A Penn Full of Think

Well, okay, maybe he has retired–but Frank Penn has never quit.

“You know the problem with life?” he asks with a chuckle. “By the time you know everything you need to know, you're too damn old to do anything with it.”

But that won't keep the rest of us from profiting. We're not here to learn about the half-dozen mares Penn still shares with brother John and nephew Alex, over at their place near Paris, nor about the show horses keeping him interested in his own paddocks. Instead we're at chez Penn, on the Mount Horeb Pike outside Lexington, simply because few in our community bring longer experience to the ever-renewing challenges of the Turf. He's served 17 years on the city planning commission, twice as many as trustee of Georgetown College. He was one of the founding fathers of Horse Country, and has been with the KTA/KTOB forever. Nowadays, even at 78, he's helping the Agricultural Finance Board in Frankfort.

Still immersed, then, in the 21st Century Bluegrass. But have any of you, for instance, lately worked a sale the way he did, half a century ago–when Penn Brothers sold 70 yearlings in a single afternoon at Keeneland?

“It was unbelievable,” he recalls. “We had every third horse that went through. Never worked harder in my life. Talk about learning how to do things, how to cut and cover. We couldn't clean stalls. All we'd do is pitch it up in the corner and put more bedding in.

“Now, we didn't prep these horses like you do now. In the wintertime we ran them like cattle, put a halter on literally a month before the sale. We had catch-pens, we'd put a halter on, trim them, worm them, turn them back out. Of course when we got them up there [to Keeneland], you'd have three or four getting loose, running over the hill. But everybody's did that. And everybody sold their whole draft.”

After all, he never saw a horse with bad feet in the Pampas, when he had a chance to see how they did things down there.

“But I guess they were just bred different then,” he says with a shrug.

So, too, were the horsemen. As he puts it himself, Penn “became an economic asset at 14.” Bear in mind that his father and two uncles bought their farm at the end of the 1920s, even as all hope, all belief, was being gnawed out of their generation.

“They paid $350 an acre for 200 acres,” Penn explains. “They put 160 of those acres in tobacco and it brought a dollar a pound. A year later, it brought a quarter a pound. On the other hand, during the Depression they had all the help they could hire. So they just kept expanding. They were three risk-takers, and they knew how to work.”

By the time young Penn was putting his shoulder to the wheel, they had 480 steers–and a couple of hundred Thoroughbreds.

“They'd bought a farm that had horses on it,” he says. “Belonged to an Oklahoma oilman. So they just started boarding them. That's when they learned to be horsemen. And Oscar, the oldest brother, he really got into it. He studied it and decided that we needed two stallions. Well, we needed two stallions like we needed a hole in our head. But we'd set tobacco till noon, go in, eat right quick, go breed two mares, set tobacco till dark, breed two more mares.”

Penn was actually raised downtown. By living there, his family could share the same commute as the labor, day-hires who climbed onto the canopied pick-up at designated street corners every morning. By 14, Penn was leading a tobacco-topping gang. A year later, he was helping to haul lumber out of the mountains to construct huge barns. For years, “tobacco supported our horse habit.”

But so, too, did the steers–in the sense that one kind of husbandry supported another. A man won't panic, foaling, if he's pulled plenty of calves as a boy. Penn learned the hallmarks of good land, too. He knew, for instance, to be wary when cedars thrived in dry weather.

“Cedars only grow on marginal land,” he explains. “I learned all that stuff, growing up. These were three old, cynical men. But they knew land, and knew that's what they needed to produce the animals they wanted, the tobacco they wanted. Same with this land here. The number of good horses raised by the Elkhorn Creek is staggering. Lee Eaton taught me that. I used to think it was crazy. Then I saw Bold Forbes, and all the rest, and started believing it.”

Penn had grown up chain harrowing, soil testing, just doing what farmers did. Nowadays he sees people coming into the Bluegrass and feeding high-protein alfalfa. He can spot those easy enough.

“All you got to do is go around and see which ones have all that mud [i.e poultice] on their legs,” he says. “Pythiosis. Way too much in the feed tub. That grass out there, if it heads out, it's 18% protein. That's why you keep topping your pastures, you don't want it to head out.”

They bought weanlings before the word “pinhook” had entered the bloodstock lexicon, with only Stanley Petter ahead of the curve. Besides foaling out 50 mares, then, they would buy 20-odd weanlings.

“We found out that you could buy a weanling for $300 to $500 and sell it for $2,500 to $5,000,” he says. “You could raise those babies like you raised steers, but the profit per horse was so much better.

“We'd bed those weanlings on tobacco stems. We had a tobacco warehouse, so we could get carloads of that stuff. It was one of the cleanest things you could use at the time, when we didn't have woodchips or shavings. And then you'd take it out and spread it as fertilizer.”

But whatever Penn learned from steers, it was horses that taught him love. He bought his first mare at 16, as soon as he had a driver's license. For a while the Penns had a satellite farm in Ocala, and that was another vital chapter in his adolescence: selling 2-year-olds at Hialeah.

“We'd raise 15 or so down there, broke them, did the whole thing,” he recalls. “So really I got baptized pretty good, pretty young, though it wasn't as speed-crazy as now. Anyway I learned about sand colic, about fire ants, all that kind of stuff. It was all experience, and it served me well.”

Knowing what he wanted to do in life, it was only to please his mother–so that she could say that he'd “attended” college–that he consented to a single semester at Georgetown. But then he got his Vietnam draft number, and it was the kind that made you gulp. Suddenly he had to engage.

“Every hour I wasn't in class, I was in the library catching up,” Penn recalls. “Because if I flunked out, 90 days later I'd be in a rice paddy.”

Whether or not Georgetown College saved his life, it certainly changed it. He has been serving that institution in various roles ever since graduating in 1968. Around that time his father and uncles began to dismantle their partnership, and help the next generation on its way. His parents gave Penn the downpayment on an 87-acre plot, the core of which is where he remains today.

“But I soon found that my tobacco wasn't supporting my horse habit,” he recalls. “And then I got married, had kids, and had to find another way. I started boarding horses, and found out right quick that the only people you board horses for are the ones that can pay you. The economics I'd learned in college taught me that it's all about cashflow. You could be worth $2 million, but if you don't have cashflow, it doesn't matter. All you're doing is borrowing and paying.”

What got the household on an even keel was an unraced Pretense mare Penn bought for $34,000. She turned out to have a son in training with Wayne Lukas. He won the GI Remsen S. and started among the favorites for the Kentucky Derby. Penn rolled the dice, managed to get a season to Seattle Slew, and sold the mare for seven figures to Juddmonte.

He paid his $450,000 covering fee, took the rest to the bank,  and discovered the pleasant novelty of solvency.

“My friends and family all said, 'You're stupid to sell that mare,'” he recalls. “But the time to get out of debt is when you can. And a couple of years later I could have bought that mare back for $50,000. She never threw another horse that could run.”

They built their house, and built a client base: a small, loyal group that thought the same way. When Penn packed up, his newest customer had been there 20 years.

“We were lucky enough to board horses for people that wanted to enjoy the life with us,” he reflects. “They became like family, watched your kids grow up.”

These included Janis Whitham, her late husband Frank and their son Clay. The Whithams imported a Hall of Famer-in-the-making in Bayakoa (Arg), but thereafter it has all been acorn-to-oak stuff.

“Jan's a very intelligent lady,” Penn marvels. “She and Frank started out raising pinto beans. There's one stoplight where they live, and it's 25 miles to a grocery store. Jan trained Quarter Horses, raised five kids. And, to this day, she hasn't bought a mare. They had Bayakoa, and the Nodouble filly [Tuesday Evening], and one other, and just built up those families. She'll nick them on the bottom, she'll nick them on the top; and she's still doing it.”

The Whithams were determined to get one of Bayakoa's daughters to Mr. Prospector's last son in Kentucky, the unfashionable E Dubai. And that was how they got GI Breeders' Cup winner Fort Larned. From the Tuesday Evening line, meanwhile, came Four Graces (Majesticperfection), sold at Keeneland last November for $2.3 million.

But if Penn's professional career is rooted in the land, so too is his service to the community. When he bought his farm, straight out of college, he paid $2,000 an acre–“and that was $500 more than it was worth.” The value of land would soar, however, as developers realized they could get 10 perimeter acres for the price of one downtown. All around, the countryside was being cut to ribbons, in tracts too small to farm and too big to make communities.

“We were panicking,” Penn admits. “Go through other counties and you'll see it, all these 10-acre piano keys all down the road. Well, that's a terrible way to use land. We were able to convince the Lexington-Fayette County Urban Government to make the minimum subdivision 40 acres. And we've now preserved 32,000 acres. If you add what the Bluegrass Conservancy has been able to do, we saved 52,000 acres in Fayette County. Out of roughly 250,000. It's been a 22-year fight, but I feel good about where it is now, because I think people now understand the value of living here.”

And not just the economic value of the industry and its ancillaries. It was also about cultural identity and, what then remained latent, the resulting potential for tourism.

“John Gaines had it right,” Penn says. “He used to say that we live in the largest privately owned, privately maintained park system in the world.” He gestures towards the pike. “The city doesn't mow any of this. We mow all the rights of way. And why do we do that? Because our neighbor does. It's pride.”

Penn has stepped back from KEEP because it's time for the next generation to inherit the responsibilities that come with land.

“The average age of the Kentucky farmer is 60-plus,” he remarks. “A lot of land is going to change hands in the next 10 years or so. And how do you keep farmers, if farms are cut up in 10-, five-, even three-acre tracts? You don't produce anything. And who's going to come in and buy those tracts and put them back together, when each has its own house? The houses elevate the price of the land, and that price doesn't justify farming it.”

The Purchase Development Rights program, redressing the difference in value, was key to maintaining those 40-acre tracts.

“We were able to make it look like Holsteins versus Dalmatians,” Penn says. “Instead of a piece here, a piece there.”

Penn was part of the team that presented to the tobacco succession program, coming away with $15 million and then got another $20 million from the city. The tobacco money was an apt dividend for a man who had spent much time on the other side of that particular fence, as president of the Council of Burley Tobacco.

Besides his own crop, Penn had managed tobacco for other horsefarms, including Calumet. He was ringside as multiple attorney generals sued the cigarette manufacturers, even as the state was figuring out that it could no longer support a proven carcinogenic. During the public furor, Penn had found himself sent out to bat for tobacco.

“So over several years I learned how to handle polarization!” he recalls. “Because the medical community came after you hard. And there I was, on every radio show, every debate, defending this stuff. I'd never say that smoking's not harmful to you. But I would say it's a personal choice. I'd say: 'Nobody ever held a gun on somebody and told them to go buy a pack of cigarettes. Look, half the people in this audience are overweight. The other half drink too much.' Now all those things are very harmful to you. But the difference was that the government was supporting tobacco. So you could see that it had to stop.”

His tobacco background, incidentally, prompts a fascinating analogy for the modern bloodstock market. Because in terms of prizing speed, Penn reckons that the 2-year-old sales have changed the game much as the cigarette filter did tobacco.

“Before filters, the Burley is what gave the flavor and aroma,” he explains. “The companies needed that tobacco. But once the filter came, they could buy it cheaper all over the world.”

Penn says that if the market is driven by a bullet work, then all pedigrees become the same–much as Rwandan tobacco would now serve just as well as Kentucky's.

“If we're basing everything on how fast they can work, then nobody is prizing three or four generations of soundness,” he reasons. “And not only do you have weaker bone, now you also have trainers no longer racing a horse fit. They're so concerned about their statistics, they won't run a horse until it's dead fit. But guess who pays for that? The owners.”

But nor does he attribute soundness solely to genes.

“If you only turn a young horse out for a couple of hours when it's a pretty day, he won't run,” he says. “He won't have bone density. He may grow up to be a beautiful horse. But when you put pressure on him, he'll fold up like a marshmallow.”

Obviously producing stock equal to the demands of the racetrack today feels more important than ever. And Penn feels that we can't complain about federal interference, when we either couldn't or wouldn't police the game properly ourselves.

“But I swore I would never be a cynic,” he says. “Because I grew up with three old men that were cynical as can be. I mean, they'd see long-haired hippies and tell you the world's come to an end. But they taught me how to work and to understand that work is not really work at all, if you enjoy what you do.”

When Penn needed bypass surgery, a decade ago, he was told that it was time to move on his handful of faithful clients.

“Done all I can do for you,” the doctor said. “You got to get away from the stress.”

“I don't have any stress!” Penn replied. “My farm's paid for!”

Now he smiles and shakes his head. “Yep, something's there, when [clients] have five mares on your farm worth a million dollars apiece and no insurance on them,” he says. “But I didn't see that as stress. I saw that as an opportunity to raise good horses.”

Now the stakes are lower. True, Penn and his brother have an Empire Maker mare whose son Arklow (Arch) won $3 million. But whenever he needs to, he can just stroll to the creek and soon retrieve perspective.

“I have a deck built down there,” he says. “And I take my Racing Form or Wall Street Journal, and just sit there and hear that water go by, listen to the birds chirping, and life's not too bad.

“The point is that we all try to make a business out of it, but really and truly, it's a sport. It's an advocation. And it's so hard to do that people want to try it. You see them putting millions of dollars into this thing and along comes Rich Strike, Birdstone.

“I've always been in love with the horse. Can't be like that with 400 steers, but go down to the barn and every one of those mares are different. And I've been fortunate to be involved in some really neat things. I'm not saying I started any of them. But for whatever reason I was asked to participate, and I never knew how to quit.”

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A Shortcut Into Decades of Patience

This is one of those programs, temperate and patient, that nourish the very marrow of our industry. It has never comprised more than around 10 mares, whose foals are brought into the world not just to make a fast buck but actually to go out there and run. Whitham Thoroughbreds is run by an octogenarian widow and her son: they devise matings to draw out speed into a second turn; they're not scared of using a turf stallion from time to time; and they work with horsemen who operate on a correspondingly intimate scale.

In fact, since Janis Whitham and her late husband Frank first dipped their toes into the Thoroughbred world, nearly 40 years ago, the mares and foals have basically been tended by the same hands: first those of Frank Penn at Pennbrook Farm near Lexington and then, when he retired around a decade ago, those of his veterinarian Dr. Steve Conboy at Maple Lane Farm. The racetrack division, albeit launched in California, has reflected similar priorities since it was decided to site the whole herd more accessibly: when Carl Nafzger stepped down, the horses simply stayed with his assistant Ian Wilkes.

“I certainly don't mean to knock those trainers who have huge strings,” stresses Clay Whitham, who assists his mother in running their equine team. “Obviously they get the job done. But I doubt whether they can have enough time to talk with every single one of their clients the way Ian does with Mom. Yes, we have a program-but first and foremost it's something we enjoy. My mother, in particular, really enjoys planning the matings. So it's very good for her to be able to work with a trainer like Ian, who takes his time with the horses, and makes time for visiting with his owners too.”

The dividends have far surpassed those typically achieved by brash ambition in other programs. Admittedly the Whithams were blessed, pretty early on, to import the Hall of Fame impetus of dual GI Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Bayakoa (Arg), but the acorn-to-oaks strategy has since yielded a GI Breeders' Cup Classic from Fort Larned (E Dubai) and a run to the GI Kentucky Derby with McCraken (Ghostzapper). That horse put a remote settlement on the national map, much to the pride of his breeders–who were both raised in the Kansas plains, and in turn made a home for Clay (now a banker in Colorado) and his siblings in the small town of Leoti.

As an unbeaten GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. winner, McCraken was a conspicuously precocious talent by the standards of his sire. The zip in McCraken's genes is attested by the fact that his half-sister Four Graces (Majesticperfection) broke the Keeneland track record over the extended seven furlongs in the GIII Beaumont S., complementing the new mark set by their dam's half-sister Mea Domina (Dance Brightly) in a graded stakes at Del Mar over 1 1/16 miles. That will doubtless seize the attention of commercial breeders when Four Graces comes under the hammer with Denali Stud as Hip 192 at the Keeneland November Sale. But perhaps they should primarily be engaged by the rare opportunity to tap directly into the very fount of this exemplary venture.

Because while there had been one or two Thoroughbred experiments at country tracks, the whole story really began with the weanling Nodouble filly unearthed by Frank Penn for $75,000 in 1983.

“They had quite a bit of Quarter Horse racing out in Kansas back in the day,” recalls Clay. “And my parents, who both came from agricultural areas of the state, had raced a few Quarter Horses. But about this time they decided to transition more into Thoroughbreds. My father was a businessman, I think he could probably just see that the purses were better! And while things have obviously changed quite a bit since, at that time the best purses were in California.”

The filly, named Tuesday Evening, won a Santa Anita maiden on her second start for Ron McAnally and, while unable to race again, duly bred half a dozen winners for the nascent program, including a very fast one in Madame Pandit (Wild Again), who won the GIII Monrovia H. before finishing chasing home Exotic Wood (Rahy) in the GI Santa Monica H.

By the time Madame Pandit came along, however, these horses had acquired a tragic new purpose: as a bond of comfort for a family united by grief. Frank, having built a successful career in livestock, oil and banking, was only 62 when lost in a plane crash in 1993. Through her long widowhood, the patient cycles of breeding-to-race have given Janis much consolation. It was partly to ease that deepening engagement that it was eventually decided to transfer the racetrack division closer to the breeding stock.

Madame Pandit made a great start to her breeding career when Mea Domina, only her second foal, won the GI Gamely Breeders' Cup H. at Hollywood Park. That success actually came just a couple of weeks after Madame Pandit was covered by Seeking The Gold, conceiving a filly that would bear the name Ivory Empress.

“Madame Pandit had been Tuesday Evening's best foal,” Clay reflects. “She was a real speedball, one-turn only, and while I think we breeders tend to get a bit too hung up on size, she really was a very good-sized mare. You know, good barrel, good scope-and every foal she threw was good-looking.

“And we knew that she had that speed back there. We do prefer to breed a two-turn horse, that's our goal, but speed is always a good thing if you can just try to stretch it out. Anyway we were very high on Madame Pandit as a broodmare prospect and, though getting a mare to a stallion like Seeking The Gold was difficult, Mother got that job done! He already had a reputation as a broodmare sire, so we did have our fingers crossed for a filly.”

While Ivory Empress won three times, and also made the podium in a graded stakes, she did not achieve quite as much on the track as Mea Domina. Yet she was the one who has ultimately proved the best conduit for the Tuesday Evening legacy.

“It's a good example of the way things often turn out,” Clay remarks. “You just never know, until you start raising foals. Mea Domina was obviously a very talented horse, but did not turn out to be the broodmare we had hoped. But Ivory Empress took her chances. We bred her first to War Front. Again, my mother got to Seth Hancock! She was the one that could get the mares in there.

“And the result was a very talented colt [early on], second in a couple of graded stakes. One time in particular he looked the clear winner, only for something to fly past in the shadow of the wire. So the mare had landed running-and her second foal was McCraken.”

There was real excitement when McCraken made a seamless resumption in the GIII Sam F. Davis S. and while he was beaten next time, and then suffered a rough trip when midfield at Churchill, he did only go down by a nose in the GI Haskell Invitational S. and has now had his first winners from a small debut book at Airdrie.

“He'll always be special to us,” Clay says. “This whole thing is very much a family activity, and obviously there's nothing quite like having a horse in the Kentucky Derby. That got all the nephews and cousins and everybody involved, it really was quite a ride he took us on.”

It will not be easy, then, to cash out his sister Four Graces. Impressive on debut at Gulfstream, she went through the ranks to win the GIII Dogwood S. before claiming that track record at Keeneland. Restricted to a single start last year, she has had several near-misses this year including when caught late in the GI Derby City Distaff S. But every program, of any size, needs discipline; needs to prune families to keep cultivating them.

“She's the kind we'd love to keep,” Clay says. “She has a great physique, and she has shown a lot of the talent and speed you see in her family. Her dam always has good-looking foals and she was probably top of the list. But as a breed-to-race program, we want to come as close as we can to paying its way. You have two revenue streams available, racing and selling, and it's tough to make it all in purse money. So to have a broodmare prospect that has accomplished everything she has, from a family like that, it's too good an opportunity not to see what we can get done.

“We do have three fillies in the pipeline out of Ivory Empress. Without that, I believe it would be difficult. But we have an Uncle Mo [yearling] down in Florida, just getting started in her training program; we have a Street Sense [weanling] on the farm; and we actually have a 2-year-old full-sister to McCraken who has just been held up by a few little things. And of course we also have Ivory Empress herself. She's 17 and, like all of us, she's getting a little more age on her-but she's doing very well. She was getting late in the foaling [cycle] so we left her open this year and we're working on a mating plan right now.”

The parallel dynasty developed by the Whithams, of course, traces to Bayakoa herself. This really has been a remarkable achievement. The dual champion mare had just two producing daughters. One of these, in turn, herself managed only a single daughter-but that was four-time Grade I winner Affluent (Affirmed). The other daughter, somewhat quixotically, was given the same name as Bayakoa's Argentinian-registered dam, Arlucea. (So good they named her twice!) Having already come up with Fort Larned, another Kansas landmark put on the racing map, she has now produced a fresh maroon-and-silver blossom in Walkathon (Twirling Candy).

Earlier this year Walkathon looked one of the most progressive turf fillies around when winning the GIII Regret S., but has not been seen since.

“She got a knock,” Clay explains. “She was shipped to Saratoga to run in the [Gi Saratoga] Oaks up there but on the morning of race, when they took her out of her stall, she had a bit of a hitch in her giddy-up. So we had her X-rayed and it's a pretty typical deal, no displacement, the kind of thing we've had very good experience recovering from. So we're looking forward to seeing her next spring.”

The emergence of Walkathon is the kind of thing that sustains the passion; and it's the passion that sustains the program. Nobody needs to tell the Whitham clan about the ups and downs of life. They have sampled unspeakable tragedy away from the track and, in the essentially trivial environment of quadrupeds running in circles, they had one of their proudest moments compromised by the disaster that befell their champion's big challenger Go For Wand at the Breeders' Cup. Yet they have found abiding renewal in the patient cycles of raising and racing Thoroughbreds. Whoever is privileged to take this short-cut with Four Graces, then, should also hope to absorb something of the fulfilment the vendors have found in all their years crafting such genetic quality.

“It's all such a great activity for my mother,” Clay says. “She's not able to travel quite so much now, but she's doing great and gets so much enjoyment from the horses. Right now she's running different pedigree programs on the mares, looking at all the different stallions, and still very much engaged.

“We were really tickled to see Walkathon came through for that family. With horses, you always have the ones that carry the load for all the others, and you don't always know which one it will be. Affluent was a disappointing broodmare, but now here's Walkathon from the same family. We've really stuck with these families, tried to develop them. You do have to be careful, not to be too close-bonded on that, but it can work and that's how we got from our foundation mare to Four Graces. Whether we're bull-headed or smart, who knows. But believe me, you have to be lucky too!”

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Walkathon Carries the Torch for Impressive Female Lineage

Hall of Fame inductee Bayakoa (Arg) (Consultant's Bid) put Frank and Janis Whitham's racing program on the map when she won the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff in 1989 and again in 1990. Over two decades later, Bayakoa's great-granddaughter Walkathon (Twirling Candy) is carrying out her female family's accomplished legacy.

Last weekend, the 3-year-old Whitham homebred trained by Ian Wilkes got her first graded stakes win in the GIII Regret S. Still a maiden after her first four starts, Walkathon switched to the turf this spring and reeled off consecutive scores in her maiden win and in a Churchill Downs allowance before successfully stepping up in class in the Regret.

Clay Whitham, who co-manages Whitham Thoroughbreds along with his mother Janis, is based in Colorado but was able to make the trip to Louisville to celebrate the victory.

“We had pretty high expectations,” he said. “Before her debut, she had shown a lot in her works so everyone was pretty high on her. We know that Twirling Candy can get both dirt and turf runners, but he really has excelled with his turf runners. We were looking forward to getting her on the turf and as it has turned out, clearly it made a big difference.”

Consistently maintaining a roster of just 10 broodmares, Whitham Thoroughbreds has always focused on breeding to race.

Bayakoa was one of the first broodmares to join their program. The champion distaffer only produced four foals and just one, Arlucea (Broad Brush), had any success on the track. After a winning debut, Arlucea ran unplaced in her next six starts. She had better luck for the Whithams as a broodmare, however, as the dam of their 2012 GI Breeders' Cup Classic winner Fort Larned (E Dubai).

Later in her broodmare career, Arlucea produced Walkabout (Stroll). The winner of the 2017 GIII Matron S. joined the Whithams' broodmare roster in 2017 and was sent to Twirling Candy for her first mating. The resulting foal, Walkathon, was an average-sized bay filly and was never a standout in her early days.

“She didn't 'wow' you necessarily,” Whitham admitted. “No one ever wants to say their foal is small, but she was probably just a notch below average. She never gave anyone any trouble and developed under the radar. She's one of those that never had any setbacks and quietly progressed through her training.”

Now a Grade III winner, Walkathon will take a short break from the starting gate after winning three races in less than two months, but Whitham said his mother already has her eye on a Grade I for their talented filly this fall.

“She is really focused on the GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup S. at Keeneland,” he said. “It's a race that my mom is really excited about running in. Ian will have to figure out what he wants to do with her until then.”

Janis Whitham has already bred and raced one QEII winner. Remarkably, it's another granddaughter of Bayakoa. Affluent (Affirmed), who won the historic Keeneland contest in 2001, is out of their foundation mare's only other producing daughter Trinity Place (Strawberry Road {Aus}).

When Clay Whitham's father Frank passed away not long after Bayakoa retired from racing, his mother carried on the Whitham racing operation from her hometown of Leoti, Kansas. Today, the mother-son duo run their breeding and racing program in partnership.

“We bounce our ideas back and forth off each other,” Whitham said. “It's really helpful when you're doing matings. We've bred these mares for a number of years so you don't have to start over from scratch each year. We've put a lot of thought into what we think we want to do with them and how we think they ought to be bred.”

Whitham explained that while it is rewarding for them to see Bayakoa's legacy continue to grow, for them, it just means that their breeding philosophies are working.

“Horse racing is a family activity for us,” he explained. “For Walkathon to be connected back to Bayakoa, that was really the horse that put my parents on the map. They had confidence in keeping her and breeding her. It's really nice that the decision continues to pay dividends. Our program is primarily breed to race, so if it doesn't work, we don't really have a Plan B. When you breed to race, your decisions had better work out.”

Before Baykoa came into the picture, there was a Whitham-owned filly named Tuesday Evening (Nodouble). Three generations later, her great-granddaughter Four Graces (Majesticperfection) is yet another Whitham Thoroughbreds success. After winning  the GIII Dogwood S. and GIII Beaumont S. in 2020, Four Graces took much of her 4-year-old season off and returned to the starting gate this year. In her last start, she ran a close second in the GI Derby City Distaff S. Whitham said she will be returning to the starting gate at Churchill Downs in the coming weeks.

Four Graces is a half-sister to first-crop sire McCraken, who took the Whithams to the GI Kentucky Derby in 2017. Whitham said that they have one exciting juvenile son of McCraken who will be heading to the racetrack soon.

While the list of accomplishments for Whitham Thoroughbreds continues to grow, Whitham said that coming out on top with a long game-focused program like theirs is still a challenge.

“You've got to have some good luck and we appreciate our success, but it's still tough,” he said. “With our type of program, having some good fillies really creates value for the program. If you can get a stakes win for a filly, you've created some value for her. We're super excited to have some recent success with a few horses. We feel very fortunate.”

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Four Graces Wins Beaumont At Keeneland, But Unlikely To Stretch Out For Kentucky Oaks

Whitham Thoroughbreds' homebred Four Graces set a track record by winning the 35th running of the $100,000 Beaumont Stakes (G3) by 4¾ lengths over Sconsin at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky., on Friday. She covered the Beard Course of 7 furlongs, 184 feet over a fast main track in 1:24.90 for a stakes and track record.

Jockey Julien Leparoux put Four Graces on the lead with second choice Wicked Whisper just to her outside as the two raced through early fractions of :22.29 and :44.37.

At the head of the stretch, Four Graces put Wicked Whisper away, opened a daylight margin and cruised to the finish line well clear of Sconsin. For Leparoux, it is his third Beaumont victory with previous wins coming in 2009 with War Kill and 2016 with Lightstream.

“She's a fast filly,” said Leparoux. “The track is pretty quick today too. But she was doing it very nicely for me in a good rhythm. That's the way she likes to run – free – and she makes that big kick at the end.

“I'm surprised we broke the track record, really,” he added. “But she's getting much better right now and she's doing very good.”

Trained by Ian Wilkes, Four Graces picked up 20 points toward the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) on Sept. 4 and hiked her total to 40, a figure that ranks 12th. The Oaks is limited to the top 14 point earners to pass the entry box.

The victory was worth $60,000 and boosted Four Graces' earnings to $194,450 with a record of 5-4-0-0. It was her third consecutive victory and second Grade 3 having won the Dogwood at Churchill last month.

Wilkes said he was not inclined to stretch out Four Graces around two turns to the Oaks distance.

“I'll talk to (owner) Mrs. (Janis) Whitham and (most likely) we'll point to the Test (G1, going 7 furlongs on Aug. 8 at Saratoga),” he said.

Four Graces is a Kentucky-bred daughter of Majesticperfection out of the Seeking the Gold mare Ivory Empress. She returned $3.40, $2.40 and $2.10. Sconsin, who picked up her initial eight Oaks points, paid $3.20 and $2.40 under James Graham. Turtle Trax, who finished 4¾ lengths back in third under Brian Hernandez Jr. and paid $3 to show. Wilkes also trains Turtle Trax, who picked up four Oaks points to raise her total to six.

Wicked Whisper (12 Oaks points) finished fourth followed by Slam Dunk.

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