Mejiro Ramonu (, April 9, 1983 - September 22, 2005) was a Japanese thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare who became the first filly to win the Japanese Triple Tiara in 1986.
After being raised at the Mejiro Stud, her hock issues gradually resolved as she became a two year old. In July 1985, she was officially given the name Mejiro Ramonu, and was moved to Hakodate Racecourse. The name is based on the Aiguille de l'Amone in the French Alps added to the Mejiro kanmei (eponym). When Okuhira first saw the horse, he didn't see the horse as one that stoof out. However, her groom Kozo Kojima saw that she had a large abdomen, suggesting that she possessed a high level of cardiorespiratory function. As she was trained at Hakodate she showed great potential, and was later moved to in Ibaraki Prefecture that fall.
She was then entered in to her first graded race, the Keisei Hai Sansai Stakes held on November 3. She was anticipated to race against the then-undefeated , but she was scratched beforehand. On the day of the race she was the most favored to win, surpassing even , who was a colt. However, she became agitated soon after the start after bumping in to another horse, and lost momentum, finishing fourth in a five-way race.
After the race, she briefly suffered from colic and periostitis, but soon recovered. She soon returned to racing, with her being entered in to an allowance race that she won with a one length lead. Two weeks later, she won her first graded race in the Fairy Stakes. Her time, 1:34.9, was seldom heard of at the time as the only other two year old in Japan in history at the time that managed to run a mile in less than 1:35 was her, Maruzensky, and .
After this was, she was moved to the Kansai region and entered in to the Hochi Hai Yonsai Himba Tokubetsu, a trial race to the Oka Sho. , who was a jockey based in Kansai, took over the duty of jockey, as it was planned that a Kansai jockey (i.e. Kawachi) would take the helm if Ramonu were to run in a race held in the Kansai region.
At the Oka Sho, she was once again the most favored to win, with the parimutuel odds set at 1.6. She showed signs of anxiety at the race, but at the race she managed to place herself in the middle of the pack and pushed herself up to take the lead, before winning the first leg of the Triple Tiara with a 1 and 3/4 length lead against second place Mayano Jo O. This marked the first classic race victory for the Mejiro Stud, and the first Oka Sho victory for Kawachi.
After returning to Miho, she was planned to run in the second leg of the Triple Tiara, the Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks), but there were concerns as to whether she can win a race at Tokyo due to both of her previous losses being at that racecourse. As such, it was decided that she would first be entered in to the Flora Stakes, an Oaks trial race.
At the Yushun Himba, she stumbled at the start and was forced to race from behind. However, she gradually pushed up forward as she ran along the railings, before taking the lead on the final stretch, winning the race with a 2 and a half length lead against . She became the first horse since in 1976 to win two of the Triple Tiara.
After winning the Yushun Himba, she was sent to the Mejiro Farm to recuperate, before restarting training at Hakodate Racecourse in August, with the intent to starting the Autumn season with the Queen Stakes before contesting the final leg of the Triple Tiara, the Queen Elizabeth II Cup (Q.E.II Cup) (at the time the Shuka Sho was yet to be formed). However, she was unable to handle the summer heat, and as a result she was sent back to Miho before given bloodletting treatment. She also showed signs of lameness during training, and as a result her restarting of training was pushed back even further. On October, she was sent to Kansai directly from Hakodate, where she would start her autumn season with the Rose Stakes. At the race, she was in the front of the pack, and attempted to take the lead on the stretch, but struggled to do so as she went neck-to-neck with Pot Tesco Lady. After the race, Kawachi suggested that the turf condition was to blame for why she struggled to win.
Okuhira recalled that, on the day of the Q.E.II Cup, Mejiro Ramonu "was at 70%". She was by far the most favored to win that day, with many anticipating her to become the first Triple Tiara winner in history. At the race, she was among the 3rd pack in the race, but took the lead as the race entered the downhill on the 3rd corner at around the 800 meter mark. She held on to the lead as she and the other horses entered the final stretch, but she briefly slowed down and was almost overtaken by Super Shot. However, she managed to hold on to the lead by a neck, making her the first winner of the Triple Tiara since its introduction in the JRA races. She also became the biggest earning filly at the time, with her earnings surpassing 300 million yen. She also held the most consecutive graded race win at the time, having won 6 graded race in the row.
After the race, some wanted her to enter the Japan Cup, but as she was already planned to be retired after the Arima Kinen, Miya Kitano formally announced that she would head straight to Arima and retire after that race.
After retirement, she was awarded the Saiyushu Yonsai Himba title the following January. Despite some anticipating for her to be named Horse of the Year, the first for a filly since in 1971, but the award ultimately went to Dyna Gulliver, who won the Tokyo Yushun the year before and defeated Ramonu at the Arima. Regarding this, columnist claimed that he asked the JRA if they could get both horses named Horse of the Year, or at least have either one awarded the JRA Special Awards, only for them to reject both suggestions.
A retirement ceremony was held at Tokyo Racecourse on February 8, 1987, where she appeared wearing the race bib from her Q.E.II Cup. That same year, she was inducted in to the JRA Hall of Fame alongside Symboli Rudolf.
Mejiro Ramonu passed away at the Mejiro Farm on September 22, 2005, at the age of 22 due to old age. Her grave is erected inside the properties of the Mejiro Stud, currently the .
1989 | Mejiro Ryumon | Colt | Bay | Mejiro Titan |
1990 | Mejiro Rivera | Mare | Dark Bay | Symboli Rudolf |
1992 | Mejiro Teno | Gelding | Bay | Real Shadai |
1994 | Mejiro Desire | Colt | Brown | Sunday Silence |
1996 | Mejiro Monju | Mare | Dark Bay | Lindo Shaver |
1997 | Mejiro Brett | Colt | Bay | Timber Country |
1998 | Mejiro Flax | Mare | Bay | Lammtarra |
1999 | Mejiro Greene | Colt | Bay | Mejiro Ryan |
2000 | Mejiro Beckham | Colt | Brown | Brian's Time |
2002 | Mejiro Snow Shoe | Filly | Dark Bay | El Condor Pasa |
2003 | Mejiro Rubato | Mare | Bay | Mejiro Ryan |
2004 | Mejiro Rastaban | Colt | Bay | Tanino Gimlet |
1985 – three-year-old season | ||||||||||||
Oct 13 | Tokyo Racecourse | Maiden race | 1,400 m (Firm) | 1:26.1 | Futoshi Kojima | (Dyna Bonder) | 466 | |||||
Nov 3 | Tokyo | Keisei Hai Sansai Stakes | 2 | 4th | 1,400 m (Firm) | 1:23.9 | Futoshi Kojima | Daishin Fubuki | 466 | |||
Nov 30 | Nakayama | Kangiku Sho | Allowance | 1,600 m (Firm) | 1:35.7 | Masatsugu Kashiwazaki | (Fujino Sengoku) | 456 | ||||
Dec 14 | Nakayama | Fairy Stakes | 3 | 1,600 m (Firm) | 1:34.9 | Masatsugu Kashiwazaki | (Dyna Fairy) | 458 | ||||
1986 – four-year-old season | ||||||||||||
Jan 26 | Tokyo | Queen Cup | 3 | 4th | 1,600 m (Firm) | 1:36.5 | Masatsugu Kashiwazaki | Super Shot | 458 | |||
Mar 16 | Hanshin | Yonsai Himba Tokubetsu (West) | 2 | 1,400 m (Good) | 1:23.9 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Chuo Sally) | 452 | ||||
Apr 6 | Hanshin | Oka Sho | 1 | 1,600 m (Firm) | 1:35.8 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Mayano Jo O) | 454 | ||||
Apr 27 | Tokyo | Flora Stakes | 2 | 1,800 m (Good) | 1.50.8 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Dyna Actress) | 450 | ||||
May 18 | Tokyo | Yushun Himba | 1 | 2,400 m (Firm) | 2:29.6 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Yu Miroku) | 456 | ||||
Oct 12 | Kyoto Racecourse | Rose Stakes | 2 | 2,000 m (Firm) | 2:01.3 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Pot Tesco Lady) | 462 | ||||
Nov 2 | Kyoto | Queen Elizabeth II Cup | 1 | 2,400 m (Firm) | 2:29.1 | Hiroshi Kawachi | (Super Shot) | 464 | ||||
Dec 21 | Nakayama | Arima Kinen | 1 | 9th | 2,500 m (Good) | 2:34.6 | Hiroshi Kawachi | Dyna Gulliver | 466 |
Legend:
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