It's A Dundeel to race on as owners put racing first

By Justin Cinque / Expert

If racing fans wore jockey’s silks to the races just as footy fans wear their team’s jumper to the football, whose colours would you don at the track?

For me the answer is simple. I’d wear the It’s A Dundeel blue and gold. And it’s not because of his incredible ability to always win a close race and it’s not because he’s my favourite horse – he isn’t.

And it’s not because his colours are the best either. No, it’s a tribute to his owners putting the interests of racing above their own.

Because, last season, when the connections of the nation’s other two great three-year-olds – Pierro and All Too Hard – were preparing arrangements for early retirements to stud, the owners of Triple Crown winning three-year-old It’s A Dundeel declared they wanted to race their colt on.

And they didn’t have to.

A better decision they haven’t made – for themselves and for racing. It’s A Dundeel secured a lucrative stud career with his fifth and most important Group 1 victory last weekend in the Underwood Stakes (1800m, Group 1, weight-for-age).

Never before have his stocks been so high than after that famous defeat of the previously unbeaten Atlantic Jewel.

So, like those privileged owners who raced Pierro and All Too Hard, the connections of It’s A Dundeel will enjoy a healthy payday.

The son of High Chaparral will stand at Arrowfield Stud in the NSW Hunter Valley at the end of his career.

But until the New Zealand stallion runs his last race, his owners will have full ownership of It’s A Dundeel.

There is also the option, and trainer Murray Bake likes the idea, that It’s A Dundeel travels to Paris next spring for a tilt at the 2014 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (2400m, Group 1, weight-for-age) in a bid to win what is perhaps the most prestigious race in the world.

Should the trip be made, the blue and gold silks worn by Kiwi hoop James McDonald will flap proudly in the French wind, along with New Zealand flags that will inevitably be carried into Longchamp by It’s A Dundeel’s travelling fan-base.

It will be a great moment in the long and rich history of New Zealand racing and perhaps just reward for deciding to race the exciting colt on after his outstanding three-year-old year.

Right now, Australian racing is benefitting from the presence of It’s A Dundeel. Atlantic Jewel is the headline horse in what promises to be a classic Spring Carnival but her vanquisher is the reason for so much interest and excitement within the industry today.

This year’s Cox Plate (2040m, Group 1, weight-for-age) could rival that of 1992 – when punters who bet in the Cox Plate had a choice of eight or nine champions to back when doing the form.

There won’t be eight or nine champions this year but I reckon we may have six or seven genuinely great horses lining up.

Don’t forget it is only because It’s A Dundeel has proven it possible to beat Atlantic Jewel that we think to dream about such possibilities.

If the mare was still unbeaten, the whole spring would be revolve around one horse in the same way Black Caviar dominated headlines in the 2013 autumn.

And while racing benefits in the short term from the media interest a dominant champion creates, it is races like the 1992 Cox Plate – whose legend will outlive those who were at the Moonee Ponds track to watch – that racing really thrives.

Those races form so much of racing’s fabric and its history.

At the weekend, Samaready, who incidentally is owned in the same interests as All Too Hard, and Rebel Dane, tasted Group 1 success in the Moir Stakes (1200m, weight-for-age) and Rupert Clarke (1400m, handicap) respectively.

Both belong to the vintage age group that will forever be highlighted by It’s A Dundeel, All Too Hard and Pierro.

On Sunday, a four-year-old named Bass Strait who could not hold a match-stick against It’s A Dundeel in the autumn, catapulted into Caulfield Cup (2400m, Group 1, handicap) calculations with a strong victory in the Open handicap (1700m).

Next weekend, Hawkspur and Toydini – four-year-olds who were not good enough to race in Group 1s against the likes of All Too Hard and Pierro – will be the focus of their two races for entirely different reasons.

Hawkspur, having his first start in Melbourne in the Turnbull (2000m, Group 1, set weights and penalties), is the current Caulfield Cup favourite.

Toydini, on the other hand, will attempt to join 1992 Cox Plate winner Super Impose on the honour roll of the Epsom Handicap (1600m, Group 1) and he will be sent out the favourite.

There has not been such interest in a spring four-year-old group since 1996 when Saintly, Octagonal, Filante and Nothin’ Leica Dane tried to build off their domination of the three-year-old classics.

Saintly achieved glory in the Cox Plate and Melbourne Cup (3200m, Group 1, handicap).

Octagonal, the Triple Crown winner, won the Underwood. That means 2013 Triple Crown winner It’s A Dundeel repeated history with his Underwood win.

And Filante, romped in the Epsom by a widening margin. Ian Craig, the now retired Sydney race-caller, described it perfectly – “Filante is giving them a mud bath,” he declared. Those are the words that ring in my ears when I think of that October annihilation.

For so many great three-year-olds, the crowning glory happens at four. It’s A Dundeel’s connections know all about that. We thank them as fans for the chance to share in that glory.

But, All Too Hard and Pierro’s owners did not give their colts the chance at that sort of spring glory. Instead, they must watch as inferior four-year-olds like Toydini and Hawkspur win headlines their colts would have hogged if given the chance.

In all likelihood All Too Hard and Pierro would have arrested a lot of media interest from Atlantic Jewel.

And when they won, their stud values would have undoubtedly increased.

I don’t think it’s a big call to say the decision to retire so early was too conservative and probably wrong.

When the day comes that racing fans decide to wear their favourite silks to the track, I will chose It’s A Dundeel’s. And I doubt I will be alone.

But I don’t expect many to come in Pierro’s red and blue or All Too Hard’s green and white. They represent everything the average fan dislikes in modern racing.

They represent the decision to retire a season too early rather than a defeat too late. They represent racing for money rather than racing for Group 1 glory.

And they represent the promising, instead of the champion.

The Crowd Says:

2013-10-07T12:10:47+00:00

Balanced

Guest


@ Diablo James, As I said to Justin above, no thanks are due to IAD's owners for "daring" to race the horse on. There was no better financial alternative. Nothing "daring" about it, just common sense. The same common sense displayed by the connections of pierro and ATH, who faced different financial equations.

2013-10-04T10:40:59+00:00

Diablo James

Guest


Finally a turf champion worthy of the accolades and connections worthy of respect for daring to actually race their future breeding prospect! Kia kaha ... ake ake ... Long live the Legend ...

2013-10-02T09:06:00+00:00

Aransan

Guest


Balanced- Northern Dancer, Hyperion and his grandson Star Kingdom were all closer to 15 hands than 16 hands so I wouldn't count size against a stallion.

AUTHOR

2013-10-02T08:59:28+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Balanced it's all hypothetical. Pierro and All Too Hard won't race on. Good luck to their owners - they have their money, they got their deal. Now they must watch on as Toydini, Hawkspur and Bass Strait challenge for big Group 1s in the next month. Baker said the phone went hot *after* the Arrowfield deal had been done - he may have said it before but I read it in an article announcing the deal. What you say about Pierro is true - he is leaving behind $10m this year if he raced on but I would have backed him to win at least $2m back on the track, win big races at four thus proving he was more than an early goer (G1 winner at 2,3,4), plus go to Europe and race well thus opening up more opportunities when it comes to shuttling (regardless of who his sire is). Dual hemisphere G1 winners are special and rare. If you're in my camp, I think the difference in the end may even itself it out (-$10m this year but +$2m in prize and a bigger service fee at the end) but at least the owners would have given something back to racing by going on and finishing his four-year-old year (like every other great horse we've had). This is a four-year-olds' spring - and he'd be in the top three four-year-olds if he was still racing. All Too Hard did not leave 12-14 Group 1s in the bag but he would've won another 8-10 in my mind which takes his tally to 12-14. I think that's realistic. He won three Group 1s in the autumn in only three starts. We have so many G1s at 1200-1600 he could easily have won four this year and four next year and gone to stud at five with 12 next to his name - maybe a Cox Plate and a service fee nudging $100,000 as well. Who knows. He could've been as good as any sprinter-miler in history. He had just matured when they sent him off to stud. I can reason with the Pierro owners even if I think they made a conservative decision but Vinery really disappointed me (and I guess a lot of others) with their decision to retire ATH. Everything pointed to an enermous 4yo campaign. This horse could've been the best miler in the world hands down. He could've been a champion - a timeless champion. As for It's A Dundeel, this article was about thanking the owners for a great decision they made to race on. It may've been easy to make (personally I think it would've been something they had to consider) but with every other colt worth anything shipped off to stud, they bucked the trend and fair play to them. They are winners in the long run for it. We all have our biases. I understand the importance of breeding but my interest in racing is mainly in the sport itself. And for that reason, I applaud the owners of It's A Dundeel for racing on, for not hiding their colt, for opening the 2013 Spring Carnival up and giving racing fans some great moments and memories.

2013-10-02T07:58:40+00:00

Balanced

Guest


Justin, it appears you do seem susceptible to "hype". Baker says the phones "rang hot" after the Underwood? What would you expect him to say when he's trying to generate stallion interest? As much as I like IAD, he is a small, slow maturing stayer. His appeal in Australia is very limited, and unless he shows a dimension we haven't seen to date, and wins a lightning or TJ Smith, his appeal will remain limited no matter how many more middle distance races he wins. If he has a commercial future it is in the NH, but even then he will always be small, and high chaparral is not that highly regarded in the NH. I repeat that arrow field have paid a modest sum that they are treating in the nature of an option. You say you would have raced Pierro on? He will serve a minimum of 150 mares this year at $77k. Allowing for missed matings and slippages etc, he will generate at least $10m. You can't earn that money on the track as a sprinter-miler. His northern hemisphere appeal would always have been less than you think, being by lonhro. The oz stallions that have got gigs in the NH have been by known NH sires, like E&E, flying spur by danehill, choisir by danehill dancer, and Starcraft by soviet star. You don't just win a G1 in the uk and have a ready made stallion career. All too hard, being by casino prince, would have faced the same resistance. The owners of pierro and all too hard made the right decisions. (And saying AtH left 12-14 g1s in the bag? Give me a break.) The owners of IAD would have likewise retired the horse if he had a stallion career waiting, but he didn't, and he can win more on the track as a middle distance horse. Your belief in their "altruism" is touching but misguided.

2013-10-02T05:45:33+00:00

max

Guest


Dundeel is Australasia's Northern Dancer in the making. Cox Plate then 4 starts in the autumn, a rest then the breeding barn. Voila.

2013-10-02T02:43:36+00:00

Bondy

Guest


I agree Justin ATH never really peaked.

2013-10-02T02:11:57+00:00

Aransan

Guest


To me the big risk with continuing to race ATH was that he could have an accident and the Helsinge bloodline might be lost from the sire line. ATH could well turn out to be the only significant sire son of that family. I agree that we didn't see the best of ATH but I wouldn't take the risk of continuing to race him and I am not just talking about money, I am hoping that he makes a significant contribution to the thoroughbred breed.

AUTHOR

2013-10-02T01:59:38+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


There's always a risk. Have you seen our sprinting ranks? Pierro could have won a couple of million dollars in prize in sprints before going to Royal Ascot next year and enhancing his European profile. If I owned him, that's how I would have played. As for All Too Hard he had not even gone close to peaking. He could have retired with 12-14 Group 1 wins if he raced for two more seasons.

2013-10-02T00:56:22+00:00

Aransan

Guest


Pierro and All Too Hard stand to earn $5m to $10m in stallion fees this season, it is hard to imagine that they could win that in prize money by continuing to race. It is difficult to see how Pierro could enhance his stud value by racing on, it is possible that ATH could have enhanced his dual hemisphere credentials by racing successfully in Europe but there would have been risks to his reputation and perhaps well being.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T20:46:59+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


If Pierro and All Too Hard raced on, I suspect their owners' wallets and certainly racing would be better off by the end of the spring.

AUTHOR

2013-10-01T20:44:51+00:00

Justin Cinque

Expert


Balanced you have contradicted yourself. You say he had no credentials at the end of the autumn and not much more now. If that's the case, his owners had more reason to retire early. Now, we don't know what his service fee will be but if it's $10,000 I'll be shocked. The Bakers said the phone was hot after his Underwood win. Why such interest for a horse with no stallion credentials? Arrowfield will have control of his breeding but have no say on his racing. The Australian media think It's A Dundeel will retire at the end of the season. It is only Baker that has expressed Arc dreams. If it happens, and I wish it does, it will be the right reward for the connections. They raced on when every other star colt was retired. There were offers made for It's A Dundeel in the autumn but the owners went on the front foot and said they wanted to race on. They bought him to race him on.

2013-10-01T13:31:03+00:00

Balanced

Guest


Ludicrous to say that IAD "could have" joined pierro and all too hard in retiring early. He had limited stallion credentials at the end of his 3yo season. Pierro and ATH are standing at $77,000 and $66,000 respectively. If IAD retired as a 3yo he would have stood at maybe $10,000 max, and even today I can't imagine who would put a mare to him at anything higher. I suspect Arrowfield have paid a modest sum in the way of an option that he might win a good race in the northern hemisphere and have an opportunity there. The owners of IAD did not "make a decision in the best interests of racing". They made the same calculations as did the owners of P and ATH, but they understood the economics better than the writer of the article appears to.

2013-10-01T00:31:48+00:00

Aransan

Guest


We don't usually refer to horses by the same sire as half siblings, they should have the same dam to be referred to in that manner.

2013-09-30T15:45:14+00:00

Mark

Guest


It's A Dundeel is very similar in ability to his half brother So You Think. He is incredibly talented over any distance. He has already demonstrated his ability over a mile out-sprinting Atlantic Jewel in the straight after sitting on her outside for 1200m. He will easily win the Cox Plate on that form alone. If the owners really love racing they should start him in the Melbourne Cup. Carrying around 53kghe would bolt in. This horse is bred to run out a very strong 2 miles. Don't be surprised if he wins the 2014 Futurity fresh. Remember Makybe Diva?

2013-09-30T13:53:44+00:00

Devout Saint

Guest


Add Norzita too that list too.

2013-09-30T05:46:36+00:00

Igota Hujecoq

Guest


Owners are racing him as he is stil to grow and there are plenty of races to be won as his tougher opponents are already serving mares in barns. If he goes to stud now, he'd be dwarfed. A bit like Danny Devito up against Models, Volleyballers and netballers.

2013-09-30T02:25:42+00:00

Andrew Moonee

Guest


Well said. I will never like Coolmore no matter what they do now after what they did to So You Think.

2013-09-29T23:59:35+00:00

Aransan

Guest


I think we saw the best of Pierro and it was sensible to retire him to stud when they did. I am not sure we saw the best of All Too Hard and it would have been good to see him race on including at Royal Ascot, however given his breeding one can understand why he was retired to stud so early. We should never forget that racing is a dangerous business and one mis-step can end tragically for the horse and its connections.

2013-09-29T23:58:50+00:00

johnny nevin is a legend

Roar Pro


That's a big call, High Chaparral was a duel derby winner, twice breeders cup turf winner and irish champion stakes winner. SYT is high chaparrals greatest progeny, IADD and Toranado battling it out for 2nd.

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