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Tom Fool

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Sire
  
Menow

Dam
  
Gaga

Foaled
  
March 31, 1949

Died
  
20 August 1976

Parents
  
Menow

Earnings
  
570,165 USD

Grandsire
  
Pharamond II

Damsire
  
Bull Dog

Country
  
United States

Trainer
  
John M. Gaver, Sr.

Sex
  
Stallion

Tom Fool Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame Tom Fool

Children
  
Buckpasser, Tim Tam, Tompion

History of the game tom fool


Tom Fool (March 31, 1949 – August 20, 1976) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse, a winner of the American Horse of the Year award and a Hall of Fame inductee. He sired the outstanding racehorses Buckpasser and Tim Tam.

Contents

Tom Fool Tom Fool 1953 Horse of the Year

Tom fool 1953 whitney handicap


Background

Tom Fool Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame Tom Fool

He was bred by Duval A. Headley and owned by Greentree Stables. Tom Fool was a bay colt by the racehorse and sire Menow out of Gaga by Pharamond II. He was a half-brother to the good two-year-old Aunt Jinny, and was a great-grandson of the broodmare Laughing Queen, whose other descendants included the Kentucky Derby winner Dust Commander. Greentree Stables purchased Tom Fool privately as a yearling for $20,000.

Racing record

Tom Fool httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Tom Fool was trained by John M. Gaver, Sr. and ridden by Ted Atkinson. In his two-year-old season, he had five wins and two seconds in seven starts, which earned him Champion 2-Year-Old Colt honors for 1951.

Tom Fool Tom Fool Brooklyn Backstretch

After he finished second in the Wood Memorial Stakes at age 3, the horse's veterinarian discovered he had raced with a high fever. The illness sidelined Tom Fool for more than two months, and he missed the Triple Crown races. Although his 1952 season was difficult, he won the majority of his races.

Tom Fool TrueNicks Pedigree Time Machine Tom Fool TrueNicks Thoroughbred

In 1953, a healthy four-year-old Tom Fool was undefeated in ten races, He won at distances ranging from 5½ furlongs to 1¼ miles and became only the second horse to win New York's Handicap Triple Crown: the Metropolitan, Suburban and Brooklyn Handicaps. Tom Fool also won the Whitney Stakes and captured the Pimlico Special by eight lengths. This final start was a win that concluded a perfect four-year-old campaign with 10 stakes wins in as many starts. The Pimlico Special was his fourth consecutive race start in a non-betting race; by this time, few horses were entered against him. In polls to determine Horse of the Year honors, Tom Fool topped polls by the Thoroughbred Racing Association (34 of a possible 37 votes) and Triangle Publications (30 of 31).

Tom Fool Tom Fool 1953 Horse of the Year

Tom Fool retired with a record of 30 starts for 21 wins, 7 seconds and 1 third for earnings of $570,165.

Stud career

Tom Fool was syndicated for $1,750,000, as a stallion and initially stood for a $5,000 service fee. He sired the winners of over 650 races in America and England, with over 30 stakes winners, including:

  • Buckpasser - 1966 U.S. Horse of the Year, U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee
  • Silly Season (USA), England’s leading two-year-old of 1964 and sire of Lunchtime, a good sire in Australia.
  • Tim Tam - won Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee
  • Tompion - multiple stakes winner, including Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, Blue Grass Stakes and Travers Stakes in 1960
  • Tom Fool's bloodline endures in the 2015 U.S. Triple Crown winner, American Pharoah, who is both a sixth- and seventh-generation descendant.

    Honors

    Tom Fool was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1960. In the Blood-Horse magazine ranking of the top 100 U.S. Thoroughbred champions of the 20th Century, he was ranked #11. The Tom Fool Handicap, contested at Belmont Park, is named in his honor.

    Tom Fool retired from stud duties in 1972 and died on 20 August 1976.

    References

    Tom Fool Wikipedia