American Thoroughbred racehorse
Halo (February 7, 1969 – November 28, 2000) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse and an important Champion sire.
Background
Bred in Kentucky by John R. Gaines, founder of the Breeders Cup, Halo was out of the mare Cosmah (who was the Kentucky Broodmare of the Year in 1974), which made him a half-brother to the Hall of Fame filly Tosmah. His sire was Hail To Reason, the U.S. Champion 2-Year-Old Colt and a great-grandson of the extremely important sire Nearco.[1]
Purchased by Charles W. Engelhard, Jr., owner of Nijinsky, Halo raced under his Cragwood Stable banner.
Racing career
After having little success at age two racing on dirt tracks, in his three-year-old campaign his U.S. Racing Hall of Fame trainer MacKenzie Miller switched him to racing on turf, where he achieved better results. Although never a superstar horse, Halo raced for four years and in 1974, at age five, won the Grade I United Nations Handicap.
Stud record
After retiring from racing, in 1975 Halo was sent to stand at stud at the Maryland division of Windfields Farm, where his progeny included Sunny's Halo and, through his mating with the mare Ballade, Devil's Bag, Glorious Song, and Saint Ballado. In 1984, new majority owners moved Halo to stand at Arthur B. Hancock III's Stone Farm in Paris, Kentucky, where he continued to produce notable offspring, the star of which was Sunday Silence. In all, Halo sired seven champions and 62 stakes winners including two Kentucky Derby winners. Twice, he was the leading sire in North America.
Halo was pensioned in 1997 and died at Stone Farm in 2000 at age thirty-one.[2]
Offspring
Halo was the sire of:[3]
- Sunny's Halo – won 1983 Kentucky Derby
- Sunday Silence – won 1989 Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, Breeders' Cup Classic. The U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee is the most successful sire in the world by progeny earnings
- Devil's Bag – won Champagne Stakes, Laurel Futurity, voted 1983 U.S. Champion 2-Year-Old Colt
- Glorious Song – 1980 & 1981 Canadian Champion Older Female Horse, 1980 United States Champion Older Female Horse, 1980 Canadian Horse of the Year
- Saint Ballado – won 1992 Arlington Classic Stakes, sire of Saint Liam and Ashado
- Goodbye Halo – filly won six Grade I stakes, earned in excess of $1.7 million
- Jolie's Halo – won three Grade I stakes, equaled track record in winning the Philip H. Iselin Handicap, earned in excess of $1.2 million
- Lively One – won Grade I Swaps Stakes, earned in excess of $1.5 million
- Present Value – multiple stakes winner, earned in excess of $1.1 million
- Southern Halo – Leading Sire in Argentina for eleven years, sire of 170 stakes winners.
Grandsire of:
- Agnes Tachyon – Leading sire in Japan (2008)
- Answer Lively – 1998 U.S. Champion 2-Year-Old Colt
- Ashado – Kentucky Oaks, Breeders' Cup Distaff winner, 2004 U.S. Champion 3-Yr-Old filly, 2005 U.S. Champion Older Female Horse
- Deep Impact – won 2005 Japanese Triple Crown, Japan Horse of the Year (2005, 2006), Leading sire of Japan (2012-22); sire of Gentildonna and Contrail
- Devil His Due – multiple Grade I stakes winner, earned in excess of $3.9 million
- Heart's Cry – won the Dubai Sheema Classic and Arima Kinen; sire of Just A Way
- Manhattan Cafe – Leading sire in Japan (2009)
- Saint Liam – won Breeders' Cup Classic, 2005 U.S. Horse of the Year
- Special Week – multiple Grade I winner; sire of Buena Vista
- Stay Gold – won the Dubai Sheema Classic and Hong Kong Vase; sire of Orfevre, Gold Ship, and Oju Chosan
- Taiki Shuttle – 1998 Japan Horse of the Year
- Zenno Rob Roy – Multiple Grade I winner, 2004 Japan Horse of the Year
- Team - Multiple Grade I winner, 1998 Argentinian Horse of the Year
Damsire of:
Pedigree
Halo is inbred 4x4 to Blue Larkspur, meaning Blue Larkspur appears twice in the fourth generation of his pedigree.
References