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Ghostzapper : ウィキペディア英語版
Ghostzapper

Ghostzapper (foaled April 6, 2000) was a Thoroughbred racehorse, who won the Breeders' Cup Classic in 2004, outdistancing Roses in May by three lengths in a stakes record of 1:59.02. His gate-to-wire Classic victory completed a 4-for-4 season and established him as one of the favorites for the 2004 Eclipse Award for Horse of the Year title, which he went on to win.
Ghostzapper's victory gave trainer Robert J. Frankel his second Breeders' Cup victory in 62 starts and jockey Javier Castellano his first Breeders' Cup win. His overall performance for the year made Ghostzapper the "''World's Top Ranked Horse''" for 2004 as compiled by the World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings.
==2004 Season==

After Ghostzapper's victory in the 2003 Vosburgh, he took time off to recover from quarter cracks. His first 2004 start came on July 4 at Belmont Park in the Tom Fool Handicap. He won the 7-furlong race in 1:20.40, 2/5 seconds off the track record.
Although Ghostzapper was primarily thought of as a sprinter, Frankel decided to point the horse towards the Breeders' Cup Classic run at 1 miles. Before that, Frankel needed to find out how far Ghostzapper could actually run, since he had never been further than 7 furlongs.
Frankel entered him in the Philip H. Iselin Breeders' Cup Handicap at Monmouth Park Racetrack on August 21. It was his first distance race, run at 1 miles. Over a muddy track, Ghostzapper won the race by 10 lengths in 1:47.6. He earned a 128 Beyer Speed rating, one of the highest ever recorded around 2 turns and one of the fastest Beyers recorded since the figures were invented. (Groovy, 1987 American Champion Sprint Horse, was the last horse to break the 130 Beyer Speed Figure, earning 133 and 132 in back-to-back 6-furlong races in 1987.)
Ghostzapper's next race was the Woodward Stakes at Belmont Park on September 11. Saint Liam (eventual 2005 Horse of the Year) ran stride for stride with him down the stretch as the horses bumped several times before Ghostzapper got his head in front in the final few strides.
His final race of 2004 was the Breeders' Cup Classic at Lone Star Park. Returning Breeders' Cup champ Pleasantly Perfect went off at almost identical odds to Ghostzapper, with Ghostzapper a slight favorite. Ghostzapper led the entire way, pulling away in the stretch to a 3-length victory. The final time of 1:59.02 set a new track record and Breeders' Cup Classic record.

Ghostzapper won the 2004 Horse of the Year title, beating Smarty Jones in votes 174-95.
In 2005, owner/breeder Frank Stronach returned Ghostzapper to racing, which was unusual for a previous Horse of the Year winner. Ghostzapper could easily earn $10 million a season as a stud. Stronach said he wanted to give something back to the game by returning Ghostzapper to competition, thus taking the financial risk.
In his debut 2005 race, he won the 112th running of the Grade 1 $750,000 Metropolitan Handicap at Belmont Park.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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