Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Birthday ‘Wishes’ Come True For Meg Levy

Meg Levy can't remember how she heard about the $500 Thoroughbred mare needing a home in February of 2017, but she's incredibly glad she decided to go see “Four Wishes” on the way to the Fasig-Tipton sale that afternoon.

The daughter of More Than Ready had been abandoned by a previous owner after running up a board bill. She had a Revolutionary foal on the ground and was in foal to the same sire, as well, but Four Wishes wasn't likely to be particularly commercial – the mare's catalog page was not inspiring, and she'd raced five times without ever finishing better than sixth.

It was Levy's birthday, though, and something told the founding owner of the Bluewater Sales consignment agency to bring the mare home. Three and a half years later, the $500 rescue mare has turned into a fairy tale success: Four Wishes' Laoban filly, Simply Ravishing, won the Grade 1 Alcibiades at Keeneland on Oct. 2.

“You just can't make it up, truly, we all need a good story right now,” Levy said. “I was lucky enough to be there when she crossed the finish line! Keeneland is kind of strange and spooky without people there, but you can move around so freely and be really close to the racetrack, and we kind of ran with her to the wire.

“Four Wishes really had all the negatives: she couldn't run a jump, and they always say never buy a mare with two blank dams, well, she had them. … It sounds kind of cheesy when I tell the story, but we'd never had anything happen like that for ourselves.”

After purchasing Four Wishes in February of 2017, Levy sent the mare to Stone Gate Farm in New York in the hopes of making her Revolutionary foal somewhat commercially viable. After the mare foaled a colt that April, Levy decided to send her to first-year sire Laoban on her husband's breeding right.

Four Wishes and her colt came home to Kentucky in the summer, and the following April her Laoban filly was born in the New York.

Levy's son, Ryder, saw the filly first. He sent his mother a text message with a photograph of the filly out in the field.

“Looks like a bunch of early breeders awards to me,” he wrote.

Those words proved prophetic down the road, but there were more bumps in the road before Simply Ravishing's long-predicted success.

Four Wishes' Revolutionary colt was not accepted to the New York-bred sale and brought a final bid of just $8,000 when sold at Fasig-Tipton October in 2018. He wound up headed to Peru, and Levy doesn't know whether the now 3-year-old has yet raced.

Four Wishes was bred to Daaher next, also on a breeding right, but she suffered a dystocia due to the foal's large size, and sadly that foal did not survive. The mare was badly bruised, Levy said, and was given a year off from the breeding shed to recover.

All that happened shortly before Levy was preparing to send Four Wishes' Laoban filly to the 2019 Fasig-Tipton New York-bred sale.

“Laoban foals were really selling well, and they were all pretty athletic looking,” Levy remembered. “I was already at the sale, and the crew at the farm was loading the horses on the trailer to ship them up to me. They sent me a text, as people sending me bad news tend to do, that once she got on the trailer she really wasn't happy and kicked the wall so hard she tore up her hind foot.

“She was going to be just fine, but obviously she had to get off the van and couldn't go to the sale. I was really disappointed and admittedly pretty grumpy about it.”

Levy re-entered the filly in the Fasig-Tipton October sale, and hoped that her impressive physical would be enough to draw the right kind of attention.

“As she was growing up, she just was so simple,” Levy said. “She was always stunning, always in motion, always the right weight, always shiny, always correct. There was none of this messing around business with awkward stages; she just stood out.”

Though she lacked a commercially attractive pedigree, the filly's good looks were enough to draw the attention of trainer Ken McPeek. His final bid of $50,000 was enough to land the filly.

“She was just the kind of filly Kenny likes, real athletic-looking,” Levy said. “He doesn't care about the page so much, and I knew he'd give her every chance.”

Levy had known McPeek since the time she had galloped for John Ward, and then worked with him at 505 Farm. When Levy first opened her consignment business in 1999, McPeek was one of her first successful customers.

Oddly enough, it was with another filly who had two blank dams on her catalog page. This filly had trouble passing the veterinary inspection; of 12 vets who scoped her airway, only McPeek's vet gave the filly a passing grade.

McPeek landed the daughter of Dehere for $175,000 at the 2000 Fasig-Tipton July sale, and the following year Take Charge Lady won Keeneland's Alcibiades.

Take Charge Lady had great success on the track, winning a total of five Grade 1 races and $2.4 million, and she went on to immeasurable success as Broodmare of the Year and dam of two Grade 1 winners, Take Charge Indy and champion Will Take Charge.

The similarities between the two fillies' storylines are the kind of thing that just can't be made up, Levy said, laughing. She remembered attending the 2001 Alcibiades and cheering Take Charge Lady to victory.

“I knew so little [about industry protocols] back then,” said Levy. “I ran across the rail to get to the winner's circle for the photo, and I'm sure everybody in there was like, 'Who is this girl?'”

A more seasoned veteran now, Levy was still emotional after Simply Ravishing's big win in the Alcibiades. Her son Ryder, now 29, had been such a huge fan of the filly's from the very beginning, and he'd surprised his mother by asking the farm manager to name Levy the sole breeder for the first time in her career.

McPeek stayed in touch about the filly through her early training, sending videos of Simply Ravishing's progress ahead of her first start.

“I thought, 'Well, she looks pretty good,'” Levy recalled. “I had taken our farm manager to brunch on that Sunday that she ran for the first time, and I missed her race and then my phone just started blowing up when she broke her maiden at Saratoga.”

After her maiden victory on the turf, McPeek stepped Simply Ravishing up to New York-bred stakes company. The race came off the grass, and the filly won by several lengths.

“I thought, 'Wow, this is pretty crazy,'” Levy said. “When he entered her in the Alcibiades, though, I thought, 'Hmm, could this really happen?'”

Apparently, Wishes do come true.

Simply Ravishing winning the Darley Alcibiades

Simply Ravishing won the Alcibiades by 6 1/4 lengths, completely dominating the competition in an impressive gate-to-wire performance. She's likely to be one of the favorites in the upcoming Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies on Nov. 6 at Keeneland.

“After this filly won, I actually ran into the guy who'd had Four Wishes at a reining show,” Levy said. “I tried to ask him about her first filly, by Revolutionary, but I guess he sold her as a riding horse prospect and didn't remember much more than that.”

Levy posted a snapshot of Four Wishes' story on social media following the Alcibiades win, and has enjoyed the excited reaction of so many of her friends. One major Kentucky breeder even told Levy's husband that after learning about the story, he went out and rescued a mare himself.

Four Wishes was bred to Speightster for 2021, and Levy is excited to see what the future will bring with her miracle mare. The entire story reminds Levy of a conversation she had with breeder Helen Alexander when she first got into the business.

“I remember asking her to lunch years ago, because she was someone I've always respected from the very beginning,” Levy said. “I asked if I could pick her brain, said, 'I'm trying to find my way and I really need some advice.' She just kind of said, basically, 'Breed your mares well, take care of them well, and they'll take care of you.' She actually called to congratulate me after Simply Ravishing won!”

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Unbeaten Happy Saver Gives Pletcher First Jockey Club Gold Cup Triumph

Saving ground throughout under Irad Ortiz Jr., Wertheimer and Frere's homebred Happy Saver outdueled fellow 3-year-old Mystic Guide and 3-5 favorite Tacitus with a determined stretch run to win Saturday's Grade 1, $250,000 Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

Now a perfect four-for-four after his first graded stakes win, Happy Saver earned a fees-paid berth for the Nov. 7 Breeders' Cup Classic after the Win and You're In Breeders' Cup Challenge Series victory.

Happy Saver covered 1 1/4 miles on a fast main track in 2:02.09 and paid $6.70 to win. Mystic Guide, ridden by John Velazquez and coming off a victory in the G2 Jim Dandy, finished second, beaten three-quarters of a length. Tacitus, who set an uncontested pace under Jose Ortiz, finished another 1 1/4 lengths back in third, with Prioritize fourth and  Name Changer fifth.

The victory was the first in the Jockey Club Gold Cup for Pletcher, who trained Vino Rosso, first across the finish but disqualified and placed second for stretch interference in last year's running. Vino Rosso went on to win the G1 Breeders' Cup Classic.

“Not only had we not won it,” said Pletcher, “we'd suffered some really close defeats and then throw in a disqualification on top of that and it's been a frustrating one over the years. This one was fun. It's one of the races that has been hard on us. We've had some tough losses and it was very fulfilling to win it today.”

Happy Saver broke alertly, but Jose Ortiz seemed intent on getting the early lead aboard Tacitus, who was allowed to set soft fractions of :24.93, :49.68 and 1:13.61 for the opening six furlongs.  Happy Saver tucked in just behind the leader, while Mystic Guide was to his outside and in the clear in the long run down the backstretch.

Mystic Guide moved up to challenge Tacitus with a quarter mile to run, the mile clocked in 1:37.25, while Irad Ortiz Jr. kept  Happy Saver glued to the fence, waiting for daylight. That opportunity came when Tacitus and Mystic Guide straightened away into the stretch, and Happy Saver quickly accelerated through the opening, setting the stage for a three-horse duel down the lane.

Tacitus was the first to retreat, then Happy Saver showed his superiority over Mystic Guide, inching away in the final sixteenth of a mile for the winning margin.

“He has a big heart, like I told Todd in the paddockmk,” Ortiz said of Happy Saver. “He's a fighter. Every time he has a horse in front of him and when you ask him to go, he passes the horse and then he puts his ears up. He still had something after he went by Johnny's horse.

“It was emotional. I wanted to win it so bad. Last year, I got DQ'd and that was for Todd, too. He's a cool horse, a special horse. I rode him first time out and we knew he was a nice horse. Todd has always liked him.

“This race was uncomfortable for him. I wasn't really happy down in there but I didn't really have any other options. I just had to go with the flow of the race. I thought we were going to be on the lead and I was surprised to look up and see Tacitus on the lead early. I can't take back but I can't go head and head so I just let my horse be there. I used him a little on the backside to stay close and go from there.

“I had horse. I just didn't have anywhere to go. I had a little space inside but i didn't know if Jose [Ortiz, aboard Tacitus] had a lot of horse and I didn't want to check him because his horse has a big stride, so I just waited. When we turned for home, I knew he'd be there for me and if the hole was still open, I'd go for it. If not, I'd go around Johnny [Velazquez aboard Mystic Guide]. But it was still open, so I went for it. When I needed him, he was there for me.”

“Watching the race, I thought he was a little uncomfortable inside there,” Pletcher said of Happy Saver. “He was in a tricky spot. Johnny [Velazquez, aboard Mystic Guide] had first run on him and was able to keep him in there. To his credit, that was a pretty game performance to come up the inside there in his fourth start and first time against older horses going a mile and a quarter. To do that after breaking his maiden on June 20th is hard to do.

“I was very proud of the horse and his performance. I'm happy for the connections, the Wertheimers have been loyal supporters for many years and I'm appreciative of that. It's great to get a Grade 1 win for them. He's by a Derby winner [Super Saver (2010)] we trained, so it's fun all the way around.

“When we started getting serious with his breezes, he was breezing with Dr Post and some horses we knew had talent and he was staying right with them, but I couldn't have imagined on June 20 he'd be winning the Jockey Club Gold Cup and be 4-for-4. That's hard to do, but it's a tribute to his quality.”

Happy Saver, bred in Kentucky, was produced from Happy Week, a daughter of Distorted Humor. Happy Saver's third dam is Weekend Surprise, a broodmare of the year whose offspring include Horse of the Year and leading sire A.P. Indy.

Pletcher said he would evaluate how Happy Saver comes out of the race before deciding on whether or not he goes to the Breeders' Cup.

“First and foremost we'll see how he bounces out of this race,” said Pletcher. “It was a tough race and he's still a lightly raced horse. That's part of the reason we decided to come here instead of going to the Preakness. We'll enjoy this for the moment and talk to the Wertheimers and come up with a plan. I wouldn't say we're definite for it, but I wouldn't rule it out either.”

Happy Saver begins to pull away from Mystic Guide nearing the finish of the Jockey Club Gold Cup

 

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Highs, Lows And Takeaways From 2020 Triple Crown

The Paulick Report editorial team – publisher Ray Paulick, editor-in-chief Natalie Voss, news editor Chelsea Hackbarth and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills – takes a look back at this strangest of Triple Crowns in this week's edition of the Friday Show.

From the minute Churchill Downs officials announced in mid-March that the Kentucky Derby would be postponed until Sept. 5 because of the coronavirus pandemic, we knew this year was going to be different. I don't think any of us knew how different.

Kicking off with a distance-shortened Belmont Stakes June 20 and ending with a Preakness on Oct. 3 that may be remembered as one of the most exciting renewals in recent history, the Triple Crown had its share of highs … and lows. We may have learned a few things – some takeaways – from this year as well.

Watch this week's Friday Show below and let us know what your favorite memories were from the 2020 Triple Crown.

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‘It Wasn’t Like Anything I’d Seen Before’: Sikura, Hill ‘N’ Dale Go ‘All-In’ On Xalapa Farm

John G. Sikura has owned Xalapa Farm in Paris, Ky., for over a year, but he still talks about the property with the kind of enthusiasm often reserved for a kid at Christmas with a new bicycle.

However, Sikura's commitment to his new farm exceeds anything on two wheels. On Wednesday, the entire Hill 'n' Dale Farms stallion roster was vanned 33 miles east from their former Lexington, Ky. base to Xalapa Farm to take up residence for the 2021 breeding season and beyond.

Putting hundreds of millions of dollars worth of horseflesh on vans – including top sires Curlin and Kitten's Joy – might seem like a harrowing task, but Sikura said the expensive cargo handled the process in stride.

“It was a very swift transition,” Sikura said. “All credit to our staff. Our farm manager, stallion manager, resident veterinarian – everybody was there. The horses were full of class. They didn't even nicker. Curlin just put his head down and started eating hay. I think that's a testament to the natural beauty of the place. There's no noise. It's so quiet.”

The history in Xalapa Farm is apparent in its notable past residents. Broodmare of the Year Hildene once called Xalapa home, along with Negofol, who sired winners of the Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes. That was appealing to Sikura, but the history of the farm's architecture – that natural beauty – was what truly excited the horseman.

Sikura had been invited out repeatedly by an acquaintance tied to the farm to see it for himself, but a packed schedule kept him from venturing out to the property. Besides, he'd seen plenty of top-class farms around the world, and he was skeptical what this one, less than an hour away, could offer that would wow him. The fact that he immediately had to eat his words is part of the reason why he remains so excited about Xalapa to this day.

“One day, I told them I'd like to come see it,” he said. “They showed me around, and when I got in the gate, I went, 'Oh my God.' It wasn't like anything I'd seen before, even though a lot of it was overgrown or in disrepair. All the architectural elements were just incredible.”

The land needed a lot of work. Hundreds of acres on the 1,100-acre farm needed to be fenced in, and infrastructure to get from place to place on the property was scant at best beyond the main buildings. Still, Sikura couldn't shake the place. He went back to visit Xalapa a few more times, and he eventually made an offer.

At the time, his plan was to use Xalapa as a base for Hill 'n' Dale's yearling operation, while the stallions would remain in Yarnalton Pike, between Lexington and Midway. Sikura had too many reasons to stay close to town, so keeping the home base close by made sense. Those circumstances changed last year, though, and so did the plans for the property.

“All my kids are now away at school,” he said. “My youngest just accepted to go to a hockey academy in Rhode Island. I could have never moved out here with my kids in school, because they were in the Spanish immersion program in downtown Lexington, and it's too far to drive back and forth two or three times a day.”

Now with a little more flexibility, Sikura fully committed to the Xalapa property, electing to move the stallions, the staff, and his own personal residence to Paris. He sold the Hill 'n' Dale property in Lexington to Don Alberto Corp., which not only married Sikura's operation to its new location, but also gave it a “save the date.”

“I had 14 months to be off the farm, and I didn't have a breeding shed, I didn't have barns, I didn't have houses for my employees, I didn't have fencing for over 500 acres, roads, electric, water, anything,” Sikura said. “For seven days a week, we've had 100 people out here constantly – Guys building stone walls, the breeding shed, doing electric, the water lines, internet. I knew there was a lot to do, but I didn't realize what a challenge it would be. It was not only an enormous expense, but the time, the mental energy.”

The bones of Xalapa trace back to its founding in 1827. Bringing it up to shape to house one of the country's top Thoroughbred operations required a top-down makeover.

Existing structures were renovated to fit modern needs using the same materials, in order to preserve their historical integrity, down to the hand-crafted hinges on the doors. If a new barn needed to be built, it was built. If a road needed to be made – be it asphalt for vehicles or rubber bricks for the stallions – it was made.

The breeding shed was created by John Howard of Lexington-based Four-H Construction Management, who was the project manager at Keeneland for nearly three decades. Howard's crew built the semi-circle saddling structure in the Keeneland paddock, which Sikura said had an ambience he wanted to recreate on his own property.

When Sikura committed to making Xalapa Hill 'n' Dale's full-time base, he also purchased the adjacent property, Stoner Mill Farm, adding another 300 acres to the project. Stoner Mill presented its own unique challenges, including the removal of 500 dead ash trees.

If the property was being built just to suit the horses' comfort, that would be one thing, but the Xalapa project also involved building or renovating 14 houses for Sikura and the farm's staff. Even the smaller details on such a large property can feel “big picture” when it comes to where one's going to spend their days and nights.

“You drift between excitement and being proud of getting it done, and then being overwhelmed,” Sikura said. “Those emotions will sometimes hit you in the same day. Now that you've got to do the stallion paddocks. How do you take a blank field and fit in 12 paddocks without them being too small, and having enough space between them? Then you've got to figure out water lines and how the roads are going to go. Then, it finally comes together.”

With the stallions settled in, Sikura said there was probably another month's worth of work to do on the property until he considered it officially completed. In the meantime, the November sales are approaching, and breeders will be crisscrossing central Kentucky to inspect stallions for potential 2021 bookings.

Xalapa Farm is far-flung compared to most of its major contemporaries in Kentucky's stallion market. It's about a 45-minute drive from Keeneland. Sikura preached perspective when it came to the farm's location, both in terms of its comparable distance to other Paris farms, and having the kind of product that's worth the trip.

“I think the most important thing you can do to get people to come out to your farm, or to get people to come up to your yearling consignment on the hill at Keeneland, is to have the best horses,” he said, referencing the sale barns furthest from Keeneland's pavilion. “A good horse can change your life, and horses are long-term, multi-million dollar commitments. If you go to Claiborne to see stallions, and a nine-minute drive to Hill 'n' Dale is too far, then you probably should do something else and not be in the horse business. You'll miss some of the quick visits, but I think today, with video walks, stallion registries, and all the professionals who go from farm to farm, all the information you need is out there.

“The difference between 20 minutes and 50 minutes…You have 11 months of gestation,” Sikura continued. “A 30-minute longer drive to get your mare in foal is really a non-factor.”

Sikura doesn't have sights on leaving Xalapa anytime soon, but he was aware of the value he's put into the land after all that work. Beyond all of the breeding and boarding facilities, there's a one-mile training track that also got a shining-up during the renovations, even if there aren't any immediate plans to use it. A stone bridge on the property was used during the filming of the 2003 “Seabiscuit” movie, which is an evergreen selling point, as well.

“I didn't buy it as an asset, but I think it's the most unique, historically significant horse farm; at least that I've been on,” he said. “I hope one or more of my sons have interest in the horse business and want to move it forward. If they do not, then somebody will then buy a one-of-a-kind, pristinely restored, massive, unique farm.”

Until that day comes, though, Sikura said the goal is to make Hill 'n' Dale's new home as welcoming as possible.

Many months and many dollars later, and after the efforts of an army of people, Sikura is still thrilled with his purchase. One of the most fun parts about being excited about something is being able to share that feeling with others, and Sikura said that will be the goal with Xalapa Farm.

“I'm trying to make the farm open and inviting, and the more people see it, the more I think they're going to embrace it – sort of the way the community embraces Keeneland,” he said. “It's private to a degree, but the gates are open and we want to show you how unique the place is.”

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