Three-Year-Old Efforia Beats Stellar Field in Grand Prix Arima Kinen
Race favorite Efforia prevailed in this year’s Arima Kinen, registering his third G1 victory following his Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000 Guineas) and Tenno Sho (Autumn) triumphs. Defeated only once in his seven career starts, the Epiphaneia colt now reigns at the pinnacle of his foes as he tops the list of the most money earned in the 2021 season. As a three-year-old, his earnings of 719,347,000 yen stands in second behind Orfevre’s record (805,524,000 yen) in 2011. Both trainer Yuichi Shikato and jockey Takeshi Yokoyama claimed their fourth JRA-G1 win following their Tenno Sho (Autumn) victory with the colt in October. Takeshi’s father is active jockey Norihiro Yokoyama who also won the Arima Kinen in 1996 and makes them the second father and son to win the title following Kunihiko and Yutaka Take.
The field broke evenly with Panthalassa gunning for the lead followed by Win Kiitos and Titleholder while Efforia was relaxed on the heels of biggest rival Chrono Genesis in mid-pack. As the pace setter’s five-length lead began to fizzle rounding the final turns, Efforia slowly made headway from the outside, hit the top of the lane in front of Chrono Genesis fourth from the frontrunner, took over the lead after the furlong marker and shook off Deep Bond, who showed a stubborn challenge beside him, in the final strides for a 3/4-length victory.
“He wasn’t in the same perfect condition today as in the Tenno Sho (Autumn) in which he was 120%, but his potential proved he still could give a remarkable performance even with the added distance—2,500 meters was the longest he’s ever run. Unlike in the Derby, he was relaxed and positioned well and was able to show his true strength,” commented jockey Takeshi Yokoyama after the race before bowing deeply in front of the fans.
Fifth pick Deep Bond, after sitting in sixth and three lengths ahead of Efforia, moved up with the field after the third corner and was driven to enter the lane in third. Skillfully guided by jockey Ryuji Wada to the outside, the Kizuna colt ran strongly dueling with the eventual winner in the last furlong but failed to keep up while holding off the rest of the field by 1/2 length for second.
Defending champion and second choice Chrono Genesis was settled in around seventh behind Deep Bond and right in front of Efforia, chased the winner into the straight and showed effort battling Stella Veloce on her outside, but was unable to threaten the top two finishers and capped off an extraordinary racing career in third.
Other Horses:
4th: (9) Stella Veloce—sat behind winner in 10-11th, showed tied fastest late kick, belatedly
5th: (16) Titleholder—tracked leader in 2nd, inherited lead at final corner, weakened in last 100m
6th: (11) Aristoteles—raced 2nd from rear, gradually made headway, showed effort until 100m out
7th: (13) Akai Ito—traveled 3-wide in 12th, circled wide, lacked needed kick
8th: (3) Mozu Bello—was off slow, ran in 13th, switched to outside at early stretch, never threatened
9th: (8) You Can Smile—settled 3rd from rear along rails, angled out, passed tired rivals
10th: (15) Kiseki—sat 3-wide around 7th, advanced to 3rd up to final corner, outrun in stretch
11th: (6) Win Kiitos—took economic trip around 3rd, fell back at stretch
12th: (12) Shadow Diva—prominent early around 3rd, faded after final corner
13th: (2) Panthalassa—set pace, opened gap over five lengths at one point, outrun in last 300m
14th: (1) Persian Knight—saved ground around 5th, faded after 200m pole
15th: (4) Melody Lane—hugged rails around 10th inside winner, never fired
16th: (14) Asamano Itazura—trailed in far rear, no factor
THE 66TH ARIMA KINEN (G1)
3-year-olds & up, 2,500 meters (about 12.5 furlongs), turf, right-handed
Sunday, December 26, 2021 Nakayama Racecourse 11th Race Post time: 15:25
Total prize money: ¥ 648,000,000 (about US$ 6,172,000 <US$1=¥105>)
3-y-o: 55kg (about 121 lbs), 4-y-o & up: 57kg (about 126 lbs),
2kg allowance for Fillies & Mares, 2kg allowance for Southern Hemisphere-bred born in 2018
Course Record: 2:29.5 Race Record: 2:29.5 [Zenno Rob Roy (JPN, by Sunday Silence), 2004]
Safety factor: 16 runners Going: Good to Firm Weather: Fine
FP |
BK |
PP |
Horse
Jockey |
S&A
Color
Wgt |
Odds
(Fav) |
Margin
(L3F) |
Sire
Dam
(Dam’s Sire) |
Owner
Breeder
Trainer |
1 |
5 |
10 |
Efforia (JPN)
Takeshi Yokoyama |
C3
b.
55.0 |
2.1
(1) |
2:32.0
(35.9) |
Epiphaneia
Katies Heart
(Heart's Cry) |
Carrot Farm Co., Ltd.
Northern Farm
Yuichi Shikato |
2 |
3 |
5 |
Deep Bond (JPN)
Ryuji Wada |
C4
br.
57.0 |
20.9
(5) |
3/4
(36.1) |
Kizuna
Zephyranthes
(King Halo) |
Shinji Maeda
Murata Bokujo
Ryuji Okubo |
3 |
4 |
7 |
Chrono Genesis (JPN)
Christophe Lemaire |
M5
g.
55.0 |
2.9
(2) |
1/2
(36.0) |
Bago
Chronologist
(Kurofune) |
Sunday Racing Co., Ltd.
Northern Racing
Takashi Saito |
4 |
5 |
9 |
Stella Veloce (JPN)
Mirco Demuro |
C3
d.b.
55.0 |
7.9
(3) |
1/2
(35.9) |
Bago
Oh My Baby
(Deep Impact) |
Tsuyoshi Ono
Northern Racing
Naosuke Sugai |
5 |
8 |
16 |
Titleholder (JPN)
Kazuo Yokoyama |
C3
b.
55.0 |
10.2
(4) |
1-1/2
(36.9) |
Duramente
Mowen
(Motivator) |
Hiroshi Yamada
Okada Stud
Toru Kurita |
6 |
6 |
11 |
Aristoteles (JPN)
Yutaka Take |
C4
b.
57.0 |
47.7
(9) |
3
(36.4) |
Epiphaneia
Blue Diamond
(Deep Impact) |
Hideko Kondo
Hideko Kondo
Hidetaka Otonashi |
7 |
7 |
13 |
Akai Ito (JPN)
Hideaki Miyuki |
F4
br.
55.0 |
31.8
(6) |
1/2
(36.6) |
Kizuna
Wadjet
(Symboli Kris S) |
Koji Oka
Koji Oka
Kazuya Nakatake |
8 |
2 |
3 |
Mozu Bello (JPN)
Kenichi Ikezoe |
H5
b.
57.0 |
146.2
(14) |
2-1/2
(37.1) |
Deep Brillante
Harlan's Ruby
(Harlan's Holiday) |
Capital System Co., Ltd.
Murata Bokujo
Naoyuki Morita |
9 |
4 |
8 |
You Can Smile (JPN)
Yusuke Fujioka |
H6
b.
57.0 |
150.6
(16) |
1/2
(36.9) |
King Kamehameha
Mood Indigo
(Dance in the Dark) |
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Co., Ltd.
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Inc.
Yasuo Tomomichi |
10 |
8 |
15 |
Kiseki (JPN)
Kohei Matsuyama |
H7
d.b.
57.0 |
43.8
(7) |
Neck
(37.6) |
Rulership
Blitz Finale
(Deep Impact) |
Tatsue Ishikawa
Shimokobe Farm
Yasuyuki Tsujino |
11 |
3 |
6 |
Win Kiitos (JPN)
Yuji Tannai |
F4
d.b.
55.0 |
70.0
(12) |
4
(38.5) |
Gold Ship
Excuse
(Boston Harbor) |
Win Co., Ltd.
Cosmo View Farm
Yoshitada Munakata |
12 |
6 |
12 |
Shadow Diva (JPN)
Norihiro Yokoyama |
M5
d.b.
55.0 |
144.5
(13) |
Nose
(38.4) |
Heart's Cry
Diamond Diva
(Dansili) |
Three H Racing Co., Ltd.
Northern Racing
Makoto Saito |
13 |
1 |
2 |
Panthalassa (JPN)
Yuji Hishida |
C4
b.
57.0 |
45.5
(8) |
1/2
(39.1) |
Lord Kanaloa
Miss Pemberley
(Montjeu) |
Hiroo Race Co., Ltd.
PANGLOSS Y.K.
Toshihiro Hirosaki et al.
Yoshito Yahagi |
14 |
1 |
1 |
Persian Knight (JPN)
Cristian Demuro |
H7
d.b.
57.0 |
62.3
(11) |
3/4
(38.8) |
Harbinger
Orient Charm
(Sunday Silence) |
G1 Racing Co., Ltd.
Oiwake Farm
Yasutoshi Ikee |
15 |
2 |
4 |
Melody Lane (JPN)
Mirai Iwata |
M5
b.
55.0 |
146.8
(15) |
3-1/2
(38.8) |
Orfevre
Mowen
(Motivator) |
Makio Okada
Okada Stud
Naoyuki Morita |
16 |
7 |
14 |
Asamano Itazura (JPN)
Hironobu Tanabe |
C3
d.b.
55.0 |
51.1
(10) |
1-1/4
(38.4) |
Victoire Pisa
High Touch Queen
(King Halo) |
Juichi Hoshino
Juichi Hoshino
Takahisa Tezuka |
FP: Final Position / BK: Bracket Number / PP: Post Position / S&A: Sex & Age / Wgt: Weight (kg) / DH: Dead Heat / L3F: Time of Last 3 Furlongs (600m)
Color: b.=bay / bl.=black / br.=brown / ch.=chestnut / d.b.=dark bay / d.ch.=dark chestnut / g.=gray / w.=white
Note1: |
No Foreign Contenders |
Note2: |
Figures quoted under Odds are shown in form of decimal odds (single unit is ¥100), and Fav indicates the order of favorites. |
Turnover for the Race alone: ¥ 49,097,246,400 Turnover for the Day: ¥ 62,876,558,500 Attendance: 6,140
PAY-OFF (for ¥100)
Win |
No.10 |
¥ 210 |
Bracket Quinella |
3-5 |
¥ 1,000 |
Quinella |
5-10 |
¥ 1,740 |
Place |
No.10 |
¥ 110 |
Quinella Place |
5-10 |
¥ 540 |
Exacta |
10-5 |
¥ 2,070 |
No.5 |
¥ 280 |
7-10 |
¥ 170 |
Trio |
5-7-10 |
¥ 1,440 |
No.7 |
¥ 130 |
5-7 |
¥ 730 |
Trifecta |
10-5-7 |
¥ 7,180 |
Winner= 7 starts, 6 wins, 1 second / Added money: ¥ 303,360,000 / Career earnings: ¥ 736,636,000
Fractional time (sec./furlong): |
6.9 - 11.3 - 11.6 - 11.5 - 11.9 - 12.5 - 12.6 - 12.2 - 12.4 - 12.4 - 12.2 - 12.0 - 12.5 |
|
Last 4 furlongs: 49.1 Last 3 furlongs: 36.7 |
Positions at each corner: |
1st corner |
2=16-(6,12)(1,5)(7,15)-10-(4,9)-13-3-8,11-14 |
|
2nd corner |
2=16-6(1,12)5(7,15)10,4,9,13,3-8,11-14 |
|
3rd corner (2nd lap) |
2,16(1,6)12(5,15)(7,10)(4,3,9)13(8,11)14 |
|
4th corner (2nd lap) |
(*2,16)-(1,15)(5,6,10)(7,9)(12,13)11(4,3)8,14 |
Note1: |
Underlined bold number indicates the winning horse. |
Note2: |
Horse numbers are indicated in the order of their positions at each corner, with the first position listed first. Two or more horses inside the same parentheses indicate that they were positioned side by side. Hyphens between the horse numbers indicate that there is distance between the former and the latter. The asterisk indicates a slight lead. |
* Arima Kinen (The Grand Prix) (G1)
Established in 1956 under the name “Nakayama Grand Prix,” the race was renamed to Arima Kinen (Arima Memorial) a year later after the sudden passing of the second JRA president, Yoriyasu Arima. Arima initiated the idea of holding an attractive event at Nakayama Racecourse, where a new grandstand had just been completed at that time, in an attempt to create a race that would receive as much attention as the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) held at Tokyo Racecourse. The Arima Kinen was designed to be a season-end Grand Prix, in which the runners are selected by fan poll—an “All-Star” event in Japanese racing. Following last year, the fans could only cast their votes online to select the ten most popular runners, as the voting at JRA racecourses and off-track betting sites was cancelled due to COVID-19. Among the horses entered in the race, ten runners with the most votes are entitled to run in the race while the rest of the field is determined in order of earnings. Foreign runners that won the Japan Cup (G1, 2,400m) became eligible to race in the Arima in 2000, then the race was designated as an international G1 race and open to a maximum of six foreign runners in 2007.
Recent Arima Kinen victors such as Orfevre (JPN, by Stay Gold; ’13), Gentildonna (JPN, by Deep Impact; ’14), Kitasan Black (JPN, by Black Tide; ’17) and Lys Gracieux (JPN, by Heart’s Cry; ’19) have capped off their stellar racing careers with an impressive win in the race.
This year’s contenders that were among the top ten horses voted included; Efforia (1st), victor of both Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000 Guineas, G1, 2,000m) and Tenno Sho (Autumn) (G1, 2,000m) this year; Chrono Genesis (2nd), who aimed to become first horse to claim four consecutive Grand Prix races; Titleholder (3rd) and Akai Ito (7th), respective winners of the Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger, G1, 3,000m) and the Queen Elizabeth II Cup (G1, 2,200m); and 2017 Kikuka Sho champion Kiseki (9th).
Other notable contenders included Deep Bond (15th), three-time G2 winner including the Prix Foy (2,400m), Stella Veloce (18th), who marked two thirds and a fourth in this year’s Triple Crown, and Aristoteles (23th), victor of the American Jockey Club Cup (G2, 2,200m) in January.
Horses that were ranked among the top ten but passed up their entry were: Sodashi (JPN, F3, by Kurofune; 4th); Shahryar (JPN, D3, by Deep Impact; 5th); Lei Papale (JPN, F4, by Deep Impact; 6th); Akaitorino Musume (JPN, F3, by Deep Impact; 8th); and Uberleben (JPN, F3, by Gold Ship; 10th). |
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