Broodmare Of The Year Sweet Life Dies At 27

Sweet Life, the dam of champion Sweet Catomine and multiple Grade 1 winner Life Is Sweet, has passed away at age 27.

Sweet Life (by Kris S, out of Symbolically), earned Broodmare of the Year honors in 2009, reflecting her status as a highly influential broodmare in producing winners of two Breeders' Cup races.

Sweet Life's daughter Sweet Catomine, sired by Storm Cat, was crowned champion 2-year-old filly in 2004 after capturing the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, Grade 1 Del Mar Debutante Stakes and G2 Oak Leaf Stakes. At age three, she was victorious in the G1 Santa Anita Oaks and G3 Santa Ysabel Stakes.

Three years after foaling Sweet Catomine, Sweet Life foaled a full-sister to Sweet Catomine, Life Is Sweet. This special filly won over $1.8 million on the racetrack, including victories in the Breeders' Cup Ladies' Classic and G1 Santa Margarita Invitational Handicap. Sweet Life also produced Calimonco, a stakes-winning full brother to the illustrious fillies.

Bred and owned by Pam and Martin Wygod, Sweet Life will be greatly missed. The mare resided at Lane's End Farm since 2008 and was retired from the broodmare band in 2018.

She will be buried in the cemetery at Lane's End Farm. Her daughters, Sweet Catomine and Life Is Sweet are now retired from the broodmare band and grace the fields at Lane's End.

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Colonel Liam Out Of Pegasus World Cup Turf, Retired To Ocala Stud

Colonel Liam's bid for a third consecutive victory in the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational Stakes will not come to be, after the horse was retired on Thursday, BloodHorse and Thoroughbred Daily News report. He will begin his stallion at Ocala Stud for the 2023 breeding season.

The 6-year-old son of Liam's Map finished his career with seven wins in 12 starts for earnings of $1,812,565, racing for owners Robert and Lawana Low and trainer Todd Pletcher.

Colonel Liam would have been among the favorites for this year's Pegasus World Cup Turf, which is set to take place Jan. 22 at Gulfstream Park.

“Colonel Liam took our whole family on quite a ride over a four-year period,” Robert Low told Thoroughbred Daily News. “Ocala Stud has a proven track record of developing young stallions into some of the most formidable stallions in the business and we are excited to be sending Colonel Liam to them. We love the family aspect of Ocala Stud. Their integrity and horsemanship set them apart.”

A $1.2-million purchase by the Lows at the 2019 Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. Spring 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale, Colonel Liam won on debut as a 3-year-old at Gulfstream Park, and he earned his first stakes score at the end of that season, when he took the listed Tropical Park Derby at the same track.

Colonel Liam's Tropical Park Derby score led into his first of two Pegasus World Cup Turf scores to begin his 2021 campaign, besting Largent by a neck at the wire. That race kicked off a run of three victories to start the year, also including the G2 Muniz Memorial Stakes at the Fair Grounds and the G1 Turf Classic Stakes at Churchill Downs.

Colonel Liam premiered in 2022 with another victory in the Pegasus World Cup Turf, this time establishing command earlier in the stretch and drawing off to win by one length.

The horse's final start came in the G2 Fort Lauderdale Stakes at Gulfstream Park on Dec. 31, where he finished a non-threatening sixth. Jacob West, racing manager for the Lows, said that a conversation with Pletcher after that race ultimately steered the decision to retire the horse to stud.

“He has given us so much and if he was not going to have a top campaign, then (racing) made no sense,” West told BloodHorse. “The Lows always do what's best for the horse.”

Colonel Liam will stand his debut season for an advertised fee of $6,500, and West told BloodHorse that the Lows will be supporting him with mares at stud, and with bids at auction when their foals reach the ring.

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Seven New Stallions To Stand In Ontario In 2023

Seven new stallions are joining the Ontario ranks in 2023, as the provincial breeding program continues to be one of fastest growing jurisdictions in North America.

Avie's Flatter, Collusion Illusion, Mohaymen, Serve The King (GB), and Tamarkuz will all stand stud in Ontario for the first time, while Ami's Flatter and Guipago return to the province.

Serve The King (GB), Avie's Flatter, and Collusion Illusion are freshman stallions, who all achieved graded stakes success on the racetrack.

Serve The King (GB) was victorious at the Grade 2 level and placed at the Grade 1 level on turf. Ontario-bred Avie's Flatter was a versatile runner who won or was placed in stakes ranging from six furlongs to 1 1/2 miles, on all surfaces; Tapeta, turf and dirt.

Serve The King (GB) will stand at Yorktech Racing Stables and Avie's Flatter at Colebrook Farms.

Collusion Illusion was a multiple graded stakes winner at six furlongs, including the Grade 1 Bing Crosby and was graded stakes placed at seven furlongs.

He will stand at Ballycroy Bloodstock alongside Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner Tamarkuz who arrives in Ontario after standing stud at Shadwell Farm in Kentucky since 2017. Learn more details about the pair's arrival Ontario here.

Mohaymen is by leading sire Tapit, and was a multiple graded stakes winner of just under $1 million on the racetrack. Since entering stud in 2018, his runners have won at the graded stakes, and black type level. He was North America's #10 first-crop sire in 2021 and will stand at Northern Dawn Stables.

Rounding out the fresh faces in 2023 are Ami's Flatter and Guipago. Ami's Flatter returns to Ontario after standing three seasons at Ocala Stud in Florida, and Guipago previously stood in Ontario from 2015-2017. They will stand at T.C. Westmeath Stud Farm and Jecara Farms respectively.

In addition to the seven new stallions, all three of Ontario's leading sires will return in 2023.

Reigning top Ontario sire Silent Name (JPN) will stand at Adena Springs. The 21-year-old son of Sunday Silence had six runners crack the $100,000 mark in 2022 led by Cup and Saucer winner Phillip My Dear.

Souper Speedy finished second on Ontario's sire list in 2022. Il Malocchio was his top runner this past year. Her 4-year-old campaign was highlighted by a win in the G3 Maple Leaf at Woodbine.

Rounding out the top three is Reload. Poulin in O T was his leading runner, as the gelding put together a 2-year-old campaign that saw him earn three stakes wins and over $200,000.

Click here for complete details on all of the stallions standing in Ontario in 2023.

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American Graded Stakes Standings Presented By Virginia Thoroughbred Association: Tapit Tops Broodmare Sires In 2022

Being a successful broodmare sire isn't necessarily a young man's game, or even a game for active stallions, but the graded stakes results of 2022 revealed that many of the industry's top broodmare sires are just starting to build their resumes.

Of the 14 stallions with five or more individual North American graded stakes winners as broodmare sires in 2022, four will still be active for the upcoming breeding season, and four more have left the ranks since 2020, meaning their final fillies haven't even hit the racetrack yet, much less entered broodmare bands.

In fact, the leading broodmare sire of graded stakes winners in 2022 was Tapit, who will stand the upcoming breeding season at Gainesway for an advertised fee of $185,000.

A three-time leading general sire in North America, Tapit was represented last year by 11 graded stakes winners as broodmare sire, led by Cody's Wish, the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner and an Eclipse Award finalist for champion male sprinter.

A son of Curlin out of the Grade 1 winner Dance Card, Cody's Wish gave broodmare sire Tapit three of his graded stakes wins in 2022, also including the Grade 1 Forego Stakes and the G3 Westchester Stakes.

Cody's Wish raced as a homebred for Godolphin, which was Tapit's most prolific supporter as a broodmare sire in the graded stakes ranks. The operation of Sheikh Mohammed Al-Maktoum also sent out G3 Gazelle Stakes winner Nostalgic, a daughter of Medaglia d'Oro out of the stakes-placed Been Here Before.

Tapit's accolades as a broodmare sire in 2022 also included Society, a two-time graded stakes winner, highlighted by a victory in the G1 Cotillion Stakes. A homebred for Peter E. Blum Thoroughbreds, Society is a daughter of Gun Runner, out of the winning Blum homebred Etiquette.

While Tapit was the leading broodmare sire by individual winners, another active sire topped the list by total graded stakes wins in 2022.

Darley's Medaglia d'Oro tallied 16 total wins as a broodmare sire, and tied with late sires Indian Charlie and Smart Strike for second by individual winners with 10.

The greatest contributor to Medaglia d'Oro's total was Olympiad, who racked up five graded scores last year, including the G1 Jockey Club Gold Cup. Bred by Emory Hamilton, the son of Speightstown is out of the Grade 3-placed Flying Passage. Olympiad also added Grade 2 wins in the New Orleans Classic, Alysheba Stakes, and Stephen Foster Stakes in 2022, along with a Grade 3 score in the Mineshaft Handicap.

Santin contributed a pair of Grade 1 scores to the equation, taking the Turf Classic Stakes and Arlington Million, both at Churchill Downs. By Distorted Humor, Santin is out of the multiple Grade 2 winner Sentiero Italia.

Once again, Godolphin factored heavily into Medaglia d'Oro's success as a broodmare sire in 2022. Aside from standing the stallion, Godolphin also campaigned Santin as a homebred and co-bred the two-time Grade 3 winner Scalding in partnership with Cobalt Investments.

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Both Tapit and Medaglia d'Oro entered stud in 2005, and quickly established themselves as commercial forces to be reckoned with when their first runners hit the track. Once they earned the trust of breeders, their books became filled with the highest class of mares, in terms of both on-track performance and pedigree, and their sustained success has ensured that those top-quality mares remained plentiful over the course of their stud careers.

Few things are guaranteed when it comes to passing successful genes through the generations, but sustained quality of mares provides a stallion the best opportunity to establish himself quickly as a broodmare sire when his first daughters retire to the breeding shed.

Tapit and Medaglia d'Oro were joined among the top broodmare sires of graded stakes winners and wins by fellow active stallions Candy Ride (seven winners, 11 wins) and Hard Spun (five winners, five wins).

Top broodmare sires of 2022 who exited stud duty due to death or pensioning since 2020 include Bernardini (died in 2021), Tiznow (pensioned in 2020), Distorted Humor (pensioned in 2021), and Malibu Moon (died in 2021).

With so many stallions still building their foundations of present and future producers, the top of the broodmare sire list could look quite similar for years to come.

Leading Broodmare Sires of 2022 by North American Graded Stakes Winners

Tapit's Graded Stakes Wins of 2022 as a Broodmare Sire

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