Search Results
7/24/2025, 7:39:02 AM
>>532468638
And I want every single one of them
And I want every single one of them
7/12/2025, 4:50:05 PM
7/11/2025, 1:47:06 PM
>>715153484
THE LOATHSOME DUNG SNIFFERS.
THE LOATHSOME DUNG SNIFFERS.
7/11/2025, 6:31:44 AM
7/9/2025, 10:50:57 PM
>>530590442
This one?
This one?
7/8/2025, 8:57:49 AM
>>714850921
The FREAKS.
The FREAKS.
7/7/2025, 5:49:54 AM
7/7/2025, 3:26:18 AM
>>714730251
Stay Gold Factoids (2/3)
>Stay Gold started his losing streak after he won the Akanko Tokubetsu on September 6, 1997. The race is an allowance race of under 9 million, which is an equivalent of 2-win class race today.
>The losing streak finally stopped on May 20, 2000 after he won the Meguro Kinen, with 28 races in between.
>He appeared in many heavy prize races at the time. However, when he was being introduced in the paddack, his best achievement was always “winning the Akanko Tokubetsu”, a sharp contrast to many other horses who may already have multiple titles.
>He received the moniker of “The supreme commander of Akan-ko” because of this.
>This is obviously a parody of Special Week’s “The supreme commander of Japan”.
>“Akan” is the name of a lake in Hokkaido, but it also means “hopeless” in Kansai dialect, so Akan-ko can mean “hopeless dude / hopeless kid”.
>He is famous for being a late bloomer, only reaching his peak at 7Y.
>He ran from 1996-2001, competed many famous horses in 36 heavy prize races (20 of them were GI races.)
>He is the first Japanese-bred, Japanese trained horse to win a foreign GI race.
>Fathered Dream Journey, Fenomeno, Gold Ship, Nakayama Festa, Orfevre, Meiner Neos, El Dorado, Red Reveur, Admire Lead, Rainbow Line, Win Bright, Indy Champ, and Oju Chosan the legendary jump horse.
Stay Gold Factoids (2/3)
>Stay Gold started his losing streak after he won the Akanko Tokubetsu on September 6, 1997. The race is an allowance race of under 9 million, which is an equivalent of 2-win class race today.
>The losing streak finally stopped on May 20, 2000 after he won the Meguro Kinen, with 28 races in between.
>He appeared in many heavy prize races at the time. However, when he was being introduced in the paddack, his best achievement was always “winning the Akanko Tokubetsu”, a sharp contrast to many other horses who may already have multiple titles.
>He received the moniker of “The supreme commander of Akan-ko” because of this.
>This is obviously a parody of Special Week’s “The supreme commander of Japan”.
>“Akan” is the name of a lake in Hokkaido, but it also means “hopeless” in Kansai dialect, so Akan-ko can mean “hopeless dude / hopeless kid”.
>He is famous for being a late bloomer, only reaching his peak at 7Y.
>He ran from 1996-2001, competed many famous horses in 36 heavy prize races (20 of them were GI races.)
>He is the first Japanese-bred, Japanese trained horse to win a foreign GI race.
>Fathered Dream Journey, Fenomeno, Gold Ship, Nakayama Festa, Orfevre, Meiner Neos, El Dorado, Red Reveur, Admire Lead, Rainbow Line, Win Bright, Indy Champ, and Oju Chosan the legendary jump horse.
7/7/2025, 2:18:32 AM
7/7/2025, 1:59:52 AM
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