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Longtime Canadian-based trainer, breeder and owner Paul Buttigieg died, according to a Woodbine release Wednesday. Over the course of his career at Woodbine, the horseman amassed 672 wins and more than $19 million in earnings as a trainer. Buttigieg also operated his own training center in Egbert, Ontario–Buttigieg Training Centre–where trainers such as Robert Tiller, Kevin Attard and Michael De Paulo were stabled. Buttigieg's most significant horses were led by champion Phil's Dream, who he bred, owned, and trained. Phil's Dream captured the GI Nearctic Stakes in 2013 and was honored as that season's Champion Male Sprinter at the Sovereign Awards. Buttigieg also notably campaigned multiple graded stakes winner Artie's Storm, who was a Sovereign Award finalist in 2022, Strait From Texas, who won the 2003 GII Nassau Stakes, and MSW and MGISP Gypsy Ring. “Paul Buttigieg was the embodiment of dedication in Canadian racing,” said Jim Lawson, Executive Chair, Woodbine Entertainment. “Paul was a true horseman in every sense of the word as a breeder, owner and trainer. He did it all with passion for the Thoroughbred and was part of the fabric of our Woodbine racing community. His loss is deeply felt and he will be dearly missed.” The post Canadian Horseman Paul Buttigieg Dies 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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Some 10 years ago, I found myself alone in Chantilly, France at a horse sale and attending the Arc de Triomphe. I didn't know anyone and certainly didn't speak French. France Galop had it set up for me to meet Nicolas Clement at his yard in Chantilly. For those of you who don't know, “yard” is their barn area and the yard is also located at their home. Nicolas was delightful. Showed me around and invited me to a barbecue he was hosting at his home the next day. The barbecue was attended by the who's who in racing. I slipped into the house in search of, as they say in France, the “toilette.” Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on how you look at it, the first door I opened happened to be to a bedroom. I quickly realized that I had intruded in on a lovely lady and after many apologies I stated that I was looking for the mysterious “toilette.” Turns out the lovely lady was Valerie Clement and she laughed and quickly pointed me in the right direction. A bit later while wandering in the yard, Valerie came up and introduced herself and immediately made me feel so welcomed. As everyone began to leave for the races, Valerie suggested I ride with them to the races. It was then that I met the rest of the Clement family as we piled into the car. Christophe driving, Valerie giving commands from the front and me, Charlotte, and Miguel in the back. Off we went. Not down the normal road to the track but suddenly we were flying on a dirt road through the forest. Bump after bump and Christophe yelling “HANG ON.” Turns out you could be arrested for taking this short cut but as luck would have it, we made it to the parking lot unnoticed and no jail time for me. As we unloaded, Valerie said to Charlotte and Miguel, “Do not lose Dean. You two are in charge of Dean and make sure when we leave, he is with us.” Little did I know at that moment that the Clements would become such dear friends and the impact they would have in our lives. Shortly thereafter, Christophe and Miguel began training horses for Patti and me. It was through this relationship that Reeves Thoroughbred Racing began to enjoy much success at the track. We had found a family that made racing fun. A hard-working family with integrity, class and a family that relished all the good things that life had to offer. Patti and I are so thankful and blessed to have been a small part of the extraordinary life of Christophe Clement. We will cherish the wins, the champagne toasts and glasses of Munity shared around the world. Christophe accomplished so much and will be missed but we are now starting a new chapter. I look forward to watching the Clement family grow and to being a part of Miguel's rise as he becomes a top trainer in his own right. Miguel and his wonderful staff will carry on in the same tradition of those who have come before him. We look forward to being a part of that journey. Because as Valerie said, “Don't lose Dean.” The post Letter to the Editor: Dean Reeves Recalls Meeting Christophe Clement 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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Friday's GIII Penn Mile has been posted postponed until June 20 due to inclement weather conditions impacting the eastern portion of the country, according to a Pennsylvania Horse Racing Association release Wednesday. Entries will be retaken on June 13, while existing nominations will be honored. Other existing stakes that will be moved to June 20 are the Lyphard Stakes, Alphabet Soup Stakes and Penn Oaks. Penn National will proceed with the seven overnight races that were originally intended for the May 30 card. Racing is scheduled to begin at 5 p.m. The post Weather Forces Postponement of Penn Mile, Oaks 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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Canadian Horse of the Year Soaring Free (Smart Strike–Dancing With Wings, by Danzig) died due to complications of old age at Sam-Son Farm's Ocala, Florida division Wednesday. Campaigned by his breeder Sam-Son Farm, the Ontario-bred won 15 of 27 career races for trainer Mark Frostad earning Canada's champion sprinter honor in 2003 followed by the champion grass horse title the following year, when he was also named that nation's Horse of the Year. Jockey Todd Kabel was aboard Soaring Free for 22 of 27 of his career starts. During his racing career, he won eight races at the graded level, highlighted by a score in the 2004 GI Atto Mile at Woodbine before retiring with $2.1 million in earnings. Nicknamed 'Muffin', he was cared for by his longtime groom, Tracy Smith. The gelding, who hails from a deep Sam-Son family, was out of Dancing With Wings, a half-sister to Canadian Horse of the Year Ruling Angel (Vice Regent), champion 3-year-old filly Tilt My Halo (Halo) and SW Tiffany Tam (Tentam), dam of champion sophomore colt and Canadian Classic winner Regal Intention. The 26-year-old stallion will be interred at the Florida farm. The post Canadian Horse of the Year Soaring Free Dies at 26 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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Lazzat (Territories), a winner of the G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest in 2024, has been purchased by Wathan Racing. He will remain in training with Jerome Reynier and target the G1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot next month. Bred and formerly raced by Nurlan Bizakov's Sumbe, the bay gelding won his first six starts at three, including the Prix Maurice de Gheest, before running a strong second in the Golden Eagle at Rosehill Down Under. Unplaced in the G1 Hong Kong Sprint in December, he made his 4-year-old bow in the Listed Prix Altipan at Saint-Cloud and finished fourth in March. The Listed Prix Servanne went his way at Chantilly on May 2. Richard Brown, racing adviser to Wathnan, said, “We've long admired Lazzat–who wouldn't? He's a sensational sprinter, a huge talent, and he's been extremely well managed to put together a string of outstanding performances. He'll be a force wherever he turns up in the top six and seven furlong races and we are delighted he'll be running in the Wathnan colours.” Out of the Australia mare Lastochka, Lazzat is a descendant of G1 1000 Guineas heroine Sleepytime (Royal Academy). Reynier added, “We are all very proud to have Wathnan Racing in the yard, and excited to have the antepost favourite for the big Royal Ascot race. Lazzat is a very easy horse to deal with and gets on very well with his work rider Franck Blondel. He's unbeaten over straight courses and has never looked better.” The post ‘Huge Talent’ Lazzat Purchased By Wathnan Racing 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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Gavin Wallace, breeder of Derby outsider Al Wasl Storm, says he is completely flabbergasted about having produced a Classic contender and believes his story serves as a timely reminder for small breeders to keep on dreaming. The 52-year-old farmer, whose family bred dual Tingle Creek Chase winner Long Engagement, has only two mares on his County Kilkenny farm. Along with his wife Orla, he has been provided with an earlier update than expected in the shape of Al Wasl Storm, a horse he openly admits to having been bred for fences rather than the undulations of Epsom. He explained, “This is the first foal out of the mare and I'm as surprised as anyone! It's unreal. People were telling me that there were too many mares like mine in the system but here we are. I'm still in disbelief.” Dearborn, one of two mares that Wallace owns, is a 10-year-old daughter of Martaline who never graced the track. She has produced three foals, all with the view of being National Hunt prospects, but somehow Al Wasl Storm found his way into Owen Burrows's system after being snapped up by Green Team Racing for €7,000 at the Tattersalls Ireland November Foal Sale in 2022. Whatever way you slice it, that is looking like €7,000 well spent by Ahmad Alshaikh and, win, lose or draw at Epsom, Al Wasl Storm has proved himself a quality performer after landing his maiden on the third attempt at Chepstow and earning himself a rating of 86. “I couldn't raffle Dearborn's most recent foal, which happened to be by Affinisea as well, so that's the reason why I actually didn't put her in foal this year,” Wallace explained. “I wanted to wait and see if there was anything coming along. I thought I might have to wait three or four years – never in my wildest dreams did I think the update would be coming on the Flat. “It was all so strange. She was bought online at the Tattersalls Ireland November Foal Sale by Ahmad Al Shaikh for €7,000. It wasn't until I saw the horse was named that I realised that he was going to be running for Green Team Racing.” Al Wasl Storm | John Hoy He added, “They seem to be delighted with him and, going by the interviews after Chepstow, they're pretty excited by him. Look it, I've only two mares so things like this are not supposed to happen to a fella like me. I think that's what makes it so special. A fella said to me, if this horse runs well in the Derby, I'll have the RTE cameras down doing a piece with me. I'm not sure about that but sure isn't it a great story for all of the small breeders in the game. Nobody would have predicted this – not even myself – so it just shows you there's no law to it at times.” Even Michael Browne, who consigned Al Wasl Storm at the foal sales on behalf of Wallace, admits to being taken aback by the success of the Mocklershill Stables graduate. He said, “The Derby? We thought we were selling a horse for the Derby Sale! Are you joking me? I actually hadn't a clue that this horse was running in the Derby until the other day when somebody said to me. Sure I thought they were joking. It just goes to show you. Gavin is a lovely fella and this is a great story. It would be an even better story if he manages to run well.” For all that Wallace and Browne speak with a heavy dollop of reality, the two men – and indeed the wider industry – appreciates the magnitude of the achievement of the small-time hobby breeder to produce a Derby runner. And, do you know what? They've come this far, so who's to say the ink has run dry on this story yet. Wallace said, “I have two mares – Dearborn and another unraced mare by Robin Des Champs. We have always had mares down through the years and we actually bred a very good chaser, Long Engagement, who won the Tingle Creek twice. Listen, we're farmers and this is just a hobby. I actually got both of these mares off Paul Nolan, who is my wife's brother-in-law. They had broken down but, credit to Paul, he said they had a bit of book to them and that they might be worth breeding from. I was interested in getting back into breeding so I said I'd chance my arm and we've bred a winner at least so it's great.” Asked if he will make the trip to Epsom for what is a once-in-a-lifetime moment, Wallace concluded, “I gave it serious consideration but I decided against it because I don't want to jinx them! I am an AI technician – I inseminate cows – so this would be my peak time at work. I couldn't take the time off work. If it was a month later? Absolutely. But I'll be tuning in without a doubt. I actually missed his previous races but I won't miss this. Horses like this keep the small fella interested in breeding and it would be brilliant if he could run a big race. I've had great help from Paul and Matt Gilsenan from Norelands Stud, which is close to me here in Kilkenny. It's a great interest. I know that he's 100-1 but he's already exceeded expectations so we won't go writing him off just yet.” The post ‘I’m In Disbelief’ – Meet The Derby Runner’s Breeder Who Was Expecting The 100-1 Shot To End Up In The Derby Sale 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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Thursday, Sandown, post time: 19:05, STAR SPORTS HENRY II STAKES-G3, £80,000, 4yo/up, 16f 50yT Field: Al Nayyir (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), Burdett Road (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), Coltrane (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}), Tashkhan (Ire) (Born To Sean {Ire}), Trawlerman (Ire) (Golden Horn {GB}). TDN Verdict: Trawlerman looks to strengthen his Gold Cup claims now that old foe Kyprios has been ushered out of the scene and the 2023 G2 British Champions Long Distance Cup winner is a cut above these rivals on all evidence. The last time Burdett Road ran on the Flat, he was four lengths behind Trawlerman as they chased home Kyprios in the latest renewal of the Long Distance Cup and it will be interesting to see how he fares after a subsequent jumping campaign including a second in the Champion Hurdle. [Tom Frary]. Thursday, Sandown, post time: 19:35, STAR SPORTS BRIGADIER GERARD STAKES-G3, £80,000, 4yo/up, 9f 209yT Field: Ombudsman (Ire) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}), Persica (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), Aafoor (Qurbaan), Almaqam (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Ancient Wisdom (Fr) (Dubawi {Ire}), Bolster (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Cicero's Gift (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), Enfijaar (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Military Order (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), Phantom Flight (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}). TDN Verdict: One of the key stepping stones to the G1 Prince of Wales's Stakes sees the return of the Gosdens' exciting Ombudsman who has a penalty for his success in the G3 Prix du Prince d'Orange when last seen in September. That will make life tough given that the likes of Almaqam has a fitness edge having finished third in the course-and-distance G3 Gordon Richards Stakes last month. Interestingly, his career-best win came in the Listed Heron Stakes on this card 12 months ago and this really has to be the time that he lives up to Ed Walker's expectations. [Tom Frary]. Thursday, Baden-Baden, Germany, post time: 16:35, 47TH KRONIMUS BADENER MEILE-G3, €55,000, 3yo/up, 8fT Field: Penalty (Ger) (Frankel {GB}), Best Lightning (Fr) (Sidestep {Aus}), Montanus (Ger) (Amaron {GB}), Short Final (Fr) (Zelzal {Fr}), Switsch (Ger) (Millowitsch {Ger}), Words Of Peace (Ger) (Palace Prince {Ger}), Namaron (Ger) (Amaron {GB}). TDN Verdict: Last year's G3 Oettingen Rennen winner Penalty may have most to fear from the unexposed 3-year-old Namaron, who captured Krefeld's G3 Dr Busch-Memorial last month and gets a healthy weight-for-age boost. [Tom Frary]. Thursday, Sandown, post time: 20:05, STAR SPORTS HERON STAKES-Listed, £45,000, 3yo, 8fT Field: Bay City Roller (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), Jackknife (GB) (Kameko), Matauri Bay (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Nebras (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), Opera Ballo (Ire) (Ghaiyyath {Ire}), Pellitory (GB) (Sergei Prokofiev), Suhail Star (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}). TDN Verdict: This launchpad to Royal Ascot boasts a roll of honour which includes subsequent G1 St James's Palace hero Without Parole (Frankel) and St James's Palace placegetters Consort (Lope De Vega), King Of Comedy (Kingman) and My Prospero (Iffraaj). Godolphin's TDN Rising Star Opera Ballo emptied early behind Field Of Gold in last month's G3 Craven Stakes and bids for redemption and black type in this second turf start. Opposition includes the unbeaten duo Bay City Roller, who annexed last term's G2 Champagne Stakes, and last month's Epsom novice winner Jackknife. [Sean Cronin]. Thursday, Sandown, post time: 18:35, STAR SPORTS NATIONAL STAKES-Listed, £40,000, 2yo, 5f 10yT Field: Alkuwarrior (Ire) (Alkumait {GB}), Clear Force (Ire) (Supremacy {Ire}), First Legion (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), Kamakameleon (GB) (Kameko), Anthelia (Ire) (Supremacy {Ire}), Eskimo Pie (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), Sayidah Hard Spun (GB) (Ubettabelieveit {Ire}). TDN Verdict: This stepping stone to the Royal meeting is most often used a trial for the G2 Norfolk Stakes and G2 Queen Mary Stakes. Rizeena, the 2013 winner, was the last to prevail here and double up at Ascot. The Richard Hannon stable, last successful with subsequent Norfolk third King Of Rooks (Acclamation) in 2015, is represented here by First Legion who comes back off a York debut victory two weeks ago. His chief threat is Karl Burke nominee Clear Force, who notched a clear-cut success at Ripon last month. Burke has previously won this with Norfolk 10th Havana Grey (Havana Gold) and Norfolk third Elite Status (Havana Grey). [Sean Cronin] Click here for the complete fields. The post Black-Type Analysis: Makes His Bid For Redemption In The Heron Stakes 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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In 10 days, Frank Mirahmadi will be in the announcers' booth to call the Belmont Stakes at Saratoga, both on-track and for the national Fox broadcast. His best trick to combat the nerves? His imagination. “Once the big Fox broadcast starts, there's no question the adrenaline goes to a new level,” said Mirahmadi, appearing as the Gainesway Guest of the Week on the TDN Writers' Room podcast, presented by Keeneland. “The key with the big races–and I've learned this over many years, it's almost 30 years now that I'm calling races-is to trick yourself into pretending it's a starter allowance event. And with these horses, it should theoretically be easier because there's no worry about who they are. You know who they are as a racing fan. And so for me, I think the whole key is to just try to stay calm.” Not that the Saratoga announcers' booth makes it easy. “The reason it's so difficult is because of how low to the ground the booth is,” said Mirahmadi. “It's just it's almost impossible. You're bobbing and weaving, you're low to the ground, which means there's more preparation necessary because you have to learn every nook and cranny. You know with announcers we start with the silks and then the equipment and then of course the horse, but in this case you've got to look at the sleeves and every little bit of the cap because when horses are across the course or across the track you can't see them. And so it's important to be able to have every little thing to identify them with.” But the Belmont won't be the only reason Mirahmadi-whose permanent job is as the announcer at Santa Anita–is happy to come to New York. A vegetarian, he says he lives on a diet that includes pizza every day. “I'm actually one of the fattest vegetarians in North American history,” he said. “I don't eat meat. I don't eat chicken and I don't eat fish. I don't eat anything that's walked, talked or breathed. So I have very strange eating habits. You've heard of the no-carb diet? Well, you're looking at a man closer to 300 than 200 pounds and it's because the all-carb diet is not very healthy. But cheese pizza is my favorite food. And so, needless to say, in Los Angeles, we are challenged. But on the East Coast, it's a beautiful thing. The East Coast definitely has the far superior pizza. I do eat pizza every day. I don't recommend it for obvious reasons. And if you do, you might want to exercise a little bit.” The hosts-T.D. Thornton, Bill Finley, and Randy Moss-also remembered trainer Christophe Clement, who passed away this week at the age of 59, and weighed in on the ongoing Preakness jockey debate, reignited this week by trainer Steve Asmussen. Randy Moss revealed the Fastest Horse of the Week in a segment sponsored by the WinStar stallion Nashville. The show, also sponsored by the PHBA, 1/ST TV, the KTA-KTOB, and West Point Thoroughbreds, recapped last week's racing, including Saffie Joseph's big weekend at Santa Anita. To watch the video version of the podcast, click here. For the audio podcast, click here. The post Belmont Stakes Announcer Frank Mirahmadi Is The TDN Writers’ Room Guest 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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Top United States jockey Flavien Prat has been snapped up to partner French raider Facteur Cheval in the Prince of Wales's Stakes (G1) at Royal Ascot June 18.View the full article
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Too much of a good thing? Not when it comes to maintaining the gold standard. For if we have only recently celebrated the way Medaglia d'Oro is confounding the self-fulfilling prejudice against aging stallions by continuing to produce runners like Good Cheer and East Avenue, then he now demands a sequel addressing his equal prowess in the kind of role more conventionally reserved for a stallion of 26–namely, as broodmare sire. Last weekend, daughters of Medaglia d'Oro gave us GI Gamely Stakes winner Be Your Best (Muhaarar {GB}); GII Santa Margarita Stakes romper Seismic Beauty (Uncle Mo); and, no less lucratively despite the formal gap in grade, Texas Derby winner Instant Replay (Maximum Security). Two others meanwhile produced 'TDN Rising Star' debutants either side of the Atlantic. Already damsire of young stallions such as National Treasure, Prince of Monaco and Olympian, Medaglia d'Oro is attending to every aspect of his legacy. Admittedly he can no more keep pace with Tapit, in this role, than anyone else. Tapit mares have already produced 19 stakes winners this year, including as many as 10 at graded level. But daughters of Medaglia d'Oro are now up to a dozen black-type scorers, ahead of 11 apiece for Jonabell neighbor Street Sense and their late buddy Bernardini. To a degree, of course, the fact that those three should be clustered in pursuit of Tapit tells its own story. Each has (or had) access to the most expensively assembled broodmare herd in Turf history. Good Cheer herself, for instance, is out of a homebred Street Sense mare; while Medaglia d'Oro and Street Sense exchanged roles to come up with First Mission. But that kind of mutual aid represents only a bonus in their overall records. So far as Medaglia d'Oro is concerned, even those of us most skeptical of formulaic breeding must concede the regularity with which his daughters have struck gold with Speightstown. But his daughters' work over the weekend reflected the versatility that remains the principal trademark of Medaglia d'Oro, not least in terms of surfaces. Seismic Beauty | Benoit As we noted the other day, while he has endured long enough to share in a welcome rapprochement, for a long time Medaglia d'Oro served as a rare crossover influence during a generation of culpable disjunction between European and American gene pools. Somehow he has managed to balance the contrasting profiles of his sire El Prado (Ire)–whose other principal heir, Kitten's Joy, dealt almost exclusively in chlorophyll–and a dam by Bailjumper. (Curious how sons of Damascus confined their imprint largely to daughters: not just the obvious case of Private Account, but also Ogygian as damsire of Johannesburg.) Interestingly, both the Medaglia d'Oro mares who produced big dirt winners last weekend were in turn out of daughters of the same stallion: Smart Strike. The one who produced Seismic Duty's dam Knarsdale (Medaglia d'Oro) is an interesting case. While Secret File (Smart Strike) didn't break her maiden until she was four, she progressed to run second in her stakes debut at Ellis Park in 2011. And look who joined her on the podium that day! The GIII Gardenia Stakes was won by an emerging filly named Groupie Doll (Bowman's Band), later a dual Breeders' Cup champion; while third home was Stage Magic (Ghostzapper), making her final racetrack appearance count before commencing the breeding career that has famously given us Justify. Smart Strike, of course, was another sire to extend his influence across different surfaces. Secret File had herself won on synthetic before switching to dirt, and her 2013 mating with Medaglia d'Oro duly led to a corresponding adaptability in their daughter: Knarsdale won a dirt maiden on debut before later transferring to turf for an allowance score/stakes podium, all at sprint distances. The choice of Medaglia d'Oro for Secret File, incidentally, may well have been inspired by his daughter Payton d'Oro, winner of the GII Black-Eyed Susan Stakes and twice Grade I-placed in 2011: she was out of a Jade Hunter half-sister to Secret File's stakes-winning dam Emery Board (Grindstone). Knarsdale herself was later sold, with a maiden cover by Uncle Mo, at the 2020 Keeneland November Sale, to Determined Stud for $430,000. (Less demand, sadly, for her 15-year-old dam a couple of years later: Secret File was culled for just $2,000, four years after a son by Uncle Mo had brought $900,000 as a yearling!) Seismic Beauty, as the foal Knarsdale carried into the ring, cleared most of that investment as a $400,000 weanling at Fasig-Tipton, and subsequent siblings have respectively raised $500,000 (Bernardini colt, won a couple of minor races at two last year) and $225,000 (Essential Quality filly) even without Seismic Beauty decorating the page on the racetrack. Her performance at the weekend, as a five-length winner in a lightning time, will duly spread excitement well beyond her own camp: her dam is still only 11 and a shrewd return to Seismic Beauty's late sire accounts for her yearling daughter; and the stakes are rising also for LCI, purchasers of the Essential Quality filly. Instant Replay | Coady Media No Rewinding But Replay Gives Maximum Pleasure The other Medaglia d'Oro mare out of a daughter of Smart Strike? Well, doubtless that's a bittersweet topic for Gary and Mary West. On the one hand, they will be delighted to see Maximum Security come up with a son as talented as Instant Replay; on the other, the annual cull essential to any program of their size in 2023 unfortunately included his dam Academy Gal (Medaglia d'Oro) for just $5,000 at the Keeneland November Sale. Having regressed sharply in just three career starts, the 7-year-old was found lurking at Hip 3452 by Gaelic Bloodstock. Her first foal, by American Freedom, then remained an unraced juvenile (second last month in a maiden claimer); while the vendors were retaining two sons by Maximum Security. The younger has since been named Final Thoughts, but second thoughts may have ensued now that Instant Replay has won consecutive stakes after closing for third in the GII Louisiana Derby. But hindsight is not a wonderful thing. It's just really irritating. It says much about Academy Gal's apparent prospects that her own dam, Flashy Gal (Smart Strike), was sold for $1,000 at the same auction. The catalogue showed that Flashy Gal had unequivocally failed to repay generous opportunity, producing a second daughter by Medaglia d'Oro (unraced); a daughter by Tapit (ditto); and two foals by Quality Road with a single, unplaced start between them. And yet, and yet… Purchasers Harper Ridge Thoroughbreds evidently reminded themselves that Flashy Gal had won a Belmont maiden on her second start before running third in a stakes over the same turf; and later won a couple of Churchill allowances. And she had cost $250,000 as a yearling, being out of a stakes-placed Deputy Minister half-sister to two elite winners: Hold That Tiger (Storm Cat), a champion juvenile in Europe; and Editor's Note (Forty Niner), winner of the GI Belmont Stakes in 1996. Well, let's at least give Maximum Security credit for stoking up these embers. It was through no fault of his own (nor of his owners) that his amazing rise was derailed, first by his rider in the Derby and then by the imprisonment of his trainer. One way or another, he became such a hard sell that he is now standing at $5,000. But Maximum Security has so far fielded 33 winners from just 68 starters, including three graded stakes/Group performers. He has many a peer whose genetic functionality, despite far greater chances, for now remains less apparent. A Family Where The Best Comes As Standard The weekend's biggest score for a Medaglia d'Oro mare takes the least explanation. Be Your Best (Ire) extends one of the most aristocratic families in the book, with matriarch Up the Flagpole (Hoist the Flag) as fourth dam. Be Your Best | Benoit Be Your Best's dam Kamakura is out of a daughter of A.P. Indy and Up the Flagpole's European Group 1 winner Flagbird (Nureyev), herself once runner-up in the Gamely. That pedigree strongly echoes GI Jenny Wiley Stakes winner Dickinson (Medaglia d'Oro), whose mother, GI Ashland Stakes winner Little Belle, is by A.P. Indy out of Flagbird's daughter by Mr. Prospector. It would be hard to claim that Be Your Best's own sire quite measures up to all these brands. Indeed, a couple of years after Kamakura (Medaglia d'Oro) delivered Be Your Best, Muhaarar (GB) was moved from Britain to France and cut to just €5,000. In fairness, he sired a French Classic winner the following year, and has since coaxed his fee back up to €14,000. It was precisely the way Muhaarar cooled off commercially, after advertising what had appeared optimal commercial speed on the track, that prompted Mike Ryan to keep Be Your Best within his St Croix Bloodstock program. That had now proved a great blessing. Not that Kamakura owed him anything. She was culled by Godolphin for 150,000gns as an unraced Godolphin sophomore, at the Tattersalls July Sale of 2016. By that stage her full brother Bay of Plenty had contributed a Saratoga stakes (dirt 9f) to this famous family; and half-brother Fortify (Distorted Humor) had operated just a tier down from the best juveniles of his crop (Grade I-placed). Kamakura immediately discharged the investment, her first son by Kingman being sold at Tattersalls October for 625,000gns–to Godolphin! He was a winner and so too, already, is Kamakura's latest 2-year-old: a Too Darn Hot colt sold to Blandford Bloodstock last fall, again in Book 1 at Tattersalls, for 270,000gns. Named Postmodern by Wathnan Racing, he looked Royal Ascot material in his five-length 'TDN Rising Star' debut at Yarmouth last week. And Royal Ascot is presumably also an option for Outfielder (Speightstown), similarly anointed a 'TDN Rising Star' after melting the clock for Wesley Ward at Churchill the very next day. The $850,000 Saratoga yearling is out of Notte d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro), so there's that Speightstown cross again. If that will obviously be drying up now, no matter: it feels like these Medaglia d'Oro mares are barely getting started. The post Breeding Digest: Gold Rush Continues With Medals For Mares 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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The National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame will open two new special exhibitions and host several public events to coincide with the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival held June 4-8. The Museum's latest exhibits, A Look Through the Eyes and Life of Charlotte C. Weber and Greg Montgomery: 40 Years of the Travers Poster open to the public Wednesday, June 4. On exhibition in the Museum's McBean Gallery through Nov. 2, A Look Through the Eyes and Life of Charlotte C. Weber chronicles the remarkable journey in thoroughbred racing and breeding and the legacy of Charlotte Weber, who established Live Oak Stud in Ocala, Fla. The Museum's von Stade Gallery will host Greg Montgomery: 40 Years of the Travers Poster, one of racing's most iconic series of artwork, through June 29. Montgomery began producing annual posters for Saratoga Race Course's Travers Stakes in 1986. The post National Museum Of Racing Celebrates Belmont Festival With New Exhibits 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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Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-bred horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Thursday's Observations features a son of a 'TDN Rising Star'. 2.40 Yarmouth, Novice, £9,950, 2yo, 7f 3yT MAN OF VISION (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) debuts for Godolphin and Charlie Appleby in the maiden the yard captured with the smart pair Naval Power and New Science in the last four years. He is the first foal out of the yard's TDN Rising Star Summer Romance, Kingman's dual Group winner who was runner-up in the GI Diana Stakes and GI Just a Game Stakes from the excellent family of Kingman's current 3-year-old sensation Field Of Gold. Also making his debut is Lady Bamford and Alice Bamford's homebred Rodeo (GB) (St Mark's Basilica {Fr}), a John and Thady Gosden-trained son of Cape Blanco's GII Sands Point Stakes winner and GI Del Mar Oaks third Californiagoldrush. The post First Foal Out Of Summer Romance, Man Of Vision, Debuts For Godolphin 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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Derek Leung Ka-chun was in the winners again at Happy Valley on Wednesday night, with his first treble since November headlined by Gracious Express’ last-gasp win in the Class Three Seine Handicap (1,200m). The 36-year-old had been winless for 27 rides prior to Voyage Boss’ debut win at Sha Tin on Sunday and he did not have to wait long to continue that winning feeling. Settled in midfield, Gracious Express’ backers would have been forgiven for throwing away their betting slips turning into the...View the full article
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Baroness Minette Batters will become the new independent chair of the Horse Welfare Board (HWB), replacing Barry Johnson on July 1, 2025. Formerly the president of the National Farmers Union from 2018-2024, Batters was appointed as a crossbench House of Lords peer in 2024. A director of Salisbury Racecourse, Batters also enjoyed a successful career as an amateur jockey with over 30 point-to-point wins to her name. Batters said, “I'm absolutely delighted to be appointed as the new chair of the HWB. Horse welfare will always be fundamental to racing's success, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank Barry Johnson for his leadership and expertise as the outgoing chair.” The post Baroness Minette Batters Appointed Independent Chair Of The Horse Welfare Board 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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Call Di led the way on the second and final day of the 2025 Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale on the Gold Coast. Twice third at Group 2 level, Call Di showed her ability on the track, but it's her pedigree that helped take her to the top status. By Frankel, Call Di is a sister to Group 2 winner Miss Fabulass and is from the family of Australian Champion three-year-old Samantha Miss. The Newgate Consignment offering ended the day as the top seller when knocked down for $2.1 million to Yulong Investments after a late bidding battle with B2B Thoroughbreds. Yulong's Sam Fairgray commented, “It's good to be able to breed up a family and she's by a champion sire, out of a champion, her granddam's a champion sire and she's in foal to a champion sire. She's a lovely mare and I'm sure she'll leave a very, very nice Extreme Choice.” He added, “On race performance, I followed her racing career and you probably didn't see the best of her on the track. She had very, very good ability.” Yulong also swept the second top seller of the day – the Victoria Oaks winner Aristia who was offered by Vinery Stud in foal to I Am Invincible. She realised $1.45 million. “Once we saw her we knew we loved her,” Yulong's Jun Zhang said. “She is in foal to Vinnie and has got a good first foal by Zoustar. Lonhro is a very good mare sire and (she is) the perfect suit for Alabama Express. She was on our first list. We are always searching for good mares.” All told, the Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale grossed $88,319,500 with the average settling at $248,088 [$206,801 in 2024]. Meanwhile, the median was $90,000 [down by $5,000 compared to 2024] and the clearance rate was also down by 6% to 77%. The post Yulong To The Fore As Call Di Tops Day Two of National Broodmare Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article