Multiple Track-Record Setter Highly Motivated to Airdrie

Klaravich Stables's multiple track-record setter Highly Motivated (Into Mischief–Strong Incentive, by Warrior's Reward) will join the Airdrie Stud stallion roster for the upcoming 2023 breeding season, the farm announced Tuesday. He will stand for a fee of $7,500 LFSN.

A son of perennial leading sire Into Mischief, Highly Motivated was purchased by Mike Ryan as a weanling on behalf of his owner for $240,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November Sale. Entrusted to trainer Chad Brown, Highly Motivated broke his maiden as the 3-5 favorite in September of his 2-year-old year at 6 1/2 furlongs at Belmont over future Grade I winner Known Agenda (Curlin). He followed that up with a win in the Nyquist S. on the Breeders' Cup undercard at Keeneland, winning easily by 4 1/4 lengths. His time of 1:14 4 for the 6 1/2 furlongs set the Keeneland track record, and his 96 Beyer Speed Figure represented the highest number of any 2-year-old that competed on the Breeders' Cup Championship weekend–a lineup that included multiple Eclipse Award champion Essential Quality (Tapit) and the multiple Breeders' Cup champion Golden Pal (Uncle Mo). By year's end, only Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) could boast of a higher juvenile figure.

Returning to Keeneland in the spring of his 3-year-old year, Highly Motivated was second to Essential Quality in a memorable edition of the GII Toyota Blue Grass S., where the latter prevailed by a short neck after a long stretch duel. It was a further 5 1/2 lengths back to third-place finisher Rombauer (Twirling Candy), who would return to take the GI Preakness S. Sent off as the 10-1 fifth choice in the GI Kentucky Derby in his next start, Highly Motivated's disappointing 10th-place finish would prove to be the final start of his sophomore season.

Following a nearly year-long layoff, Highly Motivated was brought back to win a mile feature at Belmont Park before making his next start in the GIII Monmouth Cup S, where he posted an easy victory, breaking the nine-furlong track record in 1:46.53 set 37 years prior by Kentucky Derby winner and Horse of the Year Spend a Buck. Subsequently injured while training toward the GI Cigar Mile, Highly Motivated retires with a record of 10-4-3-1 and earnings of more than $667,000.

Highly Motivated was the best colt in our barn at two and three and ran Grade I-winning numbers at both ages,” said trainer Chad Brown. “He's a two-time track-record setter by one of the best stallions in the world. In my opinion, there's not a ceiling on his potential at stud.”

“He's an undeniable talent by a brilliant sire,” added Airdrie's Bret Jones. “He's an absolutely gorgeous Mike Ryan purchase that we believe will be on anyone's short list of the best-looking horses retired this year. Highly Motivated fits the description of so many important sires: a horse with Grade I speed that goes to stud without the benefit of a Grade I on his resume. He deserves the opportunity and we will see that he gets it. Having given us the chance two years ago to stand Complexity, we are again grateful to Seth Klarman for entrusting our Airdrie team with the future of his talented horse.”

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Grade I Winner Happy Saver to Stand at Airdrie

Wertheimer and Frere's homebred Grade I winner and 'TDN Rising Star' Happy Saver (Super Saver–Happy Week, by Distorted Humor) will retire to Airdrie Stud in Midway, Kentucky following this year's GI Breeders' Cup Classic, Airdrie Stud announced Friday. He will stand for an initial fee of $12,500 LFSN.

Undefeated in his first five starts, Happy Saver's signature victory came in the historic GI Jockey Club Gold Cup, where he won the race as a 3-year-old in his fourth career start. Most recently, Happy Saver has finished second in each of the last four Grade I races he has contested. Those efforts include runner-up finishes to Flightline (Tapit) in the GI Metropolitan H. and Life Is Good (Into Mischief) in the GI Whitney S., races in which he finished in front of GISWs Olympiad (Speightstown), Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow), Speaker's Corner (Street Sense) and Aloha West (Hard Spun), among others.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher throughout his career, Happy Saver will take a lifetime record of five wins and six graded stakes placings from his 12 lifetime races and earnings of nearly $1.2 million into an expected start in the $6,000,000 GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland Nov. 5.

A regally bred son of the multiple Eclipse Award-winning sire Super Saver, Happy Saver's female family stands as one of the breed's most important. Out of the sprinting black-type Distorted Humor mare Happy Week, Happy Saver's third dam is Broodmare of the Year Weekend Surprise, dam of the champion racehorse and leading sire A.P. Indy, as well as Classic winner Summer Squall.

(Watch Happy Saver's Keeneland work Friday morning)

“Happy Saver has been a priority for our farm since the day we watched him break his maiden in his debut at Belmont,” said Airdrie's Bret Jones. “He won by five lengths that day and ran the same 1:21 and two-fifths as the seven-furlong Grade I Woody Stephens run on the same card at the same distance. It was a `wow' performance and he has validated that early impression by becoming one of the best racehorses in America. He's a direct descendent of Weekend Surprise and when you combine his female family with that of Super Saver's, it's as rich a genetic bank as any horse that will ever retire to stud. He exemplifies the Wertheimer family's best-in-class breeding program and we are so grateful that they have allowed us to partner with them on a stallion that has the speed, class and charisma to be a really special sire.”

“Winning the Jockey Club as an undefeated 3-year-old takes a very special horse, and that's exactly what we've always believed Happy Saver to be,” added Pletcher. “He's a tremendous talent and runs with as much heart as any horse we lead over. He has all the characteristics I think any breeder would look for in a young stallion.”

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Girvin Relocates to Airdrie Stud

Fast-starting freshman sire Girvin (Tale of Ekati–Catch the Moon, by Malibu Moon) will relocate to Airdrie Stud for the 2023 breeding season. The 8-year-old stallion, who began his stud career at the O'Farrell family's Ocala Stud, is already the sire of 12 winners from 23 starters, including the GII Saratoga Special S. winner Damon's Mound and Astoria S. winner Devious Dame.

Girvin, who raced in the silks of Brad Grady for trainer Joe Sharp, won the 2017 GI Betfair.com Haskell Invitational, as well as that year's GII Twinspires.com Louisiana Derby and GII Risen Star S.

He retired to Ocala Stud following his 4-year-old season and stood as a partnership between Brad and Misty Grady's Grand Oaks Farm and Airdrie Stud in a deal brokered by West Bloodstock.

Airdrie's Bret Jones said the opportunity to partner with the Grady and O'Farrell families was a major draw for the farm's investment in Girvin.

“We had great belief in Girvin's potential as a stallion, but just as importantly, we knew that every partner was going to be pulling in the same direction to give the him the greatest possible chance,” said Jones. “Ocala Stud have done a fantastic job both supporting and promoting the horse and the commitment that Brad has made has been extraordinary. He deserves every bit of good luck that comes his way. As for Girvin, he's been tipping his hand since his first foals hit the ground. He throws beautiful babies, had a monster juvenile sales season and I think his 2-year-olds have been as impressive on the track as any first-season stallion in America. He's giving every indication that he can be a big-time Kentucky stallion and we couldn't be more excited about him.”

Grady, and bloodstock agent Bobby Dodd, purchased Girvin for $130,000 at the 2015 Fasig-Tipton October sale.

“When Bobby Dodd and I first bought Girvin he was a beautiful, strong colt, that looked fast,” said Grady. “As a yearling, Mr. Beau Lane told Bobby and I that we had a serious horse and explained his depth of pedigree in a way that two rednecks could understand. Bobby was always high on Girvin and gave him the accolades of a freak. He had a minor setback as a 2-year-old that kept us from pinhooking him. We had the chance to race him, and he took us on the ride of a lifetime that we will never forget. It was a very easy decision to support him for both Misty and I, and when we got a glimpse of his first foals, we knew we did the right thing  for him and us. He has more than blessed our family. We are grateful to Airdrie Stud and Ocala Stud for supporting Girvin, and giving him the best possible chance for success.”

Girvin has arrived at Airdrie and is available for viewing.

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Steadfast Airdrie Stallion Include Dies

Grade I winner Include (Broad Brush—Illeria, by Stop the Music) was euthanized July 18 at Airdrie Stud, the farm he called home for the past 19 years, due to a worsening heart condition. He was 25 years old.

The Airdrie team were made aware of the stallion's heart condition last year and he was pensioned from stud duty shortly thereafter, in the fall of 2021.

“His condition worsened to where he was showing us that there was potentially going to be an unhappy ending and we weren't going to let that happen. We made the very difficult, from an emotional standpoint, a very difficult decision [to euthanize him], but a very easy decision when you're acting in the best interest of the horse,” said Bret Jones, vice president of Airdrie.

Bred in Maryland by Robert E. Meyerhoff and campaigned by his breeder throughout his four-season career, Include gained national attention as arguably one of the country's top handicap horses as a 4-year-old in 2001, with victories in the GI Pimlico Special H., GII New Orleans H. and GII Massachusetts H.

Trained by Grover “Bud” Delp, the Maryland-bred was also second in that year's running of the GII Clark H., and third back-to-back in the GII Suburban H. and GII Meadowlands Cup H., with his worst finish that season a seventh in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

“[Include] is the second-best horse I have ever trained beside Spectacular Bid, and I've had some pretty nice horses,” Delp said in a Suffolk Downs press release sent out ahead of Include's victory in the 2001 Massachusetts H. “He's got a lot of class. The way he ran down Albert The Great from the three-sixteenths pole in the Pimlico Special proved to me he was more than just a good horse.”

The unanimous selection for Horse of the Year and champion older male in Maryland in 2001, Include retired as a 5-year-old with 10 wins from 20 starts and earnings of $1,659,560, also earning 13 triple digit Beyers along the way – including a 117 in the Pimlico Special. He secured seven stakes wins and was Grade II stakes-placed four times.

Include entered stud at Airdrie in 2003, with hopes high as the stallion, who carried his speed around two turns with great success, also offered an attractive outcross for mares with Mr. Prospector and Northern Dancer blood as a son of Broad Brush (Ack Ack).

“It was really a big deal when we first got Include. He had a very obviously impressive track record, you know a Grade I winner on the track, had run really incredible numbers. I remember that being one of the things we were really drawn to,” said Jones. “[He was] bred beautifully, [from a] wonderful family, out of a mare that's gone on to be a really great broodmare. He looked tough and he was tough, and all that added up to what we thought was a very exciting stallion prospect.

“We immediately started supporting him as strongly as we could to try to give him that opportunity. He was a success really from the start.”

And he was, with his first two crops of racing age producing the likes of multiple GI winner Panty Raid, a filly out of the Private Account mare Adventurous Di, and GI winner Cash Included, a filly out of the Chimes Band mare Henderson Band.

As a 3-year-old, Panty Raid won the GII Black-Eyed Susan S., her first stakes win, before taking the GI American Oaks Invitational Stakes and following up with a victory in the GI Juddmonte Spinster S. in 2007. A $110,000 yearling sold at the 2005 Fasig-Tipton July Sale, she eventually went on to sell for $2.5 million at the 2008 Fasig-Tipton November Sale.

“When you start thinking about these stallions, all the memories start coming back, and [Include] was with us for a very long time. We were lucky we bred and raced, in partnership with our great friend Tim Thornton, a filly named Include Betty, who won the [GI] Mother Goose for us, which was a wonderful day,” said Jones. “We bred Include Me Out, another Grade I winner, [and] I remember Panty Raid, how excited we were when she broke her maiden at Saratoga [in 2006] and then went on to be the Grade I winner she was.”

Include Betty, a $42,000 yearling, won the GI Mother Goose S. over favored Wonder Gal (Tiz Wonderful) in 2015, while also securing victory in that year's GIII Fantasy S. and finishing second in the GII Black-Eyed Susan S., while third in the GI Coaching Club American Oaks. Just three years prior, Include Me Out picked up three consecutive graded stakes victories at Santa Anita in the GII La Canada S., GI Santa Margarita Invitational S. and GII Marjorie L. Everett H., before winning the GI Clement L. Hirsch Stakes at Del Mar-all in 2012.

Oklahoma-bred She's All In, from Include's 2007 foal crop, remains his highest earner with $1,102,489 bankrolled from 16 wins, eight seconds and three thirds in 38 career starts, topped by an impressive victory in the 2012 GIII Sixty Sails Handicap.

“He was probably the most underrated stallion we ever stood. I don't know if he ever got his due in the commercial market because all he ever did was sire racehorses. The average earning index is something we pay a lot of attention to and historically he's always improved his mares,” said Jones. “He got labeled as a filly sire, because he had some exceptional fillies, I mean he really did, [but] he never threw a colt that really had his brilliance. I wish I was smart enough to figure out why that was.

“He was really a remarkable sire of fillies and through that I think will be a really, really good broodmare sire.”

Other progeny highlights include Virginia-bred colt Redeemed, winner of the GII Brooklyn H. and GIII Greenwood Cup S. in 2012, who also took the GIII Discovery H. the previous year. He retired with $832,140 in earnings and later ranked as a leading first-crop, second-crop, and third-crop sire in the Mid-Atlantic region while standing at Northview Stallion Station in Maryland.

Among current runners, 5-year-old mare Sconsin reigns supreme as she keeps her sire's legacy alive with multiple graded stakes victories, most recently capturing the GIII Winning Colors S. in May as she nears the $1 million in earnings mark.

“That's the amazing thing about the horse business, you can go back through the catalog pages and look back two, three, four generations and see those old friends. Include is going to be one of those old friends that is going to be on those catalog pages for a long, long time,” said Jones.

With 17 crops of racing age, from 19 crops total, Include has sired 799 winners (66%) and 988 starters (82%) from his 1,202 foals of racing age to date. Those include six champions in Puerto Rico, Argentina, Canada and Panama; 24 graded black-type stakes winners; and 56 black-type stakes winners. His progeny earnings are in excess of $63 million.

“If you have an Include that's a good 2-year-old, you may really have a special horse, like a Panty Raid, because they seem to always get better with more racing,” said Jones. “They run with that real desire to win, were very sound horses just like himself, and a lot of people that race Includes have a lot of fun not only earning money but winning a lot of races.”

Though there is a silver lining to be found in his final crops of foals, along with the continuous impact he'll have as a broodmare sire, the Airdrie team will forever mourn the loss of the longtime stallion and barn favorite.

“It's to his great credit and the credit of our syndicate members who really helped support him that he was able to stay in the stallion barn his entire life. He was absolutely one of the favorites in the barn for everybody, he really ran the show. Anybody who came to the stallion barn, any time one of the other stallions would parade by Include's stall, he let everybody know that he didn't want that horse anywhere near his turf. He would yell out, which would always make everybody laugh and they would say, 'There's Include.' He was the boss,” recalled Jones.

“I think the boss of the barn is a very fitting legacy for Include and he will be missed by everyone who ever spent time with him.”

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