National Museum Of Racing And Hall Of Fame’s Foal Patrol Season 4 To Debut Dec. 29

Season 4 of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame's popular live webcam series Foal Patrol will debut online at www.foalpatrol.com on Tuesday, Dec. 29.

Season 4 will feature in-foal mares at Mill Ridge Farm, Safari North at Pauls Mill Farm, and Three Chimneys Farm — all based in Kentucky — and Old Tavern Farm in New York. Season 4 will also feature champion sire Tapit at Gainesway Farm in Kentucky.

Foal Patrol is a one-of-a-kind collection of live cameras following the daily activities of in-foal mares produced by the National Museum of Racing. Millions of people throughout the world have viewed the popular webcam program since its initial launch in late 2017.

Here is a closer look at the Foal Patrol Season 4 participants:

Janae (mare, Safari North at Pauls Mill Farm, Versailles, Ky.)

In foal to Malibu Moon, Janae is a 5-year-old bay daughter of Closing Argument out of the Petionville mare Debs Pet. Bred in Louisiana by Jim and Sue Harris, Janae won two of seven career races and was in the money two other occasions. Both of her wins, including the Texas Thoroughbred Futurity, took place at Lone Star Park.

Owned by Susan Moulton, Janae produced a filly by Mizzen Mast in 2019 and a filly by Daredevil in 2020. Janae's foal by Malibu Moon has an expected due date of April 12, 2021.

Miss Always Ready (mare, Three Chimneys Farm, Versailles, Ky.)

In foal to Palace Malice, Miss Always Ready is an 8-year-old dark bay daughter of More Than Ready out of the Dehere mare Miss Seffens. Bred in Kentucky by Santucket Stables, she was purchased by Three Chimneys at the Keeneland April 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale in 2014. During her racing career, Miss Always Ready won once from five starts, earning her lone victory in October 2014 at Belmont Park.

Miss Always Ready is expected to deliver her foal in late March/early April 2021. The foal will be a full sibling to Structor, winner of the 2019 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf. Structor was Miss Always Ready's first foal. She has since given birth to fillies by Palace Malice (2019) and Gun Runner (2020).

Miss Chapin (mare, Mill Ridge Farm, Lexington, Ky.)

In foal to Oscar Performance, Miss Chapin is a 19-year-old bay daughter of Royal Academy out of the Akarad (FR) mare Society Dream (FR). Bred in Kentucky by Jerome and John Ammerman, Miss Chapin won her lone career start at Del Mar in 2004.

Miss Chapin is the dam of Grade 1 winner Coffee Clique and Grade 2 winner Admission Office, who is still active on the track. Miss Chapin's foal by Oscar Performance has an expected due date of March 18, 2021.

To the Moon Alice (mare, Old Tavern Farm, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.)

In foal to Uncle Mo, To the Moon Alice is a 7-year-old dark bay daughter of Malibu Moon out of the Partner's Hero mare Love Match. Bred in Kentucky by Hare Forest Farm, she was purchased by Old Tavern Farm at the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale in 2017. To the Moon Alice made only two starts in her brief racing career in 2016. She finished third in her career debut at Gulfstream Park and was sixth in her only other race, which took place at Belmont.

To the Moon Alice has had three foals — all of which are owned by Old Tavern Farm — colts by Maclean's Music, Will Take Charge, and Ghostzapper. To the Moon Alice's fourth foal has an expected due date of April 20, 2021.

Tapit (featured stallion, Gainesway Farm, Lexington, Ky.)

One of the most influential and breed-shaping stallions of the past half-century, Tapit has sired 27 grade 1 winners, 31 yearlings to bring $1 million or more at auction, and earners of more than $162 million on the racetrack. He stands at historic Gainesway for a 2021 fee of $185,000.

To date, Tapit has sired 23 percent black-type horses, 138 overall stakes winners (86 graded), eight Eclipse Award winners, and six Breeders' Cup winners. His 2020 standouts include undefeated Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner Essential Quality. Tapit has been North America's leading sire three times.

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In The Stud Presented By Kentucky Equine Research: Oscar Performance, First Weanlings Of 2020

A sustained run at the top of a division is one of the hardest things to pull off in horse racing. After accomplishing just that on the racetrack within North America's turf ranks, Oscar Performance will attempt to do the same as a sire.

On this week's edition of In The Stud, we speak with Headley Bell of Mill Ridge Farm about the multiple Grade 1-winning son of Kitten's Joy, whose first foals are weanlings of 2020.

Oscar Performance won Grade 1 races at two, three, and four, starting off with the 2016 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf. At three, he added Grade 1 scores in the Belmont Derby Invitational Stakes and Secretariat Stakes. Then, at four, he won the G1 Woodbine Mile Stakes and equaled the world record time for a mile in the G3 Poker Stakes, stopping the clock in 1:31.23.

A homebred for Amerman Racing, Oscar Performance is out of the stakes-winning Theatrical mare Devine Actress, making him a full-brother to multiple Grade 3 winner Oscar Nominated.

The In The Stud video series, put together by our friends at EquiSport Photos, features up-and-coming names in the stallion ranks, with a focus on those whose first foals are weanlings of 2020. Paulick Report bloodstock editor Joe Nevills interviews farm staff about the stallion's appealing qualities and what mares might work best with them, while giving viewers and potential breeders a chance to see the stallion on the walk and on the racetrack.

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The Art And Science Of Setting Stud Fees

As the November mixed sales approach and mares start getting booked to stallions, practically all of North America's significant stud farms have released their advertised fees for the 2021 breeding season.

Each advertised fee is the end result of a decision-making process that can vary from farm to farm, whether a stallion's fee is being decided for the first time, if it's being raised or lowered, or if it's holding steady from the previous year.

There are few concrete “sliding scale” indicators when it comes to setting or moving a stallion's fee. They certainly help, but a Grade 1 victory on the racetrack or a fashionable pedigree are no guarantee of a sky-high introductory fee. The only hard and fast rule is that supply and demand should guide the ship, or else it might take on water.

For Bill Farish of Lane's End, setting fees means an extended series of feedback, starting with internal meetings, then picking up the phone to hear from outside breeders.

“I try to keep it pretty open in our organization,” he said. “Jill McCully, Levana Capria, Chance Timm, David Ingordo, we all talk about it pretty extensively, and then come up with it. I make the decision, but it's a collaborative effort, because if everyone's not comfortable with it, it's not going to work.

“We try to get a good feeling internally where we all are,” Farish continued. “We talk to a lot of people that breed with us and get a feel for where they are, and to make sure we're not way off with our thinking. You want to touch base with those that are going to be buying seasons. Generally, we're in the same ballpark with them, anyway, but we do have informal polling with them.”

Setting fees for incoming stallions presented a unique challenge for the 2021 breeding season. An increasingly fickle marketplace still responds positively toward first-crop sires at auction, giving them a unique premium in that first book of mares.

However, the bloodstock industry has been rattled by the shrinking foal crop and economic uncertainty inside and outside of the Thoroughbred business. Practically all of Kentucky's stallions except for the ones on meteoric rises saw decreased fees for the upcoming season. Most stallions will never stand for a fee as high as they do in their first season, but in a year where the purse strings stand to be especially tight, setting that price too high might turn breeders off.

With four first-season stallions expected to enter to the breeding shed in 2021, WinStar Farm has had to walk that tightrope on a large scale.

“You look at their race record and pedigree,” WinStar Farm's Elliott Walden said. “It's a bit of an art, it's not a science to get it right. There's quite a bit of comparative analysis with horses that have had a similar body of work that have gone to stud in the past, or this year.”

The intention behind a stallion's direction can also factor in the decision on an initial stud fee and beyond.

A syndicate built with “breed to race” operations who plan to wait on the foals to prove themselves on the racetrack might be less swayed by the whims of the marketplace, as opposed to syndicates comprised of commercial breeders.

This will also affect the types of mares sent to a particular stallion, both by syndicate breeders and outsiders.

“The commercial market is a driver, but it's not the main driver for me,” said Mill Ridge Farm's Headley Bell, who manages the syndicate for stallion Oscar Performance. “That's where the syndicate fell into place. We made the price of the shares attractive enough to get a really good syndicate. That's the foundation of the horse. Then, I think the market ends up seeing that and it provides them confidence, as well.

“We're not just sitting there relying on a commercial market that's going to be there the first year, and then they're going to leave you,” he continued. “This is a long-term project, so we try to manage him accordingly, as far as his fee goes, and the number of mares. We've tried to put the horse first in what we're doing.”

Because of the long-term strategy behind Oscar Performance's syndicate, the stallion's fee has not changed drastically over his first three seasons. He debuted at $20,000 in 2019, and his fee was unchanged in his second season when many others in his class see at least a mild drop. In his third season, typically a difficult one to drum up interest, Oscar Performance was lowered to $15,000.

Moving a stallion's fee up or down can be a delicate process. For one on the rise, it signifies a ringing public endorsement, but one that has to be tempered so as not to scare potential breeders away. For ones going down, the line has to be tiptoed between correcting supply and demand while still protecting the commercial reputation of the stallion and the investment of breeders.

“If it's a horse that's in the process of making it, you don't want to go too high and snuff out the positive demand,” Farish said. “If it's one that's on the fence and not really making it, it's a tough decision because you don't want to cut them too much and hurt them in the eyes of the breeders. There were a bunch of mares that were bred at a higher fee on those kinds of horses, so you don't want to drop them too far, because that goes into it, as well.”

Walden expanded on that point, noting that even lowering a stud fee contains a certain degree of gatekeeping to keep the number of unhappy customers to a minimum.

“Raising or lowering – That's the trickiest, I think,” he said. “There is a very interesting dynamic between supply and demand. Obviously, you want good demand. You want people to want your stallions, and you need to meet the supply. But, you also don't want to have 500 applications and have to turn a bunch of people away. You want to get it right where you have more demand than supply, but not to an extreme amount.”

Whether it's a newcomer or a veteran stallion, the ideal outcome of a Thoroughbred mating has changed ever so slightly in recent years due to The Jockey Club's 140-mare limit for stallions born in 2020 or later. No stallion standing today will see their books limited in any way going forward, but the foals they conceive will be born with that ceiling, should they warrant stallion careers in the future, which could be perceived as a limit on how much money a potential colt could make in his lifetime.

Realistically, only a sliver of any given foal crop is retired to stud, and an even smaller sliver of that group would be enough of a commercial success to threaten the stud book limit. Of all the factors that do go into a stallion's fee, Farish said the stud book cap on the ensuing foals was not on the list.

“Not in the slightest,” he said.

As if balancing a stallion's public value in his own ecosystem wasn't harrowing enough, there can be the issue of how the stallion and his fee interacts with those around him. At many larger Kentucky farms, veteran stallions will have sons or grandsons on the same roster, or farms will double down on horses by the same sires or similar female families.

Presumably, these stallions would be drawing from a similar pool of mares that match their general pedigrees and physicals, which could create some tough decisions for both the breeders and stud farms.

In some instances, the pricing system can offer breeders entry into a particular sire line at different price points.

For example, Lane's End stands cornerstone sire Candy Ride for $75,000. His son Twirling Candy stands at the same farm for $40,000, while newcomer Game Winner, also by Candy Ride, enters stud for $30,000. Fellow Candy Ride son Unified is advertised for $10,000, while Gift Box, a grandson of Candy Ride through sire Twirling Candy, will also stand for $10,000.

“You don't want one to hurt the other, so you try to price them to where they'd benefit from being in the same place,” Farish said. “Occasionally, they do get into each other's way, but that can be tricky.”

Bret Jones of Airdrie Stud said he preferred to price horses with similar pedigrees based on their individual merits, even if the price points are close, and let the breeders decide which option works best for them.

“At the end of the day, I don't know that you can get too caught up in that when it comes to standing a similar-bred stallion,” he said. “The Portland Trailblazers passed on Michael Jordan because they already had Clyde Drexler, so I think you can outthink yourself sometimes when it comes to stallions with similar pedigrees. I think you have to believe in the stallion on their individual merit, and price them however you think you can generate business.”

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Mill Ridge Farm Sets Oscar Performance’s 2021 Fee At $15,000

Mill Ridge Farm announces the 2021 stud fee for world record turf miler, Oscar Performance at $15,000, LFSN.

A son of 2018's leading North American sire Kitten's Joy, he was bred and raced by Jerry and John Amerman. As a 2-year-old, Oscar Performance won the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf.

He won Grade 1 stakes races at two, three, and four, and he broke a 20-year track record at Belmont Park at a mile in 1:31.23, all with no Lasix.

“We celebrate his third year, for we have seen so many of his foals and they are genuine quality,” said Headley Bell. “He has every opportunity to buck the trend and have more mares in his third year than he had in his first two of 118 and 116.  At a stud fee of $15,000 live foal, he is value, for you have these quality foals in the pipeline.”

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