Nasomo | |
---|---|
Sire | Nasrullah |
Grandsire | Nearco |
Dam | Blue Eyed Momo |
Damsire | War Admiral |
Sex | Stallion |
Foaled | 1956 |
Country | United States |
Color | Chestnut |
Owner | Pauline Woolworth |
Earnings | US$75,080 |
Major wins | |
Central Park Purse (1960) |
Nasomo (1956-1968) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse from the Pine Tree Stables, [1] registered in Freeport, Bahamas. He was a son of Nasrullah. [2] Nasomo was owned by Mrs. Pauline Woolworth of Winthrop, Massachusetts, and had lifetime earnings of US$75,080. [2]
On September 4, 1959 the three-year-old colt eclipsed the track record at Belmont Park, covering the mile and a sixteenth course in 1:40 4/5. Nasomo equaled the mile record at Belmont Park, 1:34 4/5, then shared by Count Fleet and Blessbull.
Ridden by Rogelio Trejos, the thoroughbred won the feature race in a time which was four-fifths of a second faster than the standard posted by Ricci Tavi in 1957. [3] In the $7,500 Central Park Purse, an April 25, 1960 feature race at Aqueduct Racetrack, Nasomo was at 10 to 1 odds when he triumphed in 1:36 for the mile race, while being ridden by future Hall of Fame inductee, Bobby Ussery. [4]
In his book, "Betting Thoroughbreds", Steven Davidowitz described Nasomo as "a slow-breaking Silky Sullivan type." Davidowitz studied Nasomo's workout patterns, which the author found predicated a greatly improved performance in competition. In the late spring of 1961 Davidowitz perused Nasomo's past performance charts at Gulfstream Park. He looked particularly at the thoroughbred's half-mile workout from the starting gate which was affixed to the bottom of Nasomo's chart. ".47 bg (bay gelding)" leaped off the page at Davidowitz! [5]