Classy Mares Not the Only Producers at Dixiana

While some pretty resonant horses have grazed this land, right back to Domino himself, few have played a more significant role in its story than a 25-year-old gelding retired here with a single Grade III success to his credit. But if the first horse to lure William Shively onto the Turf can be thanked for doing so with a somewhat flattering sample of the dividends available–he won eight of 30 starts and close to $500,000–then nor should anyone be misled about the kind of odds that typically stimulate his owner.

Shively's arrival in the Bluegrass has been conspicuous locally for two radically contrasting enterprises: the reintegration and loving revival of one of its most storied estates and the introduction of a rather less indigenous sporting culture, through Lexington's forthcoming soccer franchise. And if both may demand uncommon ambition and perseverance, then you only need consider the way Shively has met parallel tests to know his competence to last the course.

“In the horse business, I think you just have to claw your way through,” he reflects. “My theory is you have to take enough swings to get a home run. You have to play, you have to trade, you have to try to find the right ingredients–and eventually you get lucky, if that's what you want to call it. You do need that factor of luck. But what's nice is to take really challenging businesses and see if you can figure them out. If you think about my main business, I insure 400,000 policy holders in Florida for hurricanes. For a lot of people, that would probably keep you awake at night. But you have to look at things a different way.”

Think differently, moreover, and you might discover useful ways to think the same.

“I think I love the horse business and the insurance business because it's numbers,” remarks this relaxed figure, seated in his plush office at Dixiana Farm. “In both cases, we have so much statistical information. And then it's about how you evaluate it, how you tear it apart and put it back together. What's the risk of a home blowing away in Florida? There are amazing calculations made. Some of them, you're not sure they're right. So you have to take risks, at some point.”

He took one, more or less on a whim, the day in 1999 he took a bunch of his insurance agents on a trip to Hawaii and heard Dianne Waldron, an agent, complaining that the horse she was bidding for, over the phone, was going beyond her budget.

“Well,” Shively heard himself saying. “Why don't I go half with you?”

And that was Personal First (Personal Hope), the cherished veteran he can visit anytime he's on the farm. There must be days when Shively asks the old horse just what he must have been thinking, having since assembled over 1,000 acres, some 50 broodmares, and a top-class team of horsemen. But that $190,000 OBS 2-year-old gave him an exhilarating glimpse of the possibilities, taking the partnership to the Breeders' Cup as a juvenile and then springing a shock in the GIII Amsterdam S. at Saratoga the following summer. It was a whole new world for Shively, albeit rekindling a boyhood affection for ponies in the rural south of Pennsylvania.

“As a first experience of racing, it was about as far off typical as you could possibly get,” Shively concedes with a grin. “That race at Saratoga, we were a longshot against Trippi (End Sweep), who'd won like six [of his first seven]. But Pat Day was riding our horse for the first time, just calmed him down and gave him a wonderful ride. And there we were with the champagne in the stakes room at Saratoga. I thought, 'Man, this is pretty good stuff!'”

Waldron's primary interest was endurance and Arabian horses, and Shively actually started out breeding those on a farm in Gainesville, Florida. But the Thoroughbred spark had been lit, and before long he had not only bred Florida champion sprinter Benny the Bull (Lucky Lionel), but also bought 100 acres for broodmares in Kentucky. As he learned more about the surrounding land, Shiveley began a piecemeal acquisition that has gradually reunited broken fragments of Bluegrass heritage.

Dixiana was founded in 1877 by Major Barak G. Thomas, breeder of Domino and Himyar. The land was absorbed by Elemendorf Farm for a while, before being sold to Charles T. Fisher, the Detroit automobile tycoon, who bred Mata Hari on Dixiana. During the Fisher family's 58-year tenure, half the site was sold off, eventually becoming Domino Stud, but the core legacy was enhanced under Mary Lou Wibel and Bruce Kline, who stood Mr. Greeley and also raised Epsom Derby winner Benny the Dip.

Shively and his wife Donna took the reins in 2004, and now three farms–Elk Hill, Domino and Dixiana–have been welded back together. With the assistance of such accomplished horsemen as farm manager Robert Tillyer, consultant Robert Hammond and racing manager Steve Cauthen, Dixiana is once again a brand trusted to produce Grade I horses. Mares on the farm include I'm A Flake (Mineshaft), dam of Express Train (Union Rags); Julia Tuttle (Giant's Causeway), who gave us Tom's d'Etat (Smart Strike); and Brielle's Appeal (English Channel), the homebred mare named for Shively's daughter whose Quality Road colt made a breakout $1.15 million from Mayberry Farms at Keeneland last September.

If the renewal of Dixiana attests to Shively's ability to square all those unaccountable variables, then so, too, does the fact that 2022 marks 50 years since the foundation, by his father, of a small insurance agency in Miami. When the young Shively entered the firm, it still had only a single employee, but Bill has since expanded Tower Hill Insurance across 17 states via a series of acquisitions and mergers.

“And I've had a lot of employees that have been with me 30 years,” he says. “That's special. And that's one of the things I like in the horse business: seeing the results of your labor, that doesn't come quick. You can't do this in a hurry, especially the breeding side. Again, same with insurance. I've been with Lloyd's of London since the '80s. It's about survival of the fittest, yes, but relationships and history mean so much, also. The guys I started with were the underwriters then, and now they're the syndicate CEOs. So it's worthy, I guess is what I'm saying. It's time that's worth being spent, because you end up with something that's hard to duplicate.”

Get those foundations solid, indeed, and your business can even harness the winds most dreaded by the wider industry.    “It's when things get to their worst, that's when you can shine all of a sudden from doing it right,” he reflects. “We grew tremendously after Hurricane Andrew [1992].”

Nobody can win every time, of course, but even reverses can contain latent benefits. As Shively says: “Win, lose or draw, you always want to learn something.”

It was in that spirit that Shively dipped his toe in the movie  business, soon becoming sufficiently immersed to produce 10 films. In financial terms, he acknowledges, these did not score as a win or even a draw. On the other hand, how does one put a price on the experience?

A business associate's son had wanted to make a film so, much as when he went halves on a racehorse, he took a cue from fate and offered to finance the project.

“It was called 'O,' Othello done as a basketball movie,” he recalls. “Martin Sheen was the coach. Probably within six weeks of shooting we'd sold it for something like $6 million. And I just left that money on the table to create a company called Film Engine. Every movie is like its own company, a gigantic snowball: you spend two years on it and it goes away. We made some interesting movies. But like everybody, you want to make the one that moves people. You want to make Bridge Over The River Kwai. But you soon realize that's not how the world is going to work. But the experience was invaluable. I liked buying the scripts, I liked the deal, I liked putting people together.”

Especially that: the people part. One time he sat round a dinner table in Los Angeles with Johnny Depp, Marilyn Manson, Nick Nolte, Mickey Rourke and Hunter S. Thompson, the chaotic father of Gonzo journalism whose book, The Rum Diary, was being adapted for the screen. Thompson, who took his own life not long after, rounded off the evening in characteristic fashion.

“Hunter was a brilliant man but obviously just different,” Shively recalls. “And that evening he ended up getting mad and putting his arm through a window, and we had to take him to hospital to get stitched up. But he was a genius, in my mind. If you turn to page 36 in one of his books, he could quote you the page. I remember sitting in the hotel suite we'd got him and in walks Warren Zevon. Remember him: Werewolves Of London? He's on his death march, he has cancer, and he's visiting all his old buddies and filming. So it's Hunter Thompson and Warren Zevon and this insurance company guy! And I'm thinking, 'I need to leave. I shouldn't be in this documentary…'”

Here, then, is one who brings a cosmopolitan breadth of perspective to our often parochial community. And while there are admittedly local anxieties about the siting of the new complex, Shively hopes that Lexington will recognize and embrace the opportunities available through soccer.

With four children under 13, all enthusiasts, he has a very immediate sense of the value to the young of team sport. He also has three older children, and remembers how they tapped into the 1994 World Cup hosted by the United States.

“That was like the first wave of the game here,” he recalls. “I took them to matches and realized what a great sport this was for young people: the way it can help you understand relationships, teamwork. It also helps you get in great shape, with an injury spectrum nowhere near football, which I played.

“So I've been a fan a long time and when we came here we laid out a pitch for the farm workers, and sponsored a farm tournament. We have so many different cultures coming in here, and a lot of them are soccer cultures, so I think it all ties in well. We're having fun with the stadium, bringing things together in the design: like limestone walls, and making locker rooms look like horse barns.”

The new franchise has been underpinned by the registration of 1,400 children for what Shively hopes will prove a benign new force, both social and economic, on the Bluegrass.

“Cincinnati has an MLS team and Louisville has its successful USL team that's built a really nice stadium, so there's this nice triangle of soccer,” Shively says. “I think the growth is really pretty significant. MLS just opened at Charlotte and they had 70,000 people for the first game. I just think we're ready. We'll have a women's pro team, too. We're going to have great coaches and great facilities and make great opportunities both for individuals and for the community.”

If bedding down the club will not be without its challenges, Shively stresses that the ultimate aim is to bring people together. (The initial hope, indeed, had been to name the club Unity.) And he'd like to see the same ethic suffusing the Turf community, too, when it comes to ongoing reform.

“It's been the longest process but we're making progress,” he says. “I do feel better about the horse business, across the board, than I did 10 years ago. Keeneland have seen an 80% increase in people applying for credit for the September sale. I think with some of the heavyweights that have been stepping back recently, guys now feel they can get into the business, with a couple of hundred thousand, that previously didn't want to go in there just to get beaten up. Especially with the Kentucky circuit so fulfilled now, with $150,000 maidens at Kentucky Downs and $100,000 maidens in other places.”

Shively himself has a penchant for turf racing, to the extent that he imported a Kingman (GB) filly from the yearling sales at Tattersalls last October. He knows that to invest in grass blood in Kentucky is to wade against the commercial tide, but perceives grounds for optimism in the longer term.

“Every field is 12, and the bettors like that,” he says. “We're just not laid out the right way, structurally, to have enough grass racing. Part of the business is not yet there. I own shares in grass stallions, and I know you can get killed trying to sell the babies. But there are things that give you hope, like Belmont coming up with these back-to back races worth lot of money. And I think the blood can cross over. Horses are born to run on grass.”

The Dixiana focus, in the meantime, is rigorously on quality. At one stage, the quantity bloated to 128 mares.

“And that did not work out so well,” admits Shively wryly. “Culling is hard and you have to be a good loser. I sold Letgomyecho (Menifee) [dam of Echo Zulu (Gun Runner)] and they've been selling million-dollar horses out of her. So that was a mistake. But the intrigue is to follow it all. It's stimulating just to have those 35 to 40 foals to go through every year, asking did that work? And it's been fun to get to the point where I have repeat customers, where I feel we have earned people's trust.”

It meant a lot, therefore, that the farm's first seven-figure sale was made from a homebred mare. But those unaccountable variables will, of course, always remain. You can do everything right and be unlucky. Or you can let your 11-year-old daughter pick out an Uncle Mo filly in the back ring at Keeneland, with none of your advisors around–and end up with GII Ashland S. runner-up Cocktail Moments.

This, to be fair, is the same daughter who was asked by a recent visitor what she wants to be when she grows up. She fired back: “CEO!”

But Shively isn't just raising kids with the right spirit. He's raising horses that way, too, not least because he's doing so with future generations in mind.

“I'm doing this because I love the farm,” he says. “I'd rather be here than the racetrack. I know that sounds bad, but I love going down to the foals in the paddocks and seeing how they're doing, how they're changing and growing up as they prep. That's what I'm here for; to see them grow and become something great.

“My goal is to make this something my family will hang onto, because it's not that painful. So the answer, for me, is making it viable. When I bought Dixiana, I said I won't ever feel like I own this. I feel like I'm taking care of it for somebody. But I do at least feel that's what I've been doing: taking care of it. I feel I've improved it, from where I was. So that's something I think I can feel good about. My goal with all businesses is to make them better for the people. I want to leave good things for all.”

The post Classy Mares Not the Only Producers at Dixiana appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Mating Plans: Dixiana Farm

In this edition of our ongoing mating plans series, we spoke with Robert Tillyer, farm manager of Dixiana Farm.

“Right now we have about 50 broodmares at Dixiana Farm,” Tillyer said. “This year we are going to have around 38 foals. We usually put over 30 yearlings through the sale each year and then Mr. Shively is always happy to retain a few for his own racing stable.

 

BRIELLE'S APPEAL (m, 8, English Channel – Court of Appeal, by Deputy Minister) to be bred to Gun Runner

This year Brielle's Appeal is in foal to Speightstown and then she will be visiting Gun Runner, who set a new record for progeny earnings for a first-crop sire last year. He has great colts and great fillies and I'm really excited to see Echo Zulu run again.

This mare was a graded stakes-placed winner and she was very talented. She has proven that she can get a really good physical. She had a $1.15 million Quality Road yearling at Keeneland September last year. With this mare, she's been going to proven stallions. Gun Runner is the new, hot stallion so it just made sense.

HAVANA DREAM (m, 9, Quality Road – Mayo On the Side, by French Deputy) to be bred to Yaupon

   This is the half-sister to MGSW Midcourt (Midnight Lute). We kept her first foal, a Kitten's Joy colt, and he is now in training as a 2-year-old. She also has a really nice Uncle Mo yearling filly who is really leggy and looks fast.

We decided to go with Yaupon for her this year. Yaupon was a really talented horse with a lot of speed. With a young mare like her, she's been to two proven sires so now we're going to go with a new stallion.

I'M A FLAKE (m, 14, Mineshaft – November Snow, by Storm Cat) to be bred to Gun Runner

   This mare is the dam of MGSW Express Train (Union Rags), who was raised here at Dixiana and recently won the GII San Pasqual S. for a second time. I'm A Flake produced the full-brother to Express Train last year. The colt is a big, strong, correct horse who moves really well.

She is in foal to Munnings this year. Munnings is very commercial and we think he will add speed to the family. She hasn't been to this sire line yet, so we are very excited to see what this mating produces and then she is booked back to Gun Runner.

JULIA TUTTLE (m, 17, Giant's Causeway – Candy Cane (Arg), by Ride the Rails) to be bred to Twirling Candy

   This is the dam of GISW Tom's d'Etat (Smart Strike). We have her 3-year-old Connect filly in training with Al Stall and we also have her 2-year-old Nyquist colt. She has an American Pharoah yearling filly who is pointing for the Keeneland September Sale.

Last year we opted to go with War of Will. She's already a Grade I producer and War of Will is a beautiful sire. We're looking forward to that foal and then she will be going to Twirling Candy. He's proven and I don't think she's been to that sire line before. Physically, I think he will suit her and he has been doing really well recently.

LAYLA (m, 8, Union Rags – I'm a Flake, by Mineshaft) to be bred to City of Light

   The full sister to Express Train, Layla had her first foal last year, a Liam's Map colt. We're really happy with him.

This year she will be going to City of Light. We think the cross works well and he's a really popular stallion.

Revitalized (Uncle Mo) and her 2022 Munnings filly | photo courtesy Dixiana Farm

REVITALIZED (m, 4, Uncle Mo – Excited, by Giant's Causeway) to be bred to Authentic

   This is a mare that Mr. Shively bought at the 2021 Keeneland November Sale for $360,000. She was one of seven mares he purchased last year. We're really excited about her. She's a beautiful mare and is a full-sister to SW Thrilled. Her 3-year-old full-sister Beside Herself just broke her maiden for Todd Pletcher, so it's a very active family.

Revitalized just had her first foal, a really nice Munnings filly. This year she will be visiting Authentic.

TIGER RIDE (m, 10, Candy Ride {Arg} – Royal Tigress, by Storm Cat) to be bred to Charlatan

   Tiger Ride is one of Mr. Shively's favorite mares. She's a homebred who won the GIII Pin Oak Valley View S. at Keeneland and placed in the GI Beldame S.

She had a Tapit colt that we sold as a yearling who is now three. She also has a Tapit filly who is now two that we retained. I saw the filly last week and she looked really good. Then she has an Uncle Mo yearling colt on the ground as well.

This year, she will go to Charlatan. Again, she's been to three proven sires so we're going to try an unproven sire this year. Everyone knows that Charlatan is stunning. He was obviously very talented and John Sikura was very selective with the mares going to him, so we think he has a great shot as a stallion.

TRUE ELEGANCE (m, 9, Distorted Humor – Sealy Hill, by Point Given) to be bred to Essential Quality

The daughter of champion Sealy Hill, this mare produced her first foal in 2019. It was a Kitten's Joy filly who is now in Dixiana's racing stable. She won first out at Arlington Park last summer, beating the boys. She had a little break and just got back into training. We retained the mare's Frosted 2-year-old filly as well. She is currently in training and we really like her. The mare's yearling filly is by Ghostzapper. She looks fast and is correct. She will likely be at the September Sale.

This year the mare is in foal to Authentic. Obviously the Into Mischief-Distorted Humor mating is a proven cross, so we're excited for that foal. Then she is going to go to Essential Quality. We wanted to try a different sire line with her. He was a talented horse and is really good looking. We think he's going to be commercial and is another one that we think has a great shot as a sire.

Let us know who you're breeding your mares to in 2022, and why. We will print a selection of your responses in TDN over the coming weeks. Please send details to: garyking@thetdn.com.

The post Mating Plans: Dixiana Farm appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Bloodlines Presented by Caracaro: Express Train Helps Write New Chapter For Historic Dixiana Farms

It takes a special kind of filly to win Saratoga's Test Stakes at seven furlongs and then come back two weeks later to score at 1 ¼ miles in the Alabama Stakes, but that's what the H. Allen Jerkens-trained November Snow (Storm Cat out of Princess Alydar, by Alydar) did in 1992. In the 30 years since, only one other filly, Society Selection, achieved this Grade 1 Saratoga double, and she, too, was trained by the late Hall of Famer who has been memorialized with a Grade 1 race named in his honor during the Saratoga meet.

Some other very good fillies have won both the Test and Alabama prior to November Snow, including Love Sign (1980), Go for Wand (1990) and Versailles Treaty (1991).

After retiring with eight wins from 22 starts and earnings in excess of $500,000, November Snow did not produce any stakes winners herself, but her daughters have more than made up for that shortcoming. Graded stakes-placed November Slew (by Seattle Slew) produced Hiraboku Wild, a multiple stakes winner in Japan. Arctic Drift (Gone West) produced Australian Group 2 winner Kuroshio. Indian Snow (A. P. Indy) produced G1 Carter Handicap and G2 Pennsylvania Derby winner and sire Morning Line (Tiznow) and listed winner Liam's Pride (Liam's Map).

I'm a Flake, a 2008 foal by Mineshaft, became the latest black-type producer for November Snow earlier this year when Express Train, a 4-year-old colt by classic-winning wire Union Rags, won the G2 San Pasqual Stakes at Santa Anita for Lee and Susan Searing's C R K Stable and trainer John Shirreffs. He added a second G2 at Del Mar in the San Diego Handicap in August and most recently the G2 San Antonio Stakes on Santa Anita's opening day program on Dec. 26.

While Express Train has yet to hit the jackpot with a G1 victory (finishing second to Charlatan in the 2020 Malibu, second to Idol in the Santa Anita Handicap last March and third in the Gold Cup and Awesome Again during the summer and fall), he has defeated a host of G1 winners, most recently G1 Pennsylvania Derby winner Hot Rod Charlie and G1 American Pharoah winner Eight Rings in the San Antonio. Consistent and determined (he's been 1-2-3 in 12 of 15 starts), Express Train has the ability to score at the highest level.

Unplaced in four starts, I'm a Flake was bred in 2011 to Tiznow and entered in the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale, where she was purchased for $290,000 by Dixiana Farms, the historic Thoroughbred nursery purchased in 2004 by Florida businessman William Shively. The resulting foal, Snowbird was unplaced in three starts. Her second foal, Master Magician (also by Tiznow), was unplaced in eight starts.

I'm a Flake's first two foals sold well as yearlings, but Shively opted to keep the next one, a Union Rags filly named Layla. She broke her maiden at first asking, then was unsuccessful in two subsequent starts and is now a member of Dixiana's band of about 50 broodmares.

I'm a Flake had one more foal prior to Express Train, another son of Tiznow who brought $850,000 as a 2-year-old in training at the 2017 OBS March Sale. Named Praetorian, the gelding will soon turn 7 and remains in training, having won six of 36 starts, with 11 second-place finishes, primarily in claiming races.

After a barren year, I'm a Flake produced Express Train, who was purchased for $500,000 by the Mayberry Farm of Jeanne, April and Summer Mayberry on behalf of C R K Stable at the 2018 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

According to Dixiana farm manager Robert Tillyer, I'm a Flake then had two successive barren years after being bred to Tiznow in 2017 and Gun Runner in 2018. Her 2020 foal, a colt by Accelerate, was purchased by Mayberry Farm on behalf of C R K Stable for $300,000 at Keeneland September.

Tillyer said Dixiana has a Union Rags–I'm a Flake weanling colt on the farm that likely will head to next year's Keeneland September Sale and she is currently in foal to Munnings, with an expected foaling date in late April. “The plan is to go back to Gun Runner,” Tillyer said.

Layla, the full sister to Express Train retained by Shively, has a Liam's Map 2021 colt that Tillyer said “is as nice as a weanling can be.”

This is Tillyer's second go-round at Dixiana, having worked at the farm when it was under different ownership in the late 1990s after arriving from England.

“A lot of good horses have come off that farm,” he said, naming 1997 champion and Group 1 Epsom Derby winner Benny the Dip and 1999 European champion 2-year-old colt Fasliyev, among others.

After spending 18 years working for Kentucky horseman William Betz, Tillyer returned to Dixiana in 2020 and has seen the farm reach new heights, selling its first million-dollar yearling this past year when a Quality Road colt brought $1.15 million.

The farm, located off Russell Cave northeast of Lexington, now encompasses about 840 acres and includes property from the old Domino Stud that once was part of the original Dixiana, whose founding dates back to 1877.

There is a lot of history to Dixiana Farms (you can read about it here), but new chapters continue to be written.

The post Bloodlines Presented by Caracaro: Express Train Helps Write New Chapter For Historic Dixiana Farms appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Dixiana-Breds Hit the Right Notes for Ingordo

The silks of Lee and Susan Searing's CRK Stable have been a formidable presence in California in recent years thanks in large part to MGSWs Express Train (Union Rags) and Midcourt (Midnight Lute). Both stable stars have excelled in their division for trainer John Shirreffs with Midcourt taking last year's GII San Pasqual S. and Express Train claiming winning honors in the same race this year before also adding the GII San Diego H. to his growing resume.

While separated by two years in age, the stablemates also share the same breeder. Dixiana Farm sold Midcourt to David Ingordo, who signed on behalf of Mayberry Farm, for $450,000 at the 2016 Keeneland September Sale. Two years later, Express Train was purchased by the same connections for $500,000.

This year, Ingordo went back to the well for another Dixiana-bred to send on to Shirreffs for CRK Stable. During the second session of the Keeneland September Sale, he purchased Dixiana's Quality Road colt out of their stakes-placed homebred Brielle's Appeal (English Channel) for $1.15 million.

Steve Cauthen, who serves as Dixiana's racing manager, said their team was thrilled with the final hammer price.

“By the time we led him up into the ring, we knew he was a very popular horse and that we were going to be well-paid for him, but I don't think we were thinking he was going to pass the million-dollar mark,” he admitted. “But it was a good sale and he was a good horse out of a young mare and Quality Road is about as hot as any stallion on the market. So all the stars came together and worked for us.”

The successful sale was significant for the colt's breeders as it was the first million-dollar yearling produced by the farm's current owners, William and Donna Shively.

“The great thing that made Mr. Shively very happy was the fact that we bred and raced the dam and now we bred this horse,” Cauthen explained. “That's what you do this for. When you lead them up into that ring, it's like you're watching your kid playing soccer. When they do well, you're very proud about it.”

It was a symbolic purchase for Ingordo as well, as it marked the longstanding connection he shares with Dixiana Farm and the colt's female family.

Brielle's Appeal takes an allowance at Keeneland by over five lengths in 2018 | Coady

“When I was about 21, I worked at Walmac Farm under Johnny Jones,” Ingordo recalled. “One weekend, I had forgotten that there was an appointment and I had gone out on the farm jogging with my dog. Then this appointment showed up and it was Bill Shively. That was about 24 years ago, but it was one of those things that was probably fate because I hit it off with Bill immediately and he has been a good friend of mine since. He's given me a lot of good advice about life and business, and hopefully I've given him some good horse advice.”

One important tip that Ingordo offered to Shively came a few years later in 2006, when Ingordo recommended the purchase of an unraced 3-year-old named Court of Appeal (Deputy Minister). Dixiana Stables purchased the mare, who was in foal to Quiet American, for $335,000.

Two years later, Court of Appeal's Quiet American filly was offered at the Keeneland September Sale and Ingordo signed the $250,000 ticket on the yearling for Padua Stables..

“My arrangement with Padua was that I owned part of every horse,” Ingordo said. “She was kind of a start-and-stop filly, but we finally got her to Todd Pletcher.”

The filly, named Authenticity, didn't make her first start until she was four, but would eventually claim the GII La Troienne S. and GIII Shuvee H. while also running second in three Grade I contests. Sold for $1.2 million to Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings in 2013, she is now responsible for recently-retired MGISW 'TDN Rising Star' Charlatan (Speightstown).

In 2014, Court of Appeal produced a filly by English Channel. Dixiana sent the homebred to trainer Albert Stall. Named Brielle's Appeal, the filly won on debut at Kentucky Downs at three before later adding an allowance win at Keeneland to her resume and running third in the GIII Kentucky Downs Ladies Sprint S. Retired to the farm where she was foaled in 2019, her first foal was the million-dollar Quality Road colt.

“I've been following [this colt] for almost a year,” Ingordo said. “On my internal notes that I made for myself and for the farm, he always scored very, very highly. Because I knew his pedigree so well, it all added up to a million-dollar plus sale.”

“There are two kinds of people in this business,” he continued. “There are the ones that let the horses do the talking and the ones that the humans do the talking for. Mr. Shively is one that lets his horses do the talking. I think it was a great honor for him to sell a horse like this. He's been a big supporter of racing for a very long time, but he's only getting started in a lot of ways. His family is involved and he's setting up for the long run.”

Dixiana Farm, a historic landmark in Lexington for well over a century, was purchased by Bill and Donna Shively in 2004. Cauthen, who has been on the farm's team for six years, spoke on the relationship Dixiana holds with Ingordo.

“David is obviously a good horseman and he likes the way Dixiana breeds and raises their horses,” he said. “He's around the farm a lot and gets to watch the horses as they're growing and maturing. We're happy to have the association with David. He's been a big part of helping our farm continue to succeed and grow.”

Dixiana Farm's Bill Shively | Keeneland

“Mr. Shively does such a good job of raising them,” Ingordo said. “No expense is spared for the horses and it gives you confidence to go and buy them and try to develop them. A rising tide lifts all boats, so these pedigrees continue to improve and it's a symbiotic relationship. My clients asks to buy Dixiana-breds because we've had such good luck with them.”

In addition to purchasing the $1.15 million Quality Road colt at the September Sale, Ingordo also went to $300,000 for the Accelerate half-brother to CRK Stable's Express Train–the goal being that this pair of youngsters can follow the same path as their two Dixiana-bred predecessors

“It's fine to sell a horse for a lot of money, but how many Express Trains and Midcourts are there that people give $450,000 and $500,000 for, but they never run,” Ingordo said. “It's a really positive thing for Dixiana that their horses sell for top dollar and then they go on and perform. That's something we don't always see. One of the great things about Dixiana is that they raise their horses really organically. They have good land and do everything right.”

While Brielle's Appeal did not produce a foal this year, she is now in foal to Speightstown. The closely-related cross to the speedy Charlatan could be an exciting sales prospect in just a few years.

“We're thinking maybe a champion in the Breeders' Cup Mile,” Cauthen said with a laugh, then added that Shively has expressed an interest in putting more focus on producing quality turf runners.

“[Shively] is a big fan of turf racing,” he said. “Compared to back when I was riding, there are at least twice as many turf races and turf stakes races, so I'm all for it. That's one of his main focuses, but obviously the goal is to raise good horses. Raise them healthy and do it the right way. We race a few, but mainly we breed for the sales. I think we're starting to really find our footing in the sales arena and hopefully now on the racetrack as well.”

The post Dixiana-Breds Hit the Right Notes for Ingordo appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights