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The Listed Civic Stakes (1400m wasn’t always the first choice for Grebeni’s next start, but co-trainer Sterling Alexiou believed it might just prove the right fit. The son of Ocean Park was being aimed towards the Tattersall’s Mile (1600m) at Eagle Farm on Saturday week, however, Alexiou and training partner Gerald Ryan had a rethink and opted to send him around at Randwick this Saturday instead. “It wasn’t really the plan to run this Saturday. He was going to go to Eagle Farm (Saturday week) and run in the Tatt’s Mile, but we were just a little bit concerned about how the track there walked and how it raced last week,” Alexiou said. “The drying track (at Randwick) is a big tick for him. He raced well the other day but he is certainly better on top of the ground.” Grebeni has been racing in great heart, passing a qualification clause for the Big Dance with his runner-up finish in the Muswellbrook Cup in March and notching a gallant third in the Scone Cup two starts ago. Last time out he beat all but Loch Eagle over 1600m at Randwick and Alexiou doesn’t envisage a slight distance drop causing too many headaches in the Civic Stakes (1400m). “Probably his best form is around the mile but he’s well suited Saturday and you can expect another consistent run from him,” he said. “When he’s in a good vein of form he seems to be consistent and hold his form.” View the full article
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The Listed John Turkington Forestry Castletown Stakes (1200m) was one of the few age-group features in the lower North Island that was missing from Lisa Latta’s CV, but the fast-improving filly Platinum Diamond dealt to that unfinished business at Otaki on Friday. Latta has picked up more than 80 black-type victories in her 1200-win training career, including Central Districts two and three-year-old prizes such as the Gr.1 New Zealand Oaks (2400m), Gr.1 Manawatu Sires’ Produce Stakes (1400m), Gr.2 Hawke’s Bay Guineas (1400m), Gr.2 Wellington Guineas (1400m), Gr.2 Lowland Stakes (2100m), Gr.3 Desert Gold Stakes (1600m), Gr.3 Gold Trail Stakes (1200m), Listed Wellesley Stakes (1000m) and Listed Ryder Stakes (1200m). But the Castletown had proved elusive, with placegetters Secret Allure (2018), Miss Fi (2015) and Elusive Red (2011) delivering her best results. That all changed on Friday. Latta went into the $80,000 juvenile feature with both quality and quantity on her side. She saddled a three-strong Castletown contingent, headed by stylish last-start Wanganui winner Platinum Diamond. However, the favourite for the Castletown Stakes was one of the beaten runners from that Wanganui race on May 31. Gavin Sharrock’s Country Salon was significantly hampered by his stablemate Spandeedo that day, carried extremely wide around the home turn before recovering to finish second and three-quarters of a length behind the winner. Country Salon was sent out as a $3 favourite to reverse that result on Friday, but instead Platinum Diamond increased her winning margin with an even more impressive performance. Platinum Diamond was patiently ridden by visiting Brazilian jockey Bruno Queiroz, settling second-last as Portland led the field up to the point of the home turn. Country Salon enjoyed a perfect run on the outside of the leader and then kicked hard to take command straightening for home. But then Queiroz angled Platinum Diamond into clear air and unleashed her down the outside of the favourite. She burst to the front at the 200m mark and kicked away to win by a length and a quarter. Country Salon held on for second, a head in front of the winner’s stablemate Brutiful Lass. “I was very confident before the race,” said Queiroz, who has now ridden 12 winners in New Zealand including two at Listed level. “This is a nice horse. She was travelling very well all the way. I just waited until the straight, and then she flew home.” Lisa Latta Racing Stables paid $90,000 to buy Platinum Diamond from breeders Beaufort Downs during Book 2 of Karaka 2024. The filly has now had three starts for two wins and $66,975 in stakes. “She’s really going the right way,” Latta said. “She was a late foal, a December foal, and we’ve just waited on her and given her time. Every start, she’s got better and better. “Bruno was very confident today. I didn’t really have to give him instructions. He said, ‘I’ll just win.’ “There are some great owners in this filly. Neville McAlister has been with me for a long time and puts a huge amount of work into finding these horses. Kevin and Wendy Dixon and Trevor Tomlins, from the South Island, are in the ownership too. It’s great to get this result for them.” Platinum Diamond is the second stakes winner from Cambridge Stud shuttle stallion Hello Youmzain’s first New Zealand crop, joining Lucy In The Sky in the Listed Champagne Stakes (1200m) at Riccarton in May. Hello Youmzain heads New Zealand’s first-season sire standings with total progeny earnings of $284,585. That puts him almost $50,000 ahead of the second-placed Lucky Vega, whose $235,700 comes mostly from Karaka Millions 2YO (1200m) runner-up Vega For Luck. Platinum Diamond is out of the winning Thorn Park mare Spritz, who is a half-sister to the Group One placegetter Corsage. Spritz is the dam of two winners from two foals to race, with Platinum Diamond’s half-brother Healthy Healthy being a five-time winner in Hong Kong. View the full article
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Piper’s Son outfights the favourite in Raukawa Cup
Wandering Eyes posted a topic in BOAY Racing News
Stratford gelding Piper’s Son produced a remarkable performance to get up off the canvas and score the biggest win of his career in Friday’s $45,000 Harcourts Otaki Raukawa Cup (2100m). The Tony Dravitzki-trained Piper’s Son headed into Otaki’s Matariki meeting with a rating of just 56, making him the lowest-rated runner in the open handicap line-up. Even with apprentice jockey Elle Sole’s 3kg claim, he appeared to have his work cut out against the $2.70 favourite Boomtown Boy. But Dravitzki was confident his five-year-old gelding was not there to simply make up the numbers. “He’s always shown a bit of potential,” he said. “He’s really just a one-pace horse. Elle took the initiative and went to the front. Full credit to her and this is a great result. “I knew he was fit – he’s been doing three laps around the wet track at Stratford!” Sole was able to dictate terms out in front and conserve her mount’s energy with a sedate tempo. The field bunched up tightly behind them in the back straight and down the side of the track, and it was obvious a long way from home that Boomtown Boy was going to be the big danger. He was travelling effortlessly on the heels of the leader, then swooped around the outside to clearly take the lead at the top of the home straight. Piper’s Son looked beaten, but he lifted again in the straight and gradually clawed his way back level with Boomtown Boy. They fought tooth and nail through the last 200m, and Piper’s Son summoned another big effort in the last few strides to edge ahead and win by a short head. Boomtown Boy finished two lengths in front of the third-placed Pinkerton, with another four lengths back to Carpe Diem in fourth. “That was a real battle – very tiring,” Sole said. “He was going nicely in front, but coming down the back straight and up to the corner, he wasn’t really handling the heavy track that well. He kept chopping and changing his legs. “When Boomtown Boy came up beside him, I just screamed. But he’s a very nice horse and did a great job to fight back and win today. Thanks to Tony for always putting me on and giving me so much support.” Piper’s Son has now had 21 starts for two wins and three placings. The five-year-old son of Complacent has earned $48,760 for an ownership that includes Dravitzki. View the full article -
South Island Trainers Premiership 2025
Wandering Eyes replied to Murray Fish's topic in Galloping Chat
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Satono Reve could give a hefty boost to the formlines of Ka Ying Rising when he lines up in the Group One Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes (1,200m) at Royal Ascot on Saturday. Trained by Noriyuki Hori in Japan, the Lord Kanaloa galloper has twice chased home Ka Ying Rising this season, first when third in December’s Group One Hong Kong Sprint (1,200m) before his second-placed finish in the Group One Chairman’s Sprint Prize (1,200m) in April. In-between those runs was a fantastic win in the...View the full article
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by Mike Love Current training premiership leaders Steve and Amanda Telfer look set to edge a little further ahead on the leaderboard tonight at Addington raceway with seven runners across three races. “It’s been a really good run – long may it continue,” said co-trainer Amanda Telfer. In race one tonight, The Peninsular Beachfront Resort mobile pace over 1980m, driver Tim Williams links up with Miki Flybye ($1.55FF) for the first time under race conditions. The three year old Always B Miki gelding will need to overcome the unruly draw, but the small field of eight should assist. Telfer is confident of a good account. “He was off the unruly last start. His work is good, and his runs have been good. He just needs to pace all the way. “He’s a nice horse on the improve.” Moving onto race six the Garrards Horse & Hound handicap pace over 2600m the Telfer team line up two runners – Carbon ($10.00FF) with Nikita Burton, and C C Arden ($4.20FF) and Tim Williams. “It’s both their first stand starts tomorrow.” “Carbon is a consistent boy who’s always in the finish, and I don’t see that being any different tonight if he can negotiate the stand. “C C Arden went really well last start. His work has been really nice, so the same as Carbon, if he can get the start right he should go quite good.” Cheer The Captain ($23.00FF) and Akatea ($2.00FF) represent Stonewall Stud in race seven the Woodlands Winning Weanlings mobile pace over 1980m. Telfer believed that Cheer The Captain may feel the rise in class tonight, while Akatea just can’t put a hoof wrong at the moment. “It’s a big jump in class for Cheer The Captain, but he is a nice horse going forward. He’s progressive. So with a nice run he should hopefully measure up in this grade.” Their other runner Akatea is looking for four wins in a row, but draws the outside of the gate being the most tightly assessed runner in the field. “She’s being going great. I think she’ll have this run tonight, then the Silk Road final next week, after which she will go for a break before resuming in the spring.” Terry Chmiel takes the drive on Cheer The Captain, with Tim Williams behind Akatea. A chance to bookend the programme may arise with two strong chances in the final event, race nine the Gold Band Taxis mobile pace over 2600m. Captain Christian ($8.00FF) for Terry Chmiel and Music Mistress ($2.80FF) with Tim Williams look set to give it a decent shake. “Captain Christian has been good this time back. He’s on the improve, and is just lightly raced. It’s a nice field but he should go alright. “They will both be driven conservatively over the 2600m.” The Telfer team also line up three runners at Alexandra Park tonight, namely; Race four – Beachbreak ($11.00FF) Race five – Turn O The Tide ($8.00FF) Race seven – Iron Heart ($8.50FF) All runners will be driven by Josh Dickie. Race one at Addington gets underway at 5:06pm, while Alexandra Park commences at 5:25pm. View the full article
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by Jonny Turner The chance Hayden Douglas took on harness racing paid off twice more at Wyndham on Thursday. The Oamaru junior driver reined home a winning double, with Magnetic Beckers toughing out a strong front-running victory immediately after Princess Sadie’s successful return to racing. Despite one being a trotter and the other a pacer, each horse wore about the same amount of gear in their wins. “Magnetic Beckers has had the hopples off, and he just feels so strong now that he’s free-legged.” “He’s really improved recently, and he showed that again today.” Douglas proved he was more than up to the challenge of handling Princess Sadie in her return at Wyndham. The four-year-old was facing the standing start tapes for the first time, in what became a four-horse field following two key scratchings. The race had the potential to become a tactical affair, but Douglas ensured Princess Sadie was right where she needed to be. “My job was on the line,” the junior driver quipped. “She made it pretty easy for me — it was just a four-horse field and I just had to get her around.” “She has the Silk Road Final next week which is the main goal, but to get a penalty-free win first is nice.” “She did it under her own steam — she did it fairly easily, I thought.” Thursday’s double continues Douglas’ success since joining the Matthew Williamson stable. Though in his second season on the track, it wasn’t until early this year that the reinsman moved into a full-time position in the harness racing industry. When the Williamson stable had a vacancy for a junior driver, Douglas quit his job in Invercargill and headed to Oamaru. “I had a really good job, and it was a tough decision to move up to Matty and Charlotte’s.” “I was having some sleepless nights thinking it over, but ever since I made the decision, I haven’t had any regrets.” “So that tells me it’s been the right decision.” “Matty and Charlotte have been really supportive, getting to drive a horse like Princess Sadie has been pretty unreal.” Douglas’ Wyndham double took him to 13 wins for 2025, already equalling his 2024 tally. View the full article
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Comeback jumper Te Kahu will begin another campaign toward New Zealand’s premier steeplechases at Te Aroha on Sunday, stepping out on the flat alongside his stablemate, Captains Run. Now an 11-year-old, Te Kahu won the Great Northern Steeplechase (6200m) back in 2021 and campaigned briefly in Australia in the following year. The talented chestnut was off the scene for nearly two years after that, but he made a serious resurgence last year, defeating champion jumper West Coast to win the Hawke’s Bay Steeplechase (4800m), which was just his 19th start. Unfortunately, after his Hastings triumph, Te Kahu was ruled out for the remainder of the year with a minor injury but is back to full soundness and will have his first conditioning run in the Majestic Horse Floats 2200m. “He had a little joint issue after Hawke’s Bay, but that seems to have settled down now and we’re back into it,” trainer Dan O’Leary said. “He’s nice and sound. “We haven’t done a lot of fast work with him and he’s done a little bit of schooling, so at this stage, this is a nice trip away and a flat race to start off with. “He’s a very easy horse to have around, a pleasure to train, and he’s got a real will to win when he’s in a steeplechase. He gets very competitive and strong, so hopefully we can get back steeplechasing, and he can retain that energy that he has.” In Te Kahu’s absence in the back end of the season, Captains Run stepped up for O’Leary, placing in the Grand National Steeplechase (5600m) and Great Northern Steeplechase (6500m), his second time finishing runner-up in the latter. After 18 starts over fences, it’s something of a novelty that the gelding will make his debut on the flat on Sunday. “It’s actually his first ever flat race, he’s never been in one before,” he said. “Both he and Te Kahu wouldn’t have to be competitive, but if they’re finishing off well and pull up sound and happy, I’ll be very pleased with that. “We are targeting those later steeplechasing races in the National and the Northern. Those are the two races that they’ll both head for, if they remain sound and competitive. “That was another reason for going to Te Aroha, the Northern is run there, so it’s a step along the way.” O’Leary will have a representative over fences on Sunday, with Zac Flash contesting the K and R Steeplechase (3500m). A winner over hurdles, the gelding tends to mix his jumping at times, and O’Leary hoped to combat that with a steeplechase trial at Cambridge on Monday. “He actually didn’t jump that well again at the trials, but he can be a little bit like that, he needs a bit of repetition and routine to get flowing again,” O’Leary said. “He’s stepping into open company without a maiden chase there, so he’s finding his way a bit and we’re just hoping that he can jump well, get around safely and finish on strongly.” View the full article
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Cody Cole will be watching his in-form mare Rareza from afar on Saturday in her quest for a stakes victory. The Matamata trainer is taking a well-earned break at Port Douglas in Queensland during a personal-best season of 34 winners and stable earnings of more than $1.2 million. Cole has received positive reports from his staff ahead of the Rareza’s bid to make it four consecutive victories when she runs in the Listed Team Wealleans Tauranga Classic (1400m). “She’s going well and has come through her last win nicely,” he said. “Obviously, it’s a step up to weight-for-age and it’s not going to be easy, but she deserves to be there and worked well on Thursday morning.” The daughter of Exosphere has fashioned the tidy record of four successes from nine outings and opened her latest winning sequence at Trentham in the spring before a break. She successfully resumed at Woodville at the end of April and struck again last month at Te Rapa. “When she stepped up last start, we decided we needed to look at black-type options,” Cole said. A daughter of four-time winner La Valeta, Rareza was co-bred by Cole’s mother Lou, who is part of the ownership group in the mare. “She’s a mare that comes from Mum’s family and goes back to For Love, who won the Auckland Thoroughbred Breeders’ Stakes (Gr.2, 1400m) so more black type on the page would be valuable,” Cole said. “Rareza was a foal share with Mike O’Donnell of Fairhill Farm and went through the weanling sale, but she didn’t get a bid, so we syndicated her to race and here we are now.” She will again be ridden by Michael McNab at Tauranga and is then likely to head for a break. “I’ll probably give her a freshen-up and look toward the spring,” Cole said. “There are some nice options, she doesn’t want the firmer tracks, but she was good on a better surface at Te Rapa, so that was pretty encouraging.” Cole also has other winning chances on Saturday with Bradley in the A1 Homes Maiden (1600m), Oneira runs in the BOP Equine Vets (1200m) and Kai Moana in the Super Liquor Greerton (1600m). The former has been knocking on the door with runner-up finishes from his last two appearances. “Bradley thought he’d got the job done the other day and knocked off, the inside horse was too far away for him to chase,” Cole said. “On face value, Oneira looked a bit disappointing, but we rode her back and they ran home in 33s and she just doesn’t have that sort of turn of foot.” Placed in last season’s Gr.3 Gold Trail Stakes (1200m), Oneira had led and finished runner-up at Ellerslie at her previous run while Kai Moana was also second two starts ago at Hawera before a fifth at Wanganui. “She just needs to lead, that’s her pattern, as she can’t really quicken,” Cole said. View the full article
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Race 3 MANAWATU ITM MANAWATU HURDLES 2500M WEST COAST (S Fannin) – Trainer Mr. M Oulaghan reported to Stewards, WEST COAST underwent a veterinary examination which included blood tests, on Tuesday 10 June. An irregularity was detected, however, a subsequent blood test on Thursday 19 June showed no abnormalities. M. Oulaghan further advised that it is his intention to continue on with WEST COAST’S current preparation. The post Manawatu Racing Club @ Trentham, Saturday 7 June 2025 appeared first on RIB. View the full article
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Race 2 FAIRVIEW MOTORS WAIKATO HURDLE 3200m TAIKA (J Kozaczek) – Co-trainer Ms. C McDougal reported to Stewards, the stable was satisfied with the post-race condition of TAIKA, and it is the stables intention to carry on with the gelding’s current preparation. The post Waikato Thoroughbred Racing @ Te Rapa, Saturday 14 June 2025 appeared first on RIB. View the full article
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The California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) on Thursday voted down two separate proposals to allocate 2025 race dates to entities at Ferndale and Fresno that wanted to keep Thoroughbred racing going on the now-nonexistent Northern California circuit. The 4-3 votes on each measure dashed what appeared to be the last remaining hopes for a 2025 resuscitation of the sport in a region of the state that as recently as two summers ago boasted a year-round rotation of racing anchored by one commercial track and five fair venues. The June 19 decisions by the CHRB marked the third straight month that supporters of NorCal racing had tried but failed to advance attempts to race at Ferndale. The April CHRB meeting resulted in a vote-down of racing at Pleasanton and a failure to garner enough votes for a decision either way on Ferndale. The May CHRB meeting ended with a 4-3 vote against awarding August and September dates to Ferndale. On June 13, Ferndale tried again but got rebuffed, even after switching its request to six dates over three weekends in October, which would be outside of when the county fair at that property would be operational. The Fresno request for seven dates in September and October, with only one date coinciding with when its fair would be in session, also didn't pass. The CHRB voting bloc hasn't budged on any of the NorCal proposals since May. Voting “no” for all versions of the NorCal meets (plus the simulcast-revenue privileges that would have gone with the dates allotment) were CHRB chairman Gregory Ferraro, DVM, plus commissioners Dennis Alfieri, Damascus Castellanos and Thomas Hudnut. Voting “yes” to keep NorCal alive were vice-chair Oscar Gonzales and commissioners Brenda Washington Davis and Peter Stern. The central arguments for and against a revival of NorCal racing haven't changed much over the past 60 days. Racing at Pleasanton | Vassar Photography But the emotional intensity over the difficult situation has noticeably ramped up, with stakeholders on both sides becoming increasingly argumentative and accusatory. In-person attendees at Thursday's meeting, as they have in the recent past, peppered some parts of the testimony with derisive interjections when the opposing side said something they didn't agree with. The votes on Thursday did nothing to close the chasm on the best path forward for California racing as a whole, increasing an existential North-vs.-South rift that opened nearly two years ago when The Stronach Group (TSG) announced plans to shutter Golden Gate Fields, the main commercial licensee in NorCal. TSG also owns Santa Anita Park, and that prominent SoCal track, along with Del Mar Thoroughbred Club and the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC), have lobbied hard for centralizing all of the state's racing and simulcast revenues in the South on a single circuit that also includes Los Alamitos Race Course. Those entities remain firm in their belief that concentrating all of California's racing in the South is in the best long-term interest of the state as a whole. Some representatives have asserted that the South would be “cannibalized” by what they characterize as unrealistic, not-well-organized, and tenuously financed attempts to make a go of race meets in the North with an allegedly too-thin horse population. NorCal interests, on the other hand, argue that they have both the horses and proper financial backing to pull off successful small meets, and they are firm in their belief that it's a mistake to concentrate the entirety of the state's racing in one, largely urban geographic area. The North proponents have articulated complaints that the TOC isn't representing their interests, and that the CHRB isn't extending support to smaller-scale racing outfits that cannot compete at Santa Anita or Del Mar. They also assert that if NorCal slides off the grid, so too will the state's quickly diminishing foal crop, because the North is where the bulk of the breeding farms are. Ferndale's management has consistently portrayed a loss of racing there as a severe blow to the local community, and operators of other fairs contend that without the attraction and revenue from racing and simulcasting, the county fairs themselves will be in danger of not being able to operate. All stakeholders seem to agree that a revenue infusion is needed for statewide racing to get on firmer footing, perhaps in the form of some type of slot-machine gaming being allowed at the tracks. But that type of gambling requires legislation at the state level that is beyond the CHRB's power to grant. Dr. Gregory Ferraro | courtesy of the CHRB Some commissioners, particularly Alfieri, have advocated for a cooling-off period of study so that the NorCal proposals can be better assembled for 2026. It remains fresh in the minds of commissioners that the CHRB okayed a venture by an entity called Golden State Racing that failed to conduct a financially viable meet last autumn at Pleasanton. Back at the April meeting, Ferraro described that decision last year by the CHRB as “unwise at best or disastrous at worst.” Ferraro had explained in April that those who were advocating for an approval of race dates at NorCal venues in 2025 should “not to expect the board to give the same leeway” because of the damage such a decision might do in terms of siphoning horses and simulcasting revenue from the SoCal tracks, which are also struggling but remain more viable than any entity in the North. On Thursday, Larry SwartzlanderBernal Park Racing, the director of racing for Bernal Park Racing, the group has been trying to financially back and operate this year's proposed meets at Pleasanton, Ferndale and Fresno, warned that NorCal racing is at a now-or-never inflection point. “If we don't race in 2025, if the fairs don't show that they want to continue on in this business, I think the door's closed” for the future, Swartzlander said. “I mean, we can sit here and then come back here in 2026 and give you another calendar. But if it's going to be the same criticisms, it's not going to work,” Swartzlander continued. “It's going to be worse, because we all know in this business once you close, it's difficult to reopen.” Del Mar president Josh Rubinstein was adamant that greenlighting racing in NorCal would be detrimental to the South. “I believe the business case has been made over the last several meetings that a pop-up race meet in the North is not in the best interest of the overall California ecosystem,” Rubinstein said. “And Del Mar has been very clear throughout this entire process that we will not compete with similar conditions if dates are awarded to the North during this time frame. California simply does not have the horse population to operate parallel race meets.” Bill Nader, the president and chief executive officer of the TOC, asked critics who claim that his organization doesn't represent all of California's owners to be mindful of the much larger picture. Bill Nader | Benoit “We're fighting–and we've said it many times at meetings before–a game here where we're dependent solely on pari-mutuel income. We don't have HHR [historical horse racing]. We don't have VLTs . We don't have any of the incremental revenue sources that competing states have,” Nader said. “So every move we make here, we have to do it responsibly, in a way that protects and preserves our foundation. And if we can get to the day when we have alternative revenue streams and we're in a better position, it's an entirely different discussion,” Nader said. The CHRB's Hudnut expressed his opinion this way during a break between the two votes that denied the NorCal dates: “I can imagine sitting in the audience and thinking that some of us cast our votes in a cavalier manner. But I just want to assure you that there isn't a commissioner up here who wouldn't like to see racing in the North, at the fairs, and in the South… “We, at the moment, have a problem with viability of horse racing in this state, regardless of where it is. [And] it's too bad, because we honestly would like [two circuits],” Hudnut said. “But in the final analysis, it's not about horses. Unfortunately, it's about money.” Following Hudnut's comments, vice chair Gonzales, who has voted differently than his colleague on all of the NorCal issues, weighed in. “I appreciate what you're saying, [but] I just think this board decided Ferndale didn't matter again,” Gonzales said. “So regardless of what we think–the complexities, the legislative remedies, all of these–it's really, 'Do communities matter?' And I just believe there are some [people, not only on] this board, but many in society, that have discounted rural areas. And really, the debate that's going on in this country is which communities matter [more than] others.” Gonzales summed up his point at a different juncture: “This is democracy at work. Sometimes governance works. Sometimes it doesn't. But I encourage people not to give up. Because this board, we're going to come and go. Horses have been around for a very long time. We all know that. And horses will outlast this board and many others. So I remain optimistic.” The post CHRB Again Votes Down NorCal Dates, Dashing Hopes For ’25 Racing At Fairs 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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Appearing to lose all chance after a super-awkward start from the inside post, Meringue (Frosted) slowly reeled in her rivals over the course of Churchill's five-furlong turf test and was up just in time to earn 'TDN Rising Star' honors Thursday afternoon. Breaking from post 1, the grey was eased to the back of the field as 3-2 favorite Delightful Darling (Flameaway) went to the front, cutting out an opening quarter of :22.19 as Vibora (Hootenanny) pressed the issue in a close-up second. With those two fillies turned for home in tandem, Meringue was behind a wall of horses with several lengths left to make up on the leaders. Taken to the outside by Luan Machado for the stretch drive, the green but potent Rodolphe Brisset trainee filly closed with a sudden burst midstretch and swept to the front in the final strides to graduate by a neck over fellow-firsters Delightful Darling and Second City Saint (Raging Bull {Fr}), who was farther back in third. Vibora was fourth. Unplaced Catbrier, with this filly in utero, sold to Stephen and Denise Smith's Mesingw Farm for $32,000 at the Keeneland November Sale in 2022. Meringue, her first foal, was followed by a colt by Oscar Performance and a filly by Volatile this term. 1st-Churchill Downs, $118,987, Msw, 6-19, 2yo, f, 5fT, :56.98, fm, neck. MERINGUE, f, 2, by Frosted 1st Dam: Catbrier, by Street Sense 2nd Dam: Kiawah Cat, by Lemon Drop Kid 3rd Dam: Thunder Kitten, by Storm Cat *TDN Rising Star* Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $69,300. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. O-Elements Racing LLC; B-Mesingw Farm LLC (KY); T-Rodolphe Brisset. The post Frosted’s Meringue Closes From the Clouds to Earn ‘TDN Rising Stardom’ at Churchill Downs 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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NTL Sets New Marks at Parx Father's Day Event
Wandering Eyes posted a topic in The Rest of the World
The National Thoroughbred League continued its record-breaking 2025 campaign with the June 15 Philadelphia Cup at Parx Racing, drawing more than 6,000 fans, an NTL record, and generating a $1.55 million handle.View the full article -
Due to the extreme heat index forecasted for next week, live racing has been rescheduled for Thursday, June 26 through Saturday, June 28 at Delaware Park, the track said via a press release on Thursday. There will be no racing on Wednesday, June 25. Entries taken tomorrow, will be for the card rescheduled to Friday, June 27. Live racing is still planned for Saturday, June 21 with first race post time set for 12:35 p.m. ET. The post Heat Forces Delaware Park To Shift Next Week’s Schedule To Thursday-Saturday 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 France's Royal Ascot week having failed to lift off so far, all eyes will be on their darling Zarigana (Siyouni) to provide the rescue in Friday's G1 Coronation Stakes. As a granddaughter of Zarkava with a Classic under her belt, there should be very little for her to prove but the Aga Khan Studs representative has been edged out of both her big tests in photo finishes. Awarded a G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches that she may or may not have won had she not suffered interference, she could really do with a command performance here. Nemone Routh revealed that her handlers will have to keep a lid on her on her first foray overseas. “It is a competitive race and it's the first time she'll have to travel abroad and she can have moments where she gets quite worked up,” the Stud's racing manager said. “It looks like it's going to be very hot as well, but she's got to get through all that as part of the test of being a Group 1 filly.” “She's very consistent–she's won four of her starts and was beaten a nose in the other one. This is a big test for her and she's got to maintain that form and hold it all together in the preliminaries and have luck in running and everything else. If there is any weakness, it will be found out but we're happy with her preparation and while she goes on anything, she's probably better on fast ground.” If all goes well in the build-up and in the early stages of the race, Zarigana is very much the one to beat having covered the penultimate furlong of that ParisLongchamp Classic in a rapid :10.47 and her final three in a scintillating :32.50. It is up to Shadwell's Falakeyah (New Bay) to turn it on here, with stamina guaranteed having dazzled in Newmarket's Listed Pretty Polly Stakes. Angus Gold revealed that the decision to supplement was down largely to Jim Crowley's feedback. “To Jim's credit, he kept saying every time he sat on her that she had a lot of speed and his first words to me having got off her at Newmarket were 'she'd have killed them over a mile'. He thought she'd have gone close in the Guineas had she run in that, so I had to take notice,” he said. “Unfortunately we were going for the Prix de Diane, but then she had a hold-up and we ran out of time. They now feel she's back to her best,” he added. “It's only her third race so we're still learning and I couldn't put my hand on my heart and say she's definitely a miler, but she has plenty of speed and we felt after discussing it this was worth a try.” Ryan Moore has created a stir by picking Ballydoyle's January (Kingman) over Exactly (Frankel), with the former having gone under the radar after her G1 Fillies' Mile second. Coming off a return eighth in the Irish 1,000 Guineas, she is impossible to rule out given the stable's capacity to supercharge improvement into their runners race-to-race. According to the betting market, it seems that the 1,000 Guineas runner-up Flight (Siyouni) has been written off after running below expectations in the Curragh equivalent and is mysteriously much bigger than the Listed Michael Seely Memorial Stakes winner Kon Tiki (Night Of Thunder). Beyond A Shadow Of A Doubt? Friday's G1 Commonwealth Cup is deep, but it has a clear favourite in Godolphin's Shadow Of Light (Lope De Vega) who is one of those rarities that can pull off a Middle Park-Dewhurst double. Showing his dramatic acceleration when third in the 2,000 Guineas, he has a lot of the boxes ticked. “Shadow Of Light is in great order and I'm pleased with the draw,” Charlie Appleby said. “He ran a great race in the 2,000 Guineas and we are confident that the drop back to six furlongs is going to suit. I can't give any negatives and I'm hopeful he is the one to beat.” Juddmonte have yet to win this, but go to war with big guns this time in the G1 Phoenix Stakes winner Babouche (Kodiac) and the G1 Poule d'Essai des Poulains runner-up and fellow TDN Rising Star Jonquil (Lope De Vega). Babouche just enjoys beating up Ballydoyle's G1 Prix Morny winner Whistlejacket (No Nay Never) and will probably do so for the third time, with Colin Keane staying loyal and forsaking Jonquil. “Babouche is in good form and won the trial for this race in Ireland in good style. We would be hopeful of a good run, but we wouldn't be fussy which one won,” Barry Mahon said. “I think it would have been tough for Colin to get off Babouche, having ridden her in all her starts and his association with Ger, but both horses are in good form and ready to run well.” Of Jonquil, Juddmonte's European racing manager added, “Dropping back to six furlongs is a bit of an unknown, but he showed a lot of speed when winning the Greenham at Newbury and also showed plenty of speed in France and hit the front a furlong down. Oisin and Andrew both felt it was a good option for him.” The Aga Khan Stud homebred Rayevka (Blue Point) was electric in the Listed Prix Marchand d'Or last time and that could be a clear signal that she is the race's lurker. “It's a very tough race and a big field and a bit of a cavalry charge, but she's a three-year-old sprinting filly and if we'd waited we were going to have to run in a Group Three against older horses,” Nemone Routh explained. “She won a Listed race well last time and this was her last opportunity to run in a Group race against her own age group. It is a big ask and we'd be really chuffed if she was to run into a place. She's in good form, sprinting is her game and she is a top-of-the-ground horse.” All Set For The Ascot Derby The Aykroyds and Ralph Beckett may have missed out in the Derby, but Friday's G2 King Edward VII Stakes offers the opportunity for their unbeaten Listed Cocked Hat Stakes winner Amiloc (Postponed) to provide compensation. Ballydoyle's Listed Lingfield Derby Trial winner Puppet Master (Camelot) and the Aga Khan homebred Zahrann (Night Of Thunder) offer stern opposition from Ireland, with the latter a convincing winner of Leopardstown's Listed King George V Cup. The action begins with the G3 Albany Stakes, where Tony Bloom and Ian McAleavy's impressive Carlisle winner Venetian Sun (Starman) is one of several looking to halt Ballydoyle's momentum in the 2-year-old events this week. Good luck with that one, as the market is speaking strongly for Rosegreen's latest juvenile rifle Signora, Frankel's daughter of the Queen Mary winner Heartache who achieved as much on debut when third in Naas's G3 Coolmore Stud Irish EBF Blackbeard Fillies Sprint Stakes than most of these in their respective novices and maidens. Lazzat Heads All Star Cast In Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee International Clash Saturday's G1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes has a confirmed field of 16, with the big favourites set to represent four different countries in a fascinating edition of the six-furlong feature. Last year's G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest winner Lazzat (Territories) represents the Jerome Reynier stable and forms the spearhead of a strong French challenge alongside Topgear (Wootton Bassett), British hopes rest with last year's G1 Commonwealth Cup hero Inisherin (Shamardal) from the Kevin Ryan stable, Aidan O'Brien relies on his Australian import Storm Boy (Justify) and Japan is represented by the G1 Takamatsunomiya Kinen winner Satono Reve (Lord Kanaloa). Also on Saturday is the G2 Hardwicke Stakes, where a dozen will line up without Juddmonte's Kalpana (Study Of Man) who has been ruled out due to the fast ground. They include Godolphin's high-class stalwart Rebel's Romance (Dubawi) and Amo Racing's £2million Goffs London acquisition Ghostwriter (Invincible Spirit), while the G3 Jersey Stakes features 15 with the current favourite being Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum's unbeaten Remmooz (Blue Point) from the Owen Burrows stable. The Listed Chesham Stakes sees Godolphin's TDN Rising Star Treanmor (Frankel) tackle Ballydoyle's filly Moments Of Joy (Justify). The post ‘If There Is Any Weakness, It Will Be Found Out’: Zarigana Faces Coronation Test 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, Royal Ascot, post time: 16:20, THE CORONATION STAKES-G1, £725,750, 3yo, f, 7f 213yT Field: Cathedral (GB) (Too Darn Hot {GB}), Cercene (Ire) (Australia {GB}), Chantilly Lace (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Duty First (GB) (Showcasing {GB}), Exactly (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), Falakeyah (GB) (New Bay {GB}), Flight (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}), January (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), Kon Tiki (GB) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}), Simmering (GB) (Too Darn Hot {GB}), Zarigana (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}). TDN Verdict: All connected with Zarigana will be hoping that the blueblood can finally shine at the top level after two narrow misses with the second resulting in a promotion by the stewards. There is no doubt that she was compromised by Shes Perfect's errant passage late on in the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches without stating that she was definitely the better of the pair. What we do know is she is top-drawer material on the clock and she has a distinct edge over her chief rival Falakeyah in that regard, as for all that Shadwell's homebred was impressive in the Listed Pretty Polly Stakes it is one thing producing an excellent time performance over 10 furlongs and another to do it over a mile. Kon Tiki has it to do to get to this level despite her obvious promise and is currently a shorter price than Ballydoyle's Pouliches fourth Exactly, who has proven form in some important races and could prove an able deputy for Lake Victoria. [Tom Frary]. Friday, Royal Ascot, post time: 15:05, THE COMMONWEALTH CUP-G1, £725,750, 3yo, c/f, 6fT Field: Ain't Nobody (Ire) (Sands Of Mali {Fr}), Arabie (GB) (Dandy Man {Ire}), Arizona Blaze (GB) (Sergei Prokofiev), Berkshire Whisper (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), Big Mojo (Ire) (Mohaather {GB}), Diablo Rojo (Ire) (Pinatubo {Ire}), Ides Of March (Ire) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Jonquil (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Shadow Of Light (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Soldier's Heart (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}), Strong Warrior (GB) (Mehmas {Ire}), Whistlejacket (Ire) (No Nay Never), Arabian Dusk (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}), Babouche (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), Carla Ridge (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), Lady With The Lamp (Ire) (King Of Change {GB}), Leovanni (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), Rayevka (Ire) (Blue Point {Ire}), Sayidah Dariyan (Ire) (Dariyan {Fr}), Shisospicy (Mitole), Sky Majesty (Ire) (Blue Point {Ire}), Time For Sandals (Ire) (Sands Of Mali {Fr}). TDN Verdict: This is as good a Commonwealth Cup as has been run so far and one of the best races of the meeting, such is the depth of quality. Shadow Of Light beat Whistlejacket hollow in the Middle Park and proved in the 2,000 Guineas that he has not taken one step backwards with a huge run in third. Babouche has also dealt with Whistlejacket in both the Phoenix Stakes and in Naas's G3 Lacken Stakes last month and if it wasn't for her below-par effort in the Cheveley Park would be hard to oppose, while Jonquil is may not be quite quick enough even allowing for the stiff nature of this sprint. Ballydoyle's second string Ides Of March retains promise despite his defeats this term, while Rayevka dazzled in Chantilly's Listed Prix Marchand d'Or and is very much a contender. Other Stakes-winning fillies Sky Majesty, Shisospicy, Arabian Dusk and Lady With The Lamp add considerable weight to the line-up. [Tom Frary]. Friday, Royal Ascot, post time: 17:35, THE KING EDWARD VII STAKES-G2, £250,000, 3yo, c/g, 11f 211yT Field: Amiloc (GB) (Postponed {Ire}), Convergent (Ire) (Fascinating Rock {Ire}), Galveston (GB) (Frankel {GB}), Green Storm (Ire) (Circus Maximus {Ire}), Minhad (GB) (Universal {Ire}), Nightwalker (GB) (Frankel {GB}), Opportunity (GB) (Frankel {GB}), Puppet Master (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), Regal Ulixes (GB) (Ulysses {Ire}), Wimbledon Hawkeye (GB) (Kameko), Zahrann (Ire) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}). TDN Verdict: Amiloc had to miss the Derby, as he is a gelding, so this is very much his Blue Riband and he has looked a formidable talent on the rise in his two starts at Goodwood this term. Given the quality of Aidan O'Brien's middle-distance colts, Puppet Master warrants maximum respect having been targeted at this since his Listed Lingfield Derby Trial win, while The Aga Khan Studs representative Zahrann is another live Irish contender having won Leopardstown's Listed King George V Cup in style. [Tom Frary]. Friday, Royal Ascot, post time: 14:30, THE ALBANY STAKES-G3, £125,000, 2yo, f, 6fT Field: Awaken (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), Balantina (Ire) (Ten Sovereigns {Ire}), Bibi Dahl (American Pharoah), Fairy Oak (GB) (A'Ali {Ire}), Fitzella (GB) (Too Darn Hot {GB}), Gold Digger (Ire) (Starman {GB}), Green Sense (Ire) (Starman {GB}), Indigo Dawn (Ire) (Nando Parrado {GB}), Ipanema Queen (Ire) (Sands Of Mali {Fr}), Magny Cours (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}), Nandita (Ire) (Blue Point {Ire}), Oh Cecelia (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), Senorita Vega (Ire) (Lucky Vega {Ire}), Signora (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), Spinning Lizzie (GB) (Kameko), Tahalel (Ire) (Blue Point {Ire}), Venetian Sun (Ire) (Starman {GB}). TDN Verdict: This looks wide-open, but the money has spoken for the impressive Carlisle winner Venetian Sun and Ballydoyle's Signora who was third on debut behind Lady Iman in Naas's G3 Coolmore Stud Irish EBF Blackbeard Fillies Sprint Stakes. The latter is out of the 2017 Queen Mary winner Heartache, so has the genetics to succeed here and it is obviously expected that she has made significant enough progress from her first day at school to reverse form with that race's runner-up Green Sense. [Tom Frary]. Saturday, Ascot, post time: 15:40, THE QUEEN ELIZABETH II JUBILEE S.-G1, £1,000,000, 4yo/up, 6f 0y Field: Annaf (Ire) (Muhaarar {GB}), Elite Status (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}), Grand Grey (Ire) (Havana Grey {GB}), Iberian (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Inisherin (GB) (Shamardal), James's Delight (Ire) (Invincible Army {Ire}), Jasour (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}), Lazzat (Fr) (Territories {Ire}), Run To Freedom (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), Sajir (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}), Satono Reve (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}), Storm Boy (Aus) (Justify), Topgear (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Flora Of Bermuda (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), Great Generation (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}), Nighteyes (Ire) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}). TDN Verdict: As competitive as it gets, this renewal has leading lights coming from multiple countries with last year's G1 Commonwealth Cup hero Inisherin battling to ward off overseas threats. He looked a sharper model on his return at York last month and this track is tailor-made for his style. Last year's G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest winner Lazzat is one of his chief rivals and has a lot to commend him on form and on the clock, while his compatriot Topgear drops back in trip and will be a threat to all if able to tighten up sufficiently. Whether Aidan O'Brien can turn Storm Boy around from his seasonal bow is open to question, but he seems to have his annual midas touch this week while the G1 Takamatsunomiya Kinen winner Satono Reve shakes things up even more. [Tom Frary]. Saturday, Ascot, post time: 15:05, THE HARDWICKE S.-G2, £250,000, 4yo/up, 11f 211y Field: Al Aasy (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Al Riffa (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Bellum Justum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Burdett Road (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), Candleford (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), Epic Poet (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), Ghostwriter (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Palladium (Ger) (Gleneagles {Ire}), Rebel's Romance (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), Space Legend (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Sunway (Fr) (Galiway {GB}), Tabletalk (Ire) (Camelot {GB}). TDN Verdict: Rebel's Romance keeps going and going and there is no reason why he won't stamp his class on this. Ghostwriter may stay a mile and a half, but it is not a given and Al Riffa is probably the biggest threat to Godolphin's globetrotter with first-time blinkers. Candleford has won impressively on his seasonal bow at this meeting before and although that was a handicap, it is an interesting move by William Haggas to come here first time. [Tom Frary]. Saturday, Ascot, post time: 16:20, THE JERSEY S.-G3, £150,000, 3yo, Open, 7f 0y Field: Benevento (Ire) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Brian (Ire) (Shaman {Ire}), Caburn (Ire) (Twilight Son {GB}), Comanche Brave (Ire) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), Dhitjari (GB) (Mehmas {Ire}), Marvelman (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Noble Champion (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), One Smack Mac (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), Pellitory (GB) (Sergei Prokofiev), Remmooz (GB) (Blue Point {Ire}), Saracen (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), Seagulls Eleven (Ire) (Galileo Gold {GB}), Spy Chief (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Yah Mo Be There (GB) (Mohaather {GB}), California Dreamer (GB) (Mehmas {Ire}). TDN Verdict: Unbeaten and unexposed, Remmooz warrants maximum respect from Owen Burrows who always knows his onions. Second to Henri Matisse in Leopardstown's G3 Ballylinch Stud Stakes in March, Comanche Brave is back to seven furlongs having run fifth in the Irish 2,000 Guineas and gets the Ryan Moore treatment whichis probably worth two or three pounds in itself this week. Joseph takes on Donnacha with Saracen, who was third in a hot renewal of the G3 Greenham Stakes in April and is another unknown quantity. [Tom Frary]. Saturday, Ascot, post time: 14:30, THE CHESHAM S.-L, £110,000, 2yo, Open, 7f 0y Field: Brave Hunter (GB) (Universal {Ire}), Humidity (GB) (Ulysses {Ire}), Tailgunner Joe (Knicks Go), Thesecretadversary (Ire) (St Mark's Basilica {Fr}), Treanmor (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), Waterford Castle (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Zooter (GB) (Australia {GB}), Moments Of Joy (Justify), Venetian Lace (Ire). TDN Verdict: TDN Rising Star Treanmor puts his reputation on the line, having impressed with everything he did on debut at Newmarket. Ballydoyle will have something to say on the matter, with the filly Moments Of Joy the chosen one having opened her account at Leopardstown, while Humidity looked a smart prospect on debut at Newbury and can only improve over another furlong. [Tom Frary]. Click here for the complete fields. The post Black-Type Analysis: Zarigana Aiming For A Straightforward Coronation 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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GI Curlin Florida Derby winner Known Agenda (by Curlin) registered his first career winner in the form of five-length scorer Pure Eloquence at Gulfstream Park Thursday afternoon. First-time starter Pure Eloquence broke sharply and was encouraged to reach the front by jockey Edwin Gonzalez, leading the group of juvenile fillies through an opening quarter of :21.42. Chucky's Ride (Uncle Chuck) chased the leader up the backstretch and into the far turn, but as they turned for home, the pacesetter continued to widen her lead. While the winner was wrapped up under the wire, a distant Chucky's Ride held off Mischievous Scout (Girvin) for second. The winner is out of the unraced mare Lily Margaret, a daughter of stakes-placed So Stylish (Johannesburg), herself a half-sister to European Champion 2-year-old colt One Cool Cat (Storm Cat). A half-sister to GI Del Mar Futurity winner Gaming (Game Winner), Lily Margaret has a yearling filly by Nashville (Grand Opry) and was bred back to Buccero. 2nd-Gulfstream, $43,700, Msw, 6-19, 2yo, f, 5fT, :55.92, fm, 5 lengths. PURE ELOQUENCE (f, 2, Known Agenda–Lily Margaret, by Kitten's Joy) Sales History: $12,000 Ylg '24 KEEJAN; $95,000 2yo '25 OBSMAR. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $24,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. O-David Grund and JWS Racing LLC; B-Titletown Racing Stables (Paul Farr) (KY); T-Jack Sisterson. The post Known Agenda’s Pure Eloquence Gives Freshman First Career Winner at Gulfstream 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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A contingent of U.S. racing investigators will take part in an intensive two-week tour of France and England beginning June 21 where they will visit their counterparts and exchange ideas about integrity issues. The inaugural trip last year included stops at Ballydoyle in Ireland and during Royal Ascot. The participants are members of the Organization of Racing Investigators and the schedule was put together by board member Jason Klouser of the Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission, and local hosts Samuel Fargeat in France and John Burgess in England. The itinerary begins in Paris where investigators will meet with officials from France Galop and Le Trot before touring stud farms like Haras de Beaumont and training centers located at Chantilly Racecourse. In the U.K., the group will see Epsom Downs and Windsor Racecourse, along with the British Horseracing Authority headquarters. Investigators attending: Kassandra Creed–Keeneland Anne Dillon–California Horseracing Regulatory Board Juan Carlos Estrada–Arizona Department of Gaming Mike Keyser–Keeneland Robert Martin–Parx Racing Mike Singletary–The Maryland Jockey Club Kara Vesci–New Jersey Racing Commission Sponsorship of the program comes from Breeders Cup, Hanover Shoe Farms, Keeneland, Parx Racing, Pennsylvania Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, The Maryland Jockey Club and the Racing Officials Accreditation Program. The post Second Annual Investigator Exchange Heads To France Then England 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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Moore Earns Milestone Win With Garden of Eden
Wandering Eyes posted a topic in The Rest of the World
Victory aboard Garden of Eden in the Ribblesdale Stakes (G2) at Ascot Racecourse June 19 gave Ryan Moore his 2,594th winner in Britain, placing him in the top 10 all time among flat jockeys.View the full article