Multiple Grade 1 winner Mshawish will be relocated to Qatar for the 2023 breeding season to stand privately for owner Sheikh Joaan Al Thani, BloodHorse reports.
Sheikh Al Thani previously owned 50 percent of Mshawish, and he bought out the remaining syndicate members to move the stallion to Qatar. The 12-year-old son of Medaglia d'Oro previously stood at Taylor Made Stallions in Nicholasville, Ky., where he entered stud in 2017.
From three crops of racing age, Mshawish has sired 91 winners and compiled progeny earnings of $4,432,633.
His debut crop included Sainthood, who finished 11th in the 2021 Kentucky Derby and followed that effort with a victory in the Grade 3 Pennine Ridge Stakes. French Group 3 winner Bellharbour Music and Peruvian Group 3 winner Grand De Oro are also among his most accomplished runners.
During his own racing career, Mshawish won eight of 24 starts for earnings of $2,421,351. His first races came internationally, where he became a Group 3-placed multiple stakes winner in France, and a Group 2 winner in the U.A.E. He became a dual surface star in the U.S., winning two graded stakes each on both dirt and turf, including the G1 Donn Handicap on the main track and the G1 Gulfstream Park Turf Handicap on the grass.
Champion Uncle Mo got off to a historic start at stud, and he cemented his place as an upper-echelon sire when his own sons entered the breeding shed to rave reviews.
Spendthrift Farm added its first son of Uncle Mo for the 2022 breeding season, during which Grade 1-winning sprinter Yaupon became North America's second-most active sire with 242 reported mares bred. In 2023, Spendthrift Farm adds Belmont Stakes winner Mo Donegal to its roster.
Uncle Mo has become the type of high-level stallion where his name is a box that must be checked with one of his sons on many commercial stud farms' rosters. After breeders piled in to breed to Yaupon, Spendthrift Farm's Mark Toothaker said going after Mo Donegal was an easy decision.
“Breeders flocked to a son of Uncle Mo, and we're not rocket scientists over here at Spendthrift, but we know what breeders want,” he said. “Now, I basically want every son of Into Mischief, every son of Gun Runner, and every son of Uncle Mo, because that's what our breeders want.”
On paper, it would appear there isn't much to separate Yaupon and Mo Donegal, especially in terms of pedigree. Besides sharing the same sire, both horses are out of mares hailing from the Seattle Slew sire line, with a heavy dose of Mr. Prospector sprinkled in on the female side. If a mare matches with one of them by pedigree, chances are good they'll match with both.
From a commercial standpoint, Toothaker said differentiating the two sons of Uncle Mo probably wouldn't be a concern in 2023. Current market demands are such that breeders will flock to a first-year sire over one standing his second season, the way they did with Yaupon in 2022. It would be the seasons that followed where breeders would need to consider each stallion on their individual merits, and Toothaker would have to help guide them.
With pedigrees that reflect each other, Toothaker said choosing between Yaupon and Mo Donegal would come down to physical types, and the intention of the breeder.
Yaupon is a sprinter, and he looks like it. He was a Grade 1 winner at seven furlongs, and he carries plenty of muscle through his shoulder and rump.
Yaupon is out of the Grade 1-placed Vindication mare Modification, and he'll stand the upcoming breeding season for an advertised fee of $30,000.
It would be fair to assume that Yaupon cuts a more compact frame than a typical son of Uncle Mo upon inspection, but Toothaker said he doesn't differ from Mo Donegal as much as it might seem.
“They're both exactly the same size,” Toothaker said. “They're both 16.2 hands, but their body shape – Yaupon absolutely looks like a bullet shot out of a gun. He's built with a big gaskin, deep heart girth. He's just built for speed.
“We had had so much success last year with Yaupon,” Toothaker continued. “He was an incredible breeder, and demand was off the chart. His fertility rate was like Into Mischief's.”
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Mo Donegal cuts a more traditional frame of what breeders have come to expect from a son of Uncle Mo at stud, with longer legs supporting a solid body. Out of the winning Pulpit mare Callingmissbrown, Mo Donegal will stand his debut season for $20,000.
“He's got a beautiful shoulder and hip on him,” Toothaker said. “He's built what you would expect a two-turn Uncle Mo to look like.”
The signature scope and long stride that Uncle Mo imparts on his runners came out in spades with Mo Donegal, whose three stakes wins came at 1 1/8 miles or longer, culminating with the 1 1/2-mile Belmont Stakes.
Mo Donegal is a half-brother to the 2-year-old Prank, an Into Mischief filly who wowed on debut this summer at Saratoga Race Course, taking a 5 1/2-furlong maiden special weight by 9 3/4 lengths.
Seeing what Callingmissbrown could produce when crossed with both endurance and precociousness, Toothaker said he'd try to find the middle point with Mo Donegal, and he'd be seeking as many Into Mischief mares for his inaugural book as he could gather.
“I really want to put speed mares under him, because he's got all the endurance,” Toothaker said. “He was able to win the Remsen at 1 1/8 miles as a 2-year-old, then he came back and won the Wood Memorial and the Belmont Stakes. We know he's an Uncle Mo with all kinds of endurance, and we want to come back and put some speed mares on him and see what he can throw. We've got Mike Repole as a partner, and Mike is so good about supporting what he's involved with. He bought several Vino Rossos, and he'll be in there buying Mo Donegals. Jerry Crawford (of Donegal Racing) kept some breeding rights in the horse, and Jerry's also going to be sending mares to him.”
“Kentuckians are a peculiar people and their like cannot be found elsewhere in the new world or old.”—a 1905 article in the Nashville Banner on some notable Kentuckians
Brig. Gen. Abe Buford, a superior soldier, public servant, distinguished gentleman, brawler, and an authority on all matters pertaining to the Thoroughbred during the 19th century, was one such son of the Bluegrass.
Buford was perhaps best known as master of Bosque Bonita, a magnificent Woodford County farm that in 1979 became part of the Farish family's expansive Lane's End near Versailles.
Having gained fame as the owner and breeder associated with star Thoroughbreds including Lexington, Enquirer, *Leamington, Longfellow, Mannie Gray, and Nellie Gray in the decades before and after the Civil War, Buford served on the battlefield with the U.S. Army during the Mexican War then later as a cavalry commander in the Confederate Army.
In military life, Buford met adventure with daring courage, but later as a gentleman farmer he was faced with devastating circumstances he could not overcome—the loss of his family, fortune, beloved farm, and all his horses.
Brought up as part of the large Buford clan in Central Kentucky, the general was a tempestuous man of immense size who cast a mighty shadow at six-feet tall and 350 pounds. He enjoyed an abundance of wealth but at times could not control his combative instincts after retiring from the military.
Records and lore indicate he was guilty of a number of audacities in public. In an incident in the 1850s at the Lexington Fair and during a gunfight, he scalped a man in defense of his brother Tom, who also became a Confederate officer, holding the rank of colonel. Years later, the Nashville Banner headlined a story about the episode as the “Last Scalp Taken In Kentucky”.
Brig. Gen. Abe Buford
Woodford County tradition holds that Abe and Tom Buford and their brother Henry spent a summer afternoon on street corners Versailles shooting at each other.
An 1841 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Abe Buford was skilled in weapons of war and small firearms. Four decades later, after mounting debts forced him into bankruptcy, destitution, and homelessness, he put a .32 revolver to his head and brought conclusion to the life he mostly dedicated to his land and horses. He was 64.
Despite his tempestuous nature, Buford was noted for his kindliness and was greatly respected in Woodford County, where he was born in 1820. After his death, the sword he wore throughout the Civil War was presented to the citizens of Versailles, with a note from an unidentified person describing it as the “solitary relic of a once great estate and brilliant and sad career.”
Little more than 150 years ago, Buford enjoyed the lifestyle of a well-born, moneyed landowner. He campaigned Enquirer, the son of *Leamington who was undefeated champion 3-year-old of 1870 and the sole seasonal conqueror of Belmont Stakes winner Kingfisher, and Bosque Bonita was described as the most princely estate in the Bluegrass.
Enquirer
Situated along the Versailles-Midway Road, Bosque Bonita had long been an annual gathering place for the county's prominent citizens, national politicians, and sporting men. And Buford was known as the most genial host.
Neighboring horsemen and friends raced their horses over the farm's one-mile training grounds, settling the outcomes with nothing more than a refreshing julep.
Bosque Bonita, meaning “beautiful woods” in Spanish, was a name Buford brought from the Mexican War when he served under U.S. President Zachary Taylor.
The farm's elegant Italiante-style residence, located about a quarter mile from the road, was nestled in a woodland park that included ash, black walnut, burr oak, elms, and honey locust, and was described as incomparably stunning for the area. Decades later, when subsequent owners sought the riches from the new tobacco economy, most of trees were cut down to make way for planting.
Buford was one of 13 children of William “Colonel Billey” Buford, who married his cousin Frances Kirtley and came to Kentucky from Culpepper County, Virginia, in 1789 with his father, Revolutionary War veteran Simeon Buford, and other family members.
Simeon's military service record took him to the rank of captain, and he fought within a company commanded by this older brother, Col. Abraham Buford, as well as under the famed Major Henry “Lighthorse Harry” Lee, the father of eventual Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Both Simeon and his brother raced horses in Kentucky, as did many war veterans.
William Buford stood several stallions at his Tree Hill Farm in Woodford County that were influential in the early development of Kentucky's breeding business, including Medoc, a son of American Eclipse, and Sumpter, a son of Sir Archy. He had purchased the property from the father of Woodburn Stud owner Robert A. Alexander, and eventually the land became part of that great breeding establishment.
At Tree Hill, William Buford built Woodburn House, the now stately white brick landmark where Abe Buford was born and raised. In 1826, “Colonel Billey” was among the founders of the Kentucky Association racetrack in Lexington.
Abe, named for his great uncle, studied at Centre College in Danville, Ky., before entering West Point in 1837. Following graduation, he joined the army and served on the American frontier in Indian Territory under Daniel Boone's son, Col. Nathan Boone.
During that time, Abe Buford witnessed the amazing prowess of a legendary wild stallion—all white except for black ears—known as the “great white horse of the Western plains” as the animal commanded a battle between his herd and hungry wolves.
In June 1843, Buford was among about 90 U.S. dragoons camped along the Arkansas River near Walnut Creek in what is now Barton County, Kansas, when distant sounds of neighing and snorting, barking and baying were heard.
The next morning, Boone dispatched Buford and two other officers to investigate as the sounds continued and to capture a couple of the wild horses.
“We saw the battle raging,” Buford recalled during a lecture he gave later in Louisville. “The herd of horses was about 150 strong and the most prominent among them was the great white stallion of the plains. … He seemed to be the commander and had formed the mares in a circle with their heels to the enemy, or outward. The diameter of the circle was about 100 yards, with all the foals and younger colts in the center—all the stallions, with the white horse in command, on the outside and surrounding the circle of mares, who were fighting the wolves.
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After watching the horrific scene, Buford and the other officers chased away the wolves. As the horses retreated with the stallion taking up the rear guard, Buford said he made several dashes at the horse as they pursued for six or seven miles, but “the great white horse” eluded capture.
“I was mounted on a Thoroughbred horse my father gave me. He was sired by Sidi Hamet. I gave “Cid” the spur and moved directly at the white horse with pistol in hand. … (but) “Cid” was too heavily handicapped … while the white horse was without weight.”
Passing the battlefield on return to camp, Buford recalled the carnage of dead wolves and horses while relating his appreciation of the white stallion's reasoning and strategy.
“(The horse) is therefore a fit associate and companion of man,” Buford concluded.
After the expedition to the plains, Buford fought in the Mexican War alongside future President Zachary Taylor at Buena Vista in 1847. Upon the news of Santa Ana's retreat, it is said they embraced each other and wept for joy.
Years later, a visitor to Bosque Bonita who came to see Enquirer and other horses recounted Buford's hospitality and how he shared an enormous mint julep in a silver mug that he said he and Taylor would drink from in Mexico.
Upon resigning from the Army, Buford established Bosque Bonita in 1854 on property that had been owned by the heirs of Capt. Jack Ashby, who received a land grant after commanding a company of Virginia rangers during the French and Indian War.
When Bosque Bonita was founded, Woodford County was the epicenter of Central Kentucky breeding. Buford's neighbors in the area included John Harper of Nantura Stock Farm, Daniel Swigert of Stockwood Farm, Willa Viley of Stonewall Farm, and Ned Blackburn of Equira.
Opposite Bosque Bonita was a farm known as Glenartney. Coinciding with Bosque Bonita's development, temperance advocate Carrie Nation spent several years as a child there before becoming a hatchet-wielding saloon wrecker.
As Buford was establishing his farm, he became a co-owner of the great racehorse Lexington. Well-known turfman Richard Ten Broeck first bought the Boston colt, then named Darley, from breeder Elijah Warfield and formed a partnership with Buford, Willa Viley, and Junius Ward. Those three sold out to Ten Broeck before Lexington lost his epic rematch with rival Lecomte in 1854 at Metairie Racecourse in New Orleans.
Buford struck a deal with Ten Broeck to buy Lexington and stand him at Bosque Bonita, but Ten Broeck torpedoed their agreement for a better deal with Alexander.
Buford's greatest horse was Enquirer, who stood several seasons at Bosque Bonita, occupying the same log stable as his sire Leamington did in 1866 during a single season there. Leamington later sired the first Kentucky Derby winner, Aristides.
Leamington
Enquirer's most notable offspring include champion Falsetto, 1877 Kentucky Oaks winner Felicia, multiple stakes winner McWhirter, and Mannie Gray, who became dam of the great racehorse and sire Domino, the 1893 champion 2-year-old male and Horse of the Year, as well as Domino's full sister Correction, an influential broodmare who through her daughter Nature is ancestress of 1978 Triple Crown winner Affirmed. 1992 Kentucky Derby winner Lil E. Tee, and French Oaks victress Confidential Lady.
Without question, Buford's gamest horse was McWhirter, a son of Enquirer whose stakes wins included the 1877 Ohio Derby and the Clark Stakes at Churchill Downs, where he defeated Kentucky Derby winner and eventual champion Baden-Baden.
Racing in St. Louis, WcWhirter broke both front ankles, and in a gruesome display, struggled to continue as thousands of onlookers were roused to extreme anguish. After collapsing, the colt was shot to relieve his suffering and interred in the infield.
Buford wept openly at the tragedy and later said that was the moment he came to believe that horses had souls and went to heaven.
Enquirer's tomb at Belle Meade Stud.
Decades earlier, when the Civil War broke out, Buford's family, like many others in Kentucky, had divided loyalties. He gave his cousin John a handsome gray Thoroughbred that he named Gray Eagle. John Buford fought for the Union as a brigadier general and is said to have fired the first shot at Gettysburg as well as reportedly chosen the site for the momentous battle.
Abe Buford cast his lot with the South, becoming a brigadier general in the Confederate Army in 1862. Eventually he formed a new brigade from several Kentucky cavalries, then was attached to Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest's command until the end of the war.
Buford's financial problems began following the death of his only son at age 23 in 1872, and he sold Enquirer in 1879, the year his wife died, to Tennessee Militia Gen. William Giles Harding of Belle Meade Stud near Nashville.
Conducting a horse auction at Bosque Bonita in 1874, Buford sold several Thoroughbreds to Gen. George Custer for soldiers in his 7th Cavalry. The sale was held under a sprawling ancient oak tree known as the Custer Oak.
According to renowned Kentucky horseman John H. Morris, a later owner of Bosque Bonita, Buford brought out one of his finest horses and goaded Custer to buy him.
Morris, who was at the sale, said he heard Buford call out: “Custer, you buy that horse and I'll guarantee no Indian will ever catch you.” Custer, all his men and their horses, except one, were killed at the Battle of Little Big Horn in 1876.
Major Louis A. Beard (left) and John H. Morris
The Custer Oak was blown down in a 1936 storm, and a large branch was mounted and hung in the lobby of Lexington's Phoenix Hotel, where Custer stayed. Morris also had gavels made from the famous oak.
In 1881, Buford sold all his horses to settle debts. A large portion of his fortune had been spent to defend his brother Tom, a Henry County judge who murdered a judge that ruled against their sister in a court proceeding, forcing the loss of all her property. Tom was later declared insane and committed to an asylum.
Buford's distinguished Bosque Bonita, which was heavily mortgaged, was auctioned off that year, beginning a dismal downward trajectory for its longtime proprietor.
After beginning to work as a correspondent for a Chicago racing periodical, Buford wrote in many articles that he expected to meet his racehorses in heaven. He also turned to religion and attempted to reconcile horse racing and churchgoers who looked down on the sport, and, perhaps, to find a measure of redemption for himself.
Buford traveled to different venues and lectured with great reverence on a topic he titled “The Church and Turf,” citing scripture as well as mythology and ancient history as proof horses did ascend to heaven.
His fervent wish, he said, was that he be borne to heaven in a fiery chariot behind spirited horses he hoped would be Enquirer and McWhirter.
Brig. Gen. Abe Buford at an older age
Buford's brother Tom escaped from the asylum and in 1884 turned himself in to authorities. Newspapers were quick to pick up the story and recounted the family's tribulations and financial ruin during the past decade, which Abe Buford could not bear.
Visiting a nephew in Danville, Ind., at the time, Buford became despondent and fatally shot himself.
“Peace to all the world,” the old soldier and longtime breeder said in a letter he left behind as he began what he hoped would be a final journey with his horses.
American Freedom, a Grade 3 winner and young sire, has been sold to Bob and Tyree Wolesensky to stand at their Leadem Farm in Leola, Ark., for the 2023 breeding season, Thoroughbred Daily News reports.
The 9-year-old son of Pulpit previously stood at Airdrie Stud in Midway, Ky., where he retired for the 2018 breeding season.
With two crops of racing age, American Freedom has sired 60 winners with combined progeny earnings of $3,421,354, led by stakes winner Freedom Speaks.
During his own on-track career, American Freedom won three of eight starts for earnings of $705,100. His 3-year-old campaign featured victories in the Grade 3 Iowa Derby and the Sir Barton Stakes, with runner-up efforts in the G1 Travers Stakes and Haskell Invitational Stakes.
American Freedom will stand for an advertised fee of $3,500.