Spotlight on the Night of the Stars: Bellafina and Donna Veloce

Separated by just one year in age, Bellafina (Quality Road -Akron Moon, by Malibu Moon) and Donna Veloce (Uncle Mo – Coin Broker {Ire}, by Montjeu {Ire}) were both $800,000 2-year-old purchases for owner-breeder Kaleem Shah. Both were brilliant juveniles on the racetrack, with one becoming a 'TDN Rising Star' on debut and the other winning a pair of Grade I contests at two, and they each went on to achieve further graded stakes success throughout their careers. Retired from racing after their 2020 campaigns, they now both have one foal already on their produce records and are in foal to Coolmore's multiple Grade I-winning young sire Tiz the Law.

In just a few weeks, Bellafina and Donna Veloce will be offered along with their first foals at the Fasig-Tipton 'Night of the Stars' Sale. Their consignor Reiley McDonald of Eaton Sales is a firm believer that mares of this quality do not come around often.

“I've been doing this for 35 years and I can tell you that this is so exciting to me,” he said. “To be a part of it and sell mares like this really doesn't happen every day. My partner Ben McElroy was very instrumental in helping purchase these mares. You'll never see a horse that Ben has bought that is not stunningly beautiful and that is the case with these two mares.”

Kaleem Shah and his buying team landed both mares at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale. Bellafina sold for $800,00 in 2018 and the following year, Donna Veloce brought the same price after working the co-fastest breeze time in :9 4/5.

“It's rare in the Thoroughbred industry when a plan comes to fruition and is executed perfectly,” reflected Fasig-Tipton's Boyd Browning. “In back-to-back years, Kaleem and his team did that at the Gulfstream 2-Year-Old In Training Sale. Bellafina was one of the most brilliant performers that we had in the under-tack show that year and she looked beautiful on the end of a shank. Donna Veloce was another exceptional performer at the breeze show and back at the barn, she was a magnificent physical individual. Kaleem and his team accomplished what they set out to do, which was to buy the best fillies at the sale and achieve great success on the racetrack.”

Bellafina was the first of the pair to get her start with trainer Simon Callaghan. She broke her maiden at second asking in the GII Sorrento S., where the daughter of Quality Road bested the field by over four lengths, and she continued her win streak that year in the GI Del Mar Debutante S. and the GI Chandelier S.

Much of what made Bellafina such a juvenile success, McDonald said, was her outstanding physical.

“She was of good size as a 2-year-old,” he explained. “She was not a small, petite filly. She was a big filly with tons of speed. She had the hip and the shoulder to give her all the speed, but the leg and the length to carry her a distance. She won everywhere from six furlongs to a mile and a sixteenth.”

In 2019, Bellafina was the best of the West in her division, reeling off wins in the GII Santa Ynez S., GII Las Virgenes S. and GI Santa Anita Oaks, and later running a close second in the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint. At four, she claimed her seventh graded stakes score in the GIII Desert Stormer S. before retiring with over $1.6 million in earnings.

 

 

 

“I think what Bellafina had that set her apart was tactical speed,” McDonald said. “She had the ability to run fast, but also the ability to turn it off and on. That was Bellafina. She's also by a sire, Quality Road, that gives speed and heart to his racehorses. You put her pedigree together with that kind of physical and heart, that's what made her so special.”

Bellafina was bred to Uncle Mo and produced her first foal this year. That filly will sell as Hip 128 at the 'Night of the Stars' Sale while her dam will go through the ring later in the evening as Hip 264.

After that, Bellafina's former stablemate Donna Veloce will sell as Hip 281.

Donna Veloce joined the Callaghan barn in 2018 and turned heads soon after in her flashy debut at Santa Anita. The Uncle Mo filly took the lead early and looked the winner throughout, breaking away from the field in the stretch to win by over nine lengths.

“I remember watching that and thinking that this was not only a TDN Rising Star, this was a world-class rising star,” McDonald recalled. “The way she did it was like an older horse. I think we knew right then she was very special.”

Donna Veloce faced a tough task in her second start when she took on the best of her division in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, but she was impressive even in defeat when she fought to run second by a neck to British Idiom (Flashback). She was second in the GI Starlet S. to close out her juvenile season and then returned a winner at three in the GIII Santa Ysabel S.

Just as he described with Bellafina, McDonald said that Donna Veloce's physical strengths led to her achievements on the racetrack.

Donna Veloce against a Kentucky autumn backdrop | Sara Gordon

“She has a beautiful neck and shoulder set and plenty of length to carry that speed over a distance,” he explained. “She has a massive hip and quarter on her as well.”

McDonald described Donna Veloce's first foal, a filly by Justify, as a “magnificent foal.” That youngster will sell as Hip 159 at Fasig-Tipton.

He said he expects Donna Veloce, whose second and third dams are both Grade I winners, to draw interest from all types of buyers.

“She certainly hits our American market right between the eyes,” McDonald said. “She has the looks, the American pedigree, and she was a Classic distance horse. I think she has all the qualifications to be extremely attractive to buyers where there is dirt racing, but bred in any way you might wish, for turf racing as well. She has a ton of speed and that will be attractive to buyers all over the world.”

Both mares will be offered carrying foals by four-time Grade I winner Tiz the Law. Browning said he believes the son of Constitution has all the potential to be a leading sire once his foals hit the racetrack.

“I believe that Tiz the Law is one of the most underrated stallions prospects that we've come across in my professional career,” he said. “He had the misfortune of being brilliant on the racetrack in 2020 during the COVID year. He won the GI Champagne S. by open lengths in 2019 and his resume that he put together in 2020 was truly remarkable. He had four consecutive graded stakes wins and his average margin of victory was greater than three lengths in each of those races.”

Tiz the Law's pedigree is very intriguing as well,” Browning continued. “He's by Constitution, who we're seeing emerge as one of the top stallions in North America. Interestingly, Tiz the Law is out of a graded stakes-winning mare on turf and she comes from the family of Favorite Trick, who was named Horse of the Year as a 2-year-old, so you get this great combination of precocity and stamina, turf influences and dirt influences. It's a really unique package.”

Tiz the Law is a beautiful horse and I think he has every chance to make it in a big way,” McDonald echoed before adding that he is eager to get both mares out in front of buyers. “They're incredible mares, both extremely good 2-year-olds, and I think that when we put them in front of the public, that's when they will sell themselves.”

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A Shortcut Into Decades of Patience

This is one of those programs, temperate and patient, that nourish the very marrow of our industry. It has never comprised more than around 10 mares, whose foals are brought into the world not just to make a fast buck but actually to go out there and run. Whitham Thoroughbreds is run by an octogenarian widow and her son: they devise matings to draw out speed into a second turn; they're not scared of using a turf stallion from time to time; and they work with horsemen who operate on a correspondingly intimate scale.

In fact, since Janis Whitham and her late husband Frank first dipped their toes into the Thoroughbred world, nearly 40 years ago, the mares and foals have basically been tended by the same hands: first those of Frank Penn at Pennbrook Farm near Lexington and then, when he retired around a decade ago, those of his veterinarian Dr. Steve Conboy at Maple Lane Farm. The racetrack division, albeit launched in California, has reflected similar priorities since it was decided to site the whole herd more accessibly: when Carl Nafzger stepped down, the horses simply stayed with his assistant Ian Wilkes.

“I certainly don't mean to knock those trainers who have huge strings,” stresses Clay Whitham, who assists his mother in running their equine team. “Obviously they get the job done. But I doubt whether they can have enough time to talk with every single one of their clients the way Ian does with Mom. Yes, we have a program-but first and foremost it's something we enjoy. My mother, in particular, really enjoys planning the matings. So it's very good for her to be able to work with a trainer like Ian, who takes his time with the horses, and makes time for visiting with his owners too.”

The dividends have far surpassed those typically achieved by brash ambition in other programs. Admittedly the Whithams were blessed, pretty early on, to import the Hall of Fame impetus of dual GI Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Bayakoa (Arg), but the acorn-to-oaks strategy has since yielded a GI Breeders' Cup Classic from Fort Larned (E Dubai) and a run to the GI Kentucky Derby with McCraken (Ghostzapper). That horse put a remote settlement on the national map, much to the pride of his breeders–who were both raised in the Kansas plains, and in turn made a home for Clay (now a banker in Colorado) and his siblings in the small town of Leoti.

As an unbeaten GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. winner, McCraken was a conspicuously precocious talent by the standards of his sire. The zip in McCraken's genes is attested by the fact that his half-sister Four Graces (Majesticperfection) broke the Keeneland track record over the extended seven furlongs in the GIII Beaumont S., complementing the new mark set by their dam's half-sister Mea Domina (Dance Brightly) in a graded stakes at Del Mar over 1 1/16 miles. That will doubtless seize the attention of commercial breeders when Four Graces comes under the hammer with Denali Stud as Hip 192 at the Keeneland November Sale. But perhaps they should primarily be engaged by the rare opportunity to tap directly into the very fount of this exemplary venture.

Because while there had been one or two Thoroughbred experiments at country tracks, the whole story really began with the weanling Nodouble filly unearthed by Frank Penn for $75,000 in 1983.

“They had quite a bit of Quarter Horse racing out in Kansas back in the day,” recalls Clay. “And my parents, who both came from agricultural areas of the state, had raced a few Quarter Horses. But about this time they decided to transition more into Thoroughbreds. My father was a businessman, I think he could probably just see that the purses were better! And while things have obviously changed quite a bit since, at that time the best purses were in California.”

The filly, named Tuesday Evening, won a Santa Anita maiden on her second start for Ron McAnally and, while unable to race again, duly bred half a dozen winners for the nascent program, including a very fast one in Madame Pandit (Wild Again), who won the GIII Monrovia H. before finishing chasing home Exotic Wood (Rahy) in the GI Santa Monica H.

By the time Madame Pandit came along, however, these horses had acquired a tragic new purpose: as a bond of comfort for a family united by grief. Frank, having built a successful career in livestock, oil and banking, was only 62 when lost in a plane crash in 1993. Through her long widowhood, the patient cycles of breeding-to-race have given Janis much consolation. It was partly to ease that deepening engagement that it was eventually decided to transfer the racetrack division closer to the breeding stock.

Madame Pandit made a great start to her breeding career when Mea Domina, only her second foal, won the GI Gamely Breeders' Cup H. at Hollywood Park. That success actually came just a couple of weeks after Madame Pandit was covered by Seeking The Gold, conceiving a filly that would bear the name Ivory Empress.

“Madame Pandit had been Tuesday Evening's best foal,” Clay reflects. “She was a real speedball, one-turn only, and while I think we breeders tend to get a bit too hung up on size, she really was a very good-sized mare. You know, good barrel, good scope-and every foal she threw was good-looking.

“And we knew that she had that speed back there. We do prefer to breed a two-turn horse, that's our goal, but speed is always a good thing if you can just try to stretch it out. Anyway we were very high on Madame Pandit as a broodmare prospect and, though getting a mare to a stallion like Seeking The Gold was difficult, Mother got that job done! He already had a reputation as a broodmare sire, so we did have our fingers crossed for a filly.”

While Ivory Empress won three times, and also made the podium in a graded stakes, she did not achieve quite as much on the track as Mea Domina. Yet she was the one who has ultimately proved the best conduit for the Tuesday Evening legacy.

“It's a good example of the way things often turn out,” Clay remarks. “You just never know, until you start raising foals. Mea Domina was obviously a very talented horse, but did not turn out to be the broodmare we had hoped. But Ivory Empress took her chances. We bred her first to War Front. Again, my mother got to Seth Hancock! She was the one that could get the mares in there.

“And the result was a very talented colt [early on], second in a couple of graded stakes. One time in particular he looked the clear winner, only for something to fly past in the shadow of the wire. So the mare had landed running-and her second foal was McCraken.”

There was real excitement when McCraken made a seamless resumption in the GIII Sam F. Davis S. and while he was beaten next time, and then suffered a rough trip when midfield at Churchill, he did only go down by a nose in the GI Haskell Invitational S. and has now had his first winners from a small debut book at Airdrie.

“He'll always be special to us,” Clay says. “This whole thing is very much a family activity, and obviously there's nothing quite like having a horse in the Kentucky Derby. That got all the nephews and cousins and everybody involved, it really was quite a ride he took us on.”

It will not be easy, then, to cash out his sister Four Graces. Impressive on debut at Gulfstream, she went through the ranks to win the GIII Dogwood S. before claiming that track record at Keeneland. Restricted to a single start last year, she has had several near-misses this year including when caught late in the GI Derby City Distaff S. But every program, of any size, needs discipline; needs to prune families to keep cultivating them.

“She's the kind we'd love to keep,” Clay says. “She has a great physique, and she has shown a lot of the talent and speed you see in her family. Her dam always has good-looking foals and she was probably top of the list. But as a breed-to-race program, we want to come as close as we can to paying its way. You have two revenue streams available, racing and selling, and it's tough to make it all in purse money. So to have a broodmare prospect that has accomplished everything she has, from a family like that, it's too good an opportunity not to see what we can get done.

“We do have three fillies in the pipeline out of Ivory Empress. Without that, I believe it would be difficult. But we have an Uncle Mo [yearling] down in Florida, just getting started in her training program; we have a Street Sense [weanling] on the farm; and we actually have a 2-year-old full-sister to McCraken who has just been held up by a few little things. And of course we also have Ivory Empress herself. She's 17 and, like all of us, she's getting a little more age on her-but she's doing very well. She was getting late in the foaling [cycle] so we left her open this year and we're working on a mating plan right now.”

The parallel dynasty developed by the Whithams, of course, traces to Bayakoa herself. This really has been a remarkable achievement. The dual champion mare had just two producing daughters. One of these, in turn, herself managed only a single daughter-but that was four-time Grade I winner Affluent (Affirmed). The other daughter, somewhat quixotically, was given the same name as Bayakoa's Argentinian-registered dam, Arlucea. (So good they named her twice!) Having already come up with Fort Larned, another Kansas landmark put on the racing map, she has now produced a fresh maroon-and-silver blossom in Walkathon (Twirling Candy).

Earlier this year Walkathon looked one of the most progressive turf fillies around when winning the GIII Regret S., but has not been seen since.

“She got a knock,” Clay explains. “She was shipped to Saratoga to run in the [Gi Saratoga] Oaks up there but on the morning of race, when they took her out of her stall, she had a bit of a hitch in her giddy-up. So we had her X-rayed and it's a pretty typical deal, no displacement, the kind of thing we've had very good experience recovering from. So we're looking forward to seeing her next spring.”

The emergence of Walkathon is the kind of thing that sustains the passion; and it's the passion that sustains the program. Nobody needs to tell the Whitham clan about the ups and downs of life. They have sampled unspeakable tragedy away from the track and, in the essentially trivial environment of quadrupeds running in circles, they had one of their proudest moments compromised by the disaster that befell their champion's big challenger Go For Wand at the Breeders' Cup. Yet they have found abiding renewal in the patient cycles of raising and racing Thoroughbreds. Whoever is privileged to take this short-cut with Four Graces, then, should also hope to absorb something of the fulfilment the vendors have found in all their years crafting such genetic quality.

“It's all such a great activity for my mother,” Clay says. “She's not able to travel quite so much now, but she's doing great and gets so much enjoyment from the horses. Right now she's running different pedigree programs on the mares, looking at all the different stallions, and still very much engaged.

“We were really tickled to see Walkathon came through for that family. With horses, you always have the ones that carry the load for all the others, and you don't always know which one it will be. Affluent was a disappointing broodmare, but now here's Walkathon from the same family. We've really stuck with these families, tried to develop them. You do have to be careful, not to be too close-bonded on that, but it can work and that's how we got from our foundation mare to Four Graces. Whether we're bull-headed or smart, who knows. But believe me, you have to be lucky too!”

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Catalogue Unveiled For Arqana August Online Sale

The inaugural Arqana Online August Sale catalogue is now online. Consisting of Flat and National Hunt horses-in-training and a mare and filly out of training, the sale is set to begin at 3 p.m. and conclude at 5 p.m. French time on Aug. 26. Heading the catalogue is lot 1, the 95-rated 4-year-old Tornadic (GB) (Toronado {Ire}), who has won three times this season. He is joined by German Group 3 winner Sahib's Joy (Ger) (Soldier Hollow {GB}) (lot 2). Jean-Claude Rouget will offer the dual winner Viatore (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}) and seven-furlong victress Sudaf (War Front) as lots 3 and 4, respectively. Broodmare prospect Bellport (Ire) (Bated Breath {GB}), from the family of German Group 1 winners Borgia (Ger) (Acatenango {Ger}) andBoreal (Ger) (Java Gold), is lot 6.

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Charge It to Granddam’s Account

This whole industry, as I've often remarked, turns on a delicate pivot. We need pedigree to hold up sufficiently for the big investors to stay in the game, and incidentally to keep the rest of us in business; but we also need a sufficient number of unaccountable aberrations for the little guy to feel he always has some kind of chance, as well. If the top lot at Keeneland September Book I won the GI Kentucky Derby every year, then almost the whole pyramid beneath would collapse. But nor can we afford a Rich Strike (Keen Ice) to turn everything on its head too often, either.

This is why, when it comes to blue hens, we need two types of Lady in our lives. We need Leslie's Lady (Tricky Creek), the $8,000 daughter of a mare once claimed for $5,000 and a stallion who ended up in New Mexico. And we also need Take Charge Lady (Dehere), who was sold for $4.2 million after an elite racetrack career and has proved worth every cent.

In hailing yet another stellar talent under Take Charge Lady in her grandson Charge It (Tapit), we must remember that there is no more cherished tool in pedigree analysis than hindsight. Since we tend only to study the backgrounds of horses that excel sufficiently to claim our attention, it's difficult to avoid post-rationalization. Sure enough, I have often enjoyed demonstrating how Leslie's Lady was actually saturated with genetic quality a couple of generations down.

Given the mosaic of influences behind every Thoroughbred, we hardly ever find ourselves looking at the pedigree of an elite animal and discovering absolutely nowhere to hang our hat. Conversely, however, we seldom consider the countless duds to ask just what went wrong, when their pages often offer far more obvious hooks for quality.

There's an implicit assumption that the fulfilment of genetic potential has been thwarted by the fallibility of our own intervention, which can unravel a Thoroughbred's development at so many stages: foaling, raising, feeding, breaking, training.

Personally, however, I suspect that we're better off admitting that much of what we do will always be contingent on mystery. Of course, you're welcome to pay for a software program that claims to reconcile an infinite number of imponderables into some kind of system. It's your money, and we'll see you on the racetrack. But anyone who has met my charming, cultured and handsome brother will confirm what every Thoroughbred breeder knows, that even full siblings won't necessarily have the slightest thing in common.

It is now a couple of decades since William Schettine banked exactly the same sum for consecutive yearling fillies out of an unraced Rubiano mare he had bought for $42,000 at the 1998 Keeneland November Sale. The first had arrived with the mare, in utero, and was sold to Kenny McPeek for $175,000 at Fasig-Tipton's July Sale. Schettine had obviously liked her, because he had sent the mare straight back to Dehere. This time, the resulting daughter went to Keeneland September where, again offered through Bluewater Sales, she realized the same price from G. Watts Humphrey Jr.

Though named Uplifting, she fell rather flat as a runner, failing to break her maiden in a dozen attempts. Nonetheless her owner was able to cash out for a nice profit, for $450,000 to Glen Hill Farm at the 2004 Keeneland November Sale. Her sister with McPeek having meanwhile turned out to be none other than Take Charge Lady, winner of 11 of 22 starts (including three Grade Is) and nearly $2.5 million for Select Stable.

The more illustrious sister had actually been sold just minutes before in the same ring with a Seeking The Gold cover. As we've already noted, she realized nearly 10 times as much.

Now the only rule in this game is that there are no rules. Just because an identical pedigree had functioned so much better in Take Charge Lady, on the racetrack, it remained perfectly feasible that Uplifting could parlay their genes more effectively in their second career. In the event, however, this has proved one of those occasions when the market's assumptions, about the replication of ability, would be thoroughly vindicated.

Uplifting had been in foal to Came Home when she changed hands. The resulting filly was unraced before making little impact as a producer, and likewise the Smarty Jones filly Uplifting delivered next, who was discarded for $3,200. The mare was then given a chance with Medaglia d'Oro and their gelded son, while he did win a couple of times, ultimately descended to mediocre claiming company. By that stage Uplifting had been culled for $50,000, soon after delivering what unfortunately proved to be her final foal, a minor winner by Rock Hard Ten.

For all concerned, then, Uplifting proved a thoroughly deflating experience. In the meantime, her sister has founded one of the great dynasties of our time.

The most obvious point of departure is that Take Charge Lady was routinely given opportunity commensurate with the cost of her acquisition by Eaton Sales. Okay, so her first date after delivering her Seeking The Gold filly was with Fusaichi Pegasus (then still a six-figure cover); but her remaining eight named foals were by Storm Cat, A.P. Indy, Unbridled's Song, Indian Charlie, War Front (three times) and American Pharoah.

Three of these emulated their dam as Grade I winners: Will Take Charge (Unbridled's Song) in the Travers and Clark H.; Take Charge Indy (A.P. Indy) in the Florida Derby; and As Time Goes By (American Pharoah) in the Beholder Mile earlier this year. Meanwhile that first foal by Seeking The Gold, Charming, not only instantly recouped $3.2 million as a yearling but then contributed lavishly to her dam's legacy despite curtailed careers both on and off the track. Just five named foals included two elite performers in Omaha Beach (War Front) and Take Charge Brandi (Giant's Causeway), herself since dam of this year's Jerome S. winner Courvoisier (another Tapit).

By the time Take Charge Lady's daughter from the final crop of Indian Charlie arrived at the 2013 September Sale, her page was already decorated by Will Take Charge and Take Charge Indy. With residual value duly guaranteed, the filly was recruited for $2.2 million by Mandy Pope of Whisper Hill Farm, who named her I'll Take Charge. Confined to five starts, she showed fair ability (won a Belmont maiden) before commencing her second career and has wasted little time in coming up with a colt eligible to recover her cost in Charge It, her second foal. (The other is a daughter of Medaglia d'Oro, also retained by her breeder. She has required patience, now four, but has suggested the ability to win a race, again placed at Monmouth only last week).

The imposing gray Charge It could obviously have made good money as a yearling, but he looks like repaying the gamble of his retention for Pope's racing division. Unraced at two, thanks partly to an eye infection, he progressed quickly enough to run second in the GI Curlin Florida Derby, but remained pretty raw on the first Saturday in May. He apparently displaced his soft palate anyway, but was sensibly given an easy time once his chance had gone and, regrouping for the GIII Dwyer S. last Saturday, outclassed a short field by a jaw-dropping 23 lengths. He's clearly going to be a force in what is promising, after a messy Triple Crown series, to prove a dynamic second half of the year among the sophomores. Indeed, his 111 Beyer at Belmont is the top of the crop to date.

In the current context, it requires some effort to take a step back and see what lurks beyond the neon presence of his granddam in Charge It's pedigree. On doing so, however, you notice at once the branding of a second mighty mare. For Tapit's dam Tap Your Heels (Unbridled) is, of course, out of the celebrated Ruby Slippers (Nijinsky)–whose son Rubiano (by Unbridled's sire Fappiano) gave us Take Charge Lady's dam Felicita.

Through a double dose of Rubiano, interestingly, Ruby Slippers also has a top-and-bottom footprint in Omaha Beach, arguably the most brilliant member of this clan: in counterweight to Felicita (third dam, as with Charge It), his sire War Front is out of a Rubiano mare.

Tapit, meanwhile, already has a monster talent out of an Indian Charlie mare in Flightline. (Pope and her team wisely bred I'll Take Charge back to the Gainesway phenomenon after she delivered an Into Mischief colt this spring). Indian Charlie's record as a broodmare sire has also been lately enhanced by siblings Mitole (Eskendereya) and Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow). In terms of distaff influence, however, few modern stallions have been more abundantly qualified than the sire of Take Charge Lady herself. Dehere is by one outstanding broodmare sire in Deputy Minister, out of the daughter of another in Secretariat.

Take Charge Lady's dam Felicita, as noted, was unraced but her siblings included a couple of bright streaks of green, in a Group 1-placed juvenile in Europe plus the dam of GII Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner Chamberlain Bridge (War Chant). That figures, their mother being by Blushing Groom (Fr)–himself, of course, another killer broodmare sire.

Besides Take Charge Lady, Felicita gave us a couple of minor graded stakes operators–one of whom (by Lear Fan) became a triple black-type producer, notably with Grade II winner/Grade I runner-up Straight Story (Giant's Causeway), also on turf. But some excellent covers, for instance by A.P. Indy twice and Deputy Minister, proved less productive. And, as we've already elaborated, repeat matings with Dehere could not have yielded more contrasting results.

Take Charge Lady, sadly lost to foaling complications in 2018, has founded a dynasty that only continues to proliferate. Omaha Beach, having received all the support he has been priced to tempt, surely has a massive chance in his new career, having exceptionally spanned his Grade I success across six and nine furlongs in the same season. And Charge It, if he can build from here, will similarly bring one of the best families around into the competition to succeed an ageing sire.

Yet how perplexing, to witness all this, for those who invested in her sister. Even our old standby, hindsight, can't really help them this time.

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