Roses for Debra a Stylish Victress of Smart N Fancy at Saratoga

Neither wind nor water could stop her, and Roses for Debra (Liam's Map) streaked home at a rain-drenched Saratoga to take the Smart N Fancy S., securing her fourth win in a row in the process.

Only once off the board in her career, the grey was last seen putting up a career-high Beyer of 99 en route to winning the GIII Caress S. over this course last month and had two victories over the lawn at Belmont and Pimlico since changing from the barn of Michelle Brafford to Christophe Clement for 2023.

Christened the heavy 1-5 favorite as the field shrank with the scratch of four rivals, she veered to her outside after the jump as her outer rival also went to the right, but was settled to comfortably follow the leading pair. Three wide under an ultra confident Irad Ortiz Jr. through the turn, Roses for Debra was called on for her kick as she shifted further out. In the five path but closing with a full head of steam, she was given a single, minor reminder and powered clear in the final furlong to win by 3 1/4 lengths.

“It was pretty nice. The tote board said it all really, everybody thought she'd run really well,” said winning co-owner John O'Meara. “It was nice having some scratches. You know it's always nicer to have a smaller field, but when they scratched out of there…I don't know whether they scratched because of the weather or because they were afraid of her. Going to have to keep going and see who will be afraid of her in the future. I bought her. A good friend of mine, Gerry Dilger, bought her as a weanling and he passed away. It was a dispersal and I bought her in the dispersal. She's been nothing but fun to have around since. Of course, when she got hurt in the 2-year-old sale that didn't help, but it is all for the better at this point.”

O'Meara added that the current plan is to go to Presque Isle for the $300,000 GII Presque Isle Downs Masters S., and from there either a trip to Keeneland or the Breeders' Cup.

A half-sister to an accomplished elder half-brother in Rose's Vision and to SP Rosie's Alibi (Justify), Roses for Debra also has a 2-year-old half-sister Modarosa (Palace Malice), a yearling American Pharoah half-sister and the 2023 half-sibling by Gun Runner was unfortunately stillborn. Essential Rose, herself out of a graded stakes-winning mare and a half-sister to a graded stakes-placed stakes producer, visited Curlin for 2024. This is the female family of MGSW Flameaway (Scat Daddy) through the European blue hen Flame of Tara (Ire). Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

SMART N FANCY S., $139,500, Saratoga, 8-25, 4yo/up, f/m, 5 1/2fT, 1:01.82, gd.
1–ROSES FOR DEBRA, 124, f, 4, Liam's Map–Essential Rose, by Bernardini. ($120,000 Ylg '20 KEEJAN; $25,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-John O'Meara and Cheyenne Stable LLC; B-Blackstone Farm LLC (PA); T-Christophe Clement; J-Irad Ortiz, Jr.. $82,500. Lifetime Record: GSW, 9-7-1-0, $406,430. *1/2 to Rose's Vision (Artie Schiller), SW-USA, MSP-Can, $264,358.
2–Bubble Rock, 124, f, 4, More Than Ready–Reef Point, by Giant's Causeway. O/B-Shortleaf Stable (KY); T-Brad H. Cox. $30,000.
3–Train to Artemus, 124, m, 5, Tapizar–Pay Day Kitten, by Kitten's Joy. O-M and W Stables; B-Kenneth L. & Sarah K. Ramsey (KY); T-Kelly J. Breen. $18,000.
Margins: 3 1/4, 1, 9 1/4. Odds: 0.35, 2.85, 6.60.
Also Ran: Talkin Tipsy. Scratched: Bluefield, Can't Buy Love, Poppy Flower, Self Isolation.

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Liam’s Map Filly Shows Class in Saratoga’s Caress

Despite never having won against open stakes company, Roses for Debra nonetheless installed the 8-5 choice to best four others in Saturday's GIII Caress S. at Saratoga. Undefeated in a pair of starts since joining Christophe Clement's string earlier this season, the Pennsylvania-bred filly made short work of her rivals, coming from off the pace to win by an authoritative victory over Wakanaka (Ire).

MGSW Our Flash Drive (Ghostzapper) got off to an awkward start, spotting the field a couple of lengths as 2-1 chance Bubble Rock took control while Roses for Debra settled two lengths behind through a snappy quarter in :20.95. With Bubble Rock still in front turning for home, Wakanaka loomed up on the outside of the favorite and it appeared to be anybody's race. Unrelenting down the center of the course, Roses for Debra collared Bubble Rock midstretch and powered home a three-length winner over Wakanaka who outlasted the early front runner.

“She broke well. I thought there was going to be a little more speed in the race, but she broke so well so I just sat on her,” ridere Irad Ortiz Jr., winning his fourth race on the day's card. “When the other horse [No. 2, Bubble Rock] went, I just followed the leader. After that, I just let her do her thing from the quarter pole.”

Under the care of Presque Isle trainer Michelle Brafford, the grey reeled off a quartet of synthetic wins at that venue, including the Malvern Rose S. against state-bred company one year ago. Fourth while stepping into better company in a six furlong main track test at Keeneland in October, she came home fourth before resurfacing in 2023 with Clement.

“She came [to me] in the spring,” explained Clement. “One of our owners, Mr. [Dean] Reeves, tried to buy her last year, so we knew about the filly. The deal fell through, but we liked her. I knew the owner because we trained for the owner years ago and he's also the breeder of Big Invasion [Clement-trained graded-stakes winner]–the good sprinter–so, I got the phone call to train her which is great. I'm absolutely delighted to have her in the barn.”

Trying the turf for the first time at Pimlico this season, the 4-year-old came from off the pace to score sprinting five panels against optional claiming company May 19 before posting yet another win while progressing into 3X company and adding an extra furlong at Belmont July 3.

“She's very good. She was impressive at Pimlico. She was very impressive at Belmont,” said Clement. “She came out of the race at Belmont in great shape. When you run at Belmont you don't have to ship, you take them straight from the stalls to the paddock and back. I know it was ambitious, but why not have a look. It worked out. It's nice when you're aggressive and it works out.”

Pedigree Notes:
Rose for Debra represents the ninth group/graded stakes winner for MGISW Liam's Map (Unbridled's Song). Out of the unraced Bernardini mare Essential Rose, the filly is a half-sister to SW Rose's Vision (Artie Schiller). A daughter of the GSW Essential Edge (Storm Cat), the 12-year-old mare is from the prolific family of Flame Of Tara (Ire), responsible for a bevy of accomplished runners, including Irish Highweight route horse Salsabil (Ire) and G1SW Marju (Ire).

Saturday, Saratoga
CARESS S.-GIII, $194,000, Saratoga, 7-22, 4yo/up, f/m,
5 1/2fT, 1:02.39, gd.
1–ROSES FOR DEBRA, 120, f, 4, by Liam's Map
              1st Dam: Essential Rose, by Bernardini
              2nd Dam: Essential Edge, by Storm Cat
              3rd Dam: Rose of Tara (Ire), by Generous (Ire)
   1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($120,000 Ylg '20 KEEJAN; $25,000
Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-John O'Meara; B-Blackstone Farm LLC (PA);
T-Christophe Clement; J-Irad Ortiz, Jr. $110,000. Lifetime
Record: 8-6-1-0, $323,930. *1/2 to Rose's Vision (Artie
Schiller), SW-USA, MSP-Can, $264,358. Werk Nick Rating:
A+++. *Triple Plus* Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross
pedigree. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style
pedigree.
2–Wakanaka (Ire), 124, m, 5, Power (GB)–Storyline (Ire), by
Kodiac (GB). (£3,500 Ylg '19 GOFFPR; $975,000 RNA 4yo '22
KEENOV). O-Team Valor International and Gary Barber; B-Mrs
Jean Brennan (IRE); T-William I. Mott. $40,000.
3–Bubble Rock, 124, f, 4, More Than Ready–Reef Point, by
Giant's Causeway. O/B-Shortleaf Stable (KY); T-Brad H. Cox.
$24,000.
Margins: 2 1/4, NK, HD. Odds: 1.75, 4.80, 2.30.
Also Ran: Poppy Flower, Our Flash Drive. Scratched: Bank On Anna.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs.
VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

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Liam’s Map Filly Makes It Three Straight at Presque Isle

7th-Presque Isle Downs, $45,046, Alw (NW3L), Opt. Clm ($40,000), 9-21, 3yo/up, f/m, 6f (AWT), 1:08.64, ft, 2 3/4 lengths.
ROSES FOR DEBRA (f, 3, Liam's Map–Essential Rose, by Bernardini) would be perfect but for a debut demotion at this venue May 23 when two lengths best, only to be taken down for drifting in and causing interference. A clear-cut maiden winner second time out June 9, the gray filly was last seen posting a facile 3 3/4-length triumph in the state-bred restricted Malvern Rose S. over an extra sixteenth of a mile July 18. A cozy fit for this open-company test, Roses for Debra was content to allow a pair of rivals set things up for her, rallied three wide on the turn and pulled away through the final furlong to take it by a handy 2 3/4 lengths as the 1-2 mortal. Blackstone Farm purchased the unraced Essential Rose, a daughter of Canadian Grade III winner Essential Edge (Storm Cat), for a bargain $32,000 in foal to Lookin At Lucky at Keeneland November in 2015. The dam of Rose's Vision (Artie Schiller), SW-USA, MSP-Can, $264,358, Essential Edge is a half-sister to Grade III-placed Leading Edge (Tapit), whose daughter Pioneer's Edge (Pioneerof the Nile) is twice stakes-placed for Chiefswood Stables this season, including a third in the Aug. 14 Bison City S. Essential Rose is also responsible for the once-raced Rosie's Alibi (Justify), a $625,000 FTSAUG grad, a yearling filly by Palace Malice and a filly foal by American Pharoah, all foaled in Pennsylvania. She most recently visited Gun Runner. Sales history: $120,000 Ylg '20 KEEJAN; $25,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: SW, 4-3-1-0, $113,830. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-John O'Meara; B-Blackstone Farm LLC (PA); T-Michelle C Brafford.

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Keeneland Breeder Spotlight: Invasion a Big Tribute to O’Meara

Call it a Milestone achievement. Any farm, right up to the biggest brands of the Bluegrass, would have been proud to match the three stakes wins in 24 hours recorded by John O'Meara a couple of weekends back. And yet this is a man tending just a dozen mares, with the assistance of a single employee. Some landmark, then, in an odyssey stretching back four decades to when O'Meara first arrived in Lexington and called a farm he'd found in the bus station telephone directory.

“Is anybody Irish working there?” he asked.

Another Irishman was working there soon after, sure enough, but it would still be a long and winding road, either side of the ocean, before O'Meara went to an auction in 2002, bought 165 acres just outside Lexington and “became very friendly with the bank”. He called the farm Milestone, for an influential Irish Draft Horse his father had stood at Toomevara Stud back in Co. Tipperary. But if various experiments since have tended to confirm the odds against an enterprise on this modest scale–despite a few dozen winners as a trainer, and a bold attempt to launch a couple of stallions–then equally that's a measure of the exceptional horsemanship underpinning this remarkable treble.

It started with Big Invasion (Declaration of War), whose first three dams have all grazed Milestone pasture. Sold as a yearling for $72,000 at the 2020 September Sale to Phil Hager's Taproot Bloodstock, he has been hurtling up the sophomore ladder with five consecutive wins for Christopher Clement and Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, clocking 1:00.80 on his graded stakes debut in the GIII Quick Call S. over 5 1/2 furlongs at Saratoga.

The next afternoon another 3-year-old, Roses for Debra (Liam's Map), followed up her maiden success over the same track with a stakes score against fellow Pennsylvania-breds at Presque Isle Downs. She is trained for O'Meara himself by Michelle Brafford, having been found (knocked down to Chris Drakos) for just $25,000 in the same September Sale.

And within the hour the 6-year-old Change of Control (Fed Biz), a Milestone graduate, took her career earnings to $923,725 with her sixth black-type success in another turf sprint, at Colonial Downs. O'Meara understands Change of Control's connections are hoping to get her to the Breeders' Cup, as a graded stakes winner already at Keeneland. But the real excitement concerns Big Invasion, who got a triple-digit Beyer for his Saratoga win.

“With Declaration of War I thought I'd put some stamina into the mare, but as it turned out the speed has just been compounded in her,” O'Meara reflects. “He'd be unbeaten but for getting left in the gate on his debut. I hope he might [stretch out], because the longer you go, the longer you last. But you can't blame them, if there's big money being given away to run against 3-year-olds going short. He's with a top trainer, they take really good care of their horses, so he'll be getting every chance in the world. It's exciting.”

Whatever happens from here, Big Invasion is already a huge tribute to the way his breeder developed a family from third dam Pola (Strawberry Road {Aus}), acquired for $55,000 back in 2000. O'Meara had actually tried to buy her at the Keeneland November Sale the previous year, when culled by breeder Allen Paulson, but had to surrender at $70,000 after Frank Stronach came in for her.

“She had a lot of speed,” he recalls. “You know, :22, :44 type speed. She didn't get away in her first race, won her second, but then pulled a suspensory. I went to the Keeneland November Sale to buy her, sat around thinking there was a good deal coming up, with Strawberry Road such a solid, sound, under-rated stallion. I didn't have the money to get her that day, but then they just put her in foal to Alphabet Soup and put her in their own sale the next year, with a free Golden Missile season.”

O'Meara retained the Alphabet Soup filly that came with the package, who went on to be stakes-placed, and then used the Golden Missile cover to produce a colt he took to the September Sale with a $29,000 reserve. He made $140,000, before pinhooker Mike Miller had an even bigger touch at Gulfstream the following February, selling to Bob and Beverly Lewis for $600,000. As Going Wild, the colt won the Sham S. for D. Wayne Lukas en route to a crack at the GI Kentucky Derby.

Pola's next date was with Out of Place, and the resulting filly was retained as Pola's Place after failing to meet her reserve as a yearling but did not run until four.

“I couldn't sell her so sent her to Florida as a 2-year-old,” O'Meara recalls. “But she pulled a suspensory so I brought her home, gave her time. Dr. Bramlage ultra-sounded her and said give her more time. So I gave her another three months, took her back. And he said, 'Another two months.' And after that he said, 'Okay, you can go on.' So I sent her to Turfway on the poly, thinking it would be easier on her. And she turned out to be very fast. She was in front every [first] call, every race she ever ran in, and won a stakes race for me.”

Retired to the farm, Pola's Place was given a chance with a couple of foal shares to the young Curlin. One resulted in a filly named Curls in Place, who O'Meara was able to buy out as a $25,000 weanling on account of X-ray issues. Once again, O'Meara had to bide his time. She had ability, but wasn't showing it, including under a tag, and it was again only when she was four that she finally put it together to win a couple of races.

Big Invasion is only her third foal, both previous ones having managed a minor stakes placing.

“And she's still only 11,” O'Meara says. “She's not very big, but a beautiful looker. You look at a Ferrari and look at her, you'd think she's the Ferrari. And she's a very nice, kind mare.”

Big Invasion made a good price for Hip 3303, and will now decorate the page of his half-brother by Air Force Blue when he, too, appears deep in the September Sale. (It will also do no harm that this family has been newly decorated by Nest (Curlin), whose dam is out of a half-sister to Pola.)

“He's in the third last day, I think, but that's fine–once it's there [on the pedigree], it never goes away,” O'Meara says. “Big Invasion wasn't very big, but he was well proportioned, well put together, and a very smart horse. And this colt is much the same, moderate-sized but very intelligent, very easy to deal with.”

Though O'Meara will sell when he can, he is always happier to retain a filly. That's what he is doing with the mare's 2-year-old by Empire Maker; she also has a weanling colt by War at Will and is now in foal to Maclean's Music.

Change of Control's dam, America's Blossom (Quiet American), is also still in a position to exploit her success. She has a big, backward sophomore by Midshipman that O'Meara is still developing, and a yearling filly by Karakontie (Jpn) that he has also retained. She's now pregnant to Dialed In.

America's Blossom was found for just $7,000 at the Keeneland January Sale in 2015. “If you don't have a lot of money, you've got to do your homework,” O'Meara says. “Those Quiet American mares are really good, and she was stakes-placed herself, and very tough. She'd had one foal by Pleasantly Perfect and didn't get in foal when they bred her back, so they obviously decided to cut her loose. And January is the kind of sale where you can get a good deal: people don't want to keep them, and with the breeding season so close you can get straight going.”

We have seen how much patience O'Meara required to develop the mares behind Big Invasion, and again he has been no rush with Roses for Debra.

“She's out of a Bernardini mare that had already produced a stakes winner when I bought her,” O'Meara explained. “I sent her to Florida for the 2-year-old sales and she worked in :10 flat [at OBS April] but chipped her knee. So I had to bring her home and operate on her and give her the time. And because she's Pennsylvania-bred I sent her up there to race. On her first start she got taken down, then a couple of weeks later she won by six and now she's won a $100,000 stakes race.”

Like so many Irishmen working with young horses in the United States, O'Meara was actually raised in a National Hunt and sport horse environment. (Fitting, as such, that he should have bred Blackfoot Mystery (Out of Place), the re-trained Thoroughbred whose eventing career took him to the Rio Olympics in 2016 under Boyd Martin.) Besides Milestone, Prefairy was another resonant name at Toomevara–in both spheres–but O'Meara was only 12 when losing his father in 1969 and instead became one of many young compatriots forever indebted to Michael Osborne's mentorship at the Irish National Stud.

O'Meara then cut his teeth on farms in Australia and New Zealand before that first sampling of the Bluegrass.

“I went home in 1981 and was going to change the world,” he says wryly. “But interest rates were 22% and I couldn't get going. So went back to Mr. Osborne and he set me up with a visa and a job at Spendthrift.”

A stint at Gainesway followed, and he then spent four years working for Carl Nafzger before eventually venturing out on his own, initially renting land and boarding mares before committing to the Milestone gamble.

“My first aim was to train horses,” he says. “If you know what you're doing, you'll know where you are with a horse within a couple of months. Whereas breeding is always like a five-year plan. But while I trained a couple of nice ones, usually someone will come along to buy them and they're on their way.

“I had a couple of stallions for a time, as well. Mancini was a three-parts brother to Unbridled's Song, who was standing for $300,000. I didn't think he could lose.”

But he found a way, evidently? O'Meara responds with a laugh.

“That's a tough game,” he says. “Spendthrift had 47 stallions when I went there. A lot of them didn't make it, but they obviously had Raise A Native, Seattle Slew, J.O. Tobin, Exclusive Native, Lord Avie, Affirmed. They had 200 boarding mares and 200 mares of their own. It was a huge machine: they got the stallions because they had the mares, and the mares because they had the stallions. Mancini got a lot of sound horses but not a lot of support. I supported him as best as I could, but nearly went broke doing it.”

Holding your nerve is both harder, and even more essential, for those who can't play the numbers game. But O'Meara understands how the axiom “more haste, less speed” might have been devised specifically for Thoroughbreds–one legacy, perhaps, of an upbringing among those big, raw horses back in Ireland.

“The thing I couldn't handle about National Hunt horses is that you don't break them until they're three,” he says. “But by then they're so big they want to kill you!”

As it is, O'Meara divides his time between pre-training in the mornings–partly because he still loves the training side, and partly to keep costs under control–and then managing the mares and foals. There are five yearlings to sell this year, leaving another five whose commercial imperfections shouldn't stop them being trained. But the same approach governs both types of prep, whether for the sales or the racetrack.

“Just don't rush them,” O'Meara says. “It's hard to turn out a horse that's fit. But if you don't wait, they'll make you wait. So you just try to breed them to sound horses, take care of them growing up, and then it's just lots of long, slow work.”

And if it's unusual for the dividends to be quite so vividly compressed, O'Meara's recent streak of success will be warmly appreciated by many peers who also persevere in old school tenets of perspiration and patience. Because if you can't afford to travel the wide, smooth highway along the valley floor, every now and then sheer tenacity over the steep, crumbling mountain track will take you to the same destination.

“It's been a great experience the whole way,” O'Meara says, uncomplainingly. “And when this kind of thing happens it's fun to be able to get up in the morning and look at a horse like Curls in Place. Somebody up there seems to be looking down on me, at the moment anyway. Long may it last!”

 

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