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Afterlight from the rail|JRA/NAR|Personal |Removal on request

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Tokyo Derby 2026 🥇 FINGER (Gun Runner × Estilo Talentoso(Maclean’s Music)) Finger after the race cool

Tokyo Derby 2026 🥇 FINGER (Gun Runner × Estilo Talentoso(Maclean’s Music)) Finger after the race cool

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Almost everyone around Forever Young — the trainer, the owner, and most of the farm staff — thought he’d be a turf horse. Only the staff who were there at his birth saw something different, believing from the start that he was a dirt horse.

Almost everyone around Forever Young — the trainer, the owner, and most of the farm staff — thought he’d be a turf horse. Only the staff who were there at his birth saw something different, believing from the start that he was a dirt horse.

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Cygames informed owner Fujita about Forever Young becoming an Uma Musume right in the paddock, just before last year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic

Cygames informed owner Fujita about Forever Young becoming an Uma Musume right in the paddock, just before last year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic

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REGALEIRA(Suave Richard x Roca (Harbinger)) made a triumphant comeback in the All Comers (G2/2200m/turf/Nakayama) She is the first 3-yo filly in 64 years to capture the Arima Kinen, and as she showed in the Hopeful Stakes, she truly reigns as the Queen of Nakayama. 📹kontena

REGALEIRA(Suave Richard x Roca (Harbinger)) made a triumphant comeback in the All Comers (G2/2200m/turf/Nakayama) She is the first 3-yo filly in 64 years to capture the Arima Kinen, and as she showed in the Hopeful Stakes, she truly reigns as the Queen of Nakayama. 📹kontena

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Kontenasan_bf's profile picture

On March 19, 2021—his seventy-first birthday—a man walked to the pond on his farm and threw himself into it. He had said it again and again, almost like a prayer: “When I leave this world, I don’t want it to be without winning the Derby. I can’t accept that. I absolutely can’t. It’s nothing like the other G1s. For those of us who live in the world of horses, it’s a race apart.” Yet he never held a single classic title, the Japanese Derby included. His name was Okada Shigeyuki. They called him the Commander. He called himself “the man with Japan’s greatest eye for a horse,” and many agreed. It never felt like boasting. He simply saw too much. He traveled to Britain and America when he was young, quarreled with his family, and built everything from scratch. Big Red Farm. Its satellites. The club. He challenged taboos in Japanese breeding—things no one dared attempt—until those very acts became standard practice. Horses he bought, pedigrees others dismissed, kept turning up in the classics. Again and again. It was as if he could see not just what a horse was, but what it might become. Then came Sunday Silence, and the axis of racing shifted. Okada searched obsessively for a stallion who could surpass him. He looked everywhere, spent heavily, and invested without hesitation. Yet deep down, he knew the truth: Sunday Silence was a once-in-a-lifetime existence. There would be no second. Still, for the sake of the Derby—the dream he could not abandon—he kept struggling. In 2008, on the Japanese Derby, a jockey called him. The colt had been favorite for the Satsuki Sho. Okada had even instructed him to ride with the Derby in mind, saying it was fine not to win the Satsuki. And yet, just before the Japanese Derby, Okada said quietly: “Today, ride however you like. We can’t beat Deep Sky.” The jockey was stunned. From a man who had given everything to the Derby, such resignation felt unbearable. Deep Sky won. That was the curse of possessing the finest eye: he could see not only greatness, but also defeat. He continued to challenge the system—JRA, local racing, entrenched power itself. Cosmo Bulk was his provocation. Favorite for the Satsuki Sho, yet the horse Okada feared most was the tenth choice, Daiwa Major. Daiwa Major won. Later came the era of Deep Impact and King Kamehameha. As they kept claiming the Derby, Okada could only smile bitterly. Northern Farm was simply too strong. And then—at last—a different thread. He managed, somehow, to bring Gold Ship in as a stallion. From his prized broodmare band came a filly: Uberleben. Two months after Okada died, she won the Japanese Oaks. It was the first classic victory for horses connected to him. The first time the dream—his dream—broke the surface of history and became real. After the finish, the jockey Mirco Demuro pointed to the sky. A win offered upward. A message. A payment, long overdue. People from Big Red Farm had brought Okada’s photograph to Tokyo Racecourse, holding it as an altar in a place made of noise and speed. And then, from the rival camp—Northern Farm—Yoshida Shunsuke stepped over, looked at the picture, and said with a rough tenderness that only rivals earn the right to show: “What is this… You should’ve brought a bigger one.” There was someone there—usually composed, always steady—who, at that moment, could not stay standing inside himself. Tears spilled out. Then a sob that escaped the body’s permission. A collapse into grief so loud it startled the air. They had finally won a classic. And the one person who should have been there… wasn’t. Over the racecourse speakers, the announcement came—formal, measured, incapable of hiding what it meant: “Thoroughbred Club Ruffian records its first classic victory. This win is dedicated to Okada Shigeyuki, commander of the Meiner stable, who passed away on March 19 this year.”

𝐊𝐎𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐍𝐀|𝐋𝐕.𝐂✦𝐍🐊

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