Breeders Can Pin Their Hopes on a Mighty Oak

The breeding of Thoroughbreds being such a notoriously long game, a dispersal as uncommon as this one offers the most privileged of short cuts. It's as though you can transplant an oak overnight from a mature plantation. Someone else has put in all the necessary, painstaking seasons, years, decades since the acorns were first sown.

So it's a given, absolutely, that the root-and-branch dismantling of Pin Oak Stud into the Lexington lumberyards next week–two dozen mares, fillies and weanlings at Fasig-Tipton on Sunday evening, with 14 yearlings to follow across town at Keeneland–will partly be so coveted simply because of the sheer span of time devoted to its cultivation by Josephine Abercrombie.

But if it is quite remarkable for a breeding program still flourishing in 2021 to have been in the same two hands since the 1950s, then it must be unique for even such longevity to remain secondary–in terms of making Pin Oak Stud what it is–to the flair of its supervision.

Very few human beings are favored both by nearly a full century of vigor, and the material resources to match. But fewer yet can say that they have maximized those twin benedictions as exhaustively as this woman whose true riches, and distinction, abide far deeper than worldly fortune. As it is, her vitality has been able to sustain so many parallel “biographies” that even 95 years seem inadequate to encompass their range. By now too familiar to require reprising, these include colorful careers in boxing promotion, saddlebreds, skiing and ballroom dancing; much philanthropic commitment, notably as founder of The Lexington School; not to mention five marriages–and five divorces! But nothing has ever surpassed the Thoroughbred in her affections.

“Ms. Abercrombie has certainly led an amazing life,” says her long-serving farm manager, Clifford Barry. “But you know what, she'd tell you this, this has been her real love all the way through: being here on the farm, and developing these horses. It was something she really cherished and really took hold of, something she never took for granted. She always felt that if she could bring that passion to it, every day, success would follow. And I know that riding round the farm now, admiring the property, she would wish her dad she could see what she has done here.”

That was Houston oilman J.S. Abercrombie, whose eureka moment came with the blowout preventer, since used on oil wells all round the world. He went into Harry Cameron's toolshop and sketched out his idea on the dirt flooring with a stick. That was the start of Cameron Iron Works, and everything that followed.

Father and daughter shared a love of horses, and a ranch was soon acquired in Texas. He loved pin oaks, and ordered a bunch of them to be planted around the property. Some time later a visitor from New York looked around and told him there wasn't one pin oak on the place. These were all water oaks!

There was more arboreal precision when it came to planting up new land in Kentucky. Josephine made her first yearling purchases in a partnership, including her father, way back in 1949. Three years later they bought 1,348 acres of Woodford County, subsequently birthplace of a series of elite performers including 1976 Preakness winner Elocutionist (Gallant Romeo). But even greater success would attend the development of a new, slightly smaller estate nearby, in the 1980s, with homebred Peaks And Valleys (Mt. Livermore) perhaps the turning point in becoming Canadian Horse of the Year–in the process qualifying Abercrombie as Thoroughbred Breeder of the Year in 1995. Many other decorations and awards have ensued, while the Pin Oak legacy was further secured by such influential sires as Sky Classic (Nijinsky) and Maria's Mon (Wavering Monarch), with two homebred stallions still operating in Broken Vow (Unbridled) and Alternation (Distorted Humor). Though a premature loss at 14, Maria's Mon managed to sire two Kentucky Derby winners in Monarchos and Super Saver.

Impossibly condensed, that's just a snapshot of the genetic duct opening to breeders in Lexington next week. And even though the farm had a commercial function, too, its presiding spirit was that every equine family finds its greatest value in basic racetrack quality.

“This kind of thing is very hard to find anymore,” Barry argues. “Ms. Abercrombie never, ever wavered from where she wanted to be with Pin Oak. It was all about how to produce the best product in the afternoons, and how to get the most out of those mares. She knows every quirk these families present, and how to breed them out. There have been plenty of harsh decisions, when you have to sell young fillies, but there's no doubt overall she has done an amazing job with a very small group of mares, really. It's not like we've had 100 or 200. She's always been very strict on numbers, and I think at any one time it was never much above 30 or 40.”

So what does the Pin Oak brand represent, for those hoping to tap into it now?

“Soundness,” says Barry. “And quality. And just, show up in the afternoon. You can just look at these mares: they were turf, they were dirt, they were short, they were long, but there's always durability in these families, and always great racing minds.”

There has, moreover, been a reciprocal stickability between the boss, known universally on the farm as “Ms. A.,” and her people. Barry has himself been at Pin Oak since 1988; nor has there been any inconstancy in the racetrack roster. Donnie Von Hemel has been training for Pin Oak for three decades, Graham Motion isn't far behind, while Mike Stidham ranks as a relative newcomer at around 15 years. That's a testament not just to Abercrombie's loyalty, but also to her belief that working with a family, generation by generation, helps horsemen to read the run of the genetic grain.

“Donnie Von Hemel had a 2-year-old filly win first time out at Remington last Friday,” Barry says. “She's by Broken Vow out of a homebred mare called Bedanken (Geri), who Donnie trained [to win 11 of 19 starts]. He was saying he had to go back and look up the mare afterwards just to refresh his memory on what she was like. Getting the feedback from those guys on a yearly basis, before you do matings, has always been a huge help. If you look, Ms. Abercrombie often has horses where she has bred three or four generations on both sides. There are very few operations like that nowadays, outside maybe a Coolmore or a Juddmonte, or the Wertheimer freres. I think that's an art that's gone from American breeding.”

Whatever the practical advantages of these recurring cycles, fidelity comes naturally between the Pin Oak owner and her staff.

“She was loyal enough to hire me at 24 years of age, and give a young guy a chance,” Barry notes. “We've got one member of our staff who is coming up to 50 years here. And that just gives you an idea of what Mrs. Abercrombie is about. She was never afraid to roll up her sleeves and get out on the farm. She pushed you to be the best you could be, every day. Not one day a week: every day. Once Mrs. Abercrombie puts her faith in you, you know you have very high standards to meet. She definitely expected no stone left unturned in the care of those horses. But I think in return she took care of the staff the very same way.

“She has such a love and passion for the game. And that has not faded one bit over the years, whether here on the farm or going to the races, whether good days or bad days–and there have been plenty of both. She's about as competitive a person as you could come across, but there'd never be a finger pointed. It would always be just, 'We got outrun today and we'll do better tomorrow.' So while it was always straight back to the grindstone, to see how we could do better, it made my life and job so much easier whenever I had to give the bad news. Because you never had to hesitate to tell it like it is. That's what she expected, and from the trainers too: tell it like it is, and keep moving forward.”

Poignantly, however, there will now be no more moving forward. Barry admits the unorthodoxy of dispersing mares and weanlings on the eve of the September Sale, rather than in November, but credits Boyd Browning, Bayne Welker and the rest of the Fasig-Tipton team for a convincing case that the concept would dovetail well, with so many people in town.

“Hopefully it gives us the chance to showcase some really nice mares and offer some reverence to what Mrs. Abercrombie has done in this game for 60 years,” Barry says. “It's an amazing opportunity for the marketplace, to get into these families. I mean, these don't just pop up every November Sale. You've got Gold Medal Dancer (Medaglia d'Oro) [in foal to Munnings, Hip 23], you've got Don't Leave Me (Lemon Drop Kid) [in foal to Authentic, Hip 18]. These are families that Mrs. Abercrombie has held very tightly these last 30 years, plus.”

As for the stallions: Alternation is still young enough to come up with another Serengeti Express, whether in Kentucky or elsewhere, and options are under review; at rising 25, however, Broken Vow has probably earned a place among the pensioned stock that will remain on the farm, guaranteed diligent care in the years left to them.

Barry, for his part, is not dwelling on his own future. He will keep his head down; keep going in to work for Mrs. Abercrombie, same as always.

“I think I'll be doing that tomorrow like I did today,” he says. “I made a promise a few years ago to do everything in my power to see this through to the end. Ms. Abercrombie has been awful good to me, and my family. Deep down, it's going to be tough to see some of these horses go. But nothing in life stays the same forever, so I want us all to go out and represent as best we can Pin Oak and everything Ms. Abercrombie has put into this game.

“She's about as hands-on an owner as you could ever come across: she's lived here on the farm and watched these horses every day of their lives. Going to the races in the afternoons, too, she has loved that. There hasn't been any part of this thing she missed, from the matings all the way to the racetrack. And she was still out on the farm with me yesterday afternoon, riding around [on the golfcart], and then we went in and watched the replay of the 2-year-old at Remington.”

Barry and his team have doubtless been usefully distracted by maintaining their usual, exacting standards in the preparation of the draft, before handing over to Denali Stud for the sale.

“It'll be a tough couple of days,” says Barry. “I'd be lying if I said we won't feel it deep in the pit in the stomach. But at the same time, we're here to do a job as professionally as we can. These are Ms. Abercrombie's wishes at this stage of her life, we're going to respect that and do everything we can to get it done right. She never does anything on the spur of the moment: she wants to be in control of her legacy, and we've known for a while that we were on a kind of wind-down, and would ultimately get to this point.

“Since the news broke, I guess we've had time to reflect on it a little more. But I don't think I can put into words what Mrs. Abercrombie has meant, let alone to me, to everyone on the farm. You know, she didn't inherit any of these mares. She has built this on her own, from the ground up, and we all know that's a very hard thing to do. So you're talking about somebody that has all the passion, all the patience, and all the perseverance that this game requires. It's been an amazing ride for Ms. Abercrombie, and an amazing ride for all of us–and I feel very, very blessed to have been just a cog in that wheel.”

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After ‘Three-Plus Years Of Twists And Turns,’ Exculpatory Delivers Emotional Maiden Victory

Grace Merryman wasn't born when the Grateful Dead released its hit single Truckin' in 1970 but, boy, can she relate.

Sometimes the light's all shinin' on me

Other times, I can barely see

Lately, it occurs to me

What a long, strange trip it's been

When it comes to her 3-year-old homebred colt Exculpatory, a dramatic debut winner March 5 at Laurel Park, their journey just to get to the racetrack was as long and strange as it gets.

By Mineshaft out of the Broken Vow mare Elusory, Exculpatory was bred by Merryman and her husband Louis of Anchor and Hope Farm, located in Port Deposit, Md., and Finn's Nickel LLC. To hear Grace tell it, it was Louis' idea to breed to Mineshaft, the champion older horse and Horse of the Year in 2003.

The Merrymans went out on their own in 2017 with two stallions, and the first foal of 2018 turned out to be Exculpatory, who they lovingly referred to as Eli.

“Louis called and said, 'Hey, you've got to come see this guy. He's pretty fancy,'” Grace Merryman said. “We were head over heels with him from the get-go.”

Still, the Merrymans went ahead with their original plan to sell Exculpatory as a weanling and entered him in the book at Keeneland. Then, Grace Merryman got another, less positive, call from her husband.

“That August I'm up in Massachusetts visiting family and Louis calls. He said, 'I don't know what is going on. I think we're going to lose this colt. He is really sick,'” she said. “We did blood tests and tested for everything under the sun and nothing ever came back. I don't know if we ever really pinpointed what it was.”

Soon, Exculpatory had recovered and “looked like a million dollars – a big, robust colt.” Plans were back on for Kentucky.

“We thought, 'This is great. The plan is coming to fruition,'” Grace Merryman said. “'We'll sell him as a weanling and put a little cash in the coffers and go from there.'”

Exculpatory attracted several suitors at the sale and underwent several routine veterinary exams as part of the process.

“He had picked up some sort of virus and he flunked every scope that he got,” Merryman said. “He was quite popular and he was scoped several times and he flunked every time just because there was so much irritation. He also had a set of knees on him that looked like they belonged on two other crooked horses, so I don't think that helped matters at all.”

Louis Merryman, who had delivered Exculpatory to the sale, got back in his truck and went to fetch the horse after he didn't meet his reserve. Merryman arrived at 4 a.m., before the sales crew, loaded Eli himself without incident and settled in for the drive back to Maryland.

“Louis gets on the road with him and says, 'I don't know. This horse is really cool,'” Grace Merryman said. “'Maybe we should keep him.'”

Things were uneventful until the following March when, after a long day of work, the Merrymans were walking back to their farmhouse. Hearing a growing noise behind them, they turned to see that all their yearlings had gotten free – a gate was inadvertently left open – and needed to be rounded up.

All were quickly and safely back in place, none worse for wear – with one exception.

“The only horse with a mark on him was Exculpatory,” Grace Merryman said. “It was superficial, but three of his four legs had cuts, lacerations, scrapes – you name it, he was covered.”

Exculpatory had already been nominated to Fasig-Tipton's Saratoga selected yearling sale, and soon after the incident horsemen from the auction arrived to do their pre-inspection.

“They showed up in the morning and I was like, 'Well, here he is,' and I brought him out with three of his four legs completely wrapped,” she said. “They were like, 'Oh, he's a very nice, big-bodied colt. Maybe call when the bandages come off.' So we scrapped Saratoga.”

From there, Exculpatory was excused in the first round from the Maryland Horse Breeders Association's annual yearling show after showing up the day before “with half his hoof missing,” Merryman said. “We're like, 'Can this horse ever not maim himself?'”

Next up was the fall yearling sale at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium, but Exculpatory never made it. Like the rest of Anchor and Hope's yearlings, he was pulled from an Aug. 12, 2019 fire that destroyed the farm's main structure, a 2 ½-story barn that dated back 90 years. Damages were estimated at $500,000. No one, human or equine, was injured.

“I think we had kind of decided then that we were going to keep him,” Grace Merryman said. “After the fire, we did move all of our yearlings privately and we included him in the offerings. People would come to see him. In the morning, they'd stop to watch him because he'd be galloping around in his field with the river in the background and he just took your breath away. Then he'd walk up to the gate three-legged lame or something. We said, 'We get it. We'll keep you.'”

Exculpatory was sent to Louis Merryman's father, stakes-winning trainer Edwin Merryman, now based at Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md., to get him ready to race. Grace Merryman said her father-in-law's experience and horsemanship were invaluable.

“He gets the lion's share of the credit for getting this horse going. He broke him and he got him going. He let the horse grow into himself and develop and did all the groundwork to get him the foundation that he has,” she said. “I could never get too much out of him about how much he liked him but he'd always just say to placate his owner, 'He's a very nice horse. He's training well.'”

A guttural pouch infection kept Exculpatory from launching his career in December and it was around Christmas, the time when Fair Hill closes its main track, when Edwin Merryman suggested his daughter-in-law move a horse of his size to train over a dirt surface rather than the all-weather Tapeta, which is used year-round.

Merryman called Mark Reid, who she worked for at age 21 fresh out of college, and who is stabled at Pimlico Race Course. They talked about getting Exculpatory started at Laurel the first part of January.

“We get him down to Pimlico and Mark kind of goes over him and said, 'I think he might have lost too much fitness in his down time from the guttural pouch infection, I think we should search for a different race,'” Merryman said. “I said, 'OK.'”

Exculpatory was entered to make his debut in early February at Laurel but was withdrawn after spiking a fever when his infection flared up again. Another race Feb. 20 was scrapped when Eli had his gate card revoked.

“He'd been training great, he had managed to not hurt himself, and the gate crew calls,” Grace Merryman said. “They said, 'Hey, it's been a while since this horse has popped out of the gate. Can you just run him over for us so we can see him?

“Mark says OK, takes him over there, and he flunks big-time. He sucked back in and bolted out and veered off to the side and they said, 'Nope. He can't start on the 20th,'” she added. “On his next gate work he broke in company and broke like a dart, so they gave him his gate card back.”

Exculpatory finally made the races March 5, drawing the rail against seven other 3-year-olds – six of which had already run – in the 5 ½-furlong maiden special weight. He broke last and found himself lost and fighting kickback in the early going. He and jockey Sheldon Russell had one horse beat at the top of the stretch.

“In a 5 ½ [furlong] race he was 10 back in the stretch and I turned around to face the building,” Grace Merryman said. “I went down for the race. I was like, 'Oh my God, after all of this. After all this hype, he's going to be last.'”

It was easy to see when the light went on for Exculpatory. He gathered his stride in mids-stretch and Russell found himself with plenty of horse, little room and time running out. They carefully weaved through traffic down the lane and came with one final burst approaching the wire to win by a half-length as the betting favorite.

“Sheldon said that it definitely took him a minute to figure out that they were running and racing and then he started getting pelted pretty good with all the dirt and was kind of trying to jump over it,” Grace Merryman said. “But, once Sheldon was able to get him focused and in the race and in the groove he said Exculpatory exploded underneath him and, at that point, Sheldon was just trying to find a hole for him to get through.

“It was three-plus years of twists and turns,” she added. “We usually don't keep any of our yearlings. We try to get them out in the universe. Most of them are by our stallions and we want to get them out there, but he's just always been special to us and all the circumstances of what we've been through with him, particularly the fire, is just really neat for us to have our homebred, that we've been so head over heels for from the get-go, to do that for us. Definitely a morale boost to keep fighting the fight.”

In perhaps the ultimate twist, Merryman said following Exculpatory's win she has fielded offers to purchase the colt.

“A couple phone calls inquiring about him, which is funny. I've been trying to sell him since I knew he was coming and now there's people interested,” she said. “It's going to be a really hard thing for me to contend with offers coming in. We'll see what happens. I think anyone should know that wants to make an offer on him that I'm going to have to stay in for a little piece. This horse just means too much to us and I think I would be devastated if he was completely gone from us.”

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I’m Leaving You Gives Red-Hot Prat Fourth Winner On Friday’s Santa Anita Program

In a continuance of what happened over the four-day Presidents' Day holiday weekend that concluded on Monday, it would appear that Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., is the epicenter of Flavien Prat's world and the rest of the racing community is simply living in it.

Aboard the Vann Belvoir-trained I'm Leaving You for the first time in Friday's seventh race, which served as Santa Anita's $36,000 allowance feature, Prat, who earlier in the day had registered his 1,000th career victory, orchestrated a late rally from well off the pace that provided him his fourth win on the day while resulting in a 1 ¼ length win.  Off at even money in a field of eight older horses, I'm Leaving You got one mile on turf in 1:34.57.

A winner of 15 races, including two stakes this past week, Prat now sits atop the Winter/Spring jockey standings with 34 wins, three better than Juan Hernandez.

In a complete change of tactics from his most recent start at the same level and distance, I'm Leaving You was taken comfortably off the pace, whereas he stalked the early leaders while running second, beaten one length as the 6-5 favorite at Santa Anita on Dec. 31.

Next to last, about five lengths off the leaders three furlongs out, Prat sat patiently until mid-way on the far turn.  Fanned five-wide turning for home, he overhauled Midnight Mystery at the sixteenth pole and easily held a fast finishing Hoop Dream safe late.

“There was no plan,” said Prat when asked about tactics.  “I saw there was speed in the race and the way it worked out, he backed off the pace today and (was) very comfortable.  When I asked him, he really picked it up at the top of the stretch.”

A 4-year-old gelding by Broken Vow, I'm Leaving You paid $4.20, $2.80 and $2.20.

Owned by his breeder, Coal Creek Farm, I'm Leaving You is out of their Dayjur mare One for You.  Winless in six starts since breaking his maiden for a $62,500 claiming tag on May 29, 2020, I'm Leaving You now has two wins from 10 starts and with the winner's share of $21,600, he now has earnings of $57,220.

Ridden by Juan Hernandez, Hoop Dream rallied from last and paid $6.00 and $3.20 while finishing 1 ¾ lengths in front of Liar Liar.

Irish-bred Liar Liar, with Mario Gutierrez up, paid $3.00 to show while off at 9-2.

Fractions on the race were 22.93, 46.25, 1:10.46 and 1:22.70.

First post time for a nine-race card on Saturday is at 12:30 p.m. PT.

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The Grass Is Blue Earns Kentucky Oaks Points With Busanda Victory

There were some anxious moments throughout the running of Sunday's $100,000 Busanda for The Grass Is Blue, but the daughter of Broken Vow proved superior in the nine-furlong event for sophomore fillies at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y.

Owned by Louis Lazzinnaro and trained by Chad Brown, The Grass Is Blue received a well-timed ride by jockey Manny Franco, who piloted the filly to a one-length triumph in her second start around two turns and first with blinkers.

The Grass Is Blue garnered ten points on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks when taking the Busanda – a 10-4-2-1 qualifier for the prestigious event. The Grass Is Blue arrived at the Busanda off a close third as the favorite in Laurel Park's Anne Arundel County on December 26.

Breaking from the outside post in the five-horse field, Franco angled The Grass Is Blue to the inside approaching the first turn while Traffic Lane assumed command with fellow Todd Pletcher-trained Repole Stable color bearer Coffee Bar close behind in second through an opening quarter-mile in 24.44 seconds. Franco had a tight hold on The Grass Is Blue, who was rank as the field approached the backstretch.

With the half in 49.73, Traffic Lane was maintained command as The Grass Is Blue was still in search of racing room along the fence with Wonderwall and Diamond Ore inching closer to the front.

As Coffee Bar inched her way to even terms with her stable mate at the top of the stretch, Franco weaved The Grass Is Blue two paths to the outside and in the clear and gave the filly her cue at the three-sixteenths. Coffee Bar proved to be a tough customer and battled gamely to the inside, but the 8-5 favorite proved best, completing the 1 1/8 miles in a final time of 1:54.90 on the fast main track.

The New York-bred Coffee Bar, a Repole Stable homebred, finished another five lengths ahead of Diamond Ore, who rounded out the trifecta. Traffic Lane and Wonderwall completed the order of finish.

Franco expressed confidence in his filly and said the equipment change made a big difference.

“I knew I had a lot of horse under me the whole way around,” said Franco, who piloted Always Shopping to a win in the 2019 Busanda.“The blinkers helped a lot. I was just waiting for the right moment to make my move and at the quarter pole, she just accelerated. With the blinkers first time, I knew she was going to take me there. I just wanted to give her a breather at some point during the race and that's why I stayed inside. When the time came, I tipped out and she just accelerated. She got the distance really well.”

Lazzinnaro was full of praise for Franco for a confident and patient ride aboard his filly.

“I think Manny gave the horse a perfect trip,” Lazzinnaro said. “It looked like she liked the track a lot so we'll probably keep her here during the winter and let Chad figure out what to do and how to go about winning another race with her. Chad took his time with her and got her going good. The distance was good for her today.”

The Grass Is Blue returned $5.20 as the favorite and banked $55,000 in victory pushing her lifetime earnings past the six-figure mark to $121,978 through a career of 5-3-0-1.

Bred in Kentucky by Phillips Racing Partnership, The Grass Is Blue is out of the Aldebaran mare Shine Softly, whose mother Soaring Softly won the 1999 Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf and was named Champion Turf Mare that same year.

Live racing resumes Thursday at Aqueduct with an eight-race card. First post is 12:50 p.m. Eastern.

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