|
Stakes Winner for G1 winner BUDDHA
3-year-old GLORIFICATION, who has run 1st or 2nd in all of her starts, won the Tiburon Handicap on January 13
Though BUDDHA never won a race as at 2, he was an undefeated G1 winner as a 3-year-old
THE SONG REMAINS THE SAME
Grade 1 winner BUDDHA, the leading son at stud of leading sire UNBRIDLED’S SONG, hails from 6 consecutive generations of Leading Sires: NATIVE DANCER, RAISE A NATIVE, MR. PROSPECTOR, FAPPIANO, UNBRIDLED, UNBRIDLED’S SONG.
Cast in the mold of his sire, a classic contender who won a grade 1 in his third career start, BUDDHA won a grade 1 in his fourth career start.
A winner of 3 races in 4 starts, BUDDHA was undefeated as a three year old, winning his first two races by a combined 14 lengths. In his second start as a three year old, he won an allowance race by 9 1/2 lengths at Gulfstream Park on Florida Derby Day - posting a beyer speed figure 5 points higher than Florida Derby (G1) winner and Kentucky Derby (G1) favorite Harlan’s Holiday (G1).
In his first stakes appearance, against a 25 mile an hour head wind, after three quarters in 1:10 and change, BUDDHA bulled his way to the wire in the historic $750,000 Grade 1 Wood Memorial to defeat eventual Travers Winner (G1) and Breeders’ Cup Classic favorite Medaglia D’oro (G1).
BUDDHA emerged from the Wood, just as his sire and great-great-great grandsire did before him, as the most promising, raw-talented three year old in the country and the horse to beat in the Derby.
|
BUDDHA WINNING THE WOOD see the video: DSL | Cable Modem
Unbridled's Song - Cahooters by Storm Cat STUD FEE: $10,000
|
Yearlings from the first crop of Grade 1 winner BUDDHA sold for up to $550,000 in 2005.
Multiple Grade I winner MEDAGLIA D’ORO was beaten only once going a mile and an eighth. The horse who beat him was BUDDHA
''He's a very intelligent horse, and that is part of what makes him so good. That is No. 1, but his ability is freakish. He's an amazing animal, an exceptional animal, and that's why he is here.''
--Trainer James Bond just before learning that an injury would force a last minute scratch from the 2002 Kentucky Derby. | | |