Gay Donald

Gay Donald (foaled 1946) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse who won the 1955 Cheltenham Gold Cup. Bred and trained in Wiltshire he made steady progress through the steeplechaseing ranks in the 1953/54 National Hunt season and developed into a top-class performer in the following year. He started a 33/1 outsider for the 1955 Gold Cup but won easily from a strong field. His later career was hampered by injury but he won several more races and finished third in the 1958 Gold Cup before being retired from racing at the age of thirteen.

Gay Donald
SireGay Light
GrandsireFlamboyant
DamPas de Quatre
DamsireRoyal Dancer
SexGelding
Foaled1946[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom
ColourBay
OwnerPhilip Burt
TrainerJim Ford
Major wins
Cheltenham Gold Cup (1955)

Background

Gay Donald was a bay gelding with no white markings[2] bred in Wiltshire by Harry Frank. He was sired by Gay Light, a little-known stallion who stood cheaply in Gloucestershire. Gay Donald's dam Pas de Quatre was bred by Fred Darling who sold her for £40 to Frank in 1939. After an unsuccessful racing career Pas de Quatre became the only mare to produce two Cheltenham Gold Cup winners: her 1953 foal Pas Seul won the race in 1960. She was a distant female-line descendant of the influential British broodmare Little Sister.[3] Gay Donald was foaled in a field at Frank's Wiltshire farm: he injured an eye at birth leaving him with a cloudy pupil throughout his life.[4]

As a four-year-old in 1950 the gelding was bought by the trainer Jim Ford, acting on behalf of Philip Burt. Ford trained the horse at Yeovil before moving to the Park House stable at Cholderton. Gay Donald's idiosyncrasies included a fondness for Liquorice allsorts and sardine sandwiches.[5]

Racing career

Gay Donald showed promising form in the 1953/54 National Hunt season, winning at Wincanton Racecourse in October and then running well against top class opposition at Cheltenham.[6] Later that season he won the Runnymede Handicap at Windsor Racecourse.

In the following season he made steady progress and developed into a Gold Cup contender, winning three of his first seven races and finishing second a chase at Lingfield Park when he attempted to concede eight pounds to Pointsman.[7] The 28th running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup took place on 10 March 1955. The weather had been exceptionally harsh in the build-up to the race and the Cheltenham Festival was badly affected: the first day of the meeting was postponed and the Gold Cup was the only race from Thursday's original programme to survive. The 1954 winner Four Ten, who was expected to be well suited by the harsh conditions, started favourite ahead of Halloween whilst the other runners included Galloway Braes (third in 1952 and 1953) and Early Mist (winner of the 1953 Grand National). Gay Donald, ridden by Tony Grantham was an unconsidered outsider, starting at odds of 33/1. Gay Donald set off in front and soon built up a huge lead. He made bad jumping errors at the last two fences as he began to tire but never looked in any danger of defeat and won by ten lengths from Halloween, with Four Ten eight lengths back in third place.[4]

In the years following his Gold Cup win, Gay Donald suffered from injury complications and struggled to recapture his best form.[8] In 1957 Gay Donald attempted to win a second Gold Cup but made no impact in a race won by Linwell. His third run in the Gold Cup came in 1958 when he started at odds of 13/2 in a nine-runner field. He looked the likely winner on the second circuit but faded over the closing fences and finished third behind the mare Kerstin and the novice Polar Flight.[4] The gelding showed some good form in the following year, beating the prolific winner Crudwell at Sandown Park in January.[9] He continued to race until 1959[10] but recorded no more major wins.

Assessment and honours

In their book, A Century of Champions, based on the Timeform rating system, John Randall and Tony Morris rated Gay Donald an "inferior" Gold Cup winner.[11]

Pedigree

Pedigree of Gay Donald (GB), bay gelding, 1946[1]
Sire
Gay Light (GB)
1926
Flamboyant (GB)
1918
Tracery Rock Sand
Topiary
Simonath St Simon
Philomath
Lone Star (GB)
1917
Swynford John O'Gaunt
Canterbury Pilgrim
Lady Vista Sir Visto
Phroso
Dam
Pas de Quatre (GB)
1938
Royal Dancer (IRE)
1929
Blandford Swynford
Blanche
Queen of the Ballet Royal Realm
Lady Lightfoot
Baroness (FR)
1929
Weissdorn Prunus
Wiener Madel
American Beauty Teddy
Maillezais (Family: 8-i)[3]
gollark: At worst it would probably severely damage it.
gollark: A giant space rock would be very hard-pressed to destroy the Earth.
gollark: Depends on what you consider "die", but it will probably involve the sun doing things.
gollark: I mean, outside-view-ishly, life on Earth has existed for several billion years, so the probability (without knowing anything else) of it randomly stopping over the course of some arbitrary thousand or so is... not high.
gollark: > There's nothing that says that life on earth will go on forever. That the environment will not self destruct via CO2 and warming, or any other method.???

References

  1. "Gay Donald pedigree". Equineline. 2016-03-19. Retrieved 2016-03-19.
  2. Hugh McMahon (19 April 2016). "Gay Donald images". The Sport Horse Show and Breed Database.
  3. "Physalis – Family 8-i". Thoroughbred Bloodlines. Retrieved 2013-12-26.
  4. Harman, Bob (2000). The Ultimate Dream: The History of the Cheltenham Gold Cup. Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 1-84018-381-0.
  5. "1950s – Cheltenham". Cheltenham Festival official site.
  6. "White and Gold" (19 November 1953). "Gay Donald should win". Glasgow Herald.
  7. "White and Gold" (1 March 1955). "Gay Donald's Good Record". Glasgow Herald.
  8. "White and Gold" (28 February 1957). "Gay Donald fit after long recuperation". Glasgow Herald.
  9. "White and Gold" (18 February 1958). "Mariner's Hand chosen". Glasgow Herald.
  10. "White and Gold" (25 February 1959). "Le Petit Roi can add to success". Glasgow Herald.
  11. Morris, Tony; Randall, John (1999). A Century of Champions. Portway Press. ISBN 9781901570151.
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