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Entries in Unbridled (3)

Wednesday
Feb032010

WORDS WITH A SAGE

graham beck

J&B MET 2010
GRAHAM BECK AND ANTONY BECK

For a man who had little in the way of a “horsey” background, Graham Beck has had a remarkable association with great horses. He was telling me on Saturday that he kicked off with a R42 000 buy in Big Swinger (a multiple Graded Stakes winner), but it’s mainly for his stallions that this el padrino of our game will always be remembered. Persian Wonder, Elevation, Harry Hotspur, Jungle Cove, Lords, Badgerland, National Assembly and Jallad rush to the mind in local parlance alone, and while these include several South African Champion sires, we mustn’t forget, this is a man who’s been associated with some of the greatest stallions in history.

His acquisition of the famed Gainesway Farm in the United States from the founding father of the Breeders Cup, John Gaines, included at the time some of racing’s greatest names, Blushing Groom, Vaguely Noble, Riverman, and Lyphard and through modern day associations, extends to Unbridled and the current “big hiters”, Tapit and Birdstone.

It must be ten years or more since we saw Graham’s son Antony at the races in South Africa. Now the master of Gainesway himself, his respect extends throughout the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and he sits on both the Breeders Cup and Keeneland Association boards. As the owner of one of the most beautiful stud properties in the world, it was reassuring from a Summerhill perspective to have Antony remind us again, that most of what he knows, he learnt from Summerhill, and that this farm, for its systems and practices, could hold its own with the best in America. Pity he doesn’t come home more often.

Wednesday
Mar262008

ANDREW CAULFIELD - Power of The Nick

computer problems Readers who know us also know our views on matings, and that we believe that the role (and particularly the eye) of the Stockman is central to the production of a good horse. No computer ever consistently produced a quality athlete, and so it’s interesting to hear the views of Andrew Caulfield (Thoroughbred Daily News), one of the world’s top pedigree experts :

As someone whose income is largely derived from drawing up mating suggestions for stud owners, should I be feeling increasingly threatened by the proliferating number of computer generated nicking services now available?

Well, I suppose the answer depends on how much faith one has in the concept of a successful nick. Many breeders clearly find it reassuring that a particular cross has worked before, encouraging the belief that such a nick represents the surest route to success. On the other hand, Rob Whiteley - a breeder with a thorough grounding in statistics and logic - wrote to me in support of Bill Oppenheim’s contention that sample sizes are frequently too small to be reliable.

Bill had cited the Storm Bird/Secretariat nick as the perfect example of the way success rates tend to drop as the numbers bred on that cross increase. For the record, this cross got off to a magnificent start in 1985 when Storm Bird’s first crop produced Storm Cat and the highly talented English-trained Storm Star, both of them out of daughters of Secretariat. Their success inevitably resulted in more Secretariat mares heading to Storm Bird’s door and this further support was justified by the appearance of the Preakness winner Summer Squall and the fast English colt Mujadil. By now the Storm Bird/Secretariat cross was beginning to be regarded as the goose that laid golden eggs, to the extent that - by the end of Storm Bird’s career - more than 11 percent of his foals were out of Secretariat mares. Yet this escalation in the number of foals bred on this cross yielded very little, with Storm Cat, Storm Star, Summer Squall and Mujadil remaining the only graded/group winners produced by the cross.

Storm Bird’s name also crops up in another example. It was a daughter of Storm Bird who provided Gulch with his first champion, Thunder Gulch, and this resulted in Gulch siring more foals from Storm Bird mares than from daughters of any other broodmare sire. The total now stands at 56 but none of Thunder Gulch’s successors has so far hit the Grade I target.

It’s my belief that this apparent weakening of a popular cross owes plenty to conformation- or breeders’ willingness to overlook conformation in the reckless pursuit of nicks. Virtually every stallion sires a wide variety of physical types, with a portion of their offspring inevitably showing the influence of their dam or broodmare sire. So, while Storm Bird may have been suited by a particular type of Secretariat mare, it is unrealistic to think that he was suited by ALL types of Secretariat mare. Seth Hancock once made some interesting observations to the Blood-Horse regarding the importance of conformation, as opposed to nicks: “I never bred a good horse by Unbridled, and maybe the reason is he was a big horse and I tried to breed him to a smaller type of mare, many from the Northern Dancer line. I can’t say that worked. I’m not so sure it is as much a blood thing as it is a physical thing. The longer I stay in it I believe the more I’m going to be a type-to-type guy. I believe I should have bred some mares more of Unbridled’s type to him than I did.”

Another aspect which needs taking into account is a broodmare’s ability on the track. If the Storm Bird/Secretariat nick had been founded by comparatively low-achieving mares, we would really have been onto something. However, Storm Bird sired Storm Cat from the dazzling Terlingua; Summer Squall from a dual Grade III winner; Storm Star from a Grade III winner; and Mujadil from a winning mare who produced four stakes winners. It is surely also relevant that these four mares all produced graded winners to other stallions. In other words, Storm Bird’s so-called nick with Secretariat mares was based on mares which were well above average in one respect or another. So were the breeders who sent comparatively ordinary daughters of Secretariat to Storm Bird fooling themselves in believing they were improving their chances of breeding a stakes winner?

Saturday’s GII Lane’s End Stakes will have bolstered many people’s faith in nicks, as the impressive winner, Adriano, is no less than the 12th graded winner sired by A.P. Indy from daughters of Mr. Prospector. As these 12 come from a sample of 100 foals, they represent an impressive 12 percent, with the percentage rising still higher when a handful of other stakes winners are included. So here we have an example of a nick which has stood the test of time since its potential was highlighted by Pulpit, Tomisue’s Delight and Accelerator, three members of A.P. Indy’s first crop. Perhaps the nick has derived some of its staying power from the fact that A.P. Indy and Mr. Prospector have both been champion sire and Mr. Prospector has been champion broodmare sire on numerous occasions.

Click here to watch Adriano in the Lane’s End Stakes 2008.


Costume
, another of the weekend’s Grade II winners, also represents a successful nick (even though she carries a Werk nick rating of B+). There are 25 foals by Danehill out of Nureyev mares - a mating which creates 3x3 inbreeding to Northern Dancer - and Costume is the fourth group winner to emerge from them. She follows Desert King (G1 Irish 2000 Guineas and Irish Derby), Danestorm (G1 Brisbane Cup) and Distinction (G2 Goodwood Cup).

While this cross was attractive, it has always been Juddmonte’s priority to try to pair mares with stallions which suit their conformation. Danehill’s progeny tended to be strong, more compact than lengthy, and he passed on his own good hind-leg and hocks. He was also a fairly reliable source of bone, the danger areas being a risk of back-at-the-knee conformation and upright pasterns. In the case of Costume’s dam, the Group 3 winner Dance Dress, Danehill was considered an excellent match for this quality individual on the score of size, bone, pasterns and hocks. The theory became reality in the form of Costume. Correct enough and sound enough to have raced 12 times already, this admirably genuine filly seems to be still on the upgrade. And while the nick which produced her now has 16 percent group winners to its credit, Juddmonte’s holistic approach to matings has done even better. Costume is one of 13 group/graded winners among Juddmonte’s 57 living foals by Danehill, which equals nearly 23 percent, and she is one of the sample’s 17 stakes winners (nearly 30 percent).

It is going to be interesting to see whether Thousand Words, a four-year-old by Danehill’s son Dansili out of a mare from Costume’s family, can emulate the filly’s success when he steps back into graded company following his impressive win at Santa Anita last month.

Costume%20Pedigree%201.jpg

Friday
Dec142007

One Big Mama: One Tired Old Girl

Annet BeckerAnnet BeckerAnyone needing a reminder of the responsibilities shouldered by Summerhill’s incumbent Broodmare Manager, Annet Becker, during her three year tenure as manager of the Intensive and Frailcare units at Prince Khalid Abdullah’s Juddmonte Farm (USA), would’ve been sharply refocused by the announcement of the retirement of one of America’s most famous broodmares, TOUSSAUD, yesterday.

Besides Toussaud, Annet’s remarkable patients included HASILI, arguably the greatest broodmare of all time, and whose son DANSILI (by Danehill), has emerged in 2007 as one of Europe’s most exciting young sires.

Hasili produced no fewer than 5 individual Group One winners (3 of which were Champions) as well as Dansili (who, extraordinarily, did not win at that level, though he came close,) whilst Toussaud, (by Northern Guest’s younger brother, El Gran Senor,) produced four.

Bloodhorsenow.com reported that Toussaud, whose five grade/group winners include promising young sire Empire Maker, has been pensioned from her duties as a broodmare at Khalid Abdullah’s Juddmonte Farms near Lexington. The 18-year-old daughter of El Gran Senor is stricken with laminitis.

“She’s been great to us, and even though she’s still young, we don’t want to be greedy,” said farm manager Garret O’Rourke about the 2002 Kentucky Broodmare of the Year. ”She’s left behind quite a legacy. We look forward to future success with her young daughters as broodmares.”

A Juddmonte homebred, Toussaud is out of the In Reality mare image of Reality. Toussaud, a grade 1 winner in California and a group 3 winner in England, is the dam of grade 1 winners Chester House (by Mr Prospector), Honest Lady (by Seattle Slew), and Chiselling (By Woodman), in addition to classic winner Empire Maker (by Unbridled). She also is the dam of grade 2 winner Decarchy (by Distant View).

Several of Toussaud stakes winners have made their mark following their racing careers. Empire Maker, who won the 2003 Belmont Stakes (Gr1), is one of this year’s top freshman sires. He is represented by three stakes winners, including grade 1 winner Country Star and grade 2 winner Mushka. Empire Maker stands at Juddmonte.

Honest Lady is a multiple stakes producer for Juddmonte. She is the dam of stakes winners First Defence (by Unbridled Song) and Phantom Rose (in France, by Danzig). Honest Lady is in foal to Giant’s Causeway.

Chester House, whose big win came in the 2000 Arlington Million Stakes (Gr1T), stood three years at Juddmonte prior to his death in 2003. He is represented by 18 stakes winners, including a dozen this year.

Decarchy, who is represented by a stakes winner this year from his first crop, stands at Magall Farms in California. Chiselling was sent to stand in South Africa after his racing days.

Toussaud is the dam of 10 foals, including an unnamed AP. Indy yearling filly. Six of her nine foals of racing age are winners. As a racemare, Toussaud won the Gamely Handicap Gr1T) and two grade 2 stakes, plus the Van Gheest Criterion Stakes (Eng3). She retired with seven wins and six placings from 15 races and earnings of $551,536.

Extract from Bloodhorse 12.12.07

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