Pedigree fun facts: Rock Your World
Apr 17, 2021 Kellie Reilly/Brisnet.com
Rock Your World’s successful move from turf to dirt is no
surprise, given the surface versatility encoded in his ancestry.
Both of his parents were trained by Hall of Famer Ron
McAnally, who also co-bred Rock Your World with his wife, Deborah. Indeed, Rock
Your World represents the fourth generation of a female line developed by Mrs.
McAnally.
Rock Your World is by undefeated Argentine champion Candy
Ride. Imported after a trio of stunning victories in his homeland, including
the Joaquin de Anchorena (G1) in a brilliant 1:31.01 for a metric mile on turf,
Candy Ride remained perfect in his three U.S. starts in 2003. He reverted to dirt for
his successful debut for McAnally, then switched to turf to take the American
H. (G2). Back on the main oval for the Pacific Classic (G1), Candy Ride beat
Medaglia d’Oro while setting a 1 1/4-mile mark at Del Mar in 1:59.11.
Candy Ride descends from the Mr. Prospector male line via
Fappiano’s son Cryptoclearance. A stalwart on the 1987 Triple Crown trail,
Cryptoclearance captured the Florida Derby (G1), finished fourth in the
Kentucky Derby (G1), third in the Preakness (G1), and second in both the
Belmont (G1) and Travers (G1). The confirmed closer kept adding to his resume
as an older horse, with major wins including the 1989 Donn H. (G1) and Widener
H. (G1), and he ultimately banked more than $3.3 million from 44 career starts.
Cryptoclearance’s leading son, champion Victory Gallop, is best
known for denying Real Quiet the Triple Crown in the 1998 Belmont.
Cryptoclearance also sired Volponi, the shock winner of the 2002 Breeders’ Cup
Classic (G1).
Another son, Ride the Rails, was a lesser player on the 1994
Derby trail. Second to Hall of Famer Holy Bull in the Florida Derby, Ride the
Rails was also third in the Fountain of Youth (G2) and fourth in the Arkansas
Derby (G2).
His race record didn’t mark him out as a hot stallion
prospect, and Ride the Rails was exported to Argentina. But he did sport an
intriguing pedigree pattern. His dam, Herbalesian, is a granddaughter of Alablue,
who won the 1948 Test at Saratoga and became an influential broodmare.
Cryptoclearance is himself one of Alablue’s descendants, so Ride the Rails is
inbred to that key matron.
Perhaps the genetic kaleidoscope scrambled just right for
Ride the Rails to sire Candy Ride, a superior individual both on track and at
stud. Candy Ride is responsible for 2017 Horse of the Year Gun Runner, the 2016
Kentucky Derby runner-up who blossomed as an older horse with romps in the
Breeders’ Cup Classic and Pegasus World Cup (G1); champion juveniles Game
Winner and Shared Belief, who was later victorious in the Pacific Classic and
Santa Anita H. (G1); triple-surface threat Twirling Candy (now the sire of
Derby candidate Dream Shake); and unbeaten Mastery, a leading 2017 Derby contender
before sustaining a career-ending injury.
Rock Your World has a notable duplication in his own
pedigree, with Candy Ride’s male-line ancestor Fappiano factoring in the
pedigree of dam Charm the Maker as well. Charm the Maker descends from Fappiano’s
greatest son, Unbridled.
The 1990 Kentucky Derby and Breeders’ Cup Classic champion,
Unbridled sired a winner of each Triple Crown race – fellow Derby hero
Grindstone (1996), 2000 Preakness (G1) victor Red Bullet, and 2003 Belmont S.
(G1) star Empire Maker, Charm the Maker’s sire.
Empire Maker, runner-up as the favorite to Funny Cide in the
2003 Kentucky Derby, has sired two more Derby seconds in Pioneerof the Nile
(2009) and Bodemeister (2012). Both went on to sire Derby winners, Pioneerof
the Nile getting 2015 Triple Crown champion American Pharoah and Bodemeister
responsible for Always Dreaming (2017) in his first crop.
Chief among Empire Maker’s daughters is Hall of Famer Royal
Delta, a three-time Eclipse champion, two-time winner of the Breeders’ Cup
Distaff (G1) (2011-12), and earner of more than $4.8 million. Empire Maker
mares have produced multiple Grade 1 scorers Emollient and Separationofpowers
(like Rock Your World by Candy Ride), Grade 1 turf multi-millionaire Arklow, current
Spinster (G1) heroine Valiance, and Derby rival Mandaloun.
Charm the Maker was herself twice Grade 1-placed as a juvenile on dirt and synthetic. A half-length second in the 2011 Hollywood Starlet (G1), she captured the Sharp Cat over the same Cushion Track at old Hollywood Park and finished third in Santa Anita’s Oak Leaf (G1) (now the Chandelier). The McAnally trainee was also stakes-caliber on turf, notably placing a close second in the Unzip Me (to Byrama, now the dam of Derby contender Known Agenda) and third in the Autumn Miss (G3) in 2012. Charm the Maker added another stakes score to her resume in the 2013 Adoration over Del Mar’s then-Polytrack surface.
Charm the Maker is the first foal from Grade 3 winner Charm
the Giant, who was likewise trained by McAnally for his wife. Charm the Giant
competed exclusively on turf, winning or placing in 11 of 15 starts. Her
signature win came in the 2007 Wilshire H. (G3) at Hollywood Park. Charm the Giant is also the dam of Liam the Charmer, hero of
the 2018 John Henry Turf Championship (G2). Although he raced for other
connections, it was still heartwarming to see a McAnally-bred take the prize honoring
the trainer’s most beloved champion.
As her name implies, Charm the Giant is by European superstar
Giant’s Causeway and out of the McAnallys’ multiple Grade 2 vixen Olympic
Charmer.
Giant’s Causeway earned his “Iron Horse” nickname after battling
to five straight Group 1 victories in the summer of 2000. American fans remember
his near-miss to Tiznow in that fall’s Breeders’ Cup Classic, his lone try on
dirt. The son of Storm Cat became an outstanding sire as well, with such
progeny as 2019 U.S. Horse of the Year Bricks and Mortar and European champion
Shamardal (a top stallion himself). Giant’s Causeway factors as the broodmare
sire of the aforementioned Gun Runner (by Candy Ride).
Olympic Charmer, second to future Grade 1 queen Honest Lady
on debut, garnered the 1999 Railbird (G2) and 2000 El Encino (G2) for the
McAnallys. Although her biggest highlights were on dirt, Olympic Charmer was
2-for-2 on turf, both in minor stakes at Santa Anita.
The first in the matrilineal series of McAnally homebreds,
Olympic Charmer is by millionaire Olympio, who was trained by McAnally for owner/breeder
Verne Winchell. Olympio was himself effective on both surfaces, scoring several
majors on the main track led by the 1991 Arkansas Derby (G2) and earning the
Grade 1 laurel in the Hollywood Derby (G1) on turf.
Rock Your World’s fourth dam, Light a Charm, is a half-sister
to Herecomesthebride who has a Grade 3 stakes named after her on the Gulfstream
Park turf. Herecomesthebride, herself a Grade 3 winner of 12 of 16 starts, is
yet another with stakes trophies on both dirt and turf.
Light a Charm’s sire, Majestic Light, adds to the constant
refrain with his marquee wins spanning surfaces. By 1969 Kentucky Derby and
Preakness hero Majestic Prince, Majestic Light captured the 1976 Monmouth Invitational
H. (G1) (in track-record time) and Swaps (G1) as well as the 1977 Amory L.
Haskell H. (G1) on dirt. His biggest turf score came in a romp in the 1977 Man
o’ War (G1), but the Phipps homebred also landed that summer’s Bernard Baruch
H. (G3) at Saratoga and the Cinema H. (G2) as a sophomore. Majestic Light was
runner-up in the Washington DC International (G1), Turf Classic, and Canadian
International (G1) (to the magnificent Exceller).
Light a Charm’s dam, Like a Charm, won all three career
starts highlighted by the 1966 Sorority. Her descendants include Country House,
the promoted winner of the 2019 Kentucky Derby via the disqualification of
Maximum Security.
Aside from Country House, this family labeled 9-f is also
responsible for 1976 Kentucky Derby and Belmont champion Bold Forbes, at a
further remove. Current Derby rivals Known Agenda and Like the King trace to
the 9-f tribe too in their tail-female line.
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