Posts Tagged ‘Pioneerof The Nile’

EDWIN ANTHONY’S PEDIGREE REPORT: ESKENDEREYA

Friday, February 26th, 2010

The Paulick Report is pleased to once again offer the pedigree insights of Edwin Anthony in the weeks leading up to the Kentucky Derby. Ed has lifelong experience in the Thoroughbred industry, has practical experience planning matings for his family’s stable and formerly as a pedigree adviser to Three Chimneys Farm. His perspective is straightforward and refreshingly opinionated, and I advise anyone interested in Thoroughbred pedigrees to pick up a copy of his book, “The American Thoroughbred (Volume One)”—available for purchase here.

In this first of a series of articles, he looks at the pedigree of Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth winner Eskendereya. – Ray Paulick

ESKENDEREYA (Giant’s Causeway—Aldebaran Light, by Seattle Slew)
By Edwin Anthony
I wrote a series of eight pedigree profiles for horses on the “Triple Crown trail” starting about this time last year, and recent Fountain of Youth (G2) winner Eskendereya will serve as the first horse in our series this season. It’s interesting to look back at the horses we profiled last year (Friesan Fire, Quality Road, Pioneerof the Nile, Dunkirk, I Want Revenge, Papa Clem, Chocolate Candy, Rachel Alexandra) to see how they fared.

Quality Road is obviously a top horse (he missed the Triple Crown with quarter cracks), while Dunkirk and Pioneerof the Nile were each able to place in one classic race, and I wrote a token piece about Rachel Alexandra because she looked like a very special filly, even though she had not won anything more than a G2 race at that stage.  Only a fortune teller could have predicted Rachel Alexandra’s Horse of the Year campaign after changing hands or the rapid ascension of Birdstone (sire of longshot classic winners Mine That Bird and Summer Bird) as a major classic influence.

Even though I have studied Thoroughbred pedigrees for going on 25 years, no one can get around the folly of bad luck, injuries in training, or the fact that many horses look dominant going nine furlongs (a mile-and-an-eighth) but simply aren’t up to the demanding task of running classic distances at a competitive speed.

That’s the mystery of stamina and genetics that we’re constantly trying to figure out.  Of course, even a horse that is capable of competing at classic distances still needs to put out the effort, and sometimes horses have off-days just like people.

If nothing else, we strive to learn about the strengths and limitations of the stallions and ancestors under discussion and hope to come out smarter on the other side.  At the very least, we want to learn what strategies are working in pedigrees, even if some of them aren’t up to the classic standard.  Who are the soundest horses, where is the stamina coming from, and what ancestors are best to inbreed to?  These are the answers we’re looking for.

Pedigree analysts (like myself) try to identify patterns in graded stakes results as a way of predicting the future.  Given that the Storm Cat line has been a poor source of classic winners, then you probably wouldn’t want to lean heavily on Storm Cat’s sons (or stallions out of Storm Cat mares) in your stallion recommendations for breeders that want to breed for the classics.  The Storm Cat line hasn’t had a winner of a Triple Crown race since Tabasco Cat in 1994, although Bluegrass Cat was second in the Kentucky Derby, Belmont, and Travers in 2006.  You should note that Bluegrass Cat is out of a mare by classic influence A.P. Indy and his dam is heavily inbred to the foundation mare La Troienne, including being from the Numbered Account (champion 2YO filly by Buckpasser) branch of that important family.

So, while the Storm Cat line is dominant in 2-year-old racing and in races contested at distances of 9 furlongs or shorter, it does not appear capable of producing classic types, unless there is a LOT of help on the dam side of the equation.  Of course, when you start to speak in these kinds of absolutes, a special horse can come along and provide us with the exception to the rule.

Storm Cat’s son Giant’s Causeway was a tough campaigner in Europe out of a good racemare by Rahy, with a second dam by English Derby winner and classic influence Roberto.  He was undeniably consistent and high class, winning a series of Group 1 races at more than a mile. In his final start, he gave classic distance specialist Tiznow a real run for his money in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, that being his only start on dirt.  So, Giant’s Causeway was sound, very fast, and capable of competing with top horses at the American classic distance of 10 furlongs (a mile-and-a-quarter).  This makes him an exception among sons of Storm Cat, as most of his sons that have found any measure of success at stud were much better at a mile or less and have passed on this penchant for speed among their progeny.

Giant’s Causeway has already sired Grade 1 winners in America over 10 furlongs like Heatseeker (Santa Anita Handicap), Frost Giant (Suburban), and Red Giant (NWR, Clement L. Hirsch Memorial Turf Championship), so you can see that if there is a son of Storm Cat capable of siring an American classic winner, then Giant’s Causeway is probably the one.

The runaway win by Eskendereya (by Giant’s Causeway) in the Fountain of Youth (G2) was more than visually impressive.  You could see that the horse really relished the opportunity to go two turns, and he is now 3 for 3 on the dirt, his only losses coming in his first start (a maiden event on turf at Saratoga) and a poor effort in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1), contested over the synthetic surface at Santa Anita.  He was reported to have a troubled trip in that race as well.

I have often thought that a true classic type horse is able to simply get into a steady gallop and carve out “12’s,” which is to say that he can consistently complete each furlong of a race in 12 seconds.  It becomes increasingly difficult to do with each furlong, as the muscles begin to tire, and Secretariat’s world record time of 2:24 in the 1973 Belmont (over 12 furlongs) is the best example of a horse being able to accomplish this feat over such a distance.  It’s not about an explosive move or “turn of foot” with classic horses; it’s steady horsepower over a distance.  Classic horses “stay” (as the Europeans like to say), while horses more suited to shorter distances simply run out of gas, unable to maintain a steady stream of “12’s” on the toteboard teletimer.

This is exactly what Eskendereya did to the field in the Fountain of Youth (G2)—he galloped them into submission.  After taking over after a half-mile in a soft 47.92, he completed six furlongs in 1:12.41, a mile in 1:36.54, with a final time for nine furlongs of 1:48.87, echoing the many 12-second furlongs before the last one.  So, like several other sons of Giant’s Causeway, Eskendereya looks capable of running a distance of ground as far as 10 furlongs at a competitive rate of speed.  Let’s look at the bottom side of his pedigree to check for more stamina.

Eskendereya’s damsire, Seattle Slew, won the Triple Crown and has been a very successful classic influence, with descendants like A.P. Indy (Belmont, Breeders’ Cup Classic), Bernardini (Preakness, Travers), Cigar (Breeders’ Cup Classic, Dubai World Cup), Lemon Drop Kid (Belmont, Travers), Mineshaft (Jockey Club Gold Cup, Suburban), and Slew o’ Gold (Jockey Club Gold Cup twice) serving as notable examples.

Alydar (second in all 3 Triple Crown races to Affirmed) is the sire of Eskendereya’s second dam, and beyond the fact that he sired two Kentucky Derby winners (Alysheba and Strike the Gold) and a Belmont winner (Easy Goer), Horse of the Year Point Given (Preakness, Belmont, Travers) was produced by a mare by champion Turkoman, he being a son of Alydar.

We know that inbreeding to the family of Almahmoud (second dam of both Halo and Northern Dancer) has been quite successful, and Giant’s Causeway is a very good example of this, as Storm Cat is a grandson of Northern Dancer and Rahy (his damsire) is out of a mare by Halo.  The pedigree of Eskendereya shows why a six-generation computer program is a good investment, as his third dam carries intensive inbreeding to the Almahmoud family as well.  His third dam is by Northern Dancer himself (giving Eskendereya “balanced” inbreeding to Northern Dancer—through a son and a daughter), and while his fourth dam was sired by the stout stamina influence Ribot (winner of the 12-furlong “Arc” twice) his fifth dam is actually the mare Cosmah, she being the dam of Halo and a daughter of Almahmoud. Thus, Eskendereya is not only inbred to Northern Dancer through  a son and a daughter, he is inbred to Halo’s dam, Cosmah, 6 x 5 and carries four total crosses of Almahmoud.

As the ancestors Northern Dancer, Halo, and their granddam Almahmoud get further back in pedigrees, this reinforcement strategy of crossing horses inbred to Almahmoud should continue to find success and revive their influence in classic pedigrees.  My parents bred and raced Preakness winner Pine Bluff (inbred 4 x 4 to Almahmoud), and I have noticed him working well with reinforcement of Almahmoud’s genes, crossing successfully with stallions like More Than Ready (by Southern Halo—closely inbred to Almahmoud), Menifee (by Harlan—closely inbred to Almahmoud), and Jules (from the Northern Dancer family and carrying Halo in his pedigree).  So, it seems to be a strategy that is paying dividends with stallions and mares already carrying inbreeding to Almahmoud.

Given the fact that Giant’s Causeway has already proven capable of siring runners that excel at classic distances, and the fact that Eskendereya carries a number of other classic influences in his pedigree (Seattle Slew, Alydar, Ribot, and intensive inbreeding to the influential Almahmoud family), I’d say that his classic prospects look very bright indeed.  His clear preference for dirt racing and ability to string together one 12 second furlong after another only boosts his stock, in my opinion.  If Eskenereya can arrive in Louisville with a solid Florida Derby (G1) effort under his belt, he should be a very strong contender.
 
Edwin Anthony was the staff pedigree consultant at Three Chimneys Farm for six years and has penned dozens of articles on pedigree research.  He also published The American Thoroughbred (Volume I) in 2008, which can be ordered via the banner ad link on this web page or on his web site at www.thoroughbredadvisor.com.

PAULICK’S PREAKNESS ANALYSIS: NO DENYING THE NILE

Friday, May 15th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Going into the Kentucky Derby I thought the California-based horses, led by Pioneerof the Nile, would carry the day, but I was worried that rain and a wet track could turn form upside down. That’s exactly what happened, at least as far as the 50-1 winner, Mine That Bird, is concerned. I didn’t expect to see his late run to victory, but at least I had a lot of company.

I don’t think there is any question that the combination of the track conditions, the rail trip under Calvin Borel and a late-running style propelled the Birdstone gelding to the Derby winner’s circle. With the benefit of hindsight, I think many of us erred in dismissing Mine That Bird as a complete no-hoper in the Derby. He was the Canadian male 2-year-old champion, though you would have to analyze his two Sunland Park defeats this winter and project vast improvement to predict that he would pull off the Derby upset.

Pioneerof the Nile ran a solid race, good enough to be second, while running on a deeper part of the racetrack than the winner. With the expectation that we’ll have a better track for the 134th running of the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, I’m going to stick with the Bob Baffert-trained Empire Maker colt to win the Triple Crown’s middle jewel.

Papa Clem is my second choice. The son of Smart Strike was a little rank in the early going of the Derby, but settled and then put in a strong enough rally to be in the three-horse photo for second. He came up on the losing end of that photo, finishing fourth.

Rachel Alexandra’s winning effort in the Kentucky Oaks was an incredible performance, but it wasn’t a strong field, and I’m concerned about her coming back in just two weeks and stepping up to a higher level of competition in the male division. Can she win? Of course, but I think she’ll wind up no better than third.

Here’s my analysis of the entire field, in post position order:

1-Big Drama. Comes into the Preakness off a long layoff, not having raced since late March when disqualified from first in the Swale Stakes. A win would have been his sixth in a row. Son of Montbrook almost certainly will be the speed in the race, even though trainer David Fawkes has elected to take blinkers off the colt for the first time in his career. Has won at 1 1/16 miles, but not against this caliber. Unless he gets away with an unchallenged lead on slow fractions, I can’t see him being a factor at the end.

2. Mine That Bird. Mike Smith, who takes over for Calvin Borel in the saddle, was a logical choice because of his patient riding style. Though he was never a front-runner as a 2-year-old, Mine That Bird was not a dead closer, either, racing in mid-pack in most of his wins at Woodbine last year. With a completely different kind of racetrack at Pimlico than he had at Churchill Downs, I think Mine That Bird will struggle to hit the board, thus ending hopes of a Triple Crown winner for the 31st consecutive year.

3. Musket Man. Consistent colt never looked like a winner in the Kentucky Derby, but he nearly ran down Pioneerof the Nile in deep stretch while making the widest rally of all and getting bumped inside the final sixteenth. This son of Yonaguska continues to turn in top-class performances, and he has to be considered a contender here.

4. Luv Gov. Broke his maiden at Churchill on Derby Day in his 10th career start. Hard to see him having any shot today.

5. Friesan Fire. The mystery horse of the Kentucky Derby. Never ran a step as the betting favorite, though he had a rough start and came back with some scrapes and cuts. He’s trained very well since, prompting trainer Larry Jones to draw a line through his 18th-place finish and hope his previous form returns. I still question how good the horses were at Fair Grounds in his first two stakes wins there, and his victory in the Louisiana Derby came on a sloppy track that he seemed to relish.

6. Terrain. Was just edged for second by Papa Clem in the Louisiana Derby, then ran a lackluster fourth in the Blue Grass on Keeneland’s Polytrack surface. Son of Sky Mesa hasn’t finished first in a race since his second career start last August, though he was awarded victory via disqualification in the roughly run Arlington-Washington Futurity. Seems very unlikely.

7. Papa Clem. Trainer Gary Stute would love to win the same race his father Mel won 23 years ago with Snow Chief. Papa Clem might show more early speed than he did in the Derby when restrained in the opening quarter mile by Rafael Bejarano, and I think a more free-running style will suit his chances better at Pimlico, as will a fast racetrack. Seems ready for a big effort.

8. General Quarters. Never was a factor in the Derby after pulling off a big upset on the Polytrack in the Blue Grass Stakes. Don’t really think he’s moved up with his training since then and can’t see him as a factor.

9. Pioneerof the Nile. At the eighth pole, trainer Bob Baffert thought he’d won the Kentucky Derby, and so did I. But then Mine That Bird came running so fast up the rail it made the rest of the field look like they were going in slow motion. Empire Maker colt was very sharp in his only workout after the Derby, and I think he is ready for a huge effort in the Preakness.

10. Flying Private. Didn’t beat a horse in the Kentucky Derby and he’ll be hard-pressed to beat more than a few in here.

11. Take the Points. Last start, a fourth behind Pioneerof the Nile in the Santa Anita Derby, was a better than looked effort, and this son of Even the Score has every right to improve off that race for Todd Pletcher. Before the Santa Anita Derby, he hooked a front-running monster in The Pamplemousse, finishing a distant second to the horse that was forced off the Triple Crown trailer on the morning of the Santa Anita Derby. I think he’ll be the best longshot chance in the field.

12. Tone It Down. Local horses haven’t had the best of luck in recent Preaknesses, and I can’t see this one winning one for the home town.

13. Rachel Alexandra. Starting from the 13 post position is no bargain on this racetrack. There’s a good long run to the first turn, but Calvin Borel will have a hard time getting a ground-saving trip for the Medaglia d’Oro filly. Maybe she’s good enough to overcome the bad post, the barn switch from Hal Wiggins to Steve Asmussen, and the quick return to the races after her mind-boggling 20 ¼-length Kentucky Oaks win, but I think it’s too big of a challenge.

If Rachel Alexandra proves me wrong, she’ll deserves the super-filly status that many were ready to bestow on her following the Kentucky Oaks.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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GUEST COMMENTARY: MAY FOALS THE SECRET TO DERBY TRAIL?

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

I’ve always been surprised at the habits of many buyers at yearling sales…they sometimes remind me of lemmings marching to the sea, making decisions without logic or rationality. I once asked a leading buyer why he often spent so much money on yearlings by unproven first-year sires, a practice that is common enough to inflate the yearling average for those new sires. His response was simple: “They haven’t failed yet.”

That philosophy makes no sense to me, for it would seem far more pragmatic to look for undervalued proven stallions than to roll the dice on a group of newcomers whose chance of succeeding are somewhere between 5-10%.

Another unexplainable practice of yearling buyers is their disdain of foals born in the month of May. On average, it would make sense that May foals would be smaller than their January-April counterparts, so perhaps buyers at summer or fall yearling sales are simply unable to project how that smaller horse might look as a 2- or 3-year-old.

Some years ago, statistics accompanying an article I wrote for Bloodhorse’s MarketWatch newsletter, showed that May foals were only marginally behind earlier season foals in performance standards (stakes wins, money won), but their average yearling prices were much, much lower. Where I come from, that makes May foals a bargain.

Rob Whiteley, who operates the successful Liberation Farm breeding operation, came to the same conclusion in an article he wrote this week for the Thoroughbred Daily News. From the winning Kentucky Derby exacta of May foals Mine That Bird and Pioneerof the Nile to a review of May foals that have won Breeders’ Cup races, Whiteley makes a compelling argument that buyers should pay far more attention to May foals than they traditionally have. We’d like to thank Sue Finley of TDN for granting reprint rights of Whiteley’s article. – Ray Paulick

By Rob Whiteley
As a populist horseman, it makes me smile when a relatively obscure horse comes out of the hinterlands and beats up on a bunch of fashionably bred horses who are sired by generally over-priced, over-hyped, and over-bred stallions. And it turns my smile into a broad grin to observe that Mine That Bird is a mid-May foal.

To be fair, the valiant runner-up, Pioneerof the Nile, is regally bred and fully deserving of his cost of production. His bloodlines and hefty stud fee came through in a brave display of talent and determination, and those who played him unsuccessfully in the exotics only have themselves to blame for not taking home a big piece of the track. Like the item we look past in the front of the refrigerator, it was right there to see. Pioneerof the Nile is also a May foal, and if you had played a May foal exacta, you would have received $2,074.80 for a $2 exacta box.

(Ed. Note: A $2 exacta box with all of the May foals in the Derby would’ve cost $40. Atomic Rain (Smart Strike), Regal Ransom (Distorted Humor) and third-place finisher Musket Man (Yonaguska) are all May foals as well. A $1 triple box on the quintet would’ve set you back just $60, and returned $20,750.30)

In light of the continuous racing success achieved by May foals year after year, I am at a loss to rationally understand how that success fails to translate into the sales scene where May foals, as a group, bring approximately 35 percent less than their counterparts. For some in-grained reason, rooted in hearsay and perpetuated by the typical word of mouth momentum that spreads other horse industry falsehoods and myths, May foals get a bad rap at the sales, and are often discounted accordingly in the ring. This is such nonsense. The stigma on May foals that floats around on the winds of ignorance has no basis in fact.

It can even be persuasively argued that May foals actually have a slight advantage over other foals, as May foals are born according to a horse’s innate and natural spring-time predispositions, and with the most favorable environmental conditions.

Savvy buyers who keep up with the details of racing know that May foals, as a group, race as successfully as foals born in other months, and better than foals born in January. And the sharpest horsemen and pinhookers know that a few days or even weeks generally make little difference in a horse’s early development.

The most important factors in a horse’s ability to perform early involve genetically based precocity, balance, athleticism, and mental maturity, not date of birth. Each horse has its own genetically wound clock, and horses have wide-ranging differences in the rate that they develop, no matter which month they might be born in. Like foals born in January or February or any month, some May foals may be forward enough to zip along at two-year-old sales, while others may not be mature enough to race effectively until the middle of their three-year-old years, or later. Horses, like humans and other mammals, follow their own genetic blueprint.

When it is their time to perform, however, May foals truly hold their own, even as two-year-olds.

Except for the month of January, the fewest number of foals are born in May, yet they account for 10 percent of Breeders’ Cup Juvenile colt and filly champions. Furthermore, as May foals mature, their success rate in certain top level venues can be jaw-dropping. May foals have won a stunning 50 percent of the last 10 Breeders’ Cup Distaffs (including, Azeri, Round Pond, Spain, and Escena). And May foals have won over 25 percent of all Breeders’ Cup Mile races.

Despite the impressive frequency with which May foals find the winner’s circle in big races, however, a May foal may not win the Preakness this year. Instead, a magnificent January foal named Rachel Alexandra may be brilliant enough to outrun the boys, no matter when they were born (if she can adjust to a new groom, a new trainer, and new routines). But the Belmont, please take note, is entirely a different matter because of the extraordinary potency of the May foal factor.

The May foal factor is the strongest available predictor of Belmont success–far stronger than the most sophisticated figs or Beyer numbers–because May foals, incredibly, have won nearly 40 percent of the last 15 runnings of the Belmont (including, Afleet Alex, Lemon Drop Kid, Thunder Gulch, Touch Gold, Victory Gallop, and Mine That Bird’s own daddy, Birdstone). Therefore, given the historical dominance by May foals in this mile-and-a-half event, and given the Bird’s paternal family connection and the probable presence of steadfast Pioneerof the Nile, we could even be looking at the same May foal quinella we witnessed in the Derby. In any event, it is time we give May foals the respect they deserve, at the sales and on the track.

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PAULICK PREAKNESS INDEX by AmWest Entertainment: ALEXANDRA THE GREAT?

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

It has been almost two weeks since Mine That Bird and jockey Calvin Borel shocked the sports world with their improbable long shot victory in the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs. And as with any Derby aftermath, the question lingers in the air; will this be the year we end the Triple Crown drought? If our voters are any indication, the answer is an emphatic no as Mine That Bird is ranked in fourth place among the 14 horses prospective Preakness starters.

Furthermore, Calvin Borel’s decision to forego the Derby hero to ride the amazing Kentucky Oaks winner Rachel Alexandra in the Preakness, an unprecedented move in the 135 years of the Kentucky Derby, goes even more to the point that this may not be the year racing celebrates its 12th Triple Crown champion. Instead, the consensus of our 23 voters, including the fans, was overwhelmingly in favor of Rachel Alexandra to run away with this much anticipated race. Will this hold true? Will trainer Bob Baffert spoil the Oaks/Derby story line with Pioneerof the Nile? Or perhaps we will see another unlikely outcome with a different long shot coming out of nowhere to take the prize. Only Saturday will tell.

Ray Paulick’s Preakness Analysis

1-Pioneerof the Nile. Sure, he looked like he was running in slow motion in the Kentucky Derby compared to Mine That Bird when he rocketed up the rail to victory, but I think the condition of the racetrack had a lot to do with the outcome of the race. Pioneerof the Nile was well off the rail on what I think was the slower part of the track all the way and closer to the pace than expected. I liked the son of Empire Maker going into the Derby, and I think he dispelled concerns that he was a horse that could only run on synthetic tracks. His workout on Monday morning that prompted trainer Bob Baffert to give Pioneerof the Nile the green light to go to Pimlico indicates he came out of the Derby in very good shape.

2- Papa Clem. Smart Strike colt wanted to run more in the early going of the Kentucky Derby while jockey Rafael Bejarano was trying to get him to settle off the pace, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see a change of tactics for the Preakness. Gary Stute-trained colt has shown versatility in the past, going to the front and setting moderate fractions to win or coming from midpack, as he did in taking the Arkansas Derby. Preakness field won’t be without pace, with Big Drama and Take the Points expected to show early speed. I’d look for Papa Clem to be just behind the early leaders.

3-Rachel Alexandra. The only knock on the filly is that she hasn’t really faced top-class competition yet. The Kentucky Oaks was her first Grade 1 race, and the field was pretty weak by Oaks standards. Nevertheless, what she did, running away from her beleaguered rivals to win by 20 π lengths, with her jockey sitting like a statue (except for the occasional glance back), was remarkable. This is a huge step up, and I’m not convinced that she’s up to the task.

4-Friesan Fire. Big disappointment in the Kentucky Derby after being sent off as the betting favorite on a sloppy racetrack that everyone thought he would like, following his eye-catching Louisiana Derby win in the slop at Fair Ground. Got bumped around pretty good at the start and came back with some minor cuts and scrapes. A.P. Indy colt has bounced back quickly for trainer Larry Jones and his Tuesday morning workout at Pimlico (five furlongs in :58.40) was very sharp.

5-Mine That Bird. Can’t take the Kentucky Derby victory away from him, no matter how strange the track might have played or how all the so-called “experts” (myself included) dismissed his chances going into the race. He was champion 2-year-old in Canada last year, and it’s clear that in his two losses in New Mexico he didn’t get the right kind of trip. Whether he was pushed to the lead early by Casey Lambert or moved on his own, he came up empty in the stretch of both the Borderland and Sunland Derbies. I think the track and especially a rail bias played in his favor for the Kentucky Derby, but Calvin Borel deserves a great deal of credit for saving Mine That Bird for one big run from far back. I don’t see a repeat performance in the Preakness.

6-Musket Man. Finished with determination in the Kentucky Derby after suffering some early problems, closing to get third while on the far outside, the deepest or stickiest part of the racetrack that day. Never worse than third in seven lifetime starts.

7-Take the Points. Skipped the Kentucky Derby to point for the Preakness, so trainer Todd Pletcher has a very fresh horse going into the race. May not have liked the synthetic surfaces or maybe he just wasn’t sharp  enough to win either of his two California starts. I wouldn’t be surprised to see big improvement.

8-Big Drama. Almost certain to set the pace in the Preakness, and though the Montbrook colt has stretched his speed out to 1 1/16 miles before, he hasn’t done it against this level of competition.

9-General Quarters. Didn’t really like his chances in the Kentucky Derby and I don’t think he’s moved up with his training since finishing 10th at Churchill Downs.

10-Terrain. On a five-race losing streak since being moved up from third to first in the Arlington-Washington Futurity last September. Would take a major form reversal to threaten here.

Ray Paulick Bradford Cummings Fan Vote Alex Brown Billy Reed Bill Finley Valerie Grash
Paulick Report Paulick Report Paulick Report Alex Brown Racing Billy Reed Says ESPN, NYT Foolish Pleasure
Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Musket Man
Papa Clem Rachel Alexandra Pioneerof the Nile Mine That Bird Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra
Rachel Alexandra Musket Man Mine That Bird Pioneerof the Nile Papa Clem Friesan Fire Friesan Fire
Friesan Fire Papa Clem Friesan Fire Papa Clem Mine That Bird Papa Clem Papa Clem
Mine That Bird General Quarters Musket Man Musket Man Friesan Fire Mine That Bird Pioneerof the Nile
Musket Man Mine That Bird Papa Clem Big Drama Musket Man Big Drama Take The Points
Take The Points Friesan Fire General Quarters General Quarters General Quarters Musket Man Big Drama
Big Drama Big Drama Big Drama Friesan Fire Terrain General Quarters Mine That Bird
General Quarters Luv Guv Terrain Take The Points Big Drama Take The Points General Quarters
Terrain Terrain Take The Points Flying Private Luv Guv Terrain Tone It Down
Gary West Dana Byerly Bill Christine Vic Zast
Jon White
Richard Eng
Art Wilson
FW Star-Telegram Green But Game Horserace Insider Horserace Insider
HRTV, Santa Anita TV
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LA Newspaper Group
Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra
Big Drama Mine That Bird Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile
Friesan Fire Big Drama Papa Clem Papa Clem Mine That Bird Friesan Fire Friesan Fire
Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man Rachel Alexandra Friesan Fire Papa Clem Musket Man Papa Clem
Terrain Friesan Fire Musket Man Musket Man Musket Man Mine That Bird Musket Man
Musket Man Papa Clem Mine That Bird General Quarters Friesan Fire Papa Clem Big Drama
Papa Clem General Quarters Take The Points Take The Points Big Drama General Quarters General Quarters
Mine That Bird Pioneerof the Nile Conservative Big Drama General Quarters Terrain Mine That Bird
General Quarters Flying Private General Quarters Mine That Bird Take The Points Take The Points Take The Points
Flying Private Luv Guv Big Drama Tone It Down Terrain Big Drama Terrain
Joe Drape Andy Serling Jessica Chapel Martha Claussen Brendan O’Meara Jeff Scott Lisa Grimm
New York Times NYRA Railbird SureBet Racing News The Saratogian The Saratogian Superfectablog
Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra Mine That Bird Pioneerof the Nile Rachel Alexandra
Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile Big Drama Mine That Bird Rachel Alexandra Friesan Fire Musket Man
Mine That Bird Big Drama Pioneerof the Nile Papa Clem Take The Points Rachel Alexandra Papa Clem
Big Drama Mine That Bird Papa Clem Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man Papa Clem Mine That Bird
Papa Clem Papa Clem Friesan Fire Musket Man Big Drama Mine That Bird Friesan Fire
Musket Man Friesan Fire Musket Man Friesan Fire Papa Clem Musket Man Pioneerof the Nile
Terrain Musket Man Mine That Bird General Quarters Friesan Fire General Quarters Big Drama
Luv Guv General Quarters General Quarters Terrain Pioneerof the Nile Take The Points General Quarters
General Quarters Take The Points Take The Points Big Drama Terrain Terrain Terrain
Pioneerof the Nile Conservative Terrain Tone It Down Tone It Down Big Drama Take The Points
Patrick Patten Peter Denk Nick Kling Simon Bray
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Rachel Alexandra Mine That Bird Rachel Alexandra Rachel Alexandra
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COLLUSION, AN ONLINE FIRESTORM, AND SURRENDER

Monday, May 11th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
For those of you who decided to disconnect from the racing world on Sunday, let me just say that we had a little situation here.

Actually, it wasn’t so little. Collusion between the co-owner of Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird and the owner of runner-up Pioneerof the Nile to keep Kentucky Oaks winner Rachel Alexandra out of the starting gate for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes would have, if successfully orchestrated, created one of the biggest embarrassments this sport has seen in my lifetime.

Apparently, and thankfully, the plot to keep the filly out of the race was aborted on the same day it was hatched. And that says something about the world we live and how cable television and the internet not only have changed how we get our news, but have given the public an opportunity to swiftly react to it, and in some ways alter the course of events.

I was enjoying a quiet Mother’s Day brunch Sunday afternoon with my family when I got an urgent message that Ahmed Zayat, Pioneerof the Nile’s owner, during a telephone interview on HRTV said Mine That Bird’s co-owner Mark Allen called Zayat and asked him to enter an additional horse in the Preakness to block Rachel Alexandra’s entry in the race. The filly, newly acquired by Jess Jackson last week and expected to be supplemented to the Preakness at a cost of $100,000, would only get into the starting field if fewer than 14 horses were entered, because early Triple Crown nominees are given preference over supplemental entrants in the Preakness.

Allen said he would enter a maiden in the race, and if Zayat entered a second horse, there was a strong likelihood Rachel Alexandra would not get in. It would also put Derby-winning jockey Calvin Borel back aboard Mine That Bird after he chose to ride the filly.

The Paulick Report linked to Dan Farley’s timely dispatch in England’s Racing Post that quoted Zayat, who repeated part of the conversation he’d had with Allen. Internet forums (Thoroughbred Champions, Pace Advantage, among others) and blogs lit up with comments about “cowardice,” “unsportsmanlike conduct,” and actions that were “terribly unflattering to the sport,” and would take “the racing industry’s massive dysfunction to brand new levels.”

The late Paul Mellon, who for me defined the kind of sportsmen who helped make this game so wonderful, was, I’m certain, spinning madly in his grave over how racing has degenerated and deteriorated.

Officials of the Maryland Jockey Club must have had visions of angry, pitchfork wielding mobs of racing fans descending upon Pimlico Saturday in search of the two would-be evil-doers, Zayat and Allen. One of those officials called Zayat to explain to him that his actions weren’t being very well received and that it might not be such a bad idea to reconsider.

NBC Sports, which pays a handsome sum to televise the Preakness and has been promoting the hell out of the anticipated matchup between Mine That Bird and Rachel Alexandra, might have been a little upset as well if the filly was somehow excluded.

Before sunset, a flurry of online articles was published by Bloodhorse.com, Sports Illustrated, New York Times and others, quoting both Zayat and Allen with abandoning their ill-conceived plan and waving white flags of surrender–but not before humiliating themselves and embarrassing the sport.

The whole news cycle was over in about six hours. I’m convinced the internet reporting and commentaries, along with the public outrage expressed in online forums, drove the decisions of Zayat and Allen as much as the phone call from a racing official in Maryland may have done.

Twenty years ago, before racing had two cable channels and the internet to provide an explosion of instant information, this Sunday storm might not have ever made into the public spotlight. The late Joe Hirsch, the executive columnist for Daily Racing Form, would have gotten wind of the conspiracy first (Joe always got it first), but by the time the Form had its next press run on Monday afternoon, someone (probably Joe himself) would have smacked some sense into Zayat and Allen.

For those of you who on Sunday were plugged in to HRTV (or TVG, which also did its own reporting on the issue), the Paulick Report or other web sites, this whole unseemly saga would be old news by the time your daily newspaper hit the front door Monday morning, or the weekly trade magazines are delivered later this week.

Times have changed.

One final thought: What is it about fillies and the Preakness that brings out the worst in some people?

Twenty-nine years ago, Angel Cordero Jr. used intimidating, and many of us still believe unsportsmanlike, riding tactics aboard Codex to beat the Kentucky Derby-winning filly Genuine Risk in the 1980 Preakness.

In 1988, the late Woody Stephens hit a low point in his Hall of Fame training career when he had jockey Pat Day employ suicidal tactics in the Preakness aboard Forty Niner against Winning Colors, the front-running filly who defeated Forty Niner in the Kentucky Derby two weeks earlier. It ruined both of their chances of victory.

Interestingly, in both cases, the Daily Racing Form published front-page editorials criticizing the tactics used against the two fillies, an extremely unusual occurrence by the Form. The 2009 version of Daily Racing Form might well have an editorial printed on the Rachel Alexandra saga in the next day or two, but by then will anyone care?

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PAULICK’S DERBY ANALYSIS: PIONEER WILL LEAD A CALIFORNIA STAMPEDE

Friday, May 1st, 2009
By Ray Paulick

(Who do you like in this year’s Kentucky Derby? Please use the comment section below to give us your picks and analysis of the race.)

It’s anybody’s guess how wet the Churchill Downs racing surface is going to be on Saturday for the 135th running of the Kentucky Derby, although Butch Lehr has faced this challenge many times in the past and has managed to almost always make the best of it, sealing the track overnight to prevent too much moisture from getting in and then working it throughout the day. The end result could make one of the most formidable handicapping challenges of the year that much tougher because heavy overnight rains are expected and we really don’t know how most of the 20 entrants in the race will perform on a sloppy, muddy, or drying-out racetrack. Of all the horses in the line-up, only Friesan Fire has really proven himself on a sloppy racetrack, romping to a 7 ¼-length victory in the Louisiana Derby at the Fair Grounds in New Orleans.

I’ll be at Churchill Downs in Louisville Saturday, but my heart will be in Florida, where one of the Paulick Report’s most loyal readers will be celebrating his 91st birthday on Derby Day. That would be my father, Al Paulick, and if I could be anywhere other than Churchill Downs it would be with him, celebrating with a homemade birthday cake made by my mother and enjoying the Derby day telecasts on ESPN and NBC with both of them. I hope they’ll save me a piece of cake.

I’ve been a believer in Pioneerof the Nile throughout the spring, putting him on top in my Paulick Derby Index in eight of the nine weeks since we launched the AP-style poll in February. The lone exception was the week after the Florida Derby, when I moved Quality Road into the top spot. A week later, after Pioneerof the Nile won the Santa Anita Derby impressively, the son of Empire Maker was back in the top slot on my list.

So I’m staying with Pioneerof the Nile, though the complications of a horse who has never run on conventional dirt figure to be an even stickier wicket on an “off” track. But I like the way this horse has progressed through his four races since joining the barn of three-time Kentucky Derby-winning trainer Bob Baffert, he’s had zero setbacks along the way, and has appeared to train extremely well since arriving at Churchill Downs. The choice by jockey Garrett Gomez and his agent Ron Anderson, to ride Pioneerof the Nile instead of the lightly raced but ultra-talented Dunkirk bolstered my confidence that much more, and I think he’ll get an average to fast pace to run at in this year’s Derby.

The highest Beyer Speed Figure for Pioneerof the Nile (99) is lower than the lifetime best Beyer for nine of the others in the race, but I’m not convinced speed figures are as accurate on synthetics as they are on conventional dirt, and horsemen have said for years that California figures are habitually lower than those of their East Coast and Midwest rivals. Plus, none of these horses has ever gone a mile and a quarter on dirt, so the Beyer Figures that apply to shorter distances are in some ways irrelevant on Derby Day, at least the way I look at it.

Pioneerof the Nile not only has won four consecutive graded stakes for Baffert and the Zayat Stable, the horses he’s defeated have gone on to bigger and better things after they left Southern California. The best example, of course, is morning-line favorite I Want Revenge, who was beaten twice by the Pioneer and then swept the Gotham and Wood Memorial at Aqueduct in separate invasions of New York. Chocolate Candy won two stakes in Northern California after being defeated in the Cash Call Futurity by Pioneerof the Nile, and Papa Clem ran second to Friesan Fire in the Louisiana Derby and then defeated Old Fashioned at Oaklawn Park in the Arkansas Derby.

Going back to my handicapping roots while at the Daily Racing Form 20 years ago and from knowledge I gained from reading books by such brilliant handicappers as Steve Davidowitz and the late Tom Ainslie (aka Richard Carter), those victories by horses that chased Pioneerof the Nile made his victories that much more significant.

So Pioneerof the Nile is my top pick to win. Here’s how I feel about the rest of the field, in post position order:

1) West Side Bernie, jockey Stewart Elliott. Let’s give credit to trainer Kelly Breen and owners Lori and George Hall for getting two horses to the Derby (Atomic Rain being the other). That’s an achievement in itself, though I would be shocked to see either of them hit the board.
2) Musket Man, jockey Eibar Coa. Has been really smartly placed by trainer Derek Ryan throughout his career, resulting in five wins from six starts. Son of Yonaguska has never faced this kind of competition, however.
3) Mr. Hot Stuff, jockey John Velazquez. Full brother to Travers winner Colonel John has been slower developing than his year-older sibling. He’ll be running late, though if he’s a threat for anything it will be for third or fourth place. I wouldn’t be surprised to see him duplicate what Colonel John did at Saratoga three months down the road.
4) Advice, jockey Rene Douglas. Couldn’t win in New Mexico, but neither could Real Quiet, who won the Derby and Preakness and just missed the Triple Crown by a nose. But Real Quiet’s sojourn to the Land of Enchantment was as a 2-year-old, and Advice ran fifth there in late March of his 3-year-old season. Another late-developer it appears who won’t be a threat to win.
5) Hold Me Back, jockey Kent Desormeaux. Another synthetic surface specialist, specifically Polytrack, where he’s won 3-of-4, with a second in the Blue Grass. Only dirt start, a fifth in the Remsen, makes him a throw-out in my book.
6) Friesan Fire, jockey Gabriel Saez. Can Larry Jones improve on his last two Derby runner-up finishes. think he’s got the best chance to win that he’s had since arriving on the Derby scene in 2007, especially if the track does come up sloppy. Jones isn’t a conventional trainer, giving the horse a long layoff between the March 14 Louisiana Derby and the first Saturday in May, but I like the pattern of works he’s put into this son of A.P. Indy.
7) Papa Clem, jockey Rafael Bejarano. Gary Stute might have the horse to finish the job his father, Mel Stute, started in 1986 when Snow Chief lost the Derby as the heavy favorite. Smart Strike has turned into a world-class sire, and Stute has this colt sharp as a tack after blowing him out a quick three furlongs on Thursday, an old-school move that I really like. He could be sitting just off the pace and make the first run when the speed tires.
8 ) Mine That Bird, jockey Calvin Borel. Calvin had his big day two years ago aboard Street Sense and on Friday in the Kentucky Oaks aboard Rachel Alexandra. No matter how far back this son of Birdstone finishes, Calvin will have nothing to be disappointed about.
9) Join in the Dance, jockey Chris Decarlo. Todd Pletcher said the Sky Mesa colt “will be in front” in the early stages of the Derby, but I think Join in the Dance will look down that long Churchill Downs stretch and throw in the towel without much of a fight.
10) Regal Ransom, jockey Alan Garcia. Won the UAE Derby over the more highly regarded stablemate Desert Party, but the track that night was speed favoring, and he was under no pressure whatsoever. I see a different scenario here and don’t think the son of Distorted Humor will ever see the front.
11) Chocolate Candy, jockey Mike Smith. Trainer Jerry Hollendorfer knows how to win big races at Churchill Downs, having won two Kentucky Oaks, and this son of Candy Ride gives him a legitimate shot in the Derby. Though his entire career has been spent on synthetic tracks in California, I have a suspicion, based on his pedigree, that he will adapt to a sloppy track much better than some of the others.
12) General Quarters, jockey Julian Leparoux. The worst bet in the field, based on the early odds on Friday. Apparently, everyone who ever went to the Louisville school where owner and trainer Tom McCarthy was a teacher and principal bet on this son of Sky Mesa, driving his odds far lower than they should be. He won the Blue Grass, but I don’t like how he’s trained since then, and the field he beat at Keeneland was not a very good one.
13)  (SCRATCHED)  I Want Revenge, jockey Joe Talamo. The biggest threat to Pioneerof the Nile on paper, based on those two impressive New York victories in the Gotham and Wood Memorial. The Stephen Got Even colt has versatility, so it will be interesting where young Joe Talamo places him in the early going. Jeff Mullins has won big races in his career, but none this big. The Derby is I Want Revenge’s third big road trip in less than two months, and I suspect that could take a little something out of the colt.
14) Atomic Rain, jockey Joe Bravo. Another son of Smart Strike, he showed good form last year when second in the Remsen to Old Fashioned, but hasn’t really progressed this year, and wasn’t intended for the race until a late withdrawal opened the doors for him. Pass.
15) Dunkirk, jockey Edgar Prado. I have really been conflicted on this horse. First, I’m a believer there’s a reason horses without 2-year-old form have not done well in the Kentucky Derby. There is an important seasoning factor that helps win this race, with its big field, hectic training schedule and frenetic race-day atmosphere. Trainer Todd Pletcher has kept the horse in the quiet surroundings of Palm Meadows training in Florida until mid-week, but he’s only had three starts and none since March 28, when he was a tired horse when beaten by Quality Road in the Florida Derby. He has plenty of ability, but this presents a steep hill to climb.
16) Pioneerof the Nile, jockey Garrett Gomez. So many things are in his favor: a winning record, outstanding pedigree, top-class rider and a trainer who knows what it takes to win the Kentucky Derby. The biggest question mark is the transition from synthetics to dirt, and that’s obviously why Baffert took an outside post position, to have a minimum amount of kickback in Pioneerof the Nile’s face, especially in the early stages of the race.
17) Summer Bird, jockey Chris Rosier. After breaking his maiden he made his first stakes start in the Arkansas Derby and finished a credible third. I’ve got him in the last pool, even though his running style suggests he could pass tiring horses in the stretch.
18) Nowhere to Hide, jockey Shaun Bridgomohan. Trainer Nick Zito loves the Kentucky, and he’s shown in the past that he’s willing to bring a horse with little to no chance just to have a spot in the starting gate. That’s the case, I’m afraid.
19) Desert Party, jockey Ramon Dominguez. I think this Street Cry colt represents the best chance Godolphin has had to win the Kentucky Derby, but I just don’t believe he can overcome the long travel and difficult transition back to American racing after spending the winter in Dubai.
20) Flying Private, jockey Robbie Albarado. If anyone loves the Derby than Nick Zito it’s D. Wayne Lukas. But I’ll say this about Lukas: he’s won or ran big inraces before with horses like this that didn’t look like they belonged. Best race was on the Polytrack at Turfway Park, and that doesn’t give me a lot of confidence in this son of Fusaichi Pegasus.

THE BET: I’m not a huge gimmicks player, so I’ll be boxing exactas and trifectas using Pioneerof the Nile, Papa Clem, Friesan Fire and Chocolate Candy and throwing I Want Revenge out of the picture altogether. I think his travel itinerary will have gotten to him. But aside from I Want Revenge, I see Derby 135 as mostly a California stampede.

More than anything else, let’s hope for a safe trip for everyone from start to finish.

Who do you like in this year’s Kentucky Derby? Please use the comment section below to give us your picks and analysis of the race.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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EDWIN ANTHONY PEDIGREE REPORT: RACHEL ALEXANDRA

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
Pedigree consultant and author Edwin Anthony examines the bloodlines of Rachel Alexandra, the heavy pre-race favorite for Friday’s Kentucky Oaks, in his final analysis in a series of articles written exclusively for the Paulick Report.

Anthony previously looked at leading candidates for the Kentucky Derby: Louisiana Derby winner Friesan Fire, Florida Derby winner Quality Road, Santa Anita Derby winner Pioneerof the Nile, Florida Derby runner-up Dunkirk, Wood Memorial winner I Want Revenge, Arkansas Derby winner Papa Clem, and Santa Anita Derby runner-up Chocolate Candy.

RACHEL ALEXANDRA
(Medaglia d’oro—Lotta Kim, by Roar)
By Edwin Anthony
Every horse race has a winner; that’s a fact. And just because a horse wins an otherwise important race, that does not make that horse particularly special, other than it may have been the best (that day) of an average field of Thoroughbreds. Greatness must be earned—gauged against the clock, measured against the history books. There must be dominance and consistency, across state borders and time zones, over varying track conditions and against the best competition available. When these conditions are met, then a discussion of history and greatness can begin.

It is too early to call Rachel Alexandra great; she hasn’t even won a G1 race yet, much less run in one. But any serious fan of Thoroughbred racing has chill bumps in anticipation of the Kentucky Oaks (G1) and the rest of her 2009 campaign. Having seen her races in the Golden Rod (G2, new stakes record), Martha Washington Stakes (in time a second faster than Old Fashioned’s winning time in the Southwest Stakes), Fair Grounds Oaks (G2), and Fantasy (G2), all of which she won with devastating ease, we know that this filly has very serious talent.

Will Rachel Alexandra ever race against males? Perhaps. She looks a lot more like a colt than a filly, and her imposing frame makes her seem like the kind of filly that wouldn’t be intimidated by colts. Her front-running style would also make it easy for her to stay out of trouble, and she could simply run them off their feet (like Winning Colors or Lady’s Secret), which is a distinct possibility, given the times of her races. You can’t blame her owners for wanting to pick off the important filly races that are at their mercy in the immediate future, however, as those races are very prestigious in their own right and very difficult to win under any circumstances.

But, then, all of that is conjecture. Let’s discuss things that are a little more based in fact. Where does Rachel Alexandra’s talent come from? We should take a closer look at her pedigree, in search of some clues.

The race record of Medaglia d’Oro (her sire) is fairly fresh in our minds, as Rachel Alexandra is from his first crop. There were his wins in the Whitney (G1), Travers (G1), Donn Handicap (G1), Oaklawn Handicap (G2), Strub Stakes (G2), San Felipe (G2), and Jim Dandy (G2)—he certainly liked Saratoga—as well as solid second place finishes in the Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1, twice), Belmont (G1), Dubai World Cup (G1), Pacific Classic (G1), and Wood Memorial (G1). So, he was very fast and very consistent, always part of the exacta in important races, it seemed (he was first or second in 15 of his 17 starts).

El Prado, sire of Medaglia d’Oro, was champion 2-year-old colt in Ireland and has a top-drawer pedigree, being a son of the great stallion Sadler’s Wells from a classic-winning dam (Irish 1000 Guineas) by Sir Ivor from a mare by Tom Fool. His family is very deep, having previously yielded stallions like Drone (damsire of Kentucky Derby winners Grindstone and Charismatic), Dunce, Notebook (damsire of 2009 Dubai World Cup winner Well Armed), and Sir Wimborne. His dam also carries inbreeding to Sir Ivor’s family via the three-quarter siblings Menow and Athenia (second dam of Sir Ivor).

Medaglia d’Oro’s dam side has some quality, although it is not as obvious as in the case of his sire, El Prado. His dam was a stakes winner of five races, although not of particularly high quality. You have to go back to his third dam to find another graded stakes winner (Sapling-G1 winner Travelling Music) but his family is better than it appears. Medaglia d’Oro’s second dam was sired by champion 2-year-old colt Silent Screen, who is from the same family as Medaglia d’Oro (creating inbreeding to the foundation mare Sunday Evening) and it is a deep family indeed. Sunday Evening is part of the great Idle Fancy family that has yielded a number of champions, including Hill Prince (Horse of the Year), First Landing, Cicada, Dark Mirage, Indian Skimmer, and Speightstown, as well as G1 winners like Bluebird, Cherokee Colony, Classy Mirage, Crusader Sword, Daaher, Java Gold, Kennedy Road, Missy’s Mirage, Spun Sugar, Timely Writer, Timely Assertion, and Upper Case. That’s quite a list, and it shows what you can learn if you are simply curious enough to look off the edge of a catalog page.

Bailjumper, the damsire of Medaglia d’Oro, elicits yawns from commercial breeders, but he is closely related to a number of other successful progeny by Damascus from the important Frizette family. Furthermore, Bailjumper was the sire of the extremely sound runner Skip Trial (Haskell—G1, Gulfstream Park Handicap—G1 twice), who in turn sired the equally hickory Skip Away (Horse of the Year). The important thing is that Medaglia d’Oro was a top-class performer, and the potential was always there for him to be a good sire. It doesn’t always work out that way (seldom, in fact), but the potential was there. And the fact that he comes from such sound stock (El Prado and Bailjumper are both known for passing this forward) makes him a sire to watch. Soundness comes from soundness.

Moving to the dam side of Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree, her dam was a very nice racemare, winning the Tiffany Lass Stakes at Fair Grounds, and finishing a credible second in the Golden Rod (G2) at Churchill. Her dam’s sire, Roar, was a winner of the Jim Beam Stakes (G2, now known as the Lane’s End at Turfway) and bred in the purple, being a son of champion Forty Niner from the mare Wild Applause (by Northern Dancer and closely related to Kentucky Derby Sea Hero). Roar’s second dam is Broodmare of the Year Glowing Tribute, she being a daughter of Graustark from one of the most productive branches of the La Troienne family.

Rachel Alexandra’s second dam, Kim’s Blues, is by Cure the Blues, who is from the family of Secretariat and Sir Gaylord, and Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree does in fact carry two crosses of Sir Gaylord, giving us three crosses of the Imperatrice family. Lotta Kim carries 4 x 5 balanced inbreeding to Raise a Native (through a son and a daughter) and 5 x 5 inbreeding to the important mare Pocahontas (through her sons Tom Rolfe and Chieftain), while Kim’s Blues has 4 x 4 balanced inbreeding to Bold Ruler.

El Prado has a similar pedigree to that of Lotta Kim, with balanced inbreeding to Northern Dancer (4 x 4) and Native Dancer (6 x 6), as well as inbreeding to Hail to Reason (6 x 5), Sir Gaylord (5 x 5), Tom Fool (5 x 6), and Turn-to (6 x 6) when they are crossed in Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree. Rachel Alexandra also picks up balanced inbreeding to Ribot (6 x 6,6) through his daughter Social Position and his sons Tom Rolfe and Graustark in Lotta Kim’s pedigree.

The lesson that we can learn from Rachel Alexandra’s lineage is that if you start with a mare than can run some (Kim’s Blues) and start inbreeding to all of these important and well-bred stallions, good things are going to start happening for you. Talent doesn’t fall out of the sky, at least not in Thoroughbreds. If you look closely enough and do your research, you can invariably figure out the source or sources of excellence in a horse’s pedigree. It can skip a generation or two, but it’s always there.

Edwin Anthony was the staff pedigree consultant at Three Chimneys Farm for six years and has penned dozens of articles on pedigree research.  He recently published a reference book, The American Thoroughbred (Volume I), which can be ordered by clicking here.

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PAULICK DERBY INDEX by AmWest Entertainment: FINAL POLL LOSES SOME QUALITY

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

In a week that should have shown little movement in the rankings of the Paulick Derby Index by AmWest Entertainment, the Paulick Derby Index has actually shown some fluctuation as co-favorite Quality Road was withdrawn from the race on Monday because of complications resulting from a quarter crack. I Want Revenge, clearly now the favorite among our ballot stuffers, will lead a top ten that has lost some star power with several favorites not making the trip due to injury. That being said, this is still as strong a group as we have seen in years. The Derby this year should be an exciting one to watch with anywhere from 5-10 horses in legitimate contention.
 
You will also notice that the final week’s Paulick Derby Index by AmWest Entertainment features only the top ten contenders. We did this to put an onus on the top echelon of the field and make our last list more exclusive.

Finally, due to the fact that all ballots are submitted by 9 PM EST Monday night and well before Square Eddie’s withdrawal, you will see him on several ballots.
 
Will the PDI be the great predictor it portends to be on Saturday? Only time will tell.

1-Pioneerof the Nile. The Kentucky Derby is a tough race to win, even if everything goes your way, and it’s almost impossible for a horse to win if his training has been interrupted. Witness Unbridled’s Song, who battled foot problems coming up to the 1996 Derby, where he might have been the best horse but finished fifth while racing with a bar shoe on the problematic foot. If Quality Road’s connections felt their horse was sound and sent him to Louisville, I would have bet against him, simply because of the interruption in training. Everything has gone perfectly for Pioneerof the Nile: no interruptions in training due to bad weather or nagging injuries, and he is coming up to this race in the best form of his career. The Empire Maker colt has done everything asked of him, and I doubt trainer Bob Baffert would trade places with anybody.

2-I Want Revenge. It’s the horse, stupid. I’m no fan of trainer Jeff Mullins or the IEAH partners that bought into this son of Stephen Got Even, but I do like I Want Revenge. How can you not like a horse that does what he did to win the Wood Memorial after a disastrous start? The race before that, the Gotham Stakes, he showed enough early speed to press the pace and draw off in the stretch to a an easy victory. He is 0-for-2 against Pioneerof the Nile, though his first loss, by a nose in the Cash Call Futurity, was in his first start after breaking his maiden. I think he’ll be the betting favorite, but if Pioneerof the Nile beats I Want Revenge, people will be scratching their heads and wondering why.

3-Dunkirk. Todd Pletcher has kept the son of Unbridled’s Song under the radar, staying in Florida to train while the rest of the field is in Kentucky, and I don’t fault his logic that the track on Derby Day will likely be different from the surface everyone trained on in the weeks leading up to the race. Always seems to be that way. The colt has enormous talent, but there remains that issue of a lack of experience that has stopped many previous Derby contenders with a similar profile.

4-Friesan Fire.  One thing we know: if it rains as expected, and the track is sloppy, Friesan Fire will be one happy horse. The A.P. Indy colt seemed to relish the sloppy Fair Grounds surface while winning the Louisiana Derby in a cakewalk. His training up to the race for Larry Jones has been sensational, and the only thing his resume lacks is a victory over tough competition.

5-Musket Man. Beating Giant Oak in the Illinois Derby was no great accomplishment (doesn’t somebody always beat Giant Oak?), but it’s hard to fault a horse with five wins in six starts. Yonaguska colt seems like the grinder type—not much early speed or quick mid-race acceleration—but if he gets a good enough trip under Eibar Coa I wouldn’t be shocked to see him in the top flight at the eighth pole.

6-Papa Clem. Won the Arkansas Derby coming from off the pace, but Smart Strike colt has enough speed to be close up in the early going and maybe even make the lead if no one else wants it. Gary Stute learned from his father, Mel, the West Coast wizard of speed, so a late-week blowout of two or three furlongs might be used to sharpen up Papa Clem after a series of longer works.

7-Chocolate Candy. Has only one way of going, settle in near the back of the field and make a late run, so you know that racing luck will play a role for Candy Ride colt. Hollendorfer has won the Kentucky Oaks twice (Lite Light in 1991 and Pike Place Dancer in1996), proving he can win at the top level of the game while being based in California’s “B  Circuit” in the Bay Area. Training well, but has to have everything go his way for a victory.

8-Advice. Wise guys are asking how a horse that couldn’t win the Sunland Park Derby is going to win the Kentucky Derby.  Real Quiet, who came within a nose of winning the 1998 Triple Crown, couldn’t win in New Mexico, either, finishing third there as a 2-year-old in a pair of races. Advice demonstrated some quality last year, finishing second but DQed and placed third in the Arlington-Washington Futurity, and his last to first rally in the Coolmore Lexington Stakes was eye-catching. But races were on Polytrack, however, and he has yet to prove himself on a conventional dirt track (though the same can be said of Pioneerof the Nile).

9-Desert Party. I like the way the son of Street Cry has trained since arriving from Dubai, but I’ve seen previous Godolphin horses looking sharp in the morning before fading on Derby afternoon. If this one is any different, he’ll win without my backing at the windows.

10-Mr. Hot Stuff. Have always thought this Tiznow colt was going to develop into a good one, but it’s taken longer than expected. He’ll be running late in the Derby, but I think he looks more like a Travers winner.

Ray Paulick
Fan Vote Alex Brown Paul Moran Billy Reed John Conte Bill Finley
Paulick Report Paulick Report Alex Brown Racing At The Races Billy Reed Says Conte’s Picks
ESPN, NYT
Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Regal Ransom Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge I Want Revenge
I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Desert Party Desert Party I Want Revenge Dunkirk Friesan Fire
Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man I Want Revenge Quality Road Friesan Fire Dunkirk
Friesan Fire Dunkirk Regal Ransom Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile
Musket Man General Quarters Friesan Fire Rachel Alexandra Dunkirk West Side Bernie Papa Clem
Papa Clem Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Chocolate Candy Friesan Fire Papa Clem General Quarters
Chocolate Candy Desert Party Papa Clem Friesan Fire General Quarters Win Willy Regal Ransom
Advice Papa Clem General Quarters Papa Clem Musket Man Musket Man Desert Party
Desert Party Musket Man Square Eddie Musket Man Papa Clem General Quarters Win Willy
Mr. Hot Stuff Hold Me Back Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Desert Party Chocolate Candy Musket Man

Randy Moss Bill Nack Valerie Grash Gary West Michael Nikolic Dana Byerly Jeremy Plonk
ESPN ESPN Foolish Pleasure FW Star-Telegram Gathering the Wind Green But Game Horseplayer Pro, ESPN
I Want Revenge Dunkirk Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile
Dunkirk I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Dunkirk
Friesan Fire Desert Party Regal Ransom Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Desert Party I Want Revenge
Desert Party Friesan Fire Musket Man Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy Regal Ransom Mr. Hot Stuff
Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile Papa Clem Desert Party Papa Clem Dunkirk Desert Party
Papa Clem Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Chocolate Candy Square Eddie Papa Clem Chocolate Candy
Musket Man Hold Me Back Mr. Hot Stuff Musket Man Musket Man Chocolate Candy Hold Me Back
Chocolate Candy General Quarters Chocolate Candy Papa Clem Desert Party Musket Man Friesan Fire
General Quarters Musket Man General Quarters Regal Ransom Dunkirk General Quarters Regal Ransom
Regal Ransom Papa Clem Summer Bird West Side Bernie Regal Ransom Square Eddie Win Willy

Bill Christine John Pricci Vic Zast Jon White Richard Eng Alan Mann Alicia Wincze
Horserace Insider Horserace Insider Horserace Insider HRTV, Santa Anita TV Las Vegas R-J Left at the Gate Lexington H-L
I Want Revenge Dunkirk Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Dunkirk Friesan Fire
Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile
Desert Party Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Papa Clem I Want Revenge
Dunkirk Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Papa Clem Dunkirk General Quarters Desert Party
Friesan Fire Chocolate Candy Regal Ransom Chocolate Candy Chocolate Candy Win Willy Chocolate Candy
Regal Ransom Desert Party Desert Party Musket Man Hold Me Back Chocolate Candy Dunkirk
Chocolate Candy Musket Man Chocolate Candy Desert Party General Quarters Musket Man Papa Clem
Papa Clem Papa Clem Hold Me Back General Quarters Win Willy Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man
Musket Man Regal Ransom Papa Clem Dunkirk Desert Party Friesan Fire Regal Ransom
General Quarters General Quarters Square Eddie Mr. Hot Stuff West Side Bernie Square Eddie General Quarters

Art Wilson Joe Drape Andy Serling Jessica Chapel Brendan O’Meara Jeff Scott Lisa Grimm
Los Angeles Newspapers New York Times NYRA Railbird The Saratogian The Saratogian SuperfectaBlog
I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire I Want Revenge I Want Revenge
Pioneerof the Nile Win Willy Desert Party Desert Party I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Friesan Fire
Friesan Fire Papa Clem I Want Revenge Regal Ransom Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy
Chocolate Candy Musket Man West Side Bernie I Want Revenge Dunkirk Desert Party Papa Clem
Papa Clem Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Desert Party General Quarters General Quarters
Dunkirk Dunkirk Musket Man Papa Clem Regal Ransom Papa Clem Pioneerof the Nile
Square Eddie General Quarters General Quarters Dunkirk Papa Clem Mr. Hot Stuff Regal Ransom
Musket Man Desert Party Papa Clem Musket Man Chocolate Candy Chocolate Candy Musket Man
Hold Me Back I Want Revenge Regal Ransom General Quarters Musket Man Hold Me Back Hold Me Back
General Quarters Square Eddie Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy General Quarters Regal Ransom Dunkirk

Patrick Patten Peter Denk Nick Kling Simon Bray Todd Schrupp
Tbred Bloggers Alliance Thoroughbred Times The Troy Record TVG TVG
Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Dunkirk I Want Revenge Desert Party
Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge
I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Friesan Fire General Quarters
General Quarters Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy Regal Ransom
Square Eddie Hold Me Back Desert Party Papa Clem Dunkirk
West Side Bernie Desert Party Regal Ransom Desert Party Friesan Fire
Chocolate Candy Chocolate Candy Papa Clem Hold Me Back Musket Man
Musket Man Papa Clem Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Hold Me Back
Dunkirk Musket Man Musket Man Musket Man Pioneerof the Nile
Papa Clem General Quarters Win Willy General Quarters Advice

PAULICK DERBY INDEX by AmWest Entertainment: A TIGHTENING AT THE TOP

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Last weekend was the final opportunity for Derby hopefuls to make their case. As a result, this week’s Paulick Derby Index by AmWest Entertainment had two new entries with Square Eddie in a tie for 15th and Advice all alone in the 18th spot. The only other newbie on our list was a vote for Arkansas Derby 3rd place finisher Summer Bird.

Also significant was the tightening between the first and second place contenders I Want Revenge and Quality Road. This narrowing margin is due to Quality Road’s quarter crack not being as concerning as once believed.

Ray Paulick’s Analysis

1-Pioneerof the Nile. This was written before his first serious workout on the Churchill Downs surface, but I’m sticking with the Empire Maker colt unless and until he shows a complete disdain for dirt in his training up to the Kentucky Derby. Keeping Garrett Gomez in the saddle is a confidence booster because agent Ron Anderson is as sharp as they come.

2-I Want Revenge. Biggest question about Stephen Got Even colt’s two New York wins was who he beat. Not sure there was much quality behind him, but he was right there with Pioneerof the Nile in California and showed he likes the dirt. Versatile running style really a plus and jockey Joe Talamo is wise beyond his years.

3- Quality Road. Mystery horse as far as I’m concerned, because of the quarter crack. But based on that last New York workout and the fact the son of Elusive Quality apparently came out of it in good shape I’ve moved him up a notch over Dunkirk. Will he get the distance?

4-Dunkirk. Could there be a better backup rider to Garrett Gomez than Edgar Prado? No loss there in riding talent. Choice by Gomez and agent Anderson was a tough one, considering they were dealing with two high-powered trainers in Bob Baffert and Todd Pletcher and two of the most prominent owners in the game in Ahmed Zayat and the Coolmore operation. Call me old school, but I think the lack of racing experience will go against both Quality Road and Dunkirk.

5-Friesan Fire. Larry Jones seems to have had a pretty well-defined plan for son of A.P. Indy and he’s sticking to it. Another one racing against history with his lengthy gap between races. Working solidly at Keeneland before shipping to Churchill Downs for final preparations.

6-Musket Man. Tampa Bay and Illinois Derby winner got vote of confidence from jockey Eibar Coa, but he’ll be facing a completely different caliber of horse when the Churchill Downs starting gates open.

7-Papa Clem. Smart Strike seems to keep siring one top runner after another, and Papa Clem is moving in the right direction as the first Saturday in May approaches. Gary Stute may be a Kentucky Derby rookie, but he’s no greenhorn, having gotten some big race experience when father Mel had Preakness winner Snow Chief and other top runners during a stellar training career.

8-Chocolate Candy. Interesting that a Santa Anita publicity staff survey of West Coast horsemen found a lot of support for this Candy Ride colt trained by Jerry Hollendorfer. Will have a lot of horses to come around at the top of the stretch when he makes his late run.

9-Advice. So what if his Coolmore Lexington win was on a Polytrack surface that has produced so many unpredictable results? He’s an improving colt in good hands who closed like gangbusters to beat a Polytrack-loving Square Eddie.

10-Desert Party. How he trains over the next 10 days will have a lot to say about his chances. It’s a very difficult transition to make, coming from Dubai to Kentucky, and will take a top horse to handle it. I just don’t think he’ll be up to the challenge.

Ray Paulick
Fan Vote Alex Brown Paul Moran Billy Reed John Conte Bill Finley
Paulick Report Paulick Report Alex Brown Racing At The Races Billy Reed Says Conte’s Picks
ESPN, NYT
Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Quality Road Quality Road Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge I Want Revenge
I Want Revenge Quality Road I Want Revenge I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire
Quality Road Friesan Fire Desert Party Pioneerof the Nile Quality Road West Side Bernie Quality Road
Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man Rachel Alexandra Chocolate Candy Papa Clem Pioneerof the Nile
Friesan Fire Dunkirk Friesan Fire Regal Ransom Dunkirk Friesan Fire Papa Clem
Musket Man Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Desert Party Friesan Fire Quality Road General Quarters
Papa Clem General Quarters Regal Ransom Chocolate Candy General Quarters Regal Ransom Regal Ransom
Chocolate Candy Papa Clem Papa Clem Friesan Fire Musket Man Dunkirk Dunkirk
Advice Desert Party General Quarters Papa Clem Papa Clem Chocolate Candy Desert Party
Desert Party Musket Man Square Eddie Musket Man Desert Party   Chocolate Candy

Randy Moss Bill Nack Valerie Grash Gary West Michael Nikolic Dana Byerly Jeremy Plonk
ESPN ESPN Foolish Pleasure FW Star-Telegram Gathering the Wind Green But Game Horseplayer Pro, ESPN
I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Quality Road Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile
Quality Road Quality Road Papa Clem I Want Revenge Quality Road Quality Road Quality Road
Dunkirk Friesan Fire I Want Revenge Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Dunkirk
Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile Musket Man Friesan Fire Papa Clem Desert Party I Want Revenge
Desert Party Dunkirk Quality Road Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Papa Clem Friesan Fire
Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Desert Party Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Mr. Hot Stuff
Papa Clem Papa Clem Mr. Hot Stuff Chocolate Candy West Side Bernie Regal Ransom Desert Party
Musket Man Musket Man Chocolate Candy Musket Man Musket Man Musket Man Papa Clem
Chocolate Candy Desert Party Regal Ransom Papa Clem Desert Party General Quarters Chocolate Candy
General Quarters General Quarters Summer Bird West Side Bernie Dunkirk Chocolate Candy Hold Me Back

Bill Christine John Pricci Vic Zast Jon White Richard Eng Alan Mann Alicia Wincze
Horserace Insider Horserace Insider Horserace Insider HRTV, Santa Anita TV Las Vegas R-J Left at the Gate Lexington H-L
I Want Revenge Quality Road Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Dunkirk Friesan Fire
Quality Road Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile
Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Quality Road Quality Road Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge
Friesan Fire Dunkirk Quality Road Papa Clem I Want Revenge Papa Clem Quality Road
Desert Party Musket Man Dunkirk Chocolate Candy Dunkirk Quality Road Chocolate Candy
Dunkirk Papa Clem Regal Ransom Friesan Fire Papa Clem General Quarters Dunkirk
Regal Ransom West Side Bernie Chocolate Candy Musket Man Chocolate Candy Chocolate Candy Desert Party
Chocolate Candy Friesan Fire Desert Party Desert Party Hold Me Back Friesan Fire Papa Clem
Papa Clem Chocolate Candy Papa Clem General Quarters General Quarters Win Willy Musket Man
Musket Man Desert Party Hold Me Back Dunkirk Win Willy Musket Man Regal Ransom

Art Wilson Joe Drape Andy Serling Jessica Chapel Brendan O’Meara Jeff Scott Lisa Grimm
Los Angeles Newspapers New York Times NYRA Railbird The Saratogian The Saratogian SuperfectaBlog
I Want Revenge Musket Man Dunkirk Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire I Want Revenge I Want Revenge
Pioneerof the Nile Papa Clem Quality Road Quality Road I Want Revenge Friesan Fire Friesan Fire
Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Desert Party Desert Party Pioneerof the Nile Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy
Quality Road Quality Road I Want Revenge I Want Revenge Quality Road Desert Party General Quarters
Chocolate Candy Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Friesan Fire Dunkirk Quality Road Papa Clem
Papa Clem Dunkirk West Side Bernie Papa Clem Papa Clem Papa Clem Quality Road
Dunkirk General Quarters Musket Man Dunkirk Desert Party General Quarters Pioneerof the Nile
Musket Man Desert Party General Quarters General Quarters Chocolate Candy Mr. Hot Stuff Regal Ransom
Hold Me Back I Want Revenge Papa Clem Regal Ransom Musket Man Chocolate Candy Musket Man
Square Eddie Square Eddie Regal Ransom Musket Man Rachel Alexandra Hold Me Back Hold Me Back

Patrick Patten Peter Denk Nick Kling Simon Bray Todd Schrupp
Tbred Bloggers Alliance Thoroughbred Times The Troy Record TVG TVG
Friesan Fire Quality Road Quality Road I Want Revenge Quality Road
Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge Dunkirk Quality Road Desert Party
Quality Road Dunkirk I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile I Want Revenge
I Want Revenge Pioneerof the Nile Friesan Fire Friesan Fire General Quarters
General Quarters Friesan Fire Pioneerof the Nile Chocolate Candy Dunkirk
Papa Clem Hold Me Back Desert Party Papa Clem Friesan Fire
Chocolate Candy Musket Man Regal Ransom Desert Party Musket Man
Square Eddie General Quarters Papa Clem Dunkirk Hold Me Back
Musket Man Square Eddie Chocolate Candy Musket Man Pioneerof the Nile
Dunkirk Papa Clem Musket Man General Quarters Win Willy

EDWIN ANTHONY PEDIGREE REPORT: PAPA CLEM

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009
Pedigree consultant and author Edwin Anthony examines the bloodlines of Papa Clem, winner of Saturday’s Arkansas Derby winner Papa Clem, in the latest installment of the Paulick Report’s series of pedigree profiles of contenders for this year’s Kentucky Derby. Previously, he looked at Louisiana Derby winner Friesan Fire, Florida Derby winner Quality Road, Santa Anita Derby winner Pioneerof the Nile, Florida Derby runner-up Dunkirk, and Wood Memorial winner I Want Revenge.

Anthony, who spent six years as the staff pedigree consultant for Three Chimneys Farm and has contributed to numerous publications, is the author of a newly published book, “The American Thoroughbred (Volume I).” Click here to learn more about the book. – Ray Paulick

By Edwin Anthony

PAPA CLEM (Smart Strike—Miss Houdini, by Belong to Me)
Some truths are so simple that it is sometimes difficult to believe them. And the truth is that, on an overwhelming statistical basis, stakes quality racemares make the best producers of racehorses. Joe Estes (former editor of The Blood-Horse magazine and inventor of the Average-Earnings Index system) wrote about this, and there is a worthwhile book (
“The Estes Formula for Breeding Stakes Winners”)published by the Russell Meerdink Company (www.horseinfo.com) that details his theories.

Mr. Estes’ findings seem somewhat obvious, but the proof is in the research and in sample sizes large enough to reveal undeniable facts. In the end, pedigree research is very worthwhile (I certainly believe that), but there is no greater influence on the racing potential of a yearling than the racing record and stud record of its sire and dam.

Of course, we are disappointed when some of our favorite racemares (Winning Colors, Genuine Risk, etc.) turn out to be poor producers or produce few foals, perhaps because of their masculine nature. But for every one of those disappointments, there are quality performers who go on to be important producers like Personal Ensign (dam of several Grade 1 winners and in the pedigree of Kentucky Derby winner War Emblem), Miesque (dam of Kingmambo, Miesque’s Son, etc.), or Glowing Tribute (dam of Kentucky Derby winner Sea Hero and prominent in the pedigree of top sire Elusive Quality). These mares were very high-class racemares and continue to pass on their superiority to future generations. Of course, they inherited their greatness from their own ancestors in a genetic string that weaves its way through the patchwork of the Thoroughbred gene pool.

Personal Ensign drew upon the racing class of great racehorses like Damascus, Numbered Account, Hoist the Flag, and the Argentine mare Dorine, while Miesque was a daughter of the brilliant racehorse Nureyev from a mare by Prove Out, who beat Secretariat. Glowing Tribute’s sire, Graustark, was undefeated before fracturing his leg in the Blue Grass and comes from one of the most influential families in the stud book (Boudoir II). Her dam, Admiring, was a stakes winner and very closely related to the champion racemare Straight Deal.

Of course, that sounds as if I’m leaning on pedigrees (which I am), although this racing brilliance can very often reach back a generation or two and draw upon the influence of a superior ancestor. Thus, it is wise to have as many superior performers close up in a horse’s pedigree as one can afford, and it never hurts for these ancestors to have connections to families with a proven record of classic influence.

Recent Arkansas Derby (G2) winner Papa Clem (click here for his pedigree) has important family connections as well as an impressive string of stakes performances in his favor, both of which make him look like a serious contender for this year’s Triple Crown events. It is easy to dismiss one runner-up effort in a notable race, but when a horse continually knocks on the door, then breaks through with an impressive performance, possibly with a change of equipment or adjustment of running style, expectations must adjust in response.

After a runner-up effort to subsequent Santa Anita Derby (G1) winner Pioneerof the Nile in the Robert B. Lewis S. (G2), finishing a length ahead of Wood Memorial (G1) winner I Want Revenge, Papa Clem shipped to New Orleans and ran a credible (if well beaten) second to Friesan Fire in the Louisiana Derby (G2) after setting the pace in the slop. So, he displayed good form against very impressive competition.

Everyone expected Papa Clem to be on or near the pace in the Arkansas Derby, but he instead conceded the lead to speedster Old Fashioned, racing in fifth position early, only to swing out into the stretch and take over the lead in the final sixteenth of a mile. It was discovered that Old Fashioned had injured his leg in the running of the race, although there was no indication that was stopping him during the stretch run. The final time of 1:49 was solid, and the mile split of 1:36 and change was a second faster than the winning times of two mile-long stakes on the same card.

Smart Strike, Papa Clem’s sire, has been the Leading Sire in America two years running, thanks in large part to the exploits of Curlin (Horse of the Year during those years), although when a horse is able to sire 3 G1 winners on the same Belmont card (as he did in October of 2007), there is little point in disputing his dominance. Smart Strike is a son of Mr. Prospector and a half-brother to champion 3-year-old filly Dance Smartly (Breeders’ Cup Distaff), as well as being closely related to the top grass horse and useful stallion Sky Classic. Given the tremendous performance of the Mr. Prospector line in the Triple Crown events, this certainly bodes well for Papa Clem’s chances, especially given his liking for a dirt surface at Oaklawn that has yielded classic winners Curlin, Afleet Alex, and Smarty Jones in recent years.

Smart Strike has been able to sire everything from top sprinters (Fabulous Strike), to long winded turf horses (English Channel), to a classic winner like Curlin. What does the dam side of Papa Clem’s pedigree suggest that we can expect from him in the future?

Miss Houdini, his dam, won the Del Mar Debutante (G1), certainly one of the most important races for 2-year-old fillies in California. This does not necessarily suggest stamina, although she suffered an injury and was perhaps never able to display her true class or distance potential. There is no denying that her sire, Belong to Me, was strictly a sprinter, and certainly has the physical appearance of a sprinter. After an unbelievable beginning to his stud career while standing in New York, in which he sired three winners of G1 races at Saratoga, Belong to Me was relocated to Lane’s End Farm in Kentucky, although one would have to register his stud record as somewhat disappointing since the move. Of course, it would have been next to impossible for him to continue the string of success that he had begun, and breeders’ expectations are lofty when a stallion moves to a high profile farm like Lane’s End.

Despite his sprinter’s physique, Belong to Me did sire Mother Goose (G1) winner Jersey Girl over a distance of ground and 2008 champion turf female Forever Together, who shows no ill effects in significant tests of stamina. Belong to Me seems to be drawing on the influence of his damsire Exclusive Native (sire of Kentucky Derby winners Affirmed and Genuine Risk) and his second dam by classic influence Hail to Reason. This Hail to Reason mare, Straight Deal, was a champion, with no problems negotiating two turns, and she is closely related to the important mare Admiring, mentioned above in connection with Broodmare of the Year Glowing Tribute. Admiring actually shows up in the pedigree of Miss Houdini, via the stallion Magesterial, sire of HER second dam.

So, Miss Houdini is inbred to Hail to Reason through 2 very closely related mares from the Big Hurry (full-sister to champions Bimelech and Black Helen) branch of the La Troienne family. Miss Houdini is out of a mare by champion 2-year-old colt Lord Avie, who was not a particularly good sire, shows up in the pedigree of champion turf female Wait a While (a distance specialist) and carries the classic influences Gallant Man (new world record for a mile-and-a-half in the Belmont Stakes) and Tom Fool (sire of Buckpasser) as the sire of his first two dams. The capable young stallion Stephen Got Even (sire of I Want Revenge and champion 2YO colt Stevie Wonderboy) is from Lord Avie’s family as well.

For you pedigree buffs, there is one other very interesting thing about Papa Clem’s pedigree. Smart Strike carries two crosses of the important stallion Beau Pere in the dam side of his pedigree, he being inbred to the notable foundation mare Brown Bess. The old Australian stallion Carbine was also closely inbred to Brown Bess, and he appears no fewer than nine times in the pedigree of Leading Sire Danzig, seven of those crosses coming via the great stallion Spearmint.

I decided to see if there was a good record of combining Danzig and Beau Pere in pedigrees, thus securing a means of concentrating the influence of Brown Bess. Of course, I found that Smart Strike’s champion half-sister Dance Smartly obviously possesses this combination as she is a daughter of Danzig. But in researching this cross, I found no fewer than 38 G1 winners or otherwise notable breeding animals (the dams of Arch, Distorted Humor, etc.) with the Danzig / Beau Pere combination, including Danehill, Dispute (Kentucky Oaks), Funny Cide (Kentucky Derby, reinforcement), and Sea Hero (Kentucky Derby) as examples.  That’s a combination that works.

 
–Edwin Anthony
 
Edwin Anthony was the staff pedigree consultant at Three Chimneys Farm for six years and has penned dozens of articles on pedigree research.  He recently published a reference book, The American Thoroughbred (Volume I), which can be ordered by clicking here.
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