Two-time champ Lord Kanaloa goes out in blaze of glory in
HK Sprint
Lord Kanaloa, who emulated previous back-to-back winners Falvelon (2000-01)
When the gate opened, 2011 Sprint hero Lucky Nine fluffed the start and found
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Lord Kanaloa was also parked wide in the next flight, but the Takayuki Yasuda
charge was telegraphing his intent the entire time. Inhaling the leaders in the
stretch, the five-year-old turned it into a rout by dazzling his final 200
meters (about a quarter-mile) in :21 3/5. Regular rider Yasunari Iwata could
only savor the triumphal procession as he completed the about six-furlong dash
on good-to-firm turf in 1:08 1/5.
“This was the best performance of his career, and I could feel him ready to
unleash his run on the home turn,” Iwata said. “Maybe he knew it was his final
race. Once the gates opened he was just brilliant today. It’s a great day for us
to show what a wonderful horse he is, and to win this for a second time in front
of his many race fans in Hong Kong.”
“He’s a champion and I don’t care about his rating of 120, that’s not so
Irish shipper Sole Power flew from near the tail of the field for second,
“That was a huge run,” jockey Johnny Murtagh said of Sole Power. “He’s used
Also marveling at Lord Kanaloa from afar were Zac Purton, who was aboard
“We had a perfect run, and we did have every chance, but the winner was just
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“The winner must be some machine,” Moore said.
Cerise Cherry, who was runner-up last year, took fourth this time in a photo
with Sterling City. Rich Tapestry tired to fifth, trailed by Lucky Nine, Time
After Time, Go Baby Go, Sole Power’s stablemate Slade Power, Charles the Great,
Eagle Regiment and Joy and Fun.
Jwala, who was crowded in between horses in deep stretch, fell and unseated
Steve Drowne. While the Nunthorpe heroine sadly lost her life, Drowne was
transported to the hospital. According to published reports, Drowne broke his
collarbone and punctured a lung.
Lord Kanaloa compiled a sterling record of 19-13-5-1. A six-length romper in
his premiere as a juvenile in late 2010, the bay recorded a pair of close
seconds at seven furlongs and a mile. Lord Kanaloa then reverted to six furlongs
and promptly won five straight, including the Aoi Stakes and a pair of Grade 3s,
the Keihan Hai and the Silk Road.
Making his Grade 1 debut in the 2012 Takamatsunomiya Kinen, Lord Kanaloa was
a solid third while stuck down on the inside. He was beaten just three-quarters
of a length by Curren Chan, Japan’s champion sprinter at the time, in his only
career finish out of the top two. Upset as the heavy favorite in the Hakodate
Sprint, he was spelled for the rest of the summer. Lord Kanaloa returned to
action with a strong second in the Centaur Stakes, where he was just nailed at
the line. He made no mistake next time in the Sprinters Stakes at Nakayama,
zipping six furlongs in a course-record 1:06.7 to defeat defending champion
Curren Chan. His 2 1/2-length conquest of the Hong Kong Sprint clinched an award
as Japan’s champion sprinter.
But Lord Kanaloa swiftly took revenge when repeating in the September 29
“It’s wonderful to win for a second time here, especially as it is his last
Lord Kanaloa was bred in Japan by K.I. Farm and produced by the winning Storm
Lord Kanaloa’s second dam is 1992 champion three-year-old filly Saratoga Dew,
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