Determine
SireAlibhai
GrandsireHyperion
DamKoubis
DamsireMahmoud
SexStallion
Foaled1951
CountryUnited States
ColourGray
BreederDr. Eslie Asbury
OwnerAndrew J. Crevolin
TrainerWilliam Molter
Record44: 18-7-9
EarningsUS$573,360
Major wins
San Franciscan Handicap (1953)
Robert O'Brien Handicap (1953)
Santa Anita Derby (1954)
Bay Meadows Derby (1954)
Golden Gate Handicap (1954)
Debonair Stakes (1954)
San Felipe Handicap (1954)
San Gabriel Handicap (1954)
San Jose Handicap (1954)
Oakland Handicap (1954)
Peter Clark Handicap (1954)
Santa Anita Maturity (1955)
Golden Gate Mile Handicap (1955)
Malibu Sequet Stakes (1955)
Inglewood Handicap (1955) American Classic Race wins:
Kentucky Derby (1954)
Last updated on September 9, 2008

Determine (April 7, 1951 – September 27, 1972), was an American Thoroughbred race horse. In a racing career which lasted from 1953 through 1955, the California-trained colt ran forty-four times and won eighteen races. His best season was 1954 when he became the first gray horse to win the Kentucky Derby.

Background

Determine was sired by the British stallion Alibhai a son of the 1933 Epsom Derby and St. Leger Stakes winner Hyperion. Alibhai's other progeny included Your Host and Flower Bowl. Determine's dam was Koubis, born with a cleft palate. Her breeder, Dr. Eslie Asbury, used specially designed instruments to repair her palate in a unique operation, but she was never raced. Koubis was a granddaughter of the mare Swing On, the dam of Seabiscuit, and was also related to Equipoise and Intentionally.[1]

Bred to Alibhai, Koubis produced a colt so small that the man who bought him for $12,000, a California automobile dealer named Andrew J. Crevolin, said he "…must have been standing in a hole when he inspected the colt." His breeder offered to take him back, but Crevolin refused, explaining that he might be letting a Kentucky Derby winner get away. The colt was sent into training with William Molter in California.

Determine, a soft gray in color, grew to a little over fifteen hands and never weighed more than 900 pounds. At the time of his Derby win he was described in the press as being a "pint-sized colt"[2] and "a little package of dynamite".[3]

Racing career

In his two-year-old season Determine won prize money which totaled more than double his purchase price. Overall, it was a modest year, but when he turned three, with no break in training from the year before, Determine was always in stakes company and was never out of the money. In more than one race, his small size got him through holes, and his light weight made him nimble in cramped situations.

After Determine won the Santa Anita Derby as well as a few other important West Coast stakes races, Crevolin wanted to send him to Kentucky for the Derby. But his trainer, Wille Molter, with a large stable to manage, was reluctant to take the risk, believing that the race was too hard on a young horse so early in the year. Trainer and owner went back and forth over this decision until Determine made it for them by winning more races. He was flown to Kentucky, and in the space of four days ran in two races. On April 27, 1954, he competed in the Derby Trial, running side by side with Hasty Road in the stretch. Determine matched the much larger Hasty Road stride for stride, although Hasty Road won by a head in a new track record time of 1:35 for the mile.[2] The show horse was eleven lengths back.

On May 1, Determine, who had been flown in from California shortly before the race,[4] was ridden by Ray York in the 1954 Kentucky Derby. He was the second choice of the 100,000 crowd at odds of 4/1 with Correlation, another Californian colt, starting the 3/1 favourite.[3] Right out of the gate, York was almost unseated. Timely Tip, who had won the Arkansas Derby, cut over badly from the outside. In what Churchill Downs describes as one of the roughest Derbys ever run, Determine stayed on his feet, and York stayed in the saddle. Hasty Road was well in the lead, but Determine caught him 1/16 of a mile from the finish and won by a length and a half, becoming the first gray to win the Derby.[2] As the colt had never been entered in the Belmont Stakes there was no hope of completing the Triple Crown, and shortly after the Derby it was announced that Determine would miss the Preakness Stakes, which was won in his absence by Hasty Road. Molter had explained that as Determine was a late foal and had already run nine times in 1954, he did not want to risk over-racing him.[4]

Back in California, Determine was sent out against older horses. Losing a few races, he was found to have an abscessed jaw and was taken out of training. When he came back, he was heavily weighted, which took its toll on him. Even so, he won four stakes races and retired with winnings of $573,360.

Stud record

Determine proved to be a good sire. His son Decidedly won the 1962 Kentucky Derby. Warfare, out of War Whisk, was a solid campaigner. Also, Determine was damsire to Hall of Fame filly Bold 'n Determined.

Determine died in September 1972 and is buried at Rancho Jonata, Buellton, California.[5]

Pedigree

Pedigree of Determine (USA), gray stallion 1951[6]
Sire
Alibhai

ch. 1938

Hyperion

ch. 1930

Gainsborough Bayardo
Rosedrop
Selene Chaucer
Serenissima
Teresina

ch. 1920

Tracery Rock Sand
Topiary
Blue Tit Wildfowler
Petit Bleu
Dam
Koubis

gr. 1946

Mahmoud

gr. 1933

Blenheim Blandford
Malva
Mah Mahal Gainsborough
Mumtaz Mahal
Brown Biscuit

br. 1936

Sir Andrew Sir Gallahad III
Gravitate
Swing On Whisk Broom II
Balance (Family: 5-j)[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "Miami - Family 5-j". Bloodlines.net. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  2. 1 2 3 "Determine makes history winning Kentucky Derby". Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. May 3, 1954. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  3. 1 2 "Determine wins Kentucky Derby with fast stretch run". Reading Eagle. May 2, 1954. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  4. 1 2 "Determine, Derby victor, skips Preakness". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. May 4, 1954. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  5. "Grave Matters Thoroughbreds". Tbheritage.com. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  6. "Determine pedigree". equineline.com. 2012-05-08. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
  • The History of Thoroughbred Racing in America, by William H.P. Robertson, Bonanza Books, New York
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