Business is Booming at Norevale Farm

When Leo and Sarah Dooley announced last September that they would be starting their own boarding, quarantine and sales prep operation, they knew there would be a few factors working against them. First and foremost was the pandemic, at a time when the vaccine rollout was still months away. Plus, the couple was expecting to add a third member to their family at the end of the year.

Even so, the Dooleys decided it was the right time to step out on their own, and Norevale Farm was born.

“In the beginning, you're questioning yourself and you're thinking, 'Was this the right idea? Are we going to get enough horses? Are we going to get enough support?'” Leo said, recalling those moments of doubt. “But as we moved into the new year, it was evident that we had lots of support.”

So much, in fact, that they've already outgrown their original 110-acre property along Hume Bedford Pike near Paris and are now one month into leasing out an additional farm down the street.

“Leasing the farm across the road was definitely not expected,” Sarah admitted. “I remember when I was first setting up payroll and the payroll company asked how many employees we were going to have. I said two. They asked, 'Ever any more?' and I said, 'No, no way. We're never going to have more than two employees.' And now we have seven.”

Despite the explosion in growth, the couple still believes they're at a size where they can fulfill their initial vision of a boutique, hands-on atmosphere.

“What I love is the fact that we're not too big,” Leo said. “I can physically touch every horse, every day. We're on top of everything and with being so hands on, we know the horses inside and out and hopefully down the line that starts to show.”

“I think we both have a really great attention to detail,” Sarah added. “We talk to each other every day about everything, so our record keeping is precise and we have good control over everything that goes into the system.”

Growing up on her family's Marula Park Stud located just a few miles from what is now Norevale, Sarah learned the ins and outs of running a successful commercial operation from trailing her parents, Tony and Susan Holmes, around the fall breeding stock sales each year. After graduating from nearby Transylvania University, she traveled around the racing globe to complete the Irish National Stud and Godolphin Flying Start programs. Returning to the States, Sarah worked at Bluewater Sales, Hunter Valley Farm and Lane's End.

While serving as the sales coordinator at Hunter Valley, she met Leo Dooley.

Leo was not from a racing family, but growing up in Kilkenny, Ireland, he caught the bug early and worked for top trainer Jim Bolger as a teenager. He attended University College Dublin while also squeezing in time working at Ballylinch Stud and finding other racing-related jobs across Europe.

“I would take time off college to go and work the sales at Tattersalls and Goffs,” he admitted. “The professors weren't very happy about that, but I learned more there than I might have in the classroom.”

Before graduation, Leo made the journey overseas for a four-month internship with Gerry Dilger. The short time there was so impactful that after obtaining his degree, he came back to the States to work as the broodmare manager at Hunter Valley where he “met his lovely wife.” After four years there, he moved on to a similar position at Indian Creek Farm.

Before the duo ever became a couple, they both knew individually that their end goal would be to someday run their own operation.

“As a couple, that kind of became more realistic and was simmering in the back of our minds for a while down the road,” Sarah said. “Leo is great in terms of the hands-on aspect and I have experience in sales and the admin side of things. I think we both knew that we would work well together and so that gave us confidence to jump when this piece of land came up.”

Initially, the timing seemed a bit premature in their minds, but they took the leap anyways. Now just a few months in, their fast start is a strong indication that they made the right decision.

“We could not have done any of this without the support we've gotten from family, friends and clients,” Sarah said. “The support we've gotten has been huge.  It's hard sometimes, but it's a labor of love. We've been so incredibly busy, but every day we look at each other and we're like, 'Alright, we're doing this. We survived another day.' One hundred percent, we both know we're doing the right thing.”

To add one last variable into the equation, a three-month-old daughter keeps them on their toes, just in case they might have had a moment of spare time otherwise.

“Maeve was born in December right before foaling season,” Sarah said. “She's a huge delight. Leo is going to have a pitchfork in her hands before she can walk.”

“There was a while there where we thought we would have to use her on the farm,” Leo added.

When asked if they ever had any hesitations in taking on a business where they would be working together twenty-four seven, Leo replied, “We did think about that when we started, but it has actually worked out pretty well because I'm spending hours every day on the farm. I'm lucky if I get home for lunch.”

“I think we knew we would work well together from our time at Hunter Valley,” Sarah added. “We complement each other well, we stay out of each other's way and we respect what the other person does.”

“It gives me a lot of confidence, having been in the States for six or seven years now and having worked for three different farms, that I was able to pull bits and pieces from every operation,” Leo continued. “From Dromoland to Hunter Valley to Indian Creek, I was able to pick what I thought would fit best, from reproductive specialists to podiatrists, so it's nice to get all those bits of the puzzle together and hopefully have them all contribute to our ongoing success.”

Kentucky Derby winners Always Dreaming and Nyquist both called Dilger's Dromoland Farm home as youngsters. | Fasig-Tipton

Few were more integral in molding Leo's career than Gerry Dilger. The late breeder and Dromoland Farm owner passed on in March of last year, but he still played a roll in the Dooley's decision to start up Norevale.

“I only worked for Gerry for probably four months, but they were a very impactful four months and probably changed the course of my career,” Leo explained. “I never made a single career decision without consulting Gerry. I do remember, probably three or four years ago, he said something that stuck with me. He said, 'Yeah, you know in five years, hopefully you'll be doing your own thing.' I was very surprised because I didn't think I would do my own thing for another 10, 15 or 20 years. So ultimately when we made the decision on Norevale, which was of course after Gerry's passing, I went back to that [conversation] and because I couldn't ask him, it was nice to know he had backed me all those years ago. It made the decision a lot easier.”

Soon after Norevale opened for business, a second Dilger pupil joined the team. Erin Rogers, also a native of Ireland, had worked with Leo at Ballylinch Stud years ago before traveling abroad to work for Dilger.

“Erin has been a fantastic addition to the team,” Leo said. “It's been great to sort of carry on Gerry's legacy a bit here in a way, since we both worked for him.”

Both Erin and Leo spoke on the powerful influence Dilger had on their careers.

“For me, it was really the confidence he gave me,” Erin said. “He threw me in the deep end and told me to go for it. His knowledge and demeanor made him a good mentor. Everybody just loved him for being him. I never heard anybody say one thing bad about him and it didn't matter who you were, if you were a big owner or someone just starting out, he treated everyone the exact same, which said a lot about his character.”

“He had a huge impact on my life for sure, and on countless others across the globe,” Leo echoed. “He wanted the best for everybody. I'll bet he spent so much of his time thinking about all of his pupils and what they were doing. He just genuinely cared about what was best for people.”

Last fall, an unplaced Bodemeister mare named Bodella was offered in the final days of the Keeneland November Sale as the last of Dilger's mares to go through a sales ring. When she failed to meet her reserve, her consignor Pat Costello called up the Dooleys to see if they might be interested.

“She didn't cost much and she was in foal to Mo Town, so we said sure, mostly for sentimental reasons,” Sarah recalled. “Leo brought her back to the farm and on his way back, he called Erin and told her we had a surprise for her in the back of the trailer.”

Bodella (Bodemeister) and her 2021 Mo Town filly | photo courtesy Sarah Dooley

When Erin found the mare waiting to unload, she recognized her instantly from her years spent at Dromoland. The Dooleys offered Erin a partial ownership in Bodella and Erin jumped at the chance.

“It's cool for us to all own a mare together and Erin just loves her,” Sarah said. “She absolutely adores all the horses, but Bodella is the favorite for sure.”

Bodella foaled her Mo Town filly in February this year and has since been bred back to Volatile.

“There was a rainbow one day and Bodella and a couple of mares were in a back field here, and the rainbow ended on top of Bodella,” Sarah recalled. “We were all like, 'Yeah, that's Gerry.' So hopefully he's looking out for us and we'll have a bit of luck with her.”

While both Leo and Sarah acknowledge that luck may have helped all the pieces fall into place when Norevale first got started, they now attribute the farm's ongoing success solely to the support they've received from their clients.

“We're very thankful for all the support we've gotten,” Leo said. “We've got some great clients here and we're excited to grow with them as we continue to develop the program we have here at Norevale.”

“We're always telling each other that there's no resting on laurels,” Sarah said. “We know we've got to keep putting in the groundwork, but we couldn't imagine doing anything else, even on the hard days. I've asked Leo a few times on really busy days, “So, are you glad we're doing this?' And he's like, 'Oh yes, one hundred percent.' And I feel the same way. So we know we're doing the right thing and we couldn't be happier.”

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Veronique a Timely Purchase for Holmes

Tony Holmes has enjoyed sales success with mares he has purchased in partnership with employees of his Marula Park Stud in the past, but next week the native New Zealander and a 22-year veteran of the farm may have success on the next level when they send Veronique (Mizzen Mast) (hip 244D) through the ring during Monday’s first session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale. Holmes purchased the mare, in foal to Mastery, privately after she RNA’d for $22,000 at last year’s Keeneland November sale. It was 10 months later that her son Nashville (Speightstown) made a smashing debut at Saratoga (video), earning the ‘TDN Rising Star’ designation. When the 3-year-old colt romped home by an effortless looking 9 3/4 lengths in a Keeneland allowance (video) Oct. 10, Holmes and his partner decided to supplement the mare to the November sale.

“There is a really nice man who has worked for us for 22 years and I was looking for a mare for us to own together,” Holmes explained of Veronique’s purchase last fall. “I financed the mare and that was the whole objective. He’s been the backbone of our operation and he’s a really nice guy. The plan was to sell babies out of this mare for an income. But things have swung around in our favor, so you’ve got to take them when they do that.”

While Nashville hadn’t made it to the races yet, the colt had made a good impression in the sales ring where he sold for $460,000 to WinStar Farm and China Horse Club at the 2018 Keeneland September sale.

“Obviously, her babies had sold well and I knew that, at that time, Nashville was having a spell,” Holmes said of the mare’s appeal. “I had heard that he had ability and I knew he was at WinStar and having a spell there. I knew there was still hope.”

Nashville was pre-entered in both the GI Breeders’ Cup Sprint and GI Breeders’ Cup Big Ass Dirt Mile, but it was announced Monday he would instead target Saturday’s Perryville S. on the championship undercard.

Holmes said Nashville’s impressive victories, and more importantly his potential successes, will likely take his dam’s popularity to the next level in the sales ring.

“I think it’s huge,” he said of Nashville’s promise. “I’ve had mares before and sometimes they win a nice race, but with him, it’s just the way he’s done it. And then Elliott Walden said he’s one of the fastest horses WinStar Farm has ever had. I’ve been in the position before, but not with a horse with this much talent.”

Veronique’s page received another update last week when her 2-year-old Market Cap (Candy Ride {Arg}) graduated by seven lengths at Laurel Park Oct. 30 (video).

The 9-year-old Veronique will sell Monday in foal to GI Pacific Classic winner Collected (City Zip).

“He was a horse who had won nearly $3 million, he was a good-looking horse that [Bob] Baffert trained,” Holmes said of the choice of matings. “I thought he was attractive at that price with his looks and his race record.”

Veronique’s weanling filly (hip 885) by Mastery will sell during Wednesday’s third session of the auction.

“She’s beautiful,” Holmes said of the weanling. “The man that works for us–he obviously owns half of her too–and we have four weanlings in the sale, but she gets the most grooming. Put it that way.”

The unraced Veronique is out of Styler (Holy Bull), a full-sister to GI Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo, and she is a half-sister to stakes winner Almond Roca (Speightstown) and graded placed Calistoga (Speightstown). She will be consigned to the November sale by Paramount Sales.

Holmes purchased Crystal Shard (Mr. Prospector) for $23,000 at the 2010 Keeneland November sale, also on behalf of a partnership of his farm workers. Her yearling colt at that time would go on to be GI Wood Memorial S. winner Gemologist. The mare was sold privately at a hefty profit.

Asked what another success would mean for his longtime employee, Holmes laughed and said, “I hope he shows up the next day.”

He continued, “There was another time there we bought a mare together and it was the dam of Gemologist. So he’s been on a bit of a home run, but after he sold that mare, the next night he was out there working overtime. But it could be a real life changer for him. They are nice people. So, hopefully. Could be.”

The Keeneland November sale opens with a single Book 1 sessions beginning at noon Monday. The auction continues through Nov. 18 with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

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