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Mares on Monday: If You Love Claiborne Bloodlines, Admit It

10/27/2025

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​Keeneland’s Bank of America Valley View Stakes (USA-G2) on October 24 brought together a full field of 3-year-old fillies seeking a graded win at a mile on turf, none with particularly dominating recent form. Under the circumstances, it appeared to be a wide-open race, and it was Claiborne Farm homebred Admit who ended up getting the job done. Previously grade 3-placed on turf, Admit laid off the early pace and responded well when tipped to the outside for a clear run in the stretch, finishing 1½ lengths clear of Classic Q. It was Admit’s first graded win, and the filly improved her record to 4-1-3 from 11 starts.

A daughter of Claiborne’s good stallion Blame (the 2010 American champion older male), Admit represents one of the farm’s treasured families, that of Monarchy. A full sister to the great Round Table (whose six championship titles over four seasons of racing include American Horse of the Year honors in 1958), Monarchy illustrated the differences that can exist between full siblings as she was a precocious juvenile who failed to improve on her early successes. Her one big score was in the 1959 Arlington-Washington Lassie Stakes, and she was also third in the Alcibiades Stakes at Keeneland. That record was good enough to get her a rating of 112 pounds on the 1959 Experimental Free Handicap for American juveniles, 5 pounds below champion filly My Dear Girl. Monarchy won three of her seven starts at 3 but earned no more black type before retiring to the paddocks.

Although her failure to emulate her brother’s form at 3 and beyond was undoubtedly a disappointment, a stakes-winning full sister to a Horse of the Year, by a fine stallion (Princequillo) who was already starting to make his mark as a broodmare sire and out of an excellent producer (Knight’s Daughter) who had shown brilliant speed during her own racing days, was still a more than welcome addition to the Claiborne broodmare band. Five-time American champion sire Nasrullah, who had gotten excellent results when put to Princequillo mares, was already dead by the time Monarchy began her breeding career, but Nasrullah’s best son, eventual eight-time American champion sire Bold Ruler had taken his place as king of the Claiborne stallion barn. Thus, it was only natural that Monarchy would become a member of his book; in fact, she visited Bold Ruler eight straight times, producing six named foals in 1962-1969.

The results were not impressive given the quality of the parents. Bold Ruler was not the soundest of horses in spite of having been nursed through a 33-race career, and Monarchy tended to pass on the offset knees and upright pasterns that she had inherited from Knight’s Daughter. Only four of Monarchy’s foals by Bold Ruler made it to the races, and one of those did not win. The only one to capture a stakes event was Title, who won the Silver Anniversary Stakes and later produced the minor stakes winner Caption (by Riva Ridge).

The Bold Ruler/Monarchy cross also produced the useful sires Envoy and Blade, so it was not without some merit. Nevertheless, the second half of Monarchy’s broodmare career was spent visiting other Claiborne stallions, and the six live foals she produced in 1970-1979 included her best runner, 1976 Lexington Handicap (USA-G2) winner Fabled Monarch (by Le Fabuleux), and her best producing daughter, the Nijinsky II mare State.

State was not a particularly successful race mare, winning just three of her 34 starts, but she was sounder and more durable than her dam. Like many of Nijinsky II’s progeny, she also showed her best form on turf. She produced five stakes winners, four of which were graded winners.

Narrate, a 1980 daughter of 1975 American champion juvenile male Honest Pleasure, was the first of those graded winners, taking down the 1983 Falls City Handicap (USA-G3). Although she produced only one stakes winner, she was much the most important of State’s foals in the long term. That one stakes winner was 1991 Frizette Stakes (USA-G1) winner Preach (by Mr. Prospector), whose son by A.P. Indy, Pulpit, became both a multiple Grade 2 winner and a good stallion for Claiborne. Pulpit, in turn, sired three-time American champion sire Tapit, currently the primary conduit for the male line of A.P. ‘s sire Seattle Slew, winner of the American Triple Crown in 1977 and the primary link back to Bold Ruler in tail-male. Preach’s winning full sister Yarn proved an even better broodmare, producing 2000 English and Irish champion juvenile male Minardi (by Boundary), 1997 King’s Bishop Stakes (USA-G2) winner and successful sire Tale of the Cat (by Storm Cat), and stakes winner Spunoutacontrol (by Wild Again); she is also the second dam of 2001 American and European champion 2-year-old male Johannesburg (by the Storm Cat horse Hennessy), who stands at the head of a branch of the Storm Cat male line currently anchored by six-time American champion sire Into Mischief.

Admit was produced as the sixth foal from Preach’s last daughter, the winner Profess (by War Front), so it is a safe conclusion to say that she will be as welcome as the flowers in May when it comes to a decision about whether to retain her for the Claiborne broodmare band. In the meantime, her development as a racehorse should be worth watching, assuming she is permitted to continue her racing career next year, for the progeny of Blame typically improve with increasing maturity. She is a living embodiment of the bloodlines and breeding philosophy that have made Claiborne a legend in American Thoroughbred breeding, and it is a pleasure to see a century’s worth of careful stewardship continuing to be rewarded.
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Mares on Monday: Long Shot Kappa Kappa Proves a Good Bet in Raven Run

10/20/2025

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​Kappa Kappa may have been the second-longest shot on the board in the Lexus Raven Run Stakes (USA-G2) on Saturday at Keeneland, but she ran like a solid favorite. Never far away from the lead, she proved game and determined down the stretch in spite of brief difficulty in switching leads and gained the decision from Vodka with a Twist in the final strides. Ragtime, who was favored after coming in off a nice win in the Dogwood Stakes presented by Resolute Racing (USA-G3), encountered some early crowding but closed well to be third.

The Raven Run was the third win from four starts for the improving Kappa Kappa, who came in off an easy allowance win in Pennsylvania-bred company at Parx Racing and was making her first start away from Parx. She became the 15th stakes winner and fifth graded stakes winner of 2025 for Omaha Beach, who leads the American third-crop sire list and is 11th on the American general sire list. The son of War Front stood the 2025 Northern Hemisphere season at Spendthrift for US$35,000 but, not surprisingly, is getting a bump to US$75,000 for 2026.

On the distaff side of her pedigree, Kappa Kappa traces back to Itsabet, a foundation mare for Harry Z. Isaacs’ Brookfield Farm, via that matriarch’s most important daughter, Iaround (by Round Table). This branch of the family includes Juddmonte Farm’s great broodmare Hasili and is responsible for five champions: 1977 Irish champion 2-year-old filly Sookera, 2001 American champion turf female Banks Hill, 2005 American champion turf male Leroidesanimaux, 2005 American champion turf female Intercontinental, and 2009 Canadian Horse of the Year Champs Elysees. All of these horses trace back to Iaround through her daughter Irule (by Young Emperor).

Kappa Kappa’s branch of the family has not been quite so distinguished but has also done very well. Her fifth dam is Irule’s half sister I’m a Pleasure (by two-time American champion sire What a Pleasure), who produced 1984 Jerome Handicap (USA-G1) winner Is Your Pleasure (by Accipiter) and listed stakes-placed I’m Tickled Pink (by Sportin’ Life), dam of Brazilian listed stakes winner Mamangaba (by Dubai Dust). I’m a Pleasure is also the dam of I’ll Get There (by multiple Grade 1 winner Copelan), dam of 2000 Hollywood Starlet Stakes (USA-G1) winner I Believe in You (by Pleasant Tap) and restricted stakes winner Ready Cash (by Key to the Mint).

I’m a Pleasure’s first foal was In Jubilation, whose sire Isgala (by 1959 American champion sprinter Intentionally) was one of Isaacs’ homebred stallions and proved a useful stallion from limited opportunities. Defying the conventional wisdom that decrees that a mare will normally produce her best runner from her first five foals, In Jubilation waited until her seventh foal to come up with Little Baby Bear (by Broad Brush), a multiple Group 1 winner in Brazil. She then added two more stakes winners in 1997 Indiana Derby (USA-L) winner Dubai Dust (by Broad Brush) and 1999 Flamingo Stakes (USA-G3) winner First American (by Quiet American; a sire of some importance in Brazil) and finished her production record with Mulata Assanhada (by Royal Academy), dam of multiple Brazilian listed stakes winner Amado Mio.

I’m in Celebration (by Copelan), In Jubilation’s fourth foal, won three of her four starts and was second in the other but did not stay healthy long enough to try her mettle in stakes company. She produced the Grade 3-placed listed stakes winners Nice to Know (by Known Fact) and Cheers and Tears (by Bold Ruckus) as well as Sommerfest (by El Prado), dam of 2006 Turfway Breeders’ Cup Stakes (USA-G3) winner Beautiful Bets (by Alphabet Soup); Birthday Wire (by Birdonthewire), dam of listed stakes winner Wiredfortwotwenty (by Greatness); and Charming Amanda (by Charismatic), dam of Puerto Rican stakes winners Charming Tam (by Tamhid) and Copa de Oro (by Nite Light).

Accomplished, I’m in Celebration’s daughter by 1998 Breeders’ Cup Classic (USA-G1) winner Awesome Again, failed to win from three tries but produced 2019 Kelso Handicap (USA-G2) winner Pat on the Back (by Congrats) and New York restricted stakes winner Sarah Accomplished (by Performing Magic). To date, the only one of Accomplished’s daughters to produce a stakes winner is the winner Pharoah’s Princess (by multiple Grade 1 winner Pioneerof the Nile), who produced Kappa Kappa as her fourth foal and had no further produce until this spring, when she dropped a filly by Tiz the Law.

Given the timing and the necessity of a cross-country trip, it seems unlikely that Kappa Kappa’s connections will wheel her back in the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint (USA-G1) at Del Mar, but it can be hoped that the 2026 edition will be on her radar. If she remains in training and continues showing the gameness and speed she displayed in the Raven Run, it’s a good bet that there will be some future stakes races with her name on the trophy.




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Mares on Monday: Setup for a Clash of Unbeatens in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies

10/6/2025

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After an exciting weekend of racing, two undefeated juvenile fillies appear to be on a collision course for the NetJets Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (USA-G1), carded for October 31, 2025, at Del Mar. One, Frizette Stakes (USA-G1) winner Iron Orchard, ran down Spinaway Stakes (USA-G1) third Rileytole in the last stride to claim a “Win and You’re In” ticket to California. The other, Spinaway winner Tommy Jo, kept her undefeated record intact via the stewards’ box after being fouled by first-place finisher Percy’s Bar in the final furlong of the Darley Alcibiades Stakes (USA-G1) at Keeneland, also a “Win and You’re In” race.

Both fillies boast blue-blooded pedigrees to back up their racing resumes. A daughter of six-time American champion sire Into Mischief, Tommy Jo is the second foal and first winner from listed stakes winner Mother Mother, who placed three times at the Grade 1 level. A half sister to 2014 Kentucky Derby (USA-G1) runner-up Commanding Curve (by Master Command), Mother Mother is by multiple Grade 1 winner and 2009 Kentucky Derby runner-up Pioneerof the Nile, a son of 2003 Belmont Stakes (USA-G1) winner Empire Maker who gained fame as the sire of 2015 American Triple Crown winner American Pharoah.

Mother Mother’s dam is the winner Mother, whose sire Lion Hearted is a Grade 2-placed son of Storm Cat and Easy Goer’s full sister Cadillacing (winner of the 1988 Ballerina Stakes, USA-G1). Mother was produced from Proper Lassie, a half sister by the good Northern Dancer horse Topsider to stakes winner Proper Ridge (by Cox’s Ridge), and Proper Lassie, in turn, is out of the listed stakes winner Proper Miss (by 1965 American champion 3-year-old male Tom Rolfe), a half sister to multiple Grade 1 winner Proper Reality (by In Reality) and listed stakes winners Proper Native (by Our Native) and Proper Reflection (by Relaunch). The female line traces back to the important 20th-century broodmare Alablue.

Iron Orchard is from the same sire line as Tommy Jo as she is the first Grade 1 winner sired by 2020 American Horse of the Year Authentic (by Into Mischief). She is the third named foal and second winner from stakes-placed Onebrethatatime, whose sire Brethren (by Distorted Humor) won the 2011 Sam F. Davis Stakes (USA-G3) and has had some success as a regional sire in Florida. A half sister to 2011 Arlington-Washington Lassie Stakes (USA-G3) winner Wonderlandbynight (by Sky Mesa), Onebrethatatime is also a half sister to Gilded Miracle (by Gilded Time), dam of 2023 Shoemaker Mile Stakes (USA-G1) winner Exaulted (by Twirling Candy) and second dam of 2023 Presque Isle Downs Masters Stakes (USA-G2) winner Accomplished Girl (by Street Boss).

Onebrethatatime and her siblings are out of the winning Gulch mare Onemiracleatatime, a half sister to listed stakes winner Timeless Love (by Gilded Time). The next dam in the tail-female line, Katie Love (by 1986 American champion turf male Manila) is out of the Francis S. mare Gonfalon, also the dam of multiple Grade 1 winner Ogygian (by Damascus) and second dam of 1996 Metropolitan Handicap (USA-G1) winner Honour and Glory (by Relaunch).

On paper, Tommy Jo looks to be the faster of these two fillies based both on speed figures and on a line through Rileytole, but anything can happen on Breeders’ Cup day and often does. The West Coast contingent also cannot be taken lightly after Explora’s monster race in the Oak Leaf Stakes Presented by Oak Leaf Racing Association (USA-G2), and it must be remembered that Bottle of Rouge beat her for the Del Mar Debutante Stakes (USA-G1) at Del Mar, where she is now 2-for-2 (see “Mares on Monday: Bottle of Rouge Is the Toast of the Del Mar Debutante,” September 8, 2025). As daughters of Breeders’ Cup Classic (USA-G1) winners Blame and Vino Rosso, respectively, they should have no trouble with the 8.5-furlong distance and may well improve next year to boot. In any event, the Juvenile Fillies should be one of the more interesting races on the Breeders’ Cup card and will probably crown this year’s junior princess of the sport in the United States, regardless of which filly wins.


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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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