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Mares on Monday: Gallorette Was a Mare Worth Remembering

5/31/2021

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Now part of the Belmont Stakes undercard, the Metropolitan Handicap was once the anchor of Belmont Park's Memorial Day card. For many years the country's most prestigious event for milers, It was a showpiece that thrilled holiday crowds. It also gained the reputation of being a "stallion making" race, one that showed that a stud prospect had both a high order of speed and the ability to carry high speed beyond pure sprint distances.

Very few mares have tackled the males in this race, and fewer still have won. The last to do so was also arguably the best. She was Gallorette, one of the most remarkable members of one of the deepest handicap divisions in American racing history and a four-legged embodiment of the "can-do" spirit of American women that made Rosie the Riveter an icon and sent others into military or military auxiliary service as nurses, WACs (Army), WAVES (Navy) and WASPs (pilots who ferried planes from factories to military bases).

A daughter of Challenger II and the Sir Gallahad III mare Gallette, Gallorette was a child of the World War II era, having been foaled in 1942. She was useful at 2 and very good at 3 when competing against her own sex, but it was at 4 that she truly came into her own and showed what she was made of in the rough-and-tumble of the handicap division.

Unlike the modern era, in which good sex-restricted races for older females are plentiful, handicap racing of the 1940s had few such havens for the fair sex. If a mare was going to compete for big money and prestige, she pretty much had to knock heads with the boys to do it. That was fine with Gallorette. A big, rather masculine mare, she was as strapping as most of the males she faced off against and was not in the least intimidated by any of them.

Gallorette was at her peak in the early spring and late summer of 1946. and she needed every ounce of her speed and toughness in that year's Metropolitan Handicap. Run on May 11 that year, the race was considered one of the best renewals ever, its 14 entrants including 1945 Preakness Stakes winner Polynesian (who would win a championship when official voting in the sprint category was reinstated in 1947); the tough handicapper First Fiddle; 1945 American champion 3-year-old male Fighting Step; and the extremely fast Buzfuz. Gallorette was the only filly or mare entered, but when four horses came slugging it out to the wire in a blanket finish, it was Gallorette's nose that showed in front, with San Carlos Handicap winner Sirde second and First Fiddle another nose back in third.

Gallorette needed even more fortitude on June 22, when she came out for the 10-furlong Brooklyn Handicap at Aqueduct. The field lacked the overall balance of the one that had contested the Met Mile, but the one rival who mattered was Stymie, the champion handicap male of 1945. Also honed to a razor's edge, the horse carried 128 pounds to Gallorette's 118, a 5-pound break for the filly with her sex allowance considered. Stymie was known for his late-running stretch charges, and there were few horses indeed who could withstand one of his knockout punches when there had been some pace up front to set it up.

Two longshots, Ekyad and Helioptic, obliged by setting up an honest pace in the early going, and then it was time for the Big Two to show their stuff. Gallorette got the first jump, taking the lead at the top of the stretch, but behind her, Stymie was fully uncorked and coming on. Just past the quarter pole, Stymie's surge carried him to the lead, and this was usually where his rivals suddenly looked as though they had been thrown into reverse gear. But Gallorette was having none of it. She fought back, regaining the lost ground inch by painful inch, and at the wire it was her head and a scrap of her neck that showed in front.

Voted the champion handicap mare of 1946, Gallorette raced on for two more seasons before finally joining her two-legged sisters in retiring to more peaceful pursuits. All told, the rugged mare raced 72 times, winning 21 starts and placing in another 33. 54 of her starts were against males, and she won 13 of those, facing off against horses such as 1947 Horse of the Year Armed, 1946 Triple Crown winner and American Horse of the Year Assault, Stymie, and Lucky Draw, who retired having equaled one world record and set five other track records. She couldn't beat them all, but she was always a contender who gave no quarter and asked none, and any male who tackled the Amazonian mare knew he had been in a horse race.

Gallorette's memory lives on in more places than the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame, to which she was named in 1962. Two of her seven named foals were stakes winners and successful producers, and through her daughter Courbette, Gallorette is the ancestress of a family developed by Edward Evans that includes 2005 American Horse of the Year Saint  Liam, 2017 American Horse of the Year Gun Runner, 1986 Irish champion 2-year-old filly Minstrella and 1973 Argentine champion sire Dancing Moss. Her descendants are a fitting legacy to a mare who was one of the finest warriors of her breed in an era now largely beyond living memory. May her tribe increase and her memory remain green.



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Weekend Trivia Challenge for 5/28/2021

5/28/2021

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Named for a hunting lodge, this American champion was originally intended for racing in Europe but was held back from making the journey across the Atlantic by the trainer of his owner's American-based racing stable. The trainer was so enamored of the young horse that he faked the animal's illness to keep the colt in his own stable. Who was this champion, and who was the trainer who retained him for American racing?
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Mares on Monday: The Lady Took Charge

5/24/2021

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On May 22, As Time Goes By picked up her second Grade 2 win of the season with a game performance in the Santa Maria Stakes (USA-G2). Also Grade 1-placed earlier this year, the 4-year-old daughter of American Pharoah will undoubtedly get another chance at Grade 1 company in hopes of adding to her already considerable cachet as a multiple graded stakes winner produced from a Kentucky Broodmare of the Year.

As Time Goes By is the last foal of Take Charge Lady, who was a lot more than just another pretty face in the paddocks. Before she was a top broodmare she was a racehorse, and a highly capable one. A two-time winner of the Spinster Stakes (USA-G1) at Keeneland (her favorite track), she also won the 2002 Ashland Stakes (USA-G1) at the same venue. She won three more graded stakes during her racing career and placed four times in Grade 1 races, including a second in the 2002 Kentucky Oaks.

A half sister to listed stakes winner Commendation (by Capote) and multiple restricted stakes winner Eventail (by Lear Fan; dam of Grade 2 winner Straight Story), Take Charge Lady has a pedigree that, while not highly fashionable, was quite solid in terns of its breeding and racing quality. Her sire Dehere, a son of American champion sire Deputy Minister, was the American champion 2-year-old male of 1993 and became a useful stallion, siring 80 stakes winners and the winners of over US$104 million. Her dam, unraced Felicita, was sired by 1992 American champion sprinter Rubiano (by Fappiano), a member of the family of the important sires Tapit and Relaunch and a fairly good stallion himself with 33 stakes winners (from 510 named foals) and the earners of over US$40 million to his credit. The next dam in Take Charge Lady's direct female line is Grand Bonheur, a daughter of the excellent racer and sire Blushing Groom. Grand Bonheur was not a particularly good racehorse or broodmare herself, but she is a granddaughter of the Double Jay mare Times Two, the foundation of a respectable family.

Take Charge Lady had the racing performance to get bookings to elite stallions, and with the help of those opportunities she gave her family's reputation a considerable boost, beginning with her first foal, the Seeking the Gold mare Charming. Bred to Giant's Causeway, Charming produced 2014 American champion 2-year-old filly Take Charge Brandi as her second foal. She later produced three-time Grade 1 winner Omaha Beach (by War Front) as her fifth and last named foal, and both her daughters are now young broodmares.

It took three years after Charming's birth before Take Charge Lady produced another important foal, but that one was 2012 Florida Derby (USA-G1) winner Take Charge Indy (by A.P. Indy). Sold to South Korea after standing his first three seasons at WinStar Farm, he ranked highly on the second and third-crop sire lists when members of his Kentucky-sired crops got into action, leading WinStar to exercise the buy-back clause in his sale contract. The stallion served the 2020 season at WinStar and currently stands for US$15,000 stands and nurses.

Take Charge Lady's 2010 foal, a strapping son of Unbridled's Song, proved even better on the track. Named Will Take Charge, he came on strong in the second half of his 3-year-old season to win the Travers Stakes (USA-G1), Clark Handicap (USA-G1), and Pennsylvania Derby (USA-G2). He defeated older males in the Clark, and that plus a nose defeat by multiple Grade 1 winner Mucho Macho Man in the Breeders' Cup Classic (USA-G1) proved enough to land him the Eclipse Award as American champion 3-year-old male. He raced on at age 4, adding the Oaklawn Handicap (USA-G2) to his trophy case, and retired to Three Chimneys Farm. Thus far, his best runner has been Peruvian Group 2 winner Esidio.

As Time Goes By is the only stakes winner Take Charge Lady produced from her remaining five foals, but three of the foals in between Will Take Charge and As Time Goes By are fillies, and they are receiving excellent opportunities as is Elarose, Take Charge Lady's 2007 filly by Storm Cat. Time will tell if these daughters continue to build on their dam's legacy, but Take Charge Lady already has enough on her catalog page to have proven herself a worthy member of the sorority of Kentucky Broodmares of the Year.
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Weekend Trivia Challenge for 5/22/2021

5/22/2021

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Success in training was a family affair for one trainer. After getting his first Grade 1 win as a trainer with a Coaching Club American Oaks winner, those who looked back through the record books would have found that he had gotten his first graded win as a trainer with the filly's sire. His CCA Oaks winner was more than a one-race wonder, too, as she won five "Oaks" races all told during her 3-year-old season. Who was the trainer, and who were the horses involved in this real-life tale?
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Mares on Monday: Good Things Come in Small Packages

5/17/2021

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On May 15, Rombauer pulled an upset at nearly 12-1 odds in the Preakness Stakes. Taking advantage of the pressure being put on Kentucky Derby (for now) winner Medina Spirit by Midnight Bourbon, the Twirling Candy colt came from off the pace in the stretch to pass Midnight Bourbon, who had just finished putting away a game but leg-weary Medina Spirit. With the Tiznow colt mostly spent from his efforts in prompting the pace and nothing else coming from behind, Rombauer romped home in the sixth-fastest Preakness to date.

Bred and owned by John and Diane Fradkin, Rombauer is a second-generation homebred. Back in 1993, the couple had picked up some cash with a US$25,000 claimer named Ruff Hombre, who won a race at Del Mar for them. That was their shopping money at the 1993 Keeneland September sale. where they picked up a small, light-framed but correct filly by Afleet for US$10,500.

The filly, soon named Ultrafleet, actually had a decent pedigree. Her sire Afleet, a son of Mr. Prospector, had a weak female family and feet that were not the best but won the 1987 Jerome Handicap (USA-G1) and Pennsylvania Derby (USA-G2) as well as three Canadian stakes that year. Named the 1987 Horse of the Year in Canada, he went on to add the Toboggan Handicap (USA-G3) to his trophy case as a 4-year-old before going on to a quite useful stud career that saw him sire 66 stakes winners.

On the distaff side, Ultrafleet was the second foal of Social Conduct, a mare who placed in four stakes races on the Mid-Atlantic circuit and was a half sister to a couple of hard-knocking types in stakes winner Brief Remarks (by Talc) and Grade 3-placed Mannerism (by Grey Dawn II). Social Conduct was sired by another good racehorse that flew somewhat under the radar as a sire: Vigors (by Grey Dawn II), a come-from-behinder who won three Grade 1 races on the Southern California circuit  and sired 47 stakes winners from 514 foals while imparting a good measure of his own soundness and durability.

Jostling Queen, the next dam in the female line, is a winning half sister to stakes winner Inquire (by Star Envoy), dam of Grade 3 winner Ask de Naskra (by Star de Naskra). She herself was sired by the beautifully bred Knightly Manner (Round Table x Courtesy), who was tough enough to make 67 starts and talented enough to capture nine stakes races. Roughly the equivalent of a Grade 2 winner by modern standards, he was not a particularly good sire, nor was Nail, who sired Jostling Queen's dam Day O.  Nail was a good racehorse, though, sharing the 2-year-old championship of 1955 with Needles, and Day O. is an unraced half sister to three stakes winners including Like a Charm, ancestress of this year's Santa Anita Derby (USA-G1) winner Rock Your World (see "Mares on Monday: Rock Your World a Real Charmer," April 5, 2021).

Ultrafleet failed to win in four tries, but she did well as a broodmare, producing seven winners from 14 named foals, most by California sires. The best of those winners were California Flag, a five-time Grade 3 winner and victor in the 2009 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (USA-L), and his full sister Cambiocorsa, both by the Seattle Slew horse Avenue of Flags. A multiple Grade 3 winner in her own right, Cambiocorsa is the dam of four stakes winners including Grade 2 winners Schiaparelli (by Ghostzapper) and Moulin de Mougin (by Curlin) and is the second dam of 2018 European Horse of the Year Roaring Lion.

Cambiocorsa and most of her siblings were sold on before they could get around to contributing to the next generation, but the Fradkins retained one daughter of Ultrafleet for themselves. This was her 2011 filly Cashmere, whose sire Cowboy Cal (by Giant's Causeway) won three Grade 2 races and was second in four Grade 1 events. Small but essentially correct and a good walker like her dam, Cashmere produced stakes-placed Cono (by Lucky Pulpit) and the winners Treasure Trove (by Tapizar) and Fly Time (by Mr. Speaker) before coming up with Rombauer as her fourth foal. Still awaiting their turns at the races are the 2019 Strong Mandate filly Republique, who has been retained by the Fradkins, and the Cairo Prince yearling Alexander Helios, who is tentatively penciled in as a sales yearling. Cashmere slipped a Khozan foal late in 2019 and was bred to Kantharos for 2021.

That the Fradkins (who sell most of the horses they breed, usually as 2-year-olds) ended up retaining Rombauer as a homebred was a stroke of luck in itself, but their having bred an American Classic winner from a two-mare broodmare band is an even bigger one. They started with some good basics, though, taking a mare from a family that has consistently bred winners even from fairly modest opportunities and putting her to a fine racehorse in their price range who offered conformation and bloodlines that seemed likely to complement hers. The resulting package wasn't big and shiny; like his dam and granddam, Rombauer isn't overly large or muscular. But he is an efficient mover, light on his feet, energetic, and eager to run, and after the Preakness, there is no denying that he is big enough.



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2021 Preakness Stakes Trivia Challenge

5/14/2021

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Time again for the annual five-part Preakness trivia challenge! Can you come up with all five answers by the Preakness post time tomorrow? All answers can be found on the American Classic Pedigrees website.

1) What Preakness Stakes winner was defeated by the greatest margin in the Kentucky Derby?

2) This Preakness winner got his career off to a most inauspicious start as he failed to finish in his first race and was vanned off. Who was he?  

3) This horse didn't win the Preakness, but he got a lot of attention as a Preakness starter because he was co-owned by a former U.S. President. Name the horse and his famous owner, the year in which he ran, and where he finished.

4) What Preakness Stakes winner later distinguished himself by winning an American Horse of the Year title on fewer starts during his championship season than any other winner of American racing's highest honor?

5) This Preakness winner had an unusual career at stud after initially retiring to the breeding shed following an injury at age 5. He was back in training two months after his initial retirement to stud had been announced and ran in claiming races, and for two years after that interspersed racing activity with short stints of stud duty. At age 13, he was sold for US$400 but does not appear to have sired any more registered foals after this sale. Who was he? 

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Mares on Monday: 21st Century Broodmares of the Year

5/10/2021

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The title of Kentucky Broodmare of the Year is the highest honor that can be accorded a broodmare in the United States. For some, it has been an award reflecting a lifetime of outstanding production. For others, it has reflected the racing career of one excellent foal.

Some previous recipients of the Broodmare of the Year award have proven themselves to be among the great matriarchs of the Thoroughbred, giving rise to families that have bred on at a high level for generations. Some have been fine producers in their own day, but their daughters and granddaughters have not carried on at the same level. And some---usually young mares who gained their honors early after one of their first two or three foals rocketed to the top at the races---failed to produce anything else worthy of their lofty titles.

​This week, we'll be taking a look at the first ten mares to gain this honor in the 21st century. These are matrons who have for the most part completed their own breeding careers and whose daughters should be giving some indication as to how well they are breeding on.

2000: Primal Force

A 1987 daughter of Blushing Groom, Primal Force produced 1998 Breeders' Cup Classic (USA-G1) winner Awesome Again (by Deputy Minister) as her second foal and 2000 American champion 2-year-old male Macho Uno (by Holy Bull) as her fourth. The former, a good stallion, is now pensioned but has a fine successor at stud in 2004 American Horse of the Year Ghostzapper; the latter has been less consistent at stud but has had his moments, topped by 2013 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Mucho Macho Man. Primal Force has six producing daughters, but none have distinguished themselves in the paddocks.

2001: Turko's Turn

Foaled in 1992, the stakes-winning daughter of Turkoman earned her title by producing 2001 American Horse of the Year Point Given (by Thunder Gulch) as her second foal. Her other seven winners from 15 named foals include three stakes-placed runners including Grade 2-placed Live for Now (by Tiznow). Her daughter Perfect Story (by Tale of the Cat) is the dam of 2015 Honorable Miss Handicap (USA-G2) winner Street Story (by Street Boss) and Grade 1-placed stakes winner Paige (by Sky Mesa), and Turko's Turn has four other daughters currently in production. Her champion son proved a very inconsistent stallion.  

2002: Toussaud

A Grade 1 winner by multiple champion El Gran Senor, Toussaud compiled an outstanding record, producing Grade 1 winners Chester House (by Mr. Prospector), Honest Lady (by Seattle Slew), Chiseliing (by Woodman), and Empire Maker (by Unbridled). The last-named horse, the winner of the 2003 Belmont Stakes, became a very good stallion whose male line is now represented in the stud by his Triple Crown-winning grandson American Pharoah. Toussaud also produced Grade 2 winner Decarchy (by Distant View), and Honest Lady has bred on with four stakes winners of her own, headed by 2008 Forego Handicap (USA-G1) winner First Defence. Toussaud is also the dam of Mesmeric (by A.P. Indy), dam of 2017 New Orleans Handicap (USA-G2) winner Honorable Duty (by Distorted Humor).

2003: Prospectors Delite

The winner of two Grade 1 races in her own right, this daughter of the great broodmare sire Mr. Prospector from the family of the immortal matriarch La Troienne did her heritage proud in the paddocks. She produced only five foals, but all five became stakes winners, headed by 2003 American Horse of the Year Mineshaft (by A.P. Indy). Mineshaft has been a good stallion, and his full sister Tomisue's Delight won the 1997 Ruffian Handicap (USA-G1) before going on to produce 2009 Maker's Mark Mile Stakes (USA-G1) Mr. Sidney. Tomisue's Delight is also the second dam of Grade 3 winner Term of Art, but at this time, the family of Prospectors Delite has gone quiet.

2004: Dear Birdie

Sired by Storm Bird, Dear Birdie produced 13 winners from 15 foals, but only two have so far proved worthy of mention. The first, 2003 American champion 3-year-old filly Bird Town (by Cape Town) is the dam of 2017 Alysheba Stakes (USA-G2) winner Bird Song (by Unbridled's Song), now serving stud duty in Saudi Arabia. Bird Town was followed by 2004 Belmont Stakes (USA-G1) winner Birdstone (by Grindstone), a multiple Grade 1 winner but inconsistent sire whose champion son Summer Bird died young in Japan.

2005: Baby Zip

A quick filly by Relaunch, Baby Zip is the dam of Grade 1 winner and successful sire City Zip (by Carson City) and 2004 American Horse of the Year Ghostzapper (by Awesome Again), also a successful sire. Baby Zip is also the dam of Canadian Grade 3 winner City Wolf (by Giant's Causeway), who has not shared in his brothers' stud success. Baby Zip's best daughter in the paddocks is Getaway Girl (by Silver Deputy), dam of Grade 3 winner Northern Causeway (by Giant's Causeway) and second dam of recent Grade 2 winner Du Jour, and Baby Zip is also the dam of stakes producer Catch the Ghost (by Silver Ghost).

2006: Cara Rafaela

The winner of the 1995 Hollywood Starlet Stakes (USA-G1), this daughter of Quiet American staked her claim to Broodmare of the Year honors on her champion son Bernardini (by A.P. Indy), the winner of the 2006 Preakness Stakes (USA-G1) and the best American sophomore male of that year. She produced no other stakes winners, but her Grade 1-placed daughter Ile de France (by Storm Cat) is the dam of multiple Grade 1 winner and stakes producer Love and Pride (by A.P. Indy). Cara Rafaela is also the dam of Lovely Regina (by Deputy Minister), dam of multiple Grade 3 winner Thisskyhasnolimit, and of stakes producer Burgundy Ice (by Storm Cat). A fourth daughter of Cara Rafaela, Kind Words (by A.P. Indy), produced a champion in Saudi Arabia.

2007: Better Than Honour

Sired by Deputy Minister, Better Than Honour was a Grade 2-winning representative of the outstanding female family of Best in Show and lived up to that heritage by producing four stakes winners of her own. She gained fame with back-to-back Belmont Stakes (USA-G1) winners Jazil (by Seeking the Gold) and Rags to Riches (by A.P. Indy); the latter was the American champion 3-year-old filly of 2007 and is the dam of Hungarian Horse of the Year Rhett Butler. Better Than Honour also produced 2008 Peter Pan Stakes (USA-G2) winner Casino Drive (by Mineshaft) and 2009 Breeders' Cup Marathon (USA-L) winner Man of Iron (by Giant's Causeway). Better Than Honour's daughter Teeming (by Storm Cat) is the dam of three stakes winners including 2013 Hollywood Starlet Stakes (USA-G1) winner Streaming (by Smart Strike). Another daughter of Better Than Honour, Tiffany's Honor (by Street Cry), is the dam of Grade 3 winner Greatest Honour (byTapit).

2008: Vertigineux

Sired by Kris S., Vertigineux had talent but was not very sound. She produced one for the ages in the great Zenyatta (by Street Cry), whose four Eclipse Awards include the trophy as the 2010 American Horse of the Year. Unfortunately, Zenyatta has been luckless as a broodmare and has yet to come up with a winner, and her multiple Grade 1-winning half sister Balance (by Thunder Gulch) has so far managed just two winners from eight named foals. Another stakes-winning daughter of Vertigineux, Where's Bailey (by Aljabr) has fared better, producing Grade 2 winner She's Not Here (by Street Cry). Vertigineux is also the dam of Treasure Trail (by Pulpit), dam of Irish Group 3 winner Long Island Sound (by War Front).

2009: Sweet Life

Rounding out the first decade of the century is Sweet Life, a 1996 daughter of Kris S. who produced 2004 American champion 2-year-old filly Sweet Catomine (by Storm Cat; second dam of stakes winners Naughty Thoughts and Inthewinnerscircle) as her first foal. Her other standout is Life Is Sweet (by Storm Cat), winner of the 2009 Breeders' Cup Ladies' Classic (USA-G1). Sweet Life is also the dam of Grade 2-placed stakes winner Calmonico (by Storm Cat) and of Symbolic Gesture (by Bernardini), dam of 2020 Risen Star Stakes (USA-G2) winner Modernist (by Uncle Mo).

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Weekend Trivia Challenge for 5/7/2021

5/7/2021

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This African-American trainer was sufficiently skilled at his craft that he made himself the one of wealthiest blacks in Louisville in the late 19th century. He also appears to have been the first of his race to own or co-own a Kentucky Oaks winner. Who was he, what was the name of his Oaks-winning filly, and in what year did she win?
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Mares on Monday: A Lady to Fill the Senses

5/3/2021

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On Oaks Day, April 30, Malathaat confirmed her status as queen pro tem of the American 3-year-old filly division. Neither a bumpy start nor a determined effort by runner-up Search Results could keep the daughter of Curlin from claiming the "Lilies for the Fillies" in the Longines Kentucky Oaks (USA-G1), making her the 147th filly to capture the counterpart to the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (USA-G1). A US$1.05 million yearling purchase from the 2019 Keeneland September sale for owner Shadwell Stud from breeder Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings, she is a case of "pretty does as pretty is," as the looks of a top sales youngster have been matched by her performance to date.

Malathaat (whose name is said to mean "senses" in Arabic) is the first Oaks winner for Curlin, whose other standout daughters include 2015 American champion 3-year-old filly Stellar Wind and Coaching Club American Oaks (USA-G1) winners Curalina (2015) and Paris Lights (2020). Twice the American Horse of the Year during his own racing career, Curlin has become one of North America's best sires of two-turn runners and is currently fourth on the American general sire list.

Malathaat is bred along similar lines to both Stellar Wind and Paris Lights, as all three are out of mares from the A.P. Indy male line. In Malathaat's case, the maternal grandsire is A.P. Indy himself, the 1992 American Horse of the Year and the American champion broodmare sire of 2015. (A.P. Indy also led the American general sire list twice, in 2003 and 2006.) As of May 3, Curlin has sired 31 winners and 7 stakes winners out of 68 named foals of racing age sired from A.P. Indy mares---subpar to his overall results by percentage of winners, but superior by percentage of stakes winners.

The Oaks winner is the third foal and only winner out of A.P. Indy's daughter Dreaming of Julia, who won the 2012 Frizette Stakes (USA-G1) as a juvenile and the 2013 Gulfstream Park Oaks (USA-G2) at 3. In the latter race, she won by over 21 lengths and posted a 114 Beyer Speed figure. That made her the favorite for the 2013 Kentucky Oaks, but she all but eliminated herself by a bad stumble at the star and did well to end up fourth. She ended her career having won half her eight starts.

A half sister to multiple Grade 3 winner Dream Pauline (by Tapit) and to the speedy stakes winner Atreides (by Medaglia d'Oro), Dreaming of Julia has since produced an unnamed 2-year-old colt by Medaglia d'Oro, a 2020 filly by Curlin, and a 2021 filly by Medaglia d'Oro. She is out of multiple Grade 1 winner Dream Rush, who also remains active as a broodmare and produced a Bernardini colt this year.

While the cross of Curlin to an A.P. Indy mare would suggest stamina as the strong suit, Dream Rush provides an injection of high-class speed to the pedigree as she scored Grade 1 wins in the Prioress Breeders' Cup Stakes (6 furlongs) and the Darley Test Stakes (7 furlongs) in 2007. Her performances reflect the influence of her sire Wild Rush (by inaugural Breeders' Cup Classic, USA-G1, winner Wild Again), who took down his biggest wins in the 1998 Carter Handicap (USA-G1) over 7 furlongs and the 1998 Metropolitan Handicap (USA-G1) over a mile. A versatile horse, Wild Rush equaled the track record of 1:53.60 for 9.5 furlongs at Remington Park and set a track record of 1:47.51 for 9 furlongs at Sportsman's Park, and Dream Rush was the last of three North American Grade 1 winners that he left behind him when he was exported to Japan in 2003.

Dream Rush is out of the unraced Unbridled mare Turbo Dream, whose other produce includes Adream (by Bernardini), dam of Grade 3 winner Song of Spring (by Spring At Last). A closely inbred mare, Turbo Dream is out of the winning Mr. Prospector mare Reve de Fee and, thus, carries a 3x2 cross to Mr. Prospector (who through Fappiano, is the paternal grandsire of Unbridled). As Curlin is a male-line grandson of Mr. Prospector, Malathaat represents two generations of outcrossing away from that stallion followed by a reintroduction of his blood through a different source, in this case Curlin's sire Smart Strike, who was a two-time American champion sire.

Unbeaten in five starts, Malathaat has looked so good that Shadwell Stable general manager Rick Nichols and trainer Todd Pletcher have voiced the possibility of starting her against males in either the Preakness Stakes (USA-G1) or the Belmont Stakes (USA-G1), the latter being a race that Pletcher won with A. P. Indy's champion daughter Rags to Riches in 2007----ironically, at Preakness winner Curlin's expense. Much will depend on how Malathaat looks over the next few days and how the fields shape up for the other two Classics, but for now, she and her connections can enjoy the memory of the roar of the crowd in the Churchill Downs stands, the sweet smell of lilies, and the feel and taste of victory, providing a feast for all the senses in one comely filly.
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    I'm Avalyn Hunter, an author, pedigree researcher and longtime racing fan.

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