These photos are from Braulio Baeza's webpage. He was very lucky to have ridden some of the best horses in history, including Shuvee, a 1966 filly who rocked out in racing! Her parents were Nashua and Levee by Hill Prince. Much of what I'll write about her here is from the Blood Horse's Top 100 Thoroughbreds of the 20th Century series. She earned #70 for her impressive deeds.
Here are the first words written about her in this history book, "She looked like a stallion, ate like a stallion, and trained like a stallion. Best of all, Shuvee could race like a stallion too." Nice, real nice. I bet she'd be annoyed because she probably thought of herself as a sweet ol' big girl! She grew to 16.1 hands and was a monster-sized girl!
Anyway, she won amazing races by huge margins. She liked to swing from behind and then just leap into the lead. She won the Filly Triple Tiara -- the Triple Crown for girls in 1969, and then was voted Champion Older Mare in 1970 and 1971. Ron Turcotte rode her to a second straight victory in the Jockey Club Gold Cup -- no other filly or mare has won that race ever, let alone twice! Her big competitors at the time were Gallant Bloom and Process Shot.
Her trainer, W.C. "Mike" Freeman, said of her, "Boy, she was tough. You couldn't make her back off the feed tub or anything. She'd eat anything you put in front of her. And she needed more training than any filly I saw!" Her owner dad said, "She never took a bad step in her life and never had any physical problems at all through her racing career. Real extraordinary mare -- for a big filly, particularly. Never bucked her shins. Just a real freak!" This strange praise was indeed remarkable because she had a long 4-year racing career (1968-1971) and was a big horse, so it would have been easy for her to hurt those long legs! Her final record was 44: 16(15), 10(6), 6(4)! She was such a talented girl that she could run great at any distance -- 8 furlongs to 2 miles!
When she retired, she died fairly young in 1986 due to complications in foaling. She died a champion! She was inducted into the National Racing Hall of Fame in 1975, the Aiken Training Center Hall of Fame upon its opening in 1977, earned 2 Eclipse Awards for Champion Older Mare in 1970 and 1971, and the Filly Triple Crown! No wonder she's #70 of the top 100 racehorses of the 20th century!
My girls are related to Shuvee most immediately through Nasrullah, Princequillo, Ultimus, and Sir Gallahad!
You can read more about this champion mare at the following links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuvee
or
http://www.racingmuseum.org/hall/horse.asp?ID=136
or
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuvee_Handicap