State of the Stable
Transcription
State of the Stable
D O G W O O D S T A B L E N E W S L E T T E R VOL. XXIX No. 2 MAY 2005 PHOTO © ANNE EBERHARDT The “State of the Stable” ROSTER OF HORSES OLDER HORSES ANEW FORTY FIVE SKIPEROO Winner (c. 4 Awesome Again–Lucinda) Winner (c. 4 Gone West–Spray) Winner (g. 5 Skip Away–Exactly Like You) COLONIAL BAY HECKLE SUMMER RAINBOW Winner (h. 6 Pleasant Colony–Pelican Bay) G3 Stakes Winner (c. 4 Hennessy–Bid Me Adieu) Stakes-Placed Winner (f. 4 Summer Squall–Plucky Maid) LIMEHOUSE THERMOSTAT* DESERT DEED Winner (f. 4 Exploit–Desert Run) G2 Stakes Winner Stakes-Placed Winner (c. 4 Grand Slam–Dixieland Blues) (g. 4 Summer Squall–Comfort Zone) 3-YEAR-OLDS ARCHIE MANNING DRUM MAJOR SAINT THADDEUS (c. Sweetsouthernsaint–Queen’s Ransom) Stakes-Placed Winner (c. Dynaformer–Endless Parade) Winner (c. Saint Ballado–Super Sheila) (f. Saint Ballado–Thega) ED BOWEN SLAMMIN’ SAM BIG BAMBOOZLE (c. Artax–Godmother) Winner (g. Grand Slam–Topsa) BELLA BALLADO (c. Mazel Trick–She’s a Little Shy) ELECTRIFIED CANDY STRIPER (f. Charismatic–Whitesburg Express) SLAMMO Winner (f. Fusaichi Pegasus–Nurse Goodbody) FONDA RONDA (c. Grand Slam–Tipsy Girl) (f. Mr. Greeley–Little Ronda) SO SWANKY Winner (c. Fly So Free–So Ritzy) CAPTAIN SLEW FRANKINCENSE (c. Seattle Slew–Mama Dean) (c. Seeking the Gold–Larida) CARNIVAL SHOW GOLD BRICK Stakes-Placed Winner (c. Mazel Trick–Final Vows) Winner (c. Forty Niner–Super Dress) CATERED KIM BAKER (f. Lil’s Lad–Affirmed Affair) CIRCUIT RIDER Winner (f. Vicar–Pennbrook’s Lady) Winner (c. Deputy Minister–Western Bowl) (g. Anees–Tavos Connection) MADE MAN DEPARTING NOW PRINCE RAHY Stakes Winner (g. Wheaton–Parting Bid) Stakes-Placed Winner (c. Rahy–Hishi Lover) DRIZZLY REMUNERATION (c. Summer Squall–Cherokee Chill) Winner (c. High Yield–Afare) SPEEDY DEEDY Stakes Winner (f. Victory Gallop–Delicate Deed) TIFFANY TOUCH Winner (f. Deputy Minister–Careless Heiress) UNITED Stakes Winner (c. Dixie Union–Robyns Tune) VICARAGE Stakes-Placed Winner (c. Vicar–For Dixie) VOTE OF CONFIDENCE (c. Impeachment–Diff E Q) LORD LOVAT SONGANDAFLASH (f. Trippi–Bright Bliss) (c. Black Minnaloushe–Haleyclaire) (f. Songandaprayer–Ersatz) BLOTTO MORE THAN MOST THUNDER PASS Winner (c. Hennessy–Gleeful) (c. More Than Ready–Phari) (c. Thunder Gulch–Lakabi) BOOTSEY NEW ROCHELLE TIPPERARY (f. Old Trieste–Rochelle’s Terms) (c. Tiznow–Parsec) CRADLE ROBBER RACEHORSE DAVIS UNDER THUNDER (c. Trippi–Rhodesian Romance) (c. Thunder Gulch–Silent Cat) (c. Brahms–Copo) READY AGAIN WEDDING SINGER EYE FOR STYLE Dogwood Stable is currently ranked 10th among all North American racing stables. We’ve won $1,026,610 through May. Seven different horses have won or placed in stakes. And we have some heavy hitters developing. In the racing world, after the running of the Kentucky Derby, one tends to take a deep breath and address and assess one’s own outlook for the rest of the year. Our view at the moment is lovely! (See the adjacent roster.) ••• 2-YEAR-OLDS BLISSFUL TRIP (f. Cat Thief–Dancing Devlette) Limehouse and a jubilant John Velazquez after the Alysheba Stakes at Churchill Downs. Winner (c. Songandaprayer–Diamond of Forever) (c. Carson City–Donna Karan) (f. More Than Ready–ANorthern Angel) WEST COAST GREAT ALBERT RIPROARIOUS (c. Gone West–Starlet Game) (c. Albert the Great–Fat City) (c. High Yield–Hushed Goodbye) WRIGLEY GREAT GUSTO SAINT AUGUSTUS (c. Grand Slam–Retiro) (c. Gulch–Kris It Is) (c. Saint Ballado–Lorie Darlin) YABBO HARRIGAN SINKWICH (c. Trippi–Expect Becky) (c. Giant’s Causeway–Golden Aster) (c. Trippi–Genuine Goer) SKINAMARINK * denotes steeplechaser (c. Behrens–Palana) After running second, third and fourth in six Kentucky Derbies, we naturally yearned for a 2005 berth. But the closest we came to the Kentucky Derby was for our splendid Limehouse to win his fifth stakes (the Alysheba) at Churchill Downs, on Oaks Day. We opted for discretion over valor this year, and decided that we would not try to force a square peg into a round hole. So, we bypassed the Derby with Vicarage, even though he is stakes-placed in three significant Derby prep races. In the absence of a Derby runner, we contented ourselves appreciatively when wonderful Summer Squall’s daughter, Summerly, romped home in the Kentucky Oaks. (continued on page 3) Limehouse Wins Alysheba Stakes on Oaks Day Undercard Before a record-shattering crowd of 111,243 at Churchill Downs on Kentucky Oaks day, Limehouse won the $122,900 Alysheba Stakes and came one step closer to becoming Dogwood Stable’s sixth millionaire – with $912,433 in career earnings by his name. His final time of 1:42.32 over a fast track was three-fifths off the track record for the mile and a sixteenth distance. Limehouse has been a Dogwood favorite (and a fan favorite as well) since his two-yearold year. He’s competed in 15 stakes, nine of them graded, and runs his guts out every time. Proving that there are “horses for courses,” Limehouse has run in stakes at Churchill Downs for three consecutive years on Derby weekend: he won the Three Chimneys Juvenile in 2003; finished fourth in the Kentucky Derby in 2004; and we’ve already mentioned this year’s Alysheba Stakes. Limehouse has collected some frequent flyer miles as well! Born in Florida, he was sold as a yearling at the prestigious Saratoga sale for $140,000, then came to Aiken for his early training. Limehouse made his first start at Keeneland (April 16, 2003) a winning one for trainer Todd Pletcher, won two juvenile stakes at Churchill, and shipped to Saratoga to take on the best two-year-olds in the country (Cuvee and Silver Wagon). He capped off the year with a third-place finish in the Lane’s End Breeders’ Futurity at Keeneland. Our colt had momentum going into last year’s Derby, with two graded stakes wins in Florida and a third in the Blue Grass to The Cliff’s Edge and Lion Heart. Dismissed at odds of 41-1, Limehouse proved his detrac- Dogwood Stable Honored with this Year’s Reading Rooms Tie tors wrong – digging down deep through the Churchill Downs stretch to finish fourth behind Smarty Jones, Lion Heart and Imperialism. After his off-the-board finish in his next race, the Ohio Derby, chips were discovered in an ankle. At the end of the year he was named the Florida-bred Champion Three-Year-Old Colt. After a two-month freshening in Aiken, Limehouse returned to the races in January – finishing second in the Mr. Prospector Handicap and then came back three weeks later to finish a solid fourth in the $1 million Sunshine Millions Classic at Gulfstream. Each year the Saratoga Next stop was Louisiana, and Limehouse Reading Rooms in Saratoga faced a host of talented older runners in Springs, NY, has honored one the $500,000 New Orleans Handicap on of its members by choosing March 12. He was beaten only one length that person’s racing colors as for it all by Badge of Silver. Limehouse its “club tie.” This year the ran off the board in the $500,000 Oaklawn Reading Rooms tie will be in Handicap on April 9 – an uncharacteristic the green and yellow colors showing for our colt. of Dogwood Stable! Through the first five months of Designed by Anthony this year he’s run in Florida, Corey of Boston, our tie will Louisiana, Arkansas, and Kentucky. make its debut at Saratoga. He’s a traveling man! You’d Better Be Lucky… If You’re Going to Kentucky! We’ve never won the Kentucky Derby (or you’d know about it!)… but we’ve run seven horses in six of them, with a second, third and fourth to show for it. I have seen many – my first one in 1942! This past one seemed rich in talent… and then rich in shock! This has provoked some random, whimsical and insignificant “musings:” Musing Number One: On the renovation of Churchill Downs. It is better on the inside, but on the outside, aesthetically, it is not pleasing to traditionalists. The fabulous twin spires – one of the greatest architectural symbols in all of sport – are dwarfed by clearly indicated future casinos. But… we’ll get used to it. Musing Number Two: The Race. It always suffers from over-analysis. Various geniuses tell us why some horses will win, why others are simply littering up the field. This year, one that fell into the latter category “got the money!” This is good for racing, if not for the egos of the press. It was refreshing to see an old boy from California come quietly into Churchill Downs a few days before the Derby, and use a rider that some consider slightly over the top. Mike Smith rode that Giacomo like a 2 man with his pants on fire! The race proved that the ability to win the Derby is not confined to several high profile trainers. A healthy blow to strike. And the outcome was a boon to racing. The turfwriters who ended with egg of their faces are now telling us that it was a wretched field of sorry horses, most of which had won slow prep races. Before the race, it was one of the most glittering fields ever assembled. Nuts! Musing Number Three: Thoroughbred racing is a fad-infested activity. There is no doubt that the modern day race horse is less durable than his not-too-distant ancestors, but there is a certain amount of training faddishness involved when horses must have five or six weeks between races. Some – with ailments – need five or six months. But an able-bodied horse can race more often, and could benefit in fitness (and less repetitive training) by so doing. The colt, Don’t Get Mad, became a poster boy for that when he won the Derby Trial on April 30, then came back and ran a corking good fourth seven days later. His trainer, Ron Ellis, followed the pattern of Calumet’s Ben Jones – a man who truly did have the key to the Derby: Run in the Derby Trial on Tuesday (in those days), then come back in the big race five days later. He won six of them doing that… in a bygone era, admittedly. No less an authority on training than the great Allen Jerkens said of one of his horses recently, “I’ll run him back on three days rest if I have to. It used to be horses would run a lot more. Seabiscuit ran 35 times as a twoyear-old and won the Big ’Cap when he was seven. I’m not going to worry about running a horse twice in a week.” Another faddish Derby practice nowadays is to prefer post positions from the 10 hole out. Logic used to dictate inside post positions. Go figure! The truth is the Derby generates too much analysis and counterproductive brainwork and strategy. A good horse, campaign-tough, and blessed with luck on the day, can win the Kentucky Derby. Musing Number Four: Churchill Downs did a good job on a complicated production, but they botched the one most important ingredients of the Kentucky Derby. Because of a technical audio snafu, the singing of “My Old Kentucky Home” sounded like an unenthusiastic Gregorian chant. The upshot was that television viewers were treated to a faint, weird melodic murmuring, while those on hand were frustrated and bewildered as they awaited the magical moment to belt out, “…WEEP NO MORE MY LAAADY!!!” – WCC It’s Time Again for the Dogwood Dominion Award The Dogwood Dominion Award is now a “teenager” – 2005 marks the 13th year for the award that honors a man or woman who is truly an unsung hero of the Thoroughbred racing industry. Nominations for this award are now being accepted. This year’s winner will be honored at a luncheon on August 3 at the Saratoga Reading Rooms, and presented with a $5,000 check and a bronze statue of Dominion. Judges for this award are Anne Campbell, Penny Chenery and Jerry Bailey. The award was inspired by the multiple stakes winner Dominion, who was campaigned by Dogwood Stable in the 1970s and then went on to become five-time Champion Sire in England. Upon Dominion’s death in 1993, Dogwood President Cot Campbell created the award to recognize the industry’s unsung heroes – the behind-the-scenes men Cot and Anne Campbell flank last year’s Dogwood Dominion Award winner Pam Berg. and women who work to create a positive influence in their work environment. Nominees should be individuals who have had a positive effect on the racing/breeding environment in which they are involved. Sales Integrity Task Force Update Although Dogwood President Cot Campbell turned over the reins of the Sales Integrity Task Force on January 15, we still have a keen interest in what’s been happening in that arena. A three-person committee now monitors the Code of Ethics – Reynolds Bell, Jr. (chairman), Fred Seitz and Satish Sanan. So what has happened to the code now that it’s out of committee, so to speak, and out in the real world? The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (TOBA) has set up a marketing campaign to keep the Code of Ethics in the public’s mind and eye. Placards were in place for the first time at the Calder Race Course paddock during the Fasig-Tipton two-year-olds in training sale on March 1, and they displayed the marketing campaign’s slogan: “Act With Prudence… Buy With Confidence,” and they also listed key points of the Code of Ethics. Copies of the entire Code of Ethics and a sample legal agreement for buyers and their agents were available in the sale company office. The distribution of information hasn’t only happened on the sales grounds: TOBA has undertaken an enormous mailing to over 30,000 individuals – with packets containing the “Code” as well as the legal agreements. There is also information on the Code of Ethics on TOBA’s website (www.toba.org). Headley Bell, who was a member of the 22-person task force, has written on his Nicoma Bloodstock website that “I have been fortunate to sit on a number of boards, but, have never seen such deft defining and seamless execution of a game plan as by these leaders and their committee members; Chairman Cot Campbell; John Ward (Veterinary Practices); Nick Nicholson (Disclosure of Ownership); and Bill Casner (Role of Agent). I am aware how complex an issue it was and the methodology of working through this was most impressive.” Remembering… Absent Friends Former computer systems manager Sharon Williams died after a lengthy illness on January 24. A Dogwood employee for 16 years, Sharon was passionate about the University of Tennessee’s football team – even after she moved to Aiken from her home state. “She never met a stranger” was a saying that definitely applied to Sharon. We’ll remember her for her zany presents at the annual Dogwood Christmas party, all the homegrown tomatoes she would bring into the office, but most of all for her warmth and southern charm. George Howard, a former vice-president of Dogwood Stable, also passed away this year. In the early years George served as Dogwood’s Northeastern Operations Manager – filling a niche for the stable in that part of the country. Before Dogwood, George had served as Senior Vice-President of Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co., Vice-President of United States Trust Company of New York and Vice-President of Thoroughbred Equity Co., Inc., a division of Fasig-Tipton. He lived in Locust Valley, Long Island. Previous winners are H.W. “Salty” Roberts, Howard “Gelo” Hall, Peggy Sprinkles, Grace Belcuore, Nick Caras, Donald “Peanut Butter” Brown, Danny Perlsweig, Katherine Todd Smith, Julian “Buck” Wheat, Jim Greene and Shirley Edwards, Neftali Gutierrez, and Pam Berg. “We’ve awarded $60,000 over the years, and our idea has spawned several other similar awards,” said Campbell. “In many cases the $5,000 check – and the unexpected recognition – has had a significant impact on the lives and works of worthy human beings.” Nominations should be received no later than June 27 and be mailed or faxed to: Mary Jane Howell, Dogwood Stable, P.O. Box 1549, Aiken, SC 29802. Fax: 803.642.2747. An electronic nominating form can be found on the stable’s website: www.dogwoodstable.com. The “State of the Stable” (continued from page 1) But, onward now! Our goal is $2.5 million for the year, with no pipedreams for gigantic paydays cranked into that equation. Our horses are currently at Belmont Park with Todd Pletcher, Frank Alexander, and George Weaver. We have horses at Monmouth Park and Delaware Park with Pletcher, and we have stock with Graham Motion at Fair Hill Training Center in Maryland, and at Delaware. Dogwood has a division at Arlington in Chicago with Becky Maker; a draft of horses for Ohio and Kentucky racing with Elwood McCann, three at Calder in Miami with Henry Collazzo, and one jumper with Sanna Hendriks. Dogwood’s Top Jockey Contest Results Eddie Arcaro was ranked Number One after a tally of votes from the contest in our January newsletter. With a highly “scientific” method of assigning points (5 points for the top ranking – then down to one point for fifth place) we came up with our top five jockeys: 1. Eddie Arcaro – 64 2. William Shoemaker – 61 3. Lafitt Pincay, Jr. – 43 4. Angel Cordero, Jr. – 32 5. Jerry Bailey – 22 Arcaro is the only jockey to have won two Triple Crowns – with Whirlaway in 1941 and Citation in 1948. He won the Kentucky Derby five times and the Preakness and Belmont six times apiece. Arcaro was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1958. 3 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 4 13 Aiken (Trials, Steeplechase, etc.) and at the races… 1. Post-race kiss. Billy and Vicki Bernard. 2. Clem, Hayes Clement. Bill, Liz Victor (and twins!). 3. Anne, Lou and Teri Piancone. 4. Aiken riders, some in battle garb. Billy Bernard, Victor Sambrano, Robert Bravo (see Editor’s Notebook for more!), and Vanessa Feliciano. 5. Pre-Trials barn barbeque invitee: Jose Maria Martinez. 6. Governor Mark Sanford, Anne, grandson Brady Tindall and horse (?). 7. Now headed for Belmont’s Fashion Stakes, Ready Again (Vanessa Feliciano aboard) won at the Aiken Trials. 8. Clem, Hayes Clement, and Judge Robert (“Bodip”) Sparks lolling at the rail. 9. Pre-race strategy discussion. 10. Pete and Yvonne Gibson pose at the Dogwood wall at The Bowery restaurant. 11. Famous Red Hat Ladies, raising hell in the track kitchen after Dogwood tour. 12. Vernon and Patricia Brinson before New Orleans Handicap. 13. Before Vicarage’s Louisiana Derby second: Anne, Dawn and Dick Kelso. 4 14 15 17 20 16 18 19 21 23 22 24 25 14. Gulfstream paddock. Mark Grier, Dean DeLuke, Ron Stevens and Jack Sadler. 15. Bewigged Atlantans Jack Rooker and Bruce Wilson at the Campbells. 16. “Goodnight Irene” being rendered by Stanley Petter, Kim Taylor and Jack Burton. 17. Two dandies…Carl Myers and Jim Pippo. Dogwood Celebration Weekend, February 19… 18. Early morning barn visitors: Estelle and Jim Pippo, Sherrill and Tom Hall, Melanie and Randy Moorer. 19. At the dance. Jim and Wynona Wilson. 20. “Most Glamorous Couple” – Joyce and Ali Fyfe. 21. Dance beauties: Campbell Glenn, Lila Tindall (her mother), Cindy Rooker, Dorsey Jennings, and Sally Waldron (her mother and Cot’s sister). 22. Beth Newburn, Molly Gray, and Cecilia Davies. 23. Raucous Dogwood Revelers! Jan Eisenmann, Brad Stauffer, and Suzanne Davila. 24. Captains of Industry: Senator Greg Ryberg, Bill Coscioni, and Pat Moore. 25. Darby and Chris Copeland and “Sebastian.” 5 26 27 30 28 31 32 33 35 29 36 34 37 38 26. Josephine Abercrombie and Stanley Petter – Lexington glitterati. 27. Three generations of Campbell women – Anne, Campbell, Lila. 28. Reggie’s Red Hot Feetwarmers prepare to hit it. 29. Nashville’s Flash Gordon sits in on a final number. 30. Lila and her dad cut a rug. 31. Post Dogwood Dance: track kitchen breakfast – too many to identify. At the Derby… 32. Churchill’s John Asher, Cot, Anne, and Wayne Perkey, Rotary President, at pre-Derby speech. 33. Smarty Jones and a slightly wary Anne. 34. Charlie, Joanne Owen, Bill Brittain, and Anne at Cot’s Louisville Rotary speech. 35. Michelle Nihei and Anne seconds after Limehouse’s victory. Michelle is his exercise rider and one of Pletcher’s fine assistants. 36. Champagne in the Director’s Room: Jo Ann Oreffice, Jerrie Pletcher (Todd’s mom), and Anne in a celebratory mood. 37. Same room – Marylou Whitney and Walter Cronkite. 38. Two hours after his Churchill victory, Limehouse has peppermints on the brain. 6 PAUL OREFFICE: Dogwood’s Renaissance Man In 1978 he became the President/CEO of thinks that the Breeders’ Cup is the most Dow, a position he held until 1987. The important day in American racing. His world of chemical engineering and horse favorite tracks are Saratoga and Keeneland. racing may seem worlds “My wife Jo Ann and apart, but Paul had not I built a house eight forgotten his love of years ago in Saratoga horses during his years Springs,” said Paul. “I with Dow. never miss a day at the “When my family races during the meet.” came to the United States His children, Laura and From the world of Italian show jumping to we had nothing, I wouldAndrew, and their famithe winner’s circle at Pimlico for Summer n’t even let myself dream lies, also enjoy the sport Squall’s Preakness victory, Paul has had innuof owning a horse,” said – making trips to the merable high points in his life with horses. Paul. “It was after I startDerby and Saratoga “People ask me why I don’t have my own ed to make some money most years. stable,” said Paul. “I tell them that the that I looked for ways to Paul was on the Dogwood family is filled with great people get involved with racing. board of trustees for the and we have the advantage of Cot’s vast Someone had sent me one New York Racing knowledge, besides the fact that I get a lot of Dogwood’s partnership Association for 10 years, more action with 60 horses than I would with catalogs that featured five Paul Oreffice during a recent visit to Aiken. which gave him some 15 of my own!” horses. The one that fresh insights into the Paul Oreffice was born in Venice, Italy, in caught my eye was an unnamed colt with both sport. We asked him what changes he would 1927. His father was both a breeder and trainNorthern Dancer and Secretariat in his pedigree. make in racing if he held the position of er, and specialized in harness horses. “I was I met with Cot, took a cou“Racing Czar.” thrown on a horse as ple of shares (it was the “The first thing I would do would be to try soon as I could walk and days of the 40-share limitand get racing people together. Right now I really loved them,” he ed partnerships), and that each track and each state rules its own fiefrecalled. “My father let colt turned out to be dom – and there’s not enough work done me start breaking horses Summer Squall!” together to benefit racing as a whole. My secwhen I was nine years Paul’s next involveond objective would be to have standardized old. What was probably ment (and first winner) drug rules nationwide. This is something that my finest hour came at was a stakes horse named is being worked on, but it’s a difficult topic,” age 12, when I won an Luge II. Imported from explained Paul. “Thirdly I would raise jockadult jumping show on a England as a two-yearey’s weights. These guys are killing themhorse that I had trained – old in the fall of 1988, selves and there’s no need for it. Finally I I was the only one to Luge II was already a would create some heroes – and the jockeys have ever ridden him.” stakes winner in his are the obvious answer. Horses could be Life took a dark turn on native land. His first heroes, but they’re not around long enough the eve of World War II, North American race was any more. Jerry Bailey would be a perfect when Paul’s father, who choice – a great rider, intelligent, savvy – we was strongly against the And the crowd goes wild! Paul Oreffice and the Grade 1 Laurel could be making use of guys like him to pubFascists, “disappeared” Cot Campbell share in the moment of Summer Futurity on October 22, which he won. licize the sport to a national audience. Look at one night. After being Squall’s Hopeful Stakes victory 1989. “My first five races as other athletes like Tiger Woods and Michael tortured for days, an a Dogwood partner were all wins,” laughed Jordan. Everyone knows them. We need to anonymous phone call led Paul’s mother to Paul. “Talk about being spoiled!” do that with our jockeys.” where her husband was being held and she With hundreds of wins under his belt, you Paul is active on several boards, performed a daring rescue. The family was might think that Paul including the able to leave Italy for Ecuador (the only would have a hard country that would give them visas) on the Dogwood’s Salute to Longevity National Parkinson time deciding what his Foundation and the very last ship to sail to freedom. We have often said that our Dogwood University of Texas most thrilling moment The family lived in Ecuador for five years as an owner was… but clients make up a blue-chip roster if ever M.D. Anderson before immigrating to the United States. it takes him just a sec- there was one. And we appreciate – and Cancer Center. He Paul studied chemical engineering at Purdue ond: “Hands down it are proud – of their longevity. We take is also involved in a University, graduating in 1949. “I love math was British Banker this opportunity to salute five who have large-scale developand chemistry,” explained Paul, “and the winning the Nearctic been with us for many, many years: ment project in field of chemical engineering gave me a way Stakes at Woodbine. Jack Lansill – Lexington, KY – 1976 southern Arizona. to combine those two interests.” Paul went Six horses at the wire – Bob Evensen – Pepperell, MA – 1981 A much sought after to work for Dow in 1953 and three years photo finish – and our Hayes Clement – Greensboro, NC – 1985 commencement later at 28 he was sent to Brazil to lead the horse wins by a nose.” Helen Brann – Bridgewater, CT – 1986 speaker, Paul start-up of the company’s South American And although he Sherry Rosenthal – New York, NY – 1988 coined the phrase division. It was the first of many business says that the “Do the common successes for Paul – when he left the country Kentucky Derby is a “special occasion, espething uncommonly well” that he used in several years later, Dow was the second cially when we have a horse entered” Paul many of his public speeches. biggest chemical company in Brazil. 7 Editor’s Note: Paul Oreffice, former CEO of Dow Chemical, owns a share in every Dogwood runner, and has for almost 20 years – making him a 23.75% owner of the stable. He’s an interesting man, important to us, and a significant factor on the American racing scene. So, we thought you’d enjoy this glimpse into the life of Paul Oreffice… Editor’s Notebook PHOTO © MARIANNA HAUN Cotton Anne, a two-year-old filly owned by Penny Chenery, has had her photo in our newsletter before (back in May, 2004), but because she’s named for Cot and Anne Campbell we’ve taken a special interest in her maturation. This photo was taken on January 27 – Penny’s birthday. * * * Storm Song Court, Summer Squall Lane and Trippi Lane – the neighborhood sure is improving! One of Aiken’s newest developments, Woodside Reserve, has several streets named after Dogwood Stable runners. This collection of small, and decidedly upscale neighborhoods, lies within the larger development of Woodside Plantation. Although golf courses dot the landscape, the streets reflect Aiken’s pride in its equine heritage. We’ve had several new home owners who live on Summer Squall Lane come by our office to get a copy of A Year at the Races, a book written by Robert Parker which chronicles the colt’s early career. DOGWOOD STABLE, INC. Woodside Reserve is still expanding, so who knows… could there be a Limehouse Circle in their future? * * * Ron Stevens, our trainer in Aiken, has heard lots of excuses from his help over the years for missing work, but exercise rider Robert Bravo’s was priceless. Robert had gone to a party and was still at the shindig in the morning hours when he left the following message on Ron’s answering machine: “Ron, this is Robert… I’m at a party and there’s a problem… my friends told me when to come, but they never told me when to go home!” Ron’s next day suggestion: “When the sun comes up, go home… or better still, come here!” * * * Angel Cordero. One of history’s greatest jockeys, has always been noted for his rather irrepressible nature. He demonstrated this during Derby Week at one of the numerous banquets. The Campbells were seated at a table for 10 including Wayne Lukas, Todd Pletcher and Angel (now agent for America’s leading jockey John Velazquez). The evening grew late and the speaker pushed on. Wayne Lukas, who rises well before the chickens each morning, began to doze off. Angel, seated across the table, amused himself by flinging spitballs at the legendary trainer. Wayne would snap to attention when the missiles found their mark, look around the table to try to ascertain the perpetrator, while Angel looked with rapt attention toward the speaker. * * * Mountaineer Park, hang on to your hats – here comes Vanessa Feliciano! For the past three years Vanessa has been an exercise rider for Ron Stevens. This W. Cothran Campbell, President Mary Jane Howell, Newsletter Editor Address: Post Office Box 1549 Aiken, South Carolina 29802 Tel: (803) 642-2972 Fax: (803) 642-2747 E-mail: office@dogwoodstable.com Internet address: http://www.dogwoodstable.com Former exercise rider Vanessa Feliciano glamming it up with Cot Campbell before she headed off to Mountaineer Park. March Vanessa rode Dogwood’s Ready Again and Catered to victory in the Aiken Trials, perhaps whetting her appetite for more racing. With her ever-present grin and great attitude, we’ll miss her in Aiken… but wish her the best at the track. * * * Under the heading of useless information, here are three characteristics that often signal the probability of a good racehorse. I offer these in a whimsical spirit – 75 percent (but not 100 percent!) in jest: #1: A slightly bitchy attitude with a faraway look and a preoccupied manner. #2: When poked and prodded at a sale, a horse who will turn and glare at you as if to say, “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” #3: A horse that readily takes to eating peppermints, but is not obsequious about it. I maintain this signals an adventurous, inquisitive, bold attitude. But, believe me, we do have more significant prerequisites for purchasing! – WCC Does it ever stop snowing in Maine? This Dogwood lawn jockey has his doubts. Dogwood friends Clark and Judy Thompson of Bangor own the poor guy.