Blue Moon
Stride first caught the eye of Bob Marks, the former general manager of
Perretti Farms, soon after she was born, in May of 2013. The daughter of
Rocknroll Hanover, who passed almost two months to the day prior to her birth,
and Classic Star, a full sister to Bettor’s Delight and Roll With Joe, and a
half to Triple Crown winner No Pan Intended, was pacing around the foaling
stall soon after standing and nursing. This was not typical behavior on the
part of a newborn, so he started referring to her as his little “pip.”
Pip’s granddam,
Classic Wish, who was foaled in Ontario, made it to the Hall of Fame as a
broodmare on the basis of her three millionaires, two other $250,000 winners,
and two Little Brown Jug winners. However, she was also no slouch on the track.
The daughter of Canadian Hall of Fame stalwart Armbro Emerson raced six
seasons, making 144 starts and earning $436,000. Classic Wish took her 1:52
lifetime mark at The Red Mile as a three-year-old. She passed in March, 2011 at
age 21.
Pip’s dam,
Classic Star, was no match for her brothers: she started 17 times at two and
three, winning three overnights for Steve Elliott and Tony O’Sullivan and
earning about $44,000.
Her first
foal, Classic Rock, was on the small side. She sold for $40,000 as a yearling
and only started 20 times, earning less than $10,000.
Next came
Snyderman, who succumbed to colic as a weanling. Then Hollyrock, who was better
than Classic Rock, but not much. This mare won four of 24 starts and $58,000.
Pip, who was
foaled in 2013, was named Snyderwoman, partly because her dam was purchased
from Jeff Snyder, who bought her Hall of Fame sire for $190,000 at Harrisburg
in 2003, and partly because Marks thought the name might induce Snyder to bid
on her when she entered the sales ring as a yearling. As things turned out, she
sold as a weanling, as part of the Perretti Farms final dispersal, and Snyder
doesn’t buy weanlings.
Marks
suggested to Mark Harder that he buy her for his Sydney, Australia based client
Emilio Rosati, who had struck out with top-dollar purchases like Well Said
Stride ($380,000) and Rockstar Stride ($300,000). Pip would be a bargain
compared to that pair. He took Bob’s advice and purchased her for $27,000 at
the Harrisburg Mixed Sale, renaming her Blue Moon Stride.
The filly chased
home freshman champ Pure Country in her second qualifier at The Meadowlands for
David Miller in mid-June. And after
being second again in her first NJSS tilt in early July, she broke her maiden with
a handy wire to wire win from the eight in a $25,000 split of the NJSS at The
Meadowlands the following week for Andrew McCarthy. She has an abundance of gate
speed and plenty of courage, two qualities that served her well throughout the
season.
Blue Moon Stride then won the $100,000 NJSS final
as the 3/5 choice, again for McCarthy. She held off a fast closing Show Time
Hill and prevailed by a neck in 1:53.1.
She hit the
road in August, beating Ron Burke’s heavily favored Lyons River Pride comfortably
off a pocket trip in a division of the Mary Lib Miller Arden Downs Stake on
Adios Day at The Meadows. She also took
the $57,000 Geers Stake at Tioga, again for McCarthy and Harder. Then it was on
to Canada, where the daughter of Rocknroll finished second to the talented
Vintage Master filly Thatsoveryverynice in an $84,000 split of the Eternal
Camnation for Jody Jamieson. She had four wins and a pair of seconds in her
first six starts, against top tier competition.
Blue Moon
Stride failed to make the board in the elimination and final of the Great Lady,
which was dominated by O’Brien winner L A Delight. And this was followed by a
pair of seconds in the Bluegrass and International Stallion Stake to Tipton
Teez and Darlinonthebeach, respectively. She was picked up at the wire in heavy
rain in the former, and got locked in to the point where she had to stand on
her head to shake loose for second in the latter.
Things didn’t
go her way in the Breeders Crown; McCarthy brushed her to the top to the half
in her elimination, but she got swallowed up late. And she was shuffled back to
tenth in the final.
The speedy
filly closed out the season with a November 20 second place finish to Yankee
Moonshine in the $385,000 Three Diamonds at The Meadowlands. As was the case in
most of her starts, she had no problem making the top at the start.
Blue Moon
Stride had four wins and five seconds in 13 starts and earned more than
$289,000, fifth most in her division, behind only Pure Country, L A Delight,
Yankee Moonshine and Sheezarealdeal.
Bob Marks
watched her qualify last week and noticed that she was a lot bigger and
stronger than she was last year. Mark Harder told him, “She’ll win a big one
this year for sure.” He continued, “She trained down great with a couple of
fast colts that wanted no part of her.”
When
originally pitching the weanling filly to Harder, Marks told him that if worse
came to worst and she wasn’t very good, she would still be one of the best bred
fillies to ever hit the Southern Hemisphere and an outstanding broodmare
prospect. He’s very happy that this fallback scenario is not the case, and that
Emilio Rosati has acquired the best horse he ever bought in America at a
bargain price.
Among other
stakes, Blue Moon Stride is eligible to the Breeders Crown, Shady Daisy, Glen
Garnsey and Mistletoe Shalee, as well as the New Jersey Sire Stakes, which kick
off in three weeks. She cut most of the mile in yesterday’s qualifier and
finished a couple of lengths back, in third, in 1:53.1.
Joe
FitzGerald
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