PartialLogo
News

Classic success was in the blood of emphatic Irish Oaks heroine Even So

Filly is by Camelot from the family of Dr Devious and Dancing Rain

Even So: the fourth Classic winner descended from Rose Of Jericho
Even So: the fourth Classic winner descended from Rose Of JerichoCredit: Patrick McCann

Just over a month after Siskin delivered trainer Ger Lyons and jockey Colin Keane a significant breakthrough in the Irish 2,000 Guineas, Even So became their second Classic winner with a smooth victory in the Juddmonte Irish Oaks on Saturday.

The Camelot filly's other connections are far more accustomed to Classic success, though.

The Irish Oaks is the sixth of the eight Classics run in Britain and Ireland so far this year to have fallen to a winner carrying the various Coolmore silks, after the 1,000 Guineas and Oaks (won by Love), Derby (Serpentine), Irish 1,000 Guineas (Peaceful) and Irish Derby (Santiago).


View full result and watch race replay


Indeed, Even So completes the Irish Derby/Irish Oaks double for her breeders, the Shanahan family's Lynch Bages operation, who also co-own the filly with Susan Magnier.

She is the tenth foal out of the winning Danehill mare Breeze Hill, who was bred in Ireland but was based in Australasia for her paddocks career from 2004 until 2014, when she was imported to Ireland.

The dam has produced seven winners in total but Even So, who struck in the Listed Naas Oaks Trial on her last start, is her first to collect black type of any kind.

Breeze Hill, now aged 20, has an outstanding pedigree. Not only is she by the breed-shaping Danehill, but she was also the final foal of Robert Sangster's blue hen mare Rose Of Jericho, thus making her a half-sister to four stakes winners headed by Derby hero Dr Devious and Greenlands Stakes scorer Archway.

Rain Flower, an unraced Indian Ridge half-sister to Breeze Hill, produced Oaks winner Dancing Rain – dam of Group 1-placed pair Jalmoud and Magic Lily – and Sumora, the Listed-winning dam of champion two-year-old Maybe, who in turn went on to produce Racing Post Trophy and 2,000 Guineas victor Saxon Warrior.

Even So is therefore the fourth British or Irish Classic winner to be descended from her granddam Rose Of Jericho, an unraced Alleged three-parts sister to Racing Post Trophy third Zind who is buried at Coolmore alongside Doff The Derby, the dam of Epsom Classic winners Generous and Imagine.

Even So becomes the fifth Group/Grade 1 winner by triple Classic laureate Camelot, following Athena, Latrobe, Russian Camelot and Wonderment.

Camelot, who is keeping the flame alive for the Montjeu sire-line in Flat breeding, stands at Coolmore at a fee of €40,000.

His Coolmore colleague Australia was denied the first top-level winner of his stud career with Cayenne Pepper finishing two lengths in second behind Even So in the Irish Oaks.

Australia's sire Galileo, the king of Coolmore, fielded the fillies who finished third, fourth and fifth – Passion, Laburnum and Snow, each of them a sister to a Classic winner in Capri, Roderic O'Connor and Kew Gardens respectively.


Read more...

'I bought the dam of Allaho when I was 15 for the price of a few bags of apples'

'It's massively positive' – industry figures get behind Tattersalls' newest sale

Freddy Tylicki instrumental in success of Italian Derby scorer Tuscan Gaze

Martin StevensBloodstock journalist

Published on 18 July 2020inNews

Last updated 20:53, 18 July 2020

iconCopy