Busanda wrote:I know there's an old saying about breeding like to like aptitude-wise, but do most people adhere to that still?
I have a mare who's a very fast stakes-winning sprinter who's won in soft company going 7.5f on the turf.
I really want to add bottom to her and was thinking of breeding her to a turn turn specialist. I'm not looking for specific crosses, just if people stick to this type of old fashioned breeding theories.
I am going to bite the bullet and try it this year. I have a mare that was a hard knocking claimer ($35,000-$5000) but did win both of her allowance conditions. According to her pedigree, she should be a 2 turn horse. However, this mare was a crack sprinter. She would do a half in :45 almost every race (43 starts) and get 5 in :58 and then croak. Occasionally, she would hang on to get 6 in 1:12 and change.
Well, this whole female family only has 1 horse in 3 generations that has won at 1 mile. This mare herself has been bred to 2 turn stallions every year and all 4 foals are sprinters.
I bred her to Concerto with my thinking being he won at 1 1/4 but could get 6 in a fast time. Kid is a yearling so can't comment yet.
This year, I decided to breed her to a pure plodder....Raffie's Majesty. This stallion is a stamina horse with zero tactical speed. However, his AWD of his kids is over 7 which is really huge statistically speaking if you look at the numbers of all of the AWD of dirt stallions in this country. This stallion clearly passes on his stamina to his foals. On top of that, he really moves his mares up in class.
Granted, I breed for a regional race market and not to win open races at major tracks....
So, we shall see. I am hoping to just stretch this family out to a mile. Heck, I would even take a solid 6 furlongs without croaking at 5.
I'll keep you posted as to if the experiment works!
If this last kid is a sprinter, I plan on culling the mare. She has almost 100% winners (only non-winner is a 3 year old with 1 start but still racing in 2009-the rest all won). In this bunch, is an open allowance winner at Philly and another kid that is a multi-allowance placed horse at Suffolk. However, I am not interested in breeding sprinters. I didn't look deep enough into her female family when I bought her.....
So, my thought process was to finally look at the AWD (average winning distance) of a stallion's foals as a judgement of his ability to be a stamina influence. I look for a stallion with an AWD of over 7. I have only found a few stallions who are dirt sires that are over 8 such as Pleasant Tap. It doesn't matter what a pedigree says if the horse in front of you is a sprinter. It's what the horses produce and sire that really matters.
So, that's my two cents!