Red Bullet (foaled 13 April 1997 in Kentucky) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning the 2000 Preakness Stakes.

Red Bullet
SireUnbridled
GrandsireFappiano
DamCargo
DamsireCaro (IRE)
SexStallion
Foaled1997
CountryUnited States
ColourChestnut
BreederAdena Springs
OwnerStronach Stables
TrainerJoe Orseno
Record14: 6-2-2
Earnings$1,161,920
Major wins
Gotham Stakes (2000)
Foggy Road Stakes (2002)
Triple Crown classic race wins :
Preakness Stakes (2000)
Last updated on August 30, 2007

Background edit

Red Bullet is a chestnut horse bred and raced by auto parts magnate Frank Stronach. He was sired by Unbridled, the 1990 American Champion 3-Year-Old Male Horse and winner of that year's Breeders' Cup Classic. His dam, Cargo, was a daughter of French multiple Grade 1 winner Caro. Red Bullet was trained during his racing career by Joe Orseno.

Racing career edit

Red Bullet did not race at age two. Sent to the track at age three in 2000, he started six times, winning his first three starts. In that third race, Red Bullet ran in the Grade II Gotham Stakes at Aqueduct Racetrack and won handily, finishing the mile in 1:34.27. He then ran second to Fusaichi Pegasus in the 2000 Wood Memorial Stakes, a Grade I race also at Aqueduct. Afterward, his handlers felt it was not in the colt's best interest to run in the Kentucky Derby. Instead, they prepared him for the Preakness, the second leg of the U.S. Triple Crown series.

Preakness Stakes edit

In the Preakness Stakes, Kentucky Derby winner Fusaichi Pegasus was made the heavy odds-on betting favorite at 3–10. Red Bullet was listed as the second choice at 6–1 in the mile and three sixteenths classic at Pimlico Race Course. In the race, Red Bullet started slowly from post four. Jockey Jerry Bailey immediately restrained the colt passing the stands in seventh place six and a half lengths back in the small field of eight. Running into the clubhouse turn, he took an awkward step and drifted back to last, ten lengths behind the leader, Hugh Hefner. The fractions were fast at :46-3/5 for the first half and 1:11-1/5 for the six furlongs. Then Red Bullet gradually worked his way forward, passing Impeachment and Captain Steve on the back stretch. Moving into the far turn, Red Bullet started weaving between other colts, overtaking them one at a time until he passed the two leaders, Fusaichi Pegasus and speedster High Yield. At the top of the stretch, he took over the lead and started drawing away from the Kentucky Derby champion with every stride. He won by 3¾ lengths over Fusaichi Pegasus, who was a head in front of both Impeachment and Captain Steve for the third and fourth spots. Red Bullet paid $14.40 to win in front of a capacity crown of 111,821 at the Baltimore, Maryland, track.

Later racing edit

Red Bullet's connections, owner Frank Stronach and trainer Joe Orseno, did not enter him in the third leg of the Triple Crown, the 1½ mile Belmont Stakes. They felt his best distance were races that ranged between one mile and a mile and a quarter.

Racing as a four-year-old, Red Bullet won an allowance race out of his three starts and at age five, raced another three times with his best result a win in the Foggy Road Stakes and a second-place finish behind Sir Bear in the 2002 Skip Away Handicap.

Stud record edit

Retired at the end of the 2002 racing season, Red Bullet began stud duty the following year at his owner's Adena Springs South in Williston, Florida.

He is the sire of Fatal Bullet, Canadian Horse of the Year, and Cool Bullet (winner of the Hansel Stakes).[1]

Pedigree edit

Pedigree of Red Bullet
Sire
Unbridled

Bay 1987

Fappiano

Bay 1977

Mr. Prospector
Bay 1970
Raise A Native
Gold Digger
Killaloe
Bay 1970
Dr. Fager
Grand Splendor
Gana Facil

Chestnut 1981

Le Fabuleux
chesnut 1961
Wild Risk
Anguar
Charedi
Brown 1976
In Reality
Magic
Dam
Cargo

Bay 1989

Caro (IRE)

Gray 1967

Fortino
Gray 1959
Grey Sovereign
Ranavalo
Chambord
Chestnut 1955
Chamossaire
Life Hill
Aerturas (FR)

chestnut 1981

Manado
Bay 1973
Captain's Gig
Slipstream
Amiel
Bay 1976
Nonoalco
Alea (Family: 16-h)[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Red Bullet". Thoroughbred Times. Retrieved 9 October 2011.
  2. ^ Morris, Simon; Tesio Power 2000 - Stallions of the World, Syntax Software