Vodka (ウオッカ, 4 April 2004 – 1 April 2019) was a Japanese Thoroughbred racemare which won the 2007 Group One (GI) Tokyo Yūshun (Japanese Derby), the first filly to win this race in 64 years, as well as the 2009 Japan Cup. She won seven G1 races in Japan and was the highest earning racemare in Thoroughbred history at the time.[1]

Vodka
SireTanino Gimlet
GrandsireBrian's Time (USA)
DamTanino Sister
DamsireRousillon (USA)
SexMare
Foaled(2004-04-04)April 4, 2004
DiedApril 1, 2019(2019-04-01) (aged 14)
CountryJapan
ColourBay
BreederCountry Bokujo
OwnerYuzo Tanimizu
TrainerKatsuhiko Sumii
Record26: 10–5–3
Earnings793,578,000 JPY
$13,147,826 USD
Major wins
Hanshin Juvenile Fillies (2006)
Tulip Sho (2007)
Tokyo Yūshun (2007)
Yasuda Kinen (2008, 2009)
Tenno Sho (Autumn) (2008)
Victoria Mile (2009)
Japan Cup (2009)
Awards
JRA Award for Best Two-Year-Old Filly (2006)
Japanese Champion Older Female (2008, 2009)
Japanese Horse of the Year (2008, 2009)
JRA Special Award(2007)
Honours
Japan Racing Association Hall of Fame (2011)
Last updated on December 23, 2008
Tanino Gimlet, the sire of Vodka.

Breeding

edit

Vodka was foaled on 4 April 2004 at Country Bokujo in Shizunai, Hokkaido. She was a bay mare by the 2002 Tokyo Yushun (Derby) winner, Tanino Gimlet out of Tanino Sister by Rousillon (USA).

Racing career

edit

Vodka was owned by Yuzo Tanimizu and trained by Katsuhiko Sumii.

At two years: 2006

edit

In 2006, Vodka won her first race start and was second in the ungraded Kigiku Sho race which was also contested at the Kyoto Racecourse before she won the G1 Hanshin Juvenile Fillies race at the Hanshin Racecourse. Vodka was then awarded the 2006 JRA Award for Best Two-Year-Old Filly.[2]

At three years: 2007

edit

In 2007, Vodka won her first start in the ungraded Elfin Stakes, followed by another win in the G3 Tulip Sho, from Daiwa Scarlet, who finished in second place. At her next start on 8 April, in the G1 Oka Sho (Cherry Blossom Awards), the first race of the Japanese Filly Triple Crown, Daiwa Scarlet relegated Vodka to second place.[3] Daiwa Scarlet and Vodka would go on to meet a total of four times that year. Daiwa Scarlet bested her in three of those races. One of those contests was not a win for Daiwa Scarlet though, in the 2007 G1 Arima Kinen at Nakayama Racecourse, Daiwa Scarlet finished second to Matsurida Gogh, with Vodka finishing 11th.[4]

Vodka's next race start was in the G1 Tokyo Yūshun, also known as the Japanese Derby, the second jewel in the Japanese Triple Crown. Fillies are usually entered in the Yushun Himba, also known as the Japanese Oaks, which is the second jewel of the Japanese Filly Triple Crown which is a week before the race, however, in a move that shocked the racing world, Vodka won handily, defeating a field of some of the best three-year-old colts in the country. She became the first filly to win the race in 64 years.[5]

Vodka was unplaced in her next start before racing in the G1 Shuka Sho, which is the last race of the Japanese Filly Triple Crown races. Daiwa Scarlet won the race, with Vodka finishing in third place.[6] She was entered in the 2007 Queen Elizabeth II Commemorative Cup, but was scratched a few hours before the race due to what was thought to be a hip problem. In her next start Vodka finished 4th in the G1 Japan Cup[7] Vodka subsequently did not place in her last start of the season.

Despite winning the Japanese Derby. She lost to Daiwa Scarlet in Japanese Champion Three Year old Filly, as Vodka never finished above her in the 3 races in which both horses participated, but the achievement in the Derby led to her receiving the JRA Special award (an award given to horses/person achieved special achievements, usually historical records, not awarded every year). Her 9 race starts of the season resulted in 3 wins, 1 second and 1 third place.

At four years: 2008

edit

In her first start of the season Vodka was unplaced in the G2 Kyoto Kinen. Vodka went to Dubai in the spring of 2008 to race in the G1 Dubai Duty Free on Dubai World Cup Night.[8] She came in a fast closing fourth. Then upon her return to Japan Vodka narrowly lost the G1 Victoria Mile in May.[9] She next easily won the G1 Yasuda Kinen in June[10] and defeated Daiwa Scarlet in the G1 Tenno Sho (Autumn).[11] Finally that season even though she was heavily favored, she was unable to win the G1 Japan Cup and came in a close third to Screen Hero.[12]

During 2008 Vodka had 8 starts for the above 2 wins, 2 seconds in the G1 Victoria Mile and G2 Mainichi Okan; 1 third in the G1 Japan Cup and 1 fourth in the G1 Dubai Duty Free.

At five years: 2009

edit

Vodka’s successive wins in the Yasuda Kinen triplicated what had only been achieved twice before, by Sweet Sue in 1952 and 1953 and by Yamanin Zephyr in 1992 and 1993. In the 2009 running, another photo finish decided the winner, in which the five-year-old mare Vodka on her third Japan Cup try with the French jockey Christophe Lemaire won by a nose over the 2008 Kikuka Sho winner Oken Bruce Lee, in a time of 2 minutes and 22.4 seconds, the third-fastest Japan Cup ever run at the standard 2,400-meter distance. Vodka's win would make her the second highest earning racehorse in Japan. Vodka placed 4th in the 2007 running to Admire Moon and 3rd in the 2008 running to Screen Hero, in which the latter ran 13th in the 2009 race. Vodka had a nosebleed during the Japan Cup and was prohibited from racing for a month following her triumphant Japan Cup run according to Japan Racing Association rules.

Her 7 race starts of the season resulted in 3 wins, 1 second and 1 third placing. Vodka was voted Horse of the Year, for the second consecutive year and became the first female to win the title twice.

At six years: 2010

edit

Vodka had her first start on the synthetic Tapeta Footings surface in the Dubai International Racing Carnival Al Maktoum Challenge Round 3 (G2), after racing exclusively on turf in each of her previous 25 starts. In this race she finished eighth and was retired from racing altogether following another nasal bleeding attack.[13]

Her main jockeys included Hirofumi Shii, who rode her in four wins, and Yutaka Take, in three wins. In her final two races Vodka was ridden by Frenchman Christophe Lemaire, who rode her in the Japan Cup victory.

Vodka finished her racing career with a total 10 wins in 22 races in Japan, with wins in seven grade I races, including the 2006 Hanshin Juvenile Fillies, the 2007 Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby), the 2008 Yasuda Kinen and Tenno Sho (Autumn), the 2009 Victoria Mile, Yasuda Kinen and Japan Cup. She equalled the record of the Japanese Triple Crown winners Symboli Rudolf and Deep Impact, as well as T.M.Opera O, for the most grade 1 races won in Japan.

Vodka was inducted into the Japan Racing Association Hall of Fame in 2011.

Breeding career

edit

Vodka was retired from racing in 2010 and was shipped from Dubai to Ireland to be mated to the 2009 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner, Sea the Stars at the Aga Khan's Gilltown Stud in County Kildare. On 2 May 2011 Vodka foaled a brown colt as a result of this mating.[14] She was subsequently bred back to Sea the Stars, resulting in the following named foals:[15]

  • Volare (colt foaled 2011)
  • Case by Case (filly foaled 2012)
  • Tanino Urban Sea (filly foaled 2013) – winner in Japan[16]

She was also bred to Frankel, producing Tanino Frankel (colt foaled 2015) - placed at Grade III Nakayama Kimpai.

Vodka died on 1 April 2019, from laminitis in Newmarket, Suffolk.[17] She was 14 years old.

Racing statistics

edit

Below data is based on data available on JBIS Search[18] and netkeiba.com.[19]

Date Racecourse Race Grade Distance
(condition)
Entry HN Odds
(Favored)
Finish Time Margins Jockey Winner
(Runner-up)
2006 – two-year-old season
Oct 29 Kyoto 2yo Newcomer 1,600 m (Firm) 13 4 3.3 (2) 1st 1:35.0 -0.6 Katsuma Sameshima (Lace Doll)
Nov 12 Kyoto Kigiku Sho ALW 1,800 m (Firm) 8 7 3.0 (2) 2nd 1:49.5 0.2 Hirofumi Shii Meiner Soliste
Dec 3 Hanshin Hanshin JF 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 2 11.1 (4) 1st 1:33.1[a] -0.0 Hirofumi Shii (Aston Machan)
2007 – three-year-old season
Feb 3 Kyoto Elfin Stakes OP 1,600 m (Firm) 9 9 1.7 (1) 1st 1:33.7 -0.5 Hirofumi Shii (Nishino Manamusume)
Mar 3 Hanshin Tulip Sho 3 1,600 m (Firm) 16 11 1.4 (1) 1st 1:33.7 -0.0 Hirofumi Shii (Daiwa Scarlet)
Apr 8 Hanshin Oka Sho 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 14 1.4 (1) 2nd 1:33.9 0.2 Hirofumi Shii Daiwa Scarlet
May 27 Tokyo Japan Derby 1 2,400 m (Firm) 18 3 10.5 (3) 1st 2:24.5 -0.5 Hirofumi Shii (Asakusa Kings)
Jun 24 Hanshin Takarazuka Kinen 1 2,200 m (Good) 18 2 3.5 (1) 8th 2:14.0 1.6 Hirofumi Shii Admire Moon
Oct 14 Kyoto Shuka Sho 1 2,000 m (Firm) 18 16 2.7 (1) 3rd 1:59.3 0.2 Hirofumi Shii Daiwa Scarlet
Nov 11 Kyoto QEII Cup 1 2,200 m (Firm) 14 3 -- (--) Scr -- -- Hirofumi Shii Daiwa Scarlet
Nov 25 Tokyo Japan Cup 1 2,400 m (Firm) 18 11 6.1 (2) 4th 2:24.9 0.2 Hirofumi Shii Admire Moon
Dec 23 Nakayama Arima Kinen 1 2,500 m (Good) 16 16 6.9 (3) 11th 2:35.7 2.1 Hirofumi Shii Matsurida Gogh
2008 – four-year-old season
Feb 23 Kyoto Kyōto Kinen 2 2,200 m (Firm) 16 16 3.4 (2) 6th 2:13.9 0.3 Hirofumi Shii Admire Aura
Mar 29 Nad Al Sheba Dubai Duty Free 1 1,777 m (Good) 16 12 -- (--) 4th 1:46.6 -- Yutaka Take Jay Peg
May 18 Tokyo Victoria Mile 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 9 2.1 (1) 2nd 1:33.8 0.1 Yutaka Take Asian Winds
Jun 8 Tokyo Yasuda Kinen 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 5 4.1 (2) 1st 1:32.7 -0.6 Yasunari Iwata (Armada)
Oct 12 Tokyo Mainichi Okan 2 1,800 m (Firm) 16 3 1.5 (1) 2nd 1:44.6 0.0 Yutaka Take Super Hornet
Nov 2 Tokyo Tenno Sho (Autumn) 1 2,000 m (Firm) 17 14 2.7 (1) 1st 1:57.2[a] -0.0 Yutaka Take (Daiwa Scarlet)
Nov 30 Tokyo Japan Cup 1 2,400 m (Firm) 18 4 3.7 (2) 3rd 2:25.7 0.2 Yasunari Iwata Screen Hero
2009 – five-year-old season
Mar 5 Nad Al Sheba Jebel Hatta 2 1,777 m (Firm) 16 7 -- (--) 5th 1:49.2 -- Yutaka Take Balius
Mar 28 Nad Al Sheba Dubai Duty Free 1 1,777 m (Good) 16 3 -- (--) 7th 1:48.7 -- Yutaka Take Gladiatorus
May 17 Tokyo Victoria Mile 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 6 1.7 (1) 1st 1:32.4 -1.2 Yutaka Take (Bravo Daisy)
Jun 7 Tokyo Yasuda Kinen 1 1,600 m (Firm) 18 3 1.8 (1) 1st 1:33.5 -0.1 Yutaka Take (Deep Sky)
Oct 11 Tokyo Mainichi Okan 2 1,800 m (Firm) 11 6 1.3 (1) 2nd 1:45.5 0.2 Yutaka Take Company
Nov 1 Tokyo Tenno Sho (Autumn) 1 2,000 m (Firm) 18 7 2.1 (1) 3rd 1:57.5 0.3 Yutaka Take Company
Nov 29 Tokyo Japan Cup 1 2,400 m (Firm) 18 5 3.6 (1) 1st 2:22.4 -0.0 Christophe Lemaire (Oken Bruce Lee)
2010 – six-year-old season
Mar 4 Meydan Al Maktoum Challenge 2 2,000 m (Standard) 14 8 -- (--) 8th -- -- Christophe Lemaire (Red Desire)

Legend:
  Turf   All Weather

Notes:
  1. ^ a b Set a stakes record for the event

Pedigree

edit
Pedigree of Vodka (JPN), bay mare, 2004
Sire
Tanino Gimlet (JPN)
B. 1999
*Brian's Time (USA)

1985 
Roberto Hail to Reason
Bramalea
Kelley's Day Graustark
Golden Trail
Tanino Crystal
1988 
*Crystal Palace (FR) Caro
Hermieres
*Tanino Sea-Bird (USA) Sea-Bird
Flaxen
Dam
Tanino Sister (JPN)
Ch. 1993
*Rousillon (USA)
1981
Riverman Never Bend
River Lady
Belle Dorine Marshua's Dancer
Palsy Walsy
Energy Tosho
1987
Tosho Boy *Tesco Boy (GB)
*Social Butterfly (USA) 1963
Cornice Tosho Dandy Lute (FR)
Rose Tosho (Family: 3-l)
edit

An anthropomorphized version of Vodka appears in the multimedia franchise Uma Musume Pretty Derby.[20][21]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Vodka pursuing all-time earnings record in Dubai". Thoroughbred Times, February 26, 2010 Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  2. ^ [1], Hanshin Juvenile Fillies (JPN G1) – Vodka toast of her class 12/3/06
  3. ^ [2], Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas) – Daiwa Scarlet gets a leg up on Vodka 4/9/07.
  4. ^ [3], Matsurida Gogh springs stunning upset in Arima Kinen 12/23/07.
  5. ^ [4], Vodka First Filly Since 1943 to Win Japanese Derby 5/27/07.
  6. ^ [5], Shuka Sho – Scarlet knocks down Vodka 10/14/07.
  7. ^ [6], Admire Moon wins the 27th Japan Cup! 11/25/07.
  8. ^ [7], Dubai World Cup day – no joy for the Japanese contenders 3/30/08.
  9. ^ [8], Gale Winds blow in Victoria Mile 5/18/08.
  10. ^ [9], Vodka back to her best in the Yasuda Kinen! 6/8/08.
  11. ^ [10], Vodka edges Daiwa Scarlet by two centimeters for historic Tenno Sho (Autumn) finish 11/2/08.
  12. ^ [11], Screen Hero causes a boilover in the Japan Cup! 11/30/08.
  13. ^ "Vodka retired, no Dubai World Cup". DubaiRaceNight. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
  14. ^ "Champion Japanese mare Vodka foals a Sea the Stars colt". Aga Khan Stud. Retrieved 16 February 2017.
  15. ^ "Vodka Offspring". www.pedigreequery.com. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  16. ^ "Tanino Urban Sea – Race Record". Umanity!. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  17. ^ 名牝ウオッカ死亡 谷水オーナー、角居調教師、武豊騎手、四位騎手のコメント netkeiba.com
  18. ^ "Vodka(JPN) JBIS-Search". JBIS-Search. Japan Bloodhorse Breeders' Association. Retrieved 2024-04-17.
  19. ^ "ウオッカ (Vodka) 競走馬データ - netkeiba". netkeiba. NET DREAMERS, Co., Ltd. Retrieved 2024-04-17.
  20. ^ "TVアニメ『ウマ娘 プリティーダービー Season 2』公式サイト". TVアニメ『ウマ娘 プリティーダービー Season 2』公式サイト (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  21. ^ "キャラクター一覧 | ウマ娘 プリティーダービー 公式ポータルサイト|Cygames". ウマ娘 プリティーダービー 公式ポータルサイト (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-12-29.
edit