Sysonby

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Sysonby
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Sysonby (1906)
Sire Melton (GB)
Grandsire Master Kildare
Dam Optime (GB)
Damsire Orme
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1902
Country United States
Colour Bay
Breeder Marcus Daly
Owner James R. Keene
Trainer James G. Rowe, Sr.
Record 15: 14-0-1
Earnings $184,438
Major wins
Flash Stakes (1904)
Saratoga Special Stakes (1904)
Brighton Derby (1905)
Century Stakes (1905)
Metropolitan Handicap (1905)
Lawrence Realization Stakes (1905)
Tidal Stakes (1905)
Honours
United States Racing Hall of Fame (1956)
#30 - Top 100 U.S. Racehorses of the 20th Century
Sysonby Mile at Belmont Park
Last updated on October 2, 2006

Sysonby (1902–1906) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. He won every start easily, except one, at distances from one mile to two and a quarter miles. His superiority as a two and three-year-old was unchallenged during his short career of 15 race starts.

Background

Foaled in Kentucky, Sysonby was a bay son of the 1885 Epsom Derby winner, Melton, out of the English mare Optime by Orme (by the undefeated Ormonde). The mating of Melton and Optime was arranged by Marcus Daly, who was involved with the Anaconda Copper Mine. Daly died before Optime, stabled in England, foaled. His stock, including the still pregnant Optime, was brought to New York to be auctioned. James R. Keene purchased Optime for $6,600, sending her to his Castleton Stud in Kentucky, which he rarely visited.

Apparently Optime's foal, observed in his paddock, was anything but inspiring. Considered unattractive and small, as well as slow, young Sysonby was to be sent back to England for sale. But Keene's trainer, the well-regarded James G. Rowe, Sr., had seen Sysonby in action during some early trials. When it was time for the yearlings to be sent away, Rowe, a leading trainer who had once been a leading jockey (guiding Harry Bassett to his Saratoga Cup win amongst many other successes), covered Sysonby in blankets, convincing Keene he was too ill to make the long ocean journey.

Racing career

In the care of Rowe, Sysonby won everything Rowe entered him in by sizable margins, with the exception of the Futurity Stakes (USA), where he came in an unaccountable third, beaten by the filly Tradition and the filly Artful. Artful ranked 94th in the top 100 U.S. Thoroughbred champions of the 20th century by Blood-Horse magazine). Rowe saw Sysonby's groom exhibiting a large sum of money, and the groom admitted he'd been bribed to drug Sysonby before the race.

If not drugged, nothing beat Sysonby. The turf writer Neil Newman ranked Sysonby as one of the three best colts he'd ever seen. The other two were Colin (also trained by Rowe) and Man o' War.[1]

Sysonby's wins

Over the course of his two-year racing career, Sysonby won:

  • 1st - Brighton Junior Stakes
  • 1st - Flash Stakes
  • 1st - Saratoga Special Stakes
  • 1st - Junior Champion Stakes
  • 1st - Metropolitan Handicap (in a dead heat with the older horse, Race King, who carried 97 pounds against his 107 pounds and who had raced seven times while Sysonby had not raced for seven and a half months. It was also Sysonby's first experience in a race longer than 6 furlongs.)
  • 1st - Tidal Stakes
  • 1st - Commonwealth Handicap
  • 1st - Lawrence Realization Stakes
  • 1st - Iroquois Stakes
  • 1st - Brighton Derby
  • 1st - Great Republic Stakes (where he was left at the post and overcame an almost hundred yard disadvantage, beating Oiseau as well as Broomstick, a great son of the great Ben Brush.)
  • 1st - Century Stakes
  • 1st - Annual Champion Stakes

Sysonby's racing life was brief but brilliant, with winning margins of up to 10 lengths. His only loss was the Sheepshead Bay Futurity. Sysonby was the top money earner of 1905, and his lifetime earnings were $184,438.

Death

At four years and four months of age, Sysonby died. He had broken out with bloody sores all over his body, having contracted a serious disease called variola, and it proved fatal. Sysonby died on June 17, 1906, in his stall at Sheepshead Bay from septicemia brought on by an illness consisting of multiple skin lesions, fever and profound muscle wasting,[2] now thought to be variola.[3] After his death, his owner Keene donated his remains to New York City's American Museum of Natural History to become part of the Chubb series of skeletons as studies in anatomy and locomotion. Sysonby was in the storage area of the Museum with other horses of the Chubb Collection. These other horses include, General Philip Sheridan's American Civil War steed, Winchester, General Robert E. Lee's Traveller, Comanche ( the sole survivor of the Battle of the Little Big Horn), and Roy Rogers' Trigger. At this time, however, Sysonby is currently on loan to the International Museum of the Horse in Lexington, KY as part of a Horse and Man sculpture by Chubb.

Honors

Sysonby was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 1956. In the list of the top 100 U.S. Thoroughbred champions of the 20th Century by Blood-Horse magazine, he ranks 30th.

James Rowe, Sr. was also inducted posthumously into the Hall of Fame as a trainer.

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. NY Times article, 1906
  3. Sysonby information
  • The World Encyclopedia of Horse Racing: George Ennor and Bill Mooney
  • The History of Thoroughbred Racing in America: William H. Robinson
  • Thoroughbred Champions, online resource
  • Encyclopedia Smithsonian:Famous Horses, online resource

External links