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Mares on Monday: A Canadian Tragedy Leads to a Brilliant Hollywood Triumph

11/29/2021

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E. P. Taylor is now a legendary figure in the history of Canadian Thoroughbred breeding, but even he had to start somewhere. It was Mona Bell who became his first love and his first heartbreak among the many fine horses he owned. A 1935 daughter of the English import Osiris II who cost Taylor $1,200 in Canadian currency as a yearling, the filly became a popular idol at ages 3 and 4 thanks to her tilts against the best Canadian colt of her crop, Bunty Lawless. When it was announced that the two would be mated at the end of their racing careers, Canadian racing fans greeted the news with wild enthusiasm. Unfortunately, it was not to be, as Mona Bell broke a leg as a 4-year-old and could not be saved.

The loss of Mona Bell nearly crushed Taylor, but he not only persevered with Thoroughbred racing but moved into breeding. One of the keystones of the latter endeavor proved to be Mona Bell's full sister Iribelle, who was stakes-placed on the track before becoming a foundation mare for Taylor's Windfields Farm.

Bred to five-time Canadian champion sire Chop Chop, Iribelle produced 1952 Canadian Horse of the Year Canadiana, also a multiple stakes winner in the United States. Canadiana, in turn, produced multiple Canadian stakes winner All Canadian (by Bunty Lawless's son Windfields), but she was eclipsed as a broodmare by her half sister Victoriana. A daughter of Windfields, Victoriana produced 1960 Canadian Horse of the Year and successful sire Victoria Park (by Chop Chop) and, through her stakes-winning daughter Victoria Regina (by Ménétrier), became the second dam of 1968 Canadian Horse of the Year Viceregal and 13-time Canadian champion sire Vice Regent, both by Northern Dancer.

Victoriana also produced Northern Queen (by Northern Dancer's sire Nearctic), who lived up to both her name and her illustrious connections by winning the 1965 Canadian Oaks and becoming the Canadian champion 3-year-old filly of that year. Northern Queen was not the broodmare that Victoria Regina was, but she did produce two stakes winners in Buckstopper (by Buckpasser) and Against All Flags (by Hoist the Flag). Against All Flags, in turn produced only five foals, but three were fillies. Her eldest daughter, Pass All Flags (by Buckpasser) produced 1992 Miami Breeders' Cup Handicap (USA-G3) winner Jodi's Sweetie (by Time for a Change), while her youngest daughter, My Native Flag (by Raise a Native) is the dam of 1997 Brazilian Mare of the Year Bandeira Nativa (by Elmaamul).

The best of the daughters of Against All Flags as a race mare was Dewan's Flag (by 1970 Brooklyn Handicap winner Dewan, by Bold Ruler), the winner of a minor stakes race at Fairmount Park as a 3-year-old. Like her sisters, she became a graded/Group stakes producer, her foals including multiple graded stakes winner Recoup the Cash (by Copelan) and listed stakes winner Up With the Flag (by Time for a Change).

Recoup the Cash and Up With the Flag were both geldings, but Dewan's Flag also has two stakes-producing daughters to her credit. The first is Pause to Pray, a 1992 daughter of Timeless Moment who produced listed stakes winner Praise from Dixie (by Dixie Brass). The second is her last foal, the unraced Royal Academy mare Summer Exhibition, who is the dam of multiple graded stakes winner Summer Applause (by Harlan's Holiday). Summer Exhibition is also the dam of Summer on the Lawn (by 2008 Forego Stakes, USA-G1, winner First Defence), whose son Beyond Brilliant (by Twirling Candy) proved himself perhaps the family's best North American runner since the days of its Canadian champions when he won the Hollywood Derby (USA-G1) in a game performance on November 27.

Beyond Brilliant is the third foal and the only colt produced by Summer on the Lawn, who previously had the winning fillies Perfect Reflection (by Majesticperfection) and Ainoa (by Blame) to her credit. Since Beyond Brilliant, she has produced a 2019 filly by Mastery and a 2021 filly by Mitole and was covered by More Than Ready for 2022. Whether any of these fillies can help return the family to the glory days it enjoyed under Taylor's stewardship remains to be seen, but if Beyond Brilliant is any indication, the future appears bright for a female line which arose from the aftermath of tragedy.


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Weekend Trivia Challenge for 11/26/2021

11/26/2021

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Hope all of you had a happy and blessed Thanksgiving. The subject of this week's trivia challenge certainly had something to be thankful for when it came to his horses, for he owned two runners that had to compete against each other in the same divisions, yet earned four championships between them, leapfrogging each other year by year so that each one won titles in alternating years. Who was the lucky owner, and what were the names and championship years/titles of the rivals/stablemates?
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Mares on Monday: Aloe Grows in South America

11/22/2021

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Earlier this month, Irwin scored his second win in an Argentine Triple Crown event when he captured the Gran Premio Nacional (Argentine Derby, ARG-G1) to go with his previous victory in the Gran Premio Polla de Potrillos (Argentine Two Thousand Guineas, ARG-G1). A son of 2013 Hollywood Derby (USA-G1) winner Seek Again (by Speightstown), Irwin traces the tail-female line of his pedigree to Aloe, one of the great English matriarchs of the 20th century.

The Aloe family's major successes in the Americas have come through three granddaughters of the grande dame, all imported in mid-century. Starling (Noble Star x Feola), repeatedly bred to the dual Argentine Classic winner and important sire Seductor, produced two Argentine champions in Sideral (a great sire) and his full sister Siderea and has bred on through her daughters. Her half-sister Knight's Daughter (Sir Cosmo x Feola) was equally influential in North America, producing 1958 American Horse of the Year and excellent sire Round Table and establishing a line leading to champions Turkish Trousers and Tessla as well as the good sires Pulpit, Blade, and Envoy.

Irwin is descended from the third major importation, Persian Maid (Tehran x Aroma), but not through Mixed Marriage (Tudor Minstrel x Persian Maid), whose descendants include the important runners and sires Gone West, Known Fact, and Tentam, as well as two-time American champion filly Go for Wand, the good Maryland sire Carnivalay, and 2011 Kentucky Broodmare of the Year Oatsee. Instead, his tail- female line traces to Persian Maid through her granddaughter Sans Critique (Reviewer x Ian Maid, by 1954 Kentucky Derby winner Determine), who became a stakes winner at 3 and was second in the Delaware Handicap (USA-G1) at 4.

Sans Critique, in turn, produced stakes winner Praise Her, who is the second dam of four stakes winners including multiple Brazilian Group 2 winner Reizinho. However, the branch of interest here is descended from St. Cecelia (The Minstrel x Sans Critique), a winner who produced only two foals. Her only daughter is the Sir Ivor mare Ivory Saint, who was exported to Argentina in 1995 and became part of the broodmare band at Haras Carampangue.

Ivory Saint did well for her new owners, producing Group 1-placed Brazilian Group 3 winner Isidorito and Group 3-placed Irlandesita (both by the Fappiano horse Roy, a nine-time champion sire and eight-time champion broodmare sire in Chile and a champion sire in Argentina as well). Irlandesita unfortunately produced only three foals, but one of them was Irwina (by Argentine champion sire and broodmare sire Orpen, a Group 1 winner as a juvenile in France), the dam of Irwin.

Continuing the misfortune that has dogged this branch of Aloe's family, Irwina died when only 14, but she may have done enough to perpetuate the line. Aside from Irwin, she is the dam of the 2014 Pure Prize mare Irisa, winner of the 2019 Premio Arturo R. y Arturo Bullrich (ARG-G2), and Irisa's full sister Irenka is in production in the Haras Carampangue broodmare band. Two other full sisters to Irisa, Inculcada and Iraida, are young broodmares in Argentina and Chile, respectively, and Irwina's last foal was a 2020 filly by two-time Argentine champion Suggestive Boy that has been named Isolation. Irwin has certainly done nothing to hurt the future opportunities of these mares, and it now lies with them as to whether this branch of the great Aloe family will keep growing in South America.
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Weekend Trivia Challenge for 11/19/2021

11/19/2021

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When this Queen's Plate winner ran in Canada's premier event, he carried a jockey who carried a burden of his own: a death threat, to the effect that the jockey would be shot off his mount in the Plate if he did not deposit the demanded amount of money in a certain bank account prior to the race. The jockey was apparently a cool customer, for he rode a winning race anyway. No attempt was made at carrying out the threat, and the perpetrator was never identified. Name the horse and jockey who were part of this bizarre incident, and the year in which they won the Queen's Plate.
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Mares on Monday: Yes, Virginia, Somethingroyal Had Daughters Too

11/15/2021

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Ask anyone with a modest amount of knowledge of American pedigrees to identify Somethingroyal, and the response will almost certainly be, "She was Secretariat's dam." Some might also recall that she was the dam of Sir Gaylord as well, and certainly the production of these two important racehorses and sires would be legacy enough for any mare. Nonetheless, she did have some influence through her daughters as well, a fact highlighted by Skygaze's recent victory in the Maple Leaf Stakes (CAN-G3). A descendant of Secretariat, who appears in the fifth generation of the pedigree of her sire, American Pharoah, she is also descended from Somethingroyal in her direct female line through the matriarch's stakes-placed daughter Cherryville, her fifth dam.

Sired by 1954 Hollywood Gold Cup winner Correspondent, Cherryville is the eldest of eight fillies produced during Somethingroyal's lengthy broodmare career. The second dam of the stakes-winning hurdler Marlingford, she has one other Grade/Group 3 winner tracing to her in the direct female line; this is her great-grandson John Cherry, who won the 1977 Prix Gladiateur (FR-G3).

This is not a particularly impressive record, but other daughters of Somethingroyal accomplished more, including two full sisters to Secretariat. The elder, Syrian Sea, added to Bold Ruler's record as a great sire of juveniles by winning three stakes races at 2, headed by the Selima Stakes (then the equivalent of a Grade 1 event). She produced multiple Grade 2 winner Alada (by Secretariat's champion stablemate Riva Ridge) and, through her, is the third dam of 1992 American champion 3-year-old filly Saratoga Dew.

Secretariat's other full sister, The Bride, was a year older than he and gained a perverse sort of fame as the "booby prize" for the coin flip that made Penny Chenery Secretariat's owner rather than Ogden Phipps. (To give the background on this, Somethingroyal and another Meadow Stud mare, Hasty Matelda, were bred to Bold Ruler on a foal sharing arrangement between Meadow Stud and Phipps. The arrangement called for the two mares to both be bred to Bold Ruler in 1968 and 1969, with ownership of the resulting foals to be determined by a coin flip; the winner of the flip would get first choice of the 1969 foals, while the loser would get first choice of the 1970 foals. Phipps won the toss but came out the loser twice over, as The Bride proved unable to get out of her own way on the race track and Hasty Matelda did not conceive for a 1970 foal, meaning that he only got one foal from the arrangement.) Phipps did not do so badly when it came to The Bride as a broodmare, however. She produced Argentine Group 2 winner At Ease (by Hoist the Flag) and stakes winner Heavenly Match (by Gallant Romeo) and became the second dam of 1990 John A. Morris Handicap (USA-G1) winner Personal Business. She is also the third dam of three-time Japanese champion Nishino Flower and Grade 3 winner In Conference.

Sir Gaylord also had a full sister, Swansea, and she was just as useless as The Bride on the track. She also failed to come up with a stakes winner on the track, but her Buckpasser son Chairman Walker had some success as a sire and broodmare sire in Chile. 
She is also the second dam of multiple stakes winner Nettlesome and stakes-winning steeplechaser Moment of Truth, but her primary importance has been in South America, where her granddaughters have come up with of 2002 Gran Premio Zelia Gonzaga Peixoto de Castro (BRZ-G1) winner Aviacion, Brazilian Group 2 winner Cerutti, multiple Argentine Group 3 winner Forest Bell, Argentine Group 3 winner American Hero and Brazilian Group 3 winner Persane.

Somethingroyal's last daughter was Queen's Colours, a 1976 filly by Bold Ruler's good son Reviewer. Placed in both her starts, she was not much of a broodmare during her own producing career but received a measure of redemption through her granddaughter Royal Diploma, dam of multiple Australian Group 1 winner Typhoon Zed and Australian Group 3 winner Captain Bax to covers by Zeditave.

Overall, Somethingroyal's record as a producer of sires was better than her record as a producer of broodmares, especially when the record of her useful California-based sire son Somethingfabulous (by Northern Dancer) is also considered. Still, her daughters have not done badly, and with her family having produced graded or Group stakes winners in Argentina, Canada, Japan, and the United States within the last decade, Somethingroyal can be considered a success in breeding on even without reference to the contributions of her sons.


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Weekly Trivia Challenge for 11/12/21

11/12/2021

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What North American breeder distinguished himself by breeding horses that won Triple Crowns in two different major racing nations, and in what years and countries did these horses achieve their feats?
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Mares on Monday: Remembering the Magnificent Miesque

11/8/2021

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When Loves Only You sliced her way through traffic with a scintillating turn of foot to capture the Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf (USA-G1) on November 6, she delivered both a historic first and a blast from the past. The first was her new status as the first horse bred, trained, and raced in Japan to capture a Breeders' Cup event. The blast from the past was the heritage that enabled her to find the electric burst of speed that led to her triumph, for she is a great-granddaughter of Miesque, one of the most remarkable runners to grace the history of the Breeders' Cup.

Loves You Only's connection to Miesque has been explored in an earlier post ("Mares on Monday: More Love for Miesque in Japanese Oaks," 5/20/2019), but it is well worth a moment's reminiscence to look back at Miesque's own performances in the Breeders' Cup. In 1987, Miesque, then a 3-year-old, went off as the 7-2 second choice in the wagering for the Breeders' Cup Mile (USA-G1). Her victory was as much due to the split-second timing of jockey Freddy Head and the filly's own unflinching courage as to the explosive burst that carried her through a narrow hole on the rail to score an impressive victory in Hollywood course record time. Off that single win on American soil, she was voted the Eclipse Award winner in the American turf female division to go with titles as the best 3-year-old filly and best miler in both England and France.

Five championship titles in one year was a record for the ages, and Miesque did not quite equal that in 1988; she only won three, including a repeat as American champion turf female. (She was also champion older female and co-champion miler in France.) As in 1987, she earned her American honors off a single sensational performance in the Breeders' Cup Mile. Running over a softer, more tiring surface at Churchill Downs than she had encountered in 1987, she took the outside route and simply overwhelmed her field with her stretch run, leaving as good a horse as Steinlen four lengths to her rear. The following year, Steinlen would reign as American champion turf male, crowning his campaign with a Breeders' Cup Mile win of his own. Miesque's other victims included English and French champion 3-year-old male and miler (co-champion with Miesque in France) Warning, who in fairness seemed unable to handle the footing, and the brilliant Ravinella, winner of that year's One Thousand Guineas (ENG-G1) and Poule d'Essai des Pouliches (French One Thousand Guineas, FR-G1).

As stellar as she had been on the race course, Miesque went on to an equally remarkable career as a broodmare. One could hardly expect her to maintain the standard she set with her first two foals, for they were 1993 Poule d'Essai des Poulains (French Two Thousand Guineas, FR-G1) winner and top sire Kingmambo (by Mr. Prospector) and 1994 French dual Classic winner East of the Moon (by Private Account). She did not, but she produced three more stakes winners, two of them at Group 3 level. She has also bred on richly through her daughters, whose descendants of note in just the last three years have included 2018 European champion 3-year-old filly Alpha Centauri, 2018 Prix du Jockey Club (French Derby, FR-G1) winner Study of Man, 2020 Coronation Stakes (ENG-G1) winner Alpine Moon, 2021 Moyglare Stud Stakes (IRE-G1) winner Discoveries, and, of course, Loves Only You, who had previously won the 2019 Yushin Himba (Japanese Oaks, JPN-G1) and the 2021 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (HK-G1).

Loves Only You is the second Breeders' Cup winner descended in direct female line from Miesque, following 2014 Mile winner Karakontie, who was also bred in Japan but was trained and raced in France prior to his Breeders' Cup score, and the daughter of Deep Impact is not likely to be the last of her line. With the number of top female descendants Miesque has out there, it looks as if it will be only a matter of time before Miesque's name is written still deeper into Breeders' Cup history and into bloodstock annals around the world.

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Mares on Monday: The Subconscious Persistence of Stick to Beauty

11/1/2021

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On October 31, it was another day, another milestone for top Gainesway sire Tapit as his gelded son Subconscious became the stallion's 150th black-type stakes winner in the Twilight Derby (USA-G2) at Santa Anita. After taking time off during the summer to recover from a knee issue and being gelded, Subconscious broke his maiden at Del Mar on August 21 in his first race back and followed up with a Santa Anita allowance win on October 2, before becoming a graded stakes winner in his first stakes appearance. His margin of victory was not huge, but the authoritative way in which he got the job done suggests that he may be one to keep an eye on in the American turf division next year.

On the distaff side, Subconscious represents the family of Stick to Beauty who did much to revive an American branch of Bruce Lowe family 1-g. One of just six stakes winners sired by the stakes-winning Round Table horse Illustrious and produced from the unraced Hail to Reason mare Hail to Beauty, Stick to Beauty produced five stakes winners. Neither her Grade 2-winning son The Prime Minister (by Deputy Minister) or Grade 2-placed stakes winner Majestic Venture (by Majestic Prince) amounted to much at stud, but Stick to Beauty has bred on in good style through her daughters.

Gold Beauty, Stick to Beauty's 1979 filly by Mr. Prospector), was much the best of her daughters on the track and in the breeding shed. The American champion sprinter of 1982, she produced only five foals but nonetheless came up with 1990 English Horse of the Year Dayjur (by Danzig) and multiple Grade 1 winner Maplejinsky (by Nijinsky II). Maplejinsky, in turn, produced 1994 American champion older female Sky Beauty (by Blushing Groom) and is the second dam of 2005 Breeders' Cup Distaff (USA-G1) winner Pleasant Home and multiple Grade 1 winner Tale of Ekati, the third dam of multiple Grade 1 winners Pine Island and Point of Entry, and the fourth dam of multiple Grade 1 winner Guarana.

Two other daughters of Stick to Beauty, Miraloma (by Deputy Minister) and Storm Beauty (by Storm Cat) were listed stakes winners, and while Miraloma was a disappointment in the paddocks, Storm Beauty did better. She produced 2012 Bold Ruler Handicap (USA-G3) winner Buffum (by Bernardini) and multiple stakes winner Stormy West (by Gone West) and is the second dam of 2018 Tempted Stakes (USA-G3) winner Oxy Lady.

Among Stick to Beauty's lesser daughters, both the Codex mare Poster Beauty (dam of multiple Irish listed stakes winner Ailleacht, by Chief's Crown) and the Alydar mare Raise a Beauty (dam of 2000 Prix d'Arenberg, FR-G3, winner Iron Mask, by Danzig) became stakes producers, and Sticky Prospect (by Mr. Prospector), although not herself a stakes producer, is the second dam of 2003 Gran Premio San Isidro (ARG-G1) winner Question. Subconscious traces his descent back through yet another daughter, Misconduct (by 1990 American Horse of the Year Criminal Type), whose best runner was Grade 2-placed listed stakes winner Cat Charmer (by Storm Cat). Cat Charmer, in turn, produced 2016 Woodford Reserve Ballston Spa Stakes (USA-G2) winner Strike Charmer (by Smart Strike) as her first foal, and her third foal, multiple listed-placed Sweet Dreams (by Candy Ride), produced Subconscious as her third foal. Sweet Dreams' 2-year-old Tapit colt Moment of Peace has yet to race, and the mare has since produced a yearling colt by Quality Road and a weanling filly by Justify; she was bred to Mendelssohn for 2022.

With numerous well-bred descendants of Stick to Beauty either still in production or due to enter their breeding careers soon, the persistence of her family at the upper levels of racing and breeding appears almost certain. As for Subconscious, now that he has figured out his game, there seems a good chance that this promising gelding will be keeping up awareness of his lineage for some time to come.



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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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