PHBA Honors 2020 Champions

The Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association honored its 2020 champions during a virtual celebration of the 42nd annual Iroquois Awards last Friday. Multiple stakes-winning Caravel (Mizzen Mast), bred, owned and trained by Elizabeth Merryman, was named Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old filly.

Other champions announced Friday were: 2yo Filly: Plane Drunk (Stay Thirsty); 2yo Male: Fire's Finale (Jump Start); 3yo Male: Dreams Untold (Smarty Jones); Older, Turf and Sprinter Female: Jakarata (Bustin Stones); Older Male: Wait for It (Uptowncharlybrown); Turf and Sprinter Male: The Critical Way (Tizway).

PA-Preferred Female and Male were Its a Journey (Jump Start) and Wait for It, respectively. Avani Force (Forestry) was named broodmare of the year. Leading Breeder Award Recipients were Blackstone Farm and Glenn E. Brok LLC.

Patricia Chapman was given the lifetime achievement award and Pastures of Point Lookout was honored with the award of merit.

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Caravel Named Pennsylvania’s 2020 Horse Of The Year

The Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association's 42nd Annual Iroquois Awards was held virtually on May 21 to celebrate the champions of 2020.

Leading the way was Caravel, who was named 2020 Horse of the Year.

The daughter of Mizzen Mast won four of five starts last year, going from last to first to win on debut at Penn National, then taking an allowance race at the same track with a front-running trip. Caravel then shipped to Presque Isle Downs to win the Lady Erie Stakes in her black type debut.

She took her only trip out of the state to race when she shipped to Pimlico Race Course for the Hilltop Stakes, where she finished third. Her season wrapped up back at Presque Isle, where she drew off to win the Malvern Rose Stakes by 4 3/4 lengths.

Caravel is owned, trained, and bred in Pennsylvania by Elizabeth Merryman. She is out of the winning Congrats mare Zeezee Zoomzoom

Following is the complete list of 2020 Iroquois Award winners.

2-Year-Old Filly: Plane Drunk
Bred by Triple Threat Stables LLC

Dazzling in a Parx maiden special weight when winning by nearly a dozen lengths, Triple Threat Stables' homebred Plane Drunk captured Penn National's Shamrock Rose Stakes by more than three lengths after a second-place finish in Delaware Park's Small Wonder Stakes.

2-Year-Old Male: Fire's Finale
Bred by Kenwood Racing LLC

A last-to-first run in the Pennsylvania Nursery at Parx capped a busy season in which Jump Start's son Fire's Finale hit the board in three of five starts outside Pennsylvania before heading to Parx and getting back-to-back wins.

3-Year-Old Filly: Caravel
Bred by Elizabeth M. Merryman

A winner of four of her five starts at three, all by daylight margins, Caravel, a gray filly owned, bred and trained by Lizzie Merryman, accounted for the Lady Erie in her stakes debut and the Malvern Rose, both at Presque Isle Downs, and was stakes-placed on the turf in Pimlico's Hilltop Stakes.

3-Year-Old Male: Dreams Untold
Bred by Patricia L. Chapman

In a sophomore campaign that started with a 14 1/4-length romp in January at Parx, Pat Chapman's Dreams Untold, a homebred son of Smarty Jones, sprinted home in front of four of his eight starts during the year while earning $146,400, the most of any 3-year-old male in 2020.

Older Female: Jakarta
Bred by Arrowwood Farm Inc.

The richest PA-Bred runner of the year, Jakarta traveled the country, recording stakes wins at Gulfstream Park in the Powder Break and Claiming Crown Distaff Dash, winning at Kentucky Downs going gate-to-wire, and placing in the Grade 3 Buffalo Trace Franklin County Stakes at Keeneland and Caress Stakes at Saratoga. She earned nearly $250,000 with four wins in nine starts.

Older Male: Wait for It
Bred by Fantasy Lane Stable

At age five, Wait for It had his best season yet when winning four times and placing twice in eight starts while earning nearly $210,000. The son of Uptowncharlybrown drew off to easy scores in the Storm Cat Stakes at Parx and Hard Spun Stakes at Presque Isle Downs.

Turf Female: Jakarta
Bred by Arrowwood Farm Inc.

The PA-Bred champion older female adds the turf title after winning or placing in five of her six turf starts, three of them stakes. The richest PA-Bred runner of the year, Jakarta capped her season with a devastating stretch run to win the Claiming Crown Distaff Dash at Gulfstream. Earlier in the year she set the fractions until caught late when second in Saratoga's Caress Stakes, and blazed through the early running of the G3 Buffalo Trace Franklin County Stakes at Keeneland before finishing third.

Turf Male: The Critical Way
Bred by Blackstone Farm LLC

In a COVID-19 shortened year The Critical Way went from claimer in January to stakes winner in late summer in six starts. His biggest score came in dominating gate-to-wire fashion in the Marshall Jenney Handicap at Parx. Less than a month later he just missed by a head after setting the early fractions against open company in Monmouth Park's Virgil Buddy Raines Stakes.

Female Sprinter: Jakarta
Bred by Arrowwood Farm Inc.

Jakarta is also female sprinter after a season in which she won or placed in stakes from five furlongs to one mile. Her daylight win in the Claiming Crown Distaff Dash came at five furlongs, and she just missed in the 5 1/2-furlong Caress Stakes at Saratoga. She was only beaten a length by multiple Grade 1 winner Got Stormy in the 5 1/2-furlong G3 Buffalo Trace Franklin County Stakes at Keeneland after blazing through opening fractions of :21 and change and :44 and change.

Male Sprinter: The Critical Way
Bred by Blackstone Farm LLC

Six races, all at five or 5 1/2 furlongs, and The Critical Way was either first or second in five of them. The 5-furlong Marshall Jenney Handicap at Parx was his richest race, but he also won going 5 furlongs in allowance company at Tampa Bay and got caught late when second in Monmouth Park's 5 1/2-furlong Virgil Buddy Raines Stakes.

Horse of the Year: Caravel
Bred by Elizabeth M. Merryman

Caravel was exciting in each and every one of her five starts, with her four wins coming by daylight margins. The gray filly owned, bred and trained by Lizzie Merryman won Presque Isle Downs' Lady Erie in her stakes debut and added the Malvern Rose, winning by a combined eight lengths. In her second start she just missed the 18-year-old Penn National course record for five furlongs as she cruised home by more than five lengths.

PA-Preferred Female: Its a Journey
Bred by Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Szeyller
2020 earnings: $187,260
Won Mrs. Penny Stakes at Parx Racing

PA-Preferred Male: Wait for It
Bred by Fantasy Lane Stable
2020 earnings: $208,610
Won Storm Cat Stakes at Parx Racing and Hard Spun Stakes at Presque Isle Downs
3rd DTHA Governors Day Handicap at Delaware Park

Broodmare of the Year: Avani Force
Owned by Vicky Schowe & Beatrice Patterson
Dam of 2020 stakes winner Pink Caddy

Her first five foals of racing age are all winners, including multiple graded stakes winner Call Paul, the El Padrino filly Pink Caddy, a stakes winner at two and three, and 2020 juvenile stakes-placed Maythehorsebwithu, by Bullsbay.

Leading Breeder Award Recipients:

Blackstone Farm LLC
Award Earnings: $171,522

Glenn E. Brok LLC
Award Earnings: $149,268

Leading Breeding Fund Recipient (horse): Wait For It
Bred by Fantasy Lane Stable
Award Earnings: $191,540

Leading Total Breeding Fund Recipient: Northview Stallion Station Inc.
Award Earning: $306,970

Leading Stallion: Jump Start
Owned by Northview Stallion Station Inc.
Earnings: $172,796

Leading Overall Breeder of Pennsylvania-Breds: Blackstone Farm LLC
Earnings: $1,676,119

Lifetime Achievement Award: Patricia L. Chapman

Award of Merit: Pastures of Point Lookout

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Trainer Liz Merryman Has High Hopes for Homebred Filly

It's a rare feat to get to the winner's circle on one of the biggest weekends in racing with a horse bred, owned and trained by the same connection, but Elizabeth Merryman did just that when her speedy filly Caravel (Mizzen Mast) gave a gutsy performance at Pimlico to take The Very One S. by a nose on Preakness weekend.

Many would consider the juggling act between the foaling barn and the training center to be an impossibility, but Liz Merryman says for her, it's the best way to produce a racehorse.

“I love working with a horse that has no mystery to what happened before I got them,” she said. “You know everything about them, you know why they do what they do and it's really rewarding. It's my favorite way to train a horse.”

Did last Friday's victory mark Caravel as the most successful homebred Merryman has brought up?

“Definitely,” the Fair Hill-based trainer said.

And for the cherry on top, Merryman picked up Caravel's dam for free.

Zeezee Zoomzoom (Congrats), a $135,000 2-year-old purchase out of a dual stakes winner, broke her maiden on the Saratoga turf as a 3-year-old in 2015. After she dropped to the claiming ranks the next year, a bowed tendon ended her racing career.

A friend of Merryman's heard the filly was up for grabs.

“I was looking for another broodmare and my friend called me from Florida,” Merryman recalled. “She said the owners were just looking for a good home for her, either as a riding horse or a broodmare, but she told me she thought the filly would make me a nice broodmare. I looked her up and she had a weird page. There were very few horses on it, but the ones there could really run. All the way down, there were nice, strong broodmare types.”

So Merryman agreed to take the filly and shipped her from Florida to Kentucky, for a date with Juddmonte's Mizzen Mast, and then on to her farm in Pennsylvania.

“I never saw her until she was pregnant with Caravel,” Merryman noted with a laugh.

Zeezee Zoomzoom's first foal immediately showed promise.

“She was the only foal I had that year since my other mare wasn't in foal, so she was kind of raised as an only child,” Merryman said. “She always had a great personality and was really nice-looking and correct. I thought she was special from day one, I just didn't know she would be this special.”

A young Caravel taking a snooze. | Elizabeth Merryman

While Merryman said she will occasionally put a foal through a sale, she never considered it with Caravel.

“I really believe if you're going to make a mare, you should keep the first foal and campaign it yourself to make sure it gets every possible chance to prove itself and the family. She was also bred for the grass and she started cribbing early on. I thought she was a fantastic-looking baby, so I didn't want her to be discounted for being a cribbing turf horse.”

Merryman's hopes for the gray filly grew once she started putting in her first works at Fair Hill.

“One day I told her rider to kind of cruise through the lane and two-minute lick the last eighth to see how she goes. I clocked her at 11 flat and I thought, 'You know what? I think I have a runner.'”

Caravel broke her maiden on debut, going last to first over five furlongs of turf at Penn National. She then took an allowance at the same track before claiming her first stakes win in the Lady Erie S. at Presque Isle Downs.

At that point, the Pennsylvania-bred was getting some attention. After a third-place effort in the Hilltop S., Merryman put her in the Wanamaker's October Online Auction.

“I had a lot of people calling me and I thought I should probably cash in on her,” Merryman said. “I set her reserve at $350,000 and she didn't get to it. I wasn't very sorry. She won a stakes a week later.”

Caravel wrapped up her 3-year-old season with a win in the Malvern Rose S. back at Presque Isle Downs.

From the start of her campaign this year, Merryman was shooting to bring Caravel to Pimlico for The Very One S.

“I knew she was going to need a prep race, but everything kept getting backed up at Laurel and there was no allowance for her in New York really, so I thought I would run her in the License Fee S. and that would be a nice prep for her being three weeks out,” Merryman explained.

When bad weather pushed the race back a week, Merryman decided to keep her filly entered, planning to opt out of a trip to Pimlico on Preakness weekend two weeks later and instead wait until Monmouth opened.

But after Caravel's third-place finish in the License Fee, Merryman wavered in her decision.

“When she came out of that race, she seemed like she had really moved forward,” Merryman said. “She didn't come out tired or stiff and she was training happy, so I thought alright, maybe two weeks is going to be fine.”

Merryman grew more confident in the days leading up to the race.

“The week before, I was so confident in her, and I'm never confident,” she said. “I always second guess myself, but I'd never had a horse come into a race like such a monster.”

Caravel settled along the rail for the five-furlong contest and waited for a hole coming down the stretch. It seemed as though she would have no way to get up and would have to fight to get in the money, but in the final strides before the wire, she slipped through to surge forward and get the bob in a nail-biting three-way photo finish.

“I thought she had finished third when she crossed the wire,” her trainer admitted.

Merryman joins her homebred in the winner's circle for the Malvern Rose S. | Coady

For Merryman, who was born into a prominent racing family and has now passed on the trade to her children, the victory was cause for celebration.

“I had a lot of family there- both my kids, my husband, my sister and her family, and quite a few friends. It was really special and a lot of fun.”

Merryman reports that Caravel came out of the race with flying colors. She doesn't have any set plans for the filly's next start, but is considering options at Woodbine and Belmont.

Caravel's 3-year-old sister Tipsy Chatter (Bourbon Courage) is now in training with Merryman and looking to break her maiden, entered on May 26 at Delaware Park. Their dam also has a juvenile son of Great Notion named Witty, a yearling colt by Holy Boss, and was most recently bred back to Great Notion.

While Merryman admits that Caravel and her siblings are foaled out at another farm, they are back in her hands at three days old. Caravel has not left her owner's care since she first arrived at Merryman's Pennsylvania farm in the spring of 2017.

“We broke her ourselves,” she said. “She's been with us for everything. I love raising them. It's obviously a slow process. Everything goes wrong, there's always sleepless nights, but being able to work with a clean slate, with a horse you know everything about, there's no mystery.”

Merryman said she starts her day later than most at Fair Hill so she can care for her mares and foals before heading to the training center. It makes for hectic days, but it's a process that she has found serves her best.

“I just like to work with horses,” she said. “It's thrilling. A lot of people's lives are pretty mundane and boring. Mine certainly isn't. There's a lot of hard work and drudgery, but there's always something that's going to get your blood up.”

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What’s In A Name? Seize the Night, Someday Is Today, Caravel, Que Sera Sir Ralph, Heresy

As for intriguing names of winning horses, that was the week that was.

Let's start with the seminal power of those two immortal little words Carpe Diem ('Seize The Day'} from Ancient Rome prince of poets Horace (65-8 BC)–also responsible for Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori ('It is sweet and fitting to die for the homeland'), written only a few years after having run away, throwing the shield on the ground, at the battle of Philippi (42 BC).

Two horses creatively honored the WinStar stallion Carpe Diem (by Giant's Causeway out of Rebridled Dreams by Unbridled's Song): Churchill Downs 5-14 2yo winner SEIZE THE NIGHT (by Carpe Diem out of Candle Maker by Tapit) cleverly switched day with night with some help from his dam's name, while Charles Town 5-13 3yo winning filly SOMEDAY IS TODAY (by Carpe Diem out of Any Day Now by Smart Strike) sounds like an eloquent exhortation based on both father's and mother's names.

Then we have the nautical congruity of the name of Pimlico's The Very One S. triumphant speed merchant CARAVEL (by Mizzen Mast out of Zeezee Zoomzoom by Congrats). Caravels, Portuguese-developed ships that were “agile and easy to navigate” (according to Wikipedia), ventured across the oceans in the 13th century with notorious epoch-making results. The mizzen mast is the aft-most (or last) mast of many sailing ships, lower in height and well suited to carry a relatively small lateen (triangular) sail in those adventurous caravels.

The name of Golden Gate 3-year-old winner QUE SERA SIR RALPH (by Haynesfield out of Norah's Kitten by Kitten's Joy) is a phonetical little masterpiece of wordplay–Doris Day would approve of it and maybe smile her famous smile.

Down Under winner HERESY (AUS) {by Street Boss out of Montsegur {Aus} by New Approach {Ire}) carries a cunning name. The Chateau de Montsegur is a former fortress in the Ariege department in southern France. Its ruins are the site of a razed stronghold of the Cathars, unorthodox Christians that were persecuted as heretics by the Catholic Church between the 12th and the 14th centuries. Godolphin namers, do not make me work this hard–this was a tough one, I almost missed it.

And, last but absolutely not least, we have our brilliant Preakness winner. A few people have noticed a possible link with a precious Napa Valley Chardonnay–and this number includes the national daily newspaper USA TODAY, who ran a story before the race about the 10 Preakness participants, ranking their names for “originality, prestige and more” (Concert Tour was first, the winner fourth). The ultimate origin of the very name ROMBAUER is not clear and may be never known, but, in any case, the name has a great sound to it: it evokes 'roar' and 'rumble' and 'blast'. It is greatly suited to a sporting spectacle: not for nothing, “Rombo Di Tuono” ('Roar of Thunder') was the nickname of Italian soccer legendary goal scorer Gigi Riva. Never ask for whom the crowd roars: it roars for the winner, dark horse or not.

5th-Churchill Downs, $99,058, Msw, 5-14, 2yo, 5f, :58.81, ft, head.
SEIZE THE NIGHT (c, 2, Carpe Diem–Candle Maker, by Tapit) Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $57,488. O-Willis Horton Racing LLC; B-Cove Springs Farm LLC (KY); T-Dallas Stewart.

Someday Is Today, f, 3, Carpe Diem–Any Day Now, by Smart Strike. Charles Town, 5-13, (S), 6 1/2f, 1:19.94. Lifetime
Record: 2-1-1-0, $26,145. B-Schiano Racing Inc. & Carpe Diem Syndicate (WV). *$50,000 Ylg '19 FTKFEB; $30,000 Ylg '19 FTKOCT

THE VERY ONE S., $100,000, Pimlico, 5-14, 3yo/up, f/m, 5fT, :56.21, fm.
1–CARAVEL, 122, f, 4, Mizzen Mast–Zeezee Zoomzoom, by Congrats. ($330,000 RNA 3yo '20 WANOCT). O/B/T-Elizabeth M Merryman (PA); J-Florent Geroux. $60,000. Lifetime Record: 7-5-0-2, $212,872.

Que Sera Sir Ralph, g, 3, Haynesfield–Norah's Kitten, by Kitten's Joy. Golden Gate Fields, 5-14, 1 1/16mT, 1:47.03. Lifetime Record: 8-1-0-2, $31,154. B-Richard James & Roberto Gonzalez (CA).

Heresy (Aus), f, 2, Street Boss–Montsegur (Aus) (GSW-Aus, $267,703), by New Approach (Ire). Morphettville, 5-15, David Coles AM S.-G3 ($99k), 1200mT, 1:10.78. B-Godolphin Australia (NSW). *1ST STAKES WIN. 1ST GROUP WIN.

The post What’s In A Name? Seize the Night, Someday Is Today, Caravel, Que Sera Sir Ralph, Heresy appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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