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Silent Witness (horse)

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Dam
  
Jade Tiara

Foaled
  
1999

Colour
  
Bay

Species
  
Equus caballus

Sex
  
Gelding

Damsire
  
Bureaucracy (NZ)

Country
  
Australia

Breeder
  
Mr I. K. Smith

Trainer
  
Anthony S. Cruz

Grandsire
  
Conquistador Cielo

Silent Witness (horse) Special edition Silent Witness Octopus Card launched on Sunday

Silent Witness (traditional Chinese: 精英大師; simplified Chinese: 精英大师; pinyin: Jīngyīng Dàshī) (foaled 1 October 1999) was an outstanding Thoroughbred racehorse who won his first 17 starts in sprint races in Hong Kong. He was ranked the world's top sprinter for three seasons.

Silent Witness (horse) wwwlivinglegendsorgauwpcontentuploads20120

He was bred by Mr I. K. Smith and foaled in 1999 at Edinburgh Park Stud near Taree, New South Wales in Australia. Silent Witness is by El Moxie (USA) out of Jade Tiara by Bureaucracy (NZ). Jade Tiara is the dam of nine named horses.

Silent Witness (horse) Racing News 2004 Horse Stud and Racing Thoroughbreds

Racing record

Silent Witness (horse) Silent Witness horse Wikipedia

Silent Witness was trained by Tony Cruz, ridden by Felix Coetzee and owned by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Antonio da Silva.

Silent Witness (horse) International Sprint Trial Photo Release Racing News Horse

He made his debut as a three-year-old at the Sha Tin racecourse in a 1,000 metre race in Hong Kong. Silent Witness won this race by a margin of almost four lengths in the fast time of 57.8 seconds.

Silent Witness (horse) SILENT WITNESS HONG KONG HERO AND ROCK STAR HORSE Fasttrack

Silent Witness was awarded the title of Most Improved Horse and Champion Griffin (inexperienced racehorse) in the Hong Kong Jockey Club awards presentation ceremony in June 2003.

Silent Witness (horse) Silent Witness Star Horses Racecourses amp Entertainment The

In 2003 and 2004 Silent Witness won the internationally contested Hong Kong Sprint race by defeating top horses from Europe, Japan, Australia, and the United States. In the Centenary Sprint Cup (G1), Silent Witness equalled the long-standing Hong Kong record of ten consecutive wins. He also won six other major Group One (G1) Sprints in 2004 and 2005.

After the 17 consecutive wins, he attempted the mile race in the Champions Mile on May 2005 at Sha Tin Racecourse but he was defeated by Bullish Luck by a short head.

He made a second attempt on the mile by going to Tokyo, Japan to participate in the Yasuda Kinen in June. Again, he ran well but was defeated by Asakusa Den'en, a Japanese horse, near the winning post.

A mile was the maximum distance that he could race and win. On 2 October 2005, he took part in the Sprinters Stakes, which is a Group 1 Sprint Race in Japan over 1,200 metres. Silent Witness won the race easily by 1¼ lengths with a time of 1:07.3 seconds, 0.3 seconds slower than the track record time.

For the three years from 2003 to 2005, the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities in Paris ranked Silent Witness the world's fastest sprinter.

The Hong Kong Jockey Club made a website for him, making him the first horse with its own website in Hong Kong. The Jockey Club also sells gifts for him. On 24 April 2005, the day Silent Witness won his 17th consecutive race, the Jockey Club gave memorial caps to people, which led to a trampling incident.

Silent Witness is sometimes compared to another Hong Kong champion, Co-Tack, and the American horse Cigar who won 16 consecutive races.

Silent Witness was retired, after his last race on the Sha Tin Racecourse on 4 February 2007. He is now at Living Legends, the International Home of Rest for Champion Horses located in Woodlands Historic Park, Greenvale, Victoria, Australia.

References

Silent Witness (horse) Wikipedia