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Yes, Alan was opinionated, but like I said, he was very smart. I found him to be volatile. One minute you'd think he was your best friend, and the next minute he'd be screaming at you and then he wouldn't talk to you for months. LOL. The entire No Nukes saga had so many twists and turns and he butted heads with Vince Vinci (and Steve Demas and Ben Webster as well) on several occasions. While Benny retained part ownership in No Nukes and drove him as a 2yo, it was Glen Garnsey who drove him as a 3yo. After his 2yo year, Alan syndicated No Nukes for $5m. Of course a lot of people thought he was absolutely nuts. I guess he ended up getting the last laugh, LOL. At some point, Vince started selling breedings (from the shares he retained, or depending on who you talk to, shares he got stuck with, LOL). Alan of course is trying to create more demand in the marketplace and maximize the revenue of the pooled shares. I think Vince also had credit with Lana Lobell as a result of the syndication, but I am not sure about that. Of course No Nukes stood at Lana Lobell, but several years later he was moved to Steve Demas' farm (Upstream Farm), and then ended up at Hanover Shoe Farms (in NJ) in the mid-90's.No discussion necessary on the stallion career of No Nukes.
I believe No Nukes was a 'headcase' on the racetrack as well as the breeding shed.As far as the breeding shed, while with Demas, No Nukes almost knocked a mare over and had to be handled by 2 individuals while performing his "studly" duties after this incident!
I can recall a stud who bred like that.
Really?Who?