The Man Alongside Foundation Sire Malibu Moon

Following the sudden passing of Spendthrift foundation sire Malibu Moon, much has been said on his accomplishments at stud.

The perennial leading sire has had 126 stakes winners, 51 graded winners and 17 Grade I winners. He's the sire of a Kentucky winner in Orb and an Eclipse Champion in Declan's Moon. As a broodmare sire, he has produced champion Stellar Wind (Curlin) and Breeders' Cup runner-up Bellafina (Quality Road). Just yesterday, he had his 21st 'TDN Rising Star' with Always Carina.

To Spendthrift's Stallion Manager Wayne Howard, those stats don't mean all that much. To him, Malibu Moon will be remembered for so much more.

“Malibu Moon is a once-in-a-lifetime horse for me,” he said. “I don't see myself having another horse like that again with his presence. Everybody knew he was the man. Without Malibu Moon, I'm not sure where I would be.”

Malibu Moon was foaled in 1997, the same year Howard, a native of Falmouth Cornwall England, arrived in the United States.

As a juvenile, Malibu Moon went into training under Melvin Stute, where the B. Wayne Hughes homebred made his only two career starts at Hollywood Park, breaking his maiden on second asking going five furlongs. From there, the son of A.P. Indy began his stud career at the Pons family's Country Life Farm in Maryland, his initial stud fee set at $3,000.

Meanwhile Howard was working at Gainsborough Farm, learning from the likes of Allen Kershaw and Sandy Hatfield.

In 2004, Malibu Moon was relocated to Castleton Lyons. That's when the stars aligned for Malibu Moon and Wayne Howard.

“I was working the sales when Gary Murray [of Castleton Lyons] came up to me and asked if I had ever worked with stallions,” Howard recalled. “He said they were looking for somebody to come look after Malibu Moon and they had already been through three people who didn't stay very long with him. I came for an interview and Gary made me grab the horse. He bit me, made me bleed. I took him out to the show ring and when he went up in the air, I gave him a slap on the shoulder. Gary said I was hired. That's how our 18 years together started.”

The duo slowly began to figure each other out, their relationship developing as mutual respect grew for the other.

“He was always a tough horse to be around,” Howard said. “But he wasn't in any way vicious, he just had to have his own way. I spent most of my time looking at the sky because he was always on his hind end with his legs up in the air. You had to have a firm hand but also respect him.”

During Malibu Moon's first year in Kentucky in 2004, his son Declan's Moon was named champion juvenile colt. The next year, his fee at Castleton Lyons was increased from $10,000 to $30,000, and again to $40,000 in 2007.

In 2008, Hughes was ready to bring his homebred success to Spendthrift. It was quickly decided that Howard would come along too.

“They were asking who was going to look after him,” Howard remembered. “I was lucky enough that they said, 'Well Wayne is handling him now,' and I was offered the position. When I arrived at Spendthrift, there were just three stallions. Here we are now with 24.”

As it turned out, Howard's hand with the rambunctious stallion would be needed for most of his career.

“Malibu Moon was a tough horse up until the age of 14,” he said. “Then he finally decided it was time to grow up a bit. But he was definitely the man of the barn. He was such a great breeder, but we had to do everything his way. He was the boss, one hundred perfect.”

Even as the stallion produced a Kentucky Derby winner in 2013 and soon became regarded as a perennial leading sire, to Howard, he was just 'Malibu,' or sometimes, 'Boo Boo.'

“For me, the enjoyment was just coming up here at 11 o'clock at night in my pj's and flip flops, going around and seeing all the guys and patting Malibu on the head and giving him a carrot. The racing is great, but for me, it's about seeing these horses and getting to know them. Every one of them is different and Malibu, without a doubt, is a horse like I've never been around before. He's one of a kind.”

Over the past few days, the loss of Spendthrift's cornerstone sire has hung heavy among members of the farm's stallion team.

“There was just a presence about him,” Howard explained. “When every other stallion would see him walk by, they would all just kind of drop their heads. They knew he was the boss of the farm. Without him around, there's a big hole to be honest. You don't think of Spendthrift without thinking of Malibu Moon. It's heartbreaking at the moment.”

A few years ago, Howard handed Malibu's shank over to his new handler, Alex.

“He's taking it very hard,” Howard shared. “He has lost a great horse.”

Malibu Moon's paddock is the first on the left when driving up the hill to the farm's sprawling stallion complex. Along the fence, an arrangement of flowers sits this week, given by Howard and his wife in honor of the horse that will have an eternal impact on their lives.

“He was just like having a best friend,” Howard said. “There were plenty of good horse people out there, but you get an opportunity and you grab it and you're lucky enough to get a chance to go with a horse. I've been at Spendthrift now for 14 years. We breed up to 3,000 mares a year and I couldn't be in a better place. If it weren't for Malibu, who knows? Honestly, he's made my career.”

Howard and his team find comfort in the fact that one of Malibu Moon's most accomplished sons, Gormley, is off to a flying start at Spendthrift with his first crop of juveniles.

“We're super excited about Gormley,” Howard said. “He has started off great and we're hoping that one day, we can put Gormley in Malibu's stall and he can take over the mantle, without a doubt.”

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Pioneerof the Nile Colt Lights Up Tote Board in Gotham

Chiefswood Stables homebred Weyburn (Pioneerof the Nile), last seen breaking his maiden going seven panels in the local slop Dec. 5, slipped past the bettors and into the winner's circle to post a 46-1 upset in Aqueduct's GIII Gotham S. He fended off Chad Brown trainee Crowded Trade (More Than Ready) to take the head bob, with that one's stablemate Highly Motivated (Into Mischief) a non-threatening third as the 4-5 chalk.

Away well from his outside draw, Weyburn locked on to California invader Freedom Fighter (Violence) through splits of :24.29 and :48.03. He challenged the pacesetter at the quarter pole as Crowded Trade looked like he would blow on by him out wider, but Weyburn dug deep to eek out the narrow and improbable victory and pick up 50 GI Kentucky Derby qualifying points.

Fifth sprinting in his Belmont debut in October, Weyburn sported first-time blinkers when second going seven furlongs here Nov. 14 before donning cap and gown in the slop while earning just a 69 Beyer Speed Figure. Perhaps his recent worktab on the Belmont training track signaled his readiness–it included a 1:00 1/5 bullet from the gate two breezes back Feb. 25.

“We thought he would like the distance, ultimately. His last two works were sensational,” said trainer Jimmy Jerkens, whose father, the legendary H. Allen Jerkens, won this event in 1992 with Devil his Due. “He went three-quarters in 1:13 and galloped out in 26 and change. I didn't mean for him to go that fast. But you don't worry about that when they're fresh and strong. He was going to have to do something like that to win a race like this. We had to ask him for something in the morning and replicate it in the afternoon.”

Jerkens, who did win the GI Wood Memorial S. in 2014, said of returning in that now Grade II final stepping stone for the

GI Kentucky Derby: “I don't know. We'll just take this all in. Of course it's a logical spot. It's right here. He's kind of a quirky horse. The pony man takes him every morning because he's tough and wants to wheel. He's still a little kid. He doesn't trust everybody. This is just really satisfying because it's been a tough winter and we loved him from day one. He didn't run first out and we didn't know what to think. Thank God we stuck to our guns. I think he'll end up being a decent colt.”

Rob Landry, general manager of Robert and Mark Krembil's Ontario-based Chiefswood Stables, was on hand Saturday.

“His half-brother Yorkton was a fighter and Nipigon, his other half-brother, was a real fighter, too,” Landry said. “He looked like he really dug in hard in the stretch when it counted. He had every reason to give up.”

When asked about any potential Kentucky Derby dreams, Landry said, “We don't want to get too excited. We haven't nominated him to the Triple Crown because we were a little bit behind, but that doesn't stop us from supplementing him. If he earns his way there, he'll get to run there. There's still a long way to go.”

Saturday, Aqueduct
GOTHAM S.-GIII, $300,000, Aqueduct, 3-6, 3yo, 1m, 1:38.70, ft.
1–WEYBURN, 118, c, 3, by Pioneerof the Nile
                1st Dam: Sunday Affair, by A.P. Indy
                2nd Dam: Million Gift (Jpn), by Sunday Silence
                3rd Dam: Maplejinsky, by Nijinsky II
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN.
O/B-Chiefswood Stables Limited (ON); T-James A. Jerkens;
J-Trevor McCarthy. $165,000. Lifetime Record: 4-2-1-0,
$227,520. *1/2 to Yorkton (Speightstown), MGSW-Can,
GSP-USA, $546,332; 1/2 to Nipigon (Niigon), MSP, $384,329.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating: A+.
2–Crowded Trade, 118, c, 3, More Than Ready–Maude S, by
Jump Start. ($185,000 Wlg '18 KEENOV). O-Klaravich Stables, Inc.; B-Forging Oaks LLC (KY); T-Chad C. Brown. $60,000.
3–Highly Motivated, 120, c, 3, Into Mischief–Strong Incentive,
by Warrior's Reward. ($240,000 Wlg '18 KEENOV). O-Klaravich Stables, Inc.; B-Klaravich Stables (KY); T-Chad C. Brown. $36,000.
Margins: NO, 1 3/4, 3. Odds: 46.75, 5.40, 0.95.
Also Ran: Freedom Fighter, The Reds, Capo Kane, Wipe the Slate, Atlantic Road.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

Pedigree Notes:
American Pharoah, Classic Empire, Cairo Prince, Social Inclusion, Thousand Words, and now Weyburn: not too many years have gone by recently without a major contender on the Derby trail by Pioneerof the Nile. The former WinStar stallion, who died unexpectedly two years ago this month at 13, has 35 black-type winners, including 15 graded, in his eight crops to race. The Empire Maker stallion's last full crop of 2-year-olds will race this year. Weyburn is a half-brother to MGSW and new Crestwood stallion Yorkton (Speightstown), as well as to Canadian MSP Nipigon (Niigon), with dam Sunday Affair last producing a live foal in 2019, a filly named Indy Champagne (Curlin). Sunday Affair, an unraced A.P. Indy mare who sold for $800,000 as a Keeneland September yearling, is out of a daughter of Sunday Silence from a four-year stint for her granddam, MGISW and Grade I stakes producer Maplejinsky, in Japan. The female family is one of the deepest in the North American stud book, with Maplejinsky's descendants including champion Sky Beauty (Blushing Groom {Fr}), as well as GISWs Take of Ekati (Tale of the Cat), Pleasant Home (Seeking the Gold), Point of Entry (Dynaformer), and Pine Island (Arch), and her immediate ancestors including the wonderful and prolific line of “Beauty” mares: Gold Beauty (Mr. Prospector), Stick to Beauty (Illustrious), and Hail to Beauty (Hail to Reason).

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Feb. 4 Insights: Expensive Quality Road Colt Debuts at Fair Grounds

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

The most expensive yearling and second-priciest progeny overall of superstar sire Quality Road to sell in 2019, FIND NEW ROADS, will open his account in this New Orleans dirt sprint Thursday afternoon. Hammering to Tom Durant for $950,000 at Keeneland September, the bay is out of a daughter of GSW Welcome Surprise (Seeking the Gold), herself a half-sister to dual champion and legendary super-sire A.P. Indy (Seattle Slew) as well as Classic winner Summer Squall (Storm Bird). Trained by Bret Calhoun, Find New Roads shows a series of encouraging and stamina-building drills, including a six-furlong move in 1:13 1/5 (1/3) over the local main track Jan. 18. Also set to be unveiled is Gary and Mary West's Prime Time Player (Ghostzapper). Bought for $430,000 at KEESEP, the chestnut also has recorded several quick breezes, including a five-furlong spin from the gate in 1:00 4/5 (4/29) here Jan. 25. His future may ultimately be on grass, however, as he's out of a daughter of five-time turf GSW Plenty of Grace (Roberto), who is also a half to champion grass mare Soaring Softly (Kris S.), and most of the other black-type in the family has been earned on the lawn. TJCIS PPs@JBiancaTDN

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Late-Developing Idol, Runner-Up In San Antonio, Has Connections Thinking Big ‘Cap

Richard Baltas, an active participant at Santa Anita Park's entry box, has San Antonio runner-up Idol pointed to the Grade 2 San Pasqual Stakes on Jan. 30, a major steppingstone to the G1 Santa Anita Handicap on March 6.

Owned by Calvin Nguyen, the son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin had won two overnight races at Churchill Downs by daylight margins as a 3-year-old before tackling older in the San Antonio on Dec. 26.

Out of stakes-winning A.P. Indy mare Marion Ravenwood, Idol commanded a final bid of $375,000 at the 2018 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. The late-developing colt did not debut until Sept. 5 of his sophomore season, then broke his maiden and won an allowance, both at Churchill Downs, by a combined 8 1/4 lengths. Idol's second-place finish in the San Antonio came in just his fourth career start.

Through 12 racing days, Baltas has run 42 horses to rank third behind perennial category leader Doug O'Neill (55) and Peter Miller (44).

Meanwhile, Venetian Harbor is “almost ready to come in” from Kentucky after a three-month freshening following her race in the Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint at Keeneland on Nov. 6, in which she finished far back after attending the pace early in the seven-furlong event.

“We gave her 90 days off at the farm and she's coming back into training,” Baltas said of the daughter of Munnings, winner of two Grade 2 stakes last year, the Las Virgenes at Santa Anita and the Raven Run at Keeneland.

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