Three Oh's
Three Oh's, 1966 brown Quarter Horse stallion, AQHA #0458120, winner of the 1968 All American Futurity. He sired Maskeo Lad, a 1972 brown Quarter Horse stallion, AQHA #0835539, who was the 1975 AQHA Racing Champion Three-Year-Old Colt,[2] and Oh Shiney, a 1976 black Quarter Horse stallion, AQHA #1431631, who was the 1981 AQHA Racing Champion Aged Stallion.[3] Three Oh's sired seven crops before his death in 1976 at age 10. All totaled, he sired earners of over $4.7 million including 57 stakes winners. He set track records in 1968—1969 at several tracks in the Southwest, and was inducted into the Texas Horse Racing Hall of Fame.[4] He was owned by Dr. & Mrs. D. G. Strole of Abilene, Texas and trained by C.W. "Bubba" Cascio.[4]
Breed | Quarter Horse |
---|---|
Discipline | Racing |
Sire | Three Chicks |
Grandsire | Three Bars (TB) |
Dam | Oh My Oh |
Maternal grandsire | Spotted Bull (TB) |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1966 |
Country | United States |
Color | brown |
Breeder | Henry R. Hurd[1] |
Record | |
16-10-2-1 SI-100 | |
Earnings | |
$201,716 | |
Major wins | |
All American Futurity | |
Honors | |
Texas Horse Racing Hall of Fame |
Pedigree
Percentage (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Three Bars (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Myrtle Dee (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Three Chicks | |||||||||||||||
Chicaro Bill | |||||||||||||||
Chicado V | |||||||||||||||
Do Good | |||||||||||||||
Three Oh's | |||||||||||||||
Bull Dog (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Spotted Bull (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Spotted Beauty (TB) | |||||||||||||||
Oh My Oh | |||||||||||||||
Leo | |||||||||||||||
Miss Meyers | |||||||||||||||
Star's Lou | |||||||||||||||
gollark: <@622402892141166602> `/seen`
gollark: Heavpoot kept dumping ridiculous amounts of stuff into their crucible on another thing when "doing alchemy" and cleaning up the constant taint incursions was very annoying.
gollark: Ideally the crucible should be near someone you don't like.
gollark: A fun thing you can do for recycling with Thaumcraft is to dump all your excess items into a crucible.
gollark: Keansia is basically dead, yes.
References
- "Horse Profile". Equibase. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
- "AQHA Racing Champions". American Quarter Horse Association. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
- J. Warren Evans (2000). Horses, 3rd Edition: A Guide to Selection, Care, and Enjoyment. Owl Books (NY). p. 790. ISBN 9780805072518.
- "Three Oh's —Texas Horse Racing Hall of Fame". Texas Horse Racing Museum and Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
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