August Belmont Jr. sold Friar Rock shortly after winning the 1 miles Saratoga Cup. New owner
John E. Madden brought him to stand at stud at his
Hamburg Place farm in Kentucky. Only a minor success as a sire of racers, Friar Rock did produce the noteworthy runner Pilate, who in turn was the sire of
Eight Thirty. Pilate himself won 24 of his 44 starts. Friar Rock's other progeny included Rockminster (winner of the Pimlico Cup Handicap), Flat Iron (raced 107 times and won the Hawthorne Handicap), and Polydorus (won the Tremont Stakes). Friar Rock proved to be a good
broodmare sire and on five occasions was in the top ten on the annual broodmare sires' list. One of his best-known daughters was
Friar's Carse, the
United States' Champion Two-Year-Old Filly and dam of
War Relic. In 1918, Friar Rock was sold again and his new owners brought him to
Santa Rosa, California, to stand at Rancho Wickiup, where he remained for the rest of his life. Diagnosed as suffering from
peritonitis, Friar Rock died at age fifteen on January 8, 1928. In 1918, Madden had sold a half interest in Friar Rock to John Rosseter. The deal included sending the horse to Rosseter in California until the end of the breeding season 1920. Then Madden was to keep Friar Rock in Kentucky for the seasons of 1921 and 1922. When the end of the season of 1920 came, Rosseter refused to send Friar Rock back to Kentucky. After Madden sued Rosseter, the horse was eventually delivered to him on May 23, 1921, in good condition. ==References==