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Oju Chosan made his debut at the Tokyo Racecourse under the training of Mitsuhiro Ogata in October 2013 in a flat race but finished in 11th place and his second race in 8th place, [7] before a broken front leg forced him to take a year off, by which point maiden races that suited Oju Chosan had finished. They then tried to have him run in a ...
Pages in category "Racehorses trained in Japan" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 216 total. ... Oju Chosan; One and Only (horse ...
Oju Chosan: Shoichiro Wada Chosan Co. Ltd. 5 2017 Oju Chosan Shoichiro Wada Chosan Co. Ltd. 6 [1] 2018 Oju Chosan Shoichiro Wada Chosan Co. Ltd. 7 2019 Shingun Michael Keiji Takaichi Shigenori Isaka 5 [2] 2020 Meisho Dassai Yuji Iida Kazuma Mori 7 [3] 2021 Oju Chosan Shoichiro Wada Chosan Co. Ltd. 10 [4] 2022 Oju Chosan Shoichiro Wada Chosan Co ...
Oju Chosan: Steeplechase race horse who won numerous JG1 races, most notably winning the Nakayama Grand Jump five times in a row. Orb: 2013 Kentucky Derby winner; Orfevre: winner of almost 20 million US dollars in earnings and is one of the highest earning racehorses ever; Overdose: champion Hungarian sprinter and winner of 14 straight races.
The Nakayama Grand Jump (中山グランドジャンプ) is a Japanese horse racing steeplechase, held at Nakayama Racecourse every year in mid-April. It is for thoroughbreds, four years old and older, run at a distance of 4250m (2 5/8 miles + 84 feet).
The Nakayama Daishogai (中山大障害) is a Group 1 steeplechase horse race in Japan open to thoroughbreds which are three-years-old or above. It is run over a distance of 4100m (2 1 ⁄ 2 miles + 84 feet) at Nakayama Racecourse every year in late December.
The Japan Racing Association (Japanese: 日本中央競馬会 Nippon Chūō Keiba Kai, or JRA) is a public company established to operate Chūō Keiba (中央競馬 Central horse racing) and to manage racecourses, betting facilities, and horse-training facilities.
An important factor in success at timber racing is for the horse to land in stride, so that it can carry its speed forward on the flat part of the race course. This is harder than in hurdle races because the nature of the obstacle being jumped. If a horse hits a timber fence hard enough, it can bring it almost to a complete stop.