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What Wagga Gold Cup Day Where Murrumbidgee Turf Club – Travers St, Wagga Wagga NSW 2650 When Friday, May 2, 2025 First Race 12:45pm AEST Visit Dabble The $200,000 Wagga Gold Cup (2000m) headlines proceedings on another cracking country racing program at the Murrumbidgee Turf Club this Friday. With pristine conditions forecast in Wagga Wagga this week, punters can expect a genuine Good 4 circuit for Day 2 of the carnival. The rail remains in the true position, with racing on Wagga Gold Cup Day scheduled to get underway at 12:45pm local time. Wagga Gold Cup Tip: Medatsu The Chris Waller-trained Medatsu closed off impressively in the Listed Albury Cup (2000m) on April 17 and was one of the better runs in defeat. The son of Staphanos got too far back from barrier 12, and with the track playing up-and-in throughout the day, it was tough to make inroads from the rear of the field. There appears to be genuine speed engaged in the 2025 Wagga Gold Cup, so expect Medatsu to be flashing down the centre of the course at a good each-way price with horse racing bookmakers. Wagga Gold Cup Race 7 – #10 Medatsu (9) 4yo Gelding | T: Chris Waller | J: Kerrin McEvoy (54kg) Best Bet at Wagga: Me Me Me Me caught the eye when returning from a 161-day spell at Kembla Grange on April 15, narrowly denied by Oui Oui Oui in the shadows of the post. The pair cleared out comfortably, with a 3.3-length margin back to third, suggesting punters can follow both with confidence moving forward. This maiden contest is no exception, and although Tyler Schiller will need to overcome the awkward draw (13), expect Me Me to prove too classy for country company. Best Bet Race 1 – #12 Me Me (13) 4yo Mare | T: Robert & Luke Price | J: Tyler Schiller (57kg) Next Best at Wagga: Fear No Evil Fear No Evil was denied a hat-trick of wins by Movin Out at Mornington on April 19 but never shirked the task behind the Group 1-placed filly. The son of Russian Revolution attempted to make every post a winner and was simply outclassed in the end, with the three-year-old looking better placed in this BM74 contest. Expect Jett Stanley to adopt similar tactics and lead from stall eight, and provided the pair can land a soft sectional in the middle stages, Fear No Evil should give a big kick and return to winning ways. Next Best Race 4 – #1 Fear No Evil (8) 3yo Gelding | T: Gai Waterhouse & Adrian Bott | J: Jett Stanley (60.5kg) Wagga Gold Cup Day quaddie tips Wagga quadrella selections Friday, May 2, 2025 2-4-9 15 1-2-8-10-12 1-5-8-10-11-13-14 Horse racing tips View the full article
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Progressive stablemates Overdraft and Oscar have flourished in the care of Jo Rathbone and they put that on display with winning performances at Woodville on Wednesday. Dannevirke Dairy Supplies Woodville-Pahiatua Cup (2100m) contender Overdraft had trialled once before joining the Wanganui horsewoman, and after three seconds, the son of Burgundy broke through for his maiden success in a highweight at Waverley. Rathbone had been wary of the step into Rating 65 grade, but punters had confidence in her charge, closing him among the favourites for the Cup in a market headed by Rum Night ($3.70). In the hands of Jonathan Riddell, Overdraft settled three-wide in the second half of the field in deteriorating conditions. The gelding began slowly making ground along the back straight and was right in contention on the home turn, showing his staying qualities to defeat ex-Hong Kong galloper Gallant Hero by a long head. “I wasn’t surprised by him winning yesterday, he’s very honest and he gives everything really,” Rathbone said. “He’s always felt like a nice horse, but he’s been quite casual in his work, and now he’s becoming a lot more professional. “He’d had a trial before I got him, but he had some soundness issues. He had come to me as a bit of a last chance and to do something a little bit different, and he’s just one that has continued to impress me more and more with the more he’s done. “The wet track didn’t worry him at all, he’s gone on all surfaces and gone well.” Bred by Charlotte Myers, Overdraft was passed in as a yearling when presented at the 2021 New Zealand Bloodstock National Yearling Sales, and was retained to race by his breeder and other family members. “He is Kirk and Charlotte Myers’ horse, Kirk is my partner Simon (Harrison)’s uncle,” Rathbone said. The gelding has plenty of pedigree on his page, being a half-brother to multiple Group One-winning juvenile Yourdeel. Earlier in the meeting, Rathbone got plenty of satisfaction out of Oscar’s deserved maiden success in the NZB Mega Maiden Series (1200m). Ridden by Jonathan’s daughter Amber Riddell, a three-kilogram claiming apprentice, Oscar showed his usual speed out of the barriers and found the lead, where he would remain all the way to the winning post holding off Good Craic by a length. The Mulaazem four-year-old had placed in his five previous starts, benefitting from a variety in his training by the former jumps jockey (Rathbone). “She (Riddell) rated him well in front and he found the line quite well, I wondered if he would run out of puff but he kept going,” Rathbone said. “He seems to be trying a lot harder lately with the more racing he’s done. “It’s always rewarding when you can see them running consistently good races and trying, and winning comes as an extra reward.” Oscar was bred and now raced by Gordon Lambert, whose colours have been seen aboard the likes of Group One-winning filly Mi Jubilee. View the full article
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Stephen Marsh’s travelling road show continues this weekend with stakes contenders in two Australian states and a strong hand in a domestic age group feature. The Cambridge trainer has Roctave in the Gr.1 South Australian Derby (2000m) at Morphettville while Tardelli will do battle in the Gr.2 Queensland Guineas (1600m) at Eagle Farm. On the home front, in-form fillies Lady Iris and Mazino will go head-to-head at Te Rapa in the Waikato Equine Veterinary Centre Stakes (1200m). Marsh, who returned this week from Hong Kong where El Vencedor was below par in the Gr.1 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2000m) after racing too fiercely, has plans to be trackside for Roctave’s Derby bid. Bred and raced by The Oaks Stud, the son of Roc De Cambes galloped well at Flemington on Tuesday morning and will travel on to Morphettville on Thursday evening. “He’s really well and has done a treat since he’s been over there,” Marsh said. “He won so well at Ellerslie that we thought there could be a nice race in him and then he went a boomer for third in the Championship Stakes (Gr.3, 2100m). “The first and second horses (Kiwi Skyhawk and Zormella) are well above average, so we thought we’d have a crack at the Derby.” To be ridden by Jordan Childs, Roctave will return home win, lose or draw after Saturday’s outing. Tardelli was an impressive winner three runs back before he was luckless when unplaced in the Gr.2 Wellington Guineas (1400m) and clinched his trip to Brisbane with a last-start second in the Gr.3 Easter Handicap (1600m). “Michael McNab has gone over to ride him, he’s drawn an outside gate (13), but he has settled in really well over there,” Marsh said. “He breezed up this (Thursday) morning so we’re happy with him. He was very good against the older horses in the Easter without a whole lot of luck again.” Tardelli’s performance on Saturday will determine whether the son of I Am Invincible races on at the Queensland winter carnival. “We’ll see what he does first and then make some decisions. We’re mindful he’s had a big trip, he flew to Sydney and then floated to Brisbane with no direct flights, but he does seem to have handled it well.” Closer to home, U S Navy Flag filly Lady Iris followed up her debut victory at Matamata with a runner-up finish behind stablemate Little Black Dress in the Listed Star Way Stakes (1200m) at Ellerslie. “It was a great run and probably the only question mark is stepping up to the 1400m, she is a fast filly and will jump and put herself right up on speed,” Marsh said. Hello Youmzain’s daughter Mazino was second first time out at Pukekohe behind Little Black Dress before overcoming a check to run fourth in the Star Way. “The step up in trip will be right up Mazino’s alley, she has been very good in both of her runs,” Marsh said.Stephen Marsh’s travelling road show continues this weekend with stakes contenders in two Australian states and a strong hand in a domestic age group feature. The Cambridge trainer has Roctave in the Gr.1 South Australian Derby (2000m) at Morphettville while Tardelli will do battle in the Gr.2 Queensland Guineas (1600m) at Eagle Farm. On the home front, in-form fillies Lady Iris and Mazino will go head-to-head at Te Rapa in the Waikato Equine Veterinary Centre Stakes (1200m). Marsh, who returned this week from Hong Kong where El Vencedor was below par in the Gr.1 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2000m) after racing too fiercely, has plans to be trackside for Roctave’s Derby bid. Bred and raced by The Oaks Stud, the son of Roc De Cambes galloped well at Flemington on Tuesday morning and will travel on to Morphettville on Thursday evening. “He’s really well and has done a treat since he’s been over there,” Marsh said. “He won so well at Ellerslie that we thought there could be a nice race in him and then he went a boomer for third in the Championship Stakes (Gr.3, 2100m). “The first and second horses (Kiwi Skyhawk and Zormella) are well above average, so we thought we’d have a crack at the Derby.” To be ridden by Jordan Childs, Roctave will return home win, lose or draw after Saturday’s outing. Tardelli was an impressive winner three runs back before he was luckless when unplaced in the Gr.2 Wellington Guineas (1400m) and clinched his trip to Brisbane with a last-start second in the Gr.3 Easter Handicap (1600m). “Michael McNab has gone over to ride him, he’s drawn an outside gate (13), but he has settled in really well over there,” Marsh said. “He breezed up this (Thursday) morning so we’re happy with him. He was very good against the older horses in the Easter without a whole lot of luck again.” Tardelli’s performance on Saturday will determine whether the son of I Am Invincible races on at the Queensland winter carnival. “We’ll see what he does first and then make some decisions. We’re mindful he’s had a big trip, he flew to Sydney and then floated to Brisbane with no direct flights, but he does seem to have handled it well.” Closer to home, U S Navy Flag filly Lady Iris followed up her debut victory at Matamata with a runner-up finish behind stablemate Little Black Dress in the Listed Star Way Stakes (1200m) at Ellerslie. “It was a great run and probably the only question mark is stepping up to the 1400m, she is a fast filly and will jump and put herself right up on speed,” Marsh said. Hello Youmzain’s daughter Mazino was second first time out at Pukekohe behind Little Black Dress before overcoming a check to run fourth in the Star Way. “The step up in trip will be right up Mazino’s alley, she has been very good in both of her runs,” Marsh said. View the full article
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With five races under her belt, Cashla Bay (NZ) (U S Navy Flag) is one of the more seasoned runners in Saturday’s Listed Waikato Equine Veterinary Centre Stakes (1400m) at Te Rapa, and trainer Andrew Forsman is hoping that works in her favour. Bred and raced by The Oaks Stud, Cashla Bay made her debut in the Gr.3 Colin Jillings 2YO Classic (1200m) at Ellerslie in February where she beat just one runner home. She improved on that result when placing in her subsequent three starts, before breaking through for her maiden victory over 1400m at Matamata earlier this month. Forsman was rapt with the confidence-boosting victory and is hoping the daughter of U S Navy Flag can now earn some lucrative black-type this weekend before heading for a spell. “She has had a fair bit of racing and a fair bit of travelling, but we also wanted to make her a winner this campaign, she has been so genuine right the way through,” Forsman said. “It was good to tick that box the other day at Matamata and hopefully she can get some black-type.” Cashla Bay will jump from barrier six on Saturday and will be ridden by veteran hoop Vinnie Colgan. “It all sets up really nicely for her,” Forsman said. “We have got a good, experienced rider in Vinnie on and she has got the ability. The big thing with her is that she jumps and puts herself in the race and she can handle all track conditions. There’s no reason why she won’t have every chance. “She has been up a fair while now and this has always been the target, and hopefully she can go well.” Forsman will also be represented in the race by Engine Of War (NZ) (Circus Maximus), who will carry the silks of Australian micro-share syndicator MyRacehorse. The Circus Maximus gelding placed on debut over 1100m at Waverley last week, and Forsman is hopeful of a bold showing with that experience under his belt. “He is a very capable horse, he just lacks experience,” Forsman said. “We had to take him down to Waverley the other day without the benefit of a trial just to get his campaign going. “He is a horse we think a lot of, and I think he will make a nice horse into the spring of his three-year-old year.” Engine Of War is the first horse Forsman has trained for MyRacehorse, and he said his future is likely to be in Australia post-Saturday’s run. “They have just come onboard and bought into him,” Forsman said. “At this stage, I’d say his future lies in Australia.” On the undercard, stablemate Force Of Nature (NZ) (Savabeel) is a dual acceptor for the Modern Transport Group (1200m) and Peter Kelly – Bayleys 1400, with Forsman to decide on which race he will contest closer to Saturday. “We put in a late nom for the 1200m, which came on the radar because of the smaller field size and he is probably better weighted there,” Forsman said. “We have Craig (Grylls) engaged to ride him in the 75 (1400m), in his own grade, but he has drawn wide (16) in that. I am glad we have got the back up option. “It will also depend on what the track comes up like. Second-up, if the track was to be testing maybe he is better suited at the 1200m. 1200 to 1400m is about his range. “We will have to see how the fields shape up in the next couple of days and then make a decision. There’s no firm call either way yet.” One stable runner that will take her place in the Peter Kelly – Bayleys 1400 is last start winner Wainui Bay (NZ) (Iffraaj). The Haunui Farm-bred and raced mare has been freshened since her victory over a mile in February, and has pleased in her return, placing in her 950m trial at Cambridge a fortnight ago. “She has got to make the step up from 65,” Forsman said. “I think 1400m will be a little bit short of her best. We have taken the blinkers off. Toward the end of her last campaign she was going well but had a tendency to be a bit keen in her races and doing a bit early. “Back to 1400m, up in grade, blinkers off, I think with a light weight (54kg) she can run really well. I think she will be a horse to keep an eye on and see how she goes in 75 (grade).” Across the Tasman, Forsman will have one representative from his Flemington barn at Caulfield on Saturday, with stakes winner Mustang Morgan (NZ) (Preferment) to contest the Evergreen Turf Handicap (2000m). After running fourth in the Gr.1 New Zealand Derby (2400m) last month, he disappointed when 12th in the Gr.1 Australian Derby (2400m), and Forsman is looking forward to stepping him back in trip this weekend. “He seems great, I can’t fault him, we just don’t know why he went so poorly that (Australian Derby) day,” Forsman said. “We have taken the blinkers off and I think dropping back to the 2000m will suit him. It is a distance we know he has performed well over before, it’s just a shame that he has drawn a poor barrier (13). It is a race he needs to run in. There’s a similar race in a fortnight, and if it doesn’t work out this weekend that will set him up for that at least. “He will deserve a good break after this campaign and I think he will make a nice stayer in time.” View the full article
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Explore a multitude of captivating racing promotions offered by horse racing bookmakers on Thursday, May 1. 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 May 1, 2025, include: Today’s best horse racing promotions Warrnambool Races 1-3 | 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 Blonde Boosts! Elevate your prices! BlondeBet T&C’s Apply. Eligible Customers Only. Login to BlondeBet 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 Double Winnings! – Warrnambool Get DOUBLE WINNINGS paid in BONUS CASH. Applies to Win, Place & Top 2/3/4 markets (excludes SRM). First eligible bet per race. Must apply Promotion in bet slip. Cash bet only. Max Bonus $50. Picklebet T&Cs apply. Login to Picklebet to Claim Promo Daily Multi Insurance Any Race. Any Runner. Any Odds. Get a Bonus Back if your Multi loses by a specified number of legs. Fixed odds only. Check your Vault for eligibility. Unibet T&C’s apply. Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Bet Boost | Thursday Thoroughbred Meetings Get a bet boost on thoroughbred races around Australia on Thursday. Eligible customers. T&C’s apply. Login to Bet365 to Claim Promo Owners Bonus! – Win a bet on your horse & receive extra 15% of winnings in cash Max Payout $2000. Account holder must be registered as an official owner of the nominated horses. Fixed odds win bets on Australian thoroughbred races only. Excludes boosted, multi, live and bonus bets. PlayUp T&Cs apply. Login to PlayUp 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 Daily Exotic Boosts Boost your exotics by up to 20%. Available on Exactas, Quinellas, Trifectas & First Fours. Excludes Quaddies. Check your Vault for eligibility. T&C’s apply. Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Odds Drift Protector | If Your Horse Drifts, You Get The Bigger Price Only available on Australian Horse Racing Fixed Price Win bets placed from 8am AET the day of the race. Eligible customers. T&C’s apply. Login to Bet365 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 May 1, 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. Horse racing promotions View the full article
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Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-bred horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Thursday's Observations features the return of a Rising Star. 15.15 Great Yarmouth, £8,000, Nov, 3yo/up, f/m, 7f 3yT Godolphin's TDN Rising Star VERSE OF LOVE (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}) failed to fire on all cylinders when seventh in Newmarket's G3 Nell Gwyn Stakes two weeks ago and gets an almost-immediate opportunity of redemption in a low-key affair. Journeying up the A11 to the Norfolk Coast for this straight seven-furlong heat, the March-foaled bay meets Apple Tree Stud's debutante and fellow HQ day-tripper Rumba Numba (GB) (Too Darn Hot {GB}), who is a homebred half-sister to three stakes performers out of Listed Princess Royal Stakes victrix Astonishing (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), from the Roger Varian stable. 15.50 Saint-Cloud, €30,000, Cond, 2yo, 6fT Alain and Gerard Wertheimer entry INDIFFERENTE (IRE) (Siyouni {Fr}) is a Yann Barberot-conditioned daughter of G1 Prix Marcel Boussac victrix Indonesienne (Ire) (Muhtathir {GB}) from the family of Poule d'Essai des Pouliches heroine Matiara (Bering {GB}). The February-foaled homebred bay is a full-sister to G3 Prix d'Aumale third Bahasa (Ire) and a half-sister to Listed Grand Criterium de Bordeaux second Precious Sea (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}). She returns for this step up to six furlongs, and encounters 11 rivals, bouncing back off a six-length first-up fifth tackling five at Deauville earlier in the month. The post Rising Star Verse Of Love Seeks Redemption By The Sea 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-CD, $141K, OC100K/N3X, 3yo/up, 6f, 5:13 p.m. ET. WORLD RECORD (Gun Runner) in his second start for WinStar and BBN Racing going seven over Churchill's main track last May was certainly impressive when he won by 6 1/4 lengths. That effort garnered the colt 'TDN Rising Star' honors and the Rodolphe Brisset trainee proceeded to run third in the Maxfield Stakes over course and distance, and then he checked off the GII Amsterdam Stakes at the Spa in late July. Despite finishing sixth in the GI H. Allen Jerkens Memorial Stakes upstate, the bay cleared an optional claimer at Keeneland in October. To close out his year in late November, World Record hit the board in the Steel Valley Sprint Stakes at Mahoning Valley. Out of Marwa (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), the '21 $410,000 Keeneland November buy is part of an extended female family which includes sire Sir Cherokee (Cherokee Run) and MGSW Miss Isella (Silver Charm). TJCIS PPS The post Thursday Racing Insights: ‘Rising Star’ World Record Back In The Starting Blocks 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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Steve Kornacki is more than the political junkie who, for years, has had a way of explaining things when it comes to elections that help make everything make sense. He does so by turning statistics into an easy-to-understand formula and displaying his findings on an interactive map that is known as the big board. But Kornacki sometimes needs a break from politics, and he has found one in horse racing. It's been his passion since his uncle started taking him to the harness races at Scarborough Downs in Maine. He loves to handicap and approaches racing with the same sort of mind set he uses for politics. The numbers matter. Kornacki will once again be part of NBC's coverage of this week's GI Kentucky Derby. But before he left we grabbed him for the TDN Writers' Room Podcast presented by Keeneland. He was this week's Gainesway Guest of the Week. Like many others, Kornacki believes that the pace may just decide the race. “We're hardly alone in this, I'm sure, but I'll be looking at the pace scenario in the race,” he said. “There was that sense after they introduced the point system back in 2013, that all the sprinters are out of it now and it's slowed down and the speed is holding a lot more. And we saw that for a long time there. It seems that over the last three years that's changed. You had that torrid pace in 2022 that got Rich Strike to the wire first. Mage came from off the pace and then last year Mystik Dan was sort of mid-pack. Sierra Leone and Forever Young rounded out the trifecta and they also came from behind. You had closers coming in there, taking advantage of a pace that heated up a little. So that seems to be the mini-trend. Then, obviously, when you look at the composition of the field this year, you just see speed, speed, speed, especially on the inside. You just see so much of it.” He hasn't made his pick yet but he has a few horses in mind. “I haven't landed yet and I'm torn, to be honest,” Kornacki said. “I've got a couple of closers that I'm really interested in. I'm really interested mainly in the closers. Grande really interests me. I was a little curious about Tiztastic, and maybe to get even a little crazier about it, Chunk of Gold. This is a gut thing, this is not a numbers thing, but I can't shake the feeling that it's just all about the pace. Then again, watch, maybe a couple of them won't break and a couple of them take back because they're afraid of a hot pace. In that case, maybe Rodriguez with Mike Smith, goes to the front and takes him to the lead and they wire the field.” So, what kind of handicapper is he? “Not a good one,” he joked. “I'm always hoping to do better. I do like speed figures. I pay a lot of attention to speed figures, to the Beyers. It's been really interesting hearing Randy (Moss) , talk about those, just given that he's part of the team that complies them. I also like trying to figure out the pace scenario in a race.” In our “Fastest Horse of the Week” segment, which is sponsored by WinStar, we went over the many reasons there are breed to WinStar stallion Heartland. The fastest horse of the week was Keeneland allowance winner Unmatched Wisdom (Cairo Prince), who ran a 103. Elsewhere on the podcast, which is also sponsored by the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders' Association, West Point Thoroughbreds, 1/ST Racing and 1/ST TV, the team of Moss, Zoe Cadman and Bill Finley held the first ever TDN Writers' Room Oaks-Derby draft. All 20 horses in the GI Kentucky Derby and all 14 in the GI Kentucky Oaks were drafted and points will be awarded on a 5-3-1 basis. Zoe Cadman took Journalism (Curlin) with the first overall pick. They also handicapped the major stakes on the Oaks and Derby undercards. Click here to watch the podcast or here to listen. The post Steve Kornacki Joins the TDN Writers’ Room Podcast Presented by 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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Major immigration reform has been talked about for decades, but torpedoed legislation is as far as that has gone. Indeed, President Ronald Reagan was still just in his second term when he signed the last comprehensive immigration reform bill successfully steered through congress. Amid the cavalcade of immigration-related actions that the current administration has sanctioned, however, the possibility has appeared for that trend to be bucked. In the process, it opens the door for some of the nation's backstretch immigrant workforce to potentially find themselves on a new pathway towards legal status. “This is not a new problem, and I'm encouraged by the fact that the president is talking about it,” said James O'Neill, director of legislative affairs for the American Business Immigration Coalition (ABIC), a nationwide bipartisan coalition of over 1,700 employers and CEOs, about comments made by President Donald Trump at an April 10 cabinet meeting. At that gathering, Trump intimated of a new program to help farm, hotel and other workers leave the country and then return legally with the support of their U.S. employer. “We are also going to work with farmers, that if they have strong recommendations from their farms for certain people, we're going to let them stay in for a while and work with the farmers and then come back and go through a process, a legal process,” Trump said. “We have to take care of our farmers and hotels and, you know, various places where they use, where they need the people. And we're going to be working with you very carefully on that,” the president added. Federally, the backstretch workforce falls under the umbrella of the fair labor standards act, limiting them to H-2B visas only. The H-2B visa program–which affords non-agriculture seasonal immigrant workers jobs in such industries as hospitality or with animals–has its limitations. It comes with a restrictive annual quota. The visa is typically only granted for a year or less, but it can be extended for up to three years. While Trump's wording at the meeting was vague, the pathways available to bring such concepts to life appear largely two-fold: Through executive order or through legislation. If he takes the executive order route, said O'Neill, “then the scope of the program may be more limited. But it may be faster from a procedural standpoint.” A legislative fix may take longer, O'Neill added, but it would likely be a “more comprehensive or more permanent solution to some of the problems that we're seeing.” While the current administration's aggressive approach to immigration enforcement towards individuals both documented and undocumented has so far largely left horse racing alone, other industries haven't fared as well, like in the breadbasket of Central California, for example, of the Midwest. Indeed, Trump's comments came off the back of much push back from industry groups and immigration reform organizations in recent months. According to O'Neill, ABIC brought over 150 business owners to Washington to meet with over 121 offices at the end of March. They included representatives from the racing industry like trainer Dale Romans and California Horse Racing Board vice president, Oscar Gonzalez. Their message? “What we need to see is a secure border and a secure workforce. And we need policy that provides employers with the talent that they need to keep their business running and their business growing,” said O'Neill. There are possible blueprints for a new immigration bill to follow, including the language written into the stalled 2022 Affordable and Secure Food Act, which, among other things, provided a pathway to a green card after 10 years of work for farm and equine workers in the program. According to immigration attorney Will Velie, who also represents individuals from horse racing, Senator Michael Bennet (D-Colo)–the law maker who introduced that 2022 bill–is still pursuing similar legislative reforms. “He needs a Republican co-sponsor, which is where the bill is right now,” said Velie. Velie added that the federal budget is expected to contain tens of billions of dollars for immigration enforcement only. That, weighted against the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, could be the impetus needed for comprehensive immigration reform to finally find the needed traction, said Velie. “Trump is so mercurial when it comes to policy. And his party is so lock-step with him that if he on one-day says enforcement only, and on the next day says 'oh, we'll save the farm workers,' then all of a sudden it's a possibility,” said Velie. On Thursday morning at Churchill Downs, Velie will be one of the attendees at a joint ABIC and Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association media briefing to discuss this renewed push for bipartisan immigration reform. The post Amid Immigration Crackdown, Possible Opportunity For Immigrant Backstretch Workers 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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LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Bob Baffert stood in front of Barn 33–covered once again with green-and-white plaques celebrating his six GI Kentucky Derby winners and three GI Kentucky Oaks winners– and held court with the media and posed for pictures with fans on a humid Wednesday morning at Churchill Downs. Following a well-documented, three-year suspension following the medication disqualification of Medina Spirit in the 2021 Kentucky Derby, it was business as usual for the Hall of Fame trainer, who will make his highly anticipated return beneath the Twin Spires this weekend with Tenma (Nyquist) in the Kentucky Oaks and champion 2-year-old colt Citizen Bull (Into Mischief) and 'TDN Rising Star' Rodriguez (Authentic) in the Kentucky Derby. He will also saddle the comebacking, unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' Nysos (Nyquist) in a loaded renewal of the GI Churchill Downs S., Hope Road (Quality Road) in the GI Derby City Distaff S. and turning-back Madaket Road (Quality Road) in the GII Pat Day Mile S., all on the Derby undercard. How does it feel to be back? “It's been good,” Baffert replied on the go after watching a set train by his usual spot by the gap. “The horses, so far, they've settled in well and that's the main thing. It's normal–to me, it feels like just another Derby week.” He continued, “We've got a lot of fans. The fans want to come out and they want to see the good horses and all the top trainers. It's like anything. It's just like going to the Masters again, everybody wants to see the main players. Louisville is a great city. They really love it when people show up everywhere we go. It's nice.” Journalism galloping beneath the Twin Spires Wednesday | Sherackatthetrack All of those “main players,” including Baffert's aforementioned inside-drawn Derby duo, were in action during the 7:15-7:30 a.m. training window reserved for Derby and Oaks entrants. Imposing Kentucky Derby favorite Journalism (Curlin) continues to dominate the headlines on that front since shipping in from Michael McCarthy's Santa Anita base, as does the Brad Cox-trained unbeaten Good Cheer (Medaglia d'Oro), who is favored at 6-5 on the morning line in the female equivalent. Journalism continues do everything you want to see, displaying terrific energy while galloping powerfully as well as showcasing that massive stride of his. Sovereignty (Into Mischief) is another who has been training like he owns the place while striking grays Final Gambit (Not This Time) and Sandman (Tapit) and Burnham Square (Liam's Map) all left lasting impressions. Sovereignty getting over the track very nicely this morning beneath the Twin Spires pic.twitter.com/KRBChHDWR6 — Steve Sherack (@SteveSherackTDN) April 30, 2025 The post ‘It’s Just Like Going to the Masters Again’ – Following Three-Year Suspension, Baffert Back in Spotlight for Kentucky Derby 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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California Governor Gavin Newsom has appointed Peter Stern to the California Horse Racing Board, the CHRB announced Wednesday. Stern, who will require Senate approval for the appointment, has been Chief Revenue Officer at Skedulo and an Advisor at Berkeley SkyDeck since 2025. Additionally, he held several roles at Authorium from 2024 to 2025, including Advisor and Executive Vice President and was the Co-Founder of VoiceBrain from 2021 to 2023. The post Newsom Appoints Peter Stern To California Horse Racing Board appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
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Precocious kid, streaks ahead of his peers, brought crashing to earth? Hang in there, boy. Because if that's pretty much where the champion juvenile finds himself, heading into the GI Kentucky Derby off a disappointing run at Santa Anita, he need not seek far for inspiration. Robert Low bred Citizen Bull (Into Mischief) with his wife Lawana from their mare No Joke (Distorted Humor), who had cost them $750,000 as a yearling at the 2017 Keeneland September Sale–just days after her half-sister Moonshine Memories (Malibu Moon) had won the GI Debutante Stakes. Unfortunately, No Joke never made the racetrack. “Just one of these hard-luck fillies,” Low explains. “Plagued by little, niggling issues. She did show flashes of brilliance, in her works, even as we were trying to take it easy and let her work through those things. But she's absolutely gorgeous, a wonderful physical, so at some point we decided to turn her into a broodmare. And that has obviously turned out a good decision.” But this was hardly the first time Low had discovered how a hard road will often lead to the summit. He was still a University of Missouri student when buying himself a dump truck in 1970. “Really, it was downpayment on a dump truck,” he clarifies. “A pretty old one, too, and not that profitable because it kept breaking down.” But still–what kind of 19-year-old does that, when his buddies are boozing and chasing girls? “Some of my fraternity brothers and classmates did say I was crazy,” Low admits. “But I was a pretty enterprising youth, raised on a farm, and I'm sure my parents had helped spot me a couple cows, that kind of thing. So when I went to college, I had a few dollars stored away that I could invest. And driving that dump truck, it was really like a summer job.” Except then he remembered what everyone in the meatpacking trade had always told his father, a market news reporter: the guys who made the real money were the truckers. Citizen Bull works at Churchill | Coady Media “I would find out that it wasn't necessarily true,” Low recalls. “But it got me interested, the talk at the kitchen table about over-the-road trucks. So when my dump truck wasn't working out, I decided I'd trade it for one of those. And that's how we got started.” He didn't just do well. He did too well, a sapling rocketing too tall for its roots. “Early, mid-'70s, we were essentially doubling the size of the company: one truck, two, four, eight, and up,” Low explains. “Pretty soon, say just prior to 1980, we had 300. But that kind of rapid growth, I don't know where you can do that now. High-tech, maybe, but in trucking you have assets that are expensive. So going like that, you create a lot of debt–and your debt-to-equity really hasn't had a chance to catch up.” And then, at that peak of vulnerability, he ran into a historic spike in interest rates: 20 percent and more, plus he was borrowing at two to four points above the prime rate. In 1979, not yet 30 years old, Low cleared $1 million profit. The following year, he found himself in a bankruptcy court. Through around four years in Chapter 11, he learned to live scrupulously according to his means: not a cent spent that hadn't been earned. He would come to work every morning terrified of a call from the bank. Would the day's cashflow hold out? It was a highwire and, just as it seemed ready to snap, Low's mother insisted that she should help. “And actually that became a tremendous motivation,” Low says. “Because she was just a regular working person that had gotten her home free and clear. She borrowed $50,000 and gave it to me, at one of the darkest points, to keep the company going. And I think that really turned the situation around, emotionally. I mean, you can't leave your mother hanging out there with nothing. You are very highly motivated, to get her paid back!” Today, looking back as CEO of Prime Inc.–with a fleet of 6,500 trucks and revenues exceeding $2 billion–Low recognizes that the furnace must first be endured before steel can cool and harden. “I was a prideful country boy,” he says. “My parents, my relatives, had always paid their bills. It was a stark awakening. But I learned so many lessons about business, and about life and people. We got it together, got the company reorganized–a different business model, a different attitude–and really never looked back.” It was also to his parents that Low owed his passion for horses, first through the hogs-and-cattle environment in which he was raised and then, more specifically, by introducing him to Oaklawn. Sweet Melania with the Lows | Keeneland “I was farm boy,” Low recalls. “Fancied myself a bit of a cowboy, and took pretty naturally to it. I rode my horse in the Christmas parade, that kind of thing.” Doing so, in fact, produced a life-changing opportunity to flirt with a girl in the fifth grade. “Though Lawana's memory is different from mine,” Low says with a chuckle. “I'm quite sure that she didn't invite me to put her on the horse, but that I invited her.” One way or another, horses have remained a bond in a marriage now extending beyond half a century. “Oh, she loves them,” Low confirms. “She works on the matings and likes handicapping, though she doesn't seem to give me many of her winners! But yes, from early in our marriage we would go to Hot Springs together. Having been there with my parents, as a kid, I just have so many good memories down there, and it's become very dear to our hearts.” So when the business began thriving more sustainably, in the early 1990s, the Lows could have no more fulfilling reward than to start a stable. One of their earliest investments was Capote Belle, who won the GI Test Stakes, and they have twice since followed the Derby trail all the way to the first Saturday in May. Needless to say, both Steppenwolfer (2006) and Magnum Moon (2018) took the Oaklawn route, albeit there was quite a contrast in their fortunes at Churchill. Steppenwolfer, only placed in the Rebel and the Arkansas Derby, outran his odds in third; Magnum Moon, who had won both races emphatically, trailed home covered in mud. “Steppenwolfer was a great ride,” Low recalls. “He was trained by Danny Peitz, who's primarily a local Oaklawn trainer. Actually his brother worked for us in our shop here at Prime. So it was a big family deal, one of those experiences that really reinforce your enthusiasm. “Same with Magnum Moon, going into the Derby as leading points scorer: to have won those races at our home track, around friends and family, created memories to last a lifetime. But I think it remains the rainiest Derby on record, just a bog, and he lost all chance getting bumped around out of the 16 hole.” Tragically, Magnum Moon would never get a shot at redemption. That summer he was struck by laminitis and, despite showing prodigious courage and patience over the following months, eventually succumbed. Built cruises along on the tab at Churchill | Coady Media “We loved that horse so much,” Low says. “Probably even beyond his talent as a racehorse, he had an incredible will to live. He was in that clinic for almost a year, trying to recover. We'd have signs of progress, then a setback, but all the way through he was totally classy, smart, did everything right. “The game obviously has its highs and lows, so you need to cherish those highs and learn to cope with the lows. If it's going to be destructive to your life, you need to be doing something else. Because all it takes is a stroke of very bad luck, one bad step.” Returning to the Derby this time obviously feels different, rooting for a horse in someone else's silks. But the Lows retain plenty of skin in the game, between breeder's prizes and Citizen Bull's family. “We have the mare and the half-sister, who just foaled a beautiful colt by our stallion Colonel Liam,” Low notes. “No Joke has a fantastic Mandaloun yearling colt and a spectacular Life is Good weanling colt–but I think she may be going back to Into Mischief from now on!” There were Derby dreams for Colonel Liam when bought as a juvenile for $1.2 million, but he only paid off that investment once switched to turf. Now building a new career under the skilled supervision of Ocala Stud, his unexpected flowering reminds us that horses, for better or worse, remain ever unpredictable. That leaves the Lows, like anyone else, facing tricky strategic calls to maintain a viable program. The dam of GII Pat Day Mile contender Built (Hard Spun), for instance, was sold when he was a weanling for just $40,000 at the Keeneland November Sale. Both No Joke's previous foals having been retained, moreover, Citizen Bull was allowed to go for $675,000 after catching the expert eye of Donato Lanni for a partnership headed by SF/Starlight/Madaket. “Hindsight's always 20/20,” Low says. “Sometimes you'll make the wrong call. You hate to give up those beautiful Curlin mares, for sure, but before Built we felt like she hadn't produced for us, and needed moving on. I mean, I'm a businessman. Nobody likes just losing money year after year, so you need to manage things somewhat in the hope of ending up with a good, profitable venture. “We get together, try to evaluate where we are, make a decision and go with it. We really appreciate and respect the Taylor Made operation–Mark Taylor and Jeff Hayslett are very helpful–along with our farm manager Denny Wilson, and Jacob West as our bloodstock manager. And as we've said, we still have very good reasons to be cheering for Citizen Bull.” A breeding program of your own, of course, loads residual value into well-bred acquisitions like No Joke. That spurred the Lows into an extra bid or two in stretching for a $1.9 million Curlin filly out of Matera (Tapit), stakes-winning half-sister to Not This Time and Colonel Liam's sire Liam's Map, at Saratoga last summer. “Being farmers, breeders, that gives us a little backstop,” Low acknowledges. “That filly's with J.J. Pletcher in Ocala and it looks like she'll be going on to Todd pretty early, maybe in four or five weeks, hopefully then Saratoga. So we're excited about her.” The Lows lead Colonel Liam into the winner's circle after the Pegasus Turf | Coglianese But there is a further, clinching satisfaction for their whole program: the fact that the Lows have their mares and foals at Primatara Farm, right on the doorstep of the palatial home they built near Springfield, Missouri. “We love being round the horses, and really it's why we have the farm,” Low says. “And we take a great deal of pride that a champion 2-year-old was raised outside of Kentucky. Of course we do the Kentucky-bred thing, we ferry back and forth. But Denny, and Holly Hurshman and the rest of the crew, just do a great job. It's so gratifying to watch these horses growing up, a big part of the enjoyment that we get out of the sport.” No doubt as many people told Low he was crazy, trying to raise champion Thoroughbreds in Missouri, as they did when he bought that truck as a teenager. “They talk about the limestone and water in Kentucky,” Low says. “Well, we have limestone, we have good clean water, rolling hills. It's a beautiful environment. We know we need luck, everyone does. But while luck is always nice, it's also about having a good game plan. And, especially, good people. In the end, that's what gets you through. Whether racing, or trucking, logistics, whatever it is, if you can surround yourself with good people, that's going to make the difference.” The post Breeder Spotlight: Proud Missouri Citizen A Model For Bull Run, Presented By 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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By Dave Di Somma, Harness News Desk The “House” party looks set to continue at Manawatu today. The red juggernaut will be represented by 11 runners at Palmerston North this evening with all of them backing up from Tuesday’s meeting. Trainer Michael House had five winners then to take him to 903 career victories while son Wilson drove three of them on his 21st birthday – not that there was any huge celebration to mark the big event. “It was just a few drinks with dinner, nothing out of the ordinary.” With 51 wins in 2025, House is the country’s leading junior driver and second in the overall drivers’ premiership behind seven-time champion Blair Orange. He looks a great chance to add to that with six drives tonight, starting with Shezabettorgirl in Race 1, the Andrew and Lyn Neal Stables Mobile Pace “She’s a nice tough mare who won well for Harry (Harrison Orange) the first day – it was a great drive.” “She’d be one of my better drives on the day.” In race 3 he partners up with another Tuesday winner in Matai Harry in the Smale Logistics Mobile Pace (6.04pm). Two days ago he kicked through to lead and won well by over a length from Ragnar Lothbrok. “He’s a keen traveller who’s held his condition well.” “The best one seems to be Kevin Kline who’s drawn out well.” Oakley Shard is another Tuesday winner who shapes up as an each way chance in Race 4, the D and M Webb Mobile Pace. “He’s drawn exactly where he drew the first day (two on the second line) and that could be a good draw from there,” says House. In race 5, the Herb Stent Memorial Handicap Pace House partners with Avenger. After a big second two starts ago at Addington the Sweet Lou six-year-old was fourth on Tuesday. “I was slow away and then he had a bit of gallop so I was three deep which cost me second or third.” “But he’s in a bit of trouble on the second day because it’s 2500 and those back markers will catch you.” House is especially mindful of Rough And Ready in a field that also includes Iron Brigade, Lord Delmar and Nelson’s Boy. House is quietly confident about Koko Kaboom in the Colin Goss Memorial Handicap Trot (7.29pm) though manners will again be critical. “He was third after galloping (on Tuesday) and if he gets around trotting the 2500 will suit him more than the 2000 on the first day.” House’s last drive for the night is with La Bamba in the DSL Electrical Mobile Pace. He was backed into favouritism on Tuesday but finished sixth of seven. “I was stuck three deep and you can’t make ground. The horse went fine, he’ll be fine on the second day as long as we don’t pushed down on the fence.” Race 1 starts at 5.09pm. View the full article
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Thursday, Saint-Cloud, France, post time: 16:25, PRIX DU MUGUET-G2, €130,000, 4yo/up, 8fT Field: Ozat (Fr) (Kingman {GB}), Tribalist (GB) (Farhh {GB}), Vertbois (Fr) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}), Aigle Vaillant (Fr) (Wings Of Eagles {Fr}), Tumbler (Fr) (Kingman {GB}), No Lunch (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), Zoom (Fr) (No Nay Never). TDN Verdict: Tribalist goes for three consecutive editions of this May Day special, having memorably put Charyn (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) in his place in the G1 Prix du Moulin de Longchamp in September. The only question mark is whether his comprehensive defeat by No Lunch in the Prix Montjeu on Chantilly's Polytrack in March was down to the fact that he was needing his comeback and racing under a six-pound penalty, or was it a sign of a slight decline. The fact is that he does like it softer than it is likely to be here, so there is hope for No Lunch if he hasn't been put off his stride by a subsequent no-show in the G2 Godolphin Mile on dirt. [Tom Frary]. Thursday, Munich, Germany, post time: 15:55, WETTSTAR.DE – BAVARIAN CLASSIC-G3, €55,000, 3yo, 10fT Field: Abando (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), Aquaman (Ger) (Cracksman {GB}), Lazio (Ger) (Make Believe {GB}), Oriental Star (Ger) (Reliable Man {GB}), Path Of Soldier (Ger) (Soldier Hollow {GB}), Zuckerhut (Ger) (Almanzor {Fr}). TDN Verdict: Early sparring between the G1 Deutsches Derby hopes sees the eight-length G2 Gran Criterium winner Lazio encounter some up-and-comers including the Mulheim winner Zuckerhut and Cologne scorer Aquaman. The latter represents the Henk Grewe stable successful three times since 2019. [Tom Frary]. Thursday, Chelmsford City, Britain, post time: 19:15, BET365 CHELMER FILLIES' STAKES-Listed, £80,000, 3yo, f, 6f 0y Field: Arabian Dusk (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}), Englemere (Ire) (Goken {Fr}), Enola Holmes (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Hold A Dream (Ire) (Bated Breath {GB}), Lady With The Lamp (Ire) (King Of Change {GB}), Liberalised (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), Neytiri Te Tskaha (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}), Proudly Yours (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), Running Queen (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Spirit D'Or (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Star Of Mehmas (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), Wewilldanceagain (Ire) (Wooded {Ire}). TDN Verdict: It's back to sprinting for last year's G2 Duchess Of Cambridge Stakes winner and G1 Cheveley Park Stakes third Arabian Dusk who failed to see out the seven furlongs of the G3 Nell Gwyn Stakes. Lady With The Lamp beat some significant older horses in the Listed Cork Stakes and rates her biggest threat, while the Listed Harry Rosebery Stakes scorer Star Of Mehmas gets the Ryan Moore treatment which could be significant. [Tom Frary] Click here for the complete fields. The post Black-Type Analysis: Lazio Eyeing Bavarian Classic Laurels 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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Led by Arturo R. y Arturo Bullrich (G2) winner Martana, a field of seven fillies and mares has been entered for the May 1 Gran Premio Criadores (G1) in Argentina. The winner will earn an automatic starting berth into the Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1). View the full article
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Group 3 winner Orne (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) (lot 52) is one of the star lots among the 96 horses catalogued during the upcoming Tattersalls Online May Sale. Successful in the Horris Hill Stakes for John and Thady Gosden, he was also second in the G2 Sandy Lane Stakes and currently holds a Timeform mark of 100. Other lots of note in the mixed sale are a quartet from trainer Willie Mullins including the G2 Killashee Handicap Hurdle winner Bialystock (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) (lot 11); and G3 Scottish Grand National runner-up Klarc Kent (Fr) (Spanish Moon) (lot 39). There is also a yearling filly by Caturra (Ire) (lot 91), whose half-brother by Havana Grey (GB) made 650,000gns at the Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Sale when sold by Bansha House Stables to Godolphin. Overall, the sale consists of 84 horses in- and out-of-training, six point-to-pointers, three stores, and three yearlings. Bidding will open at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, May 7, and close beginning at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May 8. The post Orne Highlights Tattersalls Online May Sale Catalogue appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
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In Australasian stallion news, Swettenham Stud and Waikato Stud revealed their 2025 rosters and fees on Wednesday, while Group 1 winner Schwarz (Aus) will stand at Rosemont Stud after his run in the upcoming G1 Doomben 10,000. Leading Swettenham's roster is former shuttle stallion and now permanent Southern Hemisphere resident Toronado (Ire), who will stand for an unchanged fee of A$88,000 this season. The leading active sire based in Victoria, the son of High Chaparral (Ire) was one of only two Australian stallions ranked among the world's top five sires for winners in 2024. Besides siring an A$1 million yearling at the Inglis Melbourne Premier Yearling Sale, Toronado's runners have been performing well despite being sired at a fee of A$27,500 or less, barring his current crop of juveniles who were sired at A$49,500. “The quality of mares that he has served has gone up a level, and this year's yearlings were the first of his progeny conceived off the higher service fee,” said Swettenham's Marcus Heritage. “It was great to see him have his first million-dollar yearling this year. He is so well received across the board, he is hugely desired in the Asian market, but also local trainers and breeders want his progeny, he is a high-class stallion, and he deserves the success he is getting.” Swettenham also stands Wootton Bassett (GB)'s Wooded (Ire), who was a Group 1-winning sprinter in Europe. Already the sire of 20 winners from his first crop in the Northern Hemisphere, the dark bay also has a group winner to his credit in Woodshauna (Fr). His fee has been reduced to A$16,500 (inc GST). “Being a son of Wootton Bassett can only be positive after the way he started with his first Australian crop, and he is the only son of Wootton Bassett in Australia, although I'm sure that will change with time,” said Heritage. Waikato Kingpin Continues His Reign Anchoring the Waikato roster is multiple champion New Zealand sire Savabeel (Aus), who will stand for an unchanged fee of NZ$100,000. He is over NZ$2.7 million ahead of his nearest rivals on the current New Zealand General Sires' List and appears to be poised to collect his 10th sire title. The son of Zabeel (NZ) will be inducted into the New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame this May. In the 2024/2025 season, he's sired two new Group 1 winners, bringing his total to 35 individual top-level winners, on top of Atishu (NZ), who was already a seasoned Group 1 winner scoring at that level again. His ratio of stakes winners to runners is 11.1% and his group winners to runners ratio is 7.3%. He also sired his highest-priced yearling ever–a NZ$2.4 million filly this season. “He deserves every accolade, and we are very proud of everything he's done and is doing for the New Zealand industry,” said Chittick. “He has great vitality and we're heading into the season with a bright, happy and healthy horse–the only thing we will avoid breeding this year at his age is maidens.” Receiving a hefty fee boost to NZ$75,000, Super Seth (Aus) is now the sire of three Group 1 winners this season from just two crops of racing age–Australian Guineas winner Feroce (NZ), Linebacker (NZ) won the Randwick Guineas, and La Dorada (NZ) won the Manawatu Sires' Produce Stakes. Super Seth boasts a stakes winners to runners strike rate of 8%, with his yearlings having sold for as much as NZ$700,000 in recent sales. Due to the stallion's restricted nomination availability and exceptional demand, bookings will close by application at 5 p.m. (NZT) on Wednesday, June 4. Chittick added, “An unbelievable stallion. I don't feel as though we have had a stallion start like this in New Zealand for a long time. Three Group 1 winners across two countries in a month is freakish, and he keeps backing up with Trans-Tasman winners every single week.” Schwartz Coming Up Roses A winner of the G1 William Reid Stakes, Schwarz will become the first A$1-million plus yearling and Group 1 weight-for-age-winning sprinter over distances of 1200 metres or less to head to stud in Australian in over a decade. The son of Group 2 winner Summer Sham (Aus) (Not A Single Doubt {Aus}) also won a trio of other group races and was bred by Widden Stud. “We believe he's not only Zoustar's greatest, most successful son, but also his best-looking and indeed best-bred stallion,” said Rosemont bloodstock manager Ryan McEvoy. “As an A$1.25 million Magic Millions purchase from a Group 2-winning daughter of Not A Single Doubt, who descends directly from the family of Redoute's Choice (Aus), he offers everything you'd want in a top-class stallion prospect; type, sire-line, pedigree, attitude, and Group 1-winning speed.” His fee will be on a price-on-application basis with an official fee set after his final race, the Doomben 10,000 on May 17. The post Toronado Leads Swettenham Roster; Savabeel On Top Of Waikato’s Team 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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Considered well enough to get backed down to 6-5 favoritism for this first career go, Sassy C W (Yaupon–Sassy Miss Sue, by Tiznow) broke with her running shoes squarely on, sprinting clear within strides as second and third choice Wakuda (Gun Runner) and Baffle (Violence) gave chase. Not for catching late, the $375,000 OBS March graduate was well clear of her rivals turning for home and ultimately crossed the wire 5-lengths ahead of Wakuda with Baffle back in third. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $72,000. O-Patricias Hope & Carolyn Wilson; B-Harun Kahraman (KY); T-Larry Rivelli. The post Yaupon’s Sassy C W Blasts to TDN Rising Star Win at Churchill 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 share in Zoustar (Aus) topped the Inglis Digital April (Late) Sale when knocked down to Boomer Bloodstock for A$1.1 million on Wednesday. This marks only the second time a share in the Widden Stud-based sire has been available at public auction, with both shares being offered by Qatar Bloodstock. The first share was sold to Julie Ritchie for A$1.3 million last June. “I have various clients that I work for that are always on the lookout for opportunities, and this one fit well into their portfolio,” said Craig Rounsefell of Boomer Bloodstock. “I'm very pleased with the purchase, it was around the price I thought we would have to pay, one went for A$1.3 million last year and the stallion is going from strength to strength. In terms of the top class proven stallions, there is a big age gap from the others to him, so there's a bit of longevity there, and it's great to get involved with such a good stud like Widden. “In terms of Zoustar's profile, his fee may even go higher in years to come, he's going great at the sales, he's got sons retiring to stud, and I have no doubt he will be a top broodmare sire of the future.” The 14-year-old son of Northern Meteor (Aus), who will stand the upcoming season for A$275,000, has sired 10 Group 1 winners among his 65 black-type winners. His current progeny earnings are over A$20.9 million and he currently sits second on the Australian General Sires Premiership. Zoustar's yearlings have averaged A$492,000 at the sales this season with a quintet of seven-figure lots led by an A$2.6 million filly who sold to Resolute Racing at the Inglis Easter Yearling Sale. For the full sale results, please visit the Inglis Digital website. The post Boomer Bloodstock Buys Zoustar Share For A$1.1 Million On Inglis Digital appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article