Mairzy Doates
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| Mairzy Doates | |
|---|---|
Mairzy Doates, ridden by Cash Asmussen, mid-race at the 1981 Japan Cup | |
| Sire | Nodouble |
| Grandsire | Noholme |
| Dam | Avalanche Lily |
| Damsire | T. V. Lark |
| Sex | Mare |
| Foaled | April 1, 1976 Hamburg Place, Lexington, Kentucky, U.S. |
| Country | United States |
| Colour | Bay |
| Breeder | Preston and Patrick Madden |
| Owner | Arno D. Schefler |
| Trainer | Horatio Luro, John W. Fulton amongst others |
| Record | 33: 12-5-4 |
| Earnings | US$740,573 (equivalent to $2,623,000 in 2025) |
| Major wins | |
| Yerba Buena Handicap (G3: 1980, 1981) La Prevoyante Handicap (Ungraded,[a] 1981) New York Handicap (G3, 1981) Matchmaker Handicap (G2, 1981) International race wins: Japan Cup (Ungraded,[b] 1981) | |
| Honors | |
| Mairzy Doates Purse Atlantic City Race Course, 1982 Turf Paradise, 1986 Mairzy Doates Handicap Saratoga Race Course, 1992 Aqueduct Racetrack, 1996 Golden Gate Fields, 1997 Belmont Park, 1998 Calder Race Course, 2008 Mairzy Doates Stakes Calder Race Course, 2013 | |
Mairzy Doates (foaled April 1, 1976) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse and multiple graded stakes winner, most remembered for her victory at the inaugural Japan Cup in 1981. Owned by New York City art dealer Arno D. Schefler and trained primarily by future U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee Horatio Luro, she competed successfully across the United States from 1978 to 1981, including winning the Yerba Buena Handicap twice.
In her final race, she traveled to Tokyo to contest the first Japan Cup, an international invitational established by the Japan Racing Association (JRA) to assess Japanese horses' performance against the rest of the world. She defeated the field in a course-record time, which alongside the strength of the other foreign horses, was widely considered as evidence of the disparity between Japanese and international horse-racing standards. Her performance is frequently credited as the catalyst for the JRA’s long-term initiative to improve the caliber of Japanese breeding and racing. Following her victory, which made her 1981's highest earning mare globally, Mairzy Doates retired from racing to become a broodmare in Midway, Kentucky.
Mairzy Doates was born April 1, 1976, bred by Preston and Patrick Madden, a pair of horse-training brothers who operated out of Hamburg Place farm in Kentucky.[8][9] Her sire was Nodouble, a multiple graded stakes winner that had retired to stud in 1970,[10] and would later become the leading sire in North America in 1981.[11][12] In contrast, her dam, Avalanche Lily, had only ever raced lightly and never won, but she was a foal of leading sire[13] and 1960 Grass Horse of the Year T. V. Lark,[14] and a descendant of Man o' War.[15] Mairzy Doates' mare line traces directly to Cinq a Sept, winner of the 1927 Irish Oaks, making Mairzy Doates a distant relative of Secretariat.[4]
Two years later in 1978, Arno D. Schefler, a New York art dealer[16] and investment banker who had dealt in Thoroughbred horses since 1967,[17] purchased Mairzy Doates as a weanling from the Maddens. Schelfer was the one to name her,[18] referencing the novelty song "Mairzy Doats" made popular in a 1943 recording by bandleader Al Trace.[19] She was briefly trained by Angel Penna and then Mickey Preger, but by winter Schefler had handed Mairzy Doates to Horatio Luro, a veteran horse-trainer who Schefler had become acquainted with in the early 1970s. Mairzy Doates was brought to Luro's stable in Miami, where in training she had to be monitored closely due to the weakness of her ankles.[18]
Racing history
Preger raced Mairzy Doates once as a two year old, with her finishing sixth out of ten at the Aqueduct Racetrack on December 22, 1978.[18][20] Over the two months Mairzy Doates vied several times for a maiden race victory, eventually winning on her fourth attempt on February 4, 1979.[c][8][23] Her first graded race, the Grade 3 Ruthless Stakes on 18 February, went poorly; Mairzy Doates remained thoroughly distanced from the other horses for the race's entirety until her jockey eased her before the finish line.[24][25] Nevertheless, Mairzy Doates continued to race throughout the rest of the year, winning several allowance races and placing third in the Grade 1 Alabama Stakes.[18] By December, and her final race of the year at the Busher Handicap, commentators had noted Mairzy Doates’ improved performance.[26][27]
The year after, Mairzy Doates did not manage to place higher than fifth in both of her next two graded races, the Grade 1 Santa Barbara Handicap on March 23,[28] and Grade 2 Gamely Handicap on May 4.[29] However, on May 26, 1980, she achieved her first graded victory at the Golden Gate’s Grade 3 Yerba Buena Handicap in dominant fashion, beating her opponents "about as easily as a horse can" in the 1+3⁄8 mi race by six lengths and with a winning time of 2:15.[30][31]
In July, Mairzy Doates was announced as an entrant in the Grade 2 Matchmaker Stakes, a race so-called as the top three placers' owners were given the choice of several high-end stallions for stud services,[19] but had to withdraw after suffering a high fever.[32] Around this time, Mairzy Doates was injured,[33] and wasn't able to race again until December 22, where she won an allowance race by three lengths over Quick As Lightning.[34]
In her final year of racing in 1981, Mairzy Doates again failed to win a Grade 1 race in her three attempts, her best performance being a narrow defeat by a nose in the Santa Barbara Handicap.[35] In her following races she subsequently achieved a triple run of graded victories; she repeated her previous win in the Yerba Buena Handicap with a similar large margin of victory,[30] then edged out Love Sign in the New York Handicap[36], and finally, made up for her withdrawal in the previous year's Matchmaker Stakes through a 1+1⁄4 length victory over Honey Fox.[37][38] Schelfer considered using his awarded choice of stallion to pair leading stallion Raja Baba with Mairzy Doates, although this plan ultimately fell through and Raja Baba was instead paired with another of Schefler's mares.[39] By July, Mairzy Doates was considered a leading contender for turf-racing fillies in North America,[40] and placed in her final two Grade 2 races in the year.[41][42]
Running in the Japan Cup
In November 1981, Mairzy Doates was one of several American horses invited to Tokyo to take part in the first running of the Japan Cup, an international race over 2,400m designed by the Japanese Racing Association (JRA) to assess the performance of their horses against the rest of the world on home turf.[43][44] While the JRA had attempted to invite several prominent horses such as John Henry,[45] the final line-up of international horses was ultimately deemed unremarkable, while Japan fielded an "all star cast",[44] including the year's autumn Tennō Shō's top three finishers.[46] The most favored entrant of the international group was The Very One,[47][44][48] the same horse that Mairzy Doates had lost the year's Santa Barbara Handicap by a nose to.[35] The Very One had previously run against Mairzy Doates on three other occasions, each time either winning[49] or placing higher than her.[50][28] While Mairzy Doates' team accepted the invitation, Luro, now 80 years old and recovering from pneumonia, sent John Fulton to cover as trainer.[33]
On the morning of the race, November 22, Schefler and Fulton nearly pulled Mairzy Doates, stating to the race's officials that the ground was too firm for her to run on safely and demanding the entire track be watered. Since this was not possible at such short notice and may have caused objections from the Japanese jockeys, the races' organizers pretended to agree, placating Schefler and Frankel by saying that the track would be watered throughout the day. In reality, the active sprinklers they pointed out as proof were only for the track's flowerbeds, and the track itself was never touched.[51]
In the race, Mairzy Doates stayed in the mid-pack until the final turn before surging forward in the home straight, overtaking her rivals to win by one length over the Canadian horse Frost King. The Very One finished third, while the leading Japanese runner, Gold Spencer, placed fifth.[52][53] Her time was 2.25.3, taking a full second off the previous course record set by Green Grass,[52][54] and came with a purse prize of nearly $300,000.[33][55]
Retirement
Mairzy Doates was an all-time wonderful mare. There may have been better fillies in history, but the great thing about her was her enormous courage. She would give you everything she ever had. It is one thing to get a filly, any horse, to give you that courage every once once in a while. But Mairzy Doates gave it all of the time.
— Arno D. Schefler, reflecting on his horse after her retirement to The Press of Atlantic City[39]
Following her victory in Japan, Mairzy Doates' team decided against running her in the 1982 Santa Barbara Handicap, and her retirement was announced by the end of January 1982.[56][57] At the time of her retirement, she was the sixteenth highest money earner in the world for female horses, as well as the highest earning mare globally for 1981. She was transferred to Hurstland Farm in Midway, Kentucky, to stand as a breeding mare, and was quickly paired with the popular French sire Lyphard. Schefler had hoped for a filly to name her 'Dozy Doates'.[39] Instead, Mairzy Doates' first foal was a colt called Mairzy Dancer,[58] born May 5, 1983.[59]
Mairzy Doates was not considered a successful broodmare.[4] Many of her children did not race, and those which did rarely won.[60] However, Mairzy Doates' final foal, a filly called Nachtigall born in 1998,[60], sired Etoile Nocturne,[61] a graded winner through the 2009 Grade 3 Hamburg Trophy ran in Hamburg.[62]
Legacy
There are no excuses left. Japan's top-class horses were easily defeated by second-rate American horses in a race where all the conditions were advantageous to Japanese horses. The idea of "raising strong horses" will have to be started all over again.
— Sankei Sports' coverage of the first Japan Cup.[63]
Led by a "second rate mare" that set a course record, Mairzy Doates' victory at the Japan Cup, alongside the performance of the other foreign horses, greatly shocked the Japanese horseracing industry.[64][63][65] While the JRA had anticipated before the race that their horses were not on par with the rest of the world,[66] the lopsided result was still regarded as a "complete defeat".[67] The realization that the nation's best horses had been defeated by a mare considered an unexceptional stakes winner in North America was seen as a profound humiliation.[63][68] As such, the event has frequently been credited as a turning point in the JRA's efforts to improve the quality of their racing stock, both in breeding and racing ability.[66][44][69]
Honors
Since Mairzy Doates’ retirement, several one-off races at different racecourses in the United States have been named after her.
| Name | Date | Racecourse | Distance (Track) | Purse | Winner (Jockey) | Margin | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mairzy Doates Purse | July 17, 1982 | Atlantic City Race Course | 1 mi (Turf) | $10,000 | Majestic North (Pedro Lizarzaburu) | 5 lengths | [70][71] |
| Mairzy Doates Purse | February 1, 1986 | Turf Paradise | 1+1⁄16 mi (Turf) | $7,000 | My Julie (Hugo Dittfach) | 2 lengths | [72][73] |
| Mairzy Doates Handicap | August 1, 1992 | Saratoga Race Course | 1 mi (Dirt) | $47,000 | Lady D'accord (Mike E. Smith) | 3 lengths | [74] |
| Mairzy Doates Handicap | October 30, 1996 | Aqueduct Racetrack | 1+3⁄8 mi (Turf) | $50,000 | Majestic Dy (Cornelio Velasquez) | 4+1⁄2 lengths | [75][76] |
| Mairzy Doates Handicap | May 18, 1997 | Golden Gate Fields | 1+1⁄8 mi (Turf) | $35,000 | Taxable Deduction (Russell Baze) | Neck | [77] |
| Mairzy Doates Handicap | June 17, 1998 | Belmont Park | 1+1⁄4 mi (Turf) | $54,000 | Jus Agendi (Jose Santos) | 1⁄2 length | [78][79][80] |
| Mairzy Doates Handicap | April 26, 2008 | Calder Race Course | 1+3⁄8 mi (Turf) | $300,000 | Mauralakana (Rene Douglas) | 3⁄4 length | [81][82] |
| Mairzy Doates Stakes | May 4, 2013 | Calder Race Course | 1+1⁄16 mi (Dirt) | $55,000 | Awesome Belle (Fernando Jara) | Nose | [83] |
Race record
| Date | Age | Race | Distance* | Track | Odds | Field | Finish | Win Time | Margin | Jockey | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 22, 1978 | 2 | Maiden Special Weight | 6 furlongs | Aqueduct | 28.70 | 10 | 6 | 1:11.8 4⁄5 | 9+1⁄4 lengths | Jose Amy | [84][20] |
| Jan 7, 1979 | 3 | Maiden Special Weight | 6 furlongs | Aqueduct | 3.20 | 8 | 2 | 1:11.8 4⁄5 | 1+3⁄4 lengths | Jose Amy | [84][85] |
| Jan 14, 1979 | 3 | Maiden Special Weight | 6 furlongs | Aqueduct | 1.30 | 10 | 2 | 1:13 | 5+1⁄2 lengths | Jose Amy | [84][86] |
| Feb 4, 1979 | 3 | Maiden Special Weight | 8.32 furlongs | Aqueduct | 3.40 | 8 | 1 | 1:44 3⁄5 | (3⁄4 length) | Jose Amy | [84][87] |
| Feb 18, 1979 | 3 | Ruthless Stakes (G3) | 1+1⁄8 mi | Aqueduct | 12.50 | 5 | DNF | 1:51 2⁄5 | N/A | George Martens | [25][84] |
| Apr 21, 1979 | 3 | Allowance race | 7 furlongs | Aqueduct | 22.10 | 9 | 5 | 1:22 4⁄5 | 9+3⁄4 lengths | Jacinto Vásquez | [84][88] |
| May 6, 1979 | 3 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄8 mi | Aqueduct | 3.50 | 6 | 1 | 1:51 3⁄5 | (8 lengths) | Jacinto Vásquez | [84][89] |
| June 9, 1979 | 3 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄16 mi | Belmont Park | 4.90 | 8 | 1 | 1:43 1⁄5 | (3+1⁄4 lengths) | Jacinto Vásquez | [84][90] |
| June 21, 1979 | 3 | Wistful Stakes | 1+1⁄8 mi | Belmont Park | 4.30 | 8 | 3 | 1:50 1⁄5 | 4 lengths | Jacinto Vásquez | [84][91] |
| Jul 15, 1979 | 3 | Garden City Handicap | 1+1⁄4 mi | Belmont Park | 3.00 | 11 | 6 | 2:01 | 6+1⁄2 lengths | Jacinto Vásquez | [84][92] |
| Aug 11, 1979 | 3 | Alabama Stakes (G1) | 1+1⁄4 mi | Saratoga | 13.40 | 5 | 3 | 2:01 2⁄5 | 5+1⁄4 lengths | Jean Cruguet | [84][93] |
| Nov 14, 1979 | 3 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄8 mi | Aqueduct | 3.80 | 5 | 2 | 1:52 3⁄5 | Head | Jean Cruguet | [84][94] |
| Nov 22, 1979 | 3 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄16 mi | Aqueduct | 1.10 | 7 | 1 | 1:48 | (2 lengths) | Jean Cruguet | [84][95] |
| Dec 2, 1979 | 3 | Busher Handicap | 1 mi | Aqueduct | 5.00 | 11 | 7 | 1:38 3⁄5 | 9 lengths | Jean Cruguet | [84][96] |
| Feb 21, 1980 | 4 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄16 mi | Santa Anita | 2.00 | 6 | 1 | 1:45 2⁄5 | (5+1⁄2 lengths) | Eddie Delahoussaye | [84][97] |
| Mar 12, 1980 | 4 | Santa Anita Handicap | 1+1⁄8 mi | Santa Anita | 7.80 | 8 | 3 | 1:48 2⁄5 | 3+1⁄2 lengths | Eddie Delahoussaye | [84][98] |
| Mar 23, 1980 | 4 | Santa Barbara Handicap (G1) | 1+1⁄4 mi | Santa Anita | 3.40 | 10 | 5 | 2:00 2⁄5 | 2+3⁄4 lengths | Eddie Delahoussaye | [28][84] |
| Apr 5, 1980 | 4 | Santa Lucia Handicap | 1+1⁄16 mi | Santa Anita | 5.80 | 8 | 4 | 1:40 3⁄5 | 8 lengths | Bill Shoemaker | [84][99] |
| May 4, 1980 | 4 | Gamely Handicap (G2) | 1+1⁄8 mi | Hollywood Park | 26.10 | 12 | 5 | 1:47 4⁄5 | 3+1⁄2 lengths | Octavio Ramirez | [29][84] |
| May 26, 1980 | 4 | Yerba Buena Handicap (G3) | 1+3⁄8 mi | Golden Gate | 3.80 | 10 | 1 | 2:15 | (6 lengths) | Francisco Mena | [30][84] |
| Dec 22, 1980 | 4 | Allowance race | 1+1⁄16 mi | Calder | 5.40 | 6 | 1 | 1:44 1⁄5 | (3 lengths) | Octavio Aviles | [84][100] |
| Jan 1, 1981 | 5 | La Prevoyante Handicap | 1+1⁄8 mi | Calder | 0.90 | 11 | 1 | 1:47 1⁄5 | (Head) | Octavio Aviles | [84][101][102] |
| Feb 7, 1981 | 5 | Orchid Handicap (G2) | 1+1⁄16 mi | Gulfstream Park | 6.90 | 16 | 11 | 1:41 1⁄5 | 8+3⁄4 lengths | Octavio Aviles | [84][103] |
| Feb 28, 1981 | 5 | Gulfstream Park Handicap (G1) | 1+1⁄4 mi | Gulfstream Park | 12.70 | 9 | 7 | 2:03 1⁄5 | 5+3⁄4 lengths | Jean-Luc Samyn | [84][104] |
| Mar 22, 1981 | 5 | Santa Barbara Handicap (G1) | 1+1⁄4 mi | Santa Anita | 18.70 | 9 | 2 | 2:01 1⁄5 | Nose | Eddie Delahoussaye | [84][35] |
| Apr 19, 1981 | 5 | San Juan Capistrano Invitational Handicap (G1) | 1+3⁄4 mi | Santa Anita | 6.60 | 9 | 5 | 2:50 2⁄5 | 4 lengths | Eddie Delahoussaye | [84][105] |
| May 25, 1981 | 5 | Yerba Buena Handicap (G3) | 1+3⁄8 mi | Golden Gate | 1.70 | 10 | 1 | 2:15 4⁄5 | (5 lengths) | Francisco Mena | [84][106][107] |
| Jun 20, 1981 | 5 | New York Handicap (G3) | 1+1⁄4 mi | Belmont Park | 3.30 | 6 | 1 | 2:04 | (1⁄2 lengths) | Angel Cordero Jr. | [84][108][109] |
| Jul 3, 1981 | 5 | Matchmaker Stakes (G2) | 1+3⁄16 mi | Atlantic City | 1.80 | 7 | 1 | 1:56 | (1+1⁄4 lengths) | Cash Asmussen | [37][84] |
| Jul 25, 1981 | 5 | Sheepshead Bay Handicap (G2) | 1+3⁄8 mi | Belmont Park | 1.30 | 8 | 3 | 2:13 | 4 lengths | Cash Asmussen | [41][84] |
| Oct 15, 1981 | 5 | Handicap race | 1+1⁄16 mi | Aqueduct | 2.10 | 8 | 7 | 1:41 3⁄5 | 11+3⁄4 lengths | Cash Asmussen | [84][110] |
| Oct 25, 1981 | 5 | Long Island Handicap (G2) | 1+1⁄2 mi | Aqueduct | 3.70 | 12 | 2 | 2:33 | Neck | Angel Cordero Jr. | [42][84] |
| Nov 22, 1981 | 5[d] | Japan Cup[b] | 2,400 m | Tokyo | 15.1 | 15 | 1 | 2:25.3 | (1 length) | Cash Asmussen | [112][113] |
| Miles | Furlongs | Meters |
|---|---|---|
| 0.75 | 6 | 1,207 |
| 0.875 | 7 | 1,408 |
| 1 | 8 | 1,609 |
| 1 mi, 70 yd | 8.32 | 1,673 |
| 1+1⁄16 | 8+1⁄2 | 1,710 |
| 1+1⁄8 | 9 | 1,811 |
| 1+3⁄16 | 9+1⁄2 | 1,911 |
| 1+1⁄4 | 10 | 2,011 |
| 1+3⁄8 | 11 | 2,213 |
| 1.49 | 11.93 | 2,400 |
| 1+1⁄2 | 12 | 2,414 |
| 1+3⁄4 | 14 | 2,816 |