Daysee Doom prevails in blanket finish to the Coolmore Classic
At the line it was the ultra–honest five-year-old mare Daysee Doom (Domesday) who prevailed by a short neck from her paternal half-sister Oregon’s Day (Domesday) with third-placed Silent Sedition (War Chant), runner-up a year earlier, just a nose further back in third. Race time was 1:28.28.
Fourth in last year’s Coolmore Classic, Daysee Doom has now won nine races and placed in another five from 19 starts for prize money earnings of $1,174,575 and had registered earlier black-type victories in the Dark Jewel Classic (Gr 3, 1400m) at Scone last May, while her two other stakes victories also came at Rosehill earlier this season in the ATC Golden Pendant (Gr 2, 1400m) and the Millie Fox Stakes (Gr 2, 1300m).
Daysee Doom was bred by West Australian Jack Griffin and is raced by him with his wife Anthea. Her success is just compensation for the breeder as Daysee Doom is the only living foal of her dam See A Victory (Mister C) who died in 2013 shortly after giving birth to a stillborn foal by Street Boss (Street Cry).
Jack Griffin bred and raced See A Victory, a mare linebred to Danzig (Northern Dancer) 2 x 4, who became a more than useful performer in Perth where she won three races at 1000 metres and 1200 metres as well as registering a number of placings including a third in the WATC Matchmaker Classic (Listed, 1400m) to earn $116,975.
See A Victory’s now deceased sire Mister C (Danzig) was one of the first sons of Danehill’s father Danzig to come to Australia when imported by Fred Peisah in 1988 to stand at his Lomar Park Stud near Sydney.
A tall, rangy horse, Mister C was not typical of Danzig as a type but more resembled his Classic-winning damsire Herbager (Vandale) and he was to prove a very handy sire. While he got a number of stakes winners of distance events, Mister C was mainly bred to speed mares and the majority of his stock were sprinters, headed by the tough, multiple Group One winner Super Elegant, winner of 16 black–type races.
Daysee Doom is the first Group One winner produced by a daughter of Mister C, who is the damsire of 18 stakes winners, others among them the stallion Valentia (Fastnet Rock), Dance The Waves (Hennessy), Aliyana Tilde (Snitzel), Teaspoon (Snitzel), Cool Passion (Not A Single Doubt), Flaming (Beautiful Crown), Smytzer’s Trish (Geiger Counter) plus Macknuckle (Moon Rocket), Coolring (Sebring) and other good gallopers.
See A Victory’s dam Danish Victory (Vettori) was unraced but bred five winners. Her dam Eliza Dane (Danehill) failed to place but foaled seven winners, among them Listed winners Cooldini (Bernardini) and Correct Amoondo (Snippets).
Daysee Doom’s fourth dam Formal Invitation (Be My Guest) was imported to Australia by the late Robert Sangster to win two Listed events in Melbourne and place in two Group Two contests for fillies.
Among Formal Invitation’s eight winners from 11 foals to race are stakes winners Don Bellotto (Bellotto) and Hysterical (Wolverton) whose stakes winning-daughter Hy Fuji (Fuji Kiseki) is now best known as the dam of the young Darley stallion Kermadec (Teofilo).
Also from this branch of the family are stakes winners Triple Elegance (Mossman), At The Heads (Hussonet) and Shoreham (Reset).
Daysee Doom follows Pressday, Doctor Doom and Ruthven as the fourth Group One winner among 16 stakes winners for her sire Domesday (Red Ransom) whose breeding career was reborn when he transferred to Aquis Farm in Queensland for the 2016 season. Last year he received his biggest ever book of 141 mares at an advertised fee of $8,800 (inc GST).
A well-made brown horse, Domesday raced only eight times but proved one of the best Australian two-year-olds of his generation, winning the Silver Slipper Stakes (Gr 2, 1100m), finishing second to Written Tycoon (Iglesia) in the Todman Slipper Trial Stakes (Gr 2, 1200m) and fourth in the AJC Sires’ Produce Stakes (Gr 1, 1400m).
Like three times champion sire Redoute’s Choice (Danehill), Domesday traces to Best In Show (Traffic Judge), one of the most renowned foundation mares in the US over the past 40 years.
Daysee Doom carries no fewer than six lines of Northern Dancer (Nearctic) blood but none closer than in her fourth generation and also has duplications of Mr Prospector (Raise A Native) and Hail To Reason (Turn-To).