Sunday Stallion Beat A Treat As Always

NEWMARKET, UK–There's still some important business to be done in the sale ring but the Sunday between the foal sale and the mare sale at Tattersalls always has something of an end-of-term feel to it as breeders tour the local studs to view stallions and sample a range of hot sausage rolls.

First stop on a mini tour for the TDN team, which sadly did not include all the studs, was to Lanwades to see an impeccable quartet. One of the most enjoyable features of Kisten Rausing's traditional December open day is that it invariably includes either the owners of or those closely connected to her sires. Sure enough, this Sunday Sir Percy's owners Victoria and Anthony Pakenham were there along with the Derby winner's former trainer Marcus Tregoning and his son George, who posed for the lovely accompanying photograph taken by Nancy Sexton. Sir Percy is now the veteran of the Lanwades ranks at the age of 18 but looked a picture in the winter sunshine with his devoted handler Peter Manuel.

Heike Bischoff and Niko Lafrentz, the proud owner/breeders of the German Derby winner Sea The Moon (Ger), whose popularity seems to grow with each passing season, were also on hand. The Gestut Gorlsdorf owners have enjoyed some good foal sale results of late, including topping the Goffs November Sale with a Frankel (GB) half-sister to Sea The Moon.

The Niarchos family's racing manager Alan Cooper was also at Lanwades and was keenly videoing the French Derby winner Study Of Man (Fr), who has let down into a magnificent specimen. A reminder of the greatness of his sire Deep Impact (Jpn) had been provided that same morning by Contrail (Jpn), who brought the curtain down on a glittering career with victory in the Japan Cup. European breeders are fortunate to have access to his bloodline via Saxon Warrior at Coolmore in Ireland and Study Of Man, a grandson of the great Miesque, in Newmarket.

Sir Mark Prescott, who must be the apple of Kirsten Rausing's eye, having trained Alpinista (GB) to emulate her grandam Albanova (GB) by winning three German Group 1 races this season, was one of a number of trainers at the Lanwades parade, along with Sir Michael Stoute, Jane Chapple-Hyam, Rae Guest, David Simcock and George Margarson. Emma Balding was also in attendance and is an astute breeder in her own right as well as being the mother of Andrew, who trained Sandrine (GB) to win the G2 Albany S. and G2 Duchess of Cambridge S. in the Lanwades colours this season. The filly is an exciting Classic prospect next season for her imposing sire Bobby's Kitten, the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner and son of Kitten's Joy.

That sireline has of course been seen to great effect on these shores via the late Roaring Lion and more recently by 2000 Guineas winner Kameko, who is another sire well worth a visit at Longholes Stud this week with a year at stud now under his belt. Price Bell Jr, who stands another top-class son of Kitten's Joy in Oscar Performance at Mill Ridge Farm in Kentucky, had come to check out the opposition at Longholes and was a welcome visitor along with Dr Chandler.

The handsome dark brown Kameko led a trio of sires from Tweenhills who are in Newmarket for a temporary holiday. One who should feel right at home in the town is Lightning Spear (GB), who spent three of his six seasons in training in Newmarket under the excellent care of David and Jenny Simcock. He always appeared to be a laidback individual out on the Heath in the mornings and that lovely temperament has not deserted him in his second career.

Havana Gold (Ire), one of the faster sons of Teofilo (Ire) who already has his own Group 1-winning son Havana Grey (GB) at stud at Whitsbury Manor, completed the trio. For those trying to breed a durable, early 2-year-old, it's worth remembering that Havana Gold's son Chipotle (GB) won the Brocklesby on the first day of the 2021 season and, eight starts later, completed his year with a win the listed Two-Year-Old Trophy, having also won at Royal Ascot. 

Longholes is also hosting the Newsells Park Stud stallion Without Parole (GB) this week and the elegant Group 1-winning son of Frankel (GB) is another who must be seen in the flesh as he is about to embark on his second season at stud.

There is also a collaborative approach between stallion masters at the National Stud, which, along with its own stallions, is temporarily home to Whitsbury Manor Stud's son of Scat Daddy, the statuesque Sergei Prokofiev, and A'Ali (Ire), who has recently retired to Meadow Farm Stud in Marlborough, a new stallion base owned by well-known equine vet Rob Dallas and his wife Catherine. A'Ali, a compact son of the late Society Rock (Ire), has a racing profile and physique which will doubtless make him popular with commercial breeders. 

Whitsbury Manor and the National Stud have gone into partnership, along with Coolmore and Nick Bradley, to stand Lope Y Fernandez (Ire) in Newmarket. Lope is the operative word for the 4-year-old, who has a long, loose walk and appears to be pretty relaxed about life. The winner of the G3 Round Tower S. as a juvenile, the son of Lope De Vega (Ire) was then third in the Irish 2000 Guineas and placed in three further Group 1 races at three before returning at four to run second to Palace Pier (GB) in the G1 Queen Anne S.

Time Test (GB), one of the emerging success stories of the season for the British stallion scene, will return to the National Stud from New Zealand on Dec. 20 and looks set to have a very busy season in Newmarket.

Breeders in town for the sale this week can also take advantage of visiting the stallions at Juddmonte, Cheveley Park Stud, Shadwell's Beech House Stud and Darley's Dalham Hall Stud. The latter is showing the new recruits Palace Pier (GB) and Space Blues (Ire), who are bound to attract plenty of visitors.

Our thanks to all the studs who have opened their doors, and especially to the stallion handlers for their hard work and patience on a cold day.

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This Side Up: A Gift That Keeps On Giving

Hang on a minute. Weren't the seven fat years supposed to be followed by seven lean years? The way the market has gone in 2021, we have barely had seven lean minutes. Nothing, certainly, approaching the kind of reset required, logically and historically, for the cyclical functioning of capitalism.

The prospect of some such “correction” had been the only latent comfort, cold as it was, for a bloodstock market confronted by the global economic shock of the pandemic. Because a decade of almost relentless growth wasn't even ending due to any inherent weakness of the industry: we were just being broadsided, out of nowhere, by something that nobody could ever have factored into their calculations. (Not, at any rate, without Pharoah summoning Joseph from the dungeon). If we took our medicine, at least we knew that the graph now had more space to accommodate a fresh spike in the profit line.

In the event, the market barely wobbled. There were some terrifying days for the 2-year-old sector, admittedly, while clearance rates often suggested a nervous pragmatism, notably in the European market. But overall demand on both sides of the Atlantic proved far more resilient than anticipated. And we have all seen-with due relief, among those who had felt trapped by the slow cycles of our business-how values have come roaring back in 2021.

On the face of it, then, some will be wondering whether we should also renew their anxiety that the market, at some point, remains bound to overheat? The long bull run up to 2020, after all, had been driven by fiscal responses to the last emergency in 2008: continuous doping of the economy with cash, via low interest rates and quantitative easing. This recovery already has a very different feel. It must negotiate rising inflation and fractured supply chains, while the panic of stock markets Friday betrayed an ongoing instability.

Well, whatever happens, our own particular niche of the economy should not overlook a “correction” that did actually take place, this time last year. At that point, even volatility felt like a remote prospect. Everything was stuck. Whether on moral or business grounds–or both, which should perhaps always be the case for capitalism to operate healthily–many stud farms felt obliged to show breeders that they were “all in this together” and took a scythe to their fees.

Nor were they just talking a good game. Sure, even at the best of times they will always trim a few stallions that need a little help. But this time the top dozen Bluegrass farms collectively cut sires with their first foals due, for instance, by 16.2%. In 2020, they had eased the preceding intake by just 0.5%. Stallions about to present their first yearlings were slashed by 19.9%, compared with 8.33% for their predecessors in 2020. And those launching their first juveniles came down fully 22.8%, again more than double the 10.2% squeeze on the equivalent group the previous year. Moreover many senior, proven stallions–who should really have been at a premium, as a relatively safe harbor in turbulent times–also took generous cuts.

Now that the boom times seem to have returned so quickly, however, it is hardly as though stud accountants can turn round to breeders and say: “Well, thank goodness the storm seems to be abating. We do hope you guys will remember how we stood by y'all in an hour of need. But you will understand that we must now restore our prices to the levels we felt competitive, and mutually viable, before last year.”

Instead they have obliged breeders with the kind of selective cuts customary in a normal trading environment–only this time, of course, from a much lower base. And that has to mean one of two things. Either stallion fees were way too high, up until last year; or they are now pitched at such a level, in a humming market, that breeders have a pretty historic opportunity.

Take Omaha Beach, who looked very fairly priced when retiring to Spendthrift at $45,000 and duly welcomed 215 mares in 2020. The one and only reason to cut him to $35,000 for 2021 was that the late B. Wayne Hughes–leading the way, as so often, and promptly emulated by most rival farms–had responded to the crisis by reducing 15 of the farm's 21 stallions. Remember that when Bolt d'Oro had similarly started with 214 mares, in 2019, Spendthrift had left his 2020 fee unchanged.

Omaha Beach promptly replicated his debut book precisely, with another 215 covers, and has made a spectacular debut at the sales, dominating the freshmen weanling averages at $144,692. Nonetheless the Spendthrift team, respectful of the Hughes legacy, have indulged clients by giving him an extra trim to $30,000. This is the type of gesture often made by commercial farms when a young stallion, whose early supporters are demonstrably disposed to use new sires, must compete with the rookies meanwhile brought into play on two subsequent turns of the carousel. It's an incentive to keep the faith, in anticipation of continued momentum at the yearling sales and then on the racetrack. So it's a coherent and familiar strategy, albeit not one that every farm would consider particularly necessary after a sire has passed his first tests (book sizes/sales debut) as well as Omaha Beach. Without the pandemic, however, Spendthrift would surely have been cutting him from $45,000 to $40,000. So, in effect, we're getting a 25% saving on one of the most plausible prospects in Kentucky–even though the market for the sale of his foals has basically retrieved its 2019 values.

Now we all know that our industry faces some uncomfortable challenges; and that it isn't addressing some of them terribly well. But there are another 51 weeks in the year to gnash our teeth over those. For once, let's recognize some positives. A lot of people out there seem to be eager to buy themselves a Thoroughbred, just at the moment when breeding one has become more affordable. Perhaps, after the frustrations of lockdown, the affluent have been reminded that life is for living. If not, well, purse money at some tracks is even threatening to give their investment an air of viability.

So whatever twists and turns await, the initial road out of the pandemic has proved straight and smooth. And let's not forget that we were all given some free gas in the tank.

Sure, maybe stallion fees were too steep before. But they do represent a critical variable, when other base costs–such as keep and labor–are pretty constant, and sufficient to make skimping on your choice of stallion a false economy. Given how marginal a “correction” we had to absorb, in ringside demand, we should count ourselves fortunate that the stallion farms volunteered to substitute one of their own.

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‘If The Horses Aren’t Trying To Kill Me, It’s No Fun’: Tending To Stallions Is Zurick’s Extreme Sport

Christina Zurick doesn't consider herself a risk-taker in the course of her everyday life.

She doesn't climb mountains or ski down them, she doesn't ride bulls or surf giant waves, and if a plane leaves the runway, she doesn't intend to exit it via parachute.

She's got a couple German Shepherds. That's about as dangerous as it gets.

Close your eyes and listen to Zurick discuss what she likes about her job as a stallion groom at Hill 'n' Dale Farms, though, and it might sound like any number of extreme sports athletes explaining what compels them to put their bodies on the line as a vocation.

“I like that element of danger, which sounds crazy, but if the horses aren't trying to kill me, it's no fun,” Zurick said. “A lot of the guys think it's funny and say, 'Oh, this one's a problem. Hand him off to Christina.'”

Earning that status as a Kentucky stud farm's first-call for difficult stallions is a badge of honor that many take years to earn, if they ever do, and as a 25-year-old woman whose eyes barely reach the withers of the horses she cares for, Zurick does not fit the profile of what's expected in that position.

A tired adage in the Thoroughbred sport is that horses don't know who they're sired by or what their odds are on the tote board, but they also don't know anything about the equally tired unwritten rules guiding who is “supposed” to take care of them.

Though she shares duties on several stallions on the Hill 'n' Dale roster, Zurick's two primary charges are the farm's two most proven stallions, and the ones with the highest stud fees: Hall of Famers Curlin and Ghostzapper. Taking care of each one was a unique fulfillment of a childhood dream.

In 2007, a pre-teen Zurick in Minnesota was firmly on “Team Curlin” among that season's deep class of 3-year-olds, and she made a point to learn the colt's every detail. A call in to a local sports talk radio program to extoll the virtues of the future Horse of the Year led to her becoming a regular guest on the program to discuss racing topics.

That love of the champion chestnut stayed with her through to her employment at Hill 'n' Dale, where she was initially assigned Curlin as a six-month fill-in for his usual groom, who was out with a broken foot. She was placed on him full-time when Hill 'n' Dale moved its operations to Xalapa Farm in Paris, Ky., last year.

“When it first happened, I knew it was only temporary, so I thought, 'Okay, well, at least I got to take care of him for a little bit of time,'” Zurick said. “Then, I guess I did a good enough job, because he assigned him to me permanently, and when that happened, I immediately texted my parents. I don't drink, so I told them, 'Guys, I'm having a pint of ice cream tonight in celebration.' I messaged pretty much everyone I knew. I can't believe it to this day. I love that horse so much.

“I told my parents, if I never did anything else in racing, at least I took care of him,” she continued. “That was my main goal in life, and I achieved it.”

Christina Zurick and Curlin at Hill 'n' Dale Farms.

Ghostzapper was another horse whose career Zurick knew by heart as a child, but for an entirely different reason, owing to the “Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships” video game released in 2005.

“I used to play that all the time,” she said. “They had Ghostzapper's Breeders' Cup Classic replay on there, and I could recite Tom Durkin's call word for word. If you would have told me when I was 12 years old playing that Xbox game that one day, I would take care of that horse and take care of Curlin, I probably would have fainted and never woke up.”

Considering the lofty goals she has achieved, it seems impossible to think Zurick was considering getting out of working with horses entirely in the middle of the last decade, but a particularly hard run of luck working for farms in the Midwest had left her exploring her options.

“I was at rock bottom at that point,” she said. “I had $500 to my name and no car, so my mom had to pick me up in Iowa and bring me back to Minnesota.”

Meanwhile in Kentucky, fellow Minnesotan Annette Lokkesmoe was working at Margaux Farm through the Kentucky Equine Management Internship, and she'd heard about her friend's troubles back home. It didn't take long for a course of action to be put in place.

She called me and found out what happened, and she said, 'I'm coming home for Christmas, picking you up, and you're coming back to Kentucky with me to work at Margaux,'” Zurick said. “She said,' if you talk to the farm manager, I guarantee you you'll get a job.'”

Lokkesmoe was correct in her assessment, and the two Minnesotans shared a house at Margaux Farm, where Zurick worked as a groom.

Zurick was placed in a barn with a large group of 2-year-old colts, and that time spent with the youngsters was what convinced her that she wanted to work with stallions.

After nine months at Margaux Farm, she started handed out resumes at stud farms around Kentucky, but had the door closed on her for a lack of breeding shed experience, and, bluntly, because she wasn't a guy. It doesn't take an entire hand, or even most of the hand, to count out the female stallion grooms at major Kentucky farms.

Zurick took a job with Stonestreet Farm's broodmare division with the hopes of networking her way to a stallion farm, and she was successful in May 2019 when she joined the Hill 'n' Dale team. Now having worked with both stallions and mares, Zurick said she always knew the extremes that working with a stallion can bring were what she wanted all along.

“It's very different with a stallion versus a mare,” she said. “Mares are a little bit tougher at some points, but then they'll have a really sweet side. With the stallions, you're constantly in danger. There are very few that are really chill and aren't ever going to hurt you.

“I always wanted to do the breeding shed, because I get that adrenaline rush from that,” she continued. “If it's not going to maybe kill me or hurt me, I don't want to do it.”

The list of women who are chased out of male-dominated fields in the Thoroughbred industry is frustratingly long, and Zurick had expected that kind of challenge as the only female in her new position at Hill 'n' Dale. However, she said her experience has been the exact opposite, helped greatly by the unflinching support of the farm's stallion manager Larry Walton.

“Larry lets me jump stallions in the breeding shed, and that never happens when you're a girl,” Zurick said. “It's all because Larry believes in me. Last year was the first time that I did it. He radioed down to the barn, 'Hey Christina, can you bring Mucho Macho Man?' I said, 'Are you sure I can do that?' and he said 'You've got it. What are you being a chicken for? Get him over here.' It's just so crazy to have a boss that believes in you like that, because I'd never had it before. I've learned so much from him and owe so much to him.”

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Of course, even with Walton ensuring that the working environment is as harassment-free as possible for a female stallion groom, Zurick still had to prove she belonged on the team based on her own body of work.

In handling stallions Zurick said she has two basic tenets.

“My biggest thing is I like to find a balance with stallions,” she said. “A lot of people like to manhandle them, and I don't want to have to do that if I don't have to. There's a line that they know they're not supposed to cross, and there's a line I'm not supposed to cross, and we just respect each other in that way. We respect each other's bubbles and we respect each other's boundaries, and when they cross that boundary, it's like 'okay, you need to take a step back, sir.'

“The main thing with stallions is, you can't be afraid,” she continued. “They second you are afraid, they know it and they'll exploit every angle that they can on you. You have to go every day with this thought that I might get hurt today, and it is what it is. That's why we have worker's comp.”

Zurick described the farm's star stallions Curlin and Ghostzapper as two horses with quite similar personalities, in that they both know their importance and expect those around them to know it, too. She described Curlin as “a handful,” but one with an outstanding mind. As the horse she obsessed over as a child, Curlin lived up to the hype.

“He's a cool dude,” Zurick said. “If he likes you, he's really sweet. He'll still try to bite you and he still messes with me, but it's not to the point where he's legitimately going to hurt me. He's legitimately the smartest horse I've ever worked with in my life. He's very communicative about what he wants, what he needs, when he wants it.

“We had somebody new filling water buckets one day and they forgot his bucket,” she continued. “He saw I was walking down the shedrow, went over to his water bucket, banged it against the wall, walked back to the door, nickered at me, and then when I wasn't getting the message, went back over to the water bucket and banged it again and looked at me like, 'Excuse me, my water is empty.'”

Ghostzapper, on the other hand, requires a slightly different approach.

“He's a grumpy old man,” she said. “He can be sweet, but he's very much like your typical grumpy old man. He likes to be left alone for the most part. He does like to be loved on sometimes, but it has to be on his terms.”

Though she might not consider herself a risk-taker outside of her inherently risk-laden profession, there is always a stake on the line when you bet on yourself, and Zurick had to double down in a field that was not particularly looking for someone like her. When that bet hit, it paid off in a way her younger self wouldn't have dared imagined – even if it meant a broken finger or two along the way. The house always takes its share.

For other young women watching their favorite horses on a simulcast feed in flyover country, or anywhere else on the map, Zurick said her spot next to two Hall of Famers shows that the table is open for others that want to bet on themselves to get into the stallion barn.

“For any girl that really wants to do stallions, you just have to keep going and keep trying, and eventually someone will give you a chance and you'll get lucky,” she said. “I know it's hard, and sometimes you want to give up. For every person that says no, there might be at least one that might say yes, and you have to keep going until you find it. I know it stinks, and you have to push through a lot of bullcrap to get there, but at the end of it, I promise you it's worth it. I wouldn't change a single thing of how my life has gone so far for where I ended up.”

The post ‘If The Horses Aren’t Trying To Kill Me, It’s No Fun’: Tending To Stallions Is Zurick’s Extreme Sport appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Full-Brother To Nyquist To Enter Stud In California

An unnamed, unraced full-brother to champion and leading freshman sire Nyquist will enter stud in California after selling for $32,000 during Friday's closing session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

The 2-year-old Uncle Mo colt was purchased as a stallion prospect by E.A.S. Equine Alliance, and breeder Debbie Barkley signed the ticket.

“I've got some very nice mares, and I intend to incorporate him into our breeding program,” Barkley said. “I'm excited to be able to have the opportunity to purchase a colt of this breeding quality and take him out to California.”

Bred in Kentucky by Hinkle Farms, the colt is out of the winning Forestry mare Seeking Gabrielle, whose four winners from five runners are headlined by the champion juvenile and Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist, a member of Darley's stallion roster who finished the 2020 season as North America's leading freshman sire. His second dam is the Grade 2 winner Seeking Regina, who is the pivot point for runners including Grade 1 winner Sahara Sky and Grade 2 winner Seeking the Sky.

The colt was originally a $650,000 purchase by the Coolmore partnership at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, but a tendon injury put a halt to his racing career before it could begin.

Barkley said on Friday that she had not decided on a farm for the colt to stand, or a name for him. However, she felt confident that she had the had the right horse when those blanks were filled.

“He's a really nice horse,” she said. “Really classy, a ton of quality. Everything you'd like to see in a nice racehorse. It's just unfortunate the turn of events were such that he wasn't able to move on with his racing career. I liked what I saw and was willing to go out out on a limb. Good things are going to happen, I have a good feeling.”

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