Rantzau xx
Born 1946 - Died 1971
1.65 m Chestnut
Breeder Henri Tambareau
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Foxlaw |
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Foxhunter |
Trimestral |
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Foxlight |
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St
Just |
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Chouia |
Barka |
| Rantzau
xx |
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Havresac |
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Cavaliere
Darpino |
Chuette |
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Rancune |
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Bishop's
Rock |
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Rockella |
Coquerelle |
Frenchman, Henri Tambareau, was a vet, an ex-racing jockey, and
a breeder. Not one of the wealthy breeders with field full of expensive
broodmares in foal to fashionable stallions, but a man who liked
to purchase inexpensive mares and breed them to less expensive stallions.
In 1943 he purchased Rancune, who had won several times on the racetrack
and who came from an excellent family. Her dam, Rockella, is by
Bishop’s Rock, a son of Teddy who carries the great jumping
blood of Bay Ronald on
his dam line.

Teddy
At stud, Rancune produced only winners, three of them by the stallion,
Foxlight.
Foxlight was the star of the famed French stallion station, Haras
du Pin. A very ‘chic’ chestnut roan, he had won and
placed in classic races before being retired to stud, where he was
immediately successful.

Foxlight
According to Jean Delannoy in the superb feature on Rantzau, in
the Annuaire du Cheval de Sport and d’Elevage, 2000 (for information
on this annual publication which appears in French and English,
www.monneron.com ) “Like
many of the public stallions, Foxlight was not used by the big breeders
who preferred to spotlight their own stallions and so he was much
more often in the top ten sires of steeplechasers than in the top
ten sires of flat winners. Commandant Marchal, a great theoretician
of Thoroughbred, easily admitted that the ‘bureaucrats’
were more often successful in this speciality than in flat racing
because their sires were chosen with more balance than the private
sires. If Foxlight was not a ‘crack’ he had very solid
bloodlines which both we and stud farms like. He was a distance
runner (Prix du Cadran = 4,000 metres) and he came by it honestly."
As a little erudition never hurt anyone, let’s take a look
at his bloodlines which go back directly to Eclipse: Darley Arabian
(1700) – Bartlett’s Childers (1716) – Squirt (1732)
– Marske (1750) – Eclipse (1764) – Pot 8 Os (1773)
– Waxy (1790) – Whalebone (1807) – Camel (1822)
– Touchstone (1831) – Newminster (1848) – Lord
Clifden (1860) – Hampton (1872) – Bay Ronald (1893)
– Dark Ronald (1905) - Son in Law (1911) - Foxlaw (1922) -
Foxhunter (1829) – Foxlight (1935).”
Bay Ronald breeding yet again!
Bred to Foxlight, Rancune produced Rantzau in 1946.
Rantzau was a solid performer on the track, rated three of his three-year-old
generation, with 9 races between 2,000 and 3,000 metres. He won
two and was placed five times. He was purchased by Marcel Boussac
at the end of his 3-year-old season, and sold to the National Stud.
On January 5th, 1951, he arrived at Saint-Lo.
The stud inspector at the time, commented: “good front extension,
remarkably built through the shoulder and forearm, long haunches,
this classy stallion of rare nobility also has low-placed joints
and covers ground."
He was welcomed by the breeders and between 1951 and 1962, bred
between 40 and 49 mares a year. In those days, stallions only had
permission to breed 40 mares a year, plus the National Stud director’s
cards used by him ‘in the interest of breeding’.
In 1959 the Inspector noted ‘his get have good jumping ability’.
In 1963, it was noted that he was ‘high off the ground, with
slightly long cannon bones and slightly straight and interiorly
bony hocks; but he has a very lovely look, a good frame, good muscle
tone, a well-angled should and he is well muscled. His get have
good jumping ability.’
In later years, Rantzau was less used, but in all, in 20 years of
breeding, he covered 772 mares, for an average of 38 a year.
By 1958, Rantzau was ranked 17th on the list of top showjumping
sires, by 1962, he had moved to 11th spot, and by 1963, he was 5th
behind Foudroyant II, Furioso, Nithard and Brûle Tout. Next
year, he had moved into 2nd place behind Furioso, thanks in part
to Labrador C, who was now ranked 3rd amongst the aged horses, behind
the Olympic gold medallist, Lutteur B (Furioso).
Rantzau’s fame was spreading, Medrano was winning for Holland,
and a Thoroughbred, Cour d’Appel (Foxlight out of a daughter
of Cor de Chasse) won for Spain at the CSIs of Madrid, Barcelona
and Biarritz. Holland and Switzerland were buying Rantzaus. The
following year Labrador C’s full-brother, Osiris C is third
on the aged standings, just in front of Labrador C, with Luxeuse
B in 12th. Rantzau is still in no 2 position on the rankings.
Internationally, Nageur (out of Harmonie by Beau Reve) had wins
in Lisbon for Portugal, and Pascha du Bourg won an Italian CSI for
Spain.
1966 and it is more of the same in France, and he holds second,
while internationally, the five (!) year old Radar II is winning
CSIs for Italy with the famous Piero d’Inzeo, Medrano is starring
for Holland, Nageur for Portugal, and Pascha du Bourg for Spain.
Rantzau holds his 2nd spot in 1967, 68 and 69.

Medrano - starring for Holland
In 1970 the rankings are upgraded and the standings for the ‘best
sires of dams’ are published for the first time. Rantzau is
ranked 3rd of the sires of winners, behind Ibrahim
and Furioso. Finally in 1971,
Rantzau makes it to the top, ranked in front of Ibrahim and Furioso,
thanks to the now 16-year-old Labrador C, along with Roi du Manoir,
Osiris C, Prince Royal, Sire du Logis, Amour de Juilley, etc.

Qualibet Z with Jean-Luc Cornille at the World
Eventing Championships
in Punchestown
Rantzau is now ranked the 5th best sire of Eventers thanks largely
to Quolibet Z and Unic F. The following year he holds onto top spot
and interestingly for the future his son, Starter (dam sire of Baloubet
du Rouet) is moving up on the stallion rankings, 67th thanks to
the performance of Beau Fixe in the 5 year olds.
In 1973, Rantzau surrenders number one to Ibrahim, but despite that
fact that he has been dead for two years, the Thoroughbred continues
to hold his spot – and even in 1980, he is in 4th place behind
Uriel, Almé and Nankin. His son, Starter has moved up 13th,
Kalmiste is 31st (and 6th of eventing sires), Quelqu’un is
78th, Venutard is 8th of the dressage stallions.
In 1981, ten years after he died, Rantzau finally made it to number
one on the Sire of Dams rankings.
Of his sons in France, Starter moved into the top ten in 1985, and
headed the rankings in 1988-89-91-93, 4th in 1994 and 6th in 1996.
In Europe, Cor de
la Bryère, born in 1968 out of a mare by the Furioso
xx son, Lurioso, has without doubt been the most influential son
of Rantzau, establishing one of the two mighty C lines that dominate
Holstein – and jumping – breeding to this day.
The importance of the Thoroughbred in French breeding is summed
up well by French jumping star, Michel Robert in the 1994 L’Eperon
Special Breeding publication, Credo for the Thoroughbred:
“The error has been to set aside Thoroughbreds, Anglo-Arabs
and Trotters, or, in any event, not to look for them because it
was thought that they would bastardise the race… I am suspicious
of ‘pure blood’ Selle Français horses with only
far removed Thoroughbred ancestry, because I know they are going
to lack ‘gasoline’. I believe that my opinion is shared
by all of the other high-level competition riders. If they have
a complaint about their horses, it’s often ‘at the jump
off, he won’t move forward’, it’s that the horse
lacks ‘blood’. The utilization of the Thoroughbred and
Anglo-Arab should be accentuated in the maternal bloodlines and
with the stallions… we should ideally have Thoroughbred stallions
with showjumping performances which could become the new foundation
sires to get the ideal cross, I would take a dark brown Thoroughbred
stallion with a lot of strength, a show winner, with depth, length,
a little tough, a Thoroughbred which could do three day events,
and I would cross him with a dam from the Ibrahim line, or vice
versa. The Ibrahims were jumpers with a lot of strength in their
backs and a classical style. Almé was a phenomenal horse
in his propulsion, he passed his hindquarters in a manner rarely
found in our French horses. He should be used for his strength of
hindquarters, but crossed with Thoroughbred or Anglo-Arab to infuse
class and agility. What at one time saved the French breeding industry
was the fact that Thoroughbreds such as Furioso or Ranzau were brought
here, who truly marked our breeding and who were the base for the
show bloodlines. I am convinced that to make crack horses, we need
horses with Thoroughbred or Anglo-Arab in their breeding. A good
horse must be fast, careful, brave, with a lot of power.”
Jean Delannoy sums up at the end of his tribute: "People
who knew the Rantzaus (Marc Houssin, Michel Pelissier, Remy Thault,
Emille Esnault) remember horses who were sometimes sensitive, but
perfectly usable. They were cold to the girth when being broken,
and the mares in heat could be very susceptible. They needed to
gain confidence and it was necessary to completely dominate them,
but without brutality. Often stiff and sttrong with straight hocks,
a tight back, they were very generous, sure of themselves and cold
to the leg. Even today it is easy to recognize a Rantzau descendant
because of their chic look, occasional black leopard spots, sometimes
white hairs, and their famous straight hocks."