Stone Farm’s ‘$4-Million Man’ Leads Another Seven-Figure Yearling To Fasig-Tipton Saratoga

Everett Charles didn't even like horses when he took a job at Stone Farm in 1978.

In the four decades that followed, his ability to develop young horses and show them at auction would become so proven, he'd lead a pair of seven-figure session-toppers to the ring in consecutive editions of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale.

In 2019, it was a $1.5-million Curlin colt who'd one day become Grade 3 winner First Captain. On Monday, it was a $1.6-million Uncle Mo colt out of the Grade 1 winner Dame Dorothy who sold to Robert and Lawana Low.

Those two achievements alone reach a stratosphere most in the Thoroughbred industry will never touch, but they both look up to the horse Charles prepared and showed at the 1998 Keeneland July Yearling Sale: the $4-million Kentucky Derby winner Fusaichi Pegasus. That crowning achievement earned Charles the “$4-million man” nickname from Stone Farm owner Arthur Hancock III.

Butterfly effects are real in the Thoroughbred industry. A choice or twist of fate decades earlier can influence the present in ways one couldn't possibly predict.

With that in mind, something as simple as a detoured drive to work potentially swung millions of dollars in the auction ring.

“I worked in a factory, and I came out to Stone Farm just to look around,” Charles said about his introduction to the business. “I didn't care about horses. I wouldn't even watch it on TV. I came out to the farm, and the farm manager said, 'Hey young man, would you like to come out here and work?' I said, 'I work in a warm place, and it's cool in the summer. I don't care about working outside.'

“I was leaving my house, driving to Lexington to work, and a snowstorm hit,” he continued. “I got halfway there, turned around, and went back home. Two or three days later, I called the farm, went there and started working.”

Charles worked with Monday's session-topper since the colt was weaned from his dam. Six days a week, he cared for the colt, and prepared him for putting up with the grueling show schedule he'd face as a highly coveted lot at the Saratoga sale. He rode with the colt in the van from central Kentucky to upstate New York, and showed him when his number was called on the sale grounds.

It's the same regiment that he's gone through with any top-dollar horse under his care over the years. That dedication to the animals has earned the respect of the Hancock family that owns and manages Stone Farm.

“He's a key player on our team,” said Lynn Hancock, Stone Farm's director of sales and racing. “He can come to the big dance and get it done.

“He's a good horseman; you have to be to work with them for this long,” she continued. “He's a great showman. He's got a good rapport with the horses, and he's a hard worker. I don't remember a time he's missed a day of work.”

Charles said the Uncle Mo colt's professionalism stood out early on. He quickly figured out the traits that served him well at the sale, and that will serve him equally well on the racetrack: rest at every opportunity presented to you, and fuel up with food and water whenever it's presented.

Though the colt was everything one would expect from a top-level son of Uncle Mo on Monday night, his star quality didn't always shine through. Charles said the colt thrived when he was given a job, even if that job was just to make himself look good.

“At first, we had him in the field with 15 other yearlings, and he didn't really stand out,” he said. “Once he got away from the pack, and we brought him to the training barn and gave him his own paddock, he's got a big paddock full of luscious grass. I call it a 'buffet paddock.' Since then, he just took off and filled out. You couldn't ask for a better colt to take care of. He's done everything I asked him to do.”

Monday's session-topper was bred in Kentucky by celebrity chef Bobby Flay, who also campaigned dam Dame Dorothy to a Grade 1-winning career. Hancock said the quality the Bernardini mare impressed onto her foal was evident.

“They look like doppelgängers,” she said. “I've been showing people at the consignment pictures of her as a yearling and him as a yearling up here. They look so much alike, down to their markings. They're both well-balanced, and he's got a lot of Bernardini in him. He's proven he's an excellent broodmare sire.”

Going back to the great butterfly effects of the bloodstock world, Flay actually offered Dame Dorothy up for sale with the Uncle Mo colt in utero at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton November sale. She ultimately finished under her reserve with a final bid of $3.1 million and remained in Flay's broodmare band.

Though the Uncle Mo colt displayed a quiet class during his time at the sale, that's not the only road to a seven-figure payday at the auction.

Charles' greatest protege, Fusaichi Pegasus, was quite the opposite, and buyers were clearly undeterred by it. He also spent more time with the Mr. Prospector colt, transferring from the weanling barn to the yearling division as Fusaichi Pegasus graduated.

“FuPeg was a little bit meaner and more aggressive,” he said. “If I bring FuPeg out to show, he's going to rare up, swing his head, or scream out real loud. This (Uncle Mo) colt, he's so quiet. When I come out to walk him, all he does is stand quiet and perk his ears up. He notices everything, even the least little thing.”

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Even though he's brought up bigger sellers, and he's been taking horses to auction with Stone Farm for decades, the thrill of seeing one of his students eclipse seven figures still fills Charles with the same joy.

Monday's session-topper might have sold for $2.4 million less than Fusaichi Pegasus, but in the moment, Charles couldn't tell the difference.

“I was standing up there with my friend, and when he got to $1.2 million, my knees started shaking,” Charles said. “I couldn't control them. Then he went on to $1.3 million, then $1.4 million. Then, he got to five and I went numb. Then, when he hit six, I looked at my friend and said, 'I don't think I can take any more.' It's the greatest feeling in the world.”

Everett Charles might not have been a horse person when he started with Stone Farm, but the love he had for Monday's session-topper clearly went beyond the number he brought in the ring – a love learned over the course of 44 years.

Watching him check on the horse in his stall after the hammer fell, the ticket was signed, and the champagne was popped was a bittersweet moment. He was proud of his charge for what he'd accomplished after months of work, but it also meant the months of work were about to come to an end, and their paths were hours away from splitting.

Departing is a natural by-product of the auction business, but that doesn't mean it has to be easy. As he scratched the colt's neck under the dim light of the stall, Charles didn't tell the colt how much he just sold for. He told him something much more relevant.

“I'll miss you.”

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Half-Sister To Derby Winner Always Dreaming Sells At Saratoga In Dilger’s Memory

One of the enduring images of the 2017 Kentucky Derby didn't come between the rails.

It was a cell phone video from inside McCarthy's Irish Bar in Lexington, Ky., where praise and cheers rained down upon on Gerry Dilger as he watched the colt he co-bred win the biggest race of his life.

Always Dreaming's triumph at Churchill Downs was a career highlight for Dilger, who bred the colt in partnership with bloodstock agent Mike Ryan under the moniker Santa Rosa Partners.

It was a powerful pairing, combining one of the industry's top consignors, in Dilger's Dromoland Farm, and one of the keenest buying eyes in the business, in Ryan; and the mare that made Always Dreaming, the Grade 3-winning blue hen Above Perfection, was their ace in the hole.

On Tuesday, when Hip 160 goes through the ring, it'll be a reminder of the good times, but it'll also be a curtain call for those who couldn't attend.

The Quality Road filly wearing the “160” sticker on her hip was the last foal out of Above Perfection, whose mating was planned by Ryan and Dilger in tandem. Dilger died in March 2020, a month before the filly was born.

A year later, on April 20, Above Perfection had a Justify colt, but she developed laminitis in the weeks that followed and soon succumbed at age 23.

Whether the reasons are physical, economic, or personal, every horse that goes through the ring in Saratoga Springs does so because they are special. Needless to say, this one carries a bit more weight for Ryan than the garden-variety special horse.

“It's very emotional,” Ryan said. “Gerry was my best friend. It's tough.”

Above Perfection had been a revelation for Ryan and Dilger. They bought the mare for $450,000 at the 2006 Fasig-Tipton November Sale, carrying a Dixie Union foal that would become Grade 1 winner and graded stakes producer Hot Dixie Chick.

Always Dreaming, by Bodemeister, was the seventh foal bred by Santa Rosa Partners. Two foals later, the mare produced the Pioneerof the Nile filly Positive Spirit, who won the Grade 2 Demoiselle Stakes.

The mare's final Justify colt was the 12th bred by the Santa Rosa operation, and her 14th overall. Ryan said he was aware that the mare's age was catching up with her, and he'd taken steps to ease her load by putting her foals on nurse mares in recent seasons. The plan had been to pension Above Perfection after her latest foal was weaned, but she went from healthy to laminitic without warning.

“She was one of these mares that put everything into her foals,” Ryan said. “She always had good muscle and strength herself. She was a powerful mare, and she was an easy doer. She took care of herself, and she never disappointed us. She dropped a very good foal.”

The mare's age was also on Ryan and Dilger's mind when they planned the mating that produced the Quality Road filly on offer Tuesday.

“He had a terrific year at the time,” Ryan said. “We wanted a proven horse, and he's a horse that we bred to early in his career. He's one of the top horses around. The mare had some age on her, and Lane's End were gracious enough to take her.”

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The ensuing foal fit the bill of another successful filly on the page.

“This filly actually reminds me a lot of Hot Dixie Chick,” Ryan said. “She's a similar shape, similar size and stature, good length, good depth to her. She's got the same mind. All of them have a good mind. Hot Dixie Chick had the most unbelievable temperament – she was like a sheepdog, but when you dropped her on the rail, she was extremely talented.

“I'd say there's more of the mare in this filly than Quality Road,” he continued. “She's bred to go two turns, but she gives me the impression she'll have plenty of pace.”

Fillies with pages this deep don't often enter the commercial market, especially when the matriarch of such a strong family tree has recently died. Under normal circumstances, a filly like the one on offer Tuesday would be kept to join the breeder's broodmare band.

Ryan said the filly's entry in the sale was part of the process of moving on.

“To finalize Gerry's estate, this was the appropriate way to do it, to put her through the sale,” he said. “Obviously, a filly like this, you'd love to keep her for the long term as a racemare and a broodmare, because it's a pedigree we're familiar with. These kinds of fillies are hard to come by.”

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‘If I’m A One-Woman Show, I Brought The Right Filly’: Foreman Makes Her Saratoga Debut As Consignor

One's first trip to Saratoga is often unforgettable. That's why people keep coming back to the same spot in upstate New York every summer.

This is far from the first Saratoga sojourn for consignor Susan Foreman, but it'll be a memorable one nonetheless.

Foreman, born and based in Ontario, will consign her first horse at this year's Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale. The single-horse consignment doesn't take up much room in Barn 3, but the right horse can fill a lot of space.

The Medaglia d'Oro filly, offered Monday as Hip 22, is out of the winning Fusaichi Pegasus mare Vulcan Rose, whose three foals to race are all black type earners, led by the Grade 3 winner and popular young stallion Flameaway.

Though many of Vulcan Rose's foals have been foaled in Canada, the filly offered Monday was born in Kentucky, bred by British Columbia-based Deborah Holmes' Phoenix Rising Farm.

“I've got a great owner who gave this filly to me to prep,” Foreman said. “She foals mares with me, so with this breeding, she needed to be with the best of the best. They sent her to me in mid-April for prepping, and here I am. She fits the bill. She's gorgeous, classy, with pedigree. I couldn't have asked for a nicer horse. If I'm a one-woman show, I brought the right filly.”

Monday's sale will mark a new milestone for Foreman, but that's no indication that any of this is new for the consignor. She has sold in Kentucky and Ontario for decades, and she'll have 15 horses in the Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Ontario Division) Canadian Premier Yearling Sale on Sept. 1 at Woodbine, where she is no stranger to the top of the standings.

Foreman has a full-service farm in Tottenham, Ontario, with over two decades of experience with Thoroughbreds. However, her equine roots trace back to the show horse world with different breeds. The rigorous process of making sure a horse is pristine for judges made for a natural transfer when Foreman moved into the Thoroughbred realm, and the show ring was traded for the sales ring.

“I have done this since I was a little girl,” she said. “I've shown horses, conformation horses on the line, so I have a lot of attention to detail ingrained in me. Coming into the Thoroughbreds and showing them was uncomplicated for me, because since I was a small girl, it was so important for me to have them fit, muscular, shiny, clean, clipped properly.”

Even with a single-horse operation, Foreman acknowledged that she couldn't do it alone. She brought a pair of longtime friends and associates with her for her first Saratoga consignment: Amanda Hutchinson from Ontario, and Israel Romo from Kentucky.

Romo has worked in the WinStar Farm stallion operation, but her relationship with Foreman goes even further back.

“We've been friends for close to 20 years and he still shows horses for me,” Foreman said. “He's my go-to guy when I need extra help down here, he finds me all my help, so he's a key asset for me to show.”

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This year's Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale has a considerable Canadian presence, with fellow Ontario-based outfits Cara Bloodstock and Sam-Son Farm also bringing consignments.

Though COVID-19-related restrictions aren't as tight as they were at the same time last year, Foreman said there were still plenty of administrative hoops to jump through to get from one side to the other.

“It's tough,” she said. “My easy access for me was I hauled her down here myself, so I go in the commercial lane, and have all my export papers done with my broker, no problem. But, to come without her would have been a problem. You'd have had to fly. For me, transporting her with all of my equipment and my groom was the easy way to get here.

“There's a lot of documents to cross – declaration of importation, who's traveling with me,” Foreman continued. “Every detail is not overlooked on who is coming back and forth: my vehicle, plates, VIN number, everything. But, once you get all that paperwork, it's just a barcode. They scan you, and away you go.”

It took the right horse to get Foreman to the Saratoga sale, and a potentially special one for her to endure the logistical headaches. Even though Foreman has high expectations for her Medaglia d'Oro filly, the consignor does not plan to rest on her laurels, regardless of how she performs on Monday. This may be her first Saratoga sale as a consignor, but she had no intention of making it her last.

“It was a goal of mine to get here,” Foreman said. “Hopefully I'm bringing this one's half-sister and some other nice, well-bred colts next year.”

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PR Back Ring Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale: Bernardini’s Deep Roots At The Spa

CLICK HERE TO READ THIS EDITION OF THE PR BACK RING

The latest issue of the PR Back Ring is now online, ahead of the Saratoga Select Yearling Sale.

The PR Back Ring is the Paulick Report's bloodstock newsletter, released ahead of every major North American Thoroughbred auction. Seeking to expand beyond the usual pdf presentation, the Back Ring offers a dynamic experience for bloodstock content, heavy on visual elements and statistics to appeal to readers on all platforms, especially mobile devices.

Here is what's inside this issue…

CLICK HERE TO READ THIS EDITION OF THE PR BACK RING

  • Lead Feature presented by Mill Ridge Farm: Bernardini's name has been synonymous with success in Saratoga since the horse first raced at the track as a 2-year-old. Bloodstock editor Joe Nevills examines just how deep the late champion has set his roots at the Spa on the racetrack, and in the sales ring.
  • Stallion Spotlight: Headley Bell of Mill Ridge Farm on Oscar Performance, whose first foals are yearlings of 2021.
  • Lesson Horses presented by John Deere Equine Discount Program: Record-setting trainer Steve Asmussen discusses what a calm, careful racehorse taught him about life in his youth.
  • Ask Your Veterinarian presented by Kentucky Performance Products: Dr. Lindsey Rings of Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital explains why some horses might not take well to extended stall rest, and offers some solutions to help keep them calm as they heal.
  • Pennsylvania Leaderboard Presented By Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association: Ninetypercentbrynn is one of Pennsylvania's leading earners from the state's lucrative incentive program, and she's gotten there without a stakes start in 2021. Chelsea Hackbarth examines how she got there.
  • First-Crop Sire Watch: Stallions whose first crops of yearlings are represented in the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale, including the number of horses cataloged and the farm where the stallion is currently advertised.

CLICK HERE TO READ THIS EDITION OF THE PR BACK RING

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