'Every stud dreams of having a stallion like him' - Choisir dies aged 22
Dual Royal Ascot hero has sired 100 stakes winners across the world
Trailblazing Australian sprinter and high-class stallion Choisir, the first southern hemisphere horse to complete the prestigious King’s Stand Stakes - Golden Jubilee Stakes double at Royal Ascot, has died at his home of the past 18 years, Coolmore Stud in the Hunter Valley.
The striking chestnut stallion, the sire of 100 stakes winners and 11 Group 1 winners in 12 countries who was declared a “national hero” for his European racecourse feats when trained by Paul Perry, had been pensioned prior to the 2020 breeding season and had for the past two years spent his time in retirement.
He died peacefully at Coolmore, aged 22.
Newcastle trainer Perry reflected on Choisir, a horse who would not have travelled to the UK and become part of Australian racing folklore had it not been for the forced shutdown of racing in Singapore in 2003.
As fate would have it - and it is a rather poignant fact given what the world is currently enduring with Covid-19 - the SARS disease put an end to a planned Singapore trip and a tilt at the country’s feature sprint race, leaving Perry to change tact and point Choisir towards Royal Ascot.
“He was going to Singapore for the sprint race over there. They had a virus go through the country and racing stopped. He was ready to go somewhere, so we decided to go there at the suggestion of [one-time jockey-turned-media personality] Jack Petley. He suggested it and we went along with it,” Perry recalled to ANZ Bloodstock News.
“He was trained up to go to Singapore and all of a sudden that was off, there was nothing else on offer and knowing that Royal Ascot was a straight course and that he loved the Flemington straight we decided to go.”
His deeds at the famous Royal Meeting, in which he broke the course record in the Golden Jubilee at his second start for the week, laid a path for Australian sprinters to follow, most notably taken up by the connections of Takeover Target, Miss Andretti and Black Caviar.
His own sire-son Starspangledbanner, a Caulfield Guineas and Oakleigh Plate winner, also won the 2010 Golden Jubilee and that year’s July Cup.
Coolmore, who two years later bought the Perry-trained Fastnet Rock as a stallion prospect, swooped on Choisir soon after he had completed the remarkable Royal Ascot feat in which the Perrys and long-time clients Terry Wallace and his wife Diane are said to have caught unsuspecting UK High Street bookies off guard to land a long-priced betting coup on the colt in the Kings Stand as well as the, at the time, unfathomable double.
Perry, now 72, was typically understated. “Look, I think there was quite a bit of money won on him,” he said.
Choisir would have one more start, finishing runner-up to Oasis Dream in the 2003 July Cup at Newmarket, prior to his retirement as stud duties were calling at Coolmore Australia that September.
Coolmore Australia principal Tom Magnier paid tribute to Choisir yesterday, just hours after the sprinter’s death.
“I was lucky enough to be at Ascot in 2003 to witness his incredible triumphs on the Tuesday and then the Saturday where he was ridden by Johnny Murtagh,” Magnier said.
“It was a great achievement for his trainer Paul Perry and paved the way for future Australian sprinters to compete with distinction on the world stage.
“Since he retired to the farm in 2003 he has been a favourite with all those who have worked with him, especially our long-time stallion manager Gerry Ryan who was particularly fond of him.
“Choisir was the ultimate professional in all he did and every stud dreams of having a stallion like him.
“We are so grateful to him and he will be sorely missed by the entire Coolmore team.”
From the second southern hemisphere crop of Coolmore’s shuttle sire Danehill Dancer, Perry paid A$55,000 for the Ross Daisley-bred Choisir at the 2001 Inglis Classic Yearling Sale and he raced him with the Wallaces.
By then an unproven shuttler, Perry had been on a trip to Ireland in 1995, early in Danehill Dancer’s racing career, and was on course to see one of his victories.
“We went to a meeting over there in Ireland one time and I think Pat Eddery rode him and we watched him win a race, so we had a bit of liking for him from then on,” Perry said.
“[As a yearling] Choisir had a lot of presence about him, he was a burly, big horse. There was always something to like about him.”
As the record shows, Choisir would win the Breeders’ Plate and a Skyline Stakes before running placings in the Pago Pago Stakes, Golden Slipper Stakes, the ATC Sires’ Produce Stakes and an ATC Champagne Stakes.
While at three, in a precursor to his European campaign, Choisir would win a VRC Lightning Stakes and an Emirates Classic at Flemington and run third in the Oakleigh Plate, he is also remembered for his erratic performance in the L’Oreal Plate on Victoria Derby Day in which Planchet and Blur were controversially promoted in front of him in an upheld protest by stewards.
Australia’s champion first season stallion in 2006-07, a year after Galileo won the freshman title and the season before Exceed And Excel emerged, Choisir has gone on to sire the likes of Starspangledbanner, Japonisme, Divine Prophet and the Perry-trained ATC Champagne Stakes winner The Mission.
A top 20 Australian sire by earnings nine times, Choisir’s most recent stakes scorer is the Spring Stakes winner Festival Dancer who broke through at black-type level in November at Newcastle.
As a broodmare sire, Choisir’s progeny continue to be sought after by commercial breeders, with dual Group-winning sprinter Every Rose selling online this year for A$1.3 million.
Already, his mares have produced 23 stakes winners including five Group 1 winners in Europe, Coolmore’s Winter among them, while Will Clarken’s Group 2 winner Beau Rossa, Group 3 winner Eckstein and Tony Gollan’s promising Listed winner Isotope are out of daughters of Choisir.
Choisir, whose service fee across 17 seasons started at A$30,250 (inc GST) and peaked at A$35,750 (inc GST), has 13 yearlings in his final crop. Two of them, a filly and a colt, will be offered at next month’s Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale.
“We would see him nearly every year at the (Coolmore) stallion parades. We’d go up to the farm and have a look at him,” Perry said.
“He was a lovely, kind, big horse. We have some fond memories.”
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