Panique (horse)
Panique | |
---|---|
Sire | Alarm |
Grandsire | Eclipse |
Dam | Maggie B. B. |
Damsire | Australian |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1881 |
Country | United States |
Breeder | Aristides Welch |
Owner | Dwyer Brothers |
Trainer | James G. Rowe Sr. |
Earnings | $63,875 |
Major wins | |
Saratoga Stakes (1883) Withers Stakes (1884) Triple Crown wins: Belmont Stakes (1884) | |
Last updated on March 5, 2022 |
Panique (1881–1895) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning the 1884 Belmont Stakes.
Background
[edit]Panique was bred at Erdenheim Farm in Pennsylvania by Aristides Welch. His dam was Maggie B. B., a daughter of leading sire Australian who had already given birth to two stakes winners. His sire was Alarm.[1]
Racing career
[edit]As a two-year-old, Panique won the Saratoga Stakes, and came second in the Kentucky Stakes.[1] As a three-year-old, he won the Withers Stakes. The Dwyer Brothers, Philip J. Dwyer and Michael F. Dwyer, were so impressed by the colt's victory that they purchased him from his previous owner, Commodore Kitteon, on June 5, the night before the Belmont, for $14,000. The following day, Panique went into the Belmont the favorite. Another strong competitor in the race, Knight of Ellersie, had been off his feed and coughing in the days before the race. Panique ended up winning the race, beating out Knight of Ellersie by a neck. The race was called "the grandest Belmont ever run".[2]
After his victory in the Belmont, Panique did not show the same skill he had previously. He came third in the Kenner Stakes,[1] but was known as an inconsistent horse. He was later sold for a much smaller sum than the Dwyers had originally paid for him.[3]
Later life
[edit]In 1885, Panique broke down during a race, ending his racing career.[3] He started to become better known for his aggressive behavior than his prior accomplishments in racing. At some point, he ended up in the hands of Oscar Rudolph Gleason, a renowned horse trainer who specialized in dealing with particularly unruly horses. Gleason agreed with the assessment that Panique was "the worst stallion ever handled in the city of New York".[4]
Panique died in the spring of 1895.[1]
Pedigree
[edit]Sire Alarm 1869 |
Eclipse
1855 |
Orlando | Touchstone |
---|---|---|---|
Vulture | |||
Gaze | Bay Middleton | ||
Flycatcher | |||
Maud
1859 |
Stockwell | The Baron | |
Pocahontas | |||
Countess of Albemarle | Lanercost | ||
Velocipede Mare | |||
Dam Maggie B. B. 1867 |
Australian
1858 |
West Australian | Melbourne |
Mowerina | |||
Emilia | Young Emilius | ||
Persian | |||
Madeline
1849 |
Boston | Timoleon | |
Sister to Tuckahoe | |||
Magnolia | Glencoe I | ||
Myrtle |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Panique Horse Pedigree". Thoroughbred Database. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ Sowers, Richard (February 25, 2014). The Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes A Comprehensive History. McFarland Incorporated. pp. 30–31. ISBN 9780786476985. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ a b The Breeder's Gazette A Weekly Publication Devoted ... to the Interests of Live-stock Breeders Volume 7. J. H. Sanders Publishing Company. 1885. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ Gleason, Oscar, Rudolph (1890). Oscar R. Gleason's Practical Treatise on the Breaking and Taming of Wild and Vicious Horses. University of California. p. 67. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
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