Letter To The Editor: Deep Dive Into Pedigree Of Two Phil’s Reveals Rich Family History

I was very interested to read Frank Mitchell's piece on the pedigree of Two Phil's and the story of the Man o' War mare War Feathers, his 10th dam. I found this family is even richer in magnificent racehorses and unique stories that are truly fascinating for horse lovers and breeders.

War Plumage, the champion daughter of War Feathers mentioned in the article, produced to the cover of champion and classic winner Alsab the filly Plumed, a winner of just two races for her breeders James Cox Brady and Harold Oots. It is through Plumed that the direct female line of War Feathers and her daughter War Plumage reaches Two Phil's.

But there was another daughter of War Plumage that has touched modern racing history. Her 1945 daughter by King Cole named Gold Crest was a winner of just one race. At stud, Gold Crest produced the stakes-winning gelding Vantage and her daughter Sweeping Beauty produced four stakes winner. But it was her unraced daughter by the unheralded stallion Burg-el-Arab, who kept the line going. That was the 1952 filly Goldarette, also bred by Brady and Oots. The best stallion Goldarette was ever bred to was the English import Djeddah. By this time, Goldarette was under different ownership, and she dropped her Djeddah filly Silver Abbey for breeder Mrs. Anderson Fowler in New Jersey.

Also, by this time, this branch of the family of War Feathers had been very quiescent, with the only high caliber stakes winner being War Plumage. The Fowlers nursed this branch for the next couple of generations, until they bred the minor stakes-winning filly La Reine Rouge, whose stakes-placed daughter by Carson City named La Ville Rouge produced the brilliant but ill-fated Kentucky Derby hero Barbaro plus four other stakes performers.

Following Mr. Mitchell's wave illustration, the family was at the tip of the wave with the championship of War Plumage and then sunk to the lows of the wave with minor stakes winners at best for several generations until the wave crested again with the rise of Barbaro. The Grade 1- winning sprinting filly Emma's Encore also hails from this family, her second dam being a half-sister to the dam of Barbaro.

However, there is yet another branch of the family, going back to the dam of War Feathers, an unraced daughter of William Rufus who was imported to the United States to serve in the broodmare band of Admiral Cary T. Grayson. Five years prior to the birth of her Man o' War filly War Feathers, Tuscan Red, in 1919, foaled a daughter of the Commando stallion Celt. Named Leghorn, this filly was only a minor stakes winner. As a broodmare, she was average, with a small stakes winner to her credit. But through her daughter Tophorn, by Bull Dog, there came the good filly Athene, a winner of the Selima Stakes. Tophorn also produced the durable filly Dinner Horn, by Pot au Feu.

Tophorn became the second dam of the full-siblings and champions Primonetta and Chateaugay. The latter won the 1963 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes enroute to champion 3-year-old honors. The former, Primonetta, was a special favorite of mine.

I learned she was alive at the age of 32 back in the summer of 1990. I contacted Darby Dan Farm and found she was at their Ohio division near Columbus in retirement. I was allowed to visit her and found a mare in beautiful shape for being as old as she was. She shared her retirement with her close companion, the stakes producer Queen's Paradise.

Over the next two and a half years, I visited Primonetta and Queen's Paradise several times. The staff of Darby Dan gave Primonetta a birthday party every year on her actual birthday on Feb. 14. I was invited to her party in 1991. She had a carrot cake and a film of her Alabama Stakes victory was shown on a sheet hung from a wall of her barn. She died in January 1993 at the age of 35. The little pink and red hearts I had decorated her stall with were buried with her, which touched my heart so much, and she rests beneath a white boulder headstone on the Darby Dan Ohio property. Primonetta was the 1978 Broodmare of the Year and the dam of three major stakes winners.

There again, there had been a wave; the nice filly Athene and then quiet until the emergence of the dual champion siblings Primonetta and Chateaugay. Then a lull until the 1970s, when a half-sister to Primonetta and Chateaugay, the My Babu mare Luiana, produced Little Current, 1974 winner of the Preakness and Belmont Stakes and champion 3-year-old. Another lull until the 2000s, and there came Hard Spun, second in the Kentucky Derby to Street Sense, a Grade 1 winner, and very successful stallion, and sire of Two Phil's. Champion older horse Improbable also hailed from this family, as his fourth dam is none other than Luiana.

One final observation on the pedigree of Two Phil's. He is line bred in the female line to Tuscan Red. His sire, Hard Spun, as we have seen, goes back to her via her daughter Leghorn, and his dam traces directly to her via her daughter War Feathers. This type of line breeding has produced a number of top caliber performers, including two fillies from my youth I absolutely loved, Numbered Account and Relaxing. Tough, honest, and talented on the racetrack, Two Phil's should make a very interesting addition to the stallion ranks.

Elizabeth Martiniak, horse lover and free-lance racing writer

Janesville, Wisconsin

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Rusty Arnold: Red Carpet Ready ‘Happy And Ready To Go’ In Competitive Victory Ride

Ashbrook Farm and Upland Flats Racing's dual graded stakes-winner Red Carpet Ready was set to make her Empire State debut in the June 8 Jersey Girl at Belmont Park, but had her plans derailed when poor air quality forced the cancelation of that day's card. With clearer skies one month later, the Rusty Arnold trainee is back on track for a start in New York in Saturday's Grade 3, $175,000 Victory Ride, a 6 1/2-furlong sprint for sophomore fillies, at Belmont.

“She'll be leaving from Keeneland tomorrow afternoon and arrives at Belmont on Thursday morning,” said Arnold. “She's trained well and we had a little bit more of a gap than we wanted to have, but she's had three good, solid works here. She's happy and ready to go.”

The daughter of Oscar Performance flaunts the most graded stakes experience in the field of eight and was last seen posting a gutsy head score over resurgent pacesetter Munnys Gold in the Grade 2 Eight Belles on May 5 at Churchill Downs. There, she pounced from just off the pace under Luis Saez to take command at the top of the lane and battle back against her game foe, handing the Todd Pletcher trainee her first loss in four outings. She was awarded a career-best 92 Beyer Speed Figure, the highest of any in the Victory Ride field.

Arnold said he is hopeful Red Carpet Ready's performance against a then-undefeated Munnys Gold bodes well for the challenge she'll face against undefeated competitors Maple Leaf Mel and the Brad Cox-trained Dazzling Blue in the Victory Ride.

“She ran well,” said Arnold. “Todd's filly was undefeated and she's going to hook two undefeated fillies in this race with Maple Leaf Mel and Brad's filly – they've never been beaten and we have. There's two very good fillies right there and a few other good ones as well. It's a lot tougher race than the one we didn't run in [the Jersey Girl].”

The talented dark bay has won 4-of-5 starts, including the Grade 3 Forward Gal in February at Gulfstream Park and the Fern Creek going the Victory Ride distance in November at Churchill. Her lone defeat came in the Grade 2 Davona Dale in March, where she finished third, seven lengths behind the victorious Dorth Vader, who went on to finish a close second to Pretty Mischievous in the Grade 1 Acorn presented by Great Jones Distilling Co. three starts later.

“I think six and a half [furlongs] will actually suit her better,” said Arnold. “When she ran in the Eight Belles, she opened up a clear lead at the sixteenth pole and hung on in the end, but I think that's the end of how far she wants to go – six and a half won't be an issue.”

Red Carpet Ready's career has been laced with ups and downs that have shaped its trajectory, for better or worse. Arnold had planned to debut the filly on turf considering her pedigree's strong grass influence, but was forced to run her on dirt when Churchill canceled turf racing last fall. She relished a sloppy main track on debut in October, defeating a field of 12 by 10 lengths at odds of 36-1.

“I guess she surprised some people in her first start, but she had shown ability,” said Arnold. “I think the surprise was the surface. She's by Oscar Performance and at the time, there had not been a winner for him on the dirt. It's a little different now, but last fall people questioned her pedigree, not her ability. When she won, everyone – including myself – thought it was the slop and weren't convinced. But then she did it on fast dirt twice in a row and ran her big race in the Eight Belles.”

With the cancellation of the Jersey Girl being the latest unexpected turn in Red Carpet Ready's career, Arnold said he is hopeful it leads to a happy surprise on Saturday just as her affinity for the main track has.

“She was one of the good things that happened to us off of losing the turf,” said Arnold. “It's been a really weird year for her and she was going to run the last week at Churchill, but that was canceled. We had to decide to either wait for Ellis Park or go to New York. She was ready to roll so we decided to go to New York, and who would have thought it would be canceled by a fire in Canada? We've regrouped and I liked the timing of this race.”

The Victory Ride is named in honor of the filly Arnold trained to victory in the 2001 Grade 1 Test, a race slated for August 5 that Red Carpet Ready could target provided she gives a strong performance Saturday.

“I know stories don't mean anything in this business, but after having trained Victory Ride, it would be nice to win this race,” said Arnold. “This race started off as almost an overnight handicap and now it's worked its way up to a very nice prep for the Test. You'd like to have this [win photo] hanging there, but she's going to have to work for it. The Test is the ultimate goal, but like the old cliché, one at a time. She has to take this step to get to the next ones.”

Red Carpet Ready will emerge from post 8 in rein to Saez.

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McPeek Looking For Back-To-Back Upsets In Belmont Derby Invitational

Harold Lerner, Nehoc Stables, AWC Stables and Team Stallion Racing Stable's stakes-placed Mendelssohns March will be upset minded in Saturday's Grade 1, $750,000 Belmont Derby Invitational, a 10-furlong inner turf test for sophomores at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

Trainer Kenny McPeek won this event last year with 26-1 shot Classic Causeway, who posted a gate-to-wire score over favored Nations Pride and second-choice Stone Age. This year, he returns with the improving Mendelssohns March, who enters from a close runner-up effort to returning rival Webslinger in the nine-furlong Audubon on June 3 at Churchill Downs.

The Mendelssohn colt graduated on debut in February via disqualification traveling one-mile over firm Fair Grounds turf. He made his next two starts on dirt, winning an optional-claimer at Oaklawn in March over sloppy and sealed conditions before finishing sixth in the Grade 1 Blue Grass at Keeneland. Mendelssohns March returned to grass in May and finished ninth in the Grade 2 American Turf when defeated 4 3/4-lengths by Webslinger.

“He's coming off a really good run. We know it's a tough race, but we think he's going to like the added distance,” McPeek said. “He's acting like he's quite ratable. He started his career really well, 2-for-2. This is an ambitious spot for him, we realize that, but you're not going to get many opportunities to run a mile and a quarter.”

The $110,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase is out of the Galileo mare Unappeased, who is a half-sister to Grade 1-winner Sligo Bay.

“He's a beautiful moving horse,” McPeek said. “I bought him as a yearling and with a Galileo mare, how can you go wrong with that. I really thought he was one of my top 3-year-olds and this is an opportunity to prove himself at a high level.”

McPeek said Mendelssohns March, who will exit the inside post Saturday under Dylan Davis, has trained very well upstate at Saratoga Race Course over the Oklahoma trainer turf, working in company with Walking L Thoroughbreds and Three Chimneys Farm's promising filly Freydis the Red.

The French-bred daughter of Saxon Warrior will make her stakes debut in Saturday's co-featured Grade 1, $500,000 Fasig-Tipton Belmont Oaks Invitational.

The 10-furlong inner turf test for sophomore fillies kicks off the Fasig-Tipton Fillies Turf Triple series, which is followed by the 1 3/16-mile Grade 3, $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Oaks Invitational on August 4 at Saratoga Race Course and the Grade 3, $350,000 Fasig-Tipton Jockey Club Oaks Invitational on September 16 going 11 furlongs at Belmont at the Big A.

Freydis the Red completed the exacta on three occasions before breaking through last out at sixth asking on May 29 in a nine-furlong maiden special weight over firm Churchill turf. The 4 1/4-length score garnered a career-best 79 Beyer Speed Figure.

“I think she's a filly that's getting ready to move forward and I think she's another one we'd like to try at a mile and a quarter,” McPeek said. “The expectations are high for her. She ran really fast in her last race and if she can replicate that and maybe move a little bit forward off the added distance – obviously black type is important – to get her Grade 1-placed would be a big deal.”

McPeek purchased the chestnut, out of the Shirocco mare Songerie, for $147,403 from the Arqana Deauville August Yearling Sale.

“She was a real standout as a yearling,” McPeek said. “She was a little unlucky trying to get her maiden broke last year. But she really put it together in her last race.”

The late-running chestnut will exit post 8 under Junior Alvarado.

McPeek sent out a pair of multiple graded-stakes winning starters for Lucky Seven Stable in Saturday's Grade 1 Stephen Foster at Ellis Park with Rattle N Roll [2nd] and Smile Happy [5th] performing admirably in the nine-furlong route won by West Will Power.

“They both came out of it fine,” McPeek said. “Smile Happy wasn't very cooperative going to the gate. We may try blindfolding him going to the starting gate next time, but he's historically been tough to deal with. Rattle N Roll is a consummate professional.”

Rattle N Roll, a 4-year-old Connect colt, captured the 2021 Grade 1 Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland as a juvenile. He entered the Stephen Foster on a three-race win streak in Grade 3 events, taking the 1 3/16-mile Ben Ali in April at Keeneland, the 1 3/16-mile Pimlico Special in May and the nine-furlong Blame in June at Churchill.

He rallied from seventh in the Stephen Foster to finish a half-length in arrears of the winner, while earning a 101 Beyer Speed Figure – his fifth consecutive triple-digit figure.

Smile Happy, a 4-year-old Runhappy colt, made the grade at second asking in the 2021 Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club at Churchill Downs. He entered the Foster from a sharp score in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 Alysheba in May at Churchill Downs, besting multiple Grade 1-winner Art Collector by two lengths with West Will Power in third.

McPeek said both horses will be nominated to the Grade 1, $1 million Whitney, a nine-furlong rest for older horses on August 5 at Saratoga Race Course which offers a “Win and You're In” berth to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic in November at Santa Anita Park.

MJM Racing's stakes-placed V V's Dream, a 2-year-old Mitole grey, romped by 6 1/4-lengths in her May debut sprinting five furlongs at Churchill Downs. She followed last out with a runner-up effort to Brightwork in the six-furlong Debutante on Sunday at Ellis Park.

McPeek said he wants to stretch out the $190,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase.

“She's a filly that needs longer than that,” McPeek said. “She has a huge future. We'll probably sit on her until they run a mile and a sixteenth.”

Back Racing, Run for LaRoses and Magdalena Racing's Call the Cavalryovercame a bobbled start to graduate on debut in a five-furlong maiden special weight here on June 4.

McPeek said Call the Cavalry will target the Grade 3, $175,000 Sanford, a six-furlong main track sprint for juveniles on July 15 at Saratoga.

The Florida-bred Khozan colt is out of the Songandaprayer mare Song and Delight, who is a half-sister to multiple graded-stakes winner Delightful Kiss and graded-stakes winner Delightful Mary.

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Galileo’s TDN Rising Star Espionage Back With A Win In The Lenebane

Up markedly in trip and racing for the first time since October, TDN Rising Star Espionage (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) made it a winning return in Roscommon's Listed Irish Stallion Farms EBF Lenebane S. on Tuesday evening. Tracking the leading duo throughout the early stages with Ryan Moore navigating the track for the first time, Ballydoyle's 11-10 favourite took time to pick up but after gaining the advantage inside the final furlong asserted for a 1 1/2-length success from Young Ireland (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}). “He had very good form as a two-year-old, but it's taken a while to get him back and I was delighted with him today,” Moore said. “It was a nice performance and I think he's a quality colt who stays well. He got that mile and three quarters well and will be very comfortable up to fourteen.”

Stable representative Chris Armstrong added, “We'll probably look at something like the [G2 Great] Voltigeur from here. He's one to look forward to. It was a good renewal of this race. Over the last few years three-year-olds maybe didn't have the strongest record and it is tough for a three-year-old coming here against some solid older horses.”

The dam Even Song (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}), who captured the G2 Ribblesdale S., also has the unraced 2-year-old filly Maenad (Ire) by Galileo and a yearling daughter of Wootton Bassett (GB). She is a half to Simple Verse (Ire) (Duke Of Marmalade {Ire}), who was successful in the G1 St Leger and G1 British Champions Fillies & Mares S. as well as the G2 Park Hill S. and G3 Lillie Langtry Fillies S. The family includes Red Stars (Ire) (Manduro {Ger}), whose two listed wins included the 2016 renewal of his race and who is alongside her relative two of three 3-year-olds to beat their elders in this in the last 10 runnings.

IRISH STALLION FARMS EBF LENEBANE S.-Listed, €40,000, Roscommon, 7-4, 3yo/up, 11f 154yT, 2:13.45, g/y.
1–ESPIONAGE (IRE), 124, c, 3, Galileo (Ire)–Even Song (Ire) (GSW-Eng, $181,130), by Mastercraftsman (Ire).
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O-Westerberg,Mrs J Magnier,M Tabor,D Smith; B-Coolmore (IRE); T-Aidan O'Brien; J-Ryan Moore. €24,000. Lifetime Record: G1SP-Fr, 4-2-2-0, $94,997.
2–Young Ireland (Ire), 124, c, 3, New Approach (Ire)–Ard Fheis (Ire), by Lil's Boy. O-Mrs J S Bolger; B/T-J S Bolger (IRE). €8,000.
3–Jackfinbar (Fr), 136, h, 8, Whipper–Anna Simona (Ger), by Slip Anchor (GB). (€41,000 Ylg '16 AROYRG). O-Haven't A Pot Partnership; B-Larissa Kneip & Sandrine Grevet (FR); T-Willie Mullins. €4,000.
Margins: 1HF, HF, SHD. Odds: 1.10, 22.00, 18.00.
Also Ran: Serious Challenge (Ire), Kingswood (GB), Angels Wrath (Ire), Sionnach Eile (Ire), Imaginarium (Ire), Vega Magnifico (Ire). Scratched: Harbour Wind (Ire).

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