Nonetheless, the Oaks favorite continued to be successful in graded stakes races, triumphing in the Dogwood Stakes (GIII), the Spinster Stakes (GI) twice, and the Arlington Matron Handicap (GIII). With $2,480,377 in earnings, Take Charge Lady retired.
Over four years after her final
race, the mare was bred to the great sire A.P. Indy. The result of this mating
was Take Charge Indy, who made his racing debut as a juvenile at the end of
July of 2011 at Arlington Park, going six furlongs over the synthetic surface
at the Illinois track. After rating off the pace, Take Charge Indy took command
late in the race to draw away to a 6 ½-length win.
He started next in the Arlington-Washington
Futurity (GIII), falling a length short to Shared Property after coming from
off the pace. Behind Take Charge Indy were the future winners of one grade
three and two ungraded stakes races.
Take Charge Indy then took on a
tough field at Keeneland in the Dixiana Breeders’ Futurity (GI), settling off
the leaders before gamely trying to catch them in the homestretch. However, he did
not have the needed acceleration in the stretch and finished fourth behind the future Blue Grass Stakes
(GI)-winning half-brother to Mine That Bird in Dullahan, the graded
stakes-winning Majestic City, and the multiple graded stakes-placed Optimizer. He
defeated a deep cast, however, finishing ahead of two graded stakes winners.
His performances as a
two-year-old were enough to convince trainer Patrick Byrne and owners Chuck and
Maribeth Sandford to send the colt to the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (GI). Running
mid-pack, Take Charge Indy settled along the rail with dead aim on Hansen. Despite
willingly trying to chase the leaders around the far turn and into the
homestretch, Take Charge Indy yet again lacked the needed kick and was nailed
by Dullahan at the wire, finishing fifth behind Hansen, Union Rags, Creative Cause, and Dullahan. Despite being beaten by over 5 lengths, Take Charge Indy
defeated runners that had altogether won or would go on to win six graded
stakes and seven ungraded stakes, as well as horses that had placed or would go
on to place in nine graded stakes and one ungraded stakes in total.
Take Charge Indy’s sophomore
debut came in a mile and one-sixteenth allowance optional claiming over a
sealed track at Gulfstream Park. That day, however, he contested against the graded
stakes-placed and future graded stakes-winning El Padrino. The son of Take
Charge Lady pressed the pace before El Padrino swept past him, leaving him 2
lengths behind. It was clear that Take Charge Indy was much better than the
rest of the group, however, as he finished 13 ¾ lengths clear of the
third-place finisher.
Take Charge Indy Photo: Terri Cage |
Take Charge Indy did not race
for two months, but when he returned, it came in Florida’s premier Run for the
Roses prep, the Florida Derby (GI). For the first time, Take Charge Indy set
the pace, posting steady fractions. Despite the fact that he had the brilliant
grade one-winning Union Rags and El Padrino after him, Take Charge Indy dug in
beneath three-time Kentucky Derby-winning jockey Calvin Borel to score by a
length.
Many
worry about Take Charge Indy’s running style, afraid that his early speed will
take too much of a toll on him, especially with horses like Bodemeister,
Hansen, and Trinniberg slated to run. However, Take Charge Indy has made most of his
starts with a stalking style and when he did set the pace, the fractions were
certainly not overwhelming fast. The colt could definitely settle off the pace
in the Kentucky Derby.
Just
by glancing at his parents, you know Take Charge Indy is beautifully bred. If
you dig a little deeper, you will be even more impressed by his bloodlines. Not
only is his sire, A.P. Indy, a stamina-influencing champion sire and his dam a
multiple grade one winner, but Take Charge Indy’s damsire is Dehere, who is
also the broodmare sire of the champion sprinter Midnight Lute, Breeders’ Cup
Juvenile Fillies Turf (GII)-winning More Than Real, the graded stakes-winning
First Passage, and the multiple graded stakes-winning Friesan Fire – who is
bred on the same A.P. Indy/Dehere cross as Take Charge Indy. When crossed with
sires of Secretariat descent, Dehere mares have produced a total of fourteen
stakes winners.
Take
Charge Indy is inbred 3 X 4 to the great Secretariat, tracing back to him
through A.P. Indy’s dam – the great Weekend Surprise – and through Dehere’s
dam. Inbreeding to Secretariat appears in the pedigrees of several grade one
winners, including Bluegrass Cat, D’Wildcat, Sky Mesa, and Speightstown. Prominent
sires such as Bold Ruler, Northern Dancer, and Turn-To, as well as the great
mare Somethingroyal, appear frequently in Take Charge Indy’s bloodlines.
The
2012 Florida Derby winner descends from female family twenty-two, which not
only yielded the great champions Blushing Groom and Goldikova, but also the
Derby victors Count Turf and Street Sense.
Take
Charge Indy will need to run the best race he’s ever run in his life in the
Kentucky Derby, but should he live up to his pedigree, Take Charge Indy would
give A.P. Indy his first Kentucky Derby winner near the end of the line of the
great sire’s progeny’s racing days. This colt is clearly gifted, but the field
he is slated to face is not an easy one to compete against. He’ll need to
settle off the leaders and provide great acceleration in the stretch, but if
any jockey can ride a Derby winner, it’s Calvin Borel.
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