Turf historian John Hervey wrote: "Before nor since, nothing has been known in America to equal the manner in which the Archys dominated both turf and stud for over half a century, beginning with the debut of his first crop of foals, in 1814 and culminating with the last of the sixteen seasons of premiership of his inbred great-grandson Lexington in 1878."
Sad_Meow_Meow on January 22nd, 2020 at 11:06 UTC »
Suffering from success
ArrrSlashSubreddit on January 22nd, 2020 at 11:54 UTC »
Imagine buying extremely expensive offspring of this horse, just for the value to plummet because they are now banned.
sdsanth on January 22nd, 2020 at 12:04 UTC »
Turf historian John Hervey wrote: "Before nor since, nothing has been known in America to equal the manner in which the Archys dominated both turf and stud for over half a century, beginning with the debut of his first crop of foals, in 1814 and culminating with the last of the sixteen seasons of premiership of his inbred great-grandson Lexington in 1878."