Respite Farm Proves Small, But Mighty

Dr. Mike Cavey and his wife Dr. Nancy Temple have proven the old adage of quality over quantity. At their Respite Farm in Paris, Ky, the couple have been able to do a lot with a little, producing two champions and a Grade II-winning top young sire from a broodmare band of just seven. They will offer four weanlings from their boutique breeding operation at the upcoming Keeneland November Sale.

Cavey and Temple hit their first home run with a family they developed for five generations out of the first mare they ever purchased, Hot Slippers (Rollicking). Their patience and commitment to those bloodlines paid off as Hot Slippers is now the fourth dam of champion and top sire Uncle Mo.

Respite Farm sold the son of Indian Charlie for just $160,000 at Keeneland November and he took home an Eclipse Award after an undefeated juvenile season. Uncle Mo has proven equally talented since taking up stud duties at Coolmore’s Ashford Stud, producing fellow champion juvenile and GI Kentucky Derby hero Nyquist in his first crop, as well as Grade II winner Laoban.

Standing at Darley, Nyquist is the leading first-crop sire by black-type winners, producing two Grade I scorers in his initial crop. Laoban is number three on that list and also has a top-level winner already thanks to GI Darley Alcibiades S. victress Simply Ravishing. He started his career in New York at Becky Thomas’ Sequel New York, but will relocate to WinStar Farm in Kentucky for 2021.

“We’ve been lucky,” said Cavey, who also bred champion Champagne Room (Broken Row). “We were hoping Laoban would come back to Kentucky. We hope to be able to breed to him.”

Cavey and Temple have, of course, supported Uncle Mo at stud. For example, they bred the dam of Champagne Room, Lucky To Be Me (Bernstein), to the leading stallion and sold her to Japan’s Katsumi Yoshida for $1.25-million at the 2017 KEENOV sale.

“We’ve had five generations of Uncle Mo’s family and Champagne Room is the fourth generation of one of our families,” said Cavey, who also breeds cattle. “We bred Champagne Room’s dam to Uncle Mo, which combined both of our families. She went to Japan and her son broke his maiden this past weekend.”

In addition to breeding to Uncle Mo, Cavey and Temple have also supported his sons. In fact, one of their top prospects heading to the Keeneland November sale is a daughter of Nyquist.

Hip 943 is out of Cayman Sunrise (Petionville), who is a full-sister to MGSW Sailors Sunset and MSW Sailor’s Sister. She is also the dam of SP Empire Power (Bodemeister).

“We have a Nyquist who is exceptional,” Cavey said. “She is a really, really nice filly. She is a half to a Bodemeister stakes horse we bred and raised. She may be as good as anything I’ve ever bred.”

Cavey was equally enthusiastic about Hip 1572, a daughter of Liam’s Map. She is out of the Giant’s Causeway mare Rooms, who is a half to SW Congo Kaye (Congaree) and GSP Westwood Pride (Pleasantly Perfect).

“We also have a Liam’s Map filly out of a Giant’s Causeway mare we bought as a broodmare prospect,” Cavey said. “It is a toss up as to which of those is the best. Sounds crazy, but I’d put either one of them up against Champagne Room, Uncle Mo or anything I’ve ever bred.”

Respite Farm’s Keeneland November contingent also includes a Cairo Prince filly from the family of Champagne Room (Hip 1785) and Cross Traffic filly (Hip 3046) out of the Uncle Mo mare Jessica Clay.

The Keeneland November Sale kicks off Sunday, Nov. 9.

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Oct. 31 Insights

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

WELL-BRED GODOLPHIN FILLY DEBUTS AT CHURCHILL

8th-CD, $85K, Msw, 2yo, f, 6f, 4:36p.m.

Godolphin homebred ANOUSH (Candy Ride {Arg}) makes her career bow in this spot for trainer Brendan Walsh. A half to SW Sunset Wish (Malibu Moon), the bay’s second dam is GISW Cara Rafaela, who produced champion and top sire Bernardini (A.P. Indy) and the GISP dam of MGISW Love and Pride (A.P. Indy). Steve Asmussen unveils Whisper Hill homebred Happy Success (Bernardini), a half-sibling to Grade I-winning sire Brilliant Speed (Dyanformer) and SW & GSP Souper Speedy (Indian Charlie). This is also the family of Canadian Horse of the Year With Approval (Caro {Ire}); Canadian champion Serenading (A.P. Indy); and MGISW Touch Gold (Deputy Minister). Rigney Racing’s $425,000 KEESEP buy Minute Waltz (Nyquist) also debuts here. She is out of a half-sister to Grade I winners Justin Phillip (First Samurai), and Greenpointcrusader (Bernardini); as well as graded winners Successful Mission (Successful Appeal), Keyed Entry (Honour and Glory) and Algorithms (Bernardini). TJCIS PPs

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This Side Up: A Very Different Experience-but Euro Strategy Same as Ever

It’s the baby I can’t get out of my mind, try as I might.

Maybe you feel it shouldn’t have been out at all, on such an evening and in such a place: sitting there in its diaper, on a table, under the adoring smiles of the good-looking couple who had brought it into the raucous bar. But then the infant looked very much at home, alternately raising a glass of bourbon and a cheroot to its lips.

Only in L.A.; only on Halloween. On closer inspection, of course, the baby proved to be a doll and its precocious addictions automated. But Hollywood was only down the road, and its proud “father” explained that he was a professional. He created life-like dummies for the kind of roles that cause actors to become a little testy with their agents, like being blown up or run over or pushed off a cliff.

His Halloween stunt was plainly in pretty appalling taste, but the traveler needs an open mind and it was fun to hang out for a few minutes. This, after all, is just the kind of thing that makes Breeders’ Cup week what it is, for those of us who come over from Europe not simply for the most captivating race meeting on the planet but also for all the kaleidoscopic cultural impressions–some challenging, some enchanting–that go with it.

Sheer numbers at the Breeders’ Cup will look very different this year from last | Horsephotos

Back in Pasadena for Halloween last year, I was baffled and entertained anew by the communal delirium of a carnival that has, until a gradual commercial seepage in recent years, never had anything like the same importance on my side of the Atlantic. But the spectres, at Santa Anita, seemed all too real: we were all haunted by that harrowing sequence of breakdowns earlier in the year. In the event, a tremendous collective effort was bitterly unravelled in the final stages of the Classic itself, dashing to smithereens the champagne flutes all those diligent veterinarians and administrators must have been on the point of raising to their lips.

Let’s not neglect to revive an overdue toast, then, after Santa Anita recently concluded its fall meet with zero fatalities from 1,106 starters and 51,200 training bouts. Sadly, however, the Breeders’ Cup this year finds itself under a far more pervasive cloud.

For it is not just transatlantic devotees like me, grounded by the pandemic, who will feel forlornly detached this time round. Even Lexingtonians, the lucky residents of my hometown-from-home, will be painfully reminded that the whole point of the Breeders’ Cup circus is how vibrantly, and how intimately, it entwines people from all walks of life; from all parts of America, and beyond.

Some bring a particular horse, and partisan hopes. Most, however, are united by impartial fervor for the Thoroughbred, and this ultimate test of its capacity for noble endeavor. And, between mornings on the track and evenings on the town, the anticipation tends to be at least as exciting as the consummation.

As it is, the horses now have a week to thaw the human coldness of this wretched year. (And, incidentally, also to reconcile any froideurs likely to be exacerbated, in the meantime, by such a contentious election.) Will they be equal to that extra burden? We can but hope.

From the European point of view, however, that hope continues to stagnate. I won’t reprise, for the umpteenth time, how disastrously the raiders have mislaid the sense of adventure that yielded many of their finest moments at the Breeders’ Cup. Suffice to say that not a single European entry has been made in any of the dirt races, an absolutely embarrassing state of affairs when you consider how dramatically “turf” horses (both in breeding and experience) have transformed perceptions in years past.

Maximum Security working last week toward the Classic | Horsephotos

In fairness, the Coolmore partners already have a momentous stake in the Classic through Maximum Security (New Year’s Day). And they remain the one European power that reliably grasps the value, to the breed, of measuring horses in a different environment and different marketplace. (The best European racehorse of recent times, in contrast, never once spent a night away from his stable in Newmarket.)

Their willingness to roll the dice has come at a mild cost, perhaps, in the way Americans perceive their principal trainer, Aidan O’Brien. But remember that Bobby Frankel, another we knew to be a genius, had to wait for his 39th starter to win a Breeders’ Cup race; and John Sadler for his 43rd. And, almost invariably, horses shipping for Europe are being asked to regroup even as their reserves run low at the end of a long campaign.

O’Brien has saddled a dozen Breeders’ Cup scorers, including both European winners the first time the series came to Lexington. But last year the entire, 36-strong raiding party depended for its solitary success on his son, who pulled the Filly and Mare Turf out of the fire with Iridessa (Ire) (Ruler of the World {Ire}). (O’Brien and his wife Annemarie, remember, did gain credit not only as breeders of the trainer, but also of Iridessa herself.)

O’Brien divides as many as 10 of his winners between just two races, six in the Turf and four in the Juvenile Turf. Such a perfectionist hardly needs telling that he has unfinished business in other disciplines. But while these two races may seem pretty seamless, to American eyes, they are actually divided by a spectrum that shows how O’Brien, like all great trainers, views each race in a horse’s career as an organic part of a bigger, longer project.

The Turf is a destination for a horse reaching its prime, like Highland Reel (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Found (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) or High Chaparral (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells). For the adolescents sent over for the Juvenile Turf, however, it is as much about new experience–long travel, change of training environment, sharp tracks–as the customary stakes of prizemoney or a stud career.

Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy) nailed it both ways, in 2017, gaining the laurels on the day while also laying the ground for a switch to dirt, where he proved better yet. The next year, nobody gave a second glance at Anthony Van Dyck (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) after he finished a rather dazed ninth. But the following June he showed the dividends, over the Epsom rollercoaster, by winning the Derby itself.

O’Brien’s candidate for the race this year is the first foal of none other than Found, a War Front colt named Battleground. Albeit more by accident than design, having been held up by a cough, he will be much fresher than the typical raider having made three starts in June and July and then disappeared. He broke his maiden at Royal Ascot, no less, and then followed up at Goodwood–a useful track to educate a horse with America in mind, though he will duly want to look a bit sharper about his work this time. The form doesn’t look too gripping, but he is too valuable a prospect to be sent here without due purpose.

His pedigree, in mingling the best of transatlantic influences, represents exactly what horsemen should always be looking to achieve–at the Breeders’ Cup and beyond. In racing terms, there’s a similar exercise underway with Qatar Racing’s Kameko (Kitten’s Joy), whose Classic success at Newmarket in May underlined just how culpably obtuse European breeders have been in learning the lessons offered about their sire by poor old Roaring Lion. (The one man sharp enough to buy both horses being David Redvers.)

That’s another theme I have probably labored enough, by this stage. But while it may sound paradoxical, to me these are two sides of the same coin. Their turf horses, given the chance, would do far better in next weekend’s dirt races than most European horsemen would nowadays seem to expect. At the same time, however, many American stallions–not just Kitten’s Joy but speed-carrying dirt sires–would also give European mares a better chance of producing Classic horses on their home turf.

But you know what they say. You can lead a horse to water, and all that. And much the same is true of horsemen. After all, when even the babies drink bourbon, why would any of us try to get through such a bittersweet week on water?

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Lexus Named Official Breeders’ Cup Partner

Officials at the Breeders’ Cup announced Friday that Lexus will be the Official Luxury Vehicle and Transportation Partner of the 2020 World Championships, to be held Nov. 6-7 at Keeneland, and will provide participants with exclusive experiences. Breeders’ Cup and the luxury automobile company, in partnership with sports management and consulting firm JMI Sports, will provide a fleet of luxury vehicles to squire owners, trainers, breeders, and partners to the track and other relevant areas. The parking lot at Keeneland will be designated as the “Lexus Lot.”

“We are delighted to be partnering with Lexus, one of the world’s most premier automobile brands, to provide exclusive experiences for participants and viewers of the 2020 World Championships and reinforce Breeders’ Cup as a leading luxury lifestyle event,” said Chris McNamara, Breeders’ Cup Senior Vice President, Corporate Partnerships.

The partnership also involves sponsorship of this year’s Jockey Cam. The 2020 Breeders’ Cup will be the first Thoroughbred racing event in the U.S. to use two Jockey Cams during live competition.

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