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Sottsass

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Sottsass
Racing silks of Peter Brant
SireSiyouni
GrandsirePivotal
DamStarlet's Sister
DamsireGalileo
SexColt
Foaled24 March 2016[1]
CountryFrance
ColourChestnut
BreederEcurie des Monceaux
OwnerWhite Birch Farm
TrainerJean-Claude Rouget
Record12: 6-1-1
Earnings£1,856,890
Major wins
Prix de Suresnes (2019)
Prix du Jockey Club (2019)
Prix Niel (2019)
Prix Ganay (2020)
Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (2020)

Sottsass (foaled 24 March 2016) is a French Thoroughbred racehorse. In a career which ran from August 2018 to October 2020 he ran nine times and won five races, including three at the highest Group One level. He showed promise as a two-year-old in 2018 when he won the second of his two starts. In the following year he was beaten on his seasonal debut but then developed into a top-class middle distance performer with wins in the Prix de Suresnes, Prix du Jockey Club and Prix Niel. In his four-year-old season in 2020 he won the Prix Ganay before concluding his career by winning the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

Background

Sottsass is a chestnut colt with a white blaze and a white sock on his right hind leg bred in France by the Ecurie Des Monceaux. In August 2017 the yearling was consigned to the Arqana sale at Deauville and was bought for €340,000 by Oceanic Bloodstock.[2] He entered the ownership of Peter Brant's White Birch Farm and was sent into training with Jean-Claude Rouget. The colt was named by Brant after the Italian architect and designer Ettore Sottsass.[3]

He was from the fifth crop of foals sired by the Aga Khan's stallion Siyouni whose biggest win came in the 2009 running of the Prix Jean-Luc Lagardère. His other offspring have included Laurens and Ervedya.[4] Sottsass is the third foal of his dam Starlet's Sister who had previously produced Sistercharlie and My Sister Nat (Prix Bertrand de Tarragon). She showed little racing ability, failing to win in three starts in France,[5] but was a great-granddaughter of Alea who produced Noalcoholic and was the female-line ancestor of the Preakness Stakes winner Red Bullet.[6]

Racing career

2018: two-year-old season

Sottsass began his racing career in a contest for unraced juveniles over 1600 metres at Deauville Racecourse on 21 August in which he came home fourth of the nine runners, more than eight lengths behind the Freddy Head-trained winner Lone Peak. On 26 October at Clairefontaine Racecourse the colt started at odds of 2.7/1 for a maiden race and recorded his first success as he won by three lengths from Flop Shot.[7]

2019: three-year-old season

On his three-year-old debut Sottsass was stepped up in class for the Group 3 Prix La Force over 1800 metres at Longchamp Racecourse on 7 April and came home fifth behind Shaman in a seven-runner field. In the Listed Prix de Suresnes over 2000 metres on soft ground at Chantilly Racecourse on 2 May he was ridden as in all of his previous starts by Christophe Soumillon. He was made the 2.1/1 favourite and won by six and a half lengths from Battle of Toro.[8]

Cristian Demuro took the ride on 2 June when Sottsass contested the Group 1 Prix du Jockey Club over 2100 metres at Chantilly and went off the 13/1 fifth choice in a fifteen-runner field. The Poule d'Essai des Poulains winner Persian King started favourite, while the other fancied runners included Zarkallani (ridden by Soumillon), Slalom (Prix Noailles), Roman Candle (Prix Greffulhe), Raise You (Fairway Stakes), Cape of Good Hope (Blue Riband Trial Stakes) and Kick On (Feilden Stakes). Sottsass raced in mid-division as Motamarris set the pace, but began to make rapid progress approaching the last 400 metres. He gained the advantage 200 metres from the finish and stayed on well to win "readily" by two lengths from Persian King.[9] After the race Demuro said "Without really trying, I found myself directly behind Persian King, and he took me into the race with his acceleration. I knew he was the horse to beat, and once I was past him, it was easy".[10]

After a break of more than three months Sottsass returned on 15 September for the Group 2 Prix Niel (a major trial race for the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe) over 2400 metres at Longchamp and started the 1/2 favourite against four opponents. With Demuro in the saddle he was restrained in the early stages before making progress on the inside rail in the straight. He briefly looked unlikely to obtain a clear run but accelerated through a gap to take the lead in the closing stages and won by one and a quarter lengths from Mutamakina with Mohawk a short neck away in third place.[11] On 6 October Sotsass was made the 6.6/1 second favourite for France's most prestigious race, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe over 2400 metres on very soft ground at Longchamp. Ridden by Demuro he raced in mid-division before making steady progress in the straight and finishing third behind Waldgeist and Enable.

In the 2019 World's Best Racehorse Rankings Sottsass was given a rating of 123, making him the sixteenth best racehorse in the world and the best three-year-old.[12]

2020: four-year-old season

On 11 May, the day on which French racing restarted after the COVID-19 outbreak Sottsass began his third campaign in the Group 2 Prix d'Harcourt over 2000 metres on very soft ground at Longchamp. Starting the 2/5 favourite he was restrained towards the rear before moving into contention in the straight but was unable to accelerate in the closing stages and came home fourth of the nine runners behind Shaman, Way To Paris and Simona. In the Prix Ganay over 2100 metres at Chantilly on 14 June, Sottsass started favourite against four opponents, namely Shaman, Way To Paris, Simona and Palomba. With Demuro in the saddle, he raced in third place before going to the front 200 metres from the finish and held off a late challenge from Way To Paris to win by a head. Rouget's assistant Jean-Bernard Roth commented "He's an emotive horse and he didn't run up to form in his comeback, not for the first time. But where would be the point in having the horse at 100 per cent on May 11? What I liked was how calm he was today. He was a very backward horse who is now maturing and I think he'll reach that full maturity this year. You don't have to cover him up anymore, you can ride him any way you want. He's just a very good horse and he has that acceleration that the good ones have."[13]

After a two-month break Sottsass returned in the Group 3 Prix Gontaut-Biron over 2000 metres at Deauville Racecourse in August in which he started favourite but was beaten a neck into second place by the five-year-old gelding Skalleti, with the pair finishing well clear of the other five runners. Colin Keane took the ride when the colt was sent to Ireland to contest the Irish Champion Stakes over ten furlongs at Leopardstown Racecourse on 12 September. Starting the 5/1 third choice in the betting he tracked the leaders for most of the way but was unable to make any significant progress in the straight and came home fourth behind Magical, Ghaiyyath and Armory.[14]

On 4 October Sottsass, with Demuro back in the saddle, made his second attempt to win the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and went off the 7.3/1 fourth choice in the betting behind Enable, Stradivarius and Persian King. The other seven contenders, in a race run on heavy ground, were In Swoop (German Derby), Raabihah (Prix de Psyche), Gold Trip (Prix Greffulhe), Way To Paris, Deirdre, Chachnak (Prix du Prince d'Orange) and Royal Julius (Premio Presidente della Repubblica). Sotsass settled in third place as Persian King set a slow pace and was ideally places in the closely-bunched field when the pace increased abruptly entering the straight. He overtook Persian King 200 metres from the finish, saw off the challenge of Gold Trip on the outside and repelled the late charge of In Swoop to win by a neck.[15] After the race Rouget said We've worked all year for this. Our entire aim for 2020 was this, and it's not been easy with the changes to the calendar. We've never been able to do quite what we wanted with the horse. But these last few days, I've really felt he was in top form. It was a difficult choice to go to Leopardstown, but we decided that the shorter distance would sharpen him up and it was the right choice. Everything was designed to have him at 100% today and the result is there", while Demuro commented "I think it was won at the start... when I realized we were not going that fast, I felt confident he could outsprint them in the straight. It was a big help and I knew his turn of foot would kill off the others."[16]

Two days after his victory in the Arc it was announced that Sottsass had been retired from racing and would begin his career as a breeding stallion at the Coolmore Stud in 2021. Peter Brant commented "I am a big believer that a horse should go to stud when they are ready, when they look fine like a shiny penny, and not beat up. The horse has done everything in the world I could have asked him for... He’s a beautiful horse."[17]

Pedigree

Pedigree of Sottsass (FR), chestnut colt, 2016[1]
Sire
Siyouni (FR)
2007
Pivotal (GB)
1993
Polar Falcon (USA) Nureyev
Marie d'Argonne
Fearless Revival Cozzene
Stufida
Sichilla (IRE)
2002
Danehill (USA) Danzig
Razyana
Slipstream Queen (USA) Conquistador Cielo
Country Queen
Dam
Starlet's Sister (IRE)
2009
Galileo (IRE)
1998
Sadler's Wells (USA) Northern Dancer (CAN)
Fairy Bridge
Urban Sea (USA) Miswaki
Allegretta (GB)
Premiere Creation (FR)
1997
Green Tune (USA) Green Dancer
Soundings
Allwaki (USA) Miswaki
Alloy (FR) (Family: 16-h)[6]
  • Sottsass is inbred 4 × 4 to Miswaki, meaning that this stallion appears twice in the fourth generation of his pedigree.

References

  1. ^ a b "Sottsass pedigree". Equineline.
  2. ^ "Arqana Deauville August Yearlings 2017 Lot 79". Racing Post.
  3. ^ Burton, Scott (5 October 2019). "Rouget: Jockey Club hero Sottsass is my best chance yet of Arc glory". Racing Post.
  4. ^ "Siyouni – Stud Record". Racing Post.
  5. ^ "Starlet's Sister – Race Record & Form". Racing Post.
  6. ^ a b "Lily Agnes – Family 16-h". Thoroughbred Bloodlines. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  7. ^ "Prix Hippoween result". Racing Post. 26 October 2018.
  8. ^ "Prix de Suresnes result". Racing Post. 2 May 2019.
  9. ^ "Prix du Jockey Club result". Racing Post. 2 June 2019.
  10. ^ Burton, Scott (2 June 2019). "Sottsass Downs Persian King to Win Prix du Jockey Club". The Blood-Horse.
  11. ^ "Prix Niel result". Racing Post. 15 September 2019.
  12. ^ "The 2019 World Thoroughbred Rankings". IFHA. Retrieved 2020-01-22.
  13. ^ "Sottsass back to form in Prix Ganay". Racing Post. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  14. ^ "Irish Champion Stakes result". Racing Post. 12 September 2020.
  15. ^ "Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe result". Racing Post. 4 October 2020.
  16. ^ Burton, Scott (4 October 2020). "Sottsass Sails Home in Arc". The Blood-Horse.
  17. ^ Burton, Scott (6 October 2020). "'He's done everything': Arc hero Sottsass retired to stand at Coolmore". Racing Post.