Awaasif

Konafa went on to produce Korveya, the dam of Bosra Sham and Hector Protector while another of Royal Statute's daughters, Victoress was the grand-dam of Pour Moi.

[5] Awaasif finished unplaced over one mile on her three-year-old debut and then won a minor race over ten furlongs at Lingfield Park Racecourse in May, beating Dreaming Away by six lengths.

On 5 June Awaasif started at odds of 10/1 for the 204th running of the Oaks Stakes at Epsom, and finished fourth behind Time Charter, Slightly Dangerous and Last Feather.

In a closely contested three-way finish, Awaasif took the lead in the last hundred yards and won by a neck and a head from Swiftfoot and Dish Dash.

On her final appearance of the year she was sent to the United States for the Washington, D.C. International Stakes but failed to reproduce her Arc form as she finished fifth behind April Run.

Later that month she ran in Britain's most important all-aged race, the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes over one and a half miles at Ascot.

Ridden by Bruce Raymond, she briefly took second place in the straight before finishing fourth behind Time Charter, Diamond Shoal and Sun Princess, beaten less than four lengths by the winner.

Two weeks later, Awaasif travelled to Italy to contest the Group One Gran Premio del Jockey Club over 2400 metres in Milan.

In the official International Classification she was the top-rated three-year-old of either sex trained in the United Kingdom and the equal second-best filly in Europe behind Akiyda.

The International Classification placed her eleven pounds behind All Along and rated her the third-best older female in Britain behind Time Charter and the sprinter Soba.