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Contrail Claims Kikuka Sho to Become Third Undefeated Triple Crown Winner

3 minute read

Contrail wins this year’s Kikuka Sho at Kyoto.

CONTRAIL winning the Kikuka Sho at Kyoto in Japan.
CONTRAIL winning the Kikuka Sho at Kyoto in Japan. Picture: Japan Racing Association

Odds on favorite Contrail claimed this year's Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger) and added his name in JRA history as the third undefeated Triple Crown winner after Symboli Rudolf (1984) and his sire Deep Impact (2005) and the eighth colt to win all three titles—it is also the first time in history for a father and son to accomplish the feat. The Deep Impact colt extended his winning streak to seven while notching his fourth G1 title after the Hopeful Stakes last year, the Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000 Guineas) and the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby). Trainer Yoshito Yahagi, who scored his 13th JRA-G1 title with the win, became the first trainer to claim four G1 titles for two consecutive seasons. Jockey Yuichi Fukunaga, now with 28 G1 wins, claimed his second Kikuka Sho title after his victory with Epiphaneia in 2013 and became the fourth jockey in JRA history with 10 Classic titles.

Contrail broke smoothly and settled nicely between horses in mid-field behind Chimera Verite who set a relaxed pace while being pressured by Aristoteles on his outside. Yuichi Fukunaga managed to keep the colt in hand as the son of Deep Impact appeared keen to go along the backstretch while gradually making headway through the last two corners and soon taking command entering the stretch. Stalked throughout the whole trip and still challenged by Aristoteles as Contrail attempted to pull away from the rest of the field, the undefeated three-year-old demonstrated terrific tenacity to prevail by a neck at the wire for a history making victory.

"I can't say that I was successful in keeping him relaxed during the race with so much pressure from Aristoteles. It turned out to be a tough race for us with Aristoteles looking quite strong and persistent, and this race may not have been his best performance, but I kept my faith in Contrail and he certainly showed how strong he is to have maintained his position up to the end of the 3,000-meter trip," commented Yuichi Fukunaga.

Aristoteles under Christophe Lemaire quickly assumed position outside Contrail and raced in tandem with the eventual winner in mid-division. The improving Epiphaneia colt accelerated impressively and remained strong as the two colts dueled to the wire but was unable to wear down the winner, finishing a neck behind in second.

Satono Flag, unhurried and traveling fourth from the rear, angled out approaching the third corner and made headway along the outside. Entering the stretch with Contrail and Aristoteles in view down the center lane, he exerted a strong turn of speed to make up ground and seize his place in third through the last strides while unable to threaten the top two finishers.

Other Horses :

4th:  (8)  Deep Bond - sat around 6th in front of winner, showed tenacity, weakened in final strides
5th:  (15) Black Hole - raced around 11th, circled wide, accelerated at stretch, belatedly
6th:  (13) Robertson Quay - positioned around 15th, switched to inside at early stretch, showed brief effort
7th:  (6)  Weltreisende - traveled around 9th behind winner, angled out, lacked needed kick
8th:  (14) Valcos - saved ground around 11th, even paced
9th:  (2)  Galore Creek - sat in 4th, ran gamely until top of stretch, outrun thereafter
10th: (11) Babbitt - chased leader in 2nd, took command turning final corner, dropped back after 300m marker
11th: (4)  Man of Spirit - was off slow, ran 3rd from rear, advanced in backstretch, even paced at stretch
12th: (5)  Satono Impresa - raced around 9th, failed to respond at stretch
13th: (1)  Diamant Minoru - settled around 11th, checked at early stretch, never a threat
14th: (16) Turkish Palace - traveled 2nd from rear, showed little at stretch
15th: (7)  Danon Gloire - traveled around 5th, outrun after final corner
16th: (12) L'Excellence - tracked leaders in 3rd, fell back after 200m pole
17th: (18) Bitterender - broke poorly, trailed in rear, unable to reach contention
18th: (17) Chimera Verite - set pace from wide draw, faded after final corner


Japan Racing Association

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