Stormy Atlantic Pensioned

Stormy Atlantic (Storm Cat–Hail Atlantis, by Seattle Slew) has been pensioned from stud duty, Hill 'n' Dale Farms announced Friday.

The Arthur Appleton homebred won six of his 15 starts, including two stakes, and earned $148,126 before retiring to stud at Bridlewood Farm in his home state of Florida. He stood his first three seasons there before moving to Hill 'n' Dale in Kentucky.

The 27-year-old stallion is responsible for 109 black-type winners and 48 graded winners. His eight Grade I/Group 1 winners include champion and two-time GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint S. winner Stormy Liberal; Canadian Horse of the Year Up With the Birds; and Sovereign Award winner El Tormenta.

Stormy Atlantic has been generous to Hill 'n' Dale and his shareholders. I would like to thank George Isaacs from Bridlewood for showing the confidence in us for moving Stormy Atlantic from Ocala. He was truly an important sire, whose influence will endure,” said John G. Sikura, President of Hill 'n' Dale Farms.

The post Stormy Atlantic Pensioned appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Stormy Atlantic, Sire Of 100 Stakes Winners, Pensioned At 27

Hill 'n' Dale Farms announced today that Stormy Atlantic, the sire of over 100 stakes winners, has been pensioned. Relocated from Florida to Hill 'n' Dale in 2002, the son of Storm Cat proved to be one of the most reliable turf sires of recent time.

A prolific sire of stakes winners, he averaged 12 stakes winners a year for ten straight years.

Raced in the colors of Arthur Appleton, Stormy Atlantic retired to Bridlewood Farm where he stood his first three years at stud. He is the sire of champions Up With the Birds ($1,870,376), Stormy Liberal ($2,212,580), El Tormenta ($816,106), Stormy Antarctic ($946,832), Conquest Typhoon ($759,449), Leonnatus Anteas ($600,074), Maritimer ($362,835), Storm Allied ($229,114), Dixie Wave, etc. and Grade 1 Winners Get Stormy ($1,606,812), Stormy Lucy ($851,700), Stormello ($700,100), Next Question ($424,391), Victor Security, etc.. In addition, he is emerging as an important broodmare sire.


“Stormy Atlantic has been generous to Hill 'n' Dale and his shareholders. I would like to thank George Issacs from Bridlewood for showing the confidence in us for moving Stormy Atlantic from Ocala. He was truly an important sire, whose influence will endure,” said John G. Sikura, President of Hill 'n' Dale Farms.

The post Stormy Atlantic, Sire Of 100 Stakes Winners, Pensioned At 27 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Sikura’s Faith Rewarded by Grade I Exacta

It is now a decade since John Sikura was walking through a Lexington steakhouse and glimpsed, on a screen over the bar, a bay colt coasting clear of his pursuers with sparks coming from his heels: :21.24, :43.48, 1:07.44.

He was puzzled: it wasn't yet the weekend, and he wasn't aware of any stakes being run that day. Seven lengths in a hand ride. Then they told him that this was just a maiden race out at Santa Anita. Sikura couldn't believe his ears. He wasn't alone: a 114 Beyer for this son of Distorted Humor was the highest ever awarded for a debut.

To Sikura, this was an epiphany comparable to the time he was making a fishing trip in Argentina and hooked Candy Ride (Arg) running a mile in 1:31 flat. In the event, that horse would only start his stud career at Sikura's farm before moving on; but Maclean's Music has conversely initiated a relationship, with breeder Barbara Banke of Stonestreet, that has meanwhile only strengthened through the arrival at Hill 'n' Dale of Curlin, Good Magic and Kantharos.

Sikura remembers arranging to meet Banke and her advisor John Moynihan at the September Sale and asking himself how he could adequately convey his zeal, despite the fractured splint bone that had confined Maclean's Music to that single, dazzling excursion. After all, Banke had herself shown extraordinary belief in retaining the colt at $900,000 as a yearling; and Sikura's soundings with the horse's trainer had drawn a commensurate endorsement.

“Steve [Asmussen] told me that this was not only the fastest horse that he's ever trained,” Sikura recalls. “He said, 'This is the fastest horse I've ever seen.' And from someone like Steve, that really stuck with me. I felt bound and determined to buy that horse, because I believed him to be a supernatural talent. It took about two years of conversation. And when the horse was finally retired, I made what I thought at the time a ridiculous offer–as if he was a Grade I horse. But what you bid should show your commitment. So we struck a deal quickly. I jokingly say that I know I offered too much, because once I made the offer, we discussed everything else–but we never discussed money again.”

Yet whatever Sikura put on the table that day is now proving good value. For one thing, he felt certain that Maclean's Music, but for his injury, would have put himself way beyond reach. As it was, Sikura and his partners started Maclean's Music at just $6,500. Last Saturday, two of his sons finished a street clear of the rest in a stirring duel for the GI Woody Stephens S. The winner, Drain The Clock, is his fourth at the elite level. The first, of course, had been 2017 GI Preakness S. scorer Cloud Computing from his debut crop.

Over the years, the example of Danzig has inspired many failed speculations on talents that had flared only briefly on the track. But Maclean's Music, now up to $25,000, already has Cloud Computing and Complexity at stud; while the two protagonists at Belmont, Drain The Clock and Jackie's Warrior, will presumably follow them in due course. Other recent credits include a first graded stakes success, after consecutive Grade I podiums, for Estilo Talentoso; and a :55.3 track record for Pimlico stakes winner Firecrow. All this when priced for mares who could bring little to the table.

But then one of Sikura's axioms has always been that “the genetic switch” is either on or off. “I think Quick Temper (A.P. Indy) was 16, she'd never had a black-type horse,” he notes. “And then she has a Preakness winner. Complexity's dam is by Yes It's True. Okay, a good broodmare sire, and he was a lovely type–but I didn't see Grade I. Jackie's Warrior is out of an A.P. Five Hundred mare. So credit to the horse, these mares have just been a conduit of his success.”

And whereas Into Mischief was required to seal his rise by stretching his trademark speed to Classic distances, Maclean's Music had addressed that challenge straight off the bat with Cloud Computing. True, his highest achievers since have been dashers, consistent with the overall branding of his family: his remarkable dam Forest Music (Unbridled's Song), who last year came up with her third graded stakes winner in Uncle Chuck (Uncle Mo), made all in the GII Honorable Miss and extends a branch of the Lady Be Good (Better Self) dynasty also decorated by the dashing sprinter Mining (Mr. Prospector).

Remarkably, despite soaring to 181 mares in 2017 after clocking 20 winners from just 40 freshman starters, Maclean's Music had slumped to 57 by last year–and of these, Sikura supplied maybe 35. Fortunately, that bumper 2018 crop is the one that has already produced Drain The Clock and Jackie's Warrior. It seems safe to say that Maclean's Music has now ridden out the bump in his road.

“This year we've had more than 300 requests to breed the horse,” Sikura reveals. “His fee will definitely rise next year: I believe he's emerging as an important young sire that has proven he can get the utmost quality without the coveted mares. And when a horse like this starts breeding graded winners, or three dams deep in black type, then the possibilities are endless. He's getting patronage from serious breeders that hadn't considered the horse before.”

That, he stresses, is not intended as criticism. After all, he himself didn't use Into Mischief until he had reached $100,000. Yet everyone in the business knows that Sikura mixes his colors on a different palette. Yes, he knows that the sums will only add up if you ultimately achieve commercial traction. As he often says: “The market is always right–even when you disagree with it.” Nonetheless a different mindset is required when prospecting for stallions. Otherwise you find yourself in a long line for the obvious horse, with the last guy standing guaranteed to have overbid.

“Everything I do in my life, every time I have big decisions to make, I try very hard not to listen to the chatter,” Sikura remarks. “Without being reckless, I think you have to believe in yourself and heed your intuition. That's the way I've always been: I'm not driven by projections, or odds. I've certainly been wrong plenty of times, and will be wrong again. But when it's all over, I wouldn't have changed anything. Because making decisions that way has served me well even in defeat. The reward is always the journey. Successes are only fleeting. But my failures, my disappointments, have taught me lessons. If you're in the middle of the road, you're going to get run over by a car going one direction or the other. So you have to act and think boldly.”

Not that he senses any imperative to quirkiness or unorthodoxy. Charlatan, for instance, he notes as a very obvious specimen–and, sure enough, potentially the best he has ever recruited for the farm. But what Sikura does resent is when that herd mentality denies a stallion a fair chance to show his potential. He wants people to think for themselves. Deriding their meek obedience to trends, he recalls a period when every middle-aged man of his acquaintance bought a Harley Davidson and smoked Cuban cigars. (Never mind that some dude in Miami had stuck on a fake label.)

“And when most breeders hear the same opinion often enough, they start to think it's their opinion too,” he says. “It's against human nature to be independent: to support a horse until your belief is either proven out, or proven wrong. We have such a commercial business, everybody wants to be so current that they ignore a body of work. Yet the reality of breeding to a stallion who's hot in 2021 is that your foal will not be born until 2022, or sold until 2023. And by then all the drive behind him will most likely have transferred to another horse of the moment.”

Any horse can have a good or bad year. Sikura feels they get overpraised for one, overpunished for the other. Like so many of us, he is depressed by a “travelling caravan” from one new stallion to the next; by the stigma of familiarity against the proven horse; by breeders paying extra for the unknown, only to find themselves competing with each other on a flooded market.

But every now and then you get a young stallion that does make it over the crossroads. At 13, Maclean's Music now looks like he is the latest to weave through the traffic of fashion. “You can't pinpoint the moment,” Sikura says. “There's just a sort of energy in the pavilion that changes.” Sure enough, the top colt of the opening session at OBS this week was a $350,000 Maclean's Music that had failed to meet his reserve as a $6,000 weanling.

It's a rare stallion, though, that can beat the odds in an environment where farms must throw so many incentives into getting people aboard. Sikura feels that a left-field proposition like Lost Treasure would have been given a far better numerical opportunity 10 years ago. Nonetheless he will keep rolling the dice, for instance by backing Army Mule just the way he did Maclean's Music.

“I have to be very cautious, very selective, in doing anything 'obscure,'” he accepts. “Because I will have to do all the heavy lifting myself. If it works out, good. But it's a lot of time, money and effort to invest, if the only believer is yourself. Do that too often, and you'll go broke finding the mares to prove a point. And I'm not just trying to be contrary or counterintuitive.”

When things do work out, however, there is a corresponding sense of fulfilment. “It is rewarding,” Sikura says. “If the odd time you're the only one with that strong belief, then you should go for it. Because most good horses, there's a story behind them. It wasn't easy or obvious, wasn't always A.P. Indy topping the sale. American Pharaoh was out of a Yankee Gentleman mare. So many good horses come from a place where opinion hasn't identified them–but they've always been right there. So the only thing changing is the momentum of support.

“There will be mockery and ridicule, usually from those that never take risks or were born with enough that they really don't have to create for themselves. But my passion and my commitment will always take priority over commerce. If you do it right, commerce follows.”

Especially if people see that you have done something once, and then do it again. They figure that you might just keep doing it. That applies as much to maverick horsemen, like Jim Bolger, as to stallions themselves.

“I think every year it gets harder,” Sikura concedes. “Every year opinions narrow. But I was taught to be authentic–in what you do, and in the business that represents who you are–and that's the way I want to stay. I'm not saying it's enlightened or better or smarter. It's just my way. You have one life to live. And this is a hard business. But it's one where you can express yourself uniquely. You can find the mare that piques your interest in Book 6 as well as Book 1. And I think it's more enriching if you can make your own path rather than follow the trodden highway all the time.

“You can set trends or follow them. But when you follow them, the opportunity to make money is gone. I always say that when everybody knows, it's too late. Maclean's Music was possibly a reckless pursuit. But there's a very pure litmus test: his offspring competes against the offspring of others, and we can judge them on performance. A smalltown kid that shows up in the big city won't get much initial opportunity. But the one that eventually wins out is recognized for what he is. So for Maclean's Music I hope this is just the beginning.”

The post Sikura’s Faith Rewarded by Grade I Exacta appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Silver State Proves His Mettle

Winchell Thoroughbreds and Willis Horton Racing's Silver State (Hard Spun) upped his win streak to six while providing trainer Steve Asmussen with a third GI Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan H. in the last four years. The historic Met Mile also gave Silver State an automatic spot in the starting gate for the GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile should his connections choose that event over the GI Breeders' Cup Classic. By My Standards (Goldencents) rallied to cut the winning margin to a length after missing the break, while stretching-out GI Carter H. hero Mischevious Alex (Into Mischief) settled for third. Odds-on Knicks Go (Paynter), last year's Dirt Mile romper and last seen checking in fourth in the lucrative Saudi Cup in February, showed the way before fading to fourth on a rare day when Eclipse-winning conditioner Brad Cox's runners seemed to not be firing their best shots–until the GI Belmont S. at least

Silver State was a fringe player on the 2020 Triple Crown trail, finishing second in the GIII Lecomte S. and third in a division of the GII Risen Star S. before a seventh-place run in the GII Louisiana Derby in March. He reemerged a seven-length romper over Keeneland's almost-a-mile Beard Course in allowance company last October, and hasn't looked back since. The bay cleared his '2X' at Churchill in November, followed by narrow scores in Oaklawn's Fifth Season S. Jan. 23 and Essex H. Mar. 13. He most recently got up by a half-length in the nine-furlong GII Oaklawn H. Apr. 17, pairing up his 101 Beyer Speed Figure top.

Let go as the 57-10 third choice, Silver State broke well enough despite pressure from both sides, and tucked in behind Knicks Go as Mischevious Alex rushed up to apply pressure. Shuffled back a bit and ridden along near a :46.31 half, he looked to be going well heading for home as the favorites knocked heads. Knicks Go floated Mischevious Alex very wide, and that gave Silver State a perfect path if he had the horse. He did, and pushed past the fading Knicks Go, outkicked Mischevious Alex and held safe By My Standards by a length.

“He broke really sharp today and put me in a great spot,” said winning rider Ricardo Santana, Jr., who escaped injury Friday at Churchill Downs when his mount broke through the temporary rail and caused the declaration of a no contest. “I was just a passenger today. He put me where he wanted to be. The rail opened, so I decided to go through it and he gave me the victory… Steve's done a good job with him. He gave him time off. He came back fresh last year and he's the best that he's been right now… The good thing about that horse is that he can do whatever you want to. He's really smart. I'm really impressed with him.”

Hall of Famer Asmussen took the 2018 Met Mile with Bee Jersey (Jersey Town) and 2019 renewal with Mitole (Eskendereya)–both were also piloted by his go-to jock Santana.

“I'm very proud of Silver State, the whole team, and the trip Ricardo gave him and the faith he has in the horse,” said Asmussen. “The Met Mile is an extremely significant win and one of the great races in American racing.

“This is six wins in a row for him. He's an absolutely beautiful Stonestreet bred that Ron Winchell and Mr. [Willis] Horton purchased and have campaigned. Their patience in allowing him to get to this level has been perfect.

“Silver State's one-turn races last year were brilliant. Ricardo knows the horse and has a great amount of confidence in him. He was away cleanly and he was traveling very comfortably. Ricardo's level of confidence in this horse, and it's obviously warranted, had a lot to do with the outcome today.

“This horse takes a step forward with every race. The one thing you really noticed at Oaklawn is every time he went to the wire like he was trying to win. He's a Met Mile winner. We built it up to this point. To be in this position today will give him the credit he deserves. That's the great part about racing. You have to earn it. That's what he did today. The Met Mile was our target since last fall.”

Saturday, Belmont Park
HILL 'N' DALE METROPOLITAN H.-GI, $955,000, Belmont, 6-5, 3yo/up, 1m, 1:35.45, ft.
1–SILVER STATE, 120, c, 4, by Hard Spun
                1st Dam: Supreme (SW-USA, GSP-Can, $162,789),
                                by Empire Maker
                2nd Dam: Mon Belle, by Maria's Mon
                3rd Dam: Regal Band, by Dixieland Band
   1ST GRADE I WIN. ($450,000 Ylg '18 KEESEP). O-Winchell
Thoroughbreds LLC and Willis Horton Racing LLC;
B-Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC (KY); T-Steven M.
Asmussen; J-Ricardo Santana, Jr. $535,000. Lifetime Record:
11-7-2-1, $1,765,094. Werk Nick Rating: A++. Click for
   eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–By My Standards, 122, h, 5, Goldencents–A Jealous Woman,
by Muqtarib. ($150,000 2yo '18 OBSAPR). O-Allied Racing
Stable, LLC & Spendthrift Farm LLC; B-Don Ladd (KY); T-W. Bret
Calhoun. $185,000.
3–Mischevious Alex, 124, c, 4, Into Mischief–White Pants Night,
by Speightstown. ($75,000 Ylg '18 KEESEP; $140,000 RNA 2yo
'19 OBSAPR). O-Cash is King LLC and LC Racing; B-WinStar
Farm, LLC (KY); T-Saffie A. Joseph, Jr. $100,000.
Margins: 1, 3/4, 1HF. Odds: 5.70, 8.90, 3.55.
Also Ran: Knicks Go, Dr Post, Lexitonian.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:

Silver State is the 14th highest-level winner for good racehorse sire Hard Spun, whose runners perform at a variety of distances and over both surfaces. Among his recent standouts are 2019 Dirt Mile winner Spun to Run. The late Empire Maker is the broodmare sire of 27 graded winners and, for now, six Grade I winners–he is also the dam sire of current GI Kentucky Derby runner-up Mandaloun (Into Mischief). Among the six are GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby winner and GI Belmont S. also-ran Rock Your World (Candy Ride {Arg}).

The winner's dam Supreme was a two-time sprint winner on dirt, but improved significantly when switched to the sod and was a stakes winner and GSP in dashes over that surface. Stonestreet paid $800,000 for Supreme in foal to Giant's Causeway at the 2013 Keeneland January sale. Supreme is out of a full-sister to GI Kentucky Derby winner Monarchos. Supreme's 2-year-old Candy Ride (Arg) colt was a $95,000 KEESEP RNA turned $500,000 OBS March purchase by Yuji Hasegawa off a :10 flat breeze. Supreme produced an Uncle Mo colt last May but was not bred back.

The post Silver State Proves His Mettle appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights