Grade 1 Winner Known Agenda Retired To Spendthrift Farm For 2022 Season

Known Agenda, the dominant winner of this year's Grade 1 Florida Derby, has been retired from racing and will take up stud duty at Spendthrift Farm in 2022.

The son of leading sire Curlin will stand for an introductory fee of $10,000 S&N and will be offered through the farm's renowned “Share The Upside” program on a limited basis. He is available for inspection by appointment.

“Any time you can add a Florida Derby winner by Curlin with his looks and pedigree, you jump at the opportunity. Known Agenda ticks an awful lot of boxes, and the Florida Derby has produced a lot of very good sires, especially in recent history,” said Ned Toffey, Spendthrift general manager. “We are delighted to partner again with Vinnie Viola, who bred and raced this colt out of his Grade 1-winning mare. Known Agenda is one of those rare classic-type Grade 1 winners that is by a Grade 1 winner and out of a Grade 1 winner. He reminded us quite a bit of Vino Rosso, another son of Curlin that we stand that Vinnie co-owned and campaigned with Todd Pletcher. If Known Agenda's foals look anything like what we have seen from Vino Rosso, then the sky's the limit.”

A homebred for Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stables, Known Agenda broke his maiden as a 2-year-old last fall at Aqueduct, defeating eventual G2 Fountain of Youth Stakes winner Greatest Honour. At three, he won a Gulfstream allowance race by 11 lengths before capturing the prestigious $750,000 Florida Derby going away by 2 3/4 lengths, stamping himself as a leading sophomore.

“We are excited to be standing Known Agenda, our first homebred to go to stud, at Spendthrift Farm,” said Viola. “This colt showed early promise at two and continued to move forward at three with a dominant victory in the Florida Derby. We are looking for him to continue the great tradition of Florida Derby winners going on to successful stud careers, and we plan on supporting him heavily in that mission.”

Known Agenda joined champion Essential Quality and Medina Spirit as the only Kentucky Derby contenders to run a 6 on the Ragozin Sheets heading into the Run for the Roses, where he would encounter a troubled trip breaking from the vaunted post No. 1.

An earner of $641,700, Known Agenda became the first Florida Derby winner for his sire Curlin. He is also a Grade 1 winner by a Grade 1 winner and out of a Grade 1 winner, as his dam Byrama captured the 2013 Vanity S. (G1) on the main track at Hollywood Park.

“Known Agenda reminded me a great deal of Vino Rosso. He possessed the qualities of some of the better Curlins we've had. He's a good-sized, athletic, very well-balanced horse,” said trainer Todd Pletcher. “His Florida Derby win was ultra-impressive, and, obviously, that's been a great race for us when you think of the colts that have gone on to become top sires like Scat Daddy and Constitution.”

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Australian Star Winx To Visit Pierro For Next Mating

Four-time Australian Horse of the Year Winx will visit Coolmore Australia's Pierro for her next mating, the mare's ownership announced Wednesday.

A statement on the Winx website read:

“The Winx Ownership Group are pleased to announce that Winx will be visiting Pierro for this year's 2021 breeding season.

“Winx has been given a full year to recover from her ordeal and we are pleased to report that the mare has returned in great condition. She has been enjoying life on the farm with some friends while she is preparing to go back to the breeding barn this spring.”

The mating comes after Winx lost what would have been her first foal, a filly by I Am Invincible, in October 2020.

A winner of 37 races (25 Group 1, including four runnings of the Cox Plate) in 43 starts, Winx was victorious in her final 33 outings.Trained by Chris Waller and ridden most often by Hugh Bowman, the daughter of Street Cry retired with earnings in excess of AUS$26 million.

Pierro, a 12-year-old son of Lonhro, stands at Coolmore Australia for an advertised fee of AUS$110,000.

Arguably the best son of top Australian sire Lonhro on the track or at stud, Pierro became the sixth horse to win Australia's 2-Year-Old Triple Crown, sweeping the Group 1 Golden Slipper Stakes, AJC Sires Produce Stakes, and Champagne Stakes. He came back at three to win five group stakes races, including another pair of Group 1 scores.

Pierro has also sired Australian Derby winner Levendi, and additional Group 1 winners Arcadia Queen, Pierata, Shadow Hero, and Regal Power.

Coolmore Australia noted the mating announcement with the following statement on its website:

“We are so grateful to the connections of the great Winx that she will visit Pierro in 2021. As a graduate of the farm, Winx is a source of immense pride for all of us at Coolmore. It is a great honour that she will visit a stallion at the place where she was raised and grazed.”

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Tapit Scales Historic New Peak

And suddenly it feels as though the milestones have run out, leaving the road ahead tapering to some unmapped horizon. Because from now on, every dime earned by the progeny of Tapit will take him deeper into record territory. The success of Perfect Grace in a maiden at Saratoga on Saturday–and neither the setting nor the mating that produced this filly, with Horse of the Year Havre De Grace (Saint Liam), could be more commensurate with the moment–took their collective haul past the late Giant's Causeway's current tally of $173,015,900 as the most productive stallion, measured by prizemoney, in the history of the American Turf.

Given that it was only last year that he relegated Smart Strike to third, at $151 million, the Gainesway phenomenon is plainly going to set a pretty daunting record by the time he is done.

Having turned 20, admittedly, he is now at an age that prohibits complacency. But his nearest active pursuers are all older still, with zero chance of closing the gap, and we will have to wait and see whether fate favors the 16-year-old Into Mischief–himself at a significant landmark, with his stock almost simultaneously breaking $100 million in earnings–with sufficient opportunity to maintain his freakish output.

Spendthrift, of course, are maximising quantity along with quality in Into Mischief's books. He covered 248 mares last year, and presumably a further advance in his fee from $175,000 to $225,000 will not have prevented continued exploitation of his fertility and libido this spring. Tapit, in contrast, was confined to 96 mares in 2020 after a book of 111 the previous year; and, though he evidently performed with undiminished virility this time round, Antony Beck has disclosed to TDN that traffic will be even more rigorously controlled henceforth.

“He's never bred really huge books but even at his age he had better fertility, breeding over 100 mares, than he did the year before,” says Gainesway's owner. “But going forward, definitely, I think we want to be very responsible. I think we've always respected his abilities, and [most years] didn't breed him to much more than 140 mares. His libido remains excellent, so we're very excited about what he can still do. But he is our golden goose and they don't last forever. We're going to trim his book back quite significantly from now on.”

This sounds typical of the temperate way Tapit has always been managed by Beck and his team. Apart from anything else, of course, their clients have always been confident that there won't be a glut of Tapit on the market, where his progeny has long performed as consistently as on the racetrack. Since he is also coveted by the elite breed-to-race programs, his yearlings have sometimes had no less value as “collector's items” than even War Front, whose conservative output is so familiar.

In 2017, for instance, this pair finished first and second in the domestic yearling averages with virtually identical offerings: Tapit sent 38 into the ring, War Front 37; and they sold 24 and 23, respectively, at averages of $791,458 and $678,980. (Food for thought, perhaps, for those who view stallions with larger books as somehow more “commercial”!)

To be fair, even stallions under restrained management today cover far bigger books than those commanded by breed-shaping stallions like Danzig or Mr. Prospector. And when judged purely by progeny earnings, of course, inflation has set giants of the past at an even more obvious disadvantage (above all since the emergence of the modern megaprizes).

But there's no doubting the substance of Tapit's achievement, as one whose hallmark has long been consistency. His three consecutive titles, between 2014 and 2016, have been followed by finishes in the general sires' list of fourth, sixth, third and third; and his lifetime ratio of black-type performers to named foals exceeds an extraterrestrial 19%. He is, moreover, a paragon of the old school in terms of recycling the ability to carry speed through two turns, this summer becoming the only modern sire to match Lexington with a fourth winner of the GI Belmont S.

We have become so accustomed to his sturdiness, as a noble white pillar supporting the modern breed, that it's worth reminding ourselves how very precarious were some of the moments in his rise.

For one thing, Tapit really had to earn his stripes at stud. He was launched in 2005 at just $15,000, and took a trim to $12,500 to help keep him in the game in his third and fourth years. But stay in the game he did.

“I don't think he was ever close to really slipping through the cracks,” Beck recalls. “He'd been enough of a 'talking horse' as a 2-year-old to keep breeders really interested. I remember being slightly dissatisfied with his fourth book of mares, that was probably his worst one, in their physicals. But he still got Grade I winners even then.”

No, the moment when the tightrope had become a perilous thread had already come and gone: during his track career, when it took all the skill of Michael Dickinson to permit breeders an adequate glimpse of his attributes.

That is quite a paradox, given that the soundness and toughness he has imparted to his stock was never doubted, in Tapit himself, by his trainer. Misfortune, however, permitted a deceptive impression of fragility: plagued by a lung infection at three, Tapit managed only six career starts; and three of those were disappointing. But Dickinson explains that only a horse as tough as Tapit–only a horse, in fact, with the kind of heart that breeders should want to recycle–would have managed to add the GI Wood Memorial to the brilliant performances he had produced in both juvenile starts.

As such, the Wood was probably the most instructive moment of Tapit's track career. Having given him time to nurse the lung infection diagnosed after a dispiriting comeback in the GI Florida Derby, Dickinson knew the horse was nowhere near fit enough to be running for his place at Churchill on the first Saturday in May.

“My emotions that day were all over the place,” Dickinson recalls. “Before the race, as usual, I was filled with anticipation and nervous energy. During the race, I could barely watch; and afterwards I had feelings of both relief and elation. I was so proud of him, and the team for the job that they did in getting him there.”

Very possibly he had not absorbed the generosity of his Aqueduct performance when running ninth in the Derby. As Dickinson says: “The slop may have been a problem but his herculean effort in the Wood definitely affected him.”

They tried to get him back for the GI Haskell Invitational, had to sit that out, and an attempt to regroup in the GII Pennsylvania Derby ultimately only hastened his retirement.

“Unfortunately we never managed to totally clear that up,” Dickinson says of those bad scopes at three. “We don't know how good he might have been. It was such a shame as he was probably one of the soundest horses I have ever trained.”

Tapit's stock is sometimes credited with high mettle but Dickinson argues that his Wood performance was instructive of the willpower that has become a far more uniform trademark.

“His personality and attitude, not just that day but every day, I'm sure played a huge part in him being so successful,” Dickinson says. “He loved to train: he just loved getting out there and showing off. Tapit was a very relaxed horse at home, although he always loved the fillies. He was a beautiful mover and loved to strut his stuff.”

His record as a two-turn influence, not least in the Belmont, has perhaps made people forget how Tapit sparkled as a 2-year-old, when his talent remained uninhibited by these pulmonary problems. He opened with an eight-length romp over a mile at Delaware Park in October.

“When he was training on the farm, he did not show blazing speed as he was always relaxed,” Dickinson recalls. “In fact Ramon Dominguez, who had been working him in the morning, was booked to ride him but took off the mount to ride a hot shot in the race. Obviously raceday woke Tapit up. Afterwards he was more aggressive. In his next start, the [GIII] Laurel Futurity, he did try to get a little rank but teaching him to settle was always a priority.”

It was his performance in the Laurel, exploding clear after being forced to wait for racing room, that gave Tapit his chance. This wasn't the conventional route to the top of the juvenile division, but on the speed figures that was exactly where Tapit now found himself. The excitement he generated that day would, for many mare owners, absorb all moments of deflation at three.

“Fortunately for Tapit, Michael Hernon at Gainesway Stud had watched the Laurel Futurity and made a mental note of how impressive he was,” Dickinson recalls. “When he came on the market the following year he remembered and went back to revisit. He saw something in him and was convinced he would be a star at stud. How right he was.”

Hernon's employer was especially intrigued by a rare brand of fecundity in Tapit's family.

“His 3-year-old career was not nearly as good,” Beck concedes. “While he was a Grade I winner in the Wood Memorial, it was a very weak field in hindsight. But his 2-year-old form was outstanding and I hoped that he'd be a stallion because the female family is one of the few stallion-producing families in the whole world; certainly in America there aren't many. It had not just produced stallions, but horses that were better stallions than runners. With Tapit also being out of an Unbridled mare, and by Pulpit who was a fantastic racehorse–and an incredibly well-bred one, too–we were thrilled to be able to bring him to the farm.”

The people who had brought Tapit into the lives of Dickinson, and then Beck, were part of what made the horse's rise so special. Bred by Oldenburg Farms and consigned by Fred Seitz, he was bought for $625,000 at the 2002 Keeneland September Sale by Verne Winchell and his son Ron, backed up by their advisers, farm manager David Fiske and veterinarian David Lambert, as well as Dickinson himself. The team had identified the gray as their premier target of the auction, and Verne Winchell stretched accordingly.

Poignantly, he would be claimed by a heart attack two months later–but for precisely that reason the whole Tapit journey has taken place with an unseen hand resting benignly on Ron Winchell's shoulder. (And how proud he should be, of his family's contribution to modern Turf history, after already seeing trainer Steve Asmussen to a parallel summit this summer!)

For the rest of us, however, it feels necessary to account less subjectively for the magic of Tapit. What is it that has set him apart—and what does he tell us to seek in other young stallions, entering so competitive a market?

On paper, Beck has already identified one key indicator: dam a half-sister to one stallion, Rubiano; second dam a half to another, Glitterman; third dam a full sister to another, Relaunch. But how does that potency play through, in the flesh?

“They tend to have incredibly good cardiovascular systems,” Beck notes. “And very good actions to go with it. As well as that mental will to win. He seems to impart these to a few good ones every year. He's a remarkable horse in that he has a quite relaxed way about him, quite sensible in many ways, but he's one of the few stallions I've come across that knows he's a star. He has that star power. I know it sounds crazy, but he knows that and is relaxed about it. He has such confidence in himself.”

The sparks of temperament that sometimes emerge from the Tapit forge Beck attributes to Pulpit's dam Preach, who was so notoriously aggressive in protecting foals that they had to be raised by nurse mares. On the other hand, his damsire Unbridled was cherished at Gainesway–and likewise Unbridled's son Empire Maker–as “an absolute gentleman”.

Indeed, Beck feels that Unbridled has contributed much to the overall package. “He also had fantastic speed and cardiovascular capacity,” he stresses. “Don't forget how he beat Housebuster over seven furlongs at Gulfstream Park. He was one of those phenomenal horses who had that kind of speed but could also get 10 furlongs very well. I think he's an essential part of Tapit's success.”

Even in the evening of his career, it feels possible to argue that Tapit's own versatility has not yet been fully tapped. Certainly he has been culpably neglected in Europe, despite perfectly respectable dividends on turf in the U.S. Only a limited Tapit, after all, will typically even be tried away from the main track.

It was a famously patient migrant from European racing, of course, who showcased Tapit's gifts in the first place. It's worth remembering that Dickinson won a Grade I on the same card as the Laurel Futurity with A Huevo (Cool Joe), brought back only that summer from an absence barely two months short of four years! Yet this unique horseman was able to adjust his sights to test a brilliant juvenile's eligibility for the Classics.

“I'm very proud of Tapit himself, as he was a wonderful horse to be around and had so much personality,” Dickinson reflects. “I think we did a great job [with him] as a 2-year-old, giving him the time to mature yet still making him a graded stakes winner. Unfortunately the gods weren't with us for his 3-year-old career. And this has always left me wondering, 'What if?'”

The fact that he clearly didn't fulfil his potential in his own Derby gives a corresponding edge to the one unrequited ambition shared, on his behalf, by so many people around Tapit. It looked like he might nail the race this spring, but Greatest Honour was injured and Essential Quality had a messy trip.

“Oh yes, it would be wonderful if it could happen,” Beck acknowledges. “They say Essential Quality ran 68 feet more than the winner, and he was beaten just over a length. I think he will be proven a superior horse to the one that passed the post first. Any Derby is a bunfight, 20 horses going as fast as they do. But I'm sure Tapit's very best years are still head of him.

“Whatever happens he's already been a game-changing, breed-changing stallion, and only likely to become still more important and influential with his sons and daughters going to stud.”

And if Tapit trademarks an entire epoch at his historic farm, then Beck believes that the momentum he has created will exceed the span of the horse's own career.

“One thinks of all the horses that have stood on the farm–going back to the early Whitney days, Peter Pan, Equipoise, right on through the John Gaines era–yet now I think Tapit must be the best horse in over 100 years to reside there,” he observes. “So yes, definitely, we're enormously proud of him. But I truly can't express how excited I am by the future of Gainesway. I feel it to be absolutely boundless: whether with our racing stable; the broodmares we have; the lovely young stallions like Tapwrit, who had a really excellent first crop of yearlings. It's a great farm, great land, with a most wonderful, devoted team caring for it. And we're all custodians of a great legacy.”

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European Champion, Breeders’ Cup Classic Runner Up Sakhee Euthanized At 24

Shadwell legend Sakhee, crowned Europe's champion older horse in 2001, was put down on Friday due to the infirmities of old age. He was 24.

Sakhee was bred by the late Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum and was the best performer sired by Queen Elizabeth II Stakes winner Bahri. He was one of eight winners out of the Sadler's Wells mare Thawakib, whose biggest success came in the Group 2 Ribblesdale Stakes at Royal Ascot.

After being born and raised at Sheikh Hamdan's Shadwell Farm in Kentucky, it was only fitting that Sakhee was sent to Arundel to be trained by John Dunlop, as he had overseen the careers of both Bahri and Thawakib.

Sakhee scored in two of his three starts at two, but it was during his classic season at three that he really began to thrive.

Victories in the G3 Classic Trial at Sandown and G2 Dante Stakes at York were followed by an agonizing second-place finish in the Derby, in which he was headed in the final 150 yards by Sinndar.

Sakhee was transferred to the yard of Saeed bin Suroor to carry the colors of Godolphin at four. He developed into Europe's leading middle-distance horse with a pair of top-flight wins in the Juddmonte International, in which he beat Grandera by seven lengths, and the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, in which he blitzed his rivals who included Aquarelliste, Golan and Milan. His margin of success at Paris was an impressive six lengths.

He concluded his 3-year-old campaign at Belmont Park in the Breeders' Cup Classic and after a ding-dong battle with Tiznow in the home stretch, he was denied by just a nose to finish second.

Sakhee made a winning reappearance at Nad Al Sheba at five before finishing third to Street Cry in the Dubai World Cup. He ended his career that season having amassed total prize-money of £2,207,096.

Sakhee was retired to Nunnery Stud for the 2003 breeding season.

Although he did not replicate his brilliance on the racecourse in the breeding shed, he still sired several leading lights headed by Sakhee's Secret, whose biggest triumph came in the G1 July Cup, in which he beat Dutch Art by half a length under a power-packed ride from Steve Drowne.

He was also responsible for Luca Cumani's globetrotting Group 1 winner Presvis, whose career yielded more than £4 million in prize-money, and the Poule d'Essai des Poulains hero Tin Horse.

Sakhee had been living out a happy retirement at Nunnery Stud since his retirement from breeding at the end of 2016. He will be much missed by everyone in the Shadwell operation.

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