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Oju Chosan Renews Own Record Registering Fifth Consecutive Nakayama Grand Jump Title
Information sources:Horse Racing in Japan 
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Overwhelming favorite Oju Chosan renewed his own record to register his fifth back-to-back Nakayama Grand Jump victory and 13th consecutive graded steeplechase title. After winning the Nakayama Grand Jump last year, the 2016-18 Best Steeplechase Horse was raced on three flat races, his best performance being a sixth in the Stayers Stakes (G2, 3,600m) last November. He returned to steeplechase race this year in the Hanshin Spring Jump (J-G2, 3,900m) in March, where he defeated 2019 Best Steeplechase Horse Shingun Michael by an overwhelming nine-length victory. This win gave trainer Shoichiro Wada his seventh J-G1 victory, including the 2016 and 2017 Nakayama Daishogai titles he won with this horse. Jockey Shinichi Ishigami marked his eighth J-G1 victory, which includes his win in the Nakayama Daishogai with Nihonpiro Baron in 2018. This is the first five back-to-back victories in the same graded race for the horse, trainer and jockey in JRA history.

Breaking sharply from stall six, nine-year-old Oju Chosan settled in second, letting sixth pick Meadowlark take the lead after the first jump (fence no.5). Third choice Meisho Dassai and second favorite Shingun Michael followed in third and fourth, respectively. The first four runners, handling the jumps and dips skillfully, kept their respective positions while closing and widening the gaps. Though slightly losing balance in the ninth jump (no.3), Oju Chosan closed in on the frontrunner in the backstretch and took the lead after the 10th jump (no.8). Taking a wide trip rounding the final turn, the odds-on-favorite managed to hold off the challenge by Meisho Dassai after clearing the last jump (no.10) and widened the gap in the last 100 meters for a comfortable three-length victory.

“I was able to race the horse well, traveling behind Meadowlark who set a good pace, though I was careful turning the corners as the ground was very slippery. We took the front earlier than planned as we were challenged by Bright Quartz, but the horse held on well until the wire. He’s really a great horse. I’m grateful that he always gives his best performance,” commented jockey Shinichi Ishigami.

“I couldn’t imagine how he will race as he had never raced on such a soft ground. I’m glad that he was able to race well, clearing all the jumps almost perfectly. He was able to show his outstanding power again today,” added trainer Shoichiro Wada.


Meisho Dassai, who stalked the race favorite in third throughout most of the race, continued to travel in third behind Bright Quartz after Oju Chosan took the front in the backstretch. The Pegasus Jump Stakes winner nailed Bright Quartz turning the last corner, closed in on the eventual winner after clearing the last jump (no.10) in second but was unable to accelerate in the last 100 meters and crossed the wire in second.
Fourth choice Bright Quartz, traveling in fifth during most of the journey, made headway in the backstretch and challenged Oju Chosan in second after clearing the 10th jump (no.8) but was overtaken by the eventual runner-up turning the last corner. Though showing fatigue, the Nakayama Daishogai runner-up held on well in the lane to finish third.

Other Horses:
4th: (7) Thinking Dancer—traveled around 6th, passed Meadowlark after 10th jump (no.8) then Shingun Michael at stretch, finished far behind top finishers
5th: (10) Azuma Takkun—trailed in rear, made headway after 10th jump (no.8), passed tired rivals
6th: (2) Hiro Shige Seven—settled around 7-8th, improved position to 6th after 10th jump (no.8), unable to reach contention
7th: (3) Cosmo Rob Roy—was off slow, trailed towards rear, advanced to around 6th after 9th jump (no.3), never threatened
8th: (4) Yuino Sindbad—raced around 5th early, gradually dropped position, no factor
FF: (1) Shingun Michael—tracked leaders in 4th eyeing on favorite, closed gap between leaders near 10th jump (no.8), weakened thereafter, unseated rider at final jump (no.10)
FF: (8) Meadowlark—set pace, led until 10th jump (no.8), fell back thereafter, pulled up at stretch
FF: (9) Seagal Fountain—traveled near rear, unseated rider at 7th jump (no.7)

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