Santa Anita Derby Winner Roadster Retired to Ocala Stud

Roadster (Quality Road–Ghost Dancing, by Silver Ghost), winner of the 2019 GI Santa Anita Derby and runner-up in the GI Malibu S., has been retired and will stand the 2023 breeding season at Ocala Stud.

Racing in the colors of Speedway Stables, the $525,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase earned 'TDN Rising Star' status on debut for Hall of Famer Bob Baffert as a juvenile and was also third in the GI Del Mar Futurity.

“Roadster is all class, and he was an exciting colt on the racetrack,” said Ocala Stud's David O'Farrell. “He was an extremely precocious juvenile, breaking his maiden in his debut and then placing in a Grade I [Del Mar Futurity] to eventual champion Game Winner in just his second start. The following year, Roadster proved he was a serious racehorse with a tremendous win in the Grade I Santa Anita Derby, turning the tables on Game Winner. He competed against the best of his generation throughout his career, and we are excited to offer breeders the opportunity to breed to a top-class son of Quality Road who has the looks, pedigree, and performance to be a leading stallion.”

Bred in Kentucky by Stone Farm, Roadster posted a record of 16-3-4-2 and earnings of $901,500. By leading sire Quality Road, Roadster is out of the stakes-winning Silver Ghost mare Ghost Dancing. He is a half-brother to Grade I winner and Keeneland track-record setter Ascend (Candy Ride {Arg}) and the graded stakes-placed Moro Tap (Tapit).

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Girvin Relocates to Airdrie Stud

Fast-starting freshman sire Girvin (Tale of Ekati–Catch the Moon, by Malibu Moon) will relocate to Airdrie Stud for the 2023 breeding season. The 8-year-old stallion, who began his stud career at the O'Farrell family's Ocala Stud, is already the sire of 12 winners from 23 starters, including the GII Saratoga Special S. winner Damon's Mound and Astoria S. winner Devious Dame.

Girvin, who raced in the silks of Brad Grady for trainer Joe Sharp, won the 2017 GI Betfair.com Haskell Invitational, as well as that year's GII Twinspires.com Louisiana Derby and GII Risen Star S.

He retired to Ocala Stud following his 4-year-old season and stood as a partnership between Brad and Misty Grady's Grand Oaks Farm and Airdrie Stud in a deal brokered by West Bloodstock.

Airdrie's Bret Jones said the opportunity to partner with the Grady and O'Farrell families was a major draw for the farm's investment in Girvin.

“We had great belief in Girvin's potential as a stallion, but just as importantly, we knew that every partner was going to be pulling in the same direction to give the him the greatest possible chance,” said Jones. “Ocala Stud have done a fantastic job both supporting and promoting the horse and the commitment that Brad has made has been extraordinary. He deserves every bit of good luck that comes his way. As for Girvin, he's been tipping his hand since his first foals hit the ground. He throws beautiful babies, had a monster juvenile sales season and I think his 2-year-olds have been as impressive on the track as any first-season stallion in America. He's giving every indication that he can be a big-time Kentucky stallion and we couldn't be more excited about him.”

Grady, and bloodstock agent Bobby Dodd, purchased Girvin for $130,000 at the 2015 Fasig-Tipton October sale.

“When Bobby Dodd and I first bought Girvin he was a beautiful, strong colt, that looked fast,” said Grady. “As a yearling, Mr. Beau Lane told Bobby and I that we had a serious horse and explained his depth of pedigree in a way that two rednecks could understand. Bobby was always high on Girvin and gave him the accolades of a freak. He had a minor setback as a 2-year-old that kept us from pinhooking him. We had the chance to race him, and he took us on the ride of a lifetime that we will never forget. It was a very easy decision to support him for both Misty and I, and when we got a glimpse of his first foals, we knew we did the right thing  for him and us. He has more than blessed our family. We are grateful to Airdrie Stud and Ocala Stud for supporting Girvin, and giving him the best possible chance for success.”

Girvin has arrived at Airdrie and is available for viewing.

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Lovell Riding High After a Special Saratoga Win

In 1993, Michelle Lovell rode five races at Saratoga. Then known as jockey Michelle Hanley, she came home with three second-place finishes, but never got that win at the Spa. Twenty-nine years later, she finally made it to the winner's circle. This time it was with the brilliant GII Saratoga Special S. winner Damon's Mound (Girvin), her first Saratoga starter as a trainer.

How do the two experiences compare?

“Riding here back in the day, I was just super in awe of the place,” Lovell explained. “Obviously who wouldn't want to come here and have a go at it? But honestly, bringing Damon's Mound as my first Saratoga starter, I mean that's what dreams are made of, right?”

Damon's Mound is a sixth-generation homebred for Cliff and Michele Love and the first horse Lovell has trained for the Texas-based owners. The horsewoman said her connection with the couple started early this year with a cold call from Cliff.

“Thank goodness I answered the phone,” she said with a laugh. “I knew his name because I used to race in Texas. It was just a really nice person on the other end of the line who said they had a 2-year-old training in Ocala that they thought a lot of. He said he had done a lot of research and decided he wanted me as a trainer if I had a stall. We get these calls as trainers every so often and sometimes the horse doesn't pan out or the owners don't call back, but they kept in touch and when Damon's Mound was ready, he showed up at my barn–this big, beautiful 2-year-old.”

Lovell took an immediate liking to the striking bay colt, who is named after a 146 foot-tall limestone formation outside of the town of Damon, Texas.

Lovell, Damon's Mound and Gabriel Saez celebrate the GII Saratoga Special victory | Susie Raisher

“He was obviously raised right,” she said. “He was broke by Ocala Stud's David O'Farrell and I had lots of contact with him after I got him in. He told me that he was always professional and that he really liked him. We got him in the spring and he never missed a day. He was obviously well-broke. He was actually fit for a half-mile as they said, which sometimes doesn't happen.”

When Damon's Mound was named a 'TDN Rising Star' after his stunning 12 1/2-length obliteration of maidens at Churchill Downs on July 2, Lovell and the Loves were inundated with inquiries about purchasing the promising juvenile. All were turned down.

“We had dozens of calls and text messages,” Lovell shared. “We had some really nice offers from good people that have been in the business for a long time who said they would be happy to be a silent partner along for the ride, but Cliff just said he was going to share this with his wife.”

Despite Love's initial words, Lovell said she couldn't help harboring a few thoughts that the owner's mind might change if Damon's Mound was just as brilliant in his second start as he was in his debut.

“It was always in the back of my mind,” she admitted. “I just thought that I would have to wish them well and understand that it's a business and it happens. I was just grateful to have him to begin with.”

Before leaving for Saratoga, Lovell had the conversation with the Loves of what would happen if they came back with a win in the Saratoga Special.

“We really didn't think we would be worse than second,” Lovell said. “With Gulfport (Uncle Mo) in there we knew we had our work cut out for us, but we thought we could be in the winner's circle. Cliff just told me, 'If he wins they're going to be calling again, but he's still not for sale. You're my spokesperson and he's not for sale.'”

A caravan that included Lovell, Damon's Mound, Elwood (Lovell's speckled pony with a following of his own) and Roy Seales (Lovell's groom with a background working in New York racing) made the journey from their summer base at Colonial Downs Racetrack in Virginia to Saratoga. They shipped in to Mike Maker's barn, which overlooks the main track's far turn.

Change of Control settling into the same stall Damon's Mound occupied in Saratoga last week | Michelle Lovell

“The first day we were here, he could see the racing and it kind of got him excited,” Lovell said. “He watched really intensely, but then the next day, he slept all day.”

Two days before the big day, Damon's Mound had a similar laid-back attitude as he schooled in the paddock alongside his highly regarded competitor Gulfport.

“He walked in through the crowd with such confidence and poise,” Lovell said. “Especially for a young horse in his second time out, he just owns it. I couldn't have been more proud of him.”

Damon's Mound got another look at 2-5 favorite Gulfport as he trailed the rest of a four-horse field through the opening stages of the Saratoga Special, but after being asked by jockey Gabriel Saez, Damon's Mound made his move at the far turn and accelerated to a 3 1/4-length victory.

“We were confident going in, but you get a little nervous,” Lovell admitted as she reflected on the race.  “He gives you all the confidence because his demeanor is great. He's humble, too. He's proud of himself, but he's a humble horse. It was an awesome day. It couldn't have been more perfect.”

Of course, more offers came in for the new Grade II victor, but Lovell said word has spread that for now, the colt is in her barn to stay.

“It's a great thing that people are interested because obviously he's a very talented 2-year-old with a great future in front of him, but it's refreshing not to have to field those calls and text messages,” Lovell admitted. “I'm truly grateful to Cliff and Michele that they want to be on this journey. They've been waiting for it for a long time, so kudos to them for sticking to their guns. It's a great story for them.”

The Loves were not present for the victory in Saratoga, opting to enjoy the race together at home and plan to attend their stable star's next start.

Damon's Mound returned to Colonial Downs late on Sunday and Lovell reported that he has come out of the race in perfect form. She is still weighing her options for where the Florida-bred could make his next start, considering either the GIII Iroquois S. at Churchill on Sept. 17 or the GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland on Oct. 8.

While Damon's Mound has already resumed light jogging at Colonial Downs, Lovell is back in New York this weekend with her second Saratoga starter. On Saturday, Change of Control (Fed Biz) will race from post one in the Smart N Fancy S. The 6-year-old mare finished fourth by three lengths to eventual GI Fourstardave H. winner Casa Creed (Jimmy Creed) in the GI Jaipur S. and followed that effort with a stakes win at Colonial Downs on July 18.

“She's coming into this race really well off her win at Colonial,” Lovell reported. “It was nice to get a little class relief there and that will set her up well for this race. There are some good mares in there, so there's no doubt it will be a nice race. Hopefully we get a nice trip.”

It certainly can't hurt that while in Saratoga, Change of Control is staying in the same stall that Damon's Mound occupied last weekend.

“It would be awesome to be two-for-two up here,” Lovell said. “That would be the cherry on top.”

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Girvin Lands Running

Damon's Mound (Girvin) has the feel of an inspiring story for our sport, as the David who landed his slingshot squarely on the forehead of Goliath in the keynote juvenile showdown of the summer. The family that bred his first five dams had turned down big money for their spectacular Churchill debut winner, and their fidelity to minor-league trainer Michelle Lovell (16 winners from 88 starters in 2022) paid off handsomely when Damon's Mound readily beat the vaunted Gulfport (Uncle Mo), who has already been reserved a slot in the Ashford stallion barn, in the GII Saratoga Special S. last Saturday.

Gulfport's connections remain entitled to optimism for any rematch, having seen him badly checked before rallying for second. Be that as it may, it seems safe to assume that the winner's breeder, Cliff Love, is again being pestered by agents with fresh offers. But while we must pay tribute to the perseverance of his family, on suddenly conjuring this sudden blossom from a page that is a virtual snowfield, in terms of black type, by the same token Damon's Mound must be counted a real feather in the cap of his young sire.

Something, after all, must explain how this line has come to life after being so anonymously seeded for several decades. The first four dams of Damon's Mound are respectively by Stroll, The Prime Minister, Ruhlmann and Temerity Prince. His mother San Antonio Stroll did muster a couple of stakes placings, on turf at Retama Park, but the level at which she showed commendable consistency (won three of 14) can be judged from career earnings of $75,001. And otherwise the page ekes out its next black type only in his third dam's half-brother, courtesy of a 13-length debut third among Texas-breds. (His two wins would eventually follow under tags of $12,500 and $7,500.)

Given that he had already drawn attention to himself with Devious Dame, as impressive in the Astoria S. at Belmont as when becoming his first starter and first winner at Churchill in May, Girvin merits an appraisal as one of the early achievers in the annual shake-out between talk and deeds in the notoriously hyped freshman scene.

David O'Farrell, whose family stands Girvin at their Ocala Stud, was delighted not only that he happened to be in town for the Saratoga Special, but that he was also asked to represent his valued clients in the winner's circle.

“Cliff and Michele couldn't be there, and they were very gracious,” O'Farrell says. “It was a great day for us, the whole family was there. As far as I can tell, Cliff doesn't seem interested in selling the horse. He turned down offers after the maiden win, he's excited, and he's marching on. It's a feelgood story. Most people sell. And most people, no disrespect to Michelle Lovell or Gabriel Saez, would maybe not be so loyal to the people that got them there. Cliff could probably have hired six Hall of Fame caliber riders that were available, but he stuck with his jock and shipped him up. And was rewarded for it. It was great to see, and it's great for the game.

“The dam is their only mare that we board. Cliff is obviously a Girvin fan: he called me when we had just acquired the horse, to see if we had room, and he's now bred to him four years in a row. So, he now has a yearling filly, a weanling colt, and the mare's back in foal. The filly's remarkable. The mare has produced some good-looking babies. But it's true, she has no pedigree to speak of.”

If some of us feel uncomfortable with the all-then-nothing commercial stampede to unproven sires, that does at least tend to permit some kind of early judgement to be made. In most cases, his first book tends to prove the biggest and best a stallion ever gets. The opportunity will still prove too fleeting for most, however, so the very least we can do is congratulate those farms that do generate some momentum in this very tough environment; and explore why that might be happening.

Ocala Stud, after all, appeared to be offering Florida breeders something a little different when welcoming Girvin, who had made his solitary juvenile start only the week before Christmas. In doing so, true, he outpaced a subsequent graded-stakes sprinter over six furlongs at the Fair Grounds, before ending the meet as its premier Classic hope as winner of both the GII Risen Star S. and the GII Louisiana Derby. He never really cleared traffic at Churchill, however, and was then nailed on the line in the GIII Ohio Derby. That prompted a waiting ride in the GI Haskell S., where he beat McCraken (Ghostzapper) and Practical Joke (Into Mischief). That was a peak he never retrieved in three subsequent starts, the last of which lucklessly proved to be the only one he managed when connections persevered the following year.

As a result, he was hardly fresh in people's minds when starting out at $7,500 in 2019. Nor did his own paternity seem particularly resonant: though Tale Of Ekati represents a top-class family, Girvin remains his only elite winner and only millionaire. On the other hand, Girvin did bring two pretty priceless advantages to his new career. One was the seasoned assistance of the O'Farrell family; and the other was the fact that his own dynasty has gradually become highly esteemed itself.

Sure enough, Girvin proved the busiest Florida debutant of the year, with 149 mares. He corralled 124 in his second season, too, before taking the customary “bubble” dip to 63 when trimmed to $6,000 in 2021. This time round he rallied to 90 mares, as the word got out from the under-tack shows.

“I think, in today's world, his third and fourth years were quite successful,” O'Farrell says. “It's hard to maintain those early books but this year we got a huge push from the 2-year-old sales. The majority of the seasons were sold after the March and April Sales here at O.B.S., where he made a big splash, so it felt like a lot of people jumped on him late.”

The O'Farrells themselves, of course, have long specialized in breeding for the 2-year-old sales. It's a precarious model, taking on competition that can select stock specifically for the job, but they have honed it with great flair since Joe O'Farrell started Rough'n Tumble here in 1956. The following year the pioneer horseman staged the first commercial 2-year-old sale at Hialeah Park, selling 16 head under canvas at an average of around $5,000. That whole market has come a long way since–but so, too, have the broodmares and facilities developed by Joe's son Mike and grandsons David and Joe.

Girvin might not have seemed an obvious type for their program. “But he broke his maiden as a 2-year-old up on the pace,” O'Farrell emphasizes. “That was a big plus for us when we were pursuing him. He did have that precocity, and while obviously he was best going two turns, and was a Classic type of horse, his half-brother Cocked And Loaded set a track record sprinting at Keeneland, and he has Yes It's True in his pedigree [as granddam's sire]. He had plenty in there that gave us confidence.”

Certainly Girvin did not let the farm down when making his sales debut. A colt pinhooked as a Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Select yearling, by Bet Racing for $90,000, catapulted his value to $725,000 when sold by Paul Sharp to Donato Lanni for Michael Lund Peterson at the same house's Midatlantic Sale. Among his other scores was the home-bred Devious Dame, out of an unraced Quality Road mare. (She's called The Shady Lady, which looks a neat play on the farm's historic address on Shady Road.) Devious Dame made $240,000 from One Up Bloodstock before joining Norm Casse for John C. Oxley. Overall Girvin ended up processing 40 of 43 juveniles at an average $91,925. That confirmed him as No. 1 Florida freshman, as had been the case with his yearling average of $35,371.

The flamboyant stakes scores of Devious Dame and Damon's Mound, plus five other winners, represent a significant early marker from just 17 starters to date. (A couple of the four Kentucky sires currently above Girvin in the rookies' table have fielded twice as many starters.)

“It's really good to see them showing all this early speed,” O'Farrell says. “But you have to believe that they are going to carry it, that they're going to want to stretch out. Devious Dame has been extremely impressive sprinting but they're itching to stretch her out in the Sorority S. at Monmouth next weekend.”

O'Farrell believes that the sire's physique corroborates that potential. “He's a good-sized horse,” he says. “Extremely athletic-looking, really a flashy individual. He looks like they could be quick, but also has that two-turn look so that they can carry all that speed.”

As intimated earlier, interest in Girvin has been much enhanced by the upgrading of what was already a strong page.

It had always been intriguing that Girvin's second dam, dual stakes winner Catch My Fancy (Yes It's True), is inbred as close as 3×2 to the 29-for-45 Bayou legend Monique Rene (Prince Of Ascot). Besides producing one graded stakes winner herself, Monique Rene also delivered the dams of three others: Silver Max, a collector's item as a Grade I winner by Badge Of Silver; Canadian champion sophomore Kiss A Native (Kissin Kiss); and Catch My Fancy's own sire Yes It's True.

Incidentally, Monique Rene also shores up a quality I always seek: the caliber of those mares that complement the “proven” females introduced to a pedigree by stallion sons. In Girvin's case, the mares in question across the fourth generation are the Claiborne matriarch Narrate (Honest Pleasure); champion sprinter (and dam of another such) Gold Beauty (Mr. Prospector); the Group 1-winning juvenile, dual Classic-placed Maximova (Fr) (Green Dancer); and Monique Rene. In other words, this horse is backed up by a layer of unbroken genetic class.

When Girvin was first offered to breeders, his unraced dam Catch The Moon (Malibu Moon) had already produced a GIII Iroquois S. winner in first foal Cocked And Loaded (Colonel John). But then, in the months after Girvin's first foals hit the straw, his younger brother by Tiznow began to decorate the page in compelling fashion.

Grade I-placed at two, Midnight Bourbon had to settle for placings in the two New Orleans trials won by his half-brother, but then ran sixth in the Derby and second in the Preakness. After athletically averting disaster in the Haskell, he recovered to make the podium in another four Grade I events only to be lost to a horribly abrupt sickness this spring.

In the meantime another of Girvin's siblings, Pirate's Punch (Shanghai Bobby), had matured to become their dam's fourth graded stakes winner. One way or another, then, Catch My Fancy has proved to be a pretty inspired acquisition by Stonestreet for $240,000 at the 2015 Keeneland November Sale.

“No question, it's a very live family,” O'Farrell says. “Lot of activity going on. Look, he is by Tale Of Ekati, which is really the primary reason why we got the opportunity to stand the horse. If he was by Into Mischief, he would have stood in Kentucky from day one. But that's kind of our m.o. We've been able to stand stallions maybe by less fashionable sires, and have our track record with Trippi being by End Sweep; and Montbrook being by Buckaroo; and Kantharos being by Lion Heart. But Girvin has a really good bottom side, a great family. And don't forget Tale Of Ekati is very well bred, too.”

Catch My Fancy had made only a fairly brief transit through the ownership of Bob Austin, who had bought her in the same ring in January 2013, for just $30,000 (with Cocked And Loaded in utero). Austin had been at a party hosted by Darby Dan when invited to throw a dart at a board divided into free nominations. He landed on Tale Of Ekati and, with all four mares in his small program already booked for that spring, partnered with John Witte to pick out Catch My Fancy from the January catalog to take up the free date.

The resulting colt was Girvin, who was sold for $130,000 as a yearling at Fasig-Tipton October. He was intended as a pinhook by Brad Grady, but suffered a minor setback at the wrong time. Grady retained the colt to race in his own silks, and the rest is history.

And, actually, there's a neat sequel. Grady named Girvin for his tiny home community in rural West Texas–just as the stallion's breakout star was named by his Houston-based, owner-breeder for a cherished childhood hangout in the same state.

With a colt and filly quickly making waves, however, Girvin has already proved that he will not be a lone star stallion. Of course, these remain very early days. With his two-turn profile, however, O'Farrell can turn round and argue how that's actually very much in his favor.

“What also gives us a ton of confidence is that we know of others yet to start that are showing a lot of potential,” he says, noting that Girvin's big-money colt has followed another Lund Peterson investment at Timonium, Gamine (Into Mischief), to Bob Baffert. “We've only heard positive things about that horse so far, and I've heard a lot of buzz about a lot of others that are just getting ready to start. There's a lot of positivity.”

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