SAINTLY

The "horse from heaven" was a worthy champion for Bart Cummings

Saintly, foaled in 1992 was a legendary Australian Thoroughbred racehorse who was named Australia's champion racehorse in 1997. A giant chestnut gelding by Sky Chase out of All Grace (by Sir Tristram), he was bred by his trainer, Bart Cummings, who owned him in partnership with Malaysian businessman, Dato Tan Chin Nam. Saintly was a flashy chestnut with a giant stride who raced against a crop of high class three-year-olds, including the mighty Octagonal and Filante. According to those close to the Cummings stable, the master trainer kept a close eye on Saintly from the age of two months as he knew the horse was going to be special. His win in the Melbourne Cup was one of the most dominant wins in the history of the race. Saintly gained the moniker 'The horse from heaven' due to his name and his partnership with jockey Darren Beadman. He was the hallmark of a champion. He won $3.8 million in prizemoney and the racing fans loved him. Saintly won the Melbourne Cup, the Cox Plate, the Australian Cup in 1996 and probably should have won a Japan Cup.

Saintly broke his maiden as a two-year-old, on 19 April 1995, and returned in the latter part of the spring, at three, where he won three races, including the Listed Carbine Club Stakes at Flemington. He opened the new year by defeating the well-performed Juggler in the Expressway Stakes, and won the Australian Cup two starts later. He was then placed behind Octagonal in the Rosehill Guineas, the Mercedes Classic, and the Australian Derby, and finished in front of Nothin' Leica Dane and Filante, in what was considered a vintage crop of three-year-olds.

At four, Saintly was runner-up to Filante in the Warrick and the Chelmsford Stakes, won the Hill Stakes at his third run back, and was surprisingly defeated by Adventurous, Hula Flight, and Nothin' Leica Dane in the Craven Plate and The Metropolitan. In Melbourne, however, he found his best form. He charged home to beat Filante in the Cox Plate and backed up 10 days later for an easy win in the Melbourne Cup. He was just the fourth horse to complete the double in the same year, following Nightmarch (1929), Phar Lap (1930),  Rising Fast (1954), and preceding Makybe Diva (2005).

After missing the Japan Cup through illness, Saintly returned in the Orr Stakes, and came from well back on the home turn to defeat Cut Up Rough. Bart Cummings declared Saintly hadn't yet reached his peak as a racehorse, but he broke down without racing again. Over the next 18 months, Cummings made several attempts to get Saintly back to the track, but without success and he was retired in July 1998. Saintly originally resided at Living Legends, the international home of rest for champion horses in Greenvale, Melbourne Australia, but from February 2007 Saintly returned home to Bart Cummings' Princes Farm in New South Wales. Saintly died at the age of 24 in December 2016. Bart Cummings, who trained a record 12 Melbourne Cup winners, had a soft spot for Saintly, even renaming his training base after his decorated charge. For Cummings, Saintly’s win in the Cox Plate was extra special, so much so that it brought a tear to his eye. Never one to show too much emotion he quipped, “must be hay fever”.

RACE RECORD - 23: 10-8-3
EARNINGS - A$3,851,765

Australian Cup (1996)
W S Cox Plate (1996)
Melbourne Cup (1996)
C F Orr Stakes (1997)

Australian Champion Racehorse of the Year (1997)
Australian Racing Hall of Fame (2017)