FASTHORSES
THE WINNING PEDIGREE

In the Hands of the gods
by Richard Ulbrich
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Taken as a single incident, the story of Silver Fowl, alone is of passing
interest, not so much a forgotten life, but one unremembered. But, in the
light of that which came to pass, she cast a die on the future, which, on
reflection makes a truth of: "Where destiny with Men for Pieces plays…"
In 1904, the filly, Silver Fowl, was foaled in Ireland. Racing there in
1906, she ran to 3 victories, including the important National Produce
Stakes. She was then sold to England, but her form deteriorated, and she
failed to improve her reputation.
At the conclusion of the 1906 racing season, she was sent to stud, but
before she could be bred, she injured herself in a paddock accident. Her
injuries so severe that the studmaster, not wishing for the mare to endure
unnecessary pain, immediately despatched a messenger to bring back with him
the 'vet' to destroy her.
But chance was on hand...
Almost simultaneously, Richard Wootten arrived in the studmaster's office.
Australian-born Richard Wootton, who had prepared Silver Fowl during the
1906 season, was on an unannounced visit to the Stud, and her plight was
made known to him. Had he visited the stud a day earlier, his "courtesy"
call would have found her fit and well; a day later and she would have been
dead. As fortune decreed, his call was so timed that years after the passing
of all concerned, his visit on that particular day would influence the
future of racing, and notably four people, bringing fruition to the dreams
of three, and a sore disappointment to England's reigning monarch.
Although severely distressed, it was Wootton's opinion that Silver Fowl
could be saved - and Wootton's was an opinion that only a fool would ignore,
for his knowledge and skill was unquestioned. Treatment was immediately
started, and Silver Fowl was nursed back to health. In the course of the
next years, she proved a fecund matron, breeding 14 foals, 11 of which were
winners.
This story, then, which should have ended with the instruction to destroy
Silver Fowl, was suddenly a simmering pot that Wootton had placed on the
stove, and the culmination of his intervention was not realized until some
45 years later.
Among Silver Fowl's 14 offspring was a daughter Soubriquet, foaled in 1919,
her twelfth foal. She showed marked ability, winning five races at three
years, and was runner-up in Newmarket's One Thousand Guineas and Epsom's
Oaks Stakes. In the course of time, she bred nine foals, among them a filly,
Pasca (1928), a winner of 2 of her 5 career starts who in turn bred, Pasqua.
(1939)
Pasqua was one of only two filly foals of Pasca, the sixth of her dams seven
produce. She showed little racing ability being unplaced in each of her six
career starts. In 1949 she came up for sale, carrying a foal by Chanteur II.
Fred Darling, legendary, and benchmark trainer, holidaying in South Africa,
perused the sales catalogue. Liking the pedigree of Pasqua, he wired England
and arranged for her purchase. Later, he was notified that he had paid the
substantial sum of 2,000 guineas for his purchase. Returned to England, he
viewed his purchase... and almost immediately decided that he didn't like
what he saw. He retained her just long enough for her to deliver her colt
foal, and sent her off to the sales again, where under the hammer, she
realised just 525 guineas!
Darling, a knowing and as astute a judge of the racehorse as there ever was,
also decided that he didn't much like the look of the colt foal either, and
dispatched him to the Newmarket July Sales, 1951. It was a decision he was
to rue.
The beneficiary of Darling's decision to sell Pasqua's foal at those July
Sales, was an aging Sir Victor Sassoon, who for a modest 1,500 guineas
acquired the yearling. Then 69 years of age, he had spent a fortune in his
endeavours to secure good horses. The best to this time was his One Thousand
Guineas winner, Exhibitionist (1934)... but the Epsom Derby was the prize he
sought... the prize he had always sought.
On the English Racing Calendar, only one major race, Epsom's Derby Stakes,
had eluded Britain's perennial Champion Jockey, Gordon Richards,. In 27
attempts, he had failed to steer home a winner of the race he most
desperately wanted to win.
Wootton intervention those many years ago on the fateful day that Silver
Fowl was injured, was about to chance
1953 was a special year in England - Coronation Year, the year beginning of
a second Elizabethan Age. Pageantry was everywhere, and hope filled the air.
Epsom, 1953, was a vintage year.
Darling, so dismissive of the colt he had bred (and from which he did not
see any profit, his outlay of 2,000 guineas recovering only 2,025 guineas
(which became a loss when commissions were deducted), was desperately ill
and confined to his bed. Now he fervently hoped that he would crown his
achievements, and add breeder (it could have been, should have been
owner/breeder) of a Derby winner to his credit of trainer of Derby winners.
Gordon Richards reflected on his 27 rides, and with a resigned, but
determined will, silently promised to do all to guide his mount to victory,
and put lay to his hoodoo.
Sir Victor Sassoon, in the vale of his years, silently prayed that his colt
would achieve his dream.
The colt son of Pasqua, named Pinza, duly obliged, and each player in that
Coronation year, achieved his Chateau en Esapagne.
Shortly after, Fred Darling died. Gordon Richards, knighted just prior to
the running of Epsom's Classic, within two months was injured in a paddock
accident, the filly he was riding rearing over backwards and rolling on him.
He retired forthwith. And Sir Victor Sassoon, he, despite his advanced
years, went on to own three more winners of this race, his last when 79
years!
The young Queen Elizabeth II was the dispossessed. Had Wootton not been on
hand that fateful day, Pinza would not have been born, and Her Majesty's
horse, Aureole, second to Pinza, would have been the winner; and Queen
Elizabeth II would have become the only reigning monarch to own a winner of
the most sought after Classic in the world, Epsom's Derby Stakes.
Ergo...
Copyright © 2002 Richard Ulbrich