Shamardal | |
---|---|
Sire | Giant's Causeway |
Grandsire | Storm Cat |
Dam | Helsinki |
Damsire | Machiavellian |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 2002 |
Country | United States |
Colour | Bay |
Breeder | Dr. Phillip McCarthy, Fred Hertrich, John Fielding |
Owner | Richard Ketch (age 1 to 2) Abdulla Buhaleeba (lessee for first two races) Godolphin Racing |
Trainer |
Mark Johnston Saeed bin Suroor (at age 3) |
Record | 7: 6-0-0 |
Earnings | £1,099,290 |
Major wins | |
Vintage Stakes (2004) Dewhurst Stakes (2004) Poule d'Essai des Poulains (2005) Prix du Jockey Club (2005) St. James's Palace Stakes (2005) |
|
Awards | |
Cartier Champion Two-year-old Colt (2004) | |
Last updated on September 18, 2007 |
Shamardal (foaled March 27, 2002 in Kentucky) is a Thoroughbred racehorse who competed in the United Kingdom and in France and was voted the 2004 European Champion Two-Year-Old.
Bred at Watercress Farm in Paris, Kentucky, he was sired by a son of Storm Cat, the 2000 European Horse of the Year, Giant's Causeway. He was out of the mare Helsinki, who had been only an average runner, but who was a full sister to Street Cry. Shamardal's damsire was Machiavellian, a son of the Leading sire in North America, Mr. Prospector.
In November 2002, his breeders put him up for sale at the Keeneland Sales but when the bidding failed to meet their reserve price they decided to wait until the following year to auction him again. In early 2003, the yearling began to exhibit a subtle lack of coordination and an abnormal clumsiness in his gaits. He was soon diagnosed with a Grade 3 level of Cervical Vertebral Malformation Syndrome, a spinal disorder commonly referred to by horsemen as the "wobbles." The disease means the horse will likely never race and usually results in them having to be euthanized because their condition can cause them to collapse without warning that could result in severe injury to a handler. Shipped to specialists at Ohio State University, x-rays and a myelogram confirmed the condition. As such, his breeder/owners filed an insurance claim and turned ownership over to the insurance company where the colt became a standard case for euthanasia.