First, while Distorted Humor was best known as a sprinter, he placed well in races up to nine furlongs and stayed better than the title "sprinter" would imply. Second, Mr. Prospector has proven one of those rare stallions that defy easy categorization, getting runners all over the distance spectrum. Given that he himself had a "could be anything" pedigree with the brilliantly precocious Raise a Native as sire and the Classic winners and sires Nashua and Count Fleet as his first and second damsires, it hardly seems surprising he could sire horses with a wide range of distance aptitudes.Finally, one need look no further than the pedigree of Flower Alley's dam, Princess Olivia, to find all the stamina that one might wish. True, Princess Olivia did her best running in sprints, while her sire Lycius scored his primary stakes win in the six-furlong Middle Park Stakes (Eng-I). But Princess Olivia's dam, Dance Image, is by Sadler's Wells, the premier living sire of European Classic winners. Himself a group I winner at up to 10 furlongs and second in the 12 furlong Prix du Jockey Club (Fr-I), Sadler's Wells has sired the winners of 28 events generally considered Classics in England, Ireland, and France as well as the two-time Ascot Gold Cup (Eng-I) winner Kayf Tara.Princess Olivia is inbred to another stamina source in Goofed, a fine race mare who gained her biggest win in the 1963 Ladies Handicap, then at 12 furlongs. Best known as the dam of Lyphard, one of the stronger stamina influences among Northern Dancer's sons and the damsire of Lycius, Goofed is also the dam of Dumfries (by Reviewer), the fourth dam of Flower Alley.Diamond Spring, the third dam of Flower Alley, is by an even more notable stamina source in Vaguely Noble. Winner of the 1968 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Vaguely Noble is probably best remembered in the United States for his brilliant staying son Exceller, winner of the 1978 Jockey Club Gold Cup (gr. I) by a desperate nose over Seattle Slew, and for the great international star Dahlia, champion grass horse in the United States in 1974. Dumfries is a half-sister to the high-class mare Nobiliary (Vaguely Noble--Goofed), who defeated males in the Washington, D. C., International Stakes and ran second to Grundy in the Epsom Derby.Close inbreeding does not always work, but with careful selection of the parents, it has the potential for first-class results. One need look no further than Flower Alley for proof.
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