Sailor's Guide


Sailor's Guide was an outstanding Thoroughbred racehorse that was conceived in England and foaled in Australia. He is notable in that he won races in the United States, Canada, and a number of principal Australian races, and was a high stakes earner.
He was a brown stallion that was foaled in 1952 and was sired by the good racehorse Lighthouse II. His dam was the imported mare Jehane by Legend of France. Jehane was also the dam of several other winners including Far Away Places who won the SAJC Adelaide Cup.

Racing career

Many of Sailor's Guide’s wins were by margins of a neck or less and in the Sydney Cup his winning margin was a half head. In the Pentathlon Stakes Sailor's Guide showed his class by defeating the New Zealand horse, Rising Fast and then another NZ horse in Redcraze in the C B Fisher Plate. During the spring Sailor's Guide again won the Craiglee Stakes, was third in the Caulfield Cup and won the LKS MacKinnon Stakes.
He won many other major races in Australia in the late 1950s, including the VRC Queen Elizabeth Stakes and the VRC Derby. and was one of the highest stake winners of the period. He also won the Sky Classic Stakes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
He ended up winning more than £100,000, with Tulloch and the Standardbred harness horse Caduceus as the only horses bred in Australia or New Zealand to have achieved this distinction at that time. Tulloch was his main rival, and they defeated each other on a number of occasions.
The most important race he won was the 1958 Washington, D.C. International, a major horse race in the United States. It was contested on turf over 1½ miles and drew the best horses from North America and Europe. In winning the race, Sailor's Guide defeated the top performer Ballymoss who had a Timeform rating of 136. Soon after, Ballymoss won the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and was also voted as 1958 European Horse of the Year.
Sailor's Guide was retired to stud in America, but was a poor foal-getter. He did have eight of his progeny race without any great success.