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Normandy Coast (Omaha Beach), winner of a rained-off renewal of the Listed Palisades Stakes at Keeneland on Apr. 6, was hammered down to owner Steven Judy for a final bid of $355,000 to top Friday's single-session Keeneland April Selected Horses of Racing Age Sale. The auction took place following the conclusion of the final day of racing at the adjacent racetrack. A $60,000 purchase out of the 2023 Fasig-Tipton October Sale, Normandy Coast raced for Red Gate Racing and was trained by Eddie Kenneally to three wins from his five starts to date. After breaking his maiden at second asking at Ellis Park last July, he went missing and picked up where he left off with a neck success in Fair Grounds allowance company Jan. 11. Eased home in the GIII Gotham Stakes Mar. 1, he rebounded in no uncertain terms in the Palisades, striking from close range and relishing the sloppy underfoot conditions en route to a 3 1/2-length victory (video) for trainer Eddie Kenneally and owner Red Gate Racing. Kenneally Racing consigned the colt to the sale as hip 80. “Eddie is going to stay in; bought him for a friend of mine that's newer to the business,” said Donald Wells, agent for Judy's Four Sons Stable, who signed the ticket. “We are going to run on Wednesday at Churchill Downs (in the $300,000 William Walker Stakes for 3-year-olds racing 5 1/2 furlongs on turf). He has already been entered.” The conditioner was pleased with the results. “I think there's a lot of eyes on the races at Keeneland, and if you're fortunate enough to run well in any race, let alone a stakes race here, everybody notices,” Kenneally said. “So it's a good platform, and it's a good place to showcase a horse, especially a good horse like this. And I think the timing of the sale is ideal, too, with Churchill coming up, a lot of people in town for Derby Week. It's just a good fit for me because we run a lot of horses at Keeneland, we're stabled here, and it all worked out good.” A winner of the Palisades Stakes on opening day of the Keeneland Spring Meet, NORMANDY COAST (Omaha Beach) tops the April Selected Horses of Racing Age Sale after selling for $355,000 to Steven Judy. Consigned by @kenneallyracing. pic.twitter.com/rntXtIbcNR — TDN (@theTDN) April 26, 2025 Also bringing current form into the HORA sale was Tough Critic (Caravaggio), who ran down the heavily favored Longshoreman (Midshipman) to graduate at first asking in a 5 1/2-furlong turf sprint on the afternoon of Apr. 24 (video). Added to the sale just Friday morning, the New York-bred colt–the final lot offered as hip 89–was knocked down to George Weaver, agent, for $350,000. Weaver saddled the colt to victory on Thursday for John Goldthorpe's Dew Sweepers LLC. Weaver's assistant Blair Golen signed the ticket. “I have always liked this horse since we have had him,” Golen said. “He's matured and grown up so much. He showed on the track (in winning his career debut at Keeneland a day earlier). There is Ascot (in England) and that is a lovely place to go and we have a string in New York. He'd be very competitive at Saratoga. He's a cool horse.” Weaver won the 2023 G2 Queen Mary Stakes at Royal Ascot with Crimson Advocate (Nyquist). On behalf of Paramount Sales, the consignment's Lesley Campion said: “We were thrilled to consign this colt. The move he made (in winning his career debut) was phenomenal. I feel we are selling a lot of 'blue skies,' and he is loaded with potential. Going forward, they can have all the fun in the world at Royal Ascot and Saratoga, and you have the New York-bred program for him.” Campion said Paramount consigns horses for former owner Dew Sweepers, explaining: “It is part of their business plan to race and sell.” Winner of a Maiden Special Weight yesterday at @keenelandracing, Tough Critic sold for $350,000 at #KeeApril! Consigned by Paramount Sales, purchased by George Weaver, agent pic.twitter.com/AG9MIjJnK2 — Keeneland Sales (@keenelandsales) April 26, 2025 Brad Weisbord and Liz Crow's ELiTE Sales sold 23 horses for $1.885 million to lead in both categories, and the draft was topped by three horses that fetched prices in excess of $200,000. Offered on behalf of Phil and Christine Hatfield's CHP Racing, hip 40, the 4-year-old colt Clever Mischief (Into Mischief) was purchased by Team Adams Racing's Tracy Adams for $220,000. The son of Suraya (Tiznow) most recently took his record to 2-3-0 from six starts with a last-lunge allowance success over the Gulfstream turf course Mar. 1 for trainer Chad Brown. His year-younger half-sister Lady Authentic (Authentic) sold later in the session for $37,000. “That's the one we wanted,” Adams said. “We've got our trainer (Dana Hancock) with us. I've got my co-owner (Sal Perito here), so they're the ones that really take care of this whole thing. So when they tell me when (to bid on a horse), that's what I go by.” Marquee Bloodstock paid $200,000 for 4-year-old 'TDN Rising Star' Speak Easy (Constitution, hip 17) while owner Michael Dubb went to the same amount for the 4-year-old colt Exploration (Curlin), winner of two straight, including a Laurel allowance Mar. 1. A total of 44 horses were reported as sold for gross receipts of $3,884,000. The average was $88,273, while the median settled at $65,000. “This sale was a lovely complement to the race meet,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said. “Everyone here tonight was having fun, and there was a buzz around the grounds. The energy from the race day rolled down the hill from the race track to the Sales Pavilion, and we look forward to even more excitement when we open our new venues.” Added Keeneland Director of Sales Operations Cormac Breathnach: “Trade tonight was solid and the median was more comparable to the April Sales of 2022 and 2023. The horses were well received and most of all them sold through the ring.” For full results, please visit www.keeneland.com. The post Recent Stakes Winner Normandy Coast Tops Keeneland HORA 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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Explore a multitude of captivating racing promotions offered by horse racing bookmakers on Saturday, April 26. Immerse yourself in the thrill with generous bonus back offers, elevating your betting experience. Delve into these promotions from top-tier online bookmakers to maximise your betting opportunities. The top Australian racing promotions for April 26, 2025, include: Today’s best horse racing promotions Randwick & Moonee Valley All Races | Bet Back Run 2nd Or 3rd Activate your Bet Back Tool in your Betslip on ALL Races at Randwick & Moonee Valley this Saturday and if your runner comes 2nd or 3rd, get up $50 back as Bonus Cash. Bet Back Tool is only available to use on the day of race, on Fixed Win bets, and on races with 5 or more runners. Neds T&C’s Apply Login to Neds to Claim Promo Randwick R7-10 | Run 2nd & 3rd Bonus Back up to $50 BONUS CASH BACK FOR 2nd AND 3rd- Up To $50- Randwick Races 7 to 10 BlondeBet T&C’s Apply. Eligible Customers Only. Login to BlondeBet to Claim Promo Morphettville Races 1 & 2 | Copy Any Bet If Your Horse Runs 2nd Or 3rd Get Cash Back Copy any bet in Morphettville Races 1 & 2 and if it comes second or third get real cash back up to $25. Dabble T&Cs apply. Eligible Customers Only. Login to Dabble to Claim Promo 25% Boosted Winnings! – Morphettville Get 25% BOOSTED WINNINGS paid in BONUS CASH. Fixed win only. First eligible bet per race. Must apply Promotion in betslip. Cash bet only. Max bonus $250. Picklebet T&Cs apply. Eligible Customers Only Login to Picklebet to Claim Promo Randwick Races 1-5 | Run 2nd or 3rd Bonus Back up to $25 Apply from bet slip. Available one per fixed odds win bet per eligible races. Min 5 runners. Excludes boosted odds, multi & bonus bets. If a given race has less than 8 runners, only the qualifying bets on the horse finishing 2nd will receive a bonus back. PlayUp T&Cs apply. Login to PlayUp to Claim Promo Saturday Bonus Back 2nd or 3rd in R1-3 at 4 Metro Meetings Randwick, Moonee Valley, Morphettville & Ascot. Available from 12:00AM AEST Saturday. Auto-applied in Bet Slip. Promotion limits apply. Min 6 runners. Fixed odds only. Check your Vault for eligibility. Unibet T&C’s apply. Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Overpass To Win The Quokka – $5.00 Get $5 for Overpass to win The Quokka in Ascot Race 8. Eligible Customers Only. BoomBet T&C’s Apply. Login to BoomBet to Claim Promo Moonee Valley Races 1-5 | Run 2nd or 3rd Bonus Back up to $25 Apply from bet slip. Available one per fixed odds win bet per eligible races. Min 5 runners. Excludes boosted odds, multi & bonus bets. If a given race has less than 8 runners, only the qualifying bets on the horse finishing 2nd will receive a bonus back. PlayUp T&Cs Apply. Login to PlayUp to Claim Promo Punters Toolbox! Supersized Saturday helps you Bet it Out with neds! Get MORE Price Boosts, MORE Bet Backs, MORE Fluc Ups, MORE Back Ups & MORE Extra Nudge tools! Available to use on ANY races of your choice. Neds T&C’s Apply. Login to Neds to Claim Promo Moonee Valley R6-9 | Run 2nd & 3rd Bonus Back up to $50 BONUS CASH BACK FOR 2nd AND 3rd- Up To $50- Moonee Valley Races 6 to 9 BlondeBet T&C’s Apply. Eligible Customers Only. Login to BlondeBet to Claim Promo $6.00 – Yes Queen (#8) & Overpass (#1) both to win Ascot R7 & R8 Saturday Price Push Double. Price subject to change. Limits apply. Check your Vault for eligibility. T&C’s apply. Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Randwick – Same Race Multi Bet Reload up to $50 Place a 3+ leg SRM and if 1 leg loses get up to $50 Bonus Cash back! Cash bets only. First bet per race only. Must apply Promotion in bet slip. $2+ odds. Picklebet T&Cs apply. Login to Picklebet to Claim Promo Copycash – Get Copied. Get Paid. Get paids $0.10 every time someone uses Copy Bet to copy your bets. Dabble T&Cs apply. Login to Dabble to Claim Promo Daily Race Returns Bonus Back | Any Race Check BoomBox for full details. Eligible Customers Only. BoomBet T&C’s Apply. Login to BoomBet to Claim Promo How does horsebetting.com.au source its racing bonus offers? HorseBetting.com.au meticulously assesses leading Australian horse racing bookmakers, revealing thoroughbred bonus promotions for April 26, 2025. These ongoing offers underscore the dedication of top horse racing bookmakers. In the realm of horse racing betting, when one bookmaker isn’t featuring a promotion, another is stepping up. Count on HorseBetting.com.au as your go-to source for daily rewarding horse racing bookmaker bonuses. Enhance your value with competitive odds and promotions tailored for existing customers. Easily access these offers by logging in to each online bookmaker’s platform. For valuable insights into races and horses to optimise your bonus bets, trust HorseBetting’s daily free racing tips. More horse racing promotions View the full article
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Keeneland concluded its 2025 Spring Meet on Friday following 15 days of racing that produced total wagering of $192 million. The Spring Meet was slated to begin Friday, Apr. 4, but severe storms and flooding rainfall forced Keeneland officials to take the unprecedented step of rescheduling the opening two days, resulting in the GI Central Bank Ashland and the GI Toyota Blue Grass moving to Monday, Apr. 7 and Tuesday, Apr. 8, respectively. “The success of this Spring Meet is a salute to the power of teamwork, and we are grateful to all who helped as we navigated the weather-related challenges of opening weekend,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “Moving our two biggest race days–opening Friday and Saturday–to Monday and Tuesday, when we typically don't race, wasn't easy, but it was the right decision to keep our horses and community safe. I am proud of the resiliency of our Keeneland team, and we offer a huge thanks for the support of our horsemen, sponsors and fans.” All-sources wagering (not including whole card simulcasting at Keeneland) for the 15-day Spring Meet of $192,676,486 was down 11.92% from last spring's 16-day meet total of $218,741,501. During the Spring Meet, Keeneland offered a season-record $9.4 million for 19 stakes. Purses were increased for 16 of those stakes, led by the $250,000 boost to the $1.25-million Toyota Blue Grass and $150,000 increase to the $750,000 Central Bank Ashland. Average daily purses were a Keeneland record $1,327,434. “The strong support of our horsemen is what makes Keeneland racing so special,” Keeneland Vice President of Racing Gatewood Bell said. “Owners, trainers and jockeys always bring their 'A' game to Keeneland. They love to test their skills and their horses against the best of the best, which creates a tremendous product for our fans and handicappers.” Flavien Prat won five races during the final two days of the meet to push his total to 20 and secure his first Keeneland leading rider title. The race for leading trainer by Brad Cox, Wesley Ward and Brendan Walsh also went down to the wire, with Walsh and Cox each notching a win on closing day to share the title with 10 wins apiece. Brad Kelley's Calumet Farm won five races, including two stakes, to be the Spring Meet's leading owner. The post Keeneland Concludes Spring Meet, Produces $192 Million in Total Wagering 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 Florida House of Representatives on Friday passed controversial Thoroughbred decoupling legislation by a 70-34 vote at 6:10 p.m. HB 167 is a wide-ranging gaming bill, but the only section of it that came up for debate during the Apr. 25 legislative session was the decoupling aspect. As passed by the House, the bill would remove a statutory requirement that Gulfstream Park and Tampa Bay Downs run a minimum number of live Thoroughbred races in order to operate the respective casino and card room at each venue. The language of the bill would establish a five-year time frame before decoupling could go fully into effect in 2030. The Senate has not yet voted on a version of the bill. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis indicated last week he is not in favor of decoupling legislation, but he stopped short of saying he would absolutely veto any bill that comes to his desk that would decouple casino gaming from live racing in Florida. On Apr. 23, when the decoupling bill was first slated to be brought up during the House session, Lonny Powell, the chief executive officer of the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association (FTBOA), told TDN that even though this year's legislative fight is far from complete, his organization is already looking ahead to the next legislative calendar, when the issue might be debated anew with a focus on how the Thoroughbred industry might best transition to a new model if Gulfstream or Tampa were to opt for decoupling. “We expect the House to pass decoupling,” Powell said on Wednesday, predicting the vote two days ahead of its passage. “Our big challenge is going forward after this session is to define the future of what Florida racing and breeding looks like so we can [move forward] and not be defending it all the time.” The post Florida House Passes Five-Year Decoupling Bill 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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Saturday, Navan, Ireland, post time: 15:55, IRISH STALLION FARMS EBF SALSABIL STAKES-G3, €39,000, 3yo, f, 10f 20y Field: Barnavara (Ire) (Calyx {GB}), Catalina Delcarpio (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Ecstatic (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}), Island Hopping (Ire) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), J M's Joy (Ire) (Elzaam {Aus}), Medici Venus (Tiz The Law), Spicy Margarita (Ire) (Earthlight {Ire}), Tarima (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Wemightakedlongway (Ire) (Australia {GB}). TDN Verdict: TDN Rising Star Catalina Delcarpio looked every inch an Oaks filly when impressing in the Leopardstown maiden which has become a pointer to Epsom of late. It's the age-old question of whether raw ability can overcome valuable experience, with another Leopardstown debut scorer in the illustriously-connected Tarima also in deep against the likes of Ballydoyle's already well-travelled TDN Rising Star Ecstatic. If the Twomey and Weld runners have the class for a Classic, we're going to find out here. [Tom Frary]. Sunday, ParisLongchamp, France, post time: 16:25, PRIX GANAY-G1, €300,000, 4yo/up, 10 1/2fT Field: Royal Rhyme (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Al Riffa (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Horizon Dore (Fr) (Dabirsim {Fr}), Map Of Stars (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Sosie (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Higher Leaves (Ire) (Golden Horn {GB}). TDN Verdict: After straightforward wins in the G3 Prix Exbury and G2 Prix d'Harcourt, Map Of Stars goes for gold here with momentum on his side and a profile that begs a Group 1 win. First time up, last year's G1 Grand Prix de Paris hero Sosie and G1 Grosser Preis von Berlin winner Al Riffa are surely vulnerable and so it is up to Wathnan Racing's progressive performer to get the blood stirring in the first big stand-off between the elite older horses. [Tom Frary] Saturday, Dusseldorf, Germany, post time: 12:50, HENKEL-STUTENPREIS-Listed, €25,000, 3yo, f, 8fT Field: D'Ores Et Deja (Fr) (Zarak {Fr}), Dublone (Ger) (Belardo {Ire}), Hello Sweetheart (GB) (Frankel {GB}), Lady Sahara (Ger) (Counterattack {Aus}), Santara (GB) (Mehmas {Ire}), Sorceress (Ger) (Belardo {Ire}), Stugardia (Ger) (Tai Chi {Ger}), Time Goes On (GB) (Sergei Prokofiev). TDN Verdict: This prep for the G2 German 1000 Guineas sees the Schlenderhan homebred Sorceress start a warm order, which is worrying considering that she was tonked seven lengths by Lips Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) at Cologne last time. Early odds suggest that Al Shaqab's visiting Compiegne winner D'Ores Et Deja will be a big price, but that could be a big mistake with the way French raiders often fare in this country. [Tom Frary]. Saturday, Navan, Ireland, post time: 14:50, IRISH STALLION FARMS EBF COMMITTED STAKES-Listed, €27,000, 3yo, 5f 180y Field: Whistlejacket (Ire) (No Nay Never), Cowardofthecounty (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), Ides Of March (Ire) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Bodhi Bear (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), Midnight Strike (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), Pedro Nunes (Nyquist), Sparkling Sea (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}). TDN Verdict: Royal Ascot's G1 Commonwealth Cup is very much mission possible for Peter Brant and Coolmore's 500,000gns October Book 1 graduate Whistlejacket and last term's G1 Prix Morny and G2 July Stakes hero heads postward as the popular ticket in this straight six sophomore showdown. Runner-up in both the G1 Phoenix Stakes and G1 Middle Park Stakes, he boasts rock-solid juvenile form and returns off a close-up fifth in November's GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint. Aidan O'Brien stablemate Ides Of March was two spots back in that Del Mar dash, having annexed the G3 Round Tower Stakes in his penultimate start, and rates an obvious danger. Joseph O'Brien has yet to taste victory in the race and saddles both G3 Prix Francois Boutin victor Cowardofthecounty, who was off the board in two subsequent efforts at Group 1 level, and G3 Marble Hill Stakes third Midnight Strike. Cowardofthecounty lowered Whistlejacket's colours when the pair crossed swords on debut at the Curragh last April. Another notable entry is Amo Racing and Giselle De Aguiar's once-raced Dundalk maiden scorer Pedro Nunes, a $110,000 Keeneland September acquisition representing the Adrian Murray stable, who slides down in trip and up in grade. [Sean Cronin]. Saturday, Navan, Ireland, post time: 15:25, BAR ONE RACING VINTAGE CROP STAKES-Listed, €31,500, 4yo/up, 14f 0y Field: Kyprios (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Dawn Rising (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Barnso (GB) (Belardo {Ire}), Leinster (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), Poetic Sound (Ire) (Poet's Word {Ire}), Sonnyboyliston (Ire) (Poower {GB}), Bay Of Sanibel (Ger) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Enfranchise (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). TDN Verdict: Ballydoyle stalwart Kyprios is back for yet another year of competition and embarks on a fresh adventure in this familiar curtain up. Successful here in 2022 and 2024, the eight-time Group 1 winner has been pencilled in as a possible contender for October's Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and he'll likely traverse well-trodden territory en route to Paris. Bingo cards at the ready and eyes down looking in for a Vintage Crop (check), Saval Beg, Gold Cup, Goodwood Cup and Irish St Leger combo once again. The seven-year-old, lumbered with a five-pound Group 1 penalty, is heavily favoured to become the race's first three-time champion and will start at prohibitively short odds. His chief rival is the Willie McCreery-conditioned Listed Vintage Tipple victrix Enfranchise, who is match-fit coming back off a second on seasonal return in last month's Listed Devoy Stakes at Naas. Al Shira'aa Racing's lightly campaigned Leinster offers a degree of each-way value at 33-1. The Joseph O'Brien nominee, one of two entries from the Carriganog nursery, provided stamina pointers aplenty in his first start of 2025 at the Curragh four weeks ago and made all–under a 142-pound burden–to plunder a 12-furlong handicap in decisive fashion. His reward is to hump a mere 131 pounds around here in this black-type debut. [Sean Cronin]. Click here for the complete fields. The post Black-Type Analysis: Catalina Delcarpio To Test Oaks Credentials In Salsabil 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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There are 13 horse racing meetings set for Australia on Saturday, April 26. Our racing analysts here at horsebetting.com.au have found you the best bets and the quaddie numbers for Morphettville, Ascot, Eagle Farm, Randwick & Moonee Valley. Saturday’s Free Horse Racing Tips – April 26, 2025 Morphettville Racing Tips Ascot Racing Tips Eagle Farm Racing Tips Randwick Racing Tips Moonee Valley Racing Tips As always, there are plenty of promotions available for Australian racing fans. Check out all the top online bookmakers to see what daily promotions they have. If you are looking for a new bookmaker for the horse racing taking place on April 26, 2025 check out our guide to the best online racing betting sites. Neds Code GETON 1 Take It To The Neds Level Neds Only orange bookie! Check Out Neds Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. What are you really gambling with? Set a deposit limit today. “GETON is not a bonus code. Neds does not offer bonus codes in Australia and this referral code does not grant access to offers. Full terms. BlondeBet Signup Code GETON 2 Punters Prefer Blondes BlondeBet Blonde Boosts – Elevate your prices! Join BlondeBet Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. WHAT ARE YOU REALLY GAMBLING WITH? full terms. Dabble Signup Code AUSRACING 3 Say Hey to the social bet! Dabble You Better Believe It Join Dabble Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. THINK. IS THIS A BET YOU REALLY WANT TO PLACE? Full terms. Recommended! 4 Next Gen Racing Betting Picklebet Top 4 Betting. Extra Place. Every Race. Join Picklebet Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. What are you really gambling with? Full terms. 5 It Pays To Play PlayUp Aussie-owned horse racing specialists! Check Out PlayUp Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. Imagine what you could be buying instead. Full terms. Bet365 Signup Code GETON 6 Never Ordinary Bet365 World Favourite! Visit Bet365 Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. GETON is not a bonus code. bet365 does not offer bonus codes in Australia and this referral code does not grant access to offers. What’s gambling really costing you? Full terms. Horse racing tips View the full article
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The European Athletics Championships of 1966 constituted the first major international sporting event where human athletes were officially drug tested. Driving this watershed moment was growing alarm that more and more athletes were turning to performance-enhancing drugs with near impunity and no small amount of personal risk. Several amphetamines were found in the system of Danish cyclist Knud Enemark Jensen after he collapsed mid-race at the 1960 Rome Olympics, fracturing his skull. He later died in hospital. Seven years after that, British cyclist Tommy Simpson collapsed and died during the Tour de France. A post-mortem revealed that Simpson had taken a cocktail of amphetamines and alcohol, a lethal combination in the extreme heat and duress of the mountainous race. At the time, drug testing in sports was rudimentary compared to today's standards. It wasn't until a German biochemist and former competitive cyclist called Manfred Donike appeared on the scene in the 1960s and '70s that drug testing really started marching towards modernism. Donike was instrumental in developing one of earliest sports laboratories for drug testing research ahead of the 1972 Munich Olympics. By the 1983 Pan American Games, he had helped develop a portable laboratory which detected 19 positives and caused a score of athletes to flee the event. At the 1994 Asian Games at Hiroshima, Japan, his laboratory confirmed the presence of a relatively rare anabolic steroid in 11 Chinese athletes. Human athletes were tested at the 1966 European Athletic Championships in Budapest | Getty Images While Donike's lab was getting pretty good at catching drug-abusing athletes, other international laboratories charged with the same objective were struggling to play catch up–a precursor to where horse racing finds itself today. “And that was really the beginning of the impetus to talk about harmonization of the lab results on the human side,” said Dr. Larry Bowers, who sits on the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit's (HIWU) advisory council, courtesy of a 25-year career in anti-doping. International Standard for Laboratories Bowers initially served as the director of the International Olympic Committee (IOC)-accredited laboratory at Indiana University. He later became the chief science officer at the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA). Bowers was also instrumental in developing the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) “International Standard for Laboratories,” which first went into effect in 2002. The ISL built off a broad global set of laboratory standards, gearing it specifically towards anti-doping efforts in the human sports world. In terms of Bowers's work for HIWU, this particular entry on his resume has proven valuable indeed. That's because Bowers's efforts to bring performance parity to all international drug testing labs in human sports parallel in many ways HIWU's more contemporary efforts among its contracted laboratories–efforts that have encountered several high profile snags. Over the past year or so, the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC) suspended accreditation of both the University of Illinois Chicago's (UIC) Analytical Forensic Toxicology Laboratory and the University of Kentucky Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory (UK-EACL). The former's suspension was due in part to failures in identifying intentionally spiked samples–the latter's reportedly due to a long list of operational and managerial failures under former lab director Scott Stanley. Earlier this year, the RMTC fully revoked its accreditation of the Chicago lab. After an unusually high number of total carbon dioxide (TCO2) cases emerged out of the Pennsylvania Equine Toxicology and Research Laboratory (PETRL), the facility was required to upgrade its TCO2 testing equipment, bringing it up to par with the other labs. Many of those initial cases were ultimately dropped due to the questions marks surrounding the results. Dr. Larry Bowers | Paul Gilham/Getty Images What these issues relay is the story of a sport years behind its human counterparts in bringing all its different drug testing facilities onto the same performance page. Earlier this year, however, HIWU took a major step forward when instituting its new HISA Equine Analytical Laboratory (HEAL) accreditation standard program, which builds off the work of Bowers and others decades ago to ensure different laboratories were finding what they were supposed to, when they're supposed to, how they're supposed to. No easy feat. “The proficiency testing program is really the hard part to implement,” said Bowers. “There's quite a bit of work to do administration studies, then process the samples, divide them up into various and sundry things and get them out. So yes, it's a bit of a challenge,” Bowers added, with no small understatement. Single, Double-Blinds In a single-blind test, a substance has been added to a sample and the lab is required simply to identify it. The single-blind sample is known to the lab (but not of course the substance). In a double-blind test, a substance has been added to a sample that is included among a batch of routine samples, and the labs have no idea which of them is the culprit. “It's supposed to come into the lab as part of the sample flow and treated just like any other sample,” said Bowers. Prior to the implementation of WADA's international laboratory standards, the IOC typically issued just the one single-blind test a year among its stable of global labs, said Bowers, and no double-blinds–hardly the highest bar to clear. “Laboratories have self-interest at heart and they don't want to lose their accreditation. So, if you just send them a single-blind, the day that you send them that sample, they're probably performing the best that they can possibly perform,” said Bowers. “If what you want to know is the best the lab can do [that day], the single-blind is a good assessment,” said Bowers. “If you want to know what the lab does routinely, then a double-blind is a much better assessment of lab performance.” Under Bowers's new set of standards, proficiency tests were significantly ramped up. The issuance of single-blind tests increased from once to typically three times a year. For the first time in human sports testing, international labs were sent double-blind tests. But just as double-blind tests offer a much tougher bar to clear for laboratories, they're just as hard to administer properly. For example, “how do you insert a sample somewhere into the line where they normally get samples from so that they don't realize it's a proficiency testing sample?” said Bowers. Another problem was just what to spike the tests with? Athletes were abusing all manner of new and unusual drugs that regulators didn't always know how to get, how to test, nor understand how they behaved in the human body. “As you know, you put a drug into an animal and it can metabolize into other things,” said Bowers. Part of the problem was that some cheats approached the manufacture of performance enhancing drugs like DIY enthusiasts. BALCO building | Justin Sullivan/Getty Images “Not all the drugs that are being used by people who are doping humans-and I suspect horses as well–come from the pharmaceutical industry. Some of them are made in rogue labs and things like that,” said Bowers. Just take the infamous and widespread doping operation through the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO). “The guy [Victor Conte] that was supplying the drugs to the athletes was actually synthesizing them or making them in his garage,” said Bowers. As such, “It was much more challenging than what I had anticipated when we started in order to get a good set of samples for both single and double-blinds. What happens, however, when a human sports testing lab can't meet its performance goals? It turns out the loss of accreditation isn't confined to horse racing's stable of laboratories. Suspensions Just as Bowers and his team were adapting to the challenges of administering a new quality assurance program, the labs themselves had to adapt to a much more rigorous set of requirements. Easier said than done. “Having a lab is a huge financial investment. And so, you don't want to willy-nilly say, 'You made one little mistake, you're done.' But on the other hand, if you continually make mistakes, we used to say, `We don't want to falsely accuse people,'” said Bowers. “If you do that, that makes people have doubts about the program.” As lab performance standards evolve, however, so must the laboratories themselves. Over just the last decade or so, WADA has issued accreditation suspensions to several laboratories around the world, including ones in Rio de Janeiro, New Dehli and Bloemfontein (in South Africa). As per WADA's press releases, it's not always clear for what the labs were suspended–often for vaguely worded “non-conformities” with international lab standards. But occasionally, more detailed accounts slip out. In 2015, WADA revoked full accreditation of Moscow's laboratory following the exposure of Russia's institutionalized doping program to ensure a medal bonanza during the 2014 Sochi winter Olympics. Sydney Olympics in 2000 | photo by Joe McNally/Getty Images As part of Russia's doping scheme, Russian officials conducted a clandestine nighttime exchange, swapping out through a mouse hole drilled into the lab's wall the tainted urine samples from their athletes and replacing them with clean samples. Despite these serious infractions, the lab was still allowed to perform the necessary processes related to its Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) program because it's “practically impossible for laboratories to interfere with the blood variables of [these] samples,” according to WADA. But then in 2020, WADA suspended the lab again, barring them from performing the ABP tasks as well on account of the “intentional alteration and deletion of laboratory data prior to and during the time it was being forensically copied by WADA,” which was “a serious violation of the Code of Ethics of the ISL.” Interestingly, just as Bowers sought to bring performance uniformity between the labs, he still needed individual facilities to maintain a certain amount of drug testing latitude. “It became clear that we couldn't require labs–at least on the human side–to use the exact same methods because that would give us all exactly the same blind spots and so on,” said Bowers. Which is where the BALCO scandal comes in. BALCO Between the late 1990s and 2003, businessman and former musician Victor Conte funneled to dozens of successful athletes including baseball players (like Barry Bonds), footballers (like Bill Romanowski) and track and field stars (like partners Tim Montgomery and Marion Jones) a new designer anabolic steroid called tetrahydrogestrinone (THG). Conte's confidence and brazenness came from the fact the commonplace testing procedures among the labs made THG highly difficult to detect. “And that's why [Conte] was able to get away with it, knowing this major approach of all the laboratories,” said Bowers. WADA, however, worked with Don Catlin, who was developing a new way to test for THG out of his lab at the University of California, Los Angeles-one that could be replicated across all the labs. “It was only after we switched to this different technology that it became very easy to detect the compound and then the BALCO scandal ensued,” said Bowers, who explained that THG was fairly stable, meaning that it was excreted in the urine in the same form that it was administered. “That made detection a lot easier than having to work through a lot of metabolites and then make those compounds,” said Bowers. “We saved ourselves a few steps there in trying to move things forward, shall we say.” The BALCO scandal, said Bowers, was a learning curve for regulators for many reasons, perhaps none more so than in learning the legal, ethical and practical finer points of trying to unravel a large and far-reaching doping network. “It was a very interesting time. We were trying to be very careful because as you can imagine, we really didn't know who might be involved in the whole thing, other than Conte. It was a whole question of, 'who could you tell?'” said Bowers. Crossover, Human and Equine Sports To some extent, said Bowers, “HIWU has benefitted from the BALCO scandal in trying to figure out where the lines get drawn on investigations, with testing and everything else.” In other ways, “They're working through the same stages that WADA was in 2003 or so,” Bowers added. This includes the establishment of an independent group of lab experts to help oversee the HEAL accreditation process and program. Horse headed to the test barn | Coady Photography Under HEAL, the remaining four labs used by HIWU are now sent a minimum 15 single-blind tests and five double-blind tests. They're also running a sample exchange program “whereby samples that are reported as negative in one laboratory are sent to other laboratories to be re-analyzed,” according to HIWU's latest annual report. Bowers's work with HIWU isn't his first instance of professional overlap with horse racing. “When I first got involved in the lab in Indianapolis, I used to talk with the [British] horse racing lab all the time about steroids and steroid metabolites they were seeing,” said Bowers, who added that Equipoise–otherwise known as boldenone–is an anabolic steroid that made its way from the sport horse world to human athletics. “It's really good to share information across the spectrum,” Bowers added. “And I think that's happening more today than it has in the past.” The post In Lab Variability, Horse Racing Playing Catchup With Human Sports 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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7th-Keeneland, $110,000, Msw, 4-25, 3yo, 6f, 1:10.74, sy, 3/4 length. WILL TO PREPARE (c, 3, Game Winner–Hessie's Girl, by Giant's Causeway), a $185,000 Keeneland September purchase, was dismissed at 21-1 in what looked a fairly hot maiden on paper, including the $800,000 KEESEP grad Il Cavallino (Into Mischief), a half to MSW Botanical (Medaglia d'Oro), and Lifes Reward (Into Mischief), a homebred full-brother to MGISW 'TDN Rising Star' Life Is Good. The chestnut colt was beaten for speed and dropped out to race near the back of the pack early on, with only the slow-starting, but patiently ridden Lifes Reward behind him. Working his way into the race nicely approaching the stretch, Will To Prepare came five or six wide into the lane and was joined in the final furlong by Lifes Reward, who came with a barnstorming run of his own even wider out. The two may have brushed lightly with a sixteenth of a mile to run, but Will To Prepare managed to hold off the 12-5 second favorite by three-parts of a length. Il Cavallino argued the early fractions while down inside, but weakened to finish sixth at odds of 37-10. A half to Fearless Soldier (City of Light), SP, $288,003, Will To Prepare is related to nine winners from 12 to race, including GISW Bullsbay (Tiznow) and GSW Our Khrysty (Newfoundland), herself the dam of GISW Grace Adler (Curlin) and GSW & MGISP Pyrenees (Into Mischief). Hessie's Girl is represented by the 2-year-old filly Chambersburg (Charlatan) and most recently visited Flightline and Quality Road. Sales history: $185,000 Ylg '23 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $65,643. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. O-Belladonna Racing LLC, Twin Brook Stables, Griffin Thoroughbred Stables, Woodford Racing LLC, BCWT Ltd & Taylor Creek; B-Farfellow Farms Ltd (KY); T-Cherie DeVaux. #6 WILL TO PREPARE ($44) rallies between horses to win race 7 at @keenelandracing. The son of Game Winner (@LanesEndFarms) was ridden by @Jose93_Ortiz and is trained by @reredevaux. The $350,000 Bewitch Stakes (G3) is up next! Wager here https://t.co/ybo2UACnE6 pic.twitter.com/eiWJWMtKEx — FanDuel Racing (@FanDuel_Racing) April 25, 2025 The post Game Winner Colt Will To Prepare Causes Debut Upset at Keeneland 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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9th-Keeneland, $139,423, Alw (NW3$X)/Opt. Clm ($100,000), 4-25, 4yo/up, 1 1/8m, 1:48.60, sy, 3 1/4 lengths. UNMATCHED WISDOM (c, 4, Cairo Prince–Glide On By, by Pure Prize) earned his 'TDN Rising Star' tag with a 6 1/4-length win at Aqueduct just over a year ago and stayed undefeated through a win in the Curlin Stakes at Saratoga July 19. Off the board however in both the GI Travers Stakes and the GI Pennsylvania Derby, he went to the sidelines for the rest of the year and just resurfaced off the seven-month layoff Friday. Drawn inside as the 4-5 favorite, Unmatched Wisdom was let go on the lead and showed the way alone through fractions of :23.76 and :47.43. Couth (War Front) stayed closest to him into the turn but faded to leave only Will Take It (Tapit) as a challenger down the stretch. Kept to task inside the sixteenth pole, Unmatched Wisdom turned back any potential late challenge to win by ,3 1/4 lengths with Will Take It a further 9 1/4 lengths clear of third. The winner has a 2-year-old half-sister by Classic Empire and a yearling full-brother. Sales History: $25,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP; $450,000 2yo '23 OBSMAR. Lifetime Record: SW, 6-4-0-0, $310,110. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. O-Klaravich Stables, Inc.; B-Estate of Harvey A Clarke, Paul Braverman, Sebastian Murat & Steven (KY); T-Chad C. Brown. #1 UNMATCHED WISDOM ($3.74) goes gate-to-wire to win race 9 at @keenelandracing. The son of Cairo Prince was ridden by Flavien Prat and is trained by Chad Brown. Watch more on @FanDuelTV. pic.twitter.com/gmDFEpunsc — FanDuel Racing (@FanDuel_Racing) April 25, 2025 The post ‘Rising Star’ Unmatched Wisdom Gate To Wire In Return To Races 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 Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) announced Friday that it has reached an agreement with Woodbine after it conducted an investigation into a rash of equine fatalities in the fall of 2024. Woodbine did not contest the AGCO findings. Between Oct. 28 and Dec. 15, 19 horses sustained injuries while racing and training over Woodbine's synthetic surface. Ten of those horses had to be euthanized. Two horses died on Nov. 9 and the remainder of that day's card was cancelled. The breakdowns were not expected as Woodbine's Tapeta surface had enjoyed a reputation as one of the safest racing surfaces in North America. The AGCO investigation concluded that Woodbine's track maintenance practices were inadequate and inconsistent with manufacture guidelines. The AGCO investigation also concluded that there were substandard grooming practices and irregular surface depth measurements and that Woodbine was using undertrained ad inexperienced personnel. It also discovered that there was an absence of standard maintenance protocols and improperly maintained track equipment. As part of the settlement Woodbine has agreed to adopt some new measures, including independent oversight. They will be required to retain two internationally recognized track safely experts for two years to conduct quarterly safety assessments of the Tapeta surface. They will also form a Track Surfaces Committee to monitor track safety and make recommendations for improvement throughout the racing season. Failure to comply with these measures by Woodbine will result in regulatory measures, including a $200,000 fine. As part of the agreement, Woodbine Entertainment will also make a $200,000 donation to support equine aftercare and welfare in Ontario, with equal contributions to the LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement Society and the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance. Prior to reaching the agreement with the AGCO, Woodbine had already taken several steps on their own to enhance track safety. The list includes recruitment of a full-time track maintenance specialist and renovation of the track near the five-and-a-half furlong pole to improve consistency and drainage. The AGCO will take measures of its own, including strengthen veterinary oversight, increased scrutiny of horses returning from the vet's list and new guidelines around racing frequency and the use of certain therapeutic treatments. In December, it was announced by Woodbine that horses which raced in the previous 14 days are no longer eligible, nor are those who had an intra-articular fetlock injection, during that same time frame. The post Woodbine and Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario Reach Settlement Regarding Track Safety 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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With a sweeping move around the final of three turns in the 1 1/2-mile closing day feature, FOREVER AFTER ALL (m, 6, Connect–Julia Tuttle, by Giant's Causeway) took over from a pair of embattled pacesetters and romped home by daylight in the GIII Bewitch Stakes. Facing a scratched-down field over a course listed as yielding, the 9-5 shot, who was last fifth in the GIII The Very One Stakes at Gulfstream, let two horses to her inside show the way for much of the running before making a confident outside bid under Irad Ortiz, Jr. Youknownothing (Candy Ride {Arg}) was home a clear second ahead of Immensitude (Fr) (Lawman {Fr}). O/B-Dixiana Farms LLC; T-Brendan Walsh. Sales History: $290,000 RNA ylg' 20 KEESEP. Forever After All dominates in the G3 Bewitch at Keeneland for trainer @brenpwalsh with @iradortiz aboard! TwinSpiresReplay pic.twitter.com/iItMbfmI08 — TwinSpires Racing (@TwinSpires) April 25, 2025 The post Forever After All Romps In The Bewitch, Keeneland’s Closing Day Feature 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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Opening day at Finger Lakes, a rite of spring in the Finger Lakes region since 1962, is set for April 28. The 64th season of Thoroughbred action at "The Thumb" features 91 racing days through Nov. 26.View the full article
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The lightly raced Clever Again (American Pharoah), a sharp, front-running winner of the Hot Springs Stakes going a mile at Oaklawn Mar. 30, is pointing to the GI Preakness Stakes May 17 at Pimlico. Clever Again, a $500,000 Keeneland September Yearling, has won two of three career starts for Winchell Thoroughbreds, Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith and Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen. “He's a talented horse,” Asmussen said. “Obviously, the measurements or rulers that we're using, the company that he's kept, which is Tiztastic (Tiz the Law), Publisher (American Pharoah), Magnitude (Not This Time), they've all been good company for a long time, so you're very confident in what level they belong.” The post Asmussen Pointing Clever Again to Preakness 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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Devil's Marble (GB) (Territories {Ire}) topped Friday's Auctav April Sale when selling for €50,000 to Haras des Chataigniers. Also consigned by that outfit, the 3-year-old filly is out of Listed Further Flight Stakes heroine Deuce Again (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), who is also the dam of G1 Champion Hurdle Challenge Trophy heroine Golden Ace (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}). Second on the buyers' sheet was Lady Chatterley (Fr) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}) (lot 12), who sold for €21,000 to George Baker Racing. Offered by Racing D, the winning 4-year-old filly is a granddaughter of stakes winner Visoriyna (Fr) (Dansili {GB}) and from the same family as crack stayer Vazirabad (Fr) (Manduro {Ger}). Of the 18-horse catalogue, 17 were offered with seven sold for an aggregate of €105,000 (41%). The average was €15,000 and the median was €2,000. The post Territories Filly Tops Auctav April 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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As a fan of horse racing and someone that holds the Hall of Fame in esteem as the highest honor in our sport, I would like to implore the Hall and their Board of Trustees to take a hard look at both the nominating process for applicants to the Hall of Fame, and at the system through which the horses and people are elected. For the past few years, we have had a number of very good nominees on the equine and human side, and to not even know how close or how far they are from being actually put into the Hall of Fame is one mystery that would be nice to know. In the Eclipse Awards, for example, they tell us at the end of the day how many votes each nominee received. In the Hall of Fame, those numbers are not released. Contrast this to the baseball Hall of Fame, where I can tell you how many writers voted, how many votes players needed to get in, how many votes each player received, and which players got so few votes that they will drop off future ballots. The second part that I think requires some review is who is voting for these people and horses to get into the Hall of Fame? We work in a very tight-knit industry. If you go to the website for the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, you will see that the voting procedures describer the voting panel as “active and former racing writers, editors, broadcasters, historians, and commentators on the sport of thorough racing.” But even in this relatively small, close industry, I have spoken to a number of very prominent current racing writers who don't have a vote. I know people I consider to be great historians of the game who don't have a vote. I've spoken to people that I respect as commentators who don't have a vote. The people who have a voice in this process should have extreme knowledge of the sport, and maybe they do, but we don't even know who the voters are. We need to improve this process, and make it more transparent. One suggestion I would make for the Trustees to consider is that any living person in the Hall of Fame gets a vote. Let's face it; if you're good enough to make it into the Hall of Fame, you're good enough to get to vote on your contemporaries. I know I'm not the only one who feels this way, but for some reason, people are afraid to speak up about it. I implore the Trustees of the Racing Hall of Fame to take a hard look at the system and look for ways to improve it before next year's ballot comes out. The post Letter to the Editor: `Hall’ Needs More Transparency 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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Making her first appearance since a midpack fifth to the commonly owned Pounce (Lookin At Lucky) in the GIII Lake George Stakes at Saratoga last July 20, Resolute Racing's 'TDN Rising Star' SWEET REBECCA (f, 4, American Pharoah–Sweet N Discreet, by Discreet Cat) led home a 1-2 finish for her Coolmore-based stallion in a salty allowance on closing day of the Keeneland Spring Meet Friday afternoon. Off at a penny shy of 4-1, the $250,000 Keeneland September yearling was given a positive ride by Flavien Prat and was content to track the pace into and around the second turn. Asked to come after pacesetting She's A Tempest (Connect) in upper stretch, Sweet Rebecca opened a bit of daylight with a good turn of foot and got home a long neck to the good of favored Deep Satin. The latter, last seen winning the Listed Virginia Oaks last Sept. 7, enjoyed the run of the race and slipstreamed the eventual winner down the backstretch. She went on the attack entering the final furlong and was getting there but the wire came a couple of strides too soon. The final time for the one-mile distance over ground rated as yielding was 1:38.58 and the victory took Prat to a meet-leading 19 winners with five races to go. Sales history: $250,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: SW, 5-3-0-0. O-Resolute Racing; B-Mt Brilliant Farm & Ranch LLC (KY); T-Chad Brown. Flavien Prat takes the lead in the @keeneland spring meet standings with his 19th win aboard SWEET REBECCA ($9.98) in the 5th race over a yielding turf course for trainer Chad Brown and owner @resracingky! pic.twitter.com/ea2wGQwDMn — Equibase (@Equibase) April 25, 2025 The post ‘Rising Star’ Sweet Rebecca Leads Home American Pharoah 1-2 at Keeneland 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 likely lineup of riders for the 2025 Markel Magnolia Cup in support of The King's Trust International's Project Lehar, was announced by Goodwood on Friday. RIXO will design the racing silks carried by 12 women, who will ride on Thursday, July 31, during the Qatar Goodwood Festival. The race will support The King's Trust International's Project Lehar. The initiative operates in the Indian states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, with a focus on empowering adolescent girls through vocational training, skills development and promoting gender equality within their communities. The 15 riders that have a chance of contesting the 5 1/2-furlong race down Goodwood Racecourse's straight are: Charlotte Emery – chief marketing officer at Entain Group (Coral) Christy Cashman – author, writer and actor Elizabeth Hiscox – owner of sustainable fashion brand E.STOTT and part of Hiscox insurance company Jaimee Broadley -pPolice officer Jasmine Watts – construction loss adjuster in the insurance world Kate Hutchins – social media and fashion influencer Lauren Griffiths – Cool Ridings Equestrian member and nurse Lois Logan – up and coming Show jumper Madeleine Bunbury – equine artist, Bunbury Equine Art Matilda Alexander – graduate lawyer based in Melbourne Nina Barbour – managing director at Bolesworth Country Estate Philippa Hartrick-Morris – new mother and HR business partner at Markel International Sabaya Verger – partner at Tedworth Property Sienna Anderson – Riding A Dream Academy graduate Sophie Forsyth – underwriter at Markel International. The above list of 15 will be whittled down to 12 after the British Racing School standard riding and fitness assessments, which are scheduled for May. Goodwood Racecourse director, James Crespi, said, “Every year the inspirational women who take part in the Markel Magnolia Cup become part of our incredible story and it's something we're immensely proud of.” The post 2025 Likely Markel Magnolia Cup Lineup Announced appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article