Go And Go | |
---|---|
Sire | Be My Guest |
Grandsire | Northern Dancer |
Dam | Irish Edition |
Damsire | Alleged |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1987 |
Country | Ireland |
Colour | Chestnut |
Breeder | Moyglare Stud Farm |
Owner | Moyglare Stud Farm |
Trainer | Dermot K. Weld |
Record | 15: 6-0-2 |
Earnings | $727,491 |
Major wins | |
Tyros Stakes (1989) Laurel Futurity (1989) Minstrel Stakes (1990) Belmont Stakes (1990) |
|
Honours | |
Go And Go Round Tower Stakes at the Curragh | |
Last updated on September 23, 2007 |
Go And Go (1987–2000) was an Irish Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning a Triple Crown race.
Owned and bred by Swiss businessman Walter Haefner, Go And Go was bred at his Moyglare Stud Farm in Maynooth, County Kildare. The horse was sired by Be My Guest and out of the mare Irish Edition. His grandsire was the great Northern Dancer, and his damsire, Alleged, was a two-time winner of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and 1977 European Horse of the Year.
Racing at age two in Ireland, Go And Go was trained by Dermot Weld and ridden by Michael Kinane. Between July and September 1989, he had four starts, losing in his first, then winning the next two before finishing tenth in the Group I National Stakes at the Curragh. Sent to the United States, Go And Go won the important Laurel Futurity on the turf course at Laurel Park in Maryland. He then ran eighth in the 1989 Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Gulfstream Park.
In 1990, Go And Go was back in Ireland, where he won the Minstrel Stakes at the Curragh in his three-year-old debut. He then ran fourth in the Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial, after which his handlers decided to try him for the first time on the dirt and entered him in June's Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park in New York. With regular jockey Michael Kinane aboard in the third and longest leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series, Go and Go won the 1½ mile race. His victory in the nine-horse field came over runners-up Thirty Six Red and Baron De Vaux, plus the fourth-place finisher, the heavily favored Unbridled, who had won the Kentucky Derby and finished second in the Preakness Stakes.