Horsename: | Nassipour |
Sire: | Blushing Groom (FR) |
Grandsire: | Red God |
Dam: | Alama (IRE) |
Sex: | Stallion |
Country: | United States |
Colour: | Chestnut |
Breeder: | Aga Khan IV |
Owner: | Dogwood Stable |
Trainer: | Stephen A. DiMauro |
Record: | 45: 7-10-8 |
Earnings: | US$829,519 |
Race: | Dixie Handicap (1985) Rothmans International Stakes (1985) Seneca Handicap (1985) |
Awards: | Leading sire in Australia (1992) |
Updated: | 1 October 2011 |
Nassipour (1980 – 7 May 1994)[1] was an American Thoroughbred racehorse and a Leading sire in Australia. He was bred in Kentucky by the Aga Khan. His sire, Blushing Groom, was the 1977 European Champion Three-Year-old and the 1989 Leading sire in Great Britain & Ireland. Nassipour's dam was Alama, a daughter of the very good runner Aureole, who was owned by Queen Elizabeth II. Aureole's wins include the 1954 Coronation Cup and King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes. At stud, Aureole sired 1960 Epsom Derby winner, St. Paddy.
Nassipour was sent to his owner's training facility in Ireland at age two but was sold in late 1983 to American Cot Campbell for his Dogwood Stable racing partnership. Brought back to North America for the 1984 turf racing season, Nassipour did not have a Graded stakes race win but ran second in the Grade I (G1) Sword Dancer Invitational Handicap, G3 Knickerbocker Handicap, and G1 Bowling Green Handicap. He also finished third in the G3 American Handicap.
At age five in 1985, Nassipour had his best year in racing, winning the G2 Dixie Handicap at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland, and the G3 Seneca Handicap at Saratoga Race Course in New York. In the richest and most important race of his career, under jockey Jean-Luc Samyn Nassipour won the $600,000 G1 Rothmans International Stakes at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, Canada, defeating, among others, Grand Prix de Paris winner Sumayr and Irish 2,000 Guineas victor Triptych. Nassipour finished second in the G3 Niagara Stakes, G2 Bougainvillea Handicap, and G3 Fair Grounds Classic. In the G3 Pan American Handicap, he was third. Nassipour's best result at age six was a third in the Seneca Handicap.[2]
Retired from racing in 1986, Nassipour was sold to New Zealand breeding interests and stood at stud at Ra Ora Stud until his death in 1994. He was the Leading sire in Australia in 1992. Among Nassipour's best progeny were these Group one winners: