Postby buckhunter » Wed Aug 24, 2005 8:51 am
I think that the three things that I value most about Indian Ocean are his conformation, his balance, and his personality. He is a very nicely made horse with no significant flaws to my eye. Many horses come with blemishes that they overcome, but that you worry their children may not (offset knees, long pasterns, etc.). When I look at Indian Ocean, none of those areas stand out as "you're gonna have to look closely to see if his children all have that problem." At the same time, he is a remarkably well-balanced individual who, had he stayed sound, would have become a MUCH better racehorse than what he had a chance to show. And in terms of personality, he had an aggression that was not temperamental, and that was blended with an unusually quick intelligence that allowed him to learn from almost every experience.
I saw his first start on video feed, and was a bit disappointed. I had heard that he had been training well, but in his first start it was clear even on video that he was a young horse who was green in his first start. I set him aside in my memory bank to give him time to develop. So I didn't see his next two races. The next time I saw him was working out before the Affirmed, only a month or two after that debut. What impressed me most in that work was not how effortlessly he breezed, but how professionally he cut the corner, switched leads and extended through the lane. This was a racehorse who in a very short space of time had caught on not just on what to do, but on developing technique that allowed him to do it better. He simply was a natural; and he was just beginning to come into his physical ability.
In the Affirmed (if you get a chance watch that video replay), he turned for home between bigger more experienced proven 3yos with a slight lead. Instead of being intimidated, he was LOVING it. Court barely moves on him, and he maintains his slight advantage throughout the lane. While that stretch drive is exciting for anyone who was watching it, watch it again for the last 40 yards. It appears as though four horses battle through the lane. But in the last 40 yards, both Dover Dere and Buzzards Bay are completely finished. I still believe that even at that point Indian Ocean is still toying with Surf Cat as they go under the wire.
His youth hurt him in the Swaps. On the first turn, Court wants to take him back off the pace. I think that was a mistake, though I can understand the thinking at the time if he wanted to avoid being part of duel that would play to 4/5 favorite Don't Get Mad. But Indian Ocean did not rate well off that pace and through the stretch his competitiveness takes the form of sulking the final sixteenth. This is a horse so fit that he would be done blowing after a bullet work before he left the track, but he just galloped home the last part of that race.
I am very confident that his bow was one of those terribly unfortunate injuries that can occur when you switch from one surface to another; the difference between the surface he had trained over in Los Angeles and the somewhat looser Del Mar surface jumped up and bit him.
The hard part there is that if this horse had been around for another year, I have no doubt that he would have blossomed into a legitimate Grade 1 horse, and he would get the mares that accompany those accomplishments. What he shows now is three wins, including a G3, from 5 starts; 100% in the money with a G2 placing. That record is well below his actual ability, but it also compares favorably with a number of lightly-raced individuals who have become important sires. Because I believe he has all the tools of a champion racehorse, I hope that he catches the kind of mares that will give him a chance to prove what his racing record only suggests, but which being around him convinces me is well within his reach.