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Mares on Monday: Earth God Is the Latest Heir to Empiric's Realm in Argentina

5/27/2024

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​Following his powerful win in the Gran Premo Gran Criterium (ARG-G1) on May 25, Caballeriza Grupo 4’s Earth God appears to have laid claim to leadership among Argentina’s juvenile males. The son of Cosmic Trigger has also established himself as the latest star for the family of Empiric, a modern Argentine foundation mare.

Foaled in 1966, Empiric (Voodoo x Empress, by British Empire) had relatively modest antecedents by both bloodlines and racing performance, and she produced only six named foals. Five, though, were fillies, and they proved to be a fountain of class for the breeding program of Haras Abolengo. All five have figured in the pedigrees of multiple major winners in the Southern Hemisphere.

Emboscada, a 1971 daughter of 1967 Polla de Potrillos (Argentine Two Thousand Guineas) winner Gran Atleta, was the first of the quintet, which was later graced by multiple Argentine Group 1 winner Espadana (by El Virtuoso) and stakes winner Escolastica (by Great Host). She produced Encapuchado (by Farnesio), winner of the Premio General Lavalle (ARG-G3), and Argentine stakes winner Escalante (by El Virtuoso). Her daughter Escalada (a full sister to Escalante) made quite a name for herself as a broodmare in Peru, producing 1987 Peruvian Horse of the Year Tex Fina (by Utopico), 1993 Premio O.S.A.F. (PER-G1) winner Tucson, and two other stakes winners. Another daughter, Emece (by Liloy), produced multiple Argentine Group 1 winner Emigrant (by Candy Stripes), and a third, Embouche (by Ringaro), produced 1993 Grande Prêmio Barão de Piracicaba (BRZ-G1) winner Endurance (by Equalize).

Esencia, a full sister to Escalante and Escalada, did not achieve such heights during her own producing career; her best runner was 1996 Premio Loteria Nacional (ARG-G3) winner Esnaola (by Ringaro). Esnaola, though, turned out to be a first-rate broodmare, producing 2005 Argentine champion older female Halo Ola, 2003 Gran Premio Suipacha (ARG-G1) winner and noteworthy speed sire Sebi Halo, and 2009 Gran Premio Estrellas Mile (ARG-G1) winner Snapy Halo, all by Southern Halo. Esnaola is also the second dam of 2012 Premio Fortunato Damiani (ARG-G3) winner Renacere and the third dam of 2024 Premio Arturo R. y Arturo Bullrich (ARG-G2) winner Olimpica Hit.

Esnaola’s full sister Encantada is the dam of multiple Argentine Group 2 winner Encandiladora (by Equalize), whose successes may have inspired the mating of Esencia to Equalize in 1997. The resulting filly, Estadista, managed to won only one of her 11 starts, and her record as a broodmare was not overly inspiring either, as Group 3-placed Easy On (by Easing Along) was the best of her five named foals. Esthetically, Estadista’s 2006 daughter by the Hennessy horse Sunray Spirit, never made it to the track at all, but her multiple Group 3-placed daughter Earthshine has brought this branch of Empiric’s family back to the top by producing Earth God as her fifth foal and fifth winner.

Six generations is a long time for any major family to maintain top-level production, but Empiric’s family still seems to be going strong in Argentina and has also had some high-class representatives in South Africa. This clan is still awaiting its first major breakthrough in North America, but for now, it continues to be an important lineage in the Southern Hemisphere and one that could come up with an international star at any time.




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Mares on Monday: Lady Be Good Goes Shopping for More Classic Glory

5/20/2024

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​Some female families are gifts that keep on giving, and the family of Lady Be Good is one such. The subject of an earlier post this year after Martin Luther King scored a Classic success in Brazil (“Mares on Monday: The Lady Is Good in Brazil," March 18, 2024), Lady Be Good is back for more acclaim as the fifth dam of Seize the Grey, who scored a front-running victory in the classic Preakness Stakes (USA-G1) exactly two months later on May 18.

Like Martin Luther King, Seize the Grey descends from Lady Be Good’s daughter by Majestic Prince, Impish. Their lines diverge at the next step. Whereas Martin Luther King traces back to Defer (Damascus x I Pass, by Buckpasser x Impish), Seize the Grey is a great-grandson of Shopping (by Damascus’s good son Private Account x Impish). Shopping was bred by Arthur Hancock III, who had acquired Impish from Ogden Phipps prior to the filly’s birth, but like many of the Phipps family’s good producers, Shopping fit neatly in the category of “New York allowance filly,” winning three of her 10 starts during her single season on the track.

Shopping lived up to the family tradition by becoming a good broodmare, though not for Hancock, who had sold her to Jack Dreyfus’s Hobeau Farm. For Hobeau, Shopping produced Miss Shop (by Deputy Minister), winner of the 2007 Personal Ensign Stakes (USA-G1) and dam of multiple Grade 3 winner Tin Type Gal (by Tapit); Trappe Shot (by Tapit), winner of the 2011 True North Handicap (USA-G2) and twice Grade 1-placed; listed stakes winner Bought in Dixie (by Dixieland Band); and stakes winner Shop Again (by Wild Again). Shopping is also the dam of Shop Here (by Dehere), dam of Grade 2-placed listed stakes winner Fifth Avenue (by Monarchos) and second dam of 2019 Shakertown Stakes (USA-G2) winner Imprimis (by Broken Vow) and listed stakes winners Shoplifted (by Into Mischief) and Eloquist (by Nyquist).

Although she showed much less talent on the track than her half sister Miss Shop, Shop Around has done her fair share to maintain this branch of the family, producing 2012 FrontRunner Stakes (USA-G1) winner Power Broker (by Pulpit) and stakes winner Fierce Boots (by Tiznow). She is also the dam of stakes-placed Smart Shopping (by Smart Strike), who produced Seize the Grey as her third foal before throwing the unraced 2022 Justify filly Cirque Lodge and a 2024 filly by Life Is Good. Shop Around also has a couple of unraced youngsters awaiting their turn in the spotlight, the unraced 2022 filly Winning Streep and a 2023 filly, both by Oscar Performance.

Few female families last five or six generations at the top level, but Lady Be Good’s clan is breeding on strongly and doesn’t appear to be slowing down. With well-bred fillies like the ones mentioned above continuing to be produced, along with good racetrack performers, it seems that Lady Be Good will continue to do good for the Thoroughbred well into the 21st century,
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Mares on Monday: An "Almost" Derby Double for Darling My Darling

5/13/2024

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One of the more unusual doubles in Kentucky Derby history turned up during this year’s 150th anniversary renewal as two “cousins” came bumping and driving down the long Churchill Downs stretch in pursuit of Mystik Dan. Both second-place Sierra Leone and third-place Forever Young are grandsons of the mare Darling My Darling, and though no one can deny the courage shown by Mystik Dan in bursting through a narrow hole in the inside and then hanging on to win by the width of a flared nostril, it is entirely possible that without the repeated contact during the stretch run, Darling My Darling might be the second dam of both a Derby winner and a Derby runner-up.

Foaled in 1997, Darling My Darling was a good race mare on her own account, running second in the Matron Stakes (USA-G1) and Frizette Stakes (USA-G1) as a juvenile. At 3, she won the listed Raven Run Stakes at Keeneland, clicking off seven panels in a swift 1:20.88, and at 4 she added the Doubledogdare Stakes, also at Keeneland, at a mile and one-sixteenth.

Sired by two-time American champion sire Deputy Minister (the 1981 Canadian Horse of the Year and American champion 2-year-old male), Darling My Darling was produced by the Mining mare Roamin Rachel, making her a half sister to 2004 Japanese Horse of the Year Zenno Rob Roy (by Sunday Silence). Darling My Darling is also a half sister to Stray Cat (by Storm Cat), dam of Japanese Group 3 winners Cat Coin (by Stay Gold), One Breath Away (by Stay Gold), and Rock This Town (by Orfevre) as well as Japanese listed stakes winner Tagano Elisabeth (by Special Week).

Roaming Rachel was probably the best runner sired by the brilliant but unsound 1988 Vosburgh Stakes (USA-G1) winner Mining. Like her sire, she could pick ‘em up and put ‘em down, picking up the marquee score of her career in the 1994 Ballerina Handicap (USA-G1). A full sister to Canadian restricted stakes winner Hello Rachel and to Choice Claim, dam of 2001 First Lady Handicap (USA-G3) winner Another (by Seattle Slew), Roaming Rachel is also a half sister to Tangled (by Linkage), dam of 1995 Acorn Stakes (USA-G1) winner Cat’s Cradle (by Flying Paster), Roamin Rachel is out of the unraced Clever Trick mare One Smart Lady, whose dam Pia’s Lady (by the top-class handicapper Pia Star) also produced stakes winner Not Tomorrow (by Moonsplash).

Darling My Darling produced two good fillies on her own account to matings with stallions from the A.P. Indy male line. The elder, Forever Darling (by Congrats), won the 2016 Santa Ynez Stakes (USA-G2) and is the dam of Forever Young, who has the UAE Derby (UAE-G2) and Saudi Derby (KSA-G3) to his credit along with his Kentucky Derby third. The younger, Heavenly Love (by Malibu Moon), won the 2017 Darley Alcibiades Stakes (USA-G1) and is the dam of Sierra Leone (by Gun Runner), who came into the Run for the Roses off wins in the Toyota Blue Grass Stakes (USA-G1) and Risen Star Stakes (USA-G2). Darling My Darling is also the dam of Sky My Darling (by Sky Mesa), dam of multiple Brazilian Group 3 winner Charles Do Bronxs (by Carrocel Encantado).

Darling My Darling’s last name foal is Lovely Darling, an unraced 2021 filly by Flameaway, but both Forever Darling and Heavenly Love remain in production. The former produced a 2022 filly by Kizuna and a 2023 filly by Epiphaneia, while the latter is the dam of the unraced 2022 Nyquist colt Domestic Policy and a 2024 filly by Gun Runner. As for the participants in Darling My Darling’s double of Derby placers, they will undoubtedly be heard from again later in the year, though perhaps in not such dramatic fashion as when they nearly kept the Kentucky Derby all in the family.
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Mares on Monday: Raise a Mint Julep, Ma'am

5/6/2024

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​Talk about going from rags to riches. In 2014, Ma’am was a $9,500 RNA at the Keeneland September yearling sale. On May 4, 2024, she became absolutely priceless. That was the day that her first foal, the Goldencents colt Mystik Dan, hung on to win the 150th Kentucky Derby by a desperate nose.

A private purchase for Lance Gasaway, Daniel Hamby, and 4G Racing after her flop at the sales, Ma’am proved fairly tough if not overly classy on the racetrack. Trained by Kenny McPeek—who is also the trainer of her son—through her first 17 starts and by Brad Cox for the last six, she won four of her 23 starts and placed in another eight, finishing her career with earnings of $167,923.

Bred by Lucy Bassett, Ma’am is a daughter of 2008 Santa Anita Derby (USA-G1) and Travers Stakes (USA-G1) winner Colonel John (by Tiznow), who was later sent to Korea after a solid but unspectacular stud career in Kentucky. A full sister to multiple Greek highweight Revamp, winner of the 2019 Greek Derby, Ma’am was produced from the winner Lady Siphonica, whose full brother Siphonic won the 2001 Hollywood Futurity (USA-G1).

Further back, Ma’am’s pedigree continues in the same vein as the mating of her parents, putting together horses that were very good on the racetrack but not exactly household names when it came to the breeding shed. Her broodmare sire is Siphon, a Brazilian-bred scion of the St. Simon male line who won the 1994 Grande Prêmio Julio Martins (BRZ-G1) in his native land and the 1996 Hollywood Gold Cup Invitational Handicap (USA-G1) and 1997 Santa Anita Handicap (USA-G1) in North America. Siphonic was as good as anything he ever sired in North America (he also begot 2005 Frank J. DeFrancis Memorial Dash Stakes, USA-G1, winner I’m the Tiger) before being repatriated permanently back to Brazil, where he died in 2019.

Also a half sister to listed stakes winner Mountain Girl (by Mountain Cat), Lady Siphonica is out of stakes-placed Cherokee Crossing, whose other foals include Rose of Summer (by El Prado), dam of 2008 Starlet Stakes (USA-G1) winner Laragh (by Tapit) and 2014 Fort Lauderdale Stakes (USA-G2) winner Summer Front (by War Front). A daughter of 1988 Flamingo Stakes (USA-G1) winner Cherokee Colony (by Pleasant Colony), Cherokee Crossing is a half sister to multiple Grade 2 winner Dixie Dot Com (by Dixie Brass) and is out of unraced Sky Meadows, a Conquistador Cielo half sister to the minor stakes winner Kiltartan Cross (by Hero’s Honor). This female line traces back to Hillbrook, an important producer who was a half sister to the top-class handicapper Hillsdale.

Following Mystik Dan, Ma’am has produced Yes Ma’am, a 2022 filly by Unified who has yet to start, and Ford’s Ma’am, a yearling daughter of Knicks Go. Needless to say, the value of both these fillies has risen considerably thanks to their brother’s heroics under the Twin Spires. Ma’am was most recently bred to 2020 Louisiana Derby (USA-G2) winner Wells Bayou (by Lookin At Lucky), a sentimental choice for Lance and Sharilyn Gasaway as they are part-owners in the stallion.

Although one can wish Ma’am and her owners every future success, she may produce absolutely nothing worth mention during the rest of her broodmare career. This does not detract in the least from the magnitude of her achievement. She is now part of an exclusive club with only 150 members, the dams of Kentucky Derby winners, and as such has achieved a measure of immortality that could not have been foreseen on a September day 10 years ago when she was led out of the Keeneland ring unsold. Her story is one of those that keeps hope alive for those who cannot afford to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on a stud fee or millions of dollars on an elite mare, and perhaps it may kindle dreams for someone else who may someday find themselves among the connections of a Derby winner.



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    I'm Avalyn Hunter, an author, pedigree researcher and longtime racing fan with a particular interest in Thoroughbred mares and their contributions to the history of the breed.

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