2022 News

May 1, 2022

RSS


Titleholder Claims Wire-to-Wire Seven-Length Victory in Tenno Sho (Spring)
Tenno Sho (Spring) (G1)

Tenno Sho (Spring) (G1)

Second favorite Titleholder won this year’s Tenno Sho (Spring) with the first wire-to-wire victory since Kitasan Black in 2016 to mark his second G1 win. This is the seventh time that the Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger) winner has claimed the Tenno Sho (Spring) since 2015, with 2018 being the only exception. Four-year-old Titleholder concluded his three-year-old season with a fifth in the Arima Kinen (G1, 2,500m) and came off a win in his only start this year, the Nikkei Sho (G2, 2,500m), on March 26. This win marked trainer Toru Kurita’s second JRA-G1 win following last year’s Kikuka Sho title with this horse. Jockey Kazuo Yokoyama registered his seventh graded and first G1 victory by capturing this Tenno Sho (Spring) title which his grandfather Tomio (former jockey) and father Norihiro (active jockey) had also won.

Breaking sharply from a wide stall, Titleholder quickly assumed command to set the pace. The son of Duramente continued to lead the field, widening the gap between the rest of the field by more than five lengths at one point. While slowing down the pace at the backstretch, the bay colt found another gear at the lane and produced an impressive turn of speed that marked the fastest last three furlongs to cross the wire with an overwhelming seven-length margin.

“I felt that he was in good form when I rode him in the post parade so I just believed in him and concentrated on riding him in good rhythm. We were able to slow down the pace in the backstretch to conserve his stamina and I was not worried about the horses behind us in the last stretch. I’m happy that I was able to win this race with Titleholder, rather than being able to win my first G1 title. I think he will get stronger and stronger going forward,” commented Kazuo Yokoyama.

Race favorite and last year’s runner-up Deep Bond made a good break from the outermost stall and traveled by the rails in fourth. Continuing to race in good striking position, the son of Kizuna made bid rounding the last two corners to enter the lane in third, exerted a strong late charge that timed the third fastest of the field and, while no match for the winner, overtook T O Royal 100 meters out to come in second again this year.

Fourth pick T O Royal sat in third or fourth in front of the favorite on the rails, switched to the outside before the third corner (2nd lap) and closed the gap between the leader to one and a half lengths but failed to keep up with the winner’s accelerating speed and surrendered the runner-up seat 100m out while holding off the rest of the field by 3-1/2 lengths.

Other Horses:
4th: (9) Heat on Beat—positioned around 9th, showed belated charge, never threatened top finishers
5th: (1) Iron Barows—sat 3-wide around 6th behind favorite, no match for top finishers
6th: (11) Meiner Fanrong—hugged rails around 9th, angled out for stretch run, even paced
7th: (13) Robertson Quay—ran around 12th, circled wide, lacked needed kick
8th: (14) Valcos—was off slowly, made headway to 9th, unable to reach contention
9th: (6) Melody Lane—settled around 7th, overtaken by rivals turning final corner, even paced
10th: (10) Tosen Cambina—trailed in rear, never threatened while improving position
11th: (5) Machaon d'Or—raced around 13-14th early, advanced in backstretch, failed to respond
12th: (3) Divine Force—sat 2nd from rear, passed tiring rivals after 3rd corner
13th: (4) You Can Smile— took economic trip 3rd or 4th from rear, showed little at stretch
14th: (8) Crescendo Love—chased leader in 2nd, used up at top of stretch
15th: (12) Hayayakko—traveled 3rd or 4th from rear, circled wide, never fired
16th: (2) Heart's Histoire—saved ground around 7th, gradually made headway, nothing left at stretch
17th: (15) Tagano Diamante—advanced to 3rd or 4th from wide draw, faded before 3rd corner
FF: (17) Silver Sonic—unseated rider soon after break

THE 165TH TENNO SHO (SPRING) (G1)
4-year-olds & up, 3,200 meters (about 16 furlongs), turf, right-handed
Sunday, May 1, 2022           Hanshin Racecourse     11th Race         Post time: 15:40
Total prize money: ¥ 432,000,000 (about US$ 3,757,000 <US$1=¥115>)
4-y-o & up: 58kg (about 128 lbs), 2kg allowance for Fillies & Mares,
1kg allowance for Southern Hemisphere-bred born in 2018
Course Record: 3:14.7         Race Record: 3:12.5 [Kitasan Black (JPN, by Black Tide), Kyoto, 2017]
Safety factor: 18 runners      Going: Good                Weather: Fine

FP BK PP Horse
Jockey
S&A
Color
Wgt
Odds
(Fav)
Margin
(L3F)
Sire
Dam
(Dam’s Sire)
Owner
Breeder
Trainer
1 8 16 Titleholder (JPN)
Kazuo Yokoyama
C4
b.
58.0
4.9
(2)
3:16.2
(36.4)
Duramente
Mowen
(Motivator)
Hiroshi Yamada
Okada Stud
Toru Kurita
2 8 18 Deep Bond (JPN)
Ryuji Wada
H5
br.
58.0
2.1
(1)
7
(37.1)
Kizuna
Zephyranthes
(King Halo)
Shinji Maeda
Murata Bokujo
Ryuji Okubo
3 4 7 T O Royal (JPN)
Yuji Hishida
C4
b.
58.0
9.9
(4)
1
(37.4)
Leontes
Meisho Ohi
(Manhattan Cafe)
Tomoya Ozasa
Mishima Bokujo
Inao Okada
4 5 9 Heat on Beat (JPN)
Kenichi Ikezoe
H5
b.
58.0
12.4
(5)
3-1/2
(37.0)
King Kamehameha
Marcellina
(Deep Impact)
Shadai Race Horse Co., Ltd.
Shadai Farm
Yasuo Tomomichi
5 1 1 Iron Barows (JPN)
Shu Ishibashi
H5
b.
58.0
7.8
(3)
2
(37.7)
Orfevre
Palace Rumor
(Royal Anthem)
Hirotsugu Inokuma
Northern Racing
Hiroyuki Uemura
6 6 11 Meiner Fanrong (JPN)
Masami Matsuoka
H7
br.
58.0
82.9
(14)
2-1/2
(37.9)
Stay Gold
Meine Theresia
(Roses in May)
Thoroughbred Club Ruffian Co., Ltd.
Big Red Farm
Takahisa Tezuka
7 7 13 Robertson Quay (JPN)
Takuma Ito
H5
b.
58.0
45.4
(10)
3/4
(37.5)
Rulership
Tokai Megami
(Sunday Silence)
Kazutaka Hosaka
Nagahama Bokujo
Toru Hayashi
8 7 14 Valcos (JPN)
Kosei Miura
H5
b.
58.0
126.1
(17)
1/2
(37.6)
Novellist
Land's Edge
(Dance in the Dark)
Kazuhiro Sasaki
Northern Farm
Yasuo Tomomichi
9 3 6 Melody Lane (JPN)
Mirai Iwata
M6
b.
56.0
123.3
(16)
Neck
(38.0)
Orfevre
Mowen
(Motivator)
Makio Okada
Okada Stud
Naoyuki Morita
10 5 10 Tosen Cambina (JPN)
Kota Fujioka
H6
b.
58.0
146.7
(18)
2-1/2
(37.8)
Deep Impact
Cambina
(Hawk Wing)
Takaya Shimakawa
Shadai Farm
Yukihiro Kato
11 3 5 Machaon d'Or (JPN)
Kohei Matsuyama
C4
g.
58.0
13.6
(6)
5
(39.3)
Gold Ship
Million Wishes
(Darshaan)
Haruhiko Seki
Northern Racing
Teiichi Konno
12 2 3 Divine Force (JPN)
Hironobu Tanabe
H6
b.
58.0
67.9
(12)
Nose
(38.7)
Workforce
Tsukuba Beauty
(Zenno Rob Roy)
Haruya Yoshida
Oiwake Farm
Ryo Terashima
13 2 4 You Can Smile (JPN)
Yusuke Fujioka
H7
b.
58.0
78.6
(13)
2-1/2
(39.4)
King Kamehameha
Mood Indigo
(Dance in the Dark)
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Co., Ltd.
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Inc.
Yasuo Tomomichi
14 4 8 Crescendo Love (JPN)
Hiroyuki Uchida
H8
b.
58.0
117.2
(15)
2-1/2
(40.7)
Stay Gold
Higher Love
(Sadler's Wells)
Hiroo Race Co., Ltd.
PANGLOSS Y.K.
Toru Hayashi
15 6 12
B
Hayayakko (JPN)
Yutaka Take
H6
w.
58.0
58.1
(11)
Neck
(39.6)
King Kamehameha
Marshmallow
(Kurofune)
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Co., Ltd.
Kaneko Makoto Holdings Inc.
Sakae Kunieda
16 1 2 Heart's Histoire (JPN)
Christophe Lemaire
H6
d.b.
58.0
31.7
(7)
7
(41.6)
Heart's Cry
Retsina
(Captain Steve)
Masaru Shimada
Northern Racing
Sakae Kunieda
17 7 15 Tagano Diamante (JPN)
Hideaki Miyuki
H6
ch.
58.0
41.6
(9)
DS
(41.5)
Orfevre
Tagano Reventon
(King Kamehameha)
Ryoji Yagi
Niikappu Tagano Farm Ltd
Ippo Sameshima
  8 17 Silver Sonic (JPN)
Yuga Kawada
H6
g.
58.0
35.8
(8)
FF Orfevre
Air Thule
(Tony Bin)
Shadai Race Horse Co., Ltd.
Shadai Farm
Yasutoshi Ikee
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: ¥ 21,511,162,100       Turnover for the Day: ¥ 30,795,014,200       Attendance: 11,109

PAY-OFF (for ¥100)
Win No.16 ¥ 490 Bracket Quinella 8-8 ¥ 450 Quinella 16-18 ¥ 520
Place No.16 ¥ 180 Quinella Place 16-18 ¥ 270 Exacta 16-18 ¥ 1,230
No.18 ¥ 120 7-16 ¥ 950 Trio 7-16-18 ¥ 1,580
No.7 ¥ 260 7-18 ¥ 500 Trifecta 16-18-7 ¥ 6,970

Winner= 11 starts: 5 wins, 2 seconds / Added money: ¥ 203,780,000 / Career earnings: ¥ 589,331,000

Fractional time : 12.7 - 11.9 - 11.9 - 12.0 - 12.0 - 11.9 - 12.2 - 12.8 - 13.3 - 12.9 - 12.3 - 12.0 - 11.9 - 11.5 - 11.7 - 13.2
(sec./furlong) Last 4 furlongs: 48.3            Last 3 furlongs: 36.4

Positions at each corner: 1st corner 16-8,15(7,18)-1(2,6)(11,9,14)13,5(4,12)-3-10
2nd corner 16,8,15(7,18)(2,1)6(11,14)9(4,13)5(3,12)-10
3rd corner (2nd lap) 16-(8,7)18,2,1(11,6)(9,14,5)(4,13,12,15)3,10
4th corner (2nd lap) 16,7-18-(8,2,1)(9,11)5,6(4,13,14)(10,3,12)=15

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.

 

* Tenno Sho (Spring) (G1)

The forerunner of the Tenno Sho was established in 1905 under the name “Emperor’s Cup”, in which the winner received the silver comport bestowed by the Emperor. The race was renamed to “Teishitsu Goshoten Kyoso” the following year. The race became biannual events—held at Hanshin in spring and at Tokyo in autumn—a year after the establishment of the Japan Racing Society (the forerunner of the Japan Racing Association) in 1936 and was officially named the “Tenno Sho” since the autumn of 1947. The Tenno Sho (Spring) became the ultimate competition to determine the champion stayer, having altered its distance to 3,200 meters in 1938 while its counterpart in autumn run over 2,000 meters is one of the biggest middle-distance events contested between the proven older horses with the addition of the three-year-old hopefuls. The venue of the spring version was also moved to Kyoto Racecourse in 1948 and has been shifted to Hanshin due to the renovation of Kyoto’s grandstand since last year.
The Tenno Sho (Spring) was designated as an international race in 2005 and welcomed Makybe Diva (GB, by Desert King) of Australia as the first foreign contender the same year. She finished seventh and subsequently went on to make history back home by winning her third consecutive Melbourne Cup (G1, 3,200m). Red Cadeaux (GB, Cadeaux Genereux) was the latest foreign contender of this race in 2014, running for the second time after finishing third in the 2013 edition, but was unable to perform over the firm turf and finished 14th.
Here are the recent performances of this year’s runners: Deep Bond, runner-up of last year’s edition, successfully claimed back-to-back title in the Hanshin Daishoten (G2, 3,000m, Mar.20), followed by Iron Barows (2nd), Silver Sonic (3rd) and Machaon d’Or (4th). Last year’s Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger, G1, 3,000m) victor Titleholder commenced his four-year-old season with his third graded victory in the Nikkei Sho (G2, 2,500m, Mar.26) where Heat on Beat, and 2021 Stayers Stakes (G2, 3,600m) winner Divine Force were third and 11th, respectively, while T O Royal extended his winning streak to four in the Diamond Stakes (G3, 3,400m, Feb.19).

Tenno Sho (Spring) (G1) related contents