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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Saratoga WarHorse Launches Military Armed Forces and Racehorses Program

Saratoga WarHorse, a not-for-profit organization which uses retired Thoroughbred racehorses to work with service members and veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress, will now use its program to aid individuals mobilized during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Military Armed Forces and Racehorses Program is designed to assist service members and veterans during the immediate aftermath of trauma and prevent the negative consequences of Post-Traumatic Stress. The program, which will formally launch this December, is currently accepting participants and available to service members who were mobilized during the pandemic at no cost.

Since April, more than 50,000 troops across all 50 states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands, have been activated domestically to assist in their state’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, approximately 25,000 retired and former U.S. Army medical personnel have volunteered their service.

“Tens of thousands of military troops were called upon to fight this invisible enemy,” said U.S. Army veteran and Saratoga WarHorse Foundation Chief Executive Officer Allison Cherkosly, Ph.D. “Serving in an uncertain environment–unsure whether or not the person you’re trying to help will infect you–is stressful and traumatic. Our Military FAR Program will help spare a lot of service members and their families from the suffering caused by Post-Traumatic Stress by providing early intervention shortly after enduring trauma. With this program, we have the opportunity to make a major contribution to the field of veteran care. Instead of trying to reverse the devastating consequences of Post-Traumatic Stress, we could actually prevent it.”

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Big Day at the Office for Hamm Friday

With more than 1300 wins and $30 million in career earnings, a training center in Florida and a breeding operation in Ohio, Tim Hamm has already done plenty to prove his skills as a horseman and businessman. But on Friday, he’ll get a chance to showcase his program on the biggest stage when he sends out unbeaten and more or less untested Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) to take on the household barns in the GI Juvenile Fillies. It will be his first runner, as a trainer at least, in the World Championships.

Like many conditioners, the Ohio native grew up around horses–he had experience with Saddlebreds and Standardbreds, and his parents owned an Arabian farm. His father, who worked for General Motors, trained horses off the family’s farm and shipped them in to race at Mountaineer.

Hamm attended Youngstown State and earned a bachelor’s degree in business before immediately starting his own construction company upon graduation. Business must have been pretty good, as a few years into his construction career, Hamm ventured down to Ocala to shop the 1994 OBS April sale.

He purchased a Pennsylvania-bred filly by Proof for $13,500 and, after someone explained to him what her state-bred status meant, Hamm pointed his purchase towards a debut at Philadelphia Park that July. Named Willowy Proof, Hamm’s filly romped by 9 1/4 lengths in that initial outing.

“I was coming off the track, and the breeder approached me and asked if she was for sale. I said ‘No, I’m just kind of fiddling around here,'” Hamm recalled. “But they offered me $100,000. At that time, I didn’t realize that when they ran big you could make some money selling them. So, that spurred the thought that maybe I could make a business out of this. It was either beginner’s luck or not that hard–now I know it was beginner’s luck.”

Hamm went back to Ocala the following year and purchased four more horses, who he says all became stakes winners. He also bought a farm in nearby Williston around that time, and while he’s added and subtracted to that property over the years, the majority of Hamm’s runners since 1995 have gotten their start at that facility.

Hamm also preps some babies at his farm for the 2-year-old sales, and has sold under his Blazing Meadows Farm banner the likes of champion Wait a While ($50,000 KEESEP ’04 to $260,000 OBSFEB ’05) and Grade I-winning juvenile Sky Diva ($100,000 KEESEP ’07 to $250,000 FTFFEB ’08).

He’s been to the Breeders’ Cup before as an owner with flashy Ohio-bred Too Much Bling, who he sent out to a 19 1/2-length maiden-breaking score at Thistledown in 2005. Stonerside Stable subsequently purchased a majority interest in the colt and turned him over to Bob Baffert, for whom he took a trio of graded stakes before finishing sixth in the 2006 GI Breeders’ Cup Sprint.

Hamm said he typically breaks a crop of 40 to 50 on his farm, but had 75 last year and will have around 80 2-year-olds of 2021.

A significant part of his business comes from partnering with large commercial breeders. He has a close relationship with WinStar Farm, co-breeding and campaigning Ohio-breds together and standing the stallion National Flag at Blazing Meadows Ohio as WinBlaze. Hamm has also teamed up in recent years with the likes of Three Chimneys Farm, for whom his brother Tom is Director of Stallion Seasons, and Breeders’ Cup chairman Fred Hertrich III and John Fielding. Three Chimneys and Blazing Meadows race last year’s two-time Woodbine stakes winner Fast Scene (Fast Anna) together.

“They’re on an individual basis–some of them are on deals, some we partner on and some are from conception,” Hamm said when asked about the structure of his partnerships. “Most of the WinStar horses are ones we’re breeding together. Each horse is different, how it’s structured. Historically, what we started doing years ago, if they had one they really liked but maybe the sire wasn’t that hot or maybe there was a blip on the X-rays that might not hurt them to race but would hurt them at a yearling sale; or maybe their conformation wasn’t up to what would pass at a yearling sale to really get much, we took a lot of those [on deals] and we still do some of those.”

Hamm’s first time working with Dayoutoftheoffice’s breeder and co-owner, Anthony Manganaro, Ignacio Patino and David Pope’s Siena Farm, came in 2015 with eventual 2016 My Dear S. heroine Velvet Mood (Lonhro {Aus}).

“In our first experience with Siena, they gave me a Lonhro filly who was really crooked, not real big, but I took her and they called me a week later and said, ‘You know, we feel like we’re not giving you much of a shot with that filly. If you’re going to invest this time and money, we’re going to throw in this Ghostzapper colt–a more attractive horse,'” Hamm said. “It ended up that the Lonhro filly won her first three, including a stake at Woodbine and we sold her for pretty good money. The colt turned out to be a dud, but that’s how we get started with Siena.”

Hamm said he took an equity position in Dayoutoftheoffice in exchange for training her, and it didn’t take him long to figure out he had gotten a good one.

“It was probably late January or February,” Hamm said when asked when he first knew Dayoutoftheoffice was a runner. “There were three fillies who really stood out in our crop, and sure enough all three ended up really being runners. We always thought she was the best of the three based on the fact that she had a lot of size and scope along with being very athletic. The other two were [eventual Ohio-bred multiple stakes winners] Alexandria (Constitution) and Esplanande (Daredevil). Esplanade was second in the GI Spinaway S. to the filly who was second in the Frizette, and Alexandria was third in the GIII Pocahontas S. You can identify them pretty early, but what you can’t control is injury and sickness and all that.”

Dayoutoftheoffice got an early start to her career when she scored by 4 3/4 lengths at Gulfstream May 14. She was dismissed at almost 20-1 in Saratoga’s GIII Schuylerville S. two months later, but took another leap forward to air by six lengths.

“I was fairly confident that she would run very well [in the Schylerville]–whether she would win it or not, I think all those fillies that have just broken their maiden and are going into graded stakes at Saratoga for the first time, you really don’t know how they’re going to react when they meet the next level of horse,” Hamm said. “I was very skeptical about running her

4 1/2 furlongs at Gulfstream, but she was ready, and I didn’t want to keep training on her and waiting so we figured we’d get a race in her and see how she did. I knew she had a lot of ability early, and I guess she answered the question as to whether she could up her level.”

With the Breeders’ Cup circled on the calendar for quite some time now, Hamm has kept Dayoutoftheoffice’s races well spaced out. She didn’t make a start between the July 16 Schuylerville and Oct. 10 GI Frizette S. at Belmont, while posting seven drills back and forth between Thistledown and Belterra Park in the interim.

“When you start these horses in May, and she’d been in training since at least Oct. 1 [of 2019], we’d done a lot of 2-year-olds over the years and if you just drill them and drill them and don’t give them a little break, I just don’t see them lasting,” Hamm said. “We knew we had a horse who could possibly make the Breeders’ Cup, so we tried to space it so that would be a viable option if she proved to have the ability. We were slightly worried she would be short for the Frizette–she hadn’t run in 80-something days–but her last two works heading into the Frizette were pretty good. We thought she had a heck of a chance to be tight enough, and if we came out of there, we’d have a really fresh and good horse going into the Breeders’ Cup.”

Dayoutoftheoffice proved plenty fit for the next step, and bested GI Spinaway S. romper Vequist (Nyquist) by two lengths at Belmont with a chasm of 10 1/4 lengths back to third.

“I thought it was outstanding,” said Hamm. “Watching the race, it looked like she was in control of it the whole time. She never made me question if she was going to get it done. She just looked in command from the start.”

Dayoutoftheoffice is one of four unbeaten fillies set to square off in the Juvenile, along with pricey three-for-three Baffert trainee and ‘TDN Rising Star’ Princess Noor (Not This Time) expected to go favored; Ken McPeek-conditioned Simply Ravishing (Laoban) coming off a 6 1/4-length score in the GI Darley Alcibiades S. that was so impressive it played a major role in bringing her freshman sire from New York to Kentucky for 2021; and $500,000 yearling and ‘Rising Star’ Girl Daddy (Uncle Mo), last seen taking the Sept. 3 GIII Pocahontas S. by daylight for Dale Romans and the Albaugh Family Stable.

Dayoutoftheoffice owns a best last-out Beyer Speed Figure of 95, with Vequist having earned a 91 for her Frizette second. Princess Noor, meanwhile, only has a 79 Beyer top, Simply Ravishing an 89 and Girl Daddy an 82. But Dayoutoftheoffice seems to have garnered significantly less hype than either Princess Noor or Simply Ravishing.

“Probably because I’m not Baffert or McPeek and I haven’t been to the Breeders’ Cup before,” Hamm said matter-of-factly when asked about the seemingly underdog status of a filly with as impressive a set of past performances as Dayoutoftheoffice’s and who also happens to be by the world’s hottest stallion. “There’s no other reason.”

Hamm said he has been excited to see his charge race around two turns all summer, and he called her 1:00.40 breeze in the Keeneland mud last Friday “her best work.” Now it’s time to see what she, and he, can do against the big guns.

“It’s big for our whole operation–we’ve got the training center in Ocala, the breeding farm in Ohio. The thing that means the most to us is that it lets you know that you can get there,” Hamm said. “We hope that gets contagious. Sometimes the hardest thing is getting there, and sometimes you never get back there. We’re hoping that this won’t be the last time, and you realize it’s not an impossible dream you’re chasing–that it’s attainable. We’re hoping that our people kind of all buy in a little harder and stay on board, and it’s the same with our clients. It shows our clients that if we’ve got the right horse, we can get there. And hopefully it’ll allow us to keep building stronger relationships with them.”

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This Side Up: Young Guns Seek Juvenile Momentum

You can’t really resent someone hoarding the ammunition, if he only needs it because he’s being forced to play Russian roulette.

That’s pretty much how things are for all those new, unproven stallions who corral such huge books of mares. Yes, I remain ever aggrieved on behalf of those quiet achievers who never get commercial traction, despite results that will almost invariably prove beyond their emerging rivals. But I do feel increasing sympathy for the young guns, because their margin for error is zero. They have to land running, or they can pack their bags.

Only rarely can a horse persuade the market to repent, like Daredevil. His export to Turkey last year, certainly, was a good deal more typical than his recent repatriation. After entertaining 376 mares across three seasons, he had found himself reduced to 21 as breeders moved on to the next parade of clean-cut cadets.

Such is the ruthlessly narrow window of opportunity. While allowances may be made for the two-turn type–whose clientele tend to be in less of a hurry and may even, glory be, include end-users–any of us can already look down the current freshmen’s table and speculate which may be first to Louisiana, and which to Korea.

The juvenile program at the Breeders’ Cup on Friday serves as a real “windsock” for those latest stallions trying to get airborne. Needless to say, we also have several established names defending their patriarchal status through the likes of Essential Quality (Tapit). But the annual distribution of the mare pool is such that the most precocious animals in any crop–typically out of more commercial dams–tend to represent the new blood.

Freshman sire Not This Time | Jon Siegel

Sure enough, Not This Time looks to seal his flying start with an unbeaten favorite, Princess Noor, in the GI Juvenile Fillies. In the same race, others near the top of the freshmen’s league are represented by Simply Ravishing (Laoban) and Vequist (Nyquist).

Success for Vequist would show how tightly these cycles turn: Nyquist himself, in sealing his championship at the Breeders’ Cup, belonged to the first crop of Uncle Mo–who duly gained an eponymous momentum he has maintained ever since.

Nyquist also fields Gretzky the Great in the GI Juvenile Turf (presented by Coolmore America), where Outwork has the chance to consolidate his own strong start through Outadore. And in the GI Juvenile (presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance) itself, a whole bunch of freshmen take a hand: Not This Time again, plus one apiece for Upstart, Frosted and Brody’s Cause; and a couple of longshots for Laoban.

Even getting this far, mind, is only a start. Plenty of stallions have faltered after producing one or two headliners early in their careers. The challenge, then, is to consolidate after the same fashion as Maclean’s Music, who gained his first-crop foothold through the GI Preakness success of Cloud Computing but has now, crucially, built on that with two Breeders’ Cup favorites: Complexity, in the GI Big Ass Fans Dirt Mile; and Jackie’s Warrior, here in the Juvenile.

Complexity has regrouped splendidly after bombing in the 2018 Juvenile, having pitched up (just like Jackie’s Warrior) as a dazzling GI Champagne winner. Jackie’s Warrior’s forte, unsurprisingly in a barn full of speedballs, appears to be “pouring it on”. Whether he can stretch again remains to be seen: for the one-turn mile at Belmont, he tempered his opening fractions to 23.12 and 46.54, having blazed 22.56 and 44.83 in the GI Runhappy Hopeful S. and 22.06 and 44.85 over six on his previous start. The handicappers who think money grows on speed figure trees will seek no farther.

But if Maclean’s Music is a model for the rookies–in his own freshman campaign, 20 winners from just 40 starters conceived at $6,500 earned him 181 mares (including the dam of Jackie’s Warrior) at $25,000 the following spring–then he is still gazing upwards at venerable Classic influences like Tapit and the late Empire Maker.

Both have aristocratic sons menacing Jackie’s Warrior, but whereas Essential Quality–his family newly decorated by Japanese champ Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn})–is a Grade I winner over the track, Classier arrives here very raw.

The late Empire Maker could add to his legacy | EquiSport Photos

The single consolation, when Empire Maker died at the start of the year, was that he had long secured his legacy, with grandsons at stud including American Pharoah, Cairo Prince, Classic Empire, Midnight Storm and Always Dreaming. True, their respective sires had left the stage: Pioneerof the Nile predeceased Empire Maker, while Bodemeister was one of those posted to Turkey after failing to build on his breakout. With another couple of crops in the pipeline, however, Empire Maker may yet add one or two direct heirs.

As a $775,000 Keeneland September yearling, Classier was certainly priced to be a stallion–and his powerful ownership group could not have asked for a better start. They will be making no assumptions, however, after what happened with another son of Empire Maker in this race last year.

The implosion of Eight Rings opened the door to Storm the Court (Court Vision), whose shock success was by no means an outlier in a race that has also given us the likes of Action This Day (Kris S.), Wilko (Awesome Again), Vale of York (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Anees (Unbridled). In that tradition, I offer you Rombauer (Twirling Candy).

Certainly his sire sets an exemplary pattern to the young guns, having dropped from $15,000 to $10,000 when his first runners appeared before earning gradual increments to $40,000. In the present market, moreover, for Twirling Candy to hold that fee for 2021 in effect represents another hike. And the diversity of his best stock, from dirt dashers (like GI Breeders’ Cup Sprint candidate Collusion Illusion) to turf routers, puts him in a strong position in the race eventually to succeed Candy Ride (Arg).

Actually his sire’s flexibility almost put Rombauer off the scent, as he started his career on grass. But then the excellent Michael McCarthy switched John and Diane Fradkin’s homebred to the main track for the GI American Pharoah S. The result was a really auspicious two-turn dirt reconnaissance. Detached early, while appearing perfectly at ease, he circled the field with a powerful move and closed to within a length of the winner, who had been handy throughout, clearing away all the while from Classier’s odds-on barnmate Spielberg (Union Rags).

Rombauer has royal Californian blood: his second dam is Ultrafleet, who gave us not only Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner California Flag (Avenue of Flags) but also his sister Cambiocorsa, “queen of the hill” at Santa Anita and granddam of Roaring Lion (Kitten’s Joy).

This winter brings us the poignant, fleeting opportunity to buy the only weanlings by Roaring Lion, whose story reminds us how unpredictable are the paths ahead of even the most wonderful young horses. Safe travels to all, then. All the rest is gravy.

 

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