AMERICAN GRADED STAKES STANDINGS brought to you by Keeneland: BREEDING ABOUT MORE THAN MONEY?
By Ray Paulick
Voting for the Eclipse Awards will begin in just over a month, and the biggest debate and perhaps most hotly disputed division will be for Horse of the Year, where early- and mid-season leader Rachel Alexandra and undefeated Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Zenyatta will vie for the most votes from members of the National Turf Writers Association, Daily Racing Form staff, racing secretaries at National Thoroughbred Racing Association tracks and Equibase chartcallers.
I hope voters will spend as much time assessing the relative merits of some of the other categories as they will on Horse of the Year. Specifically, if they take their responsibilities seriously, they will examine as much of the season-ending statistics on leading breeder as possible before casting their votes. As I’ve written before, I don’t think that’s been the case in some years. Too many voters simply look at which breeder has won the most money.
If that’s the criteria, then Frank Stronach’s Adena Springs will win the outstanding breeder award for the sixth consecutive year. But Adena’s breeding program has produced just two American Graded Stakes winners of 2009, a far cry from some of its previous Eclipse Award winning years. Adena Springs-bred horses have won all that money through the size of Stronach’s broodmare band, producing runners that started 3,568 times in North America so far this year, far more than any other operation. The average earnings per start for Adena-bred horses is just $3,286. Those aren’t bad numbers, nor is the 14% win rate, but I don’t think they should qualify Adena for another Eclipse Award.
The award for outstanding breeder shouldn’t be about who has the biggest operation or who wins the most money. Scanning the list of leading breeders of American Graded Stakes winners of 2009, there are 10 entities that have bred at least three AGS winners alone or in partnership. They are Darley and Stonerside, with five each; Juddmonte Farms and Edward Evans, four each; and with three each are Gainsborough Stud, Phipps Stable, Classic Star, Diamond A Racing, William Farish, and Wertheimer et Frere. Our leaders list only includes Gainsborough and Phipps Stable in the group with three as their AGS winners won a total of five graded stakes, versus four or three for the others.
So if the Eclipse Award for outstanding breeder should go to one of those operations, which one? You can make a case for several, but special attention should be given to Saudi Prince Khalid’s Juddmonte, which has won four previous Eclipse Awards in this category (1995, and 2001-03). Juddmonte is third behind Adena in money won in North America, with $6,771,260, and has done so with only 280 starts, 41 one of which resulted in winners. That works out to an average of $24,183 per start.
Unlike some of the other breeding operations, Juddmonte sends the majority of its homebreds to Europe to begin their careers, and they don’t normally bring the poor performers back to the U.S. once they have established their form. So its North American stable is stocked with quality from the outset.
A large part of Juddmonte’s success is attributable to the consistently top-class work done by Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, whose death earlier this week was mourned by the Juddmonte family and everyone in racing who knew him.
Another breeder having an outstanding year with his homebreds is Edward P. Evans, whose four AGS winners have won six races (though one of them, Charitable Man, was sold at the Keeneland September yearling sale. Evans has a much more select broodmare band than Juddmonte but has still managed to produce the winners of $4,154,264 from 506 starts (89 winners), putting him eighth in the money rankings. His average earnings per start is $8,210.
There are still some big races to be run, so it’s too early for me to say who I think should win as outstanding breeder. But the hope is when the ballots are sent to voters, the voters will spend some time assessing the overall quality of the horses a breeder produces.



Tags: adena springs, American Graded Stakes Standings, bobby frankel, breeders' cup classic, Charitable Man, Classic Star, daily racing form, darley, Diamond A Racing, eclipse awards, edward p. evans, equibase, Frank Stronach, Gainsborough Stud, juddmonte, Keeneland, National Thoroughbred Racing Association, national turf writers association, Phipps Stable, Prince Khalid, Rachel Alexandra, stonerside, Wertheimer et Frere, william farish, zenyatta


November 19th, 2009 at 4:19 pm
It’s been a tremendous year for the Darley outfit any way you look at it. I want, however, to just make a quick comment, as a voter, about your post: Clearly you do not believe Adena deserves a sixth straight breeder award. Your arguments have merit. However, there is no criteria for the selection of any of the Eclipse awards, so voters must make up their own. This is probably as it should be, although I would be open to suggestion and discussion about a future criteria-based system. I would argue (maybe just for argument’s sake) that a breeder that puts so many live runners on the ground right now is more beneficial and critical to the well-being of the sport than any breeder who produces graded stakes winners. At a time of declining foal crops, field shortages, and considering the sheer volume of races run in the United States, a breeder still producing a lot of horses is a very good thing, indeed. Does it qualify for the honor of breeder of the year? I don’t know, but shouldn’t it be factored into the equation?
November 20th, 2009 at 3:23 pm
Totals mean very little. It would be better to show standings as percentage of horses sold winning a graded stake or percentage of runners winning a graded stake.
Of course yearling leads in the “Sale Year” category because more horses are sold as yearlings than any other age. Of course Keeneland September leads the “Sale” category because it has the largest catalog.
November 23rd, 2009 at 12:28 pm
With no disrespect to the other candidates, I am hoping that Mr Evans gets the award here.
Smaller operations with limited numbers do not seem to garner the same respect for whatever reason. One of the bigger travesties was Mr & Mrs Aaron Jones not getting the Eclipse Award a few years ago. From a small band of no more than 25 mares they had two Breeders Cup winners in the one year in Ashado and Speightstown but that feat rarely got a mention in the run up to the Eclipse awards.
Mr Evans, who has been a solid breeder for some time, has had a great year and deserves the recognition.