Sun Cap


Sun Cap was a French Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. After failing to win as a two-year-old in 1953 she won the Prix Penelope in the following April and then recorded her biggest win in the Epsom Oaks. After her retirement from racing she produced several minor winners but no top-class performers.

Background

Sun Cap was a grey mare bred in France by Robert Forget. During her racing career she was owned by Forget's wife and trained at Chantilly by Reg Carver.
Her sire Sunny Boy was a good racehorse but a much better breeding stallion and was the Leading sire in France in 1954. His other foals included Sica Boy and Tamanar. Sun Cap's dam Cappellina, from whom she inherited her grey colour, won only two minor races from thirty-two starts but did better as a broodmare, producing the Prix Jean Prat winner La Varende, as well as Bebob, the female-line ancestor of Stop The Music and Spend A Buck's sire Buckaroo.

Racing career

1953: two-year-old season

As a two-year-old in 1953 Sun Cap ran four times but failed to win a race.

1954: three-year-old season

Sun Cap began her second season by winning the Prix Penelope over 2100 metres at Saint-Cloud Racecourse on 18 April at odds of 30/1.
The 176th running of the Oaks Stakes over one and a half miles at Epsom Racecourse on 4 June attracted a field of twenty-one fillies with Sun Cap, ridden by the Australian jockey Rae Johnstone, being one of four French challengers. The betting for the race was unusually open with Altana and Sybil's Niece starting 8/1 joint-favourites ahead of Bara Bibi and Amora. Sun Cap took the lead approaching the final furlong and drew away to win the race "with the utmost ease" by six lengths from Altana with Philante taking third to complete a 1-2-3 for France.

Assessment and honours

The independent Timeform organisation awarded Sun Cap a rating of 123 in 1954.
In their book, A Century of Champions, based on the Timeform rating system, John Randall and Tony Morris rated Sun Cap an "inferior" winner of the Oaks.

Breeding record

At the end of her racing career Sun Cap was bought by Lady Macdonald-Buchanan and was retired to become a broodmare. She produced at least eight foals and five winners between 1956 and 1968: