King
of Diamonds
| Silvermines (RID) | |||
| Errigal (RID) | |||
| Barogue | |||
| King of Diamonds | |||
| Castlebawn | |||
| True Boy (ISH) | Lady Warrior | ||
| Ruby | |||
| Biddens xx |
King of Diamonds Born 1962 Chestnut
Described in 'The Irish Draught Horse' by
Alex Fell as 'the single best known Irish Draught of modern
times (he) has been described as the saviour of the Irish
Draught as a breed, as a result of his prepotent jumping
ability'.
King of Diamonds is ranked 21st in the World Breeding
Rankings for the period 1992 - 2001 on the basis of 19
of his progeny, including Rodrigo Pessoa's Special Envoy,
John Ledingham's Millstreet Ruby, and Joe Fargis' Mill
Pearl (below).

Technically neither King of Diamonds nor
his great rival for the 'King of the Irish Jumping Sires'
title, Clover Hill were pure bred Irish Draught horses.
They were approved because they were Irish Draught in
type, with partial pedigree, raising the question as to
whether the Irish Draught is in reality a breed or is
it a type?
King of Diamonds dominates the Irish Studbook. He has
more than forty stallion sons or grandsons, bred either
directly in the sire line or through his daughters although
some experts argue that the inspectors were a bit overwhelmed
by King of Diamonds' reputation, and perhaps a little
lax in some they passed.
King of Diamonds was by Errigal a son of Silvermines,
which was the Irish Draught side of his parentage. His
dam Ruby was by True Boy, a halfbred sire who traces to
Kildare, a well known Irish Draught stallion at the beginning
of the century. The grand dam was the Thoroughbred mare
Biddens.
King of Diamonds was a jumper in his own right, but he
achieved his Grade A status in an era when Irish jumping
tracks were not so demanding.
King of Diamonds was bred at Slyguff Stud in Co Carlow
by Tom O'Neill. Slyguff is a stud which has built its
reputation over the years with the jumping successes of
its stallions. The importance of tradition in Irish breeding
is underlined by the fact that the O'Neills bred not just
King of Diamonds but also his dam, Ruby. The sire of his
dam, True Boy, was bred by their cousin Jack O'Neill of
Whitemount, Kells, Co. Kilkenny from an old point to point
mare.
When King of Diamonds died in 1991 at the age of 29 he
had eleven stallion sons on the Irish Horse Register and
two grandsons. Four years later his descendant stallions
numbered over forty.
According to the excellent work - King of Diamonds - An
Irish Showjumping Dynasty - which can be purchased and
down loaded over the net (and is essential reading for
any student of the Irish horse - just click
here) - No single sire produces a constant stream
of top performers, indeed the best in the world produce
only a handful, and King of Diamonds was no exception.
Some of his progeny have been mediocre, but the record
indisputably shows that King of Diamonds has made a specific
contribution to thousands of highly acceptable riding
and showjumping horses. Irish breeding would have been
much the poorer without him.
His total personal registered progeny at the time ofhis
death in 1992 was 547, The registered progeny of his stallion
sons, to say nothing at all of his daughter's descendants,
expands his influence numerically to thousands.
Below - one of the most successful sons of King of Diamonds, Special Envoy, ridden by Rodrigo Pessoa, the horse was also ridden with success by his father, Nelson.
