

Daryaba, third consecutive
winner of the Prix de Diane for the Aga Khan,
following the victories of Zainta and Vereva. |
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Any owner-breeder anxious to compete at
the highest level will invariably take a special interest
in the ability displayed on the racecourse by his future stock
of broodmares. In this sphere The Aga Khan and
all those who work on the farms had plenty to cheer about
in the closing years of the Millennium. In France for instance
he was the first to match the longstanding 20th Century record
of Monsieur Edmond Blanc who in the years prior to the First
World War had completed a hat-trick in the Prix de Diane.
The Alain de Royer Dupré trained fillies who now delivered
were Vereva
(1997), Zainta
(1998) and Daryaba
(1999). Of the trio the hardest tussle involved Zainta
who brought an unblemished five race record to the race but
it was only on the line that Gérald Mossé snatched a short-head
decision over the flattering Abbatiale. It was an especially
evocative victory as she posted the first Classic to be credited
to the family that descends from the sparkling Petite
Etoile, Prince Aly Khan's racemare of outstanding
quality. Twelve months on Daryaba's
situation was in its way still more stressful. At the pre-race
Gala des Courses her owner received his award having been
voted top owner of the last fifty years by a panel of judges
assisted by votes cast by readers of two French racing publications.
However not only did she come wide to win well by a length
from Star Of Akkar but she carried on to become His Highness's
first filly to complete the rare Prix de Diane/Prix Vermeille
double.

Zalaiyka, winning the
Poule d'Essai des Pouliches. |
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The previous year Zalaiyka
had laid the first leg of a filly Classic double by winning
the Poule d'Essai des Pouliches. At The Curragh John Oxx also
had two star fillies on whom to lavish his care and attention
in the shape of Timarida
and Ebadiyla.
The former was one of the great travellers of her sex who in
the 1995 and 1996 seasons came out of the handicap ranks to
win a splendid series of Group Races. She finished up her three-year-old
career with a hat trick from a mile to ten furlongs starting
with the Trusted Partner Matron Stakes at The Curragh and then
heading to Longchamp on Arc day for the Sunset and Vine Prix
de l'Opera and then crossing the Atlantic for the first time
to take the E.P. Taylor Stakes at Woodbine. The sequel came
in the International Classification when the handicappers gave
her top spot amongst the middle distance fillies of her generation.
A rarity amongst Aga Khan Group winning fillies,
she was kept on in training at 4 and built upon her reputation
as a globe-trotter by going to Germany to beat their best oldest
horse, by name Germany, in the Grosser Dallmayr Preis-Bayeriches
Zuchtrennen at Munich and then to the United States where in
the Beverly D Stakes she gave Perfect Arc a three length lead
into the short straight at Arlington Park and not merely got
upsides with the pacemaker but opened up a two and a half length
lead at the line. Her third Group I win of the year was secured
back on home ground in the Irish Champion Stakes where she quickened
clear from a top-notch field that included the English Derby
winner Shaamit and the Irish Oaks winner Dance Design.
The following year the pick of the Oxx fillies
was the record setting Ebadiyla
who by winning the Kildangan Stud Irish Oaks at The Curragh
and the Prix Royal Oak at Longchamp became the first to complete
this particular Classic double even though the history of
both races go back to the 19th Century. The full significance
of Ebadiyla's
double only became clear in subsequent seasons when firstly
her half-sister Edabiya
and then her half-brother Enzeli triumphed in the Moyglare
Stud Stakes and the Ascot Gold Cup respectively. These were
the first three foals produced by Ebaziya and the trio thereby
claimed Group I status at distances from seven furlongs to
two and a half miles.
( Continue )
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