Deputy
Minister, a champion racehorse and
sire, died today at Ohio State University
Veterinary Hospital. He was 25. The son of
Vice Regent was expected to arrive back at
Brookdale Farm near Versailles, Ky., Friday
night where he was to be buried in the farm's
cemetery.
The
stallion had a sinus problem for several weeks
and during scoping, a mass was detected. The
tumor was obstructing Deputy Minister's airway.
"He
shipped to Ohio State on Tuesday (Sept. 7) after
a biopsy was performed here," Ric Waldman,
who managed the horse for Windfields Farm, said.
"Everything moved quickly once it was confirmed
by two labs. We made a plan to attempt to treat
it and implemented that fairly quickly."
Waldman
said the mass was determined to be a squamous
cell carcinoma.
"He
was the best breeding horse I ever saw. He was
prepotent," said Brookdale owner Fred Seitz.
"He was a member of our farm family --
he was a true blessing to this place."
Deputy
Minister was bred by Centurion Farms, which
originally raced him. Part interest was later
sold to Kinghaven Farm and together, they later
sold a majority interest in the horse to Due
Process Stable. He was produced from the Bunty's
Flight mare Mint Copy.
After
he was retired to stand at Windfields Farm in
Maryland, the nursery bought four shares and
later acquired seven more shares.
Deputy
Minister was champion juvenile in both Canada
and the U.S in 1981 and was also Canada's Horse
of the Year.
He
stood his first five seasons at Windfields and
moved to Brookdale in the fall of 1988.
Deputy
Minister was the leading sire by progeny earnings
in both 1997 and 1998. To date, he has sired
81 stakes winners and the earners of about $70
million.
Besides
being an Eclipse Award winning juvenile, he
has sired three Eclipse Award winning 2-year-olds:
Open Mind, Go For Wand, and Dehere. His other
top runners includes Breeders Cup Classic (gr.
I) winner Awesome Again, Belmont Stakes (gr.
I) winner Touch Gold, Travers Stakes (gr. I)
winner Deputy Commander, and Kentucky Oaks (gr.
I) winner Keeper Hill.
Deputy
Minister covered 71 mares this year and 64 have
been confirmed in foal.
"I
remember vividly when he arrived here at Brookdale,"
Seitz said. "Windfields was closing down
in Maryland. I had bred several mares myself
to him up there. When they decided to close
down, they did not want to own a farm in Kentucky
but they wanted to maintain his management.
We had one stallion at the time (Greinton).
I was very interested in standing him. Deputy
Minister came here along with Imperial Falcon.
It was a wonderful relationship.
"He
was a very unusual horse," Seitz added.
"He had so much character and class. He
was a tough, masculine horse. He was a handful,
but in a good sense. It was his strength of
character that came through."
Seitz
said the whole horse would be buried in the
farm's cemetery behind the stallion barn. He
is the first male horse to be buried in the
cemetery, joining the broodmares Sweet Alliance,
Ballade, Solar Slew, Brown Berry, and Raise
the Standard.
Seitz
said Deputy Minister was closest to his longtime
groom, Victor Espinoza, who would become the
farm's manager and stallion manager.
"He
was a great stallion and most importantly
his presence will be felt for years to come
through his sons and his daughters,"
Waldman said.
At
the time of his death, Deputy Minister's
stud fee was $100,000.
Deputy
Minister
By Vice Regent—Mint Copy, Bunty’s
Flight
Career record/earnings:
22-12-2-2, $696,964
Graded stakes wins: 1981 Young America
Stakes (G1), 1981 Laurel Futurity
(G1), 1983 Donn Handicap (G2), 1983
Tom Fool Stakes (G2).
Honors: Champion
two-year-old colt in Canada and U.S.
(1981); Horse of the Year in Canada
(1983); Leading North American general
sire (1997-98).
Sire summary: 20
crops, 1,007 foals of racing age,
723 starters, 504 winners, 81 stakes
winners, 39 graded stakes winners,
six champions, progeny earnings of
$70,098,867.
Best progeny: Open
Mind, seven-time Grade 1 winner and
champion two and three-year-old filly
in 1988-89; Go for Wand, seven-time
Grade 1 winner and champion two- and
three-year-old filly in 1989-90; Dehere,
two-time Grade 1 winner and champion
two-year-old colt in1993; Mongol Warrior,
multiple group winner and 1996 Spanish
champion imported three-year-old colt;
Diva’s Debut, Canada’s
champion older mare
in 1990; Hello Seattle, Canadian Group
1 winner and Canada’s champion
two-year-old filly in 1999; Awesome
Again, 1998 Breeders’ Cup
Classic (G1) winner; Deputy Commander,
1997 Travers Stakes (G1)
winner and Breeders’ Cup Classic
runner-up; Touch Gold, 1997 Belmont
Stakes (G1) winner; and Keeper Hill,
seven-time Grade 1 winner
and winner of 1998 Kentucky Oaks (G1). |