NEWS: BREEDING

Six-time leading NY sire Freud retired from breeding shed

Friday, October 11th, 2024

Six-time leading New York sire Freud stood his final season in 2024. Susie Raisher Photo.

By Evan Hammonds

A lot has changed in the breeding and racing landscape in New York since the turn of the century. One constant, however, has been the long shadow of Freud, a full brother to three-time national leading sire Giant’s Causeway, who has stood at Sequel Stallions since 2002.

His reign among the New York leading sires will continue for a few seasons yet, but the grand old man has covered his last mare. The 26-year-old son of Storm Cat has earned his retirement.

“As the years have gone by, he’s bred fewer and fewer mares, but he still thinks every horse that comes into the breeding shed is for him,” said Sequel Stallions’ Becky Thomas. “He bred a dozen mares (in 2024) and I think all but one is in foal. His fertility is great—he is a consummate professional in the breeding shed—but he’s old.

“He’s been great,” Thomas continued. “I call our farm ‘the farm that Freud built.’ He continues to be that horse. So many stallions are euthanized before his age, but knock wood, he’s in great health.”

Represented as recently as Aug. 25 with Showcase Day stakes winner Dakota Gold (out of Dakota Kid, by Lemon Drop Kid), Freud is the sire of 74 black-type stakes winners, 18 of which stepped out to win at the graded stakes level. He has sired 1,495 foals from 21 crops, and his runners have earned more than $73 million. That’s quite an accomplishment for a “regional sire.”

Freud earned his first title as leading sire in New York by progeny earnings in 2008. Subsequent titles arrived in 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019.

Freud, along with Giant’s Causeway, is out of the Rahy mare Mariah’s Storm. Bred by Orpendale (an arm of the Coolmore operation), Freud arrived Feb. 22, 1998, a year behind Giant’s Causeway. Giant’s Causeway, a group 1 winner at 2, became the legendary “Iron Horse” at 3 with a run of five group 1 victories from June 20 to Sept. 9, 2000. After a runner-up effort in the Queen Elizabeth Stakes (G1), he shipped to Churchill Downs and battled Tiznow, dropping a neck decision in the Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1). An international success as a sire, and sire of sires, while standing in both Ireland (his first season) and the U.S., he died in April 2018 at the age of 21. At the time of his passing, Giant’s Causeway was the sire of 178 stakes winners (104 graded/group winners). By September 2024, that number swelled to 196 stakes winners.

“Little Brother” Freud, racing for Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor and trainer Aidan O’Brien, was given the same opportunities as Giant’s Causeway but was less effective on the track. He ran in a pair of group 1 races at 2, finishing fifth both times, and at 3 won once and placed third at Royal Ascot in the Cork & Orrery Stakes (G2).

By Coolmore’s standards, Freud wasn’t cut out to stand at Ireland or at Ashford Stud, their Kentucky facility. Thomas was able to negotiate with Coolmore’s Paul Shanahan to stand Freud. “The New York breeding program was ‘something new and interesting for Coolmore to try,” according to Thomas.

Standing for $5,000, Freud got 32 foals in his first crop, 2003, and they proved they could run from the get-go. He had nine juvenile winners and from the first crop, 19 of 27 starters would earn at least one victory, and three would become stakes winners. He had five stakes winners in his second crop that comprised 55 named foals.

“New York was just getting ‘operational’ at that time,” Thomas said. “Freud becoming Freud was great fun. There were not near as many stallions in New York back then and he had his pick of the litter.

“Most of the people at the time did not go to Kentucky. They bred to New York stallions and did everything in New York.”

To read the rest of this feature, click here to access the October digital edition of New York Breeder magazine.

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