Starlet Series
Nuumber 6: Azeri
Nuumber 6: Azeri
Joseph Di Rienzi
This is the start of an occasional
series on the careers of the six best female thoroughbred horses I have observed
racing in the years 1959 to the present. I have chosen these females based on
their performances in their respective races. This is my assessment alone and
will undoubtedly differ with others’ opinions.
I will discuss each leading female in separate pieces starting with sixth
ranked Azeri.
She was owned by the Allen Paulson
Living Trust (managed by son, Michael Paulson) and trained by Laura De
Seroux. (Azeri, was named after an
abbreviation for the aviation checkpoint in Baku, Azerbaijan by her breeder, the late Allen E.
Paulson, a noted pilot and aircraft company owner.) A burnished chestnut daughter of Jade Hunter
from an Australian bred mare, Zodiac Miss, born in 1998, Azeri was unraced as a
two year-old and had only two starts as a sophomore in 2001, both winning efforts.
Ridden throughout her four year-old season by Mike Smith, Azeri won an allowance race
in January 2002 at her home base at Santa Anita Racetrack. She then finished
second in her initial stakes outing, the La Canada Stakes. Then Azeri went on a
prolonged winning streak, capturing the Santa Margarita (defeating former Breeders’
Cup Distaff victress Spain), Apple Blossom, Milady Breeders’ Cup, Vanity, and Clement L. Hirsch Handicaps, increasing the
weight she carried from 115 lb. in the Santa Margarita to 126 lb. in the
Clement Hirsch. In all these victories, Azeri showed good speed and won by
comfortable margins.
The Breeders’ Cup
Championship races were run at Arlington Park (in the suburbs of Chicago, IL)
on October 26, 2002. The 9 furlong Distaff was the first race of the day, and
it produced the most impressive performance of the afternoon. Azeri was the favorite (at a relatively liberal 9-5
betting odds) over seven rivals that included sophomores Farda Amiga, Imperial Gesture, and Take Charge Lady. Mike Smith made the race very elemental in urging Azeri
right from the start to take control, and she dominated the race despite
setting a fast pace. Imperial Gesture gave chase about a length back with Take
Charge Lady and Farda Amiga further behind in third and fourth place,
respectively. At the top of the stretch, Smith asked Azeri for run, and she responded by drawing away from
her rivals to win by 5 lengths in a rapid final time. Farda Amiga closed to
catch Imperial Gesture just before the finish to claim second by a head while
Take Charge Lady faded badly to finish sixth.
Trainer Laura De Seroux and owner Michael Paulson marveled at this victory that was the
culmination of a year that saw Azeri develop from an allowance horse to a champion.
For Mike Smith, who was earning a reputation
as a rider of top fillies, this was another in what would be a record setting
number of Breeders’ Cup trophies. Azeri’s Eclipse Award for Older Female Horse
was assured, but due to Volponi’s 43-1 upset in the later Breeders’ Cup
Classic, Eclipse voters picked Azeri Horse of the Year despite the fact she had
only raced against her own sex. In lieu of a dominant male horse, Michael
Paulson’s outstanding filly became
the default selection. After the Distaff, Azeri’s record stood at 10 wins and 1
second in 11 starts, and observers were not shy in comparing her to some of the
sport’s great females.
Azeri did not make her
five year-old debut until April 2003 during
the Festival of the South weekend at Oaklawn Park in the 8½ furlong Apple
Blossom Handicap, a race she won in 2002. It was not, however, an easy spot to
start the year. In the field were major winners Take Charge Lady, Mandy’s Gold and Affluent. Take Charge Lady, also making
her 2003 debut, but getting 5 lb. from Azeri, went to the front early and set
moderate fractions. Azeri, partnered with Mike Smith, challenged the leader
around the far turn, but she appeared to have been repulsed in mid-stretch.
Responding to Smith’s urging, the champion re-rallied, and just before the
finish Azeri caught Take Charge Lady for a head triumph. Mandy’s Gold finished
third, 3¼ lengths behind the embattled pair.
In her return to
California, Azeri continued
to dominate her peers and won the Milady Handicap under 125 lb. and the Vanity
and the Clement L. Hirsch Handicaps, both under 127 lb. In winning these 3
races with clear margins, Azeri extended her consecutive victory streak to 11. With
such success, speculation naturally focused on as to whether, where, and when
would Azeri step out of her own sex to face male competition. Laura De Seroux was taking a cautious approach, not ruling out
a future meeting against the other sex, but also not targeting a specific race.
In her final prep for a
try at a repeat victory in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff, Azeri was upset in the Lady’s Secret Handicap. The
defending Horse of the Year finished third (Azeri would be awarded second place
on the disqualification of Elloluv), beaten a total of 2¼
lengths. The winner, Got Koko, was getting a 10 lb. advantage over Azeri’s
128 lb., but the consensus was that Azeri, in losing for the first time in 12
starts, did not show her usual spark in the race. Afterwards, she continued
being readied for the Distaff until some erratic training revealed unsoundness,
forcing Laura De Seroux to withdraw her from the race. Azeri’s owner
Michael Paulson was, in the aftermath, non-committal as to
whether the five year-old would race again. Despite missing the climatic race
for females on dirt, Azeri was once again the Eclipse Champion Older Female.
At the beginning of 2004,
Michael Paulson announced that six year-old Azeri would compete this year. Paulson stated that
the soreness that kept the multiple champion mare out of last year’s Breeders’
Cup Distaff was gone after a period of rest. (This return to racing was over
the objections of Laura De Seroux, and, consequently, Paulson
replaced her with D. Wayne Lukas, who had no hesitation in
mapping an ambitious year schedule starting in spring 2004.)
Azeri’s first start in Lukas’s care was the Apple Blossom Handicap. Despite
winning both the Eclipse Award for Older Female and this race the previous two
years, Azeri was only the third choice in the Apple Blossom, but she proved the skeptics wrong, leading all the way
for a 1½ length victory. The champion’s next start was at Churchill Downs on
Derby Day in the 7 furlong Humana Distaff Handicap where she just failed to
give 11 lb. to oddly named Mayo On the Side, losing by a head.
Azeri, under new rider Pat
Day, was next
entered in the 1 mile Metropolitan Handicap, but in a field that included such
males as last year’s dual classic winner Funny Cide, she faded to eighth as Pico
Central, a son of 1985 Kentucky Derby
victor Spend a Buck, prevailed. The 8½ furlong Ogden Phipps Handicap brought leading
females Azeri, Juddmonte Farms’ Sightseek, and Ogden Mills Phipps’ Storm Flag Flying together. (The only other entry was Passing
Shot.) Sightseek, who was unbeaten at Belmont Park continued her love affair
with New York racetracks with an eased up 3½ length victory over Storm Flag
Flying. Azeri, giving weight to all, was raced into defeat by Sightseek and
faded to fourth, beaten a total of almost 12 lengths.
The three mentioned above
continued their intramurals during the Saratoga meeting. In the 9 furlong Go for
Wand Handicap, Azeri, getting 2 lb. from Sightseek, but giving 3 lb. to Storm
Flag Flying, regained the leadership of the division with a
wire-to-wire 1¾ length victory over Sightseek with Storm Flag Flying another 2
lengths behind. In the 1¼ mile Personal Ensign Handicap, Azeri carrying 122 lb.
was facing Storm Flag Flying (116 lb.) again, but not Sightseek, who after
suffering her first loss at a New York racetrack in the Go for Wand, was
reserved for the Beldame Stakes at Belmont Park which she won in her final
career start. In the race named after her grand dam, Storm Flag Flying, taking
advantage of a rapid pace that softened Azeri, drove by her in the stretch for
a 1¼ length victory. Azeri, game in defeat, held second by a ½ length over Nevermore.
Azeri was then
shipped to Kentucky where she scored a straightforward 3 length victory in the
Spinster Stakes against weak opposition at Keeneland Race Course.
The big news prior to the
Breeders’ Cup, held this year at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, TX on October
30, was the decision to run Azeri against males in the 1¼ mile Classic. Despite, her towering
reputation, the task seemed formidable as she was facing last year’s Classic
winner, Pleasantly Perfect, Ghostzapper (the darling of the speed handicappers),
Belmont Stakes winner Birdstone, Funny Cide, and the up and coming Roses
in May in the thirteen horse field. Ghostzapper from
his no. 1 post was guided to the lead. Azeri, broke a little slowly
under Pat Day, but she secured an inside position behind Ghostzapper.
Roses in May cruised to be second down the backstretch tracking Ghostzapper’s
moderate pace. Around the far turn, jockey Javier Castellano called on
Ghostzapper, and he slowly drew away from Roses in May. At the finish,
Ghostzapper was 3 lengths in front of Roses In May who had 4 lengths on
Pleasantly Perfect. Azeri, in her absolutely final
start, was a non-threatening fifth at a distance a little beyond her best.
Despite her unplacing in
the Breeders’ Classic, Azeri was voted the Eclipse Award (for the third time)
for Older Female Horse (although I thought Sightseek was more deserving). Michael
Paulson retired Azeri in December 2004, and she joined the broodmare band
at Hill 'n' Dale Farms in Lexingtron, KY. However, due to
financial difficulties, Paulson offered Azeri at auction in 2009, and she was
sold to Japanese owners (for $2.25 million) and currently resides in Japan at Northern
Farm. Her produce record has been spotty with Wine Princess, ironically sired by Ghostzapper, her only graded stakes winner to
date.
In justifying Azeri’s
inclusion on my list of best females, one can point to her stellar record of 17
wins, 4 seconds in 24 starts, three Older Female Horse championships, and one
Horse of the Year award. That she was unplaced in her only two starts against
male horses may have been more of a function of her competing against them as a
six year-old rather than at her peak four year-old season.