Flemensfirth | |
---|---|
Racing colours of Sheikh Mohammed
|
|
Sire | Alleged |
Grandsire | Hoist the Flag |
Dam | Etheldreda |
Damsire | Diesis |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 16 March 1992 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | Mill Ridge Farm |
Owner | Sheikh Mohammed |
Trainer | John Gosden |
Record | 9: 5-1-0 |
Major wins | |
Prix Lupin (1995) Prix Dollar (1995,1996) Premio Roma (1996) |
Flemensfirth is a retired Thoroughbred racehorse and active stallion, who was bred in the United States but trained in the United Kingdom during a racing career which ran from 1994 to 1997. He is best known as a successful sire of National Hunt racehorses.
Flemensfirth is a bay horse bred by the Mill Ridge Farm at Lexington, Kentucky. He was sired by the dual Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Alleged out of the Diesis mare Etheldreda. He was bought as a yearling for $290,000 by Sheikh Mohammed and sent into training with John Gosden in England.
Flemensfirth did not appear on the racecourse until the September of his two-year-old season, when he won a Nottingham maiden race "smoothly" by three lengths.
After finishing second in the listed Feilden Stakes at Newmarket on his three-year-old debut, he was campaigned exclusively in top-class company. At Longchamp in May he upset the 1–2 favourite Solar One to take the Group I Prix Lupin, taking the lead two furlongs out and staying on strongly to win by a length. After finishing unplaced in the Prix du Jockey Club and the St. James's Palace Stakes he was rested for an autumn campaign. He returned to Longchamp for the Arc meeting, where he led all the way to win the Group II Prix Dollar by half a length from Volochine.
Injury then kept Flemensfirth off the racecourse for over a year. When he returned he took his record at Longchamp to three wins in three starts by taking his second Prix Dollar, leading in the straight and staying on strongly to win by two lengths. A month later he traveled to Italy to land odds of 1–2 in the Premio Roma, defeating the German mare Hollywood Dream by a neck.
By the time he appeared again in the 1997 Dubai World Cup, Flemensfirth had not lost a race for almost two years, but he was always struggling on the dirt surface, and came home last of the ten finishers behind Singspiel. It proved to be his final racecourse appearance.