Six-time leading NY sire Freud retired from breeding shed

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.

Sequel’s Mision Impazible retires to Old Friends

October 9th, 2024

Top New York sire and multiple Grade 2 winner Mission Impazible retired from stud duty and will take up residence at Old Friends in Kentucky. Barbara Livingston Photo.

Multiple Grade 2 winner and leading New York sire Mission Impazible has been pensioned and retired to Old Friends in Georgetown, Kentucky.

The 17-year-old son of Unbridled’s Song stood his entire career at Sequel Stallions New York in Hudson, including the 2024 season for a private fee.

Bred by Summer Wind Farm, Mission Impazible was purchased by Twin Creeks Racing Stables for $200,000 at the 2008 Keeneland September yearling sale. Trained by Todd Pletcher, Mission Impazible won three of 21 starts and earned $1,284,949. He won or placed in nine graded stakes including victories in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby in 2010 and Grade 2 New Orleans Handicap in 2011. Mission Impazible finished second in the Grade 1 Donn and Stephen Foster Handicaps.

Retired to Sequel Stallions New York, Mission Impazible quickly emerged onto the breeding scene when his first-crop son, Silver Mission, won Belmont Park’s historic Tremont Stakes by more than 6 lengths in a time that equaled Hall of Fame member Buckpasser’s clocking.

Mission Impazible’s second crop included his speedy daughter Pure Silver, winner of Saratoga Race Course’s Grade 2 Adirondack Stakes by 9 1/2 lengths under top weight as a 2-year-old. The next two crops also produced North American black-type stakes winners led by hard-hitting Espresso Shot, the earner of $516,625 who won stakes at 2, 3, 4 and 5.

Mission Impazible was the leading Northeastern first-, second-, third-, fourth-, fifth and sixth-crop sire from 2016 to 2021, respectively. He sired the earners of almost $15 million to date.

“Mission Impazible made his mark as both an accomplished racehorse and well-respected sire,” Sequel Stallions New York said in a statement. “We wish him the best during his retirement.”

 

Vekoma filly highlights OBS yearling sale

October 9th, 2024

A filly by Vekoma bred by Trail Creek Stables sold for $130,000 to D. J. Stable Tuesday at the OBS October yearling sale. Photo courtesy of Abbie Road Farm.

A filly by freshman sire and multiple Grade 1 winner Vekoma sold for $130,000 to top the New York-bred offerings at the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co.’s October yearling sale that wrapped up Tuesday.

D. J. Stable Inc. purchased the filly, offered as Hip 462 out of Lisa McGreevy’s Abbie Road Farm consignment. Bred by Trail Creek Stables LLC and foaled at Mill Creek Farm in Stillwater, the filly is the second foal out of the Empire Maker mare Sinister Siren.

Sinister Siren, a half-sister to stakes-placed Unanimously from the family of Canadian champion Delightful Mary and graded stakes winner Delightful Kiss, is the dam of the winning New York-bred 3-year-old Mitole filly Mitole’s Girl. She’s also the dam of a weanling New York-bred colt by Mendelssohn. Both were bred by Trail Creek Stables.

The OBS October sale, shifted to earlier in the week with Hurricane Milton expected in the area Wednesday, saw 33 of the 58 New York-breds through the ring sell for $549,500 and an average price of $16,652.

Hip 517, a daughter of Kantharos also bred by Trail Creek Stables, sold for $85,000. Photo courtesy of Abbie Road Farm.

Hip 517, a filly by Kantharos also bred by Trail Creek Stables, foaled at Mill Creek and sold out of the Abbie Road Farm consignment, sold for the second highest price at $85,000 to Grassroots Training & Sales LLC. The filly is the first foal out of the Quality Road mare That’s My Cue.

Hip 335, a son of Violence from the family of stakes winner and Kentucky Oaks runner-up Gambling Girl, brought the highest price for a colt at $45,000 from Alta Visa Enterprises. Bred by TLC Thoroughbreds, foaled at Stonegate Stables in Fort Edward and consigned by Silver Oaks Farm, agent, the colt is the third foal out of the Malibu Moon mare Moon Delight.

The OBS October sale marked one of the final significant markets for yearlings in North America, with the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October sale – scheduled for October 21-24 – up next. Fasig-Tipton also hosts the Saratoga fall mixed sale Tuesday, October 15 in Saratoga Springs.

Large group set for Thoroughbred Makeover

October 7th, 2024

My Boy Tate, winner of the 2022 Hudson Stakes and five other stakes during his productive career, is among the 29 New York-breds set to compete in this week’s Thoroughbred Makeover in Lexington, Kentucky. NYRA Photo.

By Melissa Bauer-Herzog

Recently retired racehorses flock to the Retired Racehorse Project’s Thoroughbred Makeover presented by Thoroughbred Charities of America in Lexington, Kentucky, every October to show off the skills they’ve learned in their second career.

New York-breds often make up a large chunk of the field and 2024 proves no exception with 29 horses bred in the Empire State competing including fan favorite and multiple stakes winner My Boy Tate.

Ten disciplines are on offer at the Makeover with horses allowed to compete in up to two different disciplines. Each horse competing at the show is a former racehorse with all entries having to have registered a work or race no earlier than July 1, 2022, in order to be eligible. Those who travel to the show will compete in preliminary competition Wednesday and Thursday with the top five in each discipline headed to Saturday’s Finale.

Winston’s Chance, a 14-time winner and multiple stakes winner, competes at this week’s Thoroughbred Makeover. SV Photography

Horses in the Finale will not only compete for the discipline championship but also the title of Thoroughbred Makeover Champion with the Makeover featuring more than $100,000 in prize money. Saturday’s Finale will be aired on the RRP’s website.

Here are a few facts to know about this year’s New York-bred competitors:

  • New York had 41 of the original entrants at this year’s Makeover. That was the second most among all states with only Kentucky having more when entries closed in September. Twenty-nine New York-breds are still entered to compete in the competition as of Sunday evening.
  • There is at least one New York-bred entered in each of the 10 disciplines with 12 entrants in dressage to lead all disciplines. Show jumpers are second with nine entrants and competitive trail and show hunters follow with six each. The only discipline that has only one New York-bred is field hunters with Resilient Courage, who is also entered in show jumpers.
  • Of the 29 New York-breds set to compete, My Boy Tate and Winston’s Chance both won multiple stakes while Best Idea was placed in multiple stakes and Bobby Bo also has a stakes placing. Winston’s Chance has the most wins of any New York-bred with 14 while My Boy Tate leads all runners by earnings at $837,288.
  • Only two of the New York-breds never made a start with the other 27 averaging nearly 20 starts apiece. Algorix leads at 95 starts with 12 wins for $210,015 in earnings, followed by Winston’s Chance (50 starts), Ganodagan (41), My Boy Tate (38) and March Madnez Party (26). The group also earned an average of $117,960 on the track.
  • Each of the 29 entries were bred by a different group of breeders. McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds is the only individual breeder who is named as breeder on more than one horse, partnering with Chauncey David Cole III to breed Ganondagan and William Hebert to breed Elite Banker. Horacio De Paz and Michelle Nevin lead all trainers with two entrants who were trained by them when the horses retired.

McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds’ Central Banker is the only stallion with more than one entrant as the sire of Phinney’s Harbor and Elite Banker. Central Banker, Bustin Stones, Freud and War Dancer are all current New York stallions with entrants in the competition.

The New York Thoroughbred Breeders Inc. is joined by the New York Racing Association and New York Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association in sponsoring the $2,500 Empire State Success Story prize for the competition’s leading New York-bred.

Find out more about the Thoroughbred Makeover and the horses entered at www.tbmakeover.org.

Goichman homebred Scythian lands Miss Grillo

October 6th, 2024

Lawrence Goichman’s. homebred Tiz the Law filly Scythian lands first graded stakes in Sunday’s Miss Grillo at Aqueduct. NYRA Photo.

Lawrence Goichman’s homebred Scythian avoided trouble at the top of the stretch and came away with a victory in Sunday’s Grade 2 Miss Grillo Stakes at Aqueduct.

The 2-year-old daughter of two-time New York-bred Horse of the Year, classic winner and leading North American freshman sire Tiz the Law improved to 2-for-3 in the tumultuous Miss Grillo, which carries an automatic berth to the winner into the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf. She won by 2 1/2 lengths over Virgin Colado with Correto third in the field of 12.

Scythian came into the Miss Grillo off a narrow victory as the favorite over males in a 1 1/16-mile state-bred turf maiden late in the Saratoga Race Course meeting for trainer Bill Mott. She went to post as the 11-1 fifth choice and settled into a tracking spot in fourth behind fellow Goichman New York-bred homebred Marvelous Madison, who is trained by Chad Brown, Lavender Disaster and New York-bred Grace and Grit.

Marvelous Madison and Manny Franco set the pace, clicking off early splits of :23.26, :48.71 and 1:13.47, just ahead of Grace and Grit, Lavender Disaster and Scythian.

“I was where I wanted to be,” Alvarado said of his trip. “I got to save ground right away coming into the first turn and the second turn I was still saving enough ground. If I had to go inside or outside, I knew I already had saved plenty for me to have enough horse at the end.”

Franco did his best to keep Marvelous Madison from getting out around the far turn, while Alvarado kept close tabs on the proceedings.

“I’ve got horse, where do I go?” he asked himself. “Is he going to pull her back inside or is she going to bolt?”

Marvelous Madison eventually gave the answers, bolting as the field approached the top of the stretch. She took Grace and Grit and Lavender Disaster with her, and Scythian wound up on the lead.

“When that happened, that’s when I zoomed in the inside and she took off after that,” Alvarado said.

Virgin Colada made a late rally under Flavien Prat to finish second, closing from 8 1/4 lengths back through the opening half to finish 2 1/2 lengths short. Correto finished a head back in fourth with She’s Got Will fourth. Scythian won in 1:42.68 over the firm turf.

“We’ve had 10 seconds at the meet, five in stakes. It’s always good to win one of these,” said Leana Willaford, Mott’s Belmont Park-based assistant. “She ran really well, Junior gave her a perfect trip. He had horse anyways [even with the incident in the turn]. He was in a perfect spot.”

Scythian, who Willaford said is likely for next month’s Juvenile Fillies Turf at Del Mar, picked up $110,000 for her first stakes victory.

A second generation homebred for Goichman, Scythian was foaled at Stone Bridge Farm in Gansevoort and is the seventh foal and first stakes winner out of the stakes-winning Empire Maker mare Dean Henry.

The winner of three of 12 starts, including the 2009 Saratoga Dew Stakes at Saratoga, Dean Henry earned $121,287. She’s produced stakes-placed winner Bonita Cat and winner Dancing Dean, and New York-bred winners Emperor’s Cause, Ascender and Somethingtotellyou.

Mi Bago takes to turf in Woodbine stakes score

October 5th, 2024

Mi Bago, a 2-year-old son of Vekoma bred by Highclere, rolls late to win bet365 Algonquin Stakes at Woodbine. Michael Burns Photo.

The change in scenery and change in surface was just what the doctor ordered for Mi Bago Saturday, as the 2-year-old son of Vekoma stormed home to win the $175,000 bet365 Algonquin Stakes at Woodbine.

Mi Bago, bred by Highclere Inc. and foaled at Waldorf Farm in North Chatham, led a 1-2-3 finish for Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse, who saddled five horses in the race. Casse finished second with Dare to Breeze and third Sharedashenanigans.

Out of the Indian Charlie mare Wabanaki, Mi Bago was fifth early, in a group of three chasing frontrunners Mensa and Dare to Breeze through a quarter-mile in :21.89. Those two still led as they turned for home, with Mi Bago and Sharedashenanigans in hot pursuit. Dare to Breeze took the lead inside the eighth pole and looked like a winner, until Mi Bago unleashed a furious drive to get up and win by a neck.

The final time was :57.89 for the 5-furlong stakes. Bullet nailed Sharedashenanigans for third.

“I look at the program and see what horses have a lot of speed,” said winning jockey Sahin Civaci. “I just tried to get my horse out as fast as possible. … He had a little trouble getting around the turn, so I had to ask him a little bit there. And I just got up.”

Mi Bago is the fifth winner produced by the unraced New York-bred Wabanaki, joining seven-time winner Lady Macho (by Mucho Macho Man), What Mightavebeen (Freud), Dawnland (Jimmy Creed) and Weyron (Goldencents). A $62,000 purchase at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky February mixed sale in 2023, he was a $90,000 RNA later in the year at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale.

After he broke his maiden impressively as a 3-5 favorite at Colonial Downs August 1, Mi Bago was sold by CM Thoroughbreds to Gary Barber, who moved him to his main trainer Casse. Mi Bago was a non-threatening sixth in the Funny Cide Stakes on Saratoga Showcase Day at Saratoga Race Course August 25, prompting Casse to bring him north for the turf stakes at Woodbine. – Paul Halloran

Senbei lands first graded stakes in Belmont Turf Sprint

October 5th, 2024

Senbei storms to victory in Saturday’s Belmont Turf Sprint Stakes. NYRA Photo.

New York-bred stalwart Senbei scored his first graded stakes victory Saturday with a victory in the Grade 3 Belmont Turf Sprint Stakes at the Belmont at the Big A meeting.

The Dr. Jerry Bilinski-bred 5-year-old gelding broke well in the 6-furlong turf stakes before settling in the two path as one of the mid-pack markers. Senbei relaxed under Manny Franco as Nothing Better and Determined Kingdom battled for the lead through fractions of :22.10 and :44.37.

Franco took Senbei wider at the top of the stretch for clear running room and the gelding quickly found his top gear. As the front runners continued to battle for the lead, Senbei was able to sneak up the outside. Senbei flew past the leaders inside the final sixteenth to win by 1 1/4 lengths in 1:07.74 with Nothing Better second and Alogon in third.

“I had a great trip,” said Franco. “My horse broke OK, and those three horses went to the lead and I just stayed behind them. He was traveling nice and on the bridle. When I hit the clear at the quarter pole, I have to give credit to the horses in front because they were tough to go by, but my horse did it. They didn’t come back at all, but my horse ran them down.”

The Belmont Turf Sprint gave Senbei, the 2021 New York-bred champion 2-year-old male, his second win in four starts this year. He also won an allowance-optional claimer at the Aqueduct in July. He finished third in the Select Stakes last out and now has an overall record of seven wins, two seconds, and a third in 17 starts with $640,000 in earnings for Reeves Thoroughbred Racing and Darlene Bilinski.

“He’s a good horse,” said trainer Christophe Clement. “As a young horse, he was very good on dirt – he lost his form a bit on dirt and the grass brought him back. He’s been running very well on grass – maybe more on firmer turf than softer turf. He’s not always lucky. In turf racing, you need a bit of racing luck but today he was very impressive.”

Foaled at Waldorf Farm in North Chatham, Senbei was named by Clement’s daughter-in-law and NYRA racing analyst Acacia Clement after the Japanese cracker by the same name. Senbei was purchased from Stuart Morris’s consignment by his trainer for $280,000 as a short yearling during the 2020 Keeneland January horses of all ages sale.

Senbei is one of five winners and four stakes performers out of Western Cat daughter Sweet Aloha, who also produced dual stakes winners Filibustin and Indy’s Lady and the stakes-placed Man O Manassas. Filibustin has gone on to be a stakes producer herself as the dam of stakes winner Mr Fillip.

Sweet Aloha’s youngest foal is a 2-year-old New York-bred Twirling Candy colt named Tropical Candy who sold for $150,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale. – Melissa Bauer-Herzog

Central Banker filly highlights Midlantic yearling sale

October 2nd, 2024

Hip 230, a filly by three-time leading New York sire Central Banker, sold for $82,000 to highlight the New York-bred offerings at the Eastern fall yearling sale. Photo courtesy of Scott Mallory, agent.

A filly by multiple leading New York sire Central Banker sold for $82,000 to top the New York-bred offerings at Tuesday’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Eastern fall yearling sale in Timonium, Maryland.

Matthew T. Groff purchased the filly, sold as Hip 230 by Scott Mallory, agent. Bred by BHMFR, LLC and foaled at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs, the filly is out of the winning Spring At Last mare Calidez.

Calidez is the dam of two winners – the 2-year-old Caravaggio filly Mascara who won her debut in July at Saratoga Race Course and the 3-year-old Sky Mesa filly For Love and Honor, a winner in late August at Kentucky Downs and earner of $118,220. The winner of four of 17 starts and $47,201, she’s also the dam of a weanling New York-bred filly by Central Banker born April 28.

Central Banker, a 14-year-old son of Speightstown, stands for $7,500 at McMahon of Saratoga. He topped the New York general sire list the last three seasons and currently ranks second and just behind fellow McMahon of Saratoga stallion Bucchero.

Scott Mallory also consigned one of the co-top-selling colts, Hip 117, a son of Beau Liam that brought a final bid of $65,000 from Kieran Norris.

Bred by Scott Pierce and foaled at Stonegate Stables in Fort Edward, the colt is out of the winning Into Mischief mare Okbyecya. A full-sister to stakes-placed Into Oblivion and half-sister to stakes winner Balmaran, Okbyecya is the dam of the 4-year-old Classic Empire filly Classic Farewell, who sold for $100,000 at the 2022 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic May sale; and the 2-year-old Honor A.P. colt Skull Honor who recently made his debut.

Hip 13, a colt by Volatile from the family of graded stakes winners Cutting Humor, Irish You Well and Zensational, also sold for $65,000 to Sallusto & Kimmel, agent.

Bred by Harry L. Landry, foaled at Blue Chip Stock Farm in Fort Edward and consigned by Harry L. Landry Bloodstock LLC, agent, the colt is out of the winning Political Force mare Farce. She’s the dam of three-time winner Class Riot and a 2-year-old filly by Enticed.

Landry purchased Farce, in foal to Volatile, for $16,000 out of the 2022 Keeneland November breeding stock sale.

Fasig-Tipton reported sales on 23 of the 34 New York-breds offered Tuesday for a total of $593,700, an average price of $25,813 and median of $20,000.

Big Brown retired to Old Friends in Kentucky

October 1st, 2024

Champion, dual classic winner and former leading New York sire Big Brown arrived at Old Friends for retirement last week. Susie Raisher Photo.

Champion, dual classic winner and pensioned former leading New York sire Big Brown arrived at Old Friends in Georgetown, Kentucky, last week for his retirement.

The 19-year-old son of Boundary arrived at the Thoroughbred retirement operation Friday courtesy of Andy Cohen, managing partner of the Big Brown syndicate. Big Brown, who most recently stood at Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions in Stillwater, becomes the fifth Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner to retire to Old Friends. He joins Silver Charm, War Emblem, Charismatic and I’ll Have Another.

“We are excited beyond measure to welcome Big Brown as an honored member of the Old Friends family,” said John Nicholson, president and chief executive officer of Old Friends. “We are deeply grateful to Andy Cohen and all of Big Brown’s connections for choosing to share this great horse with racing fans everywhere. I know his legions of fans will love having the chance to visit him throughout the year. Big Brown will be an awesome ambassador, not only for Old Friends, but for the sport of Thoroughbred Racing.”

Campaigned by a partnership that included Cohen, IEAH Stables and the late Paul Pompa Jr., Big Brown won seven of eight starts including the 2008 Kentucky Derby and Preakness. He also won the Grade 1 Haskell Invitational and Grade 1 Florida Derby for trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. He retired in late 2008 with earnings of $3,614,500 and earned the Eclipse Award for champion 3-year-old male.

“It doesn’t seem that long ago when we would visit Big Brown in the middle of the night and just hang out with him,” Cohen said. “He was like a puppy and especially loved it when the young children would come over to pet him. As sweet as he was, when he got on the racetrack he knew it was time to go to work. I remember after his race at Gulfstream Park, Kent Desormeaux said ‘he is the fastest horse I’ve ever ridden and the rest is history.’

“After visiting Old Friends and getting to know John Nicholson and Michael Blowen, I couldn’t be more comfortable knowing Big Brown will get the love and care he deserves at Old Friends where the horse is the boss.”

Big Brown settles in at Old Friends in Georgetown, Kentucky. Photo courtesy of Old Friends.

Big Brown started his stallion career in 2009 at Three Chimneys Farm in Midway, Kentucky. He stood there, along with Southern Hemisphere seasons in Australia from 2010 to 2014, until 2015. Cohen’s Sunrise Stables and Gary Tolchin’s Golden Goose Enterprises obtained a majority interest in Big Brown in 2015 and announced he would relocate to New York for the 2015 season.

Big Brown started his New York stud career at Dutchess Views Farm in Pine Plains before relocating to Irish Hill & Dutchess Views for the 2018 season.

Big Brown topped the New York general sire list with more than $2.7 million in progeny earnings in 2020. He finished second on the same list – with more than $3.2 million in progeny earnings – in 2021 and ranked among the top 10 stallions in the Empire State until he was pensioned in 2024.

Big Brown currently ranks seventh on the New York sire list, with progeny earnings of more than $1 million, including $246,900 earned by the late stakes winner The Big Torpedo. Big Brown also sired Grade 1 winner and $1,987,505-earner Dortmund, Grade 2 winners Somelikeithotbrown, Kiss to Remember and Coach Inge and Grade 3 winners Send It In, Nancy, Darwin, Dawnie Perfect and Big Wildcat. He’s the sire of 13 crops, including 19 current 2-year-olds and 18 yearlings, 30 blacktype winners and the earners of more than $37.4 million.

Old Friends will host “Big Brown’s Barn Bash” Friday, October 18. The event will feature fun activities and a chance to meet Big Brown. Additional information will be provided soon.

Hush of a Storm rolls late to win Ashley T. Cole

September 27th, 2024

Hush of a Storm lands second stakes victory in Friday’s Ashley T. Cole at Aqueduct. NYRA Photo.

Hush of a Storm stayed in the clear and to the outside of a six-way scramble at the eighth pole on the way to his second career stakes score in Friday’s $125,000 Ashley T. Cole for older New York-breds on the grass at Aqueduct.

Making his second start off the claim for owner Sandy Goldfarb and trainer Brad Cox, the 6-year-old Creative Cause gelding won the 9-furlong Cole by a half-length over Dakota Gold. Flavien Prat rode Hush of a Storm, claimed for $45,000 out of a similar overland victory in a 1 1/16-mile turf allowance-optional July 21 at Saratoga Race Course.

Hush of a Storm, sent off as the 3-1 third choice Friday, finished third in his first start off the claim in the $79,000 Avery Whishman Memorial Stakes on synthetic at Presque Isle Downs August 12. Hush of a Storm registered his only other stakes win prior to Friday – the 2021 John Battaglia Memorial at Turfway Park – on a synthetic track when trained by Bill Morey.

The gelding ability on turf and synthetic made him an appealing claim, Goldfarb said.

“We were looking for a good one to claim,” he said. “I thought he could run here or take him to Turfway if we had to. I thought he was worth the money at that level. The day we claimed him, he won like, ‘wow.’ Since we’ve had him, they’ve done nothing but rave about him.

“He ran at Presque Isle the other day and the horse that beat him (Forever Souper) came back and won (Presque Isle Mile), so we knew he was good in here and the mile and an eighth might make the difference. So far, just about everything I’ve got with Brad has done unbelievable.”

Prat kept Hush of a Storm toward the back of the seven-horse field early as Saratoga Flash clicked off early splits of :23.61 and :50.26 ahead of 60-1 longshot Cable Ready, 7-2 fourth choice Jerry the Nipper and 2-1 favorite City Man.

Saratoga Flash continued to lead heading in the far turn, past 6 furlongs in 1:15.82 and spurted clear in the lane as Dakota Gold, Jerry the Nipper, City Man and Hush of a Storm tried to mount late rallies. Hush of a Storm, widest of all in the stretch, took over just outside the sixteenth pole and edged Dakota Gold and Jerry the Nipper in deep stretch. Dakota Gold finished a head in front of Jerry the Nipper, with City Man fourth. Hush of a Storm won in 1:51.03 over the firm turf.

Flavien Prat kept Hush of a Storm comfortable early and the Creative Cause gelding did the rest late in the Ashley T. Cole. Susie Raisher/NYRA Photo.

“I was going to try to get myself into a good position, but it felt like the first quarter was quite fast,” Prat said of Hush of a Storm’s early position. “But then on the backside, they really hit the brakes, so I was a bit worried, but no, I turned for home, I tipped him out and he laid it down for me.”

Hush of a Storm improved to 3-for-6 on turf and 9-for-28 overall with the Ashley T. Cole victory. He picked up $68.750 to boost his bankroll to $421,708.

Bred by and foaled at Dr. Doug Koch’s Berkshire Stud in Pine Plains, Hush of a Storm is the first foal out of the winning Flatter mare Hush Now. Consigned by Winter Quarter Farm, agent for Berkshire Stud, he originally sold for $60,000 to Northway Bloodstock at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred sale. Consigned by Nick de Meric’s de Meric Sales, agent, at the 2020 OBS Spring sale of 2-year-olds in training, Hush of a Storm sold to Joseph P. Morey Trust for $75,000.

Hush Now, who is out of the unraced Quiet American mare Silence Please, won and earned $68,784 for owner and breeder Berkshire Stud before retiring prior to the 2017 season. Hush Now is a full sister to multiple stakes winner and $358,487-earner Brigand and a half sister to stakes winner and $137,651-earner Sky Music.

Hush Now’s second foal, the 5-year-old Runhappy mare Voleuse remains in training and has compiled a record of 4-3-7 in 19 starts with earnings of $233,625. She’s also the dam of the winning 4-year-old Mastery gelding Camm’ Duke and the unraced 2-year-old Munnings filly Hush Munnings.

Hush Now sold carrying Camm’ Duke in utero for $130,000 at the 2019 Keeneland November breeding stock sale. She did not produce a foal in 2023 but delivered a Maclean’s Music filly – bred by GMP Stables LLC, Dutchess Views Farm and Angie V Stables LLC – March 24 in New York.