Dead Certain (horse)


Dead Certain was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. In a racing career which lasted from May 1989 until September 1990 she won five of her twelve races. She was one of the best two-year-old fillies in Britain in 1989 when she won four of her six races including the Queen Mary Stakes, Lowther Stakes and Cheveley Park Stakes. In the following year she competed mainly in sprint races and recorded another major success when she won the Prix Maurice de Gheest. After her retirement from racing she had some success as a broodmare. Her last foal was born in 2008.

Background

Dead Certain was a bay mare with no white markings bred in the United Kingdom by Fulke Johnson Houghton. She was sired by Absalom, a grey sprinter who won the Cornwallis Stakes in 1977, the Haydock Sprint Cup in 1978 and the Diadem Stakes in 1979. The best of Absalom's other progeny was probably Absalom's Lady, a leading National Hunt mare who won the Christmas Hurdle in 1994. Dead Certain's dam Sirnelta won three races over middle distances and produced several other winners including Fire Top, who won twelve races. Sirnelta was a great-granddaughter of Satanella, a broodmare whose other descendants have included Chief Singer, Winged Love and Pleasantly Perfect.
During her racing career, Dead Certain was owned by Commander G G "Toby" Marten and trained by David Elsworth at Whitsbury near Fordingbridge in Hampshire. Dead Certain was a very temperamental and difficult filly to train: Elsworth recalled "She was the kind that you really needed to keep a lid on, Peter Maughan and Rodney Boult did a great job, otherwise she'd have boiled over".

Racing career

1989: two-year-old season

Dead Certain began her racing career in the five furlong Lady Caroline Stakes at Windsor Racecourse on 8 May 1989 in which she started 11/10 favourite but was beaten two lengths into second by the Richard Hannon-trained Between the Sticks. Two weeks later she started favourite for a maiden race over the same distance at Salisbury Racecourse and recorded her first success, leading from the start and accelerating in the final furlong to win by one and a half lengths from Love Returned, with a gap of eight lengths back to the other five runners. On her next appearance the filly was moved up in class for the Group Three Queen Mary Stakes at Royal Ascot in June. The National Stakes winner Princess Taufan started favourite ahead of Shagudine and Please Believe Me with Dead Certain, ridden by Steve Cauthen fourth choice on 8/1. She was among the leaders from the start, went to the front two furlongs out and won by one and a half lengths from Please Believe Me with Performing Arts in third.
In the Cherry Hinton Stakes at Newmarket Racecourse in July, Dead Certain was moved up to six furlongs for the first time and started third favourite behind the highly-regarded Chimes of Freedom. Ridden by Ray Cochrane she took the lead in the closing stages but was caught on the line and beaten a short head by Chimes of Freedom, to whom she was conceding five pounds. Cauthen resumed the ride when the filly started 5/4 favourite for the Group Two Lowther Stakes at York Racecourse on 24 August. Princess Taufan and Please Believe Me were again in opposition as well as the Princess Margaret Stakes runner-up Routilante and the Michael Stoute-trained Fire and Shade. Dead Certain took the lead from the start, drew away in last quarter mile and won "comfortably" by two and half lengths from Routilante.
On 4 October at Newmarket, Dead Certain was one of an eleven horse field to contest the Cheveley Park Stakes, which was then the only Group One race in Britain restricted to juvenile fillies. Chimes of Freedom started favourite after following up her win in the Cherry Hinton with a victory in the Moyglare Stud Stakes. Dead Certain was the 11/2 second choice in the betting whilst the other runners included Kissogram Girl, Mademoiselle Chloe, Haunting Beauty and Tabdea. Ridden by Cash Asmussen, she started quickly before settling in second place behind In The Papers. She took the lead two furlongs out and stayed on strongly in the closing stages to win by three quarters of a length from Line of Thunder with Chimes of Freedom a head away in third.

1990: three-year-old season

On her three-year-old debut, Dead Certain was stepped up in distance for the Fred Darling Stakes over seven furlongs at Newbury Racecourse in April. She started favourite but after leading for five furlongs she dropped back and finished tailed-off last of the eight runners behind Salsabil. After a two-month break the filly returned to sprinting and was matched against colts and older horses in the Cork and Orrery Stakes at Royal Ascot. She led throughout the race but was caught in the final strides and beaten a head by the four-year-old colt Great Commotion. She was then moved up to the highest class for the Group One July Cup at Newmarket and finished sixth of the nine runners behind Royal Academy. In August, Dead Certain was sent to France for the Prix Maurice de Gheest over 1300 metres at Deauville Racecourse. Her four opponents were Machiavellian, Rock City, Whippet and Pole Position. Ridden by Asmussen, she took the lead 300 metres from the finish and won by a length and a short head from Rock City and Pole Position.
Dead Certain failed to reproduce her best form in her last two races. In the Haydock Sprint Cup on 8 September she started third favourite behind Dayjur and Royal Academy but refused to co-operate with her jockey Alan Munro, throwing her head in the air and finishing tailed-off last of the nine runners. In the Diadem Stakes three weeks later she ran well for half a mile but faded quickly and finished twelfth of the fourteen runners behind the French-trained colt Ron's Victory.

Breeding record

Dead Certain was retired from racing to become a broodmare. She produced thirteen foals and nine winners between 1992 and her death in 2008: