Per Capita Retired To Alvarez Racing Stables In Arizona

Alvarez Racing Stables will stand Per Capita (Tapit — Successful Outlook by Orientate) in partnership with Fleming Thoroughbred Farm LLC in Willcox, Ariz.

The 6-year-old chestnut horse will be the first son of leading sire Tapit to take up stud duty in the Grand Canyon State. His 2022 introductory fee is $2,000 LFSN.

Bred by Gainesway out of Successful Outlook, a graded stakes winning juvenile by champion sprinter Orientate, Per Capita boasts an impeccable stallion pedigree. He is a full-brother to sires Anchor Down (Grade 2 winner) and Iron Fist (Grade 3 winner) and a half-brother to Grade 1 winner Sweet Lulu (by Mr. Greeley).

Per Capita was initially trained by Chad Brown and later transferred into Todd Pletcher's barn after selling for $325,000, the second-highest horse sold, at Fasig-Tipton's July Horses of Racing Age Sale in 2020. Raced exclusively on dirt at Belmont Park, Saratoga, Gulfstream Park, Churchill Downs, and Aqueduct over distances from seven to nine furlongs, he earned $134,140 from eight starts for a 2-2-2 record and posted a career-best 105 Equibase speed figure.

“We are excited to offer a horse from one of the strongest Gainesway families to breeders in Arizona,” said Dylon Alvarez, who together with his father Freddy founded the racing stable in June 2019 and quickly expanded into the breeding business. “We will strongly support Per Capita with our broodmare band and plan to privately acquire a few more mares specifically to complement his pedigree.”

“Through recent legislation, the incentives for Arizona's breeders have improved significantly,  a new stallion like Per Capita will further grow the market,” says Marvin Fleming, manager of Fleming Thoroughbred Farm LLC.

Also new for the 2022 stallion roster is stakes winning and multiple stakes placed, Arizona Moon (Macho Uno – Phoenician Moon by Malibu Moon), property of John J Campo III.  Fleming Thoroughbred Farm LLC also stands Lotsa Mischief (Into Mischief), Ez Effort (In Excess (IRE)), and Distorted Reality (Distorted Humor).

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Bloodlines Presented By Mill Ridge Farm: Giant’s Causeway’s Three-Horse Swan Song Could Be History Repeating

It's been done before, getting a top racer in a stallion's miniscule last crop. So don't say it can't happen. But it is always a trick to sire a classic winner, at any point in a stud career.

In America, only the legendary Black Toney (by Peter Pan) has managed to sire a classic winner in a tiny final crop of foals, so far. In 1937, from his final crop of three foals, the 26-year-old Black Toney got a colt from an 11-year-old mare by the name of La Troienne (Teddy).

The dark brown colt was no average foal, nor from average parents. Instead, he was a grand specimen by one of the most consistent sires of racers out of a mare who ranks even today as one of the greatest in the history of the breed.

A bit was expected of this muscular colt whom E.R. Bradley named Bimelech, and the colt delivered. Unbeaten at two, his superiority over his contemporaries in 1939 was so exceptional that Bimelech was placed atop the Experimental Free Handicap at 130 pounds.

The following season, Bimelech won the 1940 Preakness and Belmont Stakes, the Blue Grass and the Derby Trial. In the Kentucky Derby itself, however, he finished second to Gallahadion (Sir Gallahad III). Even the best hands sometimes fail to catch every trick.

This year, we have a story that's just as good, or very nearly.

From the last crop of European champion and top international sire Giant's Causeway came three colts. The chestnut champion had died at Ashford Stud on April 16, 2018, and his overall health had limited his final book.

One couldn't expect a lot from just three foals, but the intensity and determination that marked the great chestnut's racing career was passed to some of his offspring, and from that small final crop has come a colt who is now a classic contender.

A chestnut reminiscent of his sire, Classic Causeway won the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes at Tampa Bay on Feb. 12, leading all the way and pulling away in the stretch to win by 3 3/4 lengths in 1:42.80.

With Classic Causeway, grand old Giant's Causeway (Storm Cat) is in the hunt for the classics with a colt whose speed and stamina have made him a prospect of exceptional appeal since his debut at Saratoga last year.

Bred in Kentucky by Kentucky West Racing LLC & Clarke M. Cooper Family Living Trust, Classic Causeway went into training with Brian Lynch, who prepared the progressive colt to make his debut on Sept. 4, and as the second-longest price on the odds board, Classic Causeway led at every pole to win by 6 1/2 lengths in 1:22.67 for seven furlongs on dirt.

The colt's maiden victory was impressive enough that he was sent off the favorite for his next start, the G1 Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland. Again leading the way, Classic Causeway was caught in the stretch by the Connect colt Rattle N Roll and finished third. The son of Giant's Causeway made his final start at two in the G2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes in late November. Again sent off the favorite, Classic Causeway finished second to Smile Happy (Runhappy), the shortest price among individual horses in the early Kentucky Derby wagering, and ahead of White Abarrio (Race Day), who won the G3 Holy Bull Stakes last weekend.

The Sam Davis was the seasonal debut for Classic Causeway, and as the favorite, he battled head and head for more than half the race as he led early, was headed at the half-mile, and pulled away in the stretch. This colt is now the early points leader (16) for the Kentucky Derby.

A homebred who races for Kentucky West (Patrick O'Keefe) and Clarke Cooper, Classic Causeway is out of the multiple stakes winner Private World, by Thunder Gulch. The colt's dam won a pair of stakes as a juvenile for breeder Kentucky West and trainer Bob Hess Jr., the Anoakia and Moccasin Stakes, then was second in the California Breeders' Cup Oaks early at three from two starts in her second season.

The dam appeared to stay at least a mile, and there's no doubt that her sire stayed much farther. A winner of the Remsen Stakes at two, Thunder Gulch developed into a mighty classic prospect the next year, winning the Fountain of Youth and Florida Derby before crushing the odds to win the Kentucky Derby at more than 24-to-1. Later, the medium-sized chestnut won the Belmont Stakes and Travers, then was named champion of his division.

A winner of two classics and champion at three like Bimelech, Thunder Gulch stood his entire stud career at Ashford and sired Horse of the Year Point Given and 2000 Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Spain, unlike Bimelech, who never had a racer equal to himself.

Retired to stud at Bradley's Idle Hour Farm, now Darby Dan, Bimelech moved to Greentree when that operation, along with King Ranch and Ogden Phipps, purchased the majority of Bradley's stock. Bimelech proved a good sire, siring 30 stakes winners, including Guillotine (Futurity at two, Carter at three, Fall Highweight at four) for Greentree, and getting broodmares who produced 50 stakes winners, including No Robbery (Swaps), winner of the 1963 Wood Memorial for Greentree.

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Foal Patrol Presented By National Museum Of Racing And Hall Of Fame: What Foals Learn From Their Mothers

Foal Patrol, an initiative of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, has partnered with the Paulick Report in Season 5 to bring you closer to featured mares and foals and to ask farm staff questions about their care and management during the season.

In this episode with Traveling Tiger and her 2022 Audible filly at Safari North at Pauls Mill Farm in Versailles, Kentucky, Safari North's Deborah Ward answers the question, “What personality traits does a foal pick up from their mother?”

For a chance to have one of your questions asked in an upcoming Foal Patrol episode on the Paulick Report, email your question to foalpatrol@racingmuseum.net. Let us know if your question is for a specific Season 5 mare.

The new Season 5 Education Site provides a platform to respond to viewers' questions, share information about horse care and management from breeding through retirement, and spotlight efforts across the industry to provide the best possible care for Thoroughbreds before, during, and after their racing careers. In partnership with industry collaborators, we will add new content to the Foal Patrol Education Site for viewers of all ages from now through June at www.foalpatrol.com/education.

Since its first season in 2018, people all over the world have engaged with Foal Patrol's live webcam series for a behind-the-scenes look at what daily life is like for in-foal mares and foals. Learn more about this season's lineup at www.foalpatrol.com and watch “Recent Updates” for Foal Patrol announcements, posts about featured Season 5 mares and foals, and updates on mares and foals from prior seasons.

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Kentucky House Introduces Bill To Override Jockey Club’s Stud Book Cap

The Kentucky House of Representatives introduced a bill on Feb. 14 that would effectively neutralize The Jockey Club's stud book cap, which has been in effect since spring 2020 for foals born that year or later.

House Bill 496 states that, “a registrar of Thoroughbreds shall not restrict the number of mares that can be bred to a stallion or otherwise refuse to register any foal based upon the number of mares bred to the stallion of the foal submitted for registration.”

The bill would also task the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission with selecting an entity to serve as the state's official registrar of Thoroughbreds, which would comply with the state's rules on limiting or not limiting the number of mares a stallion may breed.

Speaker of the House David Osborne sponsored the bill with Rep. Matthew Koch, who is the co-owner of Shawhan Place in Paris, Ky.

The Jockey Club's stud book cap restricts stallions born in 2020 or later to books of 140 mares per year. Stallions born before that cutoff point may continue to breed mares without limitations for the rest of their lives.

The rule has been divisive within the Thoroughbred breeding community, especially in Kentucky where major stallion operations Spendthrift Farm, Ashford Stud, and Three Chimneys Farm filed a lawsuit against The Jockey Club and members of the KHRC in February 2021 challenging various aspects of the rule, and the legality of how it came into existence.

According to The Jockey Club's Report of Mares Bred, 45 stallions bred 140 or more mares in 2021, and all of them stood in Kentucky.

While the court battle will settle the legality of the stud book cap, the success or failure of HR 496 could be a critical juncture in the struggle between The Jockey Club's authority as a national, but private, governing body for the Thoroughbred breeding industry versus the authority of individual state governments.

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