Flightline, Curlin Star at the Eclipse Awards

Having just last week been crowned the Longines World's Best Racehorse in London, 'TDN Rising Star' Flightline (Tapit) was named America's no-doubt-about-it Horse of the Year and champion dirt male at the Eclipse Awards, held Thursday evening at The Breakers in Palm Beach, Florida.

Bred in Kentucky by Jane Lyon's Summer Wind Equine, Flightline was a $1-million purchase out of the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale, didn't start as a juvenile and didn't get to a starting gate until April of his 3-year-old season.

The negatives end right about there.

In a spectacular six-race stretch over the course of the following 19 months, Flightline never earned a Beyer Speed Figure inferior to his debut 105 and never started at odds longer than 90 cents on the dollar while winning those half-dozen contests (or, no-contests) by an average of just under 12 lengths. That included a breathtaking 19 1/4-length romp in the GI TVG Pacific Classic, good for a 126 Beyer Speed Figure, a performance that was difficult to put in any real context. His victory in the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic came at the expense of fellow dirt male finalist Olympiad (Speightstown) after the third divisional finalist, the freakishly fast 'Rising Star' Life Is Good (Into Mischief), capitulated after taking it to Flightline for the opening mile. The Horse of the Year begins his second career as one of the most sought-after stallion prospects in recent memory this winter at Lane's End.

Speaking of superstar sires, Curlin–himself Horse of the Year in 2007 and again in 2008–was represented by a sensational three Eclipse Award winners Thursday from the 10 flat divisions. 'TDN Rising Star' Malathaat and stablemate Nest, each trained by Eclipse Award-winning conditioner Todd Pletcher, took home the hardware in the older dirt female and 3-year-old filly categories, respectively. Elite Power was a somewhat surprising winner of the male sprint Eclipse courtesy of his success in the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint, while GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile hero Cody's Wish completed a Curlin exacta in the division.

John Sikura's Hill 'n' Dale Farm celebrated a banner evening Thursday, as the nursery's stallions accounted for half the night's flat winners. In addition to the Curlin trio, 'TDN Rising Star' Forte (Violence) was a near-unanimous winner of the 2-year-old male Eclipse Award, while Ghostzapper's Goodnight Olive parlayed victories in the GI Ballerina S. and GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint into a statuette of her own.

The hotly contested 3-year-old divisional honors went to GI Runhappy Travers S. hero Epicenter, providing Taylor Made's Not This Time with his first U.S. champion, while 2-year-old Wonder Wheel (Into Mischief) gave her all-conquering sire another champion in providing the Green Family's D J Stable with a second such title.

Chad Brown and Peter Brant fielded two-thirds of the finalists for champion turf female and the voters went for the body of work of Regal Glory (Animal Kingdom)–a fourth 'TDN Rising Star' to be recognized Thursday–over fellow 'Rising Star' In Italian (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}).

Modern Games (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) sewed up the male turf Eclipse with his dominating performance in the GI Breeders' Cup Mile for Godolphin, who was named outstanding owner and breeder. In the other human categories, Irad Ortiz, Jr. was crowned outstanding jockey and Jose Antonio Gomez champion apprentice.

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Wonder Wheel and Forte Collect 2-Year-Old Eclipse Awards

Breeders' Cup Juvenile races produced both the 2-year-old filly and colt champions, with Wonder Wheel taking the filly statue and Forte leading the colts.

WONDER WHEEL
Each spring, as most trainers get their promising 2-year-olds ready to begin their careers, invariably one or two (or maybe more, depending on the conditioner) of these youngsters stand out. And just as invariably, these trainers hold their breath and cross everything they can cross to help ensure everything goes right enough that the end result–a Breeders' Cup win–produces the ultimate result–the Eclipse Award.

For Hall of Fame conditioner Mark Casse, Wonder Wheel was that horse in 2022. Some trainers cautiously follow the old idiom of playing cards close to their vest, but not Casse. Nobody didn't know how he felt about Wonder Wheel early on.

“This summer I was saying she's my next Classic Empire,” Casse said, comparing the daughter of Into Mischief to his 2016 juvenile champion. “And where I was putting her, why I was putting her in that category was he won our first 2-year-old Breeders' Cup. And I thought that she was that good. I told anybody who would listen.”

With one notable exception, Wonder Wheel turned in a classic championship-style season which garnered her two Grade I wins.

After breaking her maiden at first asking back in June, her first foray into stakes company produced a 6 3/4-length win in the Listed Debutante S. at Churchill Downs on Independence Day. That dominant performance earned her a spot in the GI Spinaway S. gate at Saratoga two months later and, though it wasn't the smoothest of trips for the filly that day–some would say she ran “greenly”–she still managed a decent runner-up finish to fellow Eclipse  Award finalist Leave No Trace (Outwork).

She was a 4-1 lukewarm favorite in the GI Darley Aclibiades S. at Keeneland Oct. 7 in her next start and had to work for it, barely holding off the highly regarded Chop Chop (City of Light) by a diminishing nose in that wire-to-wire performance. And by the time those two met again in the Breeders' Cup, she was a 6-1 fourth choice while her Alcibiades runner-up carried favoritism.

And in a somewhat surprising move that day, Wonder Wheel wasn't anywhere near her preferred spot as the leader or among them, she was in front of just two rivals in the early going. In an effort expected from older runners rather than lightly raced 2-year-olds, the bay filly saved ground in the early going, quietly gained on her rivals on the turn, snuck through the narrowest of gaps at the quarter pole, took advantage with an eighth left to run and stormed home to win by three lengths.

“Two-year-olds can't do what she did. It's just very difficult to come from out of it,” Casse said. “She, on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being absolute class, she's a 10.”

Wonder Wheel is owned by Len and Lois Green's D J Stables, which also campaigned 2018 Breeders' Cup Juvenile fillies winner Jaywalk (Cross Traffic) in partnership with Cash Is King Stable. Len Green is a CPA and lecturer at Babson College and a graduate of the Harvard Business School. He regularly writes and lectures on financial issues affecting horse owners. He is undoubtedly an expert on profits and losses, rewards and risks. The next big risk for Wonder Wheel could perhaps be taking on the boys in the GI Kentucky Derby.

“I'm sure we'll be nominating,” Casse said.

Wonder Wheel was given a couple months off over the winter and has been back to work at Casse's Florida training center, with a 2023 debut yet to be determined.

-Margaret Ransom

FORTE
He may not have been the most expensive of the 43 yearlings Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola bought out of the 2021 Keeneland September sale when the hammer fell at $110,000 that day, but Forte certainly can claim the title of most successful when he capped off an impressive year by collecting the Eclipse Award trophy as the best 2-year-old colt or gelding of 2022.

Much has been made of the colt's name, which means “strong” in Italian and follows the Italian-themed pattern of names for other top Repole/St. Elias runners, like champion and 2019 GI Breeders' Cup Classic hero Vino Rosso (Curlin). But another meaning says the word denotes, “something in which one excels; a peculiar talent or faculty; a strong point or side; chief excellence.” Not much to argue against that meaning, either, where Forte is concerned.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, who conditioned 2010 champion juvenile Uncle Mo for Repole and also Forte's sire, selected the colt for one primary reason.

“He looks like Violence,” Repole said.

Forte was the 1-5 favorite in his debut at Belmont Park May 27 off some incredible works and backstretch buzz, and he ran to his odds, dominating his opponents by 7 3/4 lengths to earn the 'TDN Rising Star' moniker. He also justifiably earned his position as a leading force to be reckoned with in the 2-year-old stakes ranks on the East Coast. For a little while, anyway.

As is more common than not with growing and maturing juveniles, that rolling boil of excitement cooled to a simmer when he turned in an unexpected and well-beaten fourth-place finish as the favorite in his stakes debut in the GIII Sanford S. at Saratoga July 16. His connections offered no excuses and continued to look ahead, the year-end goal of the Breeders' Cup always within their crosshairs.

Finding some added distance and a wet track to his liking for his next start, as well as no pressure as the near 7-1 fourth choice, was all he needed to put in a three-length romp in the sloppy GI Hopeful S. and return to the rank as the best 2-year-old based in New York.

While the logical and typical next move for the leading colt on the right coast as a last prep for the Breeders' Cup would have been the GI Champagne S. at Belmont Park, Forte's connections decided to call an audible since the Breeders' Cup would be held at Keeneland, choosing instead to use the GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity as a springboard to the World Championships. Dismissed as the near 9-2 second choice, he rolled from way back to earn a neck win over 7-5 favorite Loggins (Ghostzapper).

Despite his impressive fall campaign of two Grade I wins, on Future Stars Friday, Forte was the 5-1 second choice to the highly regarded Bob Baffert-trained dual Grade I winner Cave Rock (Arrogate) at 2-5 when the gates sprung open. And just as it looked as though the win–as well as divisional honors–were slipping away as his chief rival led the field into the stretch, Forte found another gear and dug in, running down the favorite in deep stretch in a thrilling 1 1/2-length victory.

Forte turned in his first work as a 3-year-old, going an easy three furlongs at Palm Beach Downs Jan. 21. He is expected to make his 2023 bow in the GII Fountain of Youth S. at Gulfstream Park Mar. 4 and then use GI Florida Derby Apr. 1 or GII Toyota Blue Grass S. at Keeneland Apr. 8  as his final prep for the May 6 GI Kentucky Derby.

Early Impressions…
“I thought he was a gorgeous foal. I was really happy with him. I had had weanlings by Violence that I had pinhooked–I bought weanlings and sold yearlings–and I liked them, but they didn't really resemble the sire at all. So I was pleased to get a foal in Forte that looks a lot like Violence. He's a good blend of his sire and his dam.”
-Amy Moore, South Gate Farm Owner and Founder

-Margaret Ransom

 

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Solis and Litt Join Growing Repole Team

Alex Solis II and Jason Litt, who operate the Solis/Litt bloodstock agency, have joined forces with owner Mike Repole, who has continued to add to his team as both his stable and his goals have grown in recent years. Repole, who owns many horses in partnership with Vinnie Viola, has about 300 horses and has been very active in recent years at the yearling sales.

“I am all about family and friends,” Repole said. “Over the last couple of years they've been helping me out with some yearlings and colts and they have a great opinion. I am a 'dream-bigger' type of guy. I won eight Grade Is in 2022, so this year I want to win nine. The next year I want to win 10. Bringing Alex and Jason on board is part of that vision.”

As part of the transition, Solis has stepped down from his full-time role as Gainesway Farm's Director of Bloodstock but will continue his relationship with the farm. Solis and Litt's agency will also continue to work with existing clients.

As Repole has doubled the number of horses in his stable over the last two years he has assembled a deep group of advisors who assist him in a number of areas, including yearling purchases and the overwhelming daily task of running such a large stable. The team includes Ed Rosen, Jim Martin, Danielle Bricker, Jacob West and Todd Pletcher. Solis and Litt will advise the growing stable and assist in acquisitions and management, but will be called upon to contribute in other areas.

“When you double the number of horses you own, yes, you need more people,” Repole said. “I am trying to build a bigger vision and a bigger strategy. I want to get more involved in racing as a sport, not just with Repole Stables. I want people with the experience Alex and Jason have. They have tremendous vision for the sport and share the same excitement I have for the sport and the same frustrations.

“Part of the evolution of growing your brand comes from hiring a bunch of smart people who have a ton of passion and are coachable and have the same vision you have. Who knows; maybe Jason will become the VP of global and I'll buy two racetracks and Alex will run them. I have no idea.”

Solis and Litt have been together since the early 2000s and have worked for many of the top names in the sport, including LNJ Foxwoods, which campaigned top older male dirt horse Olympiad (Speightstown). Other horses they have been involved with include Shared Belief (Candy Ride {Arg}), Mizdirection (Mizzen Mast), Country House (Lookin At Lucky) and Covfefe (Into Mischief). Their team also includes Madison Scott.

“Mike has gone from 150 to 300 horses and wanted to take advantage of Solis/Litt's experience managing large portfolios,” Solis said. “We've helped Mike for the last couple of years at yearling sales, and it's exciting to start in a more prominent role. It's been a seamless transition working with his existing team…Mike is big on relationships and family, and so are we. Jason and I have been

working together for 17 years and the majority of our clients have been with us since the beginning. Maintaining those ties is of utmost importance, which Mike fully embraces. It was great to be able to partner with him and our major client, LNJ Foxwoods, on two yearlings in September.”

Repole Stable enjoyed a banner year in 2022, campaigning Grade I winners Chocolate Gelato (Practical Joke), Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), Forte (Violence) and Nest (Curlin). Forte and Nest are expected to be named Eclipse Award winners. With most any other stable, 2022 would have been a year that cannot be topped. But Repole has never hid his ambitions and won't set a ceiling when it comes to his stable's success.

“I'm not always content,” Repole said. “I talk to somebody like Tom Brady and ask him what his favorite Super Bowl was and he says it's the next one. I am ecstatic and feel blessed about where we are but I have goals. What's wrong with trying to get better?”

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Taking Stock: Influence of ‘Roarer’ and Sub-Fertile Ormonde

In just over a week, Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable's Forte (Violence), bred by South Gate Farm and trained by Todd Pletcher, will be crowned the champion 2-year-old male of 2022. He traces in tail-female to the imported La Troienne (Fr), one of the most influential mares in the Stud Book. So many champions and high-class racehorses trace to her that it would be futile to try to list them all here.

La Troienne was foaled in 1926 and bred by Marcel Boussac. Her sire, Teddy (Fr), had a son, 1923 French Guineas winner Sir Gallahad lll (Fr), who was purchased by an American syndicate headed by A.B. Hancock Sr. for $125,000 and entered stud at Claiborne the year she was foaled. Sir Gallahad quickly changed the complexion of US racing, getting William Woodward's Gallant Fox, the 1930 Triple Crown winner, from his first American crop (he'd stood one year in France). Claiborne-based Gallant Fox, in turn, sired 1935 Triple Crown winner Omaha, also for Woodward. (There's a book about this by Jennifer Kelly, “The Foxes of Belair: Gallant Fox, Omaha, & William Woodward,” that will be out in May.)

Sir Gallahad's full brother Bull Dog (Fr) was imported a few years later by Coldstream Stud, and he made his mark as well. His son Bull Lea, at Calumet, sired Citation, winner of 1948 Triple Crown.

By this time, Teddy's influence was pervasive through La Troienne on the bottom side–she was the dam of champions Black Helen and Bimelech, plus numerous producing daughters–and Sir Gallahad and Bull Dog on the top line.

Teddy, a foal of 1913, was himself imported as an aged stallion to stand the 1932 season at Kentmere Farm in Virginia, from where he sired two other stallion sons that were massively important in retrospect. Sun Teddy, a foal of 1933, is the direct male-line ancestor of Damascus through the sire sequence Sun Again/Sunglow/Sword Dancer (sire of Damascus). And Case Ace, a foal of 1934, is the broodmare sire of Raise a Native – sire of Mr. Prospector, who is inbred 4×5 to Teddy, as his third dam is by Bull Dog.

The Teddy sire line is no longer of any consequence in this country–the Damascus branch was the last hope, and there's some symmetry to this because Damascus was bred and raced by Edie Bancroft, daughter of William Woodward, who bred and raced Gallant Fox and Omaha and was a shareholder in Sir Gallahad–but his influence within the recesses of pedigrees was powerful throughout the last century and is still felt today. And in many cases, the tail-female lines of many iconic runners have dams that were sired by Teddy-line horses, and some contain multiple strains of Teddy. The 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat's fourth dam was by Teddy himself; the 1977 winner Seattle Slew's dam is inbred 3×3 to the full sisters Busher and Striking, granddaughters of Teddy's La Troienne; and the 1978 winner Affirmed was inbred 5x5x6 to Teddy, while his dam had three crosses to Sir Gallahad and one to Bull Dog in her first five generations.

How about the last English Triple Crown winner, Nijinsky? His dam was by a Teddy-line horse and 4×6 to Teddy. Spectacular Bid, a near Triple Crown winner? His dam, by the Teddy-line horse Promised Land, was 5×5 Teddy. Sunday Silence was from a mare by Understanding–a son of Promised Land–and he was distantly inbred to Teddy as well. And Forego's dam, by a Teddy-line horse, was 3×3 to Sir Gallahad and Bull Dog on the sire-line cross.

More recently, the sixth dam of Flightline is champion Lady Pitt, a daughter of Teddy-line Sword Dancer.

There are too many others bred this way to list here, but you get the picture.

Teddy's Sire Line

This is Teddy's four-generation tail-male lineage: Teddy/Ajax (Fr)/Flying Fox (GB)/Orme (GB)/Ormonde (GB). The latter was a son of Bend Or (GB), from the Doncaster (GB)/Stockwell (GB) line.

Teddy was bred by Edmond Blanc and sold as a young colt to Jefferson Davis Cohn, who raced him and then bred and raced his sons Sir Gallahad and Bull Dog.

Blanc, who owned Haras de Jardy (later purchased by Boussac), also bred and raced Teddy's sire, Ajax, the French Derby winner of 1904. Ajax was from the first crop of Flying Fox, the 1899 English Triple Crown winner for the 1st Duke of Westminster, who died the same year.

In March of 1900, Blanc purchased Flying Fox at auction for the equivalent of $189,000–a record price at the time–and brought him to stand at Haras de Jardy, where he was successful and influential. Jardy (Fr), from Flying Fox's second crop, won the Middle Park S. at two and was second in the English Derby at three for Blanc, who sold him to Argentina for the equivalent of $150,000. Blanc also bred and raced Val d'Or (Fr), another from Flying Fox's second crop. Val d'Or won the French Guineas and the Eclipse S. in England, and Blanc also sold him to Argentina, for the equivalent of $140,000.

Argentina was a wealthy country at this time and had a penchant for importing European Classic winners and well-raced horses, such as the 1900 English Triple Crown winner Diamond Jubilee (GB), for approximately $151,000; the 1899 Ascot Gold Cup winner Cyllene (GB), for about $158,000; the disqualified English Derby winner from the infamous 1913 running, Craganour (GB), for about $150,000; and the U.S.-bred 1912 St. Leger winner and English Derby third, Tracery, for the equivalent of $180,000.

It wasn't just Argentine breeders paying big money for European horses. August Belmont paid $150,000 for 1903 English Triple Crown winner Rock Sand (GB), the sire of Tracery and the broodmare sire of Man o' War. Tracery was from a mare by Orme, the sire of Flying Fox and a son of undefeated Ormonde, the winner of the English Triple Crown of 1886 and the “horse of the century.”

Ormonde

The Duke of Westminister bred Ormonde, his son Orme, and his grandson Flying Fox at his Eaton Stud, and all three were trained by John Porter, who also trained English Triple Crown winner Common (GB) in addition to Triple Crown winners Ormonde and Flying Fox.

Ormonde was by the Duke's homebred 1880 English Derby winner Bend Or, who stood at Eaton, and he was undefeated in 15 starts (some records say 16, counting a private race that was a walkover), according to the book “John Porter of Kingsclere: An Autobiography,” co-written by Edward Moorehouse.

One of the most intriguing sections of Porter's book is where Ormonde began to develop a wind infirmity before winning the St. Leger. Porter wrote: “The satisfaction I derived from Ormonde's performances that year was sadly discounted by a discovery I made on the Kingsclere Downs one misty morning shortly before he won the St. Leger. As Ormonde galloped past me I heard him make a whistling noise. I was dumbfounded.”

Porter continued: “I hardly slept at all the following night. My mind would dwell on the fact that Ormonde had become a victim of that scourge roaring. I at once wrote to the Duke, who was naturally deeply grieved by the news. At that period the ailment was very slight, but it gradually got worse.”

Over the winter as he turned four, Ormonde was treated with an electric sponge “applied every day to the paralysed nerve in his throat,” but when the colt was back working “we could hear him breathing when he was nearly half a mile away,” Porter wrote. Nonetheless, Ormonde ran a few times that year and won, but he was retired by July and entered stud at Eaton in 1888.

The following year, 1889, Ormonde was leased to another farm, where he contracted pneumonia and became seriously ill – and this has been attributed as the cause of his low fertility. He covered only a few mares that season before returning to Eaton in the summer. He was then sold by the Duke to an Argentine breeder, Juan Boucau, for the equivalent of $58,000 and was sent abroad in September. It's likely that Ormonde's wind and fertility issues caused his sale, and at a price that was considerably lower than what top-class horses were bringing from Argentine breeders during this period.

Ormonde spent three Southern Hemisphere seasons in Argentina–1890, 1891, and 1892–before he was sold again, this time to Californian William O'Brien MacDonough of the Menlo Park Stock Farm (later renamed the Ormondale Ranch) in San Mateo on the San Francisco peninsula. The purchase price was $150,000, because by then several of Ormonde's first crop, headed by Eclipse S. winner Orme, were winning impressively.

Ormonde's fertility remained poor and he left behind few foals in Argentina and California, dying in 1904. None were of the quality of Orme, who sired English Derby winner Orby (GB) in addition to Triple Crown winner Flying Fox. One of his best American runners, however, was Ormondale, winner of the 1905 Futurity S. in New York. He later stood, among other farms, at Hamburg Place in Kentucky.

Ormondale, like his prolific male-line relative Teddy, has played a role in the pedigrees of some American Triple Crown winners, believe it or not. The 1941 winner Whirlaway's third dam is a daughter of Ormondale, and, more recently, the 2015 winner American Pharoah's eighth dam is by Ormondale.

How about that?

Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks.

 

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