- Double Jay (horse)
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Double Jay Sire Balladier Grandsire Black Toney Dam Broom Shot Damsire Whisk Broom Sex Stallion Foaled 1944 Country United States Colour Black/Brown Breeder John W. Stanley Owner Ridgewood Stable Trainer Walter L. McCue Record 48: 17-9-9 Earnings US$299,005 Major wins James H. Connors Memorial Stakes (1946)
Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes (1946)
Newport Stakes (1946)
Garden State Stakes (1946)
Jersey Handicap (1947)
Riggs Handicap (1947)
Benjamin Franklin Handicap (1947)
Prince George Autumn Handicap (1947)
Trenton Handicap (1948)
American Handicap (1949)
Mission Handicap (1949)Awards American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt (1946)
Leading broodmare sire in North America
(1971, 1975, 1977, 1981)Horse (Equus ferus caballus) Double Jay (1944–1972) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. Bred by John W. Stanley in Lexington, Kentucky, he was purchased as a yearling for $19,000 by Wilmington, Delaware businessmen James V. Tigani and James Boines who raced them under their newly formed partnership, Ridgewood Stable.
Trained by Walter "Duke" McCue, as a two-year-old, Double Jay won six of ten starts, capping it off with a win in the October 19, 1946 Garden State Stakes. [1] His performances that year earned him American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt honors.
Racing at age three, Double Jay was one of the early favorites for the Kentucky Derby, the first leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series. However, he finished third in an allowance race in April at Churchill Downs and then was fifth in a six-horse field in the Derby Trial Stakes behind winner, Faultless and as a result, was sent off as a longshot in the Derby. After finishing a distant twelfth in the Derby's thirteen-horse field he did not run in the Preakness and Belmont Stakes. While he went on to win the important Jersey Handicap, he did not achieve the same level of success at three as he had at two.
Racing at age four and five, Double Jay's most important win came in California in the 1949 American Handicap in which he equaled the track record of 1:48.60 for 1⅛ miles in the year when the race was run at Santa Anita Park. [2]
A Champion broodmare sire
The sire of several good runners, Double Jay's progeny included:
- Manotick (b. 1952) - won Ladies Handicap, Gazelle Stakes, Molly Pitcher Handicap
- Bagdad (b. 1956) - wins included the San Antonio Handicap and Hollywood Derby
- Irish Jay (b. 1957) - filly whose wins include the Spinaway Stakes, Demoiselle Stakes, Acorn Stakes, Comely Stakes
- Sunrise Flight (b. 1959 - multiple stakes winner, damsire of Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner, Pleasant Colony
Double Jay was the North American Champion broodmare sire in 1971, 1975, 1977, and 1981 and was second in three other years: 1972, 1976, 1980. Of his daughter's successful progeny, Double Jay is best remembered as the damsire of:
- Old Hat (b. 1959) - two-time American Champion Older Female Horse;
- Nodouble (b. 1965) - American Champion Older Male Horse and 1981 Leading sire in North America;
- John Henry (b. 1975) - legendary two-time American Horse of the Year and U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee;
- Ferdinand (b. 1983) - won Kentucky Derby, Breeders' Cup Classic.
Double Jay died in 1972 and is buried in the equine cemetery at Claiborne Farm near Paris, Kentucky.
References
Categories:- 1944 racehorse births
- 1972 racehorse deaths
- Thoroughbred racehorses
- Racehorses bred in Kentucky
- Racehorses trained in the United States
- American racehorses
- American Champion racehorses
- United States Champion Thoroughbred Sires
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