Nearly $100 Million Private Deal to Modernize Madison’s Alliant Energy Center
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Dane County has accepted a nearly $100 million private proposal from Frank Productions to renovate Veterans Memorial Coliseum at Madison’s Alliant Energy Center. The project aims to transform the aging arena into a modern, flexible entertainment venue while limiting financial risk to taxpayers through a public‑private partnership model. Alliant Energy Center Director Kevin Scheibler calls the upgrade a “game‑changer” that could trigger broader campus investment and strengthen Madison’s ability to attract and retain major events. Negotiations between Dane County and Frank Productions will continue over the coming months, with final approval required from the Dane County Board.
Veterans Memorial Coliseum at Madison’s Alliant Energy Center is on track for a nearly $100 million privately financed renovation after Dane County formally accepted a proposal from Frank Productions. For dairy producers familiar with the Alliant Energy Center campus, this development is worth watching.
Dane County Executive Melissa Agard framed the move as a generational reset for the entire campus, not just a cosmetic touch-up on a tired barn. By leaning on a public‑private partnership rather than asking taxpayers to foot the bill, the county is betting that a modern arena can host world‑class entertainment while keeping ag events that built Madison’s reputation firmly anchored on the grounds.
Why This Matters to Dairy
The Alliant Energy Center’s 164-acre campus hosts numerous agricultural events throughout the year. Veterans Memorial Coliseum, which opened in 1967, is a central venue on the grounds. According to a 2018 user-profile study, the campus generates significant economic impact for Dane County through events, hotels, restaurants, and related services. The venue currently has agreements in place with various agricultural and entertainment events through the coming years.
What’s Actually Changing
Under the proposal now being negotiated, Frank Productions would invest close to $100 million of private capital to transform the Coliseum into what county leaders describe as a “modern flexible entertainment destination capable of hosting concerts, performances, and community events year-round”. Think improved seating, better sound and lighting, and upgraded back‑of‑house infrastructure that can turn events faster and handle higher expectations from sponsors and fans.
Alliant Energy Center Director Kevin Scheibler called the renovation a “game‑changer,” stressing that the impact won’t stop at the Coliseum walls. In his view, a fully modernized arena becomes a catalyst for new investment in the Exhibition Hall and future campus development, strengthening Madison’s hand when competing for major national events and agricultural shows. For event users, that could translate into better traffic flow and a more modern campus experience.
The Deal: Risk, Reward, and Who’s Holding the Bag
Agard has been blunt about the county’s goal: upgrade the venue without blowing up the county budget. By bringing in Frank Productions – a Madison‑based live‑event company with roots back to the 1960s – the county is effectively renting the balance sheet of an entertainment specialist instead of asking taxpayers to underwrite every bolt and beam. The language coming out of the county stresses “limiting financial exposure” and “reducing risk for taxpayers” while putting private investment to work for public use.
Over the next several months, Dane County and Frank Productions will negotiate the fine print, including lease terms, revenue splits, and who controls the calendar on key dates. The Dane County Board must still approve any final agreement, and ag groups will be watching closely to ensure agricultural events remain a priority on the campus calendar. The question worth watching: how will a year-round entertainment model balance the needs of all user groups?
The Bottom Line for Producers
For dairy farmers who attend events at the Alliant Energy Center, a modernized Coliseum could mean improved facilities and infrastructure. A modern Coliseum:
Positions the Alliant Energy Center to remain competitive in attracting major agricultural and livestock events
Supports broader campus investment, including Exhibition Hall and supporting infrastructure
Demonstrates Dane County’s commitment to the venue’s long-term viability
Negotiations will decide whether this deal truly puts private money to work for public and agricultural good.But one thing is clear: if the Alliant Energy Center is going to remain competitive in attracting major events, standing still was never an option.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
$100 million private investment accepted: Dane County has formally accepted Frank Productions’ proposal to renovate the 58-year-old Veterans Memorial Coliseum, shifting financial risk away from taxpayers while modernizing a key Alliant Energy Center venue.
Potential benefits for agricultural events: The Alliant Energy Center hosts numerous agricultural and livestock events throughout the year. A modernized campus could benefit all users.
Campus-wide ripple effect: Alliant Energy Center leadership calls the project a “game-changer” that will drive new investment across the entire 164-acre campus, including the Exhibition Hall and supporting infrastructure.
Negotiations ongoing, Board approval required: Final terms between Dane County and Frank Productions are still being hammered out over the coming months, and any agreement must pass the Dane County Board before shovels hit dirt.
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His neighbors called it a gamble. World Dairy Expo just called him the 2025 Producer of the Year. What happened in the 13 years between? That’s the story nobody tells.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: When World Dairy Expo announced its 2025 award winners, the industry celebrated innovation that was finally recognized. But behind every honor lies a story the press releases don’t tell: the validation gap—those brutal years between building something new and anyone noticing it matters. The McCartys spent 13 years operating a processing plant that they had no experience running. Juan Moreno pioneered sexed semen technology when 88% of farmers wouldn’t touch it. Jim Mulhern showed up to policy meetings for 45 years before anyone called him Industry Person of the Year. This isn’t a story about awards. It’s about what happens in the silence of year six—and why the producers who survive that silence change the permission structure for everyone who comes after.
The cows still needed milking on the morning the award was announced. That’s the thing nobody tells you about recognition—it doesn’t change the work. It changes who believes the work was worth doing.
There’s an image from the McCarty story I can’t shake.
It was April 2012. Ken McCarty was standing in a building he had absolutely no idea how to operate.
The hum of refrigeration units filled the empty processing plant. Stainless steel gleamed under fluorescent lights—everything new, everything untested. The smell of industrial cleanser and fresh concrete hung in the air. Somewhere, a compressor cycled on—that mechanical heartbeat of a facility that represented everything his family had risked. And there stood Ken, in the middle of McCarty Family Farms in Rexford, Kansas, wondering if he’d just made the worst decision of his life.
The facility was designed to handle half a million pounds of milk daily. Thirty-one specialized employees had been recruited from outside the dairy world—people who knew processing but had never set foot on a working dairy. The whole thing was built through a partnership with Danone that seemed either visionary or completely insane, depending on who you asked.
What moves me most is Ken’s honesty about that moment. He didn’t pretend to have it figured out. He later admitted something that takes real courage to say out loud: “We had no experience running a milk processing plant before 2012. We depended heavily on the Danone teams to help us develop our skill set.”
I keep coming back to that sentence. Here’s a dairy farmer whose family has been milking cows for generations. And he’s standing in a facility that represents millions in investment, that his neighbors think is a gamble, that his banker barely understands—and he’s telling the world he had zero experience operating it.
That takes a kind of courage that doesn’t photograph well. There’s no triumphant moment to capture. Just a man in a humming building, hoping he hasn’t bet everything on a dream that won’t work.
That was Day One.
Day 4,745 would arrive on a March evening in 2025, when World Dairy Expo announced the McCarty Family as Dairy Producers of the Year—the industry’s highest recognition for farming excellence.
What happened in between those two days? That’s the story nobody tells about agricultural innovation. And honestly, it’s the part that matters most.
The McCarty Family: Generations of dairy farming excellence stands proudly in one of their innovative free-stall barns. From left to right, brothers Mike, Clay, Tom (father), Dave, and Ken McCarty have transformed a 15-cow Pennsylvania dairy into a sustainability-focused operation spanning multiple states, earning them World Dairy Expo’s prestigious 2025 Dairy Producer of the Year award.
The Valley Nobody Warns You About
Every innovation story we love to celebrate follows the same arc: Someone has a vision. They build something new. The industry recognizes their genius.
What gets edited out is the decade in between steps two and three.
Agricultural researchers have a clinical term for this brutal middle period: the “Valley of Death.” It’s where emerging tools and approaches remain stuck, unable to advance from proof of concept to widespread adoption. The funding gap hits. The adoption gap hits. And most pioneers? They don’t survive the crossing.
For the McCartys, the valley looked like years of learning to operate a processing plant while simultaneously managing dairy expansion. Technical problems for which no solutions had been documented. Equipment designed for average milk composition that couldn’t handle their herd’s exceptional genetics.
Here’s the part that still gets me: Their cows kept getting better. Through careful breeding, their herd was producing 4.5-4.6% butterfat—well above the industry average of 3.7-3.8%. Sounds like a triumph, right?
Except their processing plant separators weren’t designed for milk that rich. Ken explained it with characteristic plainness: “We have to run our plant slower.”
Think about what that actually means. Your breeding program succeeds beyond your wildest expectations—and it creates a whole new problem. Your genetics outpace your equipment. Most dairy farmers never face this challenge because, as Ken put it, their “connection to that separator ends at the back of a milk tanker.” The McCartys saw it all the way through—every improvement revealing new bottlenecks nobody else had ever needed to solve.
That’s what the validation gap actually looks like. Not a dramatic failure that makes for good storytelling. Just constant, grinding problem-solving with zero external validation that you’re even on the right path.
The Weight of the Unseen Years
In every innovator’s journey, there are moments of doubt that never make the official story.
The McCartys have spoken openly about the technical challenges of those valley years—equipment struggles, the complexity of managing what no one in their region had ever attempted before. The processing team they’d recruited? Ken shared something remarkable about them: “Most of those team members are still with us 13 years later.”
That kind of loyalty doesn’t happen by accident. It happens when people believe they’re building something worth staying for, even when the world hasn’t noticed yet. I think about those employees sometimes—the ones who showed up in 2012 to work for a dairy family with no processing experience, and decided to stay anyway. What did they see that others missed?
I think about what those years must have felt like. Not the dramatic crises, but the quieter weight. The mornings when you walk into that plant knowing you’re solving problems nobody else has faced—and the equipment manual on your desk is one you’re writing as you go.
“We enjoyed creating things,” Dave McCarty would later explain about why they left Pennsylvania for Kansas. “My dad and mom just allowed us to make it ours.”
What strikes me about that quote is what it doesn’t say. It doesn’t say they always believed it would work. It doesn’t say the doubt went away. Creating things means making something that didn’t exist before, which means you can’t know in advance whether it should exist. The McCartys built anyway. But I suspect there were mornings when “enjoying” wasn’t quite the right word. Mornings when it was just stubbornness. Just being too far in to turn back.
But they kept going. Not because they knew it would work—they couldn’t have known that. Because stopping felt worse than continuing.
There’s a moment in every innovator’s journey—usually around year five or six—when the hardest question arrives.
It’s not “Is this working?” By year five, you have data. You know if the economics function.
The hard question is this: “Is this worth it when nobody else seems to care?”
Your neighbors are milking cows, shipping milk, and going home. Their operations look simpler. Less stressful. More manageable. They’re not dealing with food safety inspections, processing plant employees, or equipment that wasn’t designed for what you’re trying to do.
Meanwhile, you’re solving problems nobody else has. You’re operating at the edge of industry knowledge. And when you look around for validation—for someone to say “Yes, this matters, keep going”—the silence is deafening.
Juan Moreno knows this silence intimately.
When Moreno was pioneering gender-sorted semen technology, the industry wasn’t celebrating his vision. They were skeptical. In 2012, only about 12% of U.S. dairy operations used sexed semen. Nearly half of the dairy farmers surveyed had never even tried it. The technology worked, but most farmers weren’t buying it—literally.
Moreno’s response? He kept building anyway.
Juan Moreno, CEO of STgenetics, stands at the forefront of his company’s facilities where revolutionary genetic technologies are developed. Under his visionary leadership, Moreno has transformed the dairy breeding industry through innovations in sexed semen technology and genomic testing that have fundamentally changed how farmers approach herd genetics worldwide.
“It all started on my family’s cattle operation, where an early fondness for animal husbandry took root,” he explained after receiving the 2025 International Person of the Year award. “Those early experiences shaped my understanding of the daily practical challenges farmers face.”
He wasn’t building sexed semen technology to revolutionize the industry. He was solving a problem nobody else thought was worth solving yet—the frustration of unwanted bull calves, the slow pace of genetic progress, the coin-flip uncertainty of every breeding decision.
By 2024, adoption had reached 84% in Great Britain—the world’s highest rate. Moreno’s decades of work finally looked like genius. But in 2005? In 2010? In all those years, when most farmers considered the technology too expensive and unreliable?
He was just a man in a lab, wondering if anyone would ever see what he saw.
Not all validation gaps end with visible, dramatic operations like on-farm processing plants.
Some end with policy infrastructure that touches every dairy farmer in America—without most of them ever knowing the name of the person who built it.
Jim Mulhern spent 45 years doing work that most dairy farmers never saw. Congressional testimony. USDA comment periods. Coalition-building with farm organizations. Endless meetings with staffers whose names would never appear in industry publications.
I find myself wondering what sustains someone through that kind of invisible work. Forty-five years. Think about that. Forty-five years of showing up to meetings where your name never appears in the headline. Forty-five years of watching legislators change, programs rise and fall, knowing that the farmers who benefit from your work will never know you built the infrastructure that saved their milk check.
How do you keep going when the work is that invisible?
When Mulhern received the 2025 Industry Person of the Year award, his colleagues’ description revealed the answer: “His work has made lasting impacts on dairy and ag policy, and his colleagues routinely say his kindness, hard work, and collaborative nature are unmatched in policy circles.”
Kindness.
In 45 years of policy work—the meetings, the testimony, the endless negotiations—that’s what people remembered most. Not the wins. Not the programs. The way he treated people during the long, unglamorous middle.
The Dairy Margin Coverage program—which distributed $1.27 billion to 17,059 operations in 2023 alone—exists in part because of Mulhern’s decades of policy architecture. Federal order reforms that affect every milk check in America bear his fingerprints.
But here’s what strikes me most: Mulhern didn’t separate survival from legacy.
He didn’t spend 20 years doing policy work and then 25 years building something meaningful. His survival strategy WAS building policy infrastructure that protected all dairy farmers—including himself. Every hour spent in committee meetings was simultaneously about keeping the industry viable and creating something that would outlast him.
Legacy isn’t what you build after you survive. Legacy is what you build while surviving.
That kind of invisible courage—showing up for decades without recognition—requires the same thing the McCartys needed: the willingness to be vulnerable to failure without anyone watching.
But most producers I talk to face the opposite challenge. Their fear isn’t invisibility. It’s visibility.
You’ve probably said this yourself. In hundreds of conversations with mid-size dairy producers, I’ve heard the same refrain: “That’s for the big guys. I’m too small to matter to Land O’Lakes or Danone or any of these programs.”
I’ve come to believe something uncomfortable about that sentence. In most cases, it’s not a size problem at all. It’s a fear problem wearing a scale costume.
The McCartys had advantages, yes. Scale, Kansas State University support, and a Danone partnership. But Randy Kortus won Dairy Producer of the Year in 2023 with approximately 90 cows across three breeds—Holsteins, Jerseys, and Ayrshires. Ninety cows. That’s not mega-scale. That’s the kind of operation thousands of producers run while telling themselves they’re “too small to matter.”
The difference wasn’t Kortus’s cow count. It was his willingness to be seen. To share operational data with universities for benchmarking. To host farm tours and engage with industry visitors. To present at conferences about what worked and what didn’t. To document his practices in ways that helped other producers learn.
“Too small” protects us from vulnerability. It’s easier to say “Programs like that aren’t for farms my size” than to make the call, share the data, and risk rejection.
But here’s what I’ve learned: Land O’Lakes TruTerra accepts operations of ALL sizes. They paid $5.1 million to farmers in 2022 for carbon sequestration—distributed among thousands of participants, most of whom were mid-size operations.
USDA EQIP programs often score smaller operations HIGHER because they can demonstrate greater per-acre environmental impact.
Regional processors actively seek mid-size operations for premium programs because they want authentic “family farm” stories for their marketing.
The question isn’t whether you’re big enough to matter. The question is whether you’re brave enough to become visible.
And I get it—visibility is terrifying. When you’re visible, people see your failures as well as your successes. Your neighbors know when you’re struggling. Industry colleagues witness your challenges.
But here’s what I’ve noticed about every producer who eventually earned recognition: They were all terrified, too. They didn’t conquer the fear. They just got tired of letting it make decisions for them.
What Separated the Stayers from the Leavers
Looking at the producers who emerged from the valley faster, I started noticing patterns. Three habits kept showing up—and none of them were what I expected.
Most producers do the opposite of all three. They compete instead of connect. Hoard instead of share. Protect instead of expose.
They became connectors instead of competitors. When you consistently highlight other farmers doing innovative work—profiling their approaches, sharing their data, celebrating their successes—something shifts. You become indispensable without ever asking to be. Within a year, people start asking you, “Who should I talk to about X?” You’ve built influence without ever self-promoting, because the person who knows who’s doing innovative work IS the expert.
The 2024 Industry Persons of the Year, GPS Dairy Consulting, won not by promoting their own expertise but by consistently highlighting their clients’ achievements. “Inspiring change and growing leaders in the dairy industry is the hallmark of success for GPS Dairy Consulting.” They spent years making other people look good—and in the process became indispensable.
They built tools others could use. Not just case studies about their own success, but actual decision-making frameworks. Spreadsheets calculating carbon program ROI. Checklists assessing direct-marketing feasibility. Templates that other farmers could adapt to their own situations.
The McCartys built a 7,500-square-foot Learning Center featuring VR experiences that show how dairy foods are made. That’s not altruism—that’s infrastructure that makes their approach replicable. Every visitor becomes a potential advocate. Every tour validates the model for someone who might have otherwise dismissed it.
They answered the questions everyone was afraid to ask. Every producer community has uncomfortable questions for which nobody has real data. “Do carbon credits actually generate meaningful income?” “Can direct marketing work at 500-cow scale?” The producers willing to answer those questions—with real numbers, including what didn’t work—become the authorities. Not because they claimed expertise, but because they provided the transparency everyone else was withholding.
The common thread? All three approaches are about serving rather than promoting. You never say “Look at me.” You say, “Look at this problem I’m helping solve.”
Dairy culture has a long memory for people who show up to help. Recognition eventually finds them—often years after they’ve stopped expecting it.
What Actually Changes When Recognition Arrives
Here’s where something remarkable reveals itself.
When World Dairy Expo announced the McCartys as Dairy Producers of the Year, nothing changed about their operation. The cows still needed milking. The processing plant—now handling 2.2 million pounds daily, up from that original 500,000—still ran the same equipment. The economics were identical to what they’d been the day before.
But something profound shifted in the broader industry.
Within months, the media amplification cascade began. K-State Magazine, Brownfield Ag News, High Plains Journal, and Dairy Herd Management—publication after publication profiled the operation. A YouTube documentary that had been quietly accumulating views suddenly surged past 92,000.
But here’s what matters most: the institutional permission structure transformed.
Before recognition: “On-farm processing? That’s too risky for our lending portfolio.”
After recognition: “On-farm processing? The World Dairy Expo Producers of the Year operate one. Let’s look at the model.”
Before recognition: “Cost-plus pricing partnerships with major processors? That’s not how dairy works.”
After recognition: “Danone publicly documented their partnership model with the McCartys. Maybe we should explore similar arrangements.”
The award didn’t make the McCartys’ approach work. It gave everyone else permission to believe it could work for them.
And in an industry where 2,800 operations closed their barn doors in 2024—most of them mid-size dairies that ran out of options before they ran out of determination—that permission to believe matters more than any number can capture.
That’s the real legacy of surviving the validation gap. You don’t just prove your model works. You compress the timeline for everyone who comes after. The next producer exploring vertical integration won’t face thirteen years of isolation. Maybe five to seven years instead—because now there’s a proof of concept. A name to cite when their banker raises objections.
The Question That Matters
I should be honest about something: For every McCarty family that survives thirteen years in the valley, others did similar things and didn’t make it. Not because they lacked courage or vision, but because timing, circumstances, or just plain bad luck worked against them. This isn’t a story about guaranteed outcomes. It’s a story about what becomes possible when you stay long enough to find out.
If you’re a mid-size producer reading this, fighting to survive the next milk check while wondering whether any of this applies to you, here’s the question that determines everything:
“Is the survival work I’m doing today solving a problem worth documenting for others?”
If yes: Document it. Share it. Stay committed. Whether or not awards ever arrive, you’ll have built something meaningful.
If no: There’s honor in survival itself. Not every farm needs to be a case study. Some just need to keep milking cows and supporting families, and that’s enough. That’s always been enough.
But whatever you do, don’t fall into the trap of thinking you’ll survive first, then build a legacy later.
The McCartys didn’t wait until year thirteen to start documenting their model. They were sharing, teaching, and opening their operation to visitors throughout the valley—building that Learning Center, hosting tours, answering questions from producers who wondered if such a thing was even possible.
Moreno didn’t wait until 84% adoption to advocate for sexed semen technology. He was presenting, publishing, and partnering while skeptics still dominated the conversation.
Legacy is what you build while surviving. Or it’s not built at all.
What This Means for All of Us
As nominations open for the 2026 World Dairy Expo awards, thousands of producers will read the criteria and think: “That’s not for someone like me.”
Some of them are right. The survival challenges they face don’t translate into industry-wide impact, and that’s okay.
But some of them are wrong. They’re in year five of something meaningful. Year eight of building infrastructure that could help thousands. Year three of solving a problem publicly that others are desperate to understand.
To those producers: The validation gap is real. The silence of year six is brutal. The temptation to quit and return to simpler operations is constant.
But so is what waits on the other side.
I think about Ken McCarty standing in that processing plant in 2012. Stainless steel and fluorescent lights. The smell of concrete, possibility, and fear, all mixed together.
And I think about him standing in that same building in 2025, knowing exactly how every system works, having solved problems nobody else had documented, watching the industry finally catch up to what his family had been building for thirteen years.
The cows still needed milking that morning. They always do.
But something had changed. Not in the plant. Not in the economics. In everyone else’s permission to believe that what the McCartys built was possible for them, too.
The 2,800 farms that closed in 2024? They faced the same choices the McCartys faced in 2012. The same uncertainty. The same skeptical neighbors and confused bankers, and years of wondering if the risk was worth it.
The difference was refusing to stop—answering questions when nobody seemed to be listening, documenting when it felt pointless, staying visible when hiding felt safer.
The industry always catches up eventually. The only question is whether you’ll still be there when it does.
World Dairy Expo award nominations are open now. Visit worlddairyexpo.com for current deadlines and nomination forms. Whether you nominate your neighbor, or simply take inspiration from those who’ve walked this path before—the work you’re building today is the legacy that matters.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
All three WDE 2025 winners survived the same invisible battle: The McCartys (Dairy Producer of the Year), Juan Moreno (International Person of the Year), and Jim Mulhern (Industry Person of the Year) endured 13-45 years of building before recognition arrived
The validation gap kills more innovations than failure does: Those brutal middle years—when the work is real but nobody’s watching—is where most pioneers quit. The McCartys survived 4,745 days of it.
“Too small” is fear wearing a scale costume: Randy Kortus won 2023 Producer of the Year with 90 cows. Land O’Lakes TruTerra paid $5.1M to mid-size farms in 2022. The barrier isn’t size—it’s visibility.
Awards change permission, not profit: The McCartys’ honor didn’t improve their margins. It transformed “on-farm processing” from a banker red flag to a validated model.
Legacy is built while surviving, not after: Document now. Share now. Answer the hard questions now. That’s what separated the 2025 winners from the 2,800 farms that closed last year.
Join the Revolution!
Join over 30,000 successful dairy professionals who rely on Bullvine Weekly for their competitive edge. Delivered directly to your inbox each week, our exclusive industry insights help you make smarter decisions while saving precious hours every week. Never miss critical updates on milk production trends, breakthrough technologies, and profit-boosting strategies that top producers are already implementing. Subscribe now to transform your dairy operation’s efficiency and profitability—your future success is just one click away.
They cancelled 2024. They came back ANGRY. Italy delivered.
Fantasy Darsena owned the spotlight in Cremona—tapping both Supreme Champion of the show and Grand Champion Holstein—while Detective daughter Isolabella Desy E.T. sealed the Holstein Heifer crown to cap an electric weekend for Italian breeding power.
Holstein power plays
Fantasy Darsena delivered the rare one-two: the Holstein Grand Championship and the show’s Supreme title, underlining the kind of durability and udder quality that moves the needle on any farm. Judges kept the momentum rolling through deep classes, with an Intermediate lineup that was all business from feet and legs to udder attachments.
Grand Champion Holstein: Fantasy Darsena (Dateline x Gatedancer x Doorman).
Best Udder Old Cows: Fantasy Darsena.
Reserve Grand Champion Holstein: Castelverde Goldchip Hotornot (Gold Chip x Atwood x Fontaine).
Honorable Mention Holstein: Sabbiona Tiky (Doorman x Goldfarm x Mr Minister), EX-97.
Depth. Style. Forward motion. The heifer show checked every box, and Isolabella Desy E.T. brought the extra gear that matters when banners are on the line. The class winners showed the kind of skeletal design, rib, and udder promise that later translate to real-world performance.
Champion Heifers Holstein: Isolabella Desy E.T. (Detective x Goldwyn x Chief).
Reserve Champion Heifers Holstein: Bel HaveNoFear Lety (HaveNoFear x Chief x Brawler).
Honorable Mention Heifers Holstein: Brigitte (RompEN Red x Hanans x Beemer).
Champion Heifers Red Holstein: Piniere Farm Holliman Calliop (Holliman-Red x Power Red x Cougar Red).
Why Cremona matters
Cremona’s 80th edition put the industry center stage—three days, four breeds, and a platform where European genetics and show-ring standards push each other to higher heights. And yes, the hometown roar was real when Darsena lifted the Supreme—proof that elite cows and elite crowds feed off the same energy.
Forget everything you know about Red Holsteins. One Italian farm just proved they can beat ANYONE
The 80th Cremona International Dairy Show just witnessed Red Holstein history in the making! With Ohio’s Nathan and Jenny Thomas wielding the official sticks after a marathon three-day judging stint across multiple breeds, the Red & White division delivered jaw-dropping quality that had international competitors buzzing.
When the final ribbons were handed out, one genetic powerhouse stood above all: DORAL RED’s influence was everywhere, with his daughters claiming the top spots and proving that red genetics have officially arrived on the world stage.
The Barbara Breakthrough: Complete Domination Story
Here’s how ROTA DORAL BARBARA-R absolutely owned the show:
Grand Champion Red Holstein Crown Package:
Animal: ROTA DORAL BARBARA-R
Pedigree: DORAL RED x JORDY RED x ATWOOD
Exhibitor: SOC. AGR. ROTA – MARIA CERRI
Complete Title Haul:
Grand Champion Red Holstein
Intermediate Champion Red Holstein
Best Udder Intermediate Champion
Campionessa Vacche Giovani (Young Cow Champion)
Migliore mammella Vacche Giovani (Best Udder Young Cows)
10th place in mixed Holstein Senior 3-Year-Old class (42-48 months)
Complete Red Holstein Championship Results
GRAND CHAMPIONSHIP – MATURE COWS
Grand Champion Red Holstein:
ROTA DORAL BARBARA-R (DORAL RED x JORDY RED x ATWOOD) – SOC. AGR. ROTA – MARIA CERRI
Reserve Grand Champion Red Holstein:
CRISTELLA SAILER RED ET (TOP RED x MANANA RED x MEGA-WATT) – BALESTRERI DONATELLA
Additional honors: Best Udder Old Cows, Migliore mammella Vacche Adulte, 7th in 4-Year-Old Holstein class
Honorable Mention Red Holstein Champion:
ALL.PEZZINI DORAL HELLY RED (DORAL RED x SWINGMAN x APOLL) – S.S.AGR.PEZZINI ENDJ E GIUSEPPE
INTERMEDIATE CHAMPIONSHIP – YOUNG COWS
Intermediate Champion:
ROTA DORAL BARBARA-R (DORAL RED x JORDY RED x ATWOOD) – SOC. AGR. ROTA – MARIA CERRI
Reserve Intermediate Champion:
ALL.PEZZINI DORAL HELLY RED (DORAL RED x SWINGMAN x APOLL) – S.S.AGR.PEZZINI ENDJ E GIUSEPPE
Third Place/Honorable Mention:
DM DORAL CHANTAL RED (DORAL RED x JORDY RED x DESTRY) – AZ.AGR. DM DEI F.LLI DI MARZIANTONIO S.S. – MATTIA BENEDETTI VALLENARI
HEIFER CHAMPIONSHIP
Champion Heifers Red Holstein:
PINIERE FARM HOLLIMAN CALLIOP (HOLLIMAN-RED x POWER RED x COUGAR RED) – DABBENE GIUSEPPE E ODDENINO GIOVANNI S.S.
Reserve Champion Heifers:
MARGHE TOWER RED RIHANA (TOWER RED x CHAMPION RED x POWER RED) – AZ.AGR. S.MARGHERITA DI MICHELI LUIGI
Third Overall Heifers:
ROTA HULU BEATRIZ-R (HULU RC x DORAL RED x JORDY RED) – SOC AGR ROTA LUIGI, MARCO E RICCARDO S.S
Complete Class-by-Class Red Holstein Results
HEIFER CLASSES (6-24 Months)
Class
Age
Placement
Animal Name
Sire x Dam’s Sire x GDS
Exhibitor
Cat 7
21-24mo
Champion
BRIGITTE
ROMPEN RED x HANANS x BEEMER
PEDRINI MADDALENA
Cat 7
21-24mo
Reserve
FANTASY GENNY
LUSTER P x LAMBDA x FRANCHISE
SOC. AGR. OITANA GUIDO E EZIO
Cat 7
21-24mo
9th
BAS FARM ARIEL
KING RED P x FREESTYLE RED x MANANA RED
SOC.AGR. BASANO
Cat 6
18-21mo
3rd
BAS FARM CRYSTAL
DETECTIVE x LAMBDA x DOC
SOC.AGR. BASANO
Cat 5
15-18mo
Champion
BEL HAVENOFEAR LETY
HAVENOFEAR x CHIEF x BRAWLER
ALLEV.BELTRAMINO S.S.
Cat 5
15-18mo
Reserve
PINIERE FARM HOLLIMAN CALLIOP
HOLLIMAN-RED x POWER RED x COUGAR RED
DABBENE GIUSEPPE
Cat 5
15-18mo
5th
LA PORTEA HULU SPOTIFY RED ET
HULU RC x JORDY RED x GOLDWYN
AZ. AGR. NUZZI DOMENICO
Cat 5
15-18mo
9th
CASTELGOLASO ROMPEN ALUNA RED
ROMPEN RED x JORDY RED x TAKEOFF
CORSINI GIUSEPPE
Cat 4
12-15mo
Reserve
MARGHE TOWER RED RIHANA
TOWER RED x CHAMPION RED x POWER RED
AZ.AGR. S.MARGHERITA
Cat 4
12-15mo
11th
A-L-H DORAL HOLY MISS-RED
DORAL RED x DIAMONDBACK x ARMANI
SCHÖNHOF HOLSTEIN
CALF CLASSES (6-12 Months)
Class
Age
Placement
Animal Name
Sire x Dam’s Sire x GDS
Exhibitor
Cat 3
10-12mo
3rd
PINIERE FARM ALLIGATOR LISTER
ALLIGATOR x LAMBDA x GOLDFARM
DABBENE GIUSEPPE
Cat 3
10-12mo
5th
EDITH
ALPHA RC x DORAL RED x WINDBROOK
PEDRINI MADDALENA
Cat 3
10-12mo
8th
CASTELGOLASO HINDSIGHT AMBER
HINDSIGHT RED x CLASSIC x BYWAY
CORSINI G. E F.
Cat 2
8-10mo
Reserve
AGR AM ADAWAY CARLY
RIO2183 x WARRIOR RED x GOLD CHIP
ALBERTO MEDINA
Cat 2
8-10mo
5th
DOTTI ACETYLENE R CHARITY ET
ACETYLENE RED x GRADE x GOLD CHIP
LA CORTE DI DOTTI
Cat 2
8-10mo
7th
AGR TURBO APPLE RED
TURBO RED x MIRAND PP RC x DIAMONDBACK
ALBERTO MEDINA
Cat 2
8-10mo
11th
FANTASY CAMELIA
EXCLUSIVE RED x FREESTYLE RED x MIRAND PP RC
SOC.AGR. OITANA
Cat 1
6-8mo
3rd
ROTA HULU BEATRIZ-R
HULU RC x DORAL RED x JORDY RED
SOC AGR ROTA
Cat 1
6-8mo
Reserve
CASTELVERDE POWER GAS GAS
POWER RED x DEFIANT x ARMANI
SOC. AGR. CASTELVERDE
Cat 1
6-8mo
7th
FUMA DORAL IMPRESSION RED ET
DORAL RED x JORDY RED x KINGBOY
SOC. AGR. FUMAGALLI
COW CLASSES
Class
Age
Placement
Animal Name
Sire x Dam’s Sire x GDS
Exhibitor
2-Year Junior
<28mo
Champion
TOC-FARM HAVENOFEAR RIA
HAVENOFEAR x LAMBDA x UNIX
TOCCHI FILIPPO
2-Year Junior
<28mo
6th
DM DORAL CHANTAL RED
DORAL RED x JORDY RED x DESTRY
AZ.AGR. DM
3-Year Junior
36-42mo
Champion
CERES PELLEGRINO SELVAGGIA
PELLEGRINO x HOTLINE x CHIEF
SOC. AGR. CERESETTA
3-Year Junior
36-42mo
3rd
ROTA BASIC BETTINA
BASIC x JORDY RED x ATWOOD
SOC AGR ROTA
3-Year Junior
36-42mo
5th
PINIERE FARM REDEYE P GUAPA
REDEYE P x JORDY RED x COUGAR RED
DABBENE GIUSEPPE
The Alberto Medina Factor: Spain’s Show Ring Maestro
Here’s where the story gets even better. Alberto Medina, the most traveled cattle fitter in the dairy world (less than 100 nights at home annually, working 12-15 countries), brought Spanish fire to Cremona despite massive challenges. His “sweet red and white heifer” performed brilliantly, with AGR AM ADAWAY CARLY taking Reserve Champion in the 8-10 month class.
But here’s the heartbreaker: Spain’s lumpy skin disease restrictions kept his best ammunition at home—including a “really fresh” red and white cow that was a previous junior champion with just 25 days rest. “I think my cows was the main thing to bring to this show,” Medina said, clearly frustrated at not bringing “the best that you have at home”.
Industry legend Carl Saucier recognizes Medina’s mastery, and his presence at Cremona added international credibility to an already stellar event.
Italian Breeding Excellence: The Rota Revolution
SOC. AGR. ROTA’s dominance wasn’t luck—it’s the result of Italian breeding excellence meeting cutting-edge genetics. Their strategic use of DORAL RED has created a dynasty of show winners that compete successfully against the world’s best black-and-white Holsteins.
The farm’s success with ROTA DORAL BARBARA-R and ROTA HULU BEATRIZ-R (Third Overall Heifer) demonstrates their complete breeding program from calves to mature cows.
The DORAL RED Global Phenomenon
Let’s talk genetics that matter. DORAL RED from STgenetics isn’t just another trendy sire—he’s revolutionizing Red Holstein breeding worldwide:
Nathan and Jenny Thomas from Triple-T Holsteins in Ohio had their work cut out for them, judging three breeds over three intense days at Cremona. Nathan, who recently led World Dairy Expo Supreme Champion Stoney Point Joel Bailey, brought serious credentials to Italy’s premier show.
“It was fun to go out there and see the quality that you were hoping to expect,” Jenny Thomas noted after evaluating Italian cattle they’d waited a year to judge following 2024’s biosecurity cancellation.
The Numbers That Matter
Recent genetic research validates what we’re seeing in the show ring. Swedish Red x Holstein crosses deliver $94.40 more profit per cow annually versus pure Holsteins. Red Holsteins show distinct advantages in udder characteristics and body condition scores. The message? Red genetics aren’t a sideshow anymore—they’re mainstream profit drivers.
Looking Forward: The Red Future is Now
Cremona’s 80th edition proved that Red Holstein genetics have arrived. With judges like Nathan Thomas recognizing quality, legends like Alberto Medina preparing cattle, and farms like SOC. AGR. ROTA breeding winners, the red revolution is real.
After recent storms and agricultural challenges in Europe, this show meant everything—a celebration of excellence, perseverance, and the bright future of dairy breeding. The atmosphere? “Unreal,” according to competitors. The quality? World-class. The message? Red means business, and DORAL RED daughters are leading the charge into dairy’s next chapter.
When a red cow can place 10th in a stacked Holstein class and then turn around to sweep her breed championships, you know the game has changed forever. Welcome to the red revolution—it’s here to stay.
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North American judges are “blown away.” Italian Brown Swiss just proved they belong on any world stage.
BBS TRACY Grand Champion Brown Swiss Cremona 2025 SOC. AGR. LA FAVOLA – BERTOLETTI
The Brown Swiss competition at Cremona’s International Livestock Exhibition showcased exceptional quality throughout afternoon and evening sessions, with judge Nathan and his wife and associate judge Jenny Thomas presiding over classes that demonstrated Italian breeding excellence
Championship Results
BBS TRACY 1st place Four Year Old & Grand Champion Brown Swiss Cremona 2025 SOC. AGR. LA FAVOLA – BERTOLETTI
Grand Champion: BBS LENUX TRACY from Soc. Agr. La Favola – Bertoletti dominated the mature cow division, winning her fourth lactation class along with Best Udder honors. The Parma-region cow from Emilia-Romagna represents generations of Mountain Farm breeding that judges have found exceptional.
IDRA Intermediate & Reserve Grand Champion Brown Swiss Cremona 2025 GIANNONI MARCO
Reserve Grand Champion: IDRA, a second-calver owned by young breeder Marco, also captured Intermediate Champion honors. The 200-cow operation from Piemonte’s mountain region produced this standout individual, praised for her exceptional mammary system.
Division Champions
Mature Cow Division (Vacche Adulte)
Champion: BBS LENUX TRACY (Soc. Agr. La Favola – Bertoletti)
Reserve Champion: WHITNEY, Third Calver class winner
Honorable Mention: BELLA, 5+ Lactation class winner
Young Cow Division (Vacche Giovani)
Reserve Champion: ARLENE, First Calver Junior class winner with Best Udder
Honorable Mention: LA FAVOLA HOLDRIO CLARA, Second Calver Junior winner with Best Udder
Junior Division (Manze e Giovenche)
Champion: VANI DUA LIPA (Vanifarm di Vaninetti Riccardo), 6-10 Months Junior winner