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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
      Duplicate to remove spam.

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    • In this continuing series, Alan Carasso takes a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for this coming Monday running at Kyoto Racecourse: Monday, January 12, 2026 4th-KYO, ¥12,330,000 ($78k), Newcomers, 3yo, 1800m CHURCHILL DEUCE (JPN) (c, 3, Into Mischief–Beautiful Gift, by Medaglia d'Oro) carries the Kieffers Co. Ltd (Do Deuce) silks and is out of the 2021 GIII Santa Ysabel Stakes winner and GII Santa Anita Oaks runner-up who was purchased by Katsumi Yoshida for $2 million with this colt in utero at the 2022 Fasig-Tipton November Sale. A Feb. 22 foal, Churchill Deuce changed hands for the equivalent of $1.13 million at the 2023 JRHA Select Sale. Beautiful Gift is a half-sister to GSW & GISP Chitu (Henny Hughes). O-Kieffers Co Ltd; B-Shunsuke Yoshida; T-Mikio Matsunaga AMERICAN STYLE (c, 3, Gun Runner–Medina Thunder, by Thunder Gulch) cost Yoshizawa Stable $400,000 at Keeneland September in 2024 and is a half-brother to SW & GSP Lights of Medina (Eskendereya)–the dam of Grade III winner Pioneer of Medina (Pioneerof the Nile)–and the dual stakes-placed Releasethethunder (More Than Ready). Lights of Medina's 4-year-old daughter June Eos (Constitution), also a $400,000 KEESEP grad, is a two-time winner in Japan. Christophe Lemaire has been enticed to ride. O-Yoshizawa Stable Co Ltd; B-International Equities Holding Inc (KY); T-Hideaki Fujiwara LORD VERITAS (JPN) (c, 3, Essential Quality–Bodhicitta {GB}, by Showcasing {GB}) is the first foal from his dam, a winner of the GII Yellow Ribbon Handicap and twice placed in the GI Gamely Stakes before selling to K I Farm for $450,000 at the 2022 Fasig-Tipton February Sale. The Feb. 14 produce is the first Japanese starter for Essential Quality, who hails from the same female family as champion Japanese freshman sire and Triple Crown winner Contrail (Jpn). O-Lord Horse Co Ltd; B-K I Farm; T-Yasuo Tomomichi The post Seven-Figure Into Mischief Colt Debuts at Kyoto appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • Dutch Girl Holdings and Irving Ventures' Queen Maxima is set to make her 5-year-old debut in the $100,000 Las Cienegas Stakes (G3T) Jan. 11, where she will face eight rivals in the 6 1/2-furlong event over Santa Anita Park's downhill turf course.View the full article
    • The mission to open racing up to a neurodiverse audience will move to a new continent this spring when Dubai stages an autism-friendly race day.View the full article
    • A very live 5-2 chance from a 9-2 morning line, Mike and Katherine Ball homebred CHIEF WALLABEE (c, 3, Constitution–A La Lucie, by Medaglia d'Oro) traveled into the race strongly approaching the stretch and pounced on favored The Puma (Essential Quality) with just under a furlong to travel and proved a very impressive winner of what appeared to be a very hot Gulfstream maiden Saturday afternoon. The effort makes him the newest 'TDN Rising Star' presented by Hagyard. Having hinted at considerable ability in his morning trials, including a bullet half-mile over the testing surface at Payson Park in :48 1/5 (1/48) Jan. 4, Chief Wallabee settled in about fifth position through the opening exchanges of the seven-furlong contest as a four-way battle for the lead ensued on the pointy end. The Puma, off to an awkward beginning from gate five–one to the inside of Chief Wallabee–was hustled up into contention by Javier Castellano for the Mage connections, but as a result of the slow start, he had no choice but to go wide and took the worst of it four deep around the turn. In the meantime, Chief Wallabee was following the move of Nanosecond (Into Mischief) on the swing for home and had first crack at The Puma, who was handled with supreme confidence. In front approaching the eighth pole, The Puma was ultimately no match for Chief Wallabee, who descended on the leader quickly with 150 yards to race and was taken in hand under the wire, scoring by about 2 1/2 lengths. Chief Wallabee is the second 'Rising Star' in three days for Constitution, whose 3-year-old son Touch of Fire won his maiden by seven convincing lengths (81 Beyer) over the Fair Grounds turf course on Thursday. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0. O/B-Mike and Katherine Ball (KY); T-Bill Mott.   The post Constitution Firster Chief Wallabee Runs To ‘TDN Rising Star’ Honors appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • The champion freshman and general sire Distorted Humor was euthanized Saturday morning at the age of 33 due to the infirmaries of old age, WinStar Farm announced via press release. A 1993 son of champion Forty Niner out of Danzig's Beauty, by Danzig, Distorted Humor was an accomplished racehorse. Bred in Kentucky by Charles Nuckols Jr. and Sons and owned by R.L. Reineman and Prestonwood Farms and trained by Walden, Distorted Humor won the 1998 GII Commonwealth Breeders' Cup Stakes at Keeneland. He set a track record in the race, getting seven furlongs in 1:20.50, a mark that stood until 2020. He also captured the GII Churchill Downs Handicap, the GIII Ack Ack Handicap, and the GIII Salvator Mile Handicap, amassing earnings of $769,964. A perennial leading sire, Distorted Humor entered stud in 1999. He topped all freshman sires in 2002, and he was North America's leading general sire in 2011, the same year, his son and leading earner, Drosselmeyer ($3,728,170) captured the GI Breeders' Cup Classic for WinStar. Drosselmeyer was also a Classic winner, having won the 2010 GI Belmont Stakes. In 2003, Distorted Humor's Funny Cide, bred by WinStar and campaigned by Sackatoga Stable, won the GI Kentucky Derby and the GI Preakness Stakes on his way to a career bankroll of $3,529,412. Distorted Humor is the sire of four champions–Funny Cide, Eclipse champion 3-Year-Old colt; Pathfork, champion 2-Year-Old colt in Ireland; Regal Ransom, champion 3-Year-Old colt in the United Arab Emirates; and Ontario-bred Hillaby, champion female sprinter in Canada. Distorted Humor helped WinStar scale new heights as a breeding operation. From 23 crops, the stallion sired an impressive 167 black-type winners, 72 graded stakes winners, and his runners have amassed earnings approaching $170 million. Counted among his top runners are Grade I winners Drosselmeyer, Funny Cide, Commentator, Any Given Saturday, Flower Alley, Hystericalady, Boisterous, Awesome Humor, and so many others. The late WinStar sire was also an influential broodmare sire. He is responsible for such outstanding horses as North America's all-time leading earner Arrogate ($17,422,600), international star Golden Sixty (Aus), last year's GI Florida Derby winner Tappan Street, Elate, Practical Joke, New Money Honey, as well as WinStar stallions Constitution, Life Is Good, and Patch Adams, and was the leading broodmare sire of 2017. “It's a deeply sad day for all of us at WinStar Farm to lose a generational sire like Distorted Humor,” said Elliott Walden, president, CEO, and racing manager of WinStar. “We take solace in the legacy he leaves behind. His sons and daughters have won on the biggest stages, and his daughters are proving to be exceptional producers. His impact on the breed is undeniable and will be felt for generations to come.” The post Distorted Humor Euthanized at 33 Due to Infirmaries of Old Age appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • 10th-SA, $70k, Msw, 3yo, f, 6fT, 7:30 p.m. ET BAILARINA (Uncle Mo) is a full-sister to SW and GIII Delaware Oaks third Mo Shopping and a half to the versatile Always Shopping (Awesome Again), winner of the GII Gazelle Stakes on the main track and the GIII La Prevoyante Stakes on the grass. The filly's dam Stopshoppingmaria (More Than Ready) also handled a variety of surfaces, with runner-up efforts in the GI Frizette Stakes and GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and a victory in the Ladies' Turf Sprint Stakes. The Feb. 27 foal made $450,000 at the 2023 Fasig-Tipton November Sale and $650,000 as a Fasig-Tipton Saratoga yearling. The competition includes Forced Entry (Charlatan), a daughter of SW Violent Times (Violence) who fetched $375,000 at Keeneland September in 2024. TJCIS PPs 4th-TAM, $55k, Msw, 3yo, f, 1m 40yds, 1:59 p.m. SUMMER GREY (Constitution) has pole position for Repole Stable and trainer Todd Pletcher as he ships in from Palm Beach Downs. The grey filly is a daughter of one-time $775,000 breezer White Mischief (Into Mischief), a half-sister to Grade II-winning turf distaffer Leggs Galore (Bayern) and a full-sister to the stakes-placed Victorious. Hailing from the deeper female family of Conveyance (Indian Charlie), Summer Grey was purchased for $325,000 at KEESEP in 2024. TJCIS PPs The post Uncle Mo Filly Bailarina Kicks Off On the Turf at Santa Anita appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • As old-fashioned as it may now seem, in this small corner of the bloodstock world a strong personal preference it still held for the Derby above all races. And by that, of course, we are talking about the original version, at Epsom, with that piece of wood at the end of the unique mile-and-a-half challenge which was made famous in a quote from the revered breeder Federico Tesio.  We can't all agree on everything though, can we? That would just be dull. But beyond the stifling and shouty sphere of social media, it is still possible to have reasoned debate, disagree with your colleague, while shaking hands and remaining friends.  So here, on this mostly civilised platform that is the TDN, we will from time to time ask a burning question of some of the industry's finest minds and put their answers to you for consideration. Lately, the term 'stallion-making race' appears to be used with more frequency, but what does it actually mean? And does such a concept exist beyond individual preferences for certain races or certain horses who have won said races?  We asked the experts, and it is worth tuning back in on Tuesday to hear what the same panel has to say about what makes a good broodmare sire. But first, let's hear whether they have a favourite race when it comes to stallion selection, or if indeed they believe in the concept of a stallion-making race. Ed Harper, Whitsbury Manor Stud “Absolutely not. If Northern Dancer had not raced would he have had a reduced pre-potency? The genetics of a stallion or any horse are already determined no matter what race(s) they win. The racecourse just gives us a few more clues. People who believe in 'stallion-making races' are confusing cause and effect. “When we bought Showcasing I had a few people tell me the Gimcrack hadn't produced a stallion of note since Mill Reef. I'm pleased we ignored them.” Kirsten Rausing, Lanwades “The answer is no, not really. The thing is it's so difficult to find any horse apt to make a stallion nowadays, so you can't just start out by pinpointing a race and going that way. You have to look at what possible horses are about and, as can be seen in the English and Irish stallion park, we are reaching a very dangerous level of low numbers in terms of stallions available, which I think is highly alarming. “One major contributory factor is surely that so many horses are nowadays gelded – so many Group winners and Group 1 winners are geldings – and I think my position on that is fairly well known. “From my own point of view, I can say that I very much like and have had great success with winners of the French Derby, for obvious reasons. I've had two horses: Hernando, who won it when it was the full mile and a half, and obviously Study Of Man, who won it at the slightly shorter distance. As we know, it has produced a whole lot of good stallions, particularly in recent years, but even going back historically, it was always a very good race for producing stallions.  “However, it has to be said that it's probably quite difficult to attract mares for that sort of horse nowadays. The stallion stud has to very significantly support such horses.” Joe Foley, Ballyhane Stud “I think the concept of a stallion-making race is a myth perpetuated by stallion marketeers. “I'm going to give you a few examples. Let's go to some of the stallions that have been very successful in the last number of years, or over the last decade, and see if they won stallion-making races. “I'll start with Havana Grey, who won the Flying Five and the Molecomb, neither of which is classed as a stallion-making race. And Mehmas, who won the Richmond Stakes and the July Stakes, both races with very poor stallion-making credentials. “And Dubawi won the National Stakes and Jacques de Marois, he didn't win the perceived big stallion-making races. So, if you go through horses like that, it's very clear to see that when it comes to stallion-making races, there's no such thing.  “Just because a horse wins a certain race doesn't make him a better stallion prospect. The best racehorses tend to make the best stallions and, as we see from the international classifications every year, the quality of races changes year on year.” Alex Scrope, pedigree expert and matings advisor “I looked through Group 1 results for the last 20 years, at different distances, and I think, as much as anything else, it's down to fashion. Now, what I think has happened is that suddenly mile-and-a-half horses went completely out of fashion 10 years ago or so, and they weren't being used anymore. “I've always thought, looking at Pour Moi and Wings Of Eagles, they both ran the most incredible races in the Derby. You'd have given your back teeth to have had either one of those, but they couldn't fill them. To me, they both had such extraordinary speed, as well as having the stamina, and they both went from last to first from Tattenham Corner, past some very good horses. “For me, the ultimate test is the Derby, because they've got to have so many things that other horses don't. It's not like Newmarket or York, or any other track you'd like to think of. They've got to have balance, they've got to have speed, and they've got to be really quick at changing tack, because things always go wrong in the race. So they've always got to change plan. I think it's a great test of a jockey as well, because they have no idea what's coming.  “So for me, that's still the ultimate test and if I had a stud of my own, and I was going to breed horses, that's what I would have. I would follow Tesio's mantra. “But then there came this fashion, and now the horses that are going to stud are so disparate, and they've got such varied track records. You don't know what you've got, except that all you know is that they don't stay.  “I think that most really good Derby horses are just as happy at 10 furlongs because they've got the speed, and  if they've got the speed to win a Derby, they've got the speed to win a Juddmonte.” Andreas Putsch, Haras de Saint Pair “When you pick a stallion that is not proven, racing performance is very important because it's the best guide you have. But once we talk about proven stallions, then the proof is in the pudding, and we've seen so many that have less impressive race records that became very good stallions. “Then you have to look at what the offspring really does, to see if there's a pattern and attitude that they pass on. And for me that tops form. Form is always great, but genetics can top form. “So when I can I look at genetics. When enough time has passed in the breeding performance then I go on that and I forget about whatever the horse did on the racetrack. “There are no rules, and you can breed a good horse with a bad breeding decision and a terrible one with a good breeding decision. You're just looking for clues, and I guess the best guide is probably also your intuition. “The one race that has really surprised me is the Jockey Club since they shortened the distance. And I have asked myself many, many lonely nights, how can that make such a difference? “It has a better performance with producing good stallions than the English Derby, for example, or the Jockey Club before [at a mile and a half]. Although we all know that in the Jockey Club, when Darshaan beat Sadler's Wells and Rainbow Quest, that was still over 2,400 metres, so maybe that's also to do with the track. I think Chantilly is a very selective track but also a very fair track. The best horse usually wins. “The race is early enough in the year and you need a certain amount of speed yet to win that race. You have to be able to accelerate, and in Chantilly you can't win plodding along. So maybe there are all these factors that play into the Jockey Club having made such a contribution to the stallion park, and that stands out against any other race, I think, in Europe.  “But again, do I know the answer why? No, I'm just speculating.” Jim Bolger, Classic-winning trainer and breeder “The two Guineas, the Irish and the English, and the St. James's Palace are probably the key mile races. And then, of course, not everybody will agree, but the two Derbys and the Arc after that, and the King George, are, we would like to think, important. And I suppose in recent years, the mile-and-a-quarter French Derby is the one that's producing the stallions. “I don't know how much sense this is going to make but they're only stallion-making races historically, and there's no guarantee that if you win one or all of those races that you're going to have a stallion. “The Epsom Derby, when the race was run in a traditional way, the way it was always run, up to, say, 10, 15 years ago, I'd say those horses had a better chance of being a stallion.” Mathieu Alex, Haras de Beaumont “As a Frenchman, I would probably first of all say the Prix du Jockey Club. Shamardal won it the first year that it was reduced to a mile and a quarter, which I think was a very good idea because what you need from the winner now is to have enough speed, but also enough stamina.  “It's a very challenging track, you're going uphill to the finish. It seems to work, and it's an obvious one. “A race that I really like is the Prix Jean-Luc Lagardère. I generally like two-year-old races that are quite late in the year because usually that's when you find the best horses. And don't get me wrong, you can have very good Prix Morny winners and all the rest, but sometimes they're just more precocious. “Two of the best recent stallions in France have been Siyouni and Wootton Bassett and they both won the Jean-Luc Lagardère. It's a race which has serious competition from abroad and it's kind of a championship. “As we've seen with Camille Pissarro, he won the race and went on to win the Prix du Jockey Club, and Sealiway won it very impressively and he was second to St Mark's Basilica in the Jockey Club. The winners generally have the speed and the precocity but should stay a mile-plus the year after, which I think is very important. “And further back you've got Kendor, Irish River, Blushing Groom. They were all very successful stallions. So, yes, I like this race.” John O'Connor, Ballylinch Stud “My answer is probably a little bit more nuanced in the sense that, yes, I think there are some races which can give you a good indication in terms of what might make a good stallion, and the Prix du Jockey Club just seems to have accelerated a bit in terms of the production since they shortened the distance. “We've had four [winners] so far. Lawman was the first one who did well, he sired Classic winners, but the subsequent ones have probably done even better. Next was Lope de Vega, who is obviously an outstanding stallion and continues to do really well. And then our next one on the list was New Bay, who I think could have a huge year this year. And the most recent Jockey Club winner we have is Look De Vega. He's covered a very nice book in terms of numbers and in quality. So we're eagerly looking forward to his first foals being born in the next couple of weeks.” Nicolas de Chambure, Haras d'Etreham “Well, probably not. I think there isn't a race that is enough in itself to justify buying a horse or setting a certain fee or whatever. I think historically some races have produced more than others, but I think it's more the form of a particular race, the style of the win, the distance. “Every year is different and every profile is different. So, basically, the answer is no.”   The post Is There Such a Thing as a Stallion-Making Race? 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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    • Jockey Gregg P. McCarron, who won over 2400 races in a 24-year career and who steered his younger brother Chris to a Hall of Fame career as a rider, died on his 96-acre farm in Mt. Airy, MD Thursday after suffering a heart attack, according to a press release sent on behalf of the family. He was 77 years old. A native of Dorchester, MA, Gregg rode in 20,595 races during a career that started at Suffolk Downs in Boston in 1969 and ended in Maryland in 1993. He was the leading apprentice rider at Rockingham Park in 1969, according to Chris McCarron. Gregg rode mainly in New England, New York and Maryland and he trained horses for a short while on the Maryland circuit after he quit riding. He rode multiple Grade I winners, including On the Sly (1977 Jockey Club Gold Cup), Bounding Basque (1983 Wood Memorial Stakes), Broom Dance (1982 Alabama Stakes). In total, he won 29 graded stakes including the Cherry Hill Mile, the Secretariat Stakes, the Selima Stakes, the Ladies Handicap and the Spinaway Stakes. Among the other horses he rode to victory were Mom's Command, Tiffany Ice, Before Dawn, Vision and Mademoiselle Forli. After he retired, the widely admired rider became a racing commentator for NBC Sports, covering the Breeders' Cup for several years. “Gregg led me to my career as a jockey and he was there for me every step of the way,” Chris said. “He was my idol and I always tried to emulate everything he did. He mentored me in my formative years and I would not have had the career I did without him in my life.” Gregg is survived by his wife Darlene, son Matt, a grandson, eight siblings and numerous nieces and nephews. Matt is a retired two-time champion steeplechase jockey. No memorial service is planned at this time. The post Jockey Gregg McCarron Dies at 77 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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