First Mare Confirmed In Foal To Grade 1 Winner Gift Box

New to Lane's End for 2021, Grade 1 winner Gift Box had his first mare confirmed in foal, the farm announced today.

The first confirmed mare is Chelsea Road, by Speightstown, and is owned by Ro Parra's Millennium Farm. She is a half to stakes-placed Aces High, and hails from the immediate family of Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old Point Given.

The first son at stud by Twirling Candy, Gift Box retired as the highest earning colt by his sire. He was among the leading older horses in America in 2019 after a string of graded stakes performances including a Grade 1 victory in the Santa Anita Handicap and a second consecutive win in the G2 San Antonio Stakes.

Gift Box stands for $10,000.

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GISW Gift Box Gets First Mare in Foal

The first mare has been confirmed in foal to Lane's End's first-year covering sire Gift Box (Twirling Candy). Winner of the 2019 GI Santa Anita H., as well as two editions of the GII San Antonio S., Gift Box retired a millionaire for Hronis Racing and trainer John Sadler. He is the first son at stud by Twirling Candy.

Millennium Farm's Chelsea Road (Speightstown) is the first mare scanned in foal to Gift Box. When he retired, the gray joined his sire and his grandsire–Candy Ride (Arg)–in the Lane's End stallion barn. Gift Box stands for $10,000.

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Fulfilling the Candy Ride Legacy at Lane’s End

Lane's End Farm brought their stallion roster up to 21 members this year as they welcomed several new additions for the 2021 season in Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), Gift Box (Twirling Candy), Honor A. P. (Honor Code) and Daredevil (More Than Ready).

We sat down with Bill Farish and spoke with him on Game Winner and Gift Box, both Grade I-winning millionaires who will join Twirling Candy and Unified in carrying on the Candy Ride (Arg) legacy at Lane's End.

Now a perennial leading general sire, Candy Ride began his career at Hill 'n' Dale in 2005 but soon moved to Lane's End, where his stud fee doubled to $25,000, in 2010.

Today, with 16 Grade I winners, six champions and a $75,000 stud fee, which was lowered from $100,000 in 2020 due to nationwide fee cuts, he sits on the cusp of passing on the baton to his sons and grandsons.

Six stallions by Candy Ride reside in Kentucky this year. Of those two are new for 2021, Game Winner and Vekoma, and only one has seen runners- four-time Grade I producer Twirling Candy. The remaining three, Gun Runner, Mastery and Unified, will all be represented by their first 2-year-olds this year.

“Candy Ride is really making a phenomenal sire of sires,” Farish said. “It's always neat to see a stallion take it to that level and become a sire of sires like we were able to see with A. P. Indy and others. It stamps their mark on the breed in a very significant way.”

Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), $30,000

   Game Winner begins his career at stud as a $2 million earner, a Breeders' Cup and Eclipse champion, and a graded stakes winner at two and three.

   Bred by Summer Wind Farm, the colt was the third and final foal out of Indyan Giving (A. P. Indy), who died shortly after his foaling. Game Winner's 7-year-old half-brother Flagstaff (Speightstown) is a Grade II winner still in training with John Sadler and their grand-dam Fleet Indian (Indian Charlie) is a champion older mare and dual Grade I winner.

A $110,000 Keeneland September buy for Ben Glass, agent for Gary and Mary West, Game Winner was sent to Bob Baffert and soon made a 'TDN Rising Star'-worthy debut with a 5 3/4-length victory at Del Mar.

“I think he surprised Bob a little bit in his maiden win,” Farish said. “If I remember right, I don't think Bob thought he was that precocious for him to run as well as he did first time out.”

That precocity never wavered for the remainder of his undefeated juvenile season as the colt reeled off victories in the GI Del Mar Futurity, GI American Pharoah S. and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile.

“At that point when he ran in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, he was not necessarily coming to Lane's End,” Farish noted. “But we were very excited to see him run and hoping obviously for Candy Ride that he would run well. It was great to see him really follow through. It's a tough race usually for favorites and he really came in and put on a great performance.”

Game Winner's 2 1/4-length victory in the juvenile championship over a field that included eventual Grade I winners Knicks Go (Paynter) and Mind Control (Stay Thirsty), as well as 2018 GI Champagne S. winner Complexity (Maclean's Music), sealed his Eclipse title for champion 2-year-old colt.

“I think any horse that comes out as a 2-year-old and wins three straight Grade I races, you just don't see it very often,” Farish said. “Bob said in an interview that to bring it to that championship level is really special and in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, he showed just how good he was.”

After a four-month layoff, the bay continued on his journey towards the Kentucky Derby  in the GII Rebel S., finishing second by a nose to Omaha Beach (War Front), who would later claim three more Grade I wins that year. He again ran second in his next start in the GI Santa Anita Derby.

In the GI Kentucky Derby, Game Winner was forced to take a wide trip, but gained ground late to finish sixth, elevated later to fifth after the disqualification of Maximum Security (New Year's Day). His effort earned the best Thorograph figure of the field.

“In the Derby, he was always up against it,” Farish said. “He had a tough post and then his running style in a 19-horse field really made it difficult for him. If you go back and watch the race, it's a phenomenal move that he makes.”

The sophomore returned to California to win the GIII Los Alamitos Derby by five lengths that summer, but incurred a high suspensory injury soon after that prevented him from returning to the starting gate and he was subsequently retired.

Farish spoke on the new addition's reception in his first year at stud.

“His first book is shaping up to be really phenomenal for us,” he said. “A 150-mare book is a big book and he's going to be a little north of that in his first year. The West's are very supportive of all their sire prospects and they're breeding some very nice mares to him.”

Farish said that Game Winner's status as a juvenile champion has been one of the biggest attractions for breeders.

“In recent years, 2-year-old champions have had great success at stud with Nyquist, Uncle Mo, Street Sense and others. It's traditionally something farms look for, that 2-year-old precocity. It's not the only criteria, but it's certainly been very successful in recent years and there's no reason why it shouldn't help Game Winner in a big way.”

Additionally, Farish noted that the new addition's physical reflects the best of his sire.

“Game Winner is a little bit bigger version of Candy Ride,” he said. “He's a good, medium-sized horse, is really well conformed and physically, is everything you'd want in a sire prospect. So we can't wait to see his offspring running pretty soon.”

Gift Box (Twirling Candy), $10,000

Gift Box, the first grandson of Candy Ride to join the Lane's End roster, begins his stud career as a Grade I-winning millionaire.

“Gift Box is an exciting horse for us as well,” Farish said. “Being a son of Twirling Candy, it's really fun for us to have that three-generation history with the horse. He showed, from two and three and on, just how good he was.”

A $135,000 weanling purchase for the Farish family, the Machmer Hall-bred colt was sent to Chad Brown as a juvenile and won in his second start at two before placing in the GII Remsen S.

At three, Gift Box ran second in the Curlin S. behind stablemate and eventual studmate Connect (Curlin), and later ran fourth in the GI Travers S.

Transferred to the John Sadler barn towards the tail end of his 5-year-old season to be campaigned by Hronis Racing, the speedy gray defeated champion Battle of Midway (Smart Strike) in the GII San Antonio S. before getting his Grade I win in the Santa Anita H., besting Grade I winners McKinzie (Street Sense) and Mongolian Groom (Hightail).

“He certainly had some big races all in a row in California,” Farish recalled. “We knew he had the ability, but to see it happen on that day was so important. It was amazing how high John Sadler was on him really from the time he got him and he lived up to that billing.”

Gift Box wrapped up his 6-year-old campaign with a second-place finish behind champion Vino Rosso (Curlin) in the GI Gold Cup at Santa Anita S. and a 3 3/4-length win in the GII San Antonio S.

In his five-year career, the son of Twirling Candy ran in the money in all but four of his 18 starts.

“Gift Box is interesting because we usually don't retire horses at that age,” Farish noted. “So I was kind of curious as to if anyone else had been that successful at that age and of course, Speightstown jumps right at you. To see the length of Speightstown's stud career and the impact he's had solved any trepidation I had with Gift Box.”

The new stallion is out of the Unbridled's Song mare Special Me who also produced dual Grade II winner and Grade I placed Stonetastic (Mizzen Mast) as well as Grade II winner Special Forces (Candy Ride {Arg}). The mare's most recent foal, a filly by Into Mischief named Gina Romantica, sold for $1.025 million to Liz Crow at the 2020 Keeneland September Sale.

“His pedigree is really exciting to me with Unbridled's Song on the bottom side,” Farish said. “With that comes speed and precocity, and I think that crossed with Candy Ride and Twirling Candy is pretty exciting to see how it plays out. He's a gorgeous physical with a lot of Unbridled's Song in him in the best sort of way. He's really beautifully conformed and we can't wait to see what his babies look like.”

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Lane’s End Goes Virtual for Annual Press Pass

The Lane’s End Press Pass event has become increasingly popular over the past few years, and while hosting a large gathering in their stud barn was made impossible for the farm due to the current circumstances, Lane’s End still worked to make the third annual Press Pass a reality.

Through a Zoom meeting, media members joined the virtual get-together to chat with Bill Farish and the rest of the Lane’s End team about the farm’s stallion program.

TVG racing analyst Scott Hazelton hosted the event and led participants through the list of 21 members of the Lane’s End stud roster. Trainers John Shirreffs, Brad Cox, Steve Asmussen, and Kenny McPeek, as well as bloodstock agents John Moynihan and Mike Ryan made appearances to speak on several of the stallions.

Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), Honor A.P. (Honor Code) and Gift Box (Twirling Candy) will each begin their inaugural season at stud alongside their sires, while the red-hot Daredevil (More Than Ready) returns to the United States to stand under the Turkish Jockey Club banner.

Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), $30,000

   Bill Farish: Game Winner was a very important horse for us to get for a lot of reasons. We sold him as a yearling to Gary and Mary West. He’s by Candy Ride and out of an A.P. Indy mare so it’s almost surprising we didn’t have the honor of having bred him, because he’s bred exactly how we would hope.

To have him go from the yearling sales and run early as a 2-year-old and win three Grade I races and become Champion 2-year-old, we were very keen to get him at that point and unfortunately so was everybody else, so we had quite a negotiation to get him.

But he’s a very exciting young horse and so far the breeders have really responded. He’s got a  phenomenal first book so far and he’s closed down already. That’s a great sign for any young horse.

 Daredevil (More Than Ready), $25,000

   Chance Timm: We’re all aware of Daredevil’s accomplishments, but it’s important to put into perspective just how remarkable they are. When Shedaresthedevil and Swiss Skydiver went one-two in the GI Kentucky Oaks, that has only happened 12 times in history in the past 585 runnings of Classic races where a sire has sired both the first and second-place finishers. He’s the only first-crop sire to ever have an individual winner of the GI Preakness S. and the GI Kentucky Oaks.

This all puts him in rarified air and I think what’s most impressive is that these two fillies are really what make Grade I American dirt racing what it is. They have speed, they press the pace, they don’t stop and they can win these top-class races going long on the dirt and that’s really what American racing is all about.

So this horse is doing something pretty remarkable and we feel very fortunate to have him. We think he’s poised to continue to do that. He’s from a very important sire line and he’s the only proven son of More Than Ready in Central Kentucky. He is in a unique position to carry on a very important sire line for this country and the breed.

Honor A.P. (Honor Code), $15,000

   John Shirreffs: Honor A.P. got over the ground really nicely. When he was working, it almost seemed effortless and he hit the ground so lightly and got into his next stride so easily that it was always a little deceiving. As a trainer, you’re watching your horse work and getting a feeling for how he’s doing, and then you look down at the stopwatch and go, ‘Oh my gosh, he actually did that.’ That’s the feeling I got with Honor A.P.

He was good because his talent made him good. He was not a particularly mature 2-year-old, but his talent made him seem to be that way. He always got over the ground well. That was one of the first things I noticed about him was how lightly he got over the ground. So just his sheer talent made him a threat as a 2-year-old.

When he got a little older, he got stronger, which is something you look for. He got stronger and bigger, so he was maturing, but he wasn’t maturing quickly. He was just one of those athletes that was ahead of his class.

Honor A.P. is a very intense horse. He’s 100% man as you would say. He’s a big strong guy and his qualities are really amazing, because he has a forearm like Paul Bunyan. You can just see his strength. He’s got a nice long back that gives him a great length of stride and he has hocks that are very clean and large and strong that give him a lot of drive from the hind end. His conformation is perfect for a racehorse.

Gift Box (Twirling Candy), $10,000

   Alys Emson: Gift Box is a really nice horse to be around. We did raise him from a weanling to a yearling. Like a lot of the Candy Rides and Twirling Candys, they’re very amenable horses, good-minded, and I think that’s a big part of the equation down the road. I think trainers are able to get the most out of these horses because they’re willing to work and they want to work.

I think he’ll be attractive to a lot of breeders for several reasons. He’s a very consistent, durable horse. He ran 18 times and was only off the board twice. From a physical standpoint, you can see why he’s so durable and consistent. He’s very correct, great through his knees and he’s got a big fluid walk like a lot of the Twirling Candys do.

From a pedigree standpoint, I think at this price point you’ll find a lot of horses that just outran their pedigrees, but this horse is out of an exceptional mare that has had three graded stakes winners. She’s a half-sister to a Grade I winner. So he really ran true to his pedigree and at the price point we have him at, I think he should be really attractive to breeders especially being free from Storm Cat and A.P. Indy lines which have both been very successful with the Twirling Candy and Candy Ride cross.

SF Bloodstock’s Tom Ryan spoke on Gift Box’s sire Twirling Candy, noting that SF Bloodstock has become increasingly invested in the stallion in the past few years.

“Twirling Candy brought himself to our attention,” he said. “Every time you pick up a paper you see, whether it’s a five-furlong turf sprinter or a mile-and-a-sixteenth dirt router, he’s there. His crops have really started to rise to the top. With the fact that he’s got four individual Grade I winners and double-digit stakes horses, he made a great impression on us. He’s a horse that is just making steps in the right direction and we see future growth for him.”

Bill Farish also spoke on Quality Road, who commands the highest stud fee of the roster for 2021 at $150,000. Farish talked on what it means to have the top Grade I-producing stallion in their stud barn.

“Quality Road has been so successful and it’s been an interesting case study to watch his stud fee rise,” Farish said. “This year he had a very good year both in the sales ring and on the race track. The 2020 crop of 2-year-olds were bred at a stud fee of $35,000. He then jumped to $70,000, so the 2-year-olds for this upcoming year will be at a much higher stud fee. Then he went to $150,000 from there and has just had phenomenal mares. So we’re very excited and he has so much in front of him. Having already sired 11 Grade I winners now, he’s a very special horse to us and we look forward to what he has in store in the future.”

Top agent Mike Ryan spoke on City of Light, a son of Quality Road who will be represented by his first crop of yearlings in 2021.

“City of Light is a magnificent physical, an unbelievable equine specimen,” Ryan said.” I think he was one of the most highly-recruited horses of his generation. Every stud farm was trying to get him to stand as a stallion because obviously he was the complete package.

Of his first crop of foals last year, Ryan added, “It wasn’t a surprise to me when his foals looked so good because I have found over the years that these magnificent-looking stallions like Alydar, Secretariat and Deputy Minister have the gene strength to reproduce themselves. When they’re really good physicals, it seems to be pretty common that they transmit that to their offspring and this was no exception in City of Light.”

Bill Farish concluded the event by saying, “I’d like to thank everyone for coming and being on this. I know there’s a lot going on in the world but we really appreciate it. It’s an event that we really love doing and we don’t want to see it die. We really appreciate having the opportunity to highlight our stallions and our roster and we look forward to next year when we can be back and in a newly renovated stallion barn.”

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