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      Thoroughbred race punting selections from Guest Selectors.  BOAY'ers post your selections for a meeting and earn BOAY points.  End of Season Prizes.

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      Harness racing punting selections from Guest Selectors.  BOAY'ers post your selections for a meeting and earn BOAY points.  End of Season Prizes.

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  • Blog Entries

         15 comments
      Today we have seen the only remaining truly independent racing industry publication "hang the bridle on the wall."  The Informant has ceased to publish.
      Why?
      In my opinion the blame lies firmly at the feet of the NZRB.  Over the next few days BOAY will be asking some very pertinent questions to those in charge.
      For example:
      How much is the NZRB funded Best Bets costing the industry?  Does it make a profit?  What is its circulation?  800?  Or more?  Does the Best Bets pay for its form feeds?  Was The Informant given the same deal?
      How much does the industry fund the NZ Racing Desk for its banal follow the corporate line journalism?
      Why were the "manager's at the door" when Dennis Ryan was talking to Peter Early?
      Where are the NZ TAB turnover figures?
      The Informant may be gone for the moment but the industry must continue to ask the hard questions.
       
         0 comments
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    • sadly so.. talking lack of security etc,  growing up in Waltham Chch in the early 60's,  a couple of 100m down the road from our house was  a fella (cant recall his name) who  had a small stable with a few harness horses in it,  he would get in a sulky, with a couple of other horses in tow,  he was taking them the 4 ks  around the back streets to Addington for fast work! including crossing to cross the busy  Lincoln Road.  I recall,  how often we would get on our bikes and have mock races with him!  There would be a couple of streets where we would be going as fast as we could!!! Giving ourselves names,  Cardigan Bay and Caduceus,  were a couple on my favs...
    • yes I would, not via social media, direct engagement!   regarding a few of the facebook pages and the likes of here,  I would be monerting them, looking for any common concern/theme and adreess them!  I am sure you would have some of the 'nutters' getting all excited, but I am sure that over time you would learn who to engage with! sigh,  not matter which way you look at it! Racing numbers wise is actually qutie a small industry and any decent leadership group should have little difficulty 'knowing' what the people in their Industry think/want.    hey,  hold on,  "I just need to go and move some chairs around..."
    • Shadwell Stable's Ezum (Essential Quality), a speed-and-fade ninth at longshot odds on seven-furlong debut at Gulfstream Park on Feb. 7, was pounded into even-money favoritism stretching out to a mile Saturday at Colonial Downs and treated his rivals to a 19 1/2-length beating. Soon in front for Flavien Prat, the $485,000 Keeneland November weanling angled down towards the inside and made the running one off the fence while doing it through comfortable fractions up front. Prat held his mount together into the final three furlongs and when he edged ever so slightly forward in the irons, Ezum quickly began to build an imposing lead. Never under anything but hand urging in the long Colonial stretch, the gray colt nevertheless covered his final quarter-mile in an unconscious :23.25 and put the better part of four seconds on his overmatched rivals. The final time of 1:34.23 was achieved over a surface that has been putting up quick times over the last couple of days. A half-brother to Beach Patrol (Lemon Drop Kid), MGISW, $2,532,945, Ezum is one of five winners from seven to race out of a full-sister to MGSW & GISP Allamerican Bertie–the dam of SW Homerun Berti (Forestry)–and a half to MGSW & GISP Hurricane Bertie (Storm Boot). This is also the female family of MGSW & MGISP Sun King and GISW Traitor. Bashful Bertie is also the dam of the 2-year-old filly Bashfully (Life Is Good) and is due to Prince of Monaco this term. 4th-Colonial Downs, $81,150, Msw, 3-14, 3yo, 1m, 1:34.23 (NTR), ft, 19 1/2 lengths. EZUM (c, 3, Essential Quality–Bashful Bertie, by Quiet American) half to Beach Patrol (Lemon Drop Kid), MGISW, $2,532,945. Sales history: $485,000 Wlg '23 KEENOV. Lifetime Record: 2-1-0-0, $45,680. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. O-Shadwell Stable; B-Nancy C Shuford (KY); T-Brad H Cox.   The post Essential Quality’s Ezum E-Z As You Please at Colonial appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • Staff have taken my two down, im doing the farm back here.
    • By Jonny Turner  Tyler Dewe’s been called the punters’ pal at Wingatui before and he hopes his popularity can rise again on Sunday. The Southland trainer will bring two horses north for Dunedin’s annual dual-code meeting with both set to start short-priced favourites. Seaside Charlie will be out to cash in after producing third placings in his two starts to date. Both efforts had real merit, though Dewe admitted he initially wasn’t thrilled with the latest of them. “I thought his first run was big and his second one was a bit average.” “But the form out of it has been franked, both horses that beat him home are handy enough and they have gone on to run good races.” Seaside Charlie’s assignment on Sunday looks the easiest of the three starts he has been aimed at so far. “The only thing is he hasn’t raced on grass before, but he is a really well-gaited horse, so I don’t think it will be a problem.” “I have tinkered with his gear a wee bit, so hopefully that will help him too.” Share A Dream will drop down into a very winnable grade in his Wingatui assignment. The pacer comes into the race after running home well in his last start at Wingatui. “I think for the horse he is he hasn’t been racing with the spark we would expect him to.” “For that reason, I have made a few changes, I have added sliding blinds and I have upped his workload as well.” Unlike his stablemate, Share A Dream brings proven grass track form having placed twice and run fourth in his three starts on turf. Mark Hurrell will link up with both of Dewe’s runners on Sunday. The reinsman will combine with another runner stepping down in grade at Wingatui in the Tony Stratford trained Lydah Valley. Hurrell also drives Born To Rock who was a grass track winner two starts ago at Riverton. View the full article
    • From the outside looking in, Rachel Arnold had everything going for her. Married in her early 20s, she received certification as a veterinary technician, secured her bachelor's degree from Auburn University, followed by her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) from Tuskegee University School of Veterinary Medicine, and had welcomed her son into the world. But inwardly, each step forward in Arnold's personal life and career was fueled by a need to prove that she had grown beyond a childhood of trauma which stemmed from a contentious relationship with her father. In spite of her professional and educational success, Arnold struggled with a secret drug addiction. In her early teens, Arnold was first prescribed anti-anxiety medication. By the time she was 15, Arnold was hooked on pills and also began drinking. By the age of 17, she had escalated to using stimulants such as cocaine and methamphetamines. “I've always had anxiety and struggled with it. But with all of the trauma from my father, I would give anything to feel normal. When I started taking the pills, I felt like I could breathe. You have zero control over things when you're a kid. You just want to be a kid,” said Arnold. “I thought I was managing and functioning fairly well. I didn't see what I was really doing, not just to myself, but to others.” After being diagnosed with Addison's disease and Neurological Lyme disease, Arnold fell further into the toxic cycle of drug use in an attempt to cope. In the meantime, the façade began to fracture, as Arnold and her husband divorced, which resulted in less time spent with her son, and she made the move from Alabama back to her home state of Kentucky. By the age of 34, Arnold was falling in and out of abusive relationships, mixed with unsuccessful trips through rehabilitation programs, and had experienced quite a few run-ins with law enforcement. Though there were many instances of feeling like she'd hit her lowest point, it was the day that Arnold was faced with the reality of potentially losing her son for good that shook her from the substance-induced haze. “His dad, who has always given me chance after chance, said, 'If this doesn't get better, you won't see him.' Knowing that I would lose [my son], that was it for me. I was facing a lot of time [in prison], and the fact that I had so many things amended down, that was huge. It was like someone was giving me this huge opportunity and all I had to do was take it,” said Arnold. “Never have I ever felt peace like I did when I was arrested. I was at the point where I didn't have anywhere to live and I was constantly struggling to feed my addiction. I'll never forget that feeling, it was like an out-of-body experience, thinking, 'Wow, maybe I'll have a chance this time.'” Arnold with Maracuja at Taylor Made | courtesy of Rachel Arnold Arnold's official sobriety date is May 19, 2022 and February of the following year, she was referred to the Stable Recovery program. After working her way through many other rehabilitation programs, Arnold thought she'd seen it all, until she set foot on Taylor Made Farm. Though she was the only female in the program at the time, Arnold never felt out of place. Instead, she once again felt a profound sense of peace. “This program helps you learn how to live sober, not just get sober. The level of care and compassion that these people show is second to none,” said Arnold. “The first time I came in, I remember sitting in a morning meditation session where everything felt so calm. I watched the sun rise in this beautiful place, knowing this experience was being gifted to me, and I thought, 'I'm doing this.'” Stable Recovery also brought Arnold back to her roots by reconnecting her with horses and reminding her why she had originally pursued a career as a veterinarian. From relearning the hands-on basics to working more closely with the broodmares, Arnold rediscovered what it was like to work and live with purpose. Along the way, she developed a special fondness for Maracuja (Honor Code), a graded stakes-winning broodmare residing at Taylor Made. “I absolutely loved her. She could be kind of spicy and I really liked that about her, but she was such a sweet soul. I really enjoyed all of my time that I spent [at Taylor Made]. After that, I went to Spy Coast Farm and worked with Julie, the vet there,” said Arnold. “Working with the horses is something I clung to. Just having them around helps. I realized I didn't need the drugs or alcohol, I could breathe without it, and that's something I had been searching for all of my life.” Arnold graduated from the Stable Recovery program in 2024 and holds the honor of being the program's first female legacy graduate, marking her completion of a full year at Stable Recovery. “It's pretty incredible to sit back and see that we now have another female legacy graduate and one more coming up. I'm so proud of these women,” said Arnold. Arnold at Taylor Made | courtesy of Rachel Arnold Women like Arnold served as inspiration for the Stable Recovery Women's Program at Spy Coast Farm, launched in September 2025, which provides women in recovery the chance to learn and grow within the sport horse industry while working to overcome addiction. Since her graduation from Stable Recovery, Arnold has had her veterinarian license reinstated, restarted her career, reconnected with her family, and relocated to Virginia to live closer to her son, who she now sees regularly. However, her most progressive step forward in recovery was taken when she came face-to-face with her father, a figure who has been the major source of pain and trauma for Arnold. “I found out he overdosed. He was on a ventilator for two weeks and they didn't think he was going to make it. During that time, I decided to go down there and see him. I felt that it was finally time to take that step. He was in a medically induced coma at the time, so my fear was manageable, and I was able to forgive him and find that closure that I never expected was possible,” said Arnold. “I know that if it weren't for God and this program, I wouldn't have been able to do that. The peace I have about it now is such a gift. My father is [currently] recovering and I'm actually able to be happy about it. My boundaries will remain, but I'm happy he's okay.” After spending the majority of her life in fight or flight mode, constantly at war with herself to prove her worth while simultaneously avoiding reality through substance abuse, Arnold is now grounded. And she's perfectly content with that. “I think that's the key, being vulnerable enough so you can figure out what it is you're missing, what you need, and how being sober can get you there. Being sober is everything. Without it, you have nothing.” Stable Recovery is a recovery housing program in Lexington, Kentucky that offers men and women in the early stages of recovery access to 12-step meetings, life skills training and-through the Taylor Made School of Horsemanship-the opportunity to develop a trade in the equine field. To learn more about Stable Recovery, click here. The post The Road Back: ‘Being Sober Is Everything’ – Arnold Reflects On Time In Stable Recovery As Program’s First Female Legacy Graduate appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • The Flat season kicks off in Ireland at the Curragh on Sunday and Brian Sheerin has spoken to some of the main protagonists ahead of the eagerly-anticipated fixture Robson Aguiar has described himself as a big fan of first-season sire Persian Force and said he expects Force Noir to get the Tally-Ho Stud resident off to the best possible start with victory in the opening two-year-old maiden of the year at the Curragh on Sunday.  Through his association with former licence holder Adrian Murray, the Brazilian native has dominated the past three runnings of the five-furlong maiden with Bucanero Fuerte, Arizona Blaze and Power Blue.  Remarkably, all three of those colts went on to win Group races – with Group 1 scorer Power Blue firmly on course for this year's 2,000 Guineas – and Aguiar says that Force Noir, who leads the stable's four-pronged attack on this year's race, compares favourably with those recent winners.  He said, “I think Force Noir is the best of mine. He should be very competitive if he can put in what he is showing us at home. Bull Shark (Mehmas), Ballinea Star (Space Blues) and What A Girl Wants (Persian Force) are really nice horses, but they will probably need the run. Force Noir is more forward than they are. He is the first choice. If the other three can learn something and progress, we will be happy.” Force Noir was a €130,000 purchase by Amo Racing from Tally-Ho Stud at the Goffs Orby Sale last year. He is a half-brother to five individual winners and is widely expected to be sent off a warm order for the Topgear At Capital Stud Irish EBF Maiden at HQ on Sunday.  Aguiar said, “I like the stallion, Persian Force. We have some nice ones by him. Even Force Noir, he is a nice horse, but I think he will have a lot more to give beyond Sunday. He could be a really nice horse later in the season – he's not just an early two-year-old. I have a very nice Persian Force colt that I will run in the Brocklesby and even What A Girl Wants, she should be a nice prospect, so I am very happy with the two-year-olds that I have by Persian Force. The ones I have, I really like them.” Speaking about where Force Noir ranks with regards to the previous winners of this race, he added, “If Force Noir can improve like I think he can, well then he could have the same ability as Power Blue, Arizona Blaze and Bucanero Fuerte. At this point in their careers, he has the same ability, so hopefully he can progress like they did. All of my horses, they start off at only 70 or 80 per cent, so they always improve. Hopefully he can be a high-level horse.” Aguiar will also be double-handed in the feature €100,000 Irish Lincolnshire with Tuscan Hills and Crypto Force. Meanwhile, the trainer provided an upbeat bulletin on Classic contenders Power Blue and Blanc De Blanc.  “Tuscan Hills is not where I want him yet and he will improve a lot from the run,” he said. “Crypto Force is fit from running on the all-weather at Dundalk over the winter and he is a horse who has a lot of back-class and we've planned this race for him for a while.” Aguiar added, “Power Blue is coming along nicely and he will run in a Guineas trial at Leopardstown next month. I am very happy with him and the plan will be to head to Newmarket. I'm not sure if Blanc De Blanc will need another run before the 1,000 Guineas or whether we go straight to Newmarket. I will make a decision closer to the time but she is very well and we are very happy with her.” Murphy Thinks Blackbeard Newcomer Will “Grow A Leg” In Testing Conditions Blackbeard -conformation-shot.jpg" alt="" width="1155" height="840" /> Blackbeard: the sire of Danny Murphy's newcomer Equus Victor | Coolmore Four brave souls will go toe-to-toe with Aguiar in the opening two-year-old maiden of the year. A daunting task, but Danny Murphy, who sends Equus Victor into battle, has never been one to shirk a challenge.  And the Curragh-based handler is reasonably optimistic about his chances of causing an upset with what is set to be the first representation of dual Group 1-winning sire Blackbeard.  “We're surrounded by Brazilians but he's a nice horse,” Murphy joked. “Now, he's out of a Fastnet Rock mare so he will probably want six or seven furlongs in time. But mine are normally sharp and Sunday's race could turn into a six-furlong race on that [heavy] ground.” He added, “Stephen Hillen bred this horse and I met him at Willie Browne's 80th birthday party in the Cashel Palace the other night. I told Stephen that the horse was running on the opening day of the season and he said, 'sure he's a February foal and is a big hardy bugger, so why wouldn't you take your chance?' I have two Blackbeards. I like this fella – and I think he'll grow a leg on this ground – but I have a filly who runs at Dundalk next week and I think she'll nearly win. She's better than this lad.” The opening juvenile race of the year evokes bittersweet memories for Mick Mulvany as it was in this contest 15 years ago when Tough As Nails, the best horse the trainer has ever had through his hands, was demoted to second after causing interference to the Jim Bolger-trained Whip Rule.  Tough As Nails went on to win his maiden before filling the frame in a Group 1 and enjoying a productive spell at stud. Mulvany remains in search of a horse of similar ability and is not in a rush to anoint Lars Soldier (Soldier's Call) as his next stable star.  “He's a grand little horse and he's ready to start but I'd say he could be up against it,” came the trainer's honest appraisal. The opposition to Aguiar is completed by Daniel O'Sullivan's Lamar River (Invincible Army) and Ruler's Control (Territories), trained by Jack Foley, who opted against providing a pre-race comment when contacted. Could that be a tip in itself? Slattery Exudes Confidence In Eastwatch Eastwatch: favourite for the Irish Lincolnshire | Racingfotos.com Trainer Andy Slattery is double-handed in the feature contest and will be hoping that Eastwatch (Make Believe) failing to sell at the Tattersalls Autumn Horses-In-Training Sale will work out to the stable's advantage this season. Eastwatch has sat at the head of the ante-post betting for the valuable handicap ever since the race was first priced up. He is the stable's first string, with Andy Slattery jnr opting to ride the unexposed four-year-old over Highbury See See (Belardo), the mount of Wayne Lordan. Slattery snr said, “Eastwatch is working well and he will love the ground. Everything has gone to plan – he's a mile-and-a-quarter horse but that's what you want to win an Irish Lincoln at this time of year. He's right up there with the best horses we have trained over this sort of trip. He's a big horse and he likes a bit of juice in the ground. He didn't get sold because there was a small vetting issue but he's a high-class horse to have in the yard and hopefully he can show that on Sunday. Highbury See See is in great form as well and seems to have improved from last year. He will love the ground and I am expecting a big run out of him as well. Eastwatch would be the number one, though.” Slattery has gone from strength to strength over both codes in recent seasons and last season's tally of 32 winners on the level represented his greatest haul.  He commented, “We had an unbelievable year last year and we were kind of waiting for it to taper off but it never did. We have a couple of really nice horses – the best bunch I'd say we've ever had.” “He Hasn't Missed A Beat” – O'Callaghan Bids To Get New Season Off To A Flyer  Michael O'Callaghan: aims to be quick out from the blocks at the Curragh | Tattersalls Michael O'Callaghan could be a man worth following on the opening day of the season. Along with fielding Noli Timere (Starspangledbanner) and new recruit Tamam Desert (Sea The Moon) in the Irish Lincoln, the trainer has a host of big chances on the undercard, including the Colin Keane-ridden pair Breaking Dawn (Twilight Son) and Hassiniya (Sands Of Mali), who boast big chances in their respective maidens.  Speaking about his Irish Lincoln challenge, O'Callaghan said, “Tamam Desert went through the ring and she interested us [bought for €41,000]. We thought her form was very good and she had a few little things that needed ironing out when she arrived. She seems to be training well and we're looking forward to getting her started. The race is obviously competitive but we just thought, off her mark [87], we could get her started here and see where we are at. We also run Noli Timere. She is good and forward and has been aimed at the race. She will like the ground. Both fillies are nice and could be up to a higher grade at some point this season. At this stage of the season, I'd probably prefer the chances of Noli Timere.” Breaking Dawn, a likely favourite for the 6f maiden [2.00pm] and Hassaniya, who boasts strong claims in the 1m maiden contest [4.55pm], will be ridden by the recently-engaged and Cheltenham Festival-winning Keane.  O'Callaghan put forward the latter as one he is quite excited about, and said, “Hassaniya is a lovely horse. He came home from the breeze-ups with sore shins and they niggled him for a while. He wasn't really a two-year-old type so, from the word go, we said we'd take our time with him, get one run into him towards the back end and look forward to this year with him, which is what we have done. He hasn't missed a beat and is in good form. The testing ground will be a bit of an unknown but he should be fine on it – the progeny of Sands Of Mali seem to handle testing ground – and he possibly will step out in trip as the season develops, so a still mile at the Curragh should be fine. He's one I am looking forward to.” Few people are better versed in the progeny of Sands Of Mali. O'Callaghan nurtured the talents of one of the stallion's first big-name stars, Copacabana Sands, while his own Classic hopes for this season appear to be pinned on Bamako Beach (Sands Of Mali), who he also acquired from the breeze-up sphere. Copacabana Sands has been moved by her owner Barbara Keller to trainer Andrew Balding while Bamako Beach is on course to get his season underway in a Guineas trial at Leopardstown next month. O'Callaghan concluded, “Bamako Beach is very exciting. He's ready to go but I don't want to bottom him out on heavy ground this early in the season. All of the bigger targets for him are in the spring and summer. He may run in a trial at Leopardstown and he has plenty of entries. He could go for the French 2,000 Guineas, the Irish 2,000 Guineas and even the German edition. He's done very well over the winter and we are looking forward to him.” The post Which One Of Aguiar’s Newcomers Is He Most Excited About And Who Are The Dangers? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
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