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Tag Archives: kodiak kowboy

archarcharch evidence of vinery’s new growth

22 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by fmitchell07 in horse breeding, horse racing, people, thoroughbred racehorse

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

arch, archarcharch, arkansas derby, broodmare sires, congrats, frances relihan, grapestock, kodiak kowboy, more than ready, Oaklawn Park, racehorse breeding, tom ludt, tom simon, vinery, woodman, woodman's dancer

The post below was published earlier this week at PaulickReport.

Although best-known as a stallion station standing such sires as international star More Than Ready, 2010 leading freshman sire Congrats, and champion sprinter Kodiak Kowboy, Vinery also breeds horses, and Archarcharch became the farm’s most important winner with his victory on Saturday in the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park.

Farm president Tom Ludt said “a Grade 1 win for a million-dollar purse would be the fanciest win for our breeding program, although we did sell the dam.”

The progressive colt was bred by Grapestock, which Ludt said is the “name of the entity that holds all of [Vinery owner] Tom Simon’s equine assets. It functions as a client of Vinery, like any other on the farm.”

Grapestock and Vinery work to strike a balance between the businesses of breeding and racing for Simon, who races a stable under the Vinery name and breeds yearlings for the commercial market. “We have bred most of our mares commercially for years,” Ludt said, “and although we race a stable, we mostly buy those at sales as yearlings by our own stallions.”

With those considerations as a stallion farm and racing stable, it is a bit surprising that Archarcharch is not by a farm stallion.

Instead, the colt is by Claiborne stallion Arch, also the sire of 2010 champion older horse Blame, and on the surface, the mating would not appear an obvious choice for a mare from Vinery. But Vinery’s assistant general manager Frances Relihan said the mating was a very good physical match.

Woodman’s Dancer, the dam of Archarcharch, Relihan said, “is a typical Woodman: very strong body, stands about 15.3 hands, and correct. We felt she needed more leg and substance; so we sent her to Arch, were pleased with the result, and bred her back to him the next year.”

In fact, the folks at Vinery were so pleased with Archarcharch as a young horse that they brought back his dam from the 2008 Keeneland November sale to get the second foal by Arch, then sold the mare in foal to farm stallion Silver Train at the 2009 November sale.

When Archarcharch arrived, Relihan noted that he was a “pretty good-sized foal whose only problem was a contracted left hind leg. But the veterinarians at Rood & Riddle put a splint on it, and he progressed nicely. He had good balance and a good hip and body type.”

In sum, Archarcharch was a well-proportioned and athletic young horse who looked the part he has come to play. The mating with Arch gave the colt greater leg length and resulting scope, and Archarcharch has shown increasing ability as he matures and races over longer distances.

A dark horse in color, as well as in general prospects for the classics, Archarcharch held on to win his most important race to date by a neck over the Mineshaft colt Nehro at Oaklawn. One of 28 stakes winners by his sire Arch, Archarcharch is the second stakes winner from Woodman’s Dancer.

The dark bay daughter of Woodman also produced Run Sully Run (by Cherokee Run) from her first five foals to race. A much better-than-average stakes-placed runner, Woodman’s Dancer earned $298,486 and placed in five stakes, including the G2 A Gleam Handicap and G3 Las Flores.

Woodman’s Dancer sold for $35,000 at the 2009 Keeneland November breeding stock sale in foal to Silver Train. The buyer was the Stallion Company, and the mare produced a chestnut colt in 2010. The mare was resold privately to a partnership, and she was bred back to US Ranger (by Danzig) in May last year.

The mare’s dam is the G1 winner Pattern Step (by Nureyev), one of the last G1 winners bred by Nelson Bunker Hunt before his bloodstock empire was dispersed.

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new kentucky stallions for 2010: kodiak kowboy

05 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by fmitchell07 in horse breeding, horse racing, people, thoroughbred racehorse

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

kodiak kowboy, posse, vinery

Kodiak Kowboy (bay horse, 2005, by Posse x Kokadrie, by Coronado’s Quest)

Vinery, $15,000

If there are any seasons left to Kodiak Kowboy, it just shows how times (and tastes) have changed in the last 24 months.

A good-looking horse with a neat, athletic profile, Kodiak Kowboy closed his career with a G1 victory in the Cigar Mile and would have been book full in a couple of days under the old program of commercial breeders glomming onto the fast first-year sires each season in Kentucky. From the comments of breeders, however, that approach seems to have faded seriously in the last year or so, and I would not be surprised if a few seasons to this son of leading juvenile sire Posse were still available.

That is no reflection on the quality of this typey bay, who has been a high-class racer since winning his maiden going four and a half furlongs at Churchill Downs. He then graduated to stakes and won the G3 Bashford Manor and G2 Saratoga Special before a third place in the G1 BC Juvenile.

Kodiak Kowboy improved on that with a pair trio of G1 victories (Carter, Vosburgh, and Cigar Mile) at 4 in 2009.  That not only earned him a place at stud in Kentucky but also a place among the final three choices for the Eclipse Awards as champion sprinter and champion older horse.

Standing 16 hands, Kodiak Kowboy is the type of stallion who should be of interest to breeders looking for some speed in their program. He has a very good hind leg, strong hindquarter — as expected from a sprinter-miler of his class — and stands over plenty of ground. The bay has good length through the body, medium bone, a good head, and a bold, clear eye.

Seen right off the racetrack, Kodiak Kowboy was tight and lean from his recent racing. His greyhound condition emphasized his rather long, high wither, but with the flesh he will put on in the coming months, Kodiak Kowboy will flesh out into a very appealing animal indeed.

On the track, he was notable for his light, fluent action. Allied with his balance and very good mechanics, he should be a good fit for many mares.

leading older horse: kodiak kowboy?

28 Saturday Nov 2009

Posted by fmitchell07 in horse breeding, horse racing, people, thoroughbred racehorse

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bribon, bullsbay, cigar mile, dubai world cup, einstein, kodiak kowboy, macho again, metropolitan handicap, posse, pyro, rail trip, vineyard haven, well armed

Victory in the G1 Cigar Mile did more than add a third victory at the premier level this year to the resume of the 4-year-old Posse colt Kodiak Kowboy. It put him directly in the spotlight as a contender for the Eclipse Award as leading older horse.

Previously, Kodiak Kowboy had to be considered primarily as a high-class sprinter, but his victory in the Cigar Mile came over Metropolitan Handicap winner Bribon, the high-class 3-year-old Vineyard Haven, and G1 winner Pyro. Nice going.

The Cigar score also foregrounds the consistent colt’s form, which has maintained a high level throughout the year, something a couple of his notable competitors for the award have not managed.

And who else would rise to the top of this group? Einstein is an admirable and courageous racehorse who seems to have lost a step or two since last spring. Likewise, the form of Well Armed crashed after his Dubai World Cup victory. Macho Again, Bullsbay, and Rail Trip have shown very good form on their day but have not progressed when called on through the fall.

I had not really considered Kodiak Kowboy for best older horse till today’s result. Part of the reason surely is that the “older horse” category typically goes to a racer who has campaigned at nine to 12 furlongs, but the stronger segment of older horses this year seems to be the sprinter-milers, and off his showings in the Carter, Vosburgh, and Cigar Mile, Kodiak Kowboy is the best of them.

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