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Meet the Cup icon named in honour of a Cuban heavyweight boxer who has never been to Flemington

Moloney is a big fan of Teofilo, having worked with him for many of his 17 years spent continuously here, where he still grosses at least $2 million a year in stud fees and his global impact continues to grow. He has now sired just shy of 800 winners of nearly 2300 races worldwide, including around 120 winners of 240-odd so-called “black-type” or group/grade and listed races.

“He’s the most extraordinary horse and I still wish he got the credit he deserves. Although I think that’s beginning to happen now through his Melbourne Cups,” Maloney says.

“He’s a big, substantial and tough sort of a horse, but there’s a gentle giant behind it.”

Bred and trained by legendary Irish trainer Jim Bolger – a mentor to modern-day master Aidan O’Brien – Teofilo blazed a trail in his juvenile season winning the best races for two-year in Ireland and England as a two-year-old, racing solely at 1400m. A subsequent injury in the spring of 2007 meant that racing fans could only guess at what he might have achieved at aged three and beyond.

Moloney says he’s still a quality lover, even he doesn’t quite have the stamina of his youth. Teofilo’s stallion fee remains at €30,000 ($49,641.00). Unlike some stallions, it hasn’t fluctuated that much over the years.

Happy Clapper is one of Teofilo’s famous Australian sons. Credit: bradleyphotos.com.au

“At his peak, we would try to cover about 140-150 mares and we would consider that as a full book. As time has gone by, and he’s got a little bit older, we’ve had to mind his fertility a little bit. So he’s now back to covering 80 mares and he’s highly successful at that.”

He even shuttled to Australia, spending five seasons at Darley studs from 2009 to 2017, producing a suite of top-class runners, notably $7 million winner Happy Clapper and group 1 winners Kermadec, Palentino and Humidor.

Helder Ferriera, who accompanied him to Australia, remembers while he was a good traveller, he hated the Australian heat. “He’d do his job and do it well, but he’d love to just lie in front of a massive fan at the back of his box when he was done,” he says.

Of his 116 global group winners, 22 of them have been in Australia including a Caulfield Cup, Australian Cup, George Main Stakes and Australian Guineas. His eight per cent group/listed winners to runners in Australia matches strides with his own sire Galileo.

Part of his growing legacy includes his group 1-winning and producing son Kermadec, standing at Darley’s Northwood Park in Victoria. Half of Kermadec’s stakes winners are at group 1 level, including the Chris Waller-trained Montefilia.

Teofilo won’t have a runner at Flemington on Tuesday, but his progeny can be found in the formguides at Echuca and Mildura. But Maloney thinks he still has another Cup in him.

“You wouldn’t put it past him,” he says. “He’s just a ripper.”

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  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

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