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The late
Aga Khan III
Early purchases
Mumtaz Mahal
First owner's title
Champion stakes success
First Epsom Derby
Triple Crown
Mahmoud
Blenheim
Mahmoud
Tulyar
Prince Aly Khan
Petite Etoile
The Aga Khan
New partnership
Zeddaan
Blushing Groom
Dupré bloodstock
Boussac bloodstock
Shergar
Akiyda
Darshaan's jockey club
Shahrastani
Natroun
Kahyasi
Shemaka
His Highness the Aga Khan
Jubilee year: Daylami emerges
Daryaba
Sinndar
Dalakhani
Azamour
Lagardère purchase
Darjina
Zarkava
The Arc week-end
Sea The Stars
Sarafina
Valyra
Redoute's Choice
Classic first crop
A classic start for Siyouni
New partnerships
Derby glory
150th Group 1
Zarak
The Curragh
Tarnawa
Vadeni success celebrates centenary
His Highness the Aga Khan IV - 1936 to 2025
While the Dupré and Boussac stock was being assimilated, the old Aga Khan families showed that they were still a potent force.
Shergar, winner of the English Derby by a record 10-length margin.
In the early summer of 1978, Nishapour, like his predecessor Kalamoun, a grey son of Zeddaan from the Mumtaz Mahal family, defeated Rusticaro by two and a half lengths in the Poule d’Essai des Poulains. In the autumn of 1979 the draft of yearlings sent to Sir Michael Stoute included a still more remarkable member of the family. This was Shergar, a colt by Great Nephew out of Sharmeen. After a twelve-length win in the Chester Vase, a race run on a course that tests ability to handle the Epsom contours, he had rightly become the Derby favourite winning by an astonishing ten lengths.
By now the Irish Derby was not just a consolation prize for the Derby runner-up but rather an opportunity for the Epsom winner to prove himself on a very different circuit. With Lester Piggott standing in for the suspended Swinburn, it was no contest. Shergar had the same winning margin of four lengths at the finish here and in his only encounter with older horses in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot. His jockey Walter Swinburn, now retired, commented that Shergar was the best racehorse he ever rode.
Shergar was retired to stud at Ballymany with a syndicated value of ten million pounds. Tragically, Shergar was kidnapped after having completed just one year at stud.
Although an opportunity for a first English Derby for the Aga Khan IV may have slipped away with Blushing Groom, 1977 marked the start of a three-year period that would transform the Aga Khan's entire stud and stable operation.
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