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Ladas (horse)

Ladas (1891–1914) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. His career attracted an unusual amount of attention as his owner, Lord Rosebery, became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom at the height of his success.

Ladas
"Ladas, winner of the 1894 Derby" painting by Emil Adam
SireHampton
GrandsireLord Clifden
DamIlluminata
DamsireRosicrucian
SexStallion
Foaled1891
CountryUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
ColourBay
BreederLord Rosebery
OwnerLord Rosebery
TrainerMathew Dawson
Record11: 7-2-1
Earnings£18,558[1]
Major wins
Woodcote Stakes (1893)
Coventry Stakes (1893)
Champagne Stakes (1893)
Middle Park Plate (1893)
2000 Guineas (1894)
Newmarket Stakes (1894)
Epsom Derby (1894)

In a career that lasted from 1893 to 1894, Ladas ran eleven times and won seven races. He was the leading British two-year-old of 1893, being unbeaten in four starts including the Champagne Stakes and the Middle Park Stakes. In the following year, he won the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket and the Derby at Epsom to complete the first two legs of the English Triple Crown. He was beaten by the four-year-old colt Isinglass in his next two starts and failed in his bid for the Triple Crown when beaten in the St Leger at Doncaster.

Ladas was retired to stud at the end of the season, and sired the winners of several important races. He died in 1914.

Background

Ladas was a bay horse of almost faultless conformation, standing just under 16 hands high.[2] He was bred at the Crafton Stud in Buckinghamshire by his owner, Lord Rosebery,[3] a prominent Liberal statesman who became Prime Minister in 1894. He was trained by Mathew Dawson at Newmarket, Suffolk.[4] Dawson, who was over seventy at the time, had "retired" from large-scale training in 1885, but continued to handle a small number of horses at his Melton House Stable.[5] Ladas was ridden in his Classic wins by Jack Watts.[6]

Ladas's sire, named Hampton, was a successful racehorse, especially over long distances, who won both the Goodwood Cup and the Doncaster Cup. Hampton was the Champion sire in 1887 and sired, in addition to Ladas, the Derby winners Merry Hampton and Ayrshire, as well as Bay Ronald, the sire of Bayardo.[7] Illuminata, the dam of Ladas, also produced a filly called Gas, the dam of the Derby winner Cicero, and Chelandry, who won the 1000 Guineas and herself produced the 2000 Guineas winner Neil Gow.[7]

The name Ladas, derived from that of Alexander the Great's messenger,[8] had previously been used by Lord Rosebery's father for a horse who ran unplaced in the 1869 Derby. Rosebery, then an under-graduate at Oxford University, had tipped the horse to his friends as a likely winner and was reportedly mortified by the result. By way of an apology, Rosebery told his friends that if he ever had a horse with a "prime chance" of winning the Derby, he would name him "Ladas" so that they could all "take the tip and back him." It was the memory of this incident which reportedly persuaded Rosebery to abandon his original plan to name the colt "Hampton Wick".[9]

The pronunciation of the name was a point of disagreement between owner and trainer: Rosebery called the colt "Lar-dar" or "Lah-dah", while Dawson insisted on "Lay-das" or "Ley-das".[10]

Racing career

 
Lord Rosebery, Ladas's owner and breeder, who became Prime Minister in 1894

1893: two-year-old season

Until 1946, racehorses in England were allowed to race without an official name[11] and the colt who would become Ladas was still unnamed when he made a successful debut on 31 May in the Woodcote Stakes at the Epsom Derby meeting. He showed impressive acceleration to easily beat the filly Mecca[12] and was identified as "a colt full of promise" by one correspondent.[13] He was then sent to Royal Ascot where he started 6/4 (1.5/1) favourite for the Coventry Stakes on 13 June. He led from the start on this occasion and shook off the opposition in the closing stages to win by one and a half lengths from a colt named Bullingdon.[14]

"The Illuminata colt", as he was still known, was then given a break of three months before returning in the Champagne Stakes at Doncaster in September, in which a horse named Sempronius was his only rival. "The Illuminata colt" led from the start, and when Sempronius moved up to challenge him, he quickened away to win easily.[15] After his win at Doncaster, he was officially named Ladas[16] and was then sent to Newmarket for the Middle Park Plate, the most important two-year-old race of the season.[17] He started at odds of 1/5 (0.2/1) and was never in any danger, leading at half way and winning the race by two lengths from a filly named Jocasta, with Sempronius two lengths further back in third.[18]

Ladas ended the season unbeaten in four races and was the winter favourite for the following year's Derby at 5/2 (2.5/1) with the Dewhurst Stakes winner Matchbox, from the stable of John Porter, being seen as his biggest potential rival.[19]

1894: three-year-old season

2000 Guineas

Ladas progressed well over the winter,[20] despite a reported bout of coughing in early March,[21] and was sent straight for the 2000 Guineas for his first appearance of 1894. On 9 May he started at odds of 5/6 (0.83/1) in a field of eight with Matchbox the second choice on 9/2 (4.5/1). Ladas raced towards the rear in the early stages before moving into third place behind Matchbox and St Florian just after half way. Two furlongs from the finish, Watts (riding on his thirty-third birthday)[22] moved him up to challenge for the lead and, as predicted, the race developed into a contest between Ladas and Matchbox. Matchbox "came again" after being overtaken and the colts raced together for a few strides before Ladas pulled away to win by one and a half lengths.[23] Immediately after the race, bookmakers offered Ladas at odds of 8/13 (0.62/1) for the Derby, which was expected to be his next major target.[24]

On 23 May Ladas started at odds of 1/12 (0.08/1) for the Newmarket Stakes against four opponents. He took the lead soon after half way and won easily ("unextended") by two lengths from St Florian.[25] His price for the Derby was immediately shortened (reduced) to 4/9 (0.44/1).[26] In the next two weeks, Ladas was the subject of intense interest, and was protected by a group of police detectives.[27]

Epsom Derby

At the Epsom Derby on 6 June, Ladas was the shortest-priced favourite in the history of the Derby, starting at odds of 2/9 (0.22/1) in against six opponents. Matchbox was the second favourite on 9/1 ahead of his stable companion Bullingdon on 100/6 (16/1).[28] Ladas started well, but was held up (restrained) by Watts and raced in fourth or fifth place in the early stages as Matchbox and Bullingdon made the running. Bullingdon weakened just after half way and Matchbox led the field into the straight, where Ladas emerged to challenge him, traveling in "grand style" and looking likely to win easily.[28] Matchbox, however, responded well and, for the first time in his career, Ladas was placed under pressure. He "forged ahead" inside the final furlong and won the race by one and a half lengths from Matchbox, with Reminder six lengths further back in third.[28]

The victory, which was received with "immense enthusiasm",[29] completed a three-part prediction made by Rosebery as a student: that he would marry an heiress, become Prime Minister and win the Derby.[30] He required the assistance of the police to extricate himself from the crush of well-wishers at the course, while at Westminster, Ladas's win was cheered in the House of Commons.[31] By contrast, Rosebery was strongly criticised by some churchmen for involving himself in the "dishonesty and degradation" of the racing world.[32] Rosebery, who responded to criticism by saying that he had "no vestige of shame" in owning a good horse,[10] used the Derby win to his advantage; he presented one of Ladas's winning horseshoes as a gift to the United States ambassador Thomas F. Bayard.[33]

Rivalry with Isinglass

 
Mathew Dawson, who trained Ladas despite having officially "retired" in 1885

Ladas was then matched against Isinglass, the Triple Crown winner of 1893, in the £10,000 Princess of Wales's Stakes over one mile at Newmarket on 5 July. The race attracted a large crowd including the Prince of Wales (who supported Isinglass) and the Queen's cousin George, Duke of Cambridge (who favoured Ladas). The field also included Raeburn, the only horse to have beaten Isinglass, Ravensbury, who had won impressively at Royal Ascot, and Bullingdon, who had recovered from the bout of coughing that had reportedly affected him at Epsom.[34] The early pace was slow, and Watts held Ladas up behind the leaders before moving into the lead just over a furlong out. He was immediately challenged, however, and overtaken inside the final furlong by both Isinglass and Bullingdon. Isinglass prevailed by a short head with Ladas, who was eased in the closing stages, finishing a well-beaten third.[35] Ladas appeared to be perfectly sound after the race, and the only explanation offered (by The Sportsman) was that the slow pace (the winning time was 1:48.4) had produced a false result.[36]

In the Eclipse Stakes at Sandown on 20 July, Ladas met Isinglass again, this time over ten furlongs on soft ground. Isinglass started favourite at 4/5 (0.8/1) with Ladas on 13/8 (1.6/1) and the other runners, who included Raeburn, Ravensbury and a filly named Throstle virtually ignored. The outsider Priestholme set off at an unsustainably fast pace, followed by Isinglass, with Watts restraining Ladas towards the rear. Priestholme dropped away in the straight, leaving Isinglass in the lead with Watts moving Ladas up to challenge.[37] The two Derby winners dominated the race in the closing stages but in spite of a "game pursuit", Ladas was unable to overhaul Isinglass, who won by a length with the rest of the field, headed by Throstle, well beaten.[38] There were no excuses for Ladas: Watts admitted that he had been beaten by a better horse.[37]

St Leger

Ladas was sent to Doncaster for the St Leger on 12 September in an attempt to win the Triple Crown. Ridden by Tommy Loates, Ladas started at odds of 10/11 (0.9/1) in a field of eight, with Matchbox (ridden by Watts) the second choice on 2/1 and the filly Throstle ignored on 50/1. As usual, Ladas was held up at the back of the field as, at first Throstle, then a horse named Legal Tender, then Matchbox made the running.[39] Ladas moved steadily closer and turned into the straight in second, before overtaking Matchbox and going into a clear lead.[40] In the final furlong, however, he was challenged by Throstle, and in the closing stages the latter pulled ahead to win by three quarters of a length.[41] According to The Sportsman, the cheers of the crowd were replaced by those of the bookmakers as the outsider overhauled the favourite.[42]

1895: four-year-old season

Ladas was kept in training as a four-year-old for the 1895 season. Rosebery issued a challenge to Isinglass's owner, Harry McCalmont, for a match race between Ladas and Isinglass to take place at Newmarket in May. McCalmont declined as he did not want to disrupt his horse's preparation for the Ascot Gold Cup.[43]

Ladas had a series of training problems[44] which kept him off the course for most of the season and he was also becoming "short-tempered and impetuous".[5] He made his belated seasonal reappearance at Newmarket on 27 September, when he ran in the £10,000 Jockey Club Stakes. Although Ladas was reported to be running with only two sound legs, he was his owner's first choice ahead of his 1895 Derby winner, Sir Visto.[45] Carrying top weight of 142 pounds, he raced in third place for most of the way but weakened in the closing stages. He finished fourth of the eleven runners behind horses named Laveno, None The Wiser and Venia.[46] Despite Ladas's disappointing season, Rosebery turned down a reported offer of £20,000 for the colt, preferring instead to retire him to his own stud.[47]

Assessment and earnings

Before Ladas ran as a three-year-old, Mat Dawson, who had been training horses, including more than twenty classic winners since the 1850s, was reported to have called Ladas the best he had ever trained.[22] Later that season he ranked him second, slightly behind St. Simon.[10] Henry Chaplin, the owner of Hermit, called Ladas the finest horse he had seen.[48] In June 1894 Ladas was rated fourteen pounds superior to the Derby winner Sir Visto by Dawson, who trained both horses.[49]

Ladas earned £5,768 as a two-year-old, placing him sixth among British horses for 1894.[50] He added £12,790 in 1895.

Stud career

Ladas had some success at stud, siring the Classic winners Gorgos and Troutbeck. Another successful offspring was the gelding Epsom Lad, who won the Eclipse Stakes and the Princess of Wales's Stakes as a four-year-old in 1901.[51] In total, he sired the winners of 196 races and £97,000 in winnings. By 1912 he had been retired from active stud duty and become extremely bad tempered: one writer said that the old stallion had "worn himself out with his restlessness and peevishness".[52] He died on 31 March 1914[53] at his owner's stud at Mentmore.[1]

Pedigree

Pedigree of Ladas (GB), bay stallion, 1891[54]
Sire
Hampton (GB)
1872
Lord Clifden
1860
Newminster Touchstone
Beewsing
The Slave Melbourne
Volley
Lady Langden
1868
Kettledrum Rataplan
Hybla
Haricot Lanercost
Queen Mary
Dam
Iluminata (GB)
1877
Rosicrucian
1865 
Beadsman Weatherbit
Mendicant
Madame Eglentine Cowl
Diversion
Paraffin
1870 
Blair Athol Stockwell
Blink Bonny
Paradigm Paragone
Ellen Horne (Family: 1-l)

References

  1. ^ a b "THE TURF". The Evening Post. 1914-05-13. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  2. ^ "ENGLISH RACING". Auckland Star. 1894-05-10. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  3. ^ "5th Earl of Rosebery". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-11-05.
  4. ^ "Mathew Dawson". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  5. ^ a b Mortimer, Roger; Onslow, Richard; Willett, Peter (1978). Biographical Encyclopedia of British Flat Racing. Macdonald and Jane’s. ISBN 0-354-08536-0.
  6. ^ "John Watts". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  7. ^ a b "Hampton". Tbheritage.com. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  8. ^ "SPORTING". Hawera & Normanby Star. 1894-09-11. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  9. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1893-11-30. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  10. ^ a b c "THE DERBY". Auckland Star. 1894-07-21. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  11. ^ Morris, Tony; Randall, John (1990). Horse Racing: Records, Facts, Champions (Third ed.). Guinness Publishing. ISBN 0-85112-902-1.
  12. ^ "EPSOM SUMMER. Tuesday, May 30". Otago Witness. 1893-07-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  13. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1893-07-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  14. ^ "RACING IN ENGLAND". Otago Witness. 1893-08-10. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  15. ^ "RACING IN ENGLAND". Otago Witness. 1893-10-19. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  16. ^ "NEW ZEALAND CUP". Otago Witness. 1893-10-19. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  17. ^ Henry Charles Howard (1900). Encyclopedia of Sport. Lawrence and Bullen. p. 195. Retrieved 2011-12-19.
  18. ^ "RACING IN ENGLAND". Otago Witness. 1893-11-30. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  19. ^ "IN A NUTSHELL". Otago Witness. 1893-12-28. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  20. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-05-17. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  21. ^ "THE EPSOM DERBY". Auckland Star. 1894-04-28. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  22. ^ a b "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-06-28. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  23. ^ "NEWMARKET FIRST SPRING". Otago Witness. 1894-06-28. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  24. ^ "SPORTING". Wanganui Chronicle. 1984-05-12. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  25. ^ "NEWMARKET SECOND SPRING". Otago Witness. 1894-07-12. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  26. ^ "DERBY BETTING". Grey River Argus. 1894-05-26. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  27. ^ "Australian and Foreign". Auckland Star. 1894-07-26. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  28. ^ a b c "26 July 1894". Otago Witness. 1894-07-26. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  29. ^ "Sporting News". Feilding Star. 1894-06-07. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  30. ^ "CAP AND JACKET". Observer. 1894-05-03. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  31. ^ "THE ENGLISH DERBY". Wanganui Chronicle. 1894-06-09. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  32. ^ "ANTI-TURFMEN" DENOUNCE LORD ROSEBERY". Otago Daily Times. 1894-07-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  33. ^ "GENERAL NEWS". Otago Daily Times. 1894-07-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  34. ^ "ENGLISH NOTES". Auckland Star. 1894-08-14. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  35. ^ "NEWMARKET FIRST JULY. Tuesday, July 3". Otago Witness. 1894-08-23. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  36. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-08-23. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  37. ^ a b "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-09-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  38. ^ "RACING IN ENGLAND. SANDOWN PARK". Otago Witness. 1894-09-20. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  39. ^ "RACING IN ENGLAND". Otago Witness. 1894-11-01. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  40. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-10-18. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  41. ^ "MISCELLANEOUS". Auckland Star. 1894-10-13. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  42. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-11-01. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  43. ^ "Sporting Notes". Auckland Star. 1895-03-23. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  44. ^ "Papers Past — Press — 25 June 1895 — SPORTING ITEMS". Paperspast.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  45. ^ "LATE SPORTING". Otago Witness. 1894-11-14. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  46. ^ "NEWMARKET FIRST OCTOBER". Otago Witness. 1895-11-14. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  47. ^ "Sporting News". Feilding Star. 1895-11-18. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  48. ^ "IN A NUTSHELL". Otago Witness. 1894-07-12. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  49. ^ "Sporting Brevities". Auckland Star. 1897-07-02. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
  50. ^ "TALK OF THE DAY". Otago Witness. 1894-05-03. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  51. ^ "Horseracing History Online - Horse Profile: Epsom Lad". Horseracinghistory.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-12-17.
  52. ^ "TUKF NOTES". Auckland Star. 28 December 1912. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  53. ^ Staff (1917). "Obituary of stallions". The General Stud Book. 23: 1178. hdl:2027/coo.31924066667340. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  54. ^ "THE ENGLISH DERBY WINNER". Auckland Star. 1894-06-09. Retrieved 2011-11-19.

ladas, horse, ladas, 1891, 1914, british, thoroughbred, racehorse, sire, career, attracted, unusual, amount, attention, owner, lord, rosebery, became, prime, minister, united, kingdom, height, success, ladas, ladas, winner, 1894, derby, painting, emil, adamsir. Ladas 1891 1914 was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire His career attracted an unusual amount of attention as his owner Lord Rosebery became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom at the height of his success Ladas Ladas winner of the 1894 Derby painting by Emil AdamSireHamptonGrandsireLord ClifdenDamIlluminataDamsireRosicrucianSexStallionFoaled1891CountryUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandColourBayBreederLord RoseberyOwnerLord RoseberyTrainerMathew DawsonRecord11 7 2 1Earnings 18 558 1 Major winsWoodcote Stakes 1893 Coventry Stakes 1893 Champagne Stakes 1893 Middle Park Plate 1893 2000 Guineas 1894 Newmarket Stakes 1894 Epsom Derby 1894 In a career that lasted from 1893 to 1894 Ladas ran eleven times and won seven races He was the leading British two year old of 1893 being unbeaten in four starts including the Champagne Stakes and the Middle Park Stakes In the following year he won the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket and the Derby at Epsom to complete the first two legs of the English Triple Crown He was beaten by the four year old colt Isinglass in his next two starts and failed in his bid for the Triple Crown when beaten in the St Leger at Doncaster Ladas was retired to stud at the end of the season and sired the winners of several important races He died in 1914 Contents 1 Background 2 Racing career 2 1 1893 two year old season 2 2 1894 three year old season 2 2 1 2000 Guineas 2 2 2 Epsom Derby 2 2 3 Rivalry with Isinglass 2 2 4 St Leger 2 3 1895 four year old season 3 Assessment and earnings 4 Stud career 5 Pedigree 6 ReferencesBackground EditLadas was a bay horse of almost faultless conformation standing just under 16 hands high 2 He was bred at the Crafton Stud in Buckinghamshire by his owner Lord Rosebery 3 a prominent Liberal statesman who became Prime Minister in 1894 He was trained by Mathew Dawson at Newmarket Suffolk 4 Dawson who was over seventy at the time had retired from large scale training in 1885 but continued to handle a small number of horses at his Melton House Stable 5 Ladas was ridden in his Classic wins by Jack Watts 6 Ladas s sire named Hampton was a successful racehorse especially over long distances who won both the Goodwood Cup and the Doncaster Cup Hampton was the Champion sire in 1887 and sired in addition to Ladas the Derby winners Merry Hampton and Ayrshire as well as Bay Ronald the sire of Bayardo 7 Illuminata the dam of Ladas also produced a filly called Gas the dam of the Derby winner Cicero and Chelandry who won the 1000 Guineas and herself produced the 2000 Guineas winner Neil Gow 7 The name Ladas derived from that of Alexander the Great s messenger 8 had previously been used by Lord Rosebery s father for a horse who ran unplaced in the 1869 Derby Rosebery then an under graduate at Oxford University had tipped the horse to his friends as a likely winner and was reportedly mortified by the result By way of an apology Rosebery told his friends that if he ever had a horse with a prime chance of winning the Derby he would name him Ladas so that they could all take the tip and back him It was the memory of this incident which reportedly persuaded Rosebery to abandon his original plan to name the colt Hampton Wick 9 The pronunciation of the name was a point of disagreement between owner and trainer Rosebery called the colt Lar dar or Lah dah while Dawson insisted on Lay das or Ley das 10 Racing career Edit Lord Rosebery Ladas s owner and breeder who became Prime Minister in 1894 1893 two year old season Edit Until 1946 racehorses in England were allowed to race without an official name 11 and the colt who would become Ladas was still unnamed when he made a successful debut on 31 May in the Woodcote Stakes at the Epsom Derby meeting He showed impressive acceleration to easily beat the filly Mecca 12 and was identified as a colt full of promise by one correspondent 13 He was then sent to Royal Ascot where he started 6 4 1 5 1 favourite for the Coventry Stakes on 13 June He led from the start on this occasion and shook off the opposition in the closing stages to win by one and a half lengths from a colt named Bullingdon 14 The Illuminata colt as he was still known was then given a break of three months before returning in the Champagne Stakes at Doncaster in September in which a horse named Sempronius was his only rival The Illuminata colt led from the start and when Sempronius moved up to challenge him he quickened away to win easily 15 After his win at Doncaster he was officially named Ladas 16 and was then sent to Newmarket for the Middle Park Plate the most important two year old race of the season 17 He started at odds of 1 5 0 2 1 and was never in any danger leading at half way and winning the race by two lengths from a filly named Jocasta with Sempronius two lengths further back in third 18 Ladas ended the season unbeaten in four races and was the winter favourite for the following year s Derby at 5 2 2 5 1 with the Dewhurst Stakes winner Matchbox from the stable of John Porter being seen as his biggest potential rival 19 1894 three year old season Edit 2000 Guineas Edit Ladas progressed well over the winter 20 despite a reported bout of coughing in early March 21 and was sent straight for the 2000 Guineas for his first appearance of 1894 On 9 May he started at odds of 5 6 0 83 1 in a field of eight with Matchbox the second choice on 9 2 4 5 1 Ladas raced towards the rear in the early stages before moving into third place behind Matchbox and St Florian just after half way Two furlongs from the finish Watts riding on his thirty third birthday 22 moved him up to challenge for the lead and as predicted the race developed into a contest between Ladas and Matchbox Matchbox came again after being overtaken and the colts raced together for a few strides before Ladas pulled away to win by one and a half lengths 23 Immediately after the race bookmakers offered Ladas at odds of 8 13 0 62 1 for the Derby which was expected to be his next major target 24 On 23 May Ladas started at odds of 1 12 0 08 1 for the Newmarket Stakes against four opponents He took the lead soon after half way and won easily unextended by two lengths from St Florian 25 His price for the Derby was immediately shortened reduced to 4 9 0 44 1 26 In the next two weeks Ladas was the subject of intense interest and was protected by a group of police detectives 27 Epsom Derby Edit At the Epsom Derby on 6 June Ladas was the shortest priced favourite in the history of the Derby starting at odds of 2 9 0 22 1 in against six opponents Matchbox was the second favourite on 9 1 ahead of his stable companion Bullingdon on 100 6 16 1 28 Ladas started well but was held up restrained by Watts and raced in fourth or fifth place in the early stages as Matchbox and Bullingdon made the running Bullingdon weakened just after half way and Matchbox led the field into the straight where Ladas emerged to challenge him traveling in grand style and looking likely to win easily 28 Matchbox however responded well and for the first time in his career Ladas was placed under pressure He forged ahead inside the final furlong and won the race by one and a half lengths from Matchbox with Reminder six lengths further back in third 28 The victory which was received with immense enthusiasm 29 completed a three part prediction made by Rosebery as a student that he would marry an heiress become Prime Minister and win the Derby 30 He required the assistance of the police to extricate himself from the crush of well wishers at the course while at Westminster Ladas s win was cheered in the House of Commons 31 By contrast Rosebery was strongly criticised by some churchmen for involving himself in the dishonesty and degradation of the racing world 32 Rosebery who responded to criticism by saying that he had no vestige of shame in owning a good horse 10 used the Derby win to his advantage he presented one of Ladas s winning horseshoes as a gift to the United States ambassador Thomas F Bayard 33 Rivalry with Isinglass Edit Mathew Dawson who trained Ladas despite having officially retired in 1885 Ladas was then matched against Isinglass the Triple Crown winner of 1893 in the 10 000 Princess of Wales s Stakes over one mile at Newmarket on 5 July The race attracted a large crowd including the Prince of Wales who supported Isinglass and the Queen s cousin George Duke of Cambridge who favoured Ladas The field also included Raeburn the only horse to have beaten Isinglass Ravensbury who had won impressively at Royal Ascot and Bullingdon who had recovered from the bout of coughing that had reportedly affected him at Epsom 34 The early pace was slow and Watts held Ladas up behind the leaders before moving into the lead just over a furlong out He was immediately challenged however and overtaken inside the final furlong by both Isinglass and Bullingdon Isinglass prevailed by a short head with Ladas who was eased in the closing stages finishing a well beaten third 35 Ladas appeared to be perfectly sound after the race and the only explanation offered by The Sportsman was that the slow pace the winning time was 1 48 4 had produced a false result 36 In the Eclipse Stakes at Sandown on 20 July Ladas met Isinglass again this time over ten furlongs on soft ground Isinglass started favourite at 4 5 0 8 1 with Ladas on 13 8 1 6 1 and the other runners who included Raeburn Ravensbury and a filly named Throstle virtually ignored The outsider Priestholme set off at an unsustainably fast pace followed by Isinglass with Watts restraining Ladas towards the rear Priestholme dropped away in the straight leaving Isinglass in the lead with Watts moving Ladas up to challenge 37 The two Derby winners dominated the race in the closing stages but in spite of a game pursuit Ladas was unable to overhaul Isinglass who won by a length with the rest of the field headed by Throstle well beaten 38 There were no excuses for Ladas Watts admitted that he had been beaten by a better horse 37 St Leger Edit Ladas was sent to Doncaster for the St Leger on 12 September in an attempt to win the Triple Crown Ridden by Tommy Loates Ladas started at odds of 10 11 0 9 1 in a field of eight with Matchbox ridden by Watts the second choice on 2 1 and the filly Throstle ignored on 50 1 As usual Ladas was held up at the back of the field as at first Throstle then a horse named Legal Tender then Matchbox made the running 39 Ladas moved steadily closer and turned into the straight in second before overtaking Matchbox and going into a clear lead 40 In the final furlong however he was challenged by Throstle and in the closing stages the latter pulled ahead to win by three quarters of a length 41 According to The Sportsman the cheers of the crowd were replaced by those of the bookmakers as the outsider overhauled the favourite 42 1895 four year old season Edit Ladas was kept in training as a four year old for the 1895 season Rosebery issued a challenge to Isinglass s owner Harry McCalmont for a match race between Ladas and Isinglass to take place at Newmarket in May McCalmont declined as he did not want to disrupt his horse s preparation for the Ascot Gold Cup 43 Ladas had a series of training problems 44 which kept him off the course for most of the season and he was also becoming short tempered and impetuous 5 He made his belated seasonal reappearance at Newmarket on 27 September when he ran in the 10 000 Jockey Club Stakes Although Ladas was reported to be running with only two sound legs he was his owner s first choice ahead of his 1895 Derby winner Sir Visto 45 Carrying top weight of 142 pounds he raced in third place for most of the way but weakened in the closing stages He finished fourth of the eleven runners behind horses named Laveno None The Wiser and Venia 46 Despite Ladas s disappointing season Rosebery turned down a reported offer of 20 000 for the colt preferring instead to retire him to his own stud 47 Assessment and earnings EditBefore Ladas ran as a three year old Mat Dawson who had been training horses including more than twenty classic winners since the 1850s was reported to have called Ladas the best he had ever trained 22 Later that season he ranked him second slightly behind St Simon 10 Henry Chaplin the owner of Hermit called Ladas the finest horse he had seen 48 In June 1894 Ladas was rated fourteen pounds superior to the Derby winner Sir Visto by Dawson who trained both horses 49 Ladas earned 5 768 as a two year old placing him sixth among British horses for 1894 50 He added 12 790 in 1895 Stud career EditLadas had some success at stud siring the Classic winners Gorgos and Troutbeck Another successful offspring was the gelding Epsom Lad who won the Eclipse Stakes and the Princess of Wales s Stakes as a four year old in 1901 51 In total he sired the winners of 196 races and 97 000 in winnings By 1912 he had been retired from active stud duty and become extremely bad tempered one writer said that the old stallion had worn himself out with his restlessness and peevishness 52 He died on 31 March 1914 53 at his owner s stud at Mentmore 1 Pedigree EditPedigree of Ladas GB bay stallion 1891 54 SireHampton GB 1872 Lord Clifden1860 Newminster TouchstoneBeewsingThe Slave MelbourneVolleyLady Langden 1868 Kettledrum RataplanHyblaHaricot LanercostQueen MaryDamIluminata GB 1877 Rosicrucian1865 Beadsman WeatherbitMendicantMadame Eglentine CowlDiversionParaffin1870 Blair Athol StockwellBlink BonnyParadigm ParagoneEllen Horne Family 1 l References Edit a b THE TURF The Evening Post 1914 05 13 Retrieved 2011 11 19 ENGLISH RACING Auckland Star 1894 05 10 Retrieved 2011 11 19 5th Earl of Rosebery Horseracinghistory co uk Retrieved 2011 11 05 Mathew Dawson Horseracinghistory co uk Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b Mortimer Roger Onslow Richard Willett Peter 1978 Biographical Encyclopedia of British Flat Racing Macdonald and Jane s ISBN 0 354 08536 0 John Watts Horseracinghistory co uk Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b Hampton Tbheritage com Retrieved 2011 11 19 SPORTING Hawera amp Normanby Star 1894 09 11 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1893 11 30 Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b c THE DERBY Auckland Star 1894 07 21 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Morris Tony Randall John 1990 Horse Racing Records Facts Champions Third ed Guinness Publishing ISBN 0 85112 902 1 EPSOM SUMMER Tuesday May 30 Otago Witness 1893 07 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1893 07 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 RACING IN ENGLAND Otago Witness 1893 08 10 Retrieved 2011 11 19 RACING IN ENGLAND Otago Witness 1893 10 19 Retrieved 2011 11 19 NEW ZEALAND CUP Otago Witness 1893 10 19 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Henry Charles Howard 1900 Encyclopedia of Sport Lawrence and Bullen p 195 Retrieved 2011 12 19 RACING IN ENGLAND Otago Witness 1893 11 30 Retrieved 2011 11 19 IN A NUTSHELL Otago Witness 1893 12 28 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 05 17 Retrieved 2011 11 19 THE EPSOM DERBY Auckland Star 1894 04 28 Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 06 28 Retrieved 2011 11 19 NEWMARKET FIRST SPRING Otago Witness 1894 06 28 Retrieved 2011 11 19 SPORTING Wanganui Chronicle 1984 05 12 Retrieved 2011 11 19 NEWMARKET SECOND SPRING Otago Witness 1894 07 12 Retrieved 2011 11 19 DERBY BETTING Grey River Argus 1894 05 26 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Australian and Foreign Auckland Star 1894 07 26 Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b c 26 July 1894 Otago Witness 1894 07 26 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Sporting News Feilding Star 1894 06 07 Retrieved 2011 11 19 CAP AND JACKET Observer 1894 05 03 Retrieved 2011 11 19 THE ENGLISH DERBY Wanganui Chronicle 1894 06 09 Retrieved 2011 11 19 ANTI TURFMEN DENOUNCE LORD ROSEBERY Otago Daily Times 1894 07 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 GENERAL NEWS Otago Daily Times 1894 07 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 ENGLISH NOTES Auckland Star 1894 08 14 Retrieved 2011 11 19 NEWMARKET FIRST JULY Tuesday July 3 Otago Witness 1894 08 23 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 08 23 Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 09 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 RACING IN ENGLAND SANDOWN PARK Otago Witness 1894 09 20 Retrieved 2011 11 19 RACING IN ENGLAND Otago Witness 1894 11 01 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 10 18 Retrieved 2011 11 19 MISCELLANEOUS Auckland Star 1894 10 13 Retrieved 2011 11 19 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 11 01 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Sporting Notes Auckland Star 1895 03 23 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Papers Past Press 25 June 1895 SPORTING ITEMS Paperspast natlib govt nz Retrieved 2012 02 26 LATE SPORTING Otago Witness 1894 11 14 Retrieved 2011 11 19 NEWMARKET FIRST OCTOBER Otago Witness 1895 11 14 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Sporting News Feilding Star 1895 11 18 Retrieved 2011 11 19 IN A NUTSHELL Otago Witness 1894 07 12 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Sporting Brevities Auckland Star 1897 07 02 Retrieved 2011 11 18 TALK OF THE DAY Otago Witness 1894 05 03 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Horseracing History Online Horse Profile Epsom Lad Horseracinghistory co uk Retrieved 2011 12 17 TUKF NOTES Auckland Star 28 December 1912 Retrieved 2012 08 26 Staff 1917 Obituary of stallions The General Stud Book 23 1178 hdl 2027 coo 31924066667340 Retrieved 6 January 2012 THE ENGLISH DERBY WINNER Auckland Star 1894 06 09 Retrieved 2011 11 19 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ladas horse amp oldid 1058217815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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