Bad As I Wanna Be (horse)

Bad As I Wanna Be (foaled 11 March 1998 – after 2011) was an Irish-bred, British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. He showed his best form as a juvenile in 2000 when he won the Prix Morny by six lengths and took third place in the Middle Park Stakes. He did not run as a three-year-old and had no success when campaigned in Dubai in 2002. He failed to make any impact as a breeding stallion.

Bad As I Wanna Be
SireCommon Grounds
GrandsireKris
DamSong of the Glens
DamsireHorage
SexStallion
Foaled11 March 1998[1]
CountryIreland
ColourChestnut
BreederYeomanstown Stud
OwnerJoe Allbritton
Godolphin
TrainerBrian Meehan
Saeed bin Suroor
Record7: 2-0-2
Earnings£104,640
Major wins
Prix Morny (2000)

Background

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Bad As I Wanna Be was a chestnut horse with a narrow white blaze[2] bred in Ireland by the County Kildare-based Yeomanstown Stud. In October 1999 the yearling was consigned to the Tattersalls sale and was bought by the Curragh Bloodstock Agency for 62,000 guineas.[3] He entered the ownership of the American banker Joe Allbritton and was sent into training with Brian Meehan at Lambourn in Berkshire.

His sire Common Grounds was a British-bred stallion who was trained in France and showed his best form as a two-year-old in 1987 when he won the Prix de la Salamandre.[4] As a breeding stallion, the best of his other progeny included Fallow (July Stakes), Murghem (Geoffrey Freer Stakes) and Flanders (Weatherbys Super Sprint).[5] Bad As I Wanna Be's dam, Song of the Glens, showed very little racing ability as she failed to win or place in five starts[6] but was a granddaughter of Polly Macaw, the dam of Right Tack.[7]

The name Bad As I Wanna Be was derived from the autobiography of Dennis Rodman.[8]

Racing career

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2000: two-year-old season

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Bad As I Wanna Be made his racecourse debut in a maiden race over six furlongs at Newbury Racecourse in which he started at odds of 11/2 but came home eleventh of the thirteen runners behind Patsy's Double. After a break of over two months the colt returned for a five furlong maiden at Windsor Racecourse on 31 July in which he started at 6/1 in a sixteen-runner field. Ridden by Jimmy Fortune he took the lead from the start and won "readily" by three lengths from Senior Minister.[9]

On 20 August Bad As I Wanna Be was stepped up sharply in class and sent to France to contest the Prix Morny over 1200 metres at Deauville Racecourse in which he was partnered by Gerald Mosse. The Richmond Stakes winner Endless Summer started odds on favourite ahead of Noverre and Rolly Polly (Prix Robert Papin) with Bad As I Wanna Be starting the 14.4/1 outsider of the six runners. The colt led from the start, broke clear of his rivals 400 metres from the start and won by six lengths from Endless Summer.[10] The runner-up was later disqualified when it was discovered that he had been foaled five days before the end of 1997 and was thus technically a three-year-old.[11] After the race Meehan commented "He's a good, old-fashioned type of horse with a decent pedigree. I'd like to find another race for him before the end of the season, but I am not sure what that race will be".[12]

Mosse again took the ride when the colt returned to France for the Prix de la Salamandre over 1400 metres at Longchamp Racecourse on 16 September. Starting the odds-on favourite, he raced in second place for most of the way but faded in the closing stages and finished last of the four runners behind Tobougg. Twelve days after his defeat at Longchamp, Bad As I Wanna Be contested the Middle Park Stakes at Newmarket Racecourse and went off the 11/2 second favourite. He finished fourth behind Minardi, Endless Summer and Red Carpet but was promoted to third when Endless Summer was disqualified as an ineligible entrant.[13]

In the official classification of European two-year-olds Bad As I Wanna Be was given a rating of 119, making him the fourth best juvenile colt of the season behind Minardi, Okawango and Tobougg.[14]

At the end of the year Bad As I Wanna Be was purchased privately by Sheikh Mohammed's Godolphin organisation and transferred to the stable of Saeed bin Suroor.[15]

2002: four-year-old season

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After missing the whole of the 2001 season Bad As I Wanna Be returned for two sprint races on the dirt track at Nad Al Sheba Racecourse in Dubai in early 2002 but made little impact. He ran third in a minor race on 12 February and then came home eighth in the Listed Mahab Al Shimaal on 2 March.[16]

Stud record

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Bad As I Wanna Be stood as a breeding stallion in Ireland and France but had no success as a sire of winners. His last recorded foal was born in 2012.[17]

Pedigree

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Pedigree of Bad As I Wanna Be (IRE), chestnut stallion, 1998[1]
Sire
Common Grounds (GB)
1985
Kris (GB)
1976
Sharpen Up Atan (USA)
Rochetta
Doubly Sure Reliance (FR)
Soft Angels
Sweetly (FR)
1999
Lyphard (USA) Northern Dancer (CAN)
Goofed
Sweet and Lovely Tanerko
Lilya
Dam
Song of the Glens (IRE)
1986
Horage (IRE)
1980
Tumble Wind (USA) Restless Wind
Easy Stages
Musicienne (FR) Sicambre
Musical
Melodious Polly (GB)
1973
Tudor Melody Tudor Minstrel
Matelda
Polly Macaw (IRE) Pollys Jet (USA)
Listowel (Family: 10-a)[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Bad As I Wanna Be pedigree". Equineline.
  2. ^ "Gerald Mosse brings Bad As I Wanna Be back to the winners enclosure". Getty Images.
  3. ^ "TATTERSALLS – Catalogue". Racing Post.
  4. ^ Timeform staff (1988). Racehorses of 1987. Timeform. ISBN 0-900599-46-4.
  5. ^ "Common Grounds – Progeny". Racing Post.
  6. ^ "Song Of The Glens – Race Record & Form". Racing Post.
  7. ^ a b "Queen Mary – Family 10-a". Thoroughbred Bloodlines.
  8. ^ Wood, Greg (21 August 2000). "Bad books his Guineas ticket". The Independent.
  9. ^ "Fedora Maiden Stakes result". Racing Post. 31 July 2000.
  10. ^ "Prix Morny result". Racing Post. 20 August 2000.
  11. ^ Popham, Mark (15 February 2005). "Endless Summer Disqualified; Mitchell Penalized". The Blood-Horse.
  12. ^ McGrath, J. A. (20 August 2000). "Racing: Mosse steals march to capture Morny". The Daily Telegraph.
  13. ^ "Middle Park Stakes result". Racing Post. 28 September 2000.
  14. ^ "International Classifications" (PDF). tjcis.com. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  15. ^ Evans, Richard (27 November 2000). "Tempting offer is irresistible". The Daily Telegraph.
  16. ^ "Mahab Al Shimaal result". Racing Post. 2 March 2002.
  17. ^ "Bad As I Wanna Be – Progeny". Racing Post.