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    • DEL MAR, CA – As Breeders' Cup hopefuls continue their final preparations in the early morning hours for racing on Friday and Saturday, the Del Mar paddock will transform into an auction ring for the second annual Keeneland Championship Sale on Wednesday evening. Last year, a share in Horse of the Year Flightline (by Tapit) was the headliner when it went for $2.5-million. Once again looking to create a high-energy atmosphere, Keeneland has put together a robust slate of offerings, which include fractional interests in three racehorses currently in-training–two are intended for the Breeders' Cup on Saturday. Stallion shares and breeding rights will take center stage.   The catalogue includes: – A 25% fractional interest in Jose D'Angelo trainee Bentornato (Valiant Minister) (Hip 7), who is considered a leading contender in the GI Cygames Breeders' Cup Sprint on Saturday. The 4-year-old Florida-bred ridgling was the runner-up in the 2024 Breeders' Cup Sprint to Straight No Chaser (Speightster) and was last seen winning the Louisville Thoroughbred Society Stakes where he earned a 108 Beyer. The interest is consigned by D'Angelo, agent. – A 25% interest in GISW & million-dollar earner Mullikin (Violence) (Hip 9), who is also a contender for the Breeders' Cup Sprint. Owned by WinStar Farm, the dark bay ran third in last year's race. The 5-year-old was the first-top level winner for trainer Rodolphe Brisset. Plans are to retire Mullikin after the Breeders' Cup and he will stand the 2026 season at WinStar. Not This Time | Sarah Andrew Potentially the most sought after stallion share on offer is a 2% fractional interest, consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent for Aaron & Marie Jones LLC, in the red-hot Not This Time (by Giant's Causeway) (Hip 3). The sire of nine Grade I winners and a stud fee of $250,000, the Taylor Made resident is the #2 'General Sire' this year with more than $19-million in progeny earnings. Keeneland reported that the purchaser will receive all income associated with this share from the 2025 breeding season. Last week, Taylor Made's Travis White spoke with TDN's Bill Finley about the opportunity. Other stallion shares in the catalogue include a pair of 'TDN Rising Stars' presented by Hagyard in Life Is Good (by Into Mischief) (Hip 1), consigned by Christie DeBernardis, agent, and MGISW Mindframe (Constitution) (Hip 2), consigned by Claiborne Farm, agent. The 4-year-old, who will stand at Claiborne in 2026, will make his final appearance at the racetrack in the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic on Saturday. Lifetime breeding rights in Constitution (by Tapit) (Hip 4), the property of Randy Gullatt, and Nyquist (Uncle Mo) (Hip 5), consigned by Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent, will also be part of the bidding. Last but not least, a 20% fractional interest in recently retired Horse of the Year and broodmare prospect Thorpedo Anna (Fast Anna) (Hip 6) is consigned by McPeek Racing Stables, agent for Richard M. Edwards. “We've designed this as a party with a sale and I think now that we proved ourselves last year, people really understand the concept which is exciting because the goal has always been to combine the social aspect with the importance of the Breeders' Cup,” Vice President of Sales at Keeneland Tony Lacy said. “We have some outstanding offerings. The Not This Time share is really unprecedented and it gives unique access to the stallion. The chance to own a piece of Thorpedo Anna makes this sale diverse and we are looking forward to it.” Attendance to the Championship Sale is by invitation or request with both buyers and sellers individually invited to attend. Qualified, registered bidders may participate in person at the event, remotely via Keeneland's online auction platform or by phone with a Keeneland representative. The Championship Sale event will begin at 5 p.m. PT. The sale will begin at 6:30 p.m. PT. Click here to view the online catalogue. The post Keeneland Championship Sale Ups The Ante At Del Mar appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • Trainer Bill Mott said there is a "possibility" Sovereignty will miss the Nov. 1 Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) after the colt registered a "mild fever" Oct. 27.View the full article
    • 5.50 for Republican Party first NZ horse home three or four months ago when Leap To Fame was so short was great value and me and a few mates jumped on that. I see the option is gone now.
    • It is called the Breeders' Cup for a reason. Yes, the commercial sector revolves to a neurotic degree around stallions, which is why the stakes are so high for the colts at Del Mar this weekend. But breeding those horses in the first place was at least as much about the mares, meaning that many of us will be no less engrossed by the auctions staged in Lexington immediately afterwards. By the same token, our curiosity about Incredibolt–who last weekend stole a march on his peers lining up for the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile–is certainly not confined to his sire. True, Bolt d'Oro finds himself at an interesting crossroads, with the upgraded mares he secured as champion freshman of 2022 still cycling through. Incredibolt belongs to his bubble crop, sired at $20,000 as his first runners approached the gate, whereas his current weanlings were conceived at $60,000. As such, his reversion to $25,000 for next spring could prove fairly temporary–especially if he turns out to have a Derby colt on his hands. Yet two other things immediately leaped out from Incredibolt's Churchill reconnaissance in the GIII Street Sense Stakes. One was a mare; the other, a mare. The first of these was Globe Trot (A.P. Indy), dam not only of Bolt d'Oro but also of Global Campaign, here denied a first graded success by his own half-brother. Global Campaign is the sire of Universe, who started favorite and led at the eighth pole, only to be run down late by Incredibolt. As it happens, the game is already up for Global Campaign as a Bluegrass stallion. But those who have welcomed him to Korea only had to wait a couple of hours for the breakthrough instead to be made by Warming in the GIII Autumn Miss Stakes at Santa Anita. We'll return to Global Campaign below, but the fact that Globe Trot was by A.P. Indy requires us first to consider the mare who stands opposite in the pedigree of Incredibolt: his granddam, Sapphiresndiamonds (Mineshaft). For here we may have one of those mares that turns out to have smuggled through some very special genes, even though they did not help her own cause in either her first or second careers.   She arrived in the Saratoga sale ring in 2006 with an extraordinary pedigree, her grandsire and granddam together richly condensing one of the most potent brands in the modern breed. Mineshaft's sire A.P. Indy was of course by Seattle Slew out of Weekend Surprise, herself by Secretariat out of Lassie Dear (Buckpasser). And the dam of Sapphiresndiamonds–a mare named Unbridled Lassie (Unbridled), a legitimate stakes performer albeit flattered by a catalogued Grade I podium (beaten 29 lengths into third)–was out of Lassie Dear's daughter by Seattle Slew, Lassie Connection. It feels scarcely necessary to reprise the dynasty spreading beneath Lassie Dear: besides Weekend Surprise with her two Classic winners, among others she produced Group 1 winner Wolfhound (Nureyev); the dam of Lemon Drop Kid (Kingmambo); and the granddam of G1 Derby winner Ruler Of The World (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and his half-brother Duke Of Marmalade (Ire) (Danehill), winner of five consecutive Group 1s. Next to that lot, Lassie Connection must be acknowledged one of the matriarch's lesser achievers, albeit she did produce three graded stakes performers plus the hard-knocking gelding Winning Connection (St. Jovite), whose 21 wins in 74 starts included a couple in black-type company. But you can certainly see why Courtlandt Farm might have viewed her daughter by Mineshaft–himself bringing another noble family into play, as a grandson of Up the Flagpole (Hoist the Flag)–as a future broodmare worth every cent of $1.45 million, whatever she might achieve on the racetrack. In the event, Sapphiresndiamonds made nine starts without winning, though placed several times. But nor did she particularly repair matters as a broodmare, before sadly disappearing from the record after six named foals. None brought a major dividend in the ring, while only a retained son of War Front managed to scrape third in a stakes race. Yet nobody could yet have formed a judgement when her third foal, by Awesome Again, failed to meet her reserve at just $45,000 at the 2014 September Sale. Some kind of deal must have been struck, however, and more than once: the three wins Sapphire Spitfire eventually managed at minor tracks came in one name; her first two foals were registered to another; and ditto her third. But the breeders of her next two, both sons of Bolt d'Oro, are Deann Baer and Greg Baer DVM–and their choice of the Spendthrift sire has certainly paid off. The first of these colts brought $400,000 as a Keeneland September yearling, a steep increase on Sapphire Spitfire's previous returns. That reflected good work by both parents: the sire had just been champion freshman, while the mare's first foal, Fire On Time (Not This Time), had meanwhile won six of 13 starts, lately achieving two placings in graded stakes. The second Bolt d'Oro colt didn't fare quite so well in the ring, sold to Pin Oak for $75,000 the following September. But Incredibolt has now proved himself a very alert buy. If consolidating from here, in fact, he could become an intriguing stallion prospect–not so much for the endeavors of his immediate family, as for the way he concentrates all those A.P. Indy vibes. Because that cluster in his granddam, remember, is compounded behind his sire… Global Campaign | Sarah Andrew Campaign Derailed In The Primaries To that extent, Globe Trot would be an interesting factor in Incredibolt's pedigree just as an anonymous “A.P. Indy mare.” But she was so much more than that. Globe Trot ruptured a mesentery in 2016, delivering her third foal. Her first, by Distorted Humor, became the Grade II-placed, multiple stakes winner Sonic Mule; the second was Bolt d'Oro; and the third, Global Campaign. What a pity that she was not granted time to bequeath a filly, as well. Her own dam Trip (Lord At War {Arg}) won three graded stakes and was a half-sister to the listed-winning dam of the flying Zensational (Unbridled's Song). Globe Trot was sold to WinStar in training, after her owner's death, and added a third career win (all on synthetic) in their silks without being able to extend the stakes success of her first four dams. WinStar sold her first two foals, including Bolt d'Oro for $630,000, but did then stay in for a stake in her last one. Global Campaign reached his peak at four, winning the GI Woodward Stakes, and was welcomed back to his native farm with no fewer than 177 mares in his debut book. Incredibly, given that a horse of his profile can hardly be said to have looked at the pitcher with a single crop of juvenile starters, last spring he was down to four. His syndicate was left with no choice but to let him seek pastures new. But perhaps Warming will not be the last maturing talent among that big first crop to restore the dignity of Global Campaign. His winners have actually come at a higher ratio than many second-crop peers who are perceived to be thriving. We wish him luck in his new home. Time After Time After his GIII Jessamine Stakes trifecta, last weekend Not This Time went one better with the superfecta in the GIII Bryan Station Stakes. Nearly as astonishing is that he had seven of the 12 starters. Again, of course, in a turf race. Which is why the most astounding thing of all, as I keep saying, is how long it is taking the top programs to try his stock in Europe. And I'll keep saying it, until it appears somebody might be listening. Of six foals so far trained in Britain or Ireland, he has already had a G2 Norfolk Stakes winner at Royal Ascot. Not This Time | Sarah Andrew The horse who dominated his latest “crowd scene” on the Keeneland turf circuit, Troubleshooting, is out of a mare by Into Mischief. Hardly a noted turf influence! In fairness, however, she won her stakes on synthetic–on which terrain her own mother ran second in the GII Hollywood Oaks. The next dam Smooth Player (Bertrando) had won that same prize when contested on dirt, but was also a Grade II winner on turf. Evidently Not This Time was tapping into a pretty versatile seam here. His stock's record on grass was hardly the principal driver behind the purchase this year of 17 seven-figure yearlings by Not This Time. These famously belong to his first crop conceived at more than $45,000, and the classy dirt mares he has since entertained will doubtless be diluting all this chlorophyll soon. But the fact remains that of nine Breeders' Cup entries for the year's leading turf sire, only two are on dirt. He actually has a shot at another trifecta in the GI Juvenile Fillies Turf! Don't get me wrong: this is all to the good. If Not This Time ends up a reincarnation of his sire, he will not just be straddling surfaces, but oceans. The post Breeding Digest: A Priceless Combination That Did Not Come Dear appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • DEL MAR, CA – A swing through the course of American Thoroughbred history yields the widely-accepted conclusion that dirt plays the king in these parts, while turf is the patient understudy offstage left–turns are configured in that direction over here. It was not all that long ago that droves of U.S. tracks debated whether putting in a bladed surface and acquiring something called a going stick made any sense. Progressive places like Del Mar's Thoroughbred Club damned the salt in the marine layer and forged ahead with its first course around 1960, roughly when J.F.K. won the first televised Presidential debate against Nixon but supposedly tanked over the radio. Switching to the subject of modern racing on the turf, one could argue that when the Breeders' Cup World Championships brought John Gaines's vision into reality by the mid-80s the American grass course entered a new phase. Mind you, Europeans separated by a common surface took full advantage by laying waste as Breeders' Cup turf conquerors. Over the last thirteen renditions of the World Championships, the Southern California set of lawn specialists have had their chance on nine occasions at both Santa Anita and Del Mar to play a series of veritable home games. Knowing the ground, denizens could settle comfortably, dart through traffic troubles like they were on the nearby 5 and surf versus the best in the world. Desert Code takes the Breeders' Cup Sprint | Sarah Andrew Visits to the top of the podium over the long history of the Breeders' Cup have been few and far between though for turfers who call Southern California home–no disrespect to the accomplishments of Desert Code (E Dubai), California Flag (Avenue of Flags), War Chant (Danzig), Mizdirection (Mizzen Mast), Obviously (Ire) (Choisir {Aus}), Stormy Liberal (Stormy Atlantic), Belvoir Bay (GB) (Equiano {Fr}), and lest we forget, that late run from Richard Mandella trainee Johar (Gone West) in 2003. However, we should not lose sight of the fact that this is turf racing and that means trends change on a dime. Just ask the Japanese about how fortunes can change. It's time to face facts though. Opportunities for the local cadre to be welcomed to the winner's circle by Drew Fleming and Dora Delgado are coming to an end for the time being in the Golden State since the purple bunting is set to ship to Keeneland next year, and then head eastward to the new and sparkling beautiful Belmont Park for 2027. That news does not mean the World Championships will not return to the left coast, but what is even more undeniable is that the chances across seven races on their home turf are here. Could this be the year when California-based grass horses become the sultans of their own sod?   Where the Turf Meets the Nuances Talking with those who hang their shingle outside Southern California shedrows on the eve of this week's Breeders' Cup turf events, there is a healthy respect across the board for who and what they are up against. Trainer John Sadler | Benoit Facing a future legend like Goldikova (Ire) (Anabaa), who dominated the GI Breeders' Cup Mile for three years running starting in 2008, is pretty much business as usual when you enter a turf race during the World Championships according to trainer John Sadler. The veteran conditioner also said that knowing the ins-and-outs of the Jimmy Durante oval certainly cannot hurt. “Having raced on this surface at Del Mar for like a million years it's a little nuanced,” Sadler said. “For instance, with several Breeders' Cup races going a mile on this course the best possible post would be on the inside. I'm not saying you can't have a winner from way outside, but it's a fairly short run to the first turn. So either you need to get up and over or drop back at safe ground. These turns are kind of tight and that means you have to have a horse that can handle them.” Sadler, who has relished some seminal Breeders' Cup wins on the dirt, has never hit the board with one of his grass runners over the three Del Mar Breeders' Cups. That could change with juvenile colt GSW Hey Nay Nay (Ire) (No Nay Never), who the trainer says is advanced despite being lightly-raced when compared to international competition he will face in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Stakes. “Hey Nay Nay is a 2-year-old who broke his maiden early in what was a good time at Santa Anita,” said Sadler. “He shipped successfully to Monmouth for a stake and his numbers have kept improving. When he won the Del Mar Juvenile Turf that told us that preparing for the Breeders' Cup was in order. The Europeans are good, there's no question about that, but he's going to be in his element. He's a home court kid, in the same stall he was in this summer and he's a little more like a 3-year-old than a 2-year-old.”   You Want a Tactical Tesla Trainer Michael McCarthy, who also has an entry slated for the Juvenile Turf in SW Stark Contrast (Oscar Performance), said that the turf course at Del Mar contrasts on several levels with the one at Santa Anita, which is a place where they race nine months out of the year. Stark Contrast is young but learning | Benoit “The marine layer at Del Mar gives the course a bit more juice, maybe a touch softer this time of year than we are used to in the summer or at Santa Anita where the stretch is longer and the turns are more forgiving,” McCarthy said. “With Stark Contrast, he's more of a medium-sized horse and even though he is still learning the game and doing some baby-ish things, he's getting better all the time. He's got a win over the surface down there [maiden special weight Sept. 6], which bodes well for him.” Speaking of members of McCarthy's shedrow with seaside turf experience, Formidable Man (City of Light) clearly has an affinity for the sea air. Owned by La Jolla residents William & Suzanne Warren, the 4-year-old colt can be defined as a proverbial 'horse for the course' since he owns a perfect six-for-six record over the local strip. The winner last out of the GII Del Mar Mile Stakes Aug. 30 will contest the GI FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile–a race which saw McCarthy entrant Smooth Like Strait (Midnight Lute) finish as the runner-up in 2021. “Horses that are tactical, ones that can lay close and finish, seem to have the best type of style,” said McCarthy. “Formidable Man has spent significant time down there, which has been a priority for us with Mr. and Mrs. Warren being so close. But you know, it's the Breeder's Cup. It's the best horses in the world, the best riders in the world and the biggest stage. I say this all the time, I hope everybody's horse is doing as best as they can possibly be doing and everyone gets the trip they are looking for. We'll see what happens.” In what promises to be a salty Breeders' Cup Mile, also making an appearance is one of Tim Yakteen's all-time greatest runners in the Joe and Debby McCloskey homebred, Johannes (Nyquist). Last year, the dark bay–who is racing for the final time in the Mile before being retired to stud at Claiborne Farm for the 2026 season–was second to More Than Looks (More Than Ready) in this very race. According to the trainer, coming back to Del Mar his team always tries to create a seamless transition from Arcadia–same ship, offloading, stall location and routine, which all lead to race day. Johannes with that long extension working at Santa Anita | Horsephotos “We'll do the same thing we did last year,” said Yakteen. “We'll have our final prep up here [Santa Anita], and then we'll ship in and spend the week down at Del Mar.” Yakteen said that he agrees that a tactical horse like his can have an advantage at a place like Del Mar. “Johannes has versatility,” said Yakteen. “That means that when you have a paceless race you can sit on or near the speed, but you can also lay back when it's there. When I was with [Charlie] Whittingham, we had a mare named Flawlessly who never lost at Del Mar. She was just like a Tesla. When you called on her, she was instantaneously there. Johannes is the same way.”   Get your Motorious runnin'… If there are advantages to playing a home game at Del Mar, then not having to ship across the country or for that matter, the world, would certainly qualify. One of the top turf trainers around is Phil D'Amato and he says that eliminating as many variables as possible is key. “I think knowing the turf at Del Mar is important because to me this time of year it plays more like a European-style grass course than what we have at Santa Anita,” said D'Amato. “But having said that, shipping a horse across the country is what is really challenging. When you don't have to do it, that's a big advantage. We are going to be at Del Mar anyway this time of year, so it all works out as we attempt to run our best.” Motorious cools his engine down | Benoit D'Amato should have one of the top contenders in the GI Prevagen Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in MGSW Motorious (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), who earned a return ticket to the World Championships after he won for the third time in a row the GIII Green Flash Handicap at Del Mar Aug. 30. In the 2024 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, the gelding was the runner-up, while Richard Baltas trainee Ag Bullet (Twirling Candy), who should also be back again this year, checked in third. “We've been pointing Motorious to this spot ever since the Green Flash,” his trainer said. “He is definitely in his zone right now of consistency, so now it is just about keeping him there. Anytime a horse goes 58 and change like he did recently, that tips me off that you know they are doing well.” D'Amato will also send out stalwart turfer GISW & MGSW Gold Phoenix (Ire) (Belarado {Ire}), who has a particular affinity for the Jimmy Durante course. Now a 7-year-old, the gelding is poised to enter his fourth GI Longines Breeders' Cup Turf, which is a race he finished fourth in last year. “Del Mar is definitely more of a favorite for Gold Phoenix than Santa Anita,” D'Amato said. “So, I think that European-type turf course helps his chances. He's a late turn of foot kind of runner. Watching him compete against the best in the world will tell us where we stand.”   Rispoli Weighs In If you are a Southern California barn who is going to wage a Breeders' Cup turf war then you need someone capable in the saddle. Umberto Rispoli is generally regarded as a top jockey in the region with extensive experience on the turf. You will not find him exuding overconfidence because he is prosaic when it comes to the level of competition that is coming. Umberto Rispoli with the eyes of Johannes | Benoit “These are global riders who are used to international travel,” Rispoli said. “When you are good, you're good. You can ride everywhere. That what it means to be top class.” Rispoli did say that knowing the course at Del Mar and its tricks is important. Jockeys will of course walk on the turf and get a feel for what is under them. They will know how much 'give' they are facing and whether their mount needs to be placed within a race. “The turf plays very different in the summer,” he said. “Del Mar is a really special track for me and I always enjoy seeing how much it changes by the fall. It's a totally different grip for the horses. During the summer the grass is shorter and really quick and speed favoring, plus the rail is out. So, it is really tough to come from behind and the speed horses win.” Rispoli mentioned the marine layer come November and how much moisture can affect the Jimmy Durante by the time the Breeders' Cup rolls around. The rider will have several chances on the grass since he has decided to ride Johannes in the Mile over Formidable Man. “I am hoping to upgrade one position in the Breeders' Cup with Johannes,” the jockey said. He will also get a leg up on D'Amato runners Gold Phoenix, Mission of Joy (Kitten's Joy) in the GI Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf and also have a chance in the GI Juvenile Turf Sprint aboard Later Than Planned (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) who is an also-eligible. “Some of those older horses like Gold Phoenix are fighters and they really like to go to Del Mar for probably the breeze, the different air and it's just fresh,” he said. “You go out there and need a jacket early in the morning because of that breeze. It's pretty cool and fresh. They feel regenerated and I think it's medicinal for them.” A young colt, Later Than Planned found his way to sprinting when D'Amato and Rispoli figured out that cutting back was just the ticket. In the GIII Del Mar Juvenile Turf Stakes Sept. 7, the colt finished a disappointing seventh. “We started working him as a pure miler, he was doing really well and broke his maiden at Del Mar,” said Rispoli. “But in the juvenile race there he never relaxed and never dropped the bridle. By the end, he was just an empty horse because he was wasting too much energy. Looking at the Speakeasy [Stakes] at Santa Anita made sense and he settled nicely behind the speed.” Later Than Planned timed his run well in the Speakeasy | Benoit The result was Later Than Planned got his picture taken, which set him up for the Breeders' Cup. “I think the key [in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf] is to find yourself a good position just behind one of the favorites before you hit the turn,” Rispoli said. “Then he can get me to the quarter pole. Once I turn for home, I would have my right or left clear and let him go.” Like his Southern California compatriots, Umberto Rispoli is a human cloud server when it comes to marine layers, tight turns, short stretches and the Jimmy Durante grass. With heaps of local knowledge about the Del Mar turf, barns and their riders will have the opportunity to apply what they have learned on the biggest stage in North America once more. This is the Breeders' Cup and that means that they are still going to have their hands full as seven chances await. Are they sitting on the precipice of turf racing glory? It is their turf, of course. The post Their Turf, Of Course: SoCal Grass Barns Chase Breeders’ Cup Glory 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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