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BC Mile hero Royal Academy dies in Australia
Royal Academy first hit the headlines when Vincent O'Brien bid a sales-topping $3.5 million for him at the 1988 Keeneland July Selected Yearling Sales. In addition to being a very handsome individual, he had the attraction of being out of Storm Cat's granddam Crimson Saint. Royal Academy proved a very sound investment for Classic Thoroughbreds Plc. Although Nijinsky's progeny were usually noted for their stamina, O'Brien, who died in 2009, took the bold decision to run him in the six-furlong Group 1 July Cup. As so often, O'Brien's judgment proved spot on and he gained his first top-level success. Royal Academy then finished a good second to the exceptional sprinter Dayjur in the Group 1 Sprint Cup at Haydock before ending his career in a blaze of glory when carrying a back-from-retirement Lester Piggott to a stirring neck victory in the Breeders' Cup Mile. Earlier in his three-year-old season, Royal Academy was successful in the Group 3 Tetrarch and a close second in the Group 1 Irish Two Thousand Guineas. He retired with a mark of 7-4-2-0, $791,003. Royal Academy began his stallion career at Coolmore at a fee of 30,000 Irish guineas in 1991. His four first-crop group winners were headed by Oscar Schindler and there was at least one Group1 winner in each of his first five Irish crops, thanks to the efforts of Ali-Royal, Carmine Lake, Sleepytime, Zalaiyka, Val Royal, and Lavery. Royal Academy also stood at Coolmore's American branch, Ashford Stud, resulting in among others, Bullish Luck, a star in Hong Kong who also won the Group 1 Yasuda Kinen in Japan. His Group 1 winners in Australia included Black Caviar's sire Bel Esprit, Serious Speed and Kenwood Melody. As a broodmare sire, Royal Academy has been represented by multiple classic winner Finsceal Beo and last year's leading French juvenile Dabirsim.
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