- Mom's Command
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Mom's Command Sire Top Command Grandsire Bold Ruler Dam Star Mommy Damsire Pia Star Sex Filly Foaled 1982 Country United States Colour Chestnut Breeder Ryemeadow Farms Owner Peter Fuller Trainer Edward T. "Ned" Allard Record 16: 11–2–1 Earnings $902,972 Major wins Selima Stakes (1984)
Astarita Stakes (1984)
Priscilla Stakes (1984)
Faneuil Miss Stakes (1984)
Coaching Club American Oaks (1985)
Acorn Stakes (1985)
Mother Goose Stakes (1985)
Alabama Stakes (1985)
Comely Stakes (1985)
Cherry Blossom Handicap (1985)
Flirtation Stakes (1985)Awards U.S. Champion 3-Yr-Old Filly (1985)
6th winner of New York's Triple Tiara of Thoroughbred Racing (1985)
New England Horse of the Year (1985)Honours Inducted into the racing wing of the New England Sports Hall of Fame (Summer, 2006)
United States Racing Hall of Fame (2007)Horse (Equus ferus caballus) Last updated on February 13, 2010 Mom's Command (1982–2007) was a multiple Grade I-winning American Thoroughbred race horse. Her breeder and owner was Peter Fuller of Runnymede Farms in in North Hampton, New Hampshire, son of a former governor of Massachusetts. Fuller (who had once been a champion boxer and wrestler at Harvard University) bred his mare Star Mommy to the stallion Top Command (by Bold Ruler),[1] hoping to produce a foal who combined speed and stamina. The result was Mom's Command.
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All in the family
The bright chestnut filly was trained by New Jersey-born Ned Allard, whose father was a professor at New York’s Juilliard School of Music. She was ridden in all but two of her races by Peter Fuller’s daughter, Abigail. Abby Fuller, at 26 years of age, became the first woman jockey to ride the winner of a Triple Crown event, and also the first to sweep a Triple Crown.
Racing career
Mom's Command won 11 of her 16 starts,[2] and every race in which she ran was a stakes race.
She won her first race, the ungraded Faneuil Miss Stakes, in July 1984 at New Hampshire’s Rockingham Park after going off at odds of 44-1. After winning the Faneuil Miss, she appeared in the Grade II Astarita at Belmont Park; she broke from the starting gate five lengths behind the field, and came back from last place to win. Following the Astarita, she took the Grade I Selima Stakes by 5½ lengths.
Three of her seven starts as a two-year-old had interesting Daily Racing Form "trouble lines" (race notes) – "steadied at start"; "poor start" and "off poorly". However, she won four of those races.
As a 3-year-old, Mom's Command dominated her competition. She won seven of her nine starts, all in quality events against quality company. In the Test Stakes she finished second to another star filly, Lady's Secret, under conditions that still have experts debating who was the real winner of that race.[citation needed] She won the stakes which constitute the Filly Triple Crown – the Acorn, the Mother Goose and the Coaching Club American Oaks (the latter by 2½ lengths). She followed up her Triple Crown victories with a 19-length win in the Flirtation Stakes at Pimlico Race Course and a second to the speedy Clocks Secret in the Goldfinch at Garden State Park. In the Goldfinch, she raced on a "dead rail" (deep mud on the rail) for nearly the entire distance. She then returned to take the Cherry Blossom Handicap at Garden State and the Comely Stakes at Belmont Park. In the Comely, Clocks Secret finished six lengths behind Mom's Command; 11 lengths back was Lady’s Secret.
Mom's Command then won the Grade I Alabama Stakes, leading all the way and defeating Fran’s Valentine by four lengths. Fran's Valentine was the betting favorite, since she had won six of seven starts and her jockey was the well-known Chris McCarron; however, the Daily Racing Form notes that Mom's Command was "ridden out" (winning easily, without additional urging). In 1985, Mom's Command won the Eclipse Award as American Champion Three-Year-Old Filly.
She was the sixth horse to win the Filly Triple Crown. Her five predecessors were Dark Mirage (1968), Shuvee (1969), Chris Evert (1974), Ruffian (1975) and Davona Dale (1979). Beside Mom’s Command, only Shuvee also won the Alabama Stakes (which replaced the Acorn in the "Triple Tiara", from 2003 to 2006). The Alabama, run at Saratoga, is the filly counterpart of the Grade I Travers Stakes. Every filly who ever beat Mom's Command was then defeated by Mom's Command (including Lady's Secret, noted above). She won at distances ranging from five furlongs to 1½ miles. Hall of Fame jockey Angel Cordero Jr. once said to Peter Fuller: "I love Mom's Command and I love your daughter Abby, but I'm sick of looking at both of their rear ends."[citation needed]
Mom's Command was retired on September 29, 1985, after she injured her ankle while training for the Rare Perfume Stakes at Belmont Park. Her career earnings were $902,972.
Later life
Back at Runnymede Farms, Mom's Command did not reproduce herself in the breeding shed; she did, however, foal one stakes winner (Jonesboro).
On February 3, 2007 she was euthanized at Runnymede Farm at 25, due to the infirmities of old age. She is buried on the farm.
Mom's Command was inducted into the racing wing of the New England Sports Hall of Fame in the summer of 2006. She was elected to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2007.
See also
References
External links
Categories:- 1982 racehorse births
- 2007 racehorse deaths
- Thoroughbred racehorses
- American racehorses
- Racehorses bred in Kentucky
- Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing winners
- Eclipse Award winners
- United States Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame inductees
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