Jump to content
Bit Of A Yarn

Wandering Eyes

Journalists
  • Posts

    129,582
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by Wandering Eyes

  1. A guide to television and radio horse racing coverage, compiled by America's Best Racing, during the upcoming week heading into a Breeders' Cup prep weekend at Woodbine and Churchill Downs. View the full article
  2. 4th-KD, $130K, Msw, 2yo, 6 1/2fT, 2:48 p.m. EST ALFIE SOLOMONS (Kantharos), previously entered in a July 24 turf sprint at Saratoga that he later scratched out of, is back in the entries and slated to make his career bow in this closing-day spot at Kentucky Downs. The chestnut, bought for $285,000 last year at Keeneland September, is a full-brother to MGISW and dual-surface star World of Trouble. Owned by Andrew Farm and For the People Racing and trained by Wesley Ward, he missed nearly a month on the worktab after his scratch, but has returned with three sharp breezes at Keeneland, capped by a five-furlong move in :59 4/5 (2/6) Sept. 6. Ward has also entered Invader (War Front), who looks to make amends after running sixth as the favorite in his career bow July 6 at Belmont. Racing for Grandview Equine and Cheyenne Stables, the $500,000 KEESEP buy also drilled five furlongs Sept. 6 in Lexington and earned the bullet, going in :59 2/5 (1/6). The bay is out of GSW/G1SP Say (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), making him a full-brother to GISW Fog of War and SW Naval Intelligence. —@JBiancaTDN TJCIS PPs The post Sept. 12 Insights: World of Trouble Full-Brother Re-Entered at Kentucky Downs appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  3. A colt by Triple Crown winner American Pharoah (Hip 382)–just the second yearling to enter the ring– caused some early fireworks during Wednesday’s session of the Keeneland September Sale, bringing $1.3 million from M.V. Magnier and Jon and Sarah Kelly. Out of the unplaced Smart Strike mare Escampette, he was bred in Kentucky by Dixiana Farms and consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent. He was previously purchased by Hunter Valley Farm for $340,000 as a KEENOV weanling. This is the extended female family of champion Althea and GI Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Bayern. The post ‘Pharoah’ Colt Leads Early Returns at KEESEP appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  4. Richard Fahey’s G3 Acomb S. winner Valdermoro (Declaration) has been sold to continue his career in Hong Kong. The Declaration Of War colt beat Aidan O’Brien’s Harpocrates (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) by a neck in the Group 3 on the Knavesmire, looking full of potential. Not surprisingly owner Martyn Macleod was inundated with offers, and it was one from overseas which won the day. “Valdermoro has been sold to Hong Kong, unfortunately for me,” said Fahey. “It’s a shame because the best was still to come from him–especially next year. But the owner was offered a lot of money and that is the game we’re in. Hopefully he’ll reinvest some of it, I’m sure he will–I just wish I owned him.” The post Valdermoro Sold to Hong Kong appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  5. Blake Shinn’s unlucky run of seconds is over after the star Australian jockey secured his first Hong Kong winner with his first ride at Happy Valley on Wednesday night.The 31-year-old had been riding well without winning – his five seconds were more than any other jockey – and he was keen to get the monkey off the back before starting a suspension which sees him miss the next three meetings.But there is no need to worry any more, Shinn is on the board thanks to a smart front-running ride aboard… View the full article
  6. Robert Winston has retired from the saddle with immediate effect. The Group 1-winning jockey cited an “amalgamation of reasons” for his decision, with a lack of rides and issues with his weight top of the list. Winston has recently set up a new business rehabilitating horses with his fiancee, and is also looking to keep his eye in on the racing front. “I’m finished as of today,” said Winston on Wednesday morning. “It’s been brewing for a while. Horses like Librisa Breeze kept me going for the last couple of years, but I was on the verge a couple of years ago. It’s an amalgamation of reasons, [including] a lack of rides and issues with my weight–and they are a knock on from the bad injury I had five years ago. I’ve still got back issues from that and recently I’ve had a niggle in my neck. “This is not how I want things to be and with my fiancee, Victoria, we’ve set up a business rehabilitating horses and other bits and pieces.” Winston has ridden some top-class horses during his career, but the Dean Ivory-trained Librisa Breeze (GB) (Mount Nelson {GB})–winner of the QIPCO British Champions Sprint at Ascot in 2017–stands out. He added, “On the track he’d have to be the best, but I rode some good mares, like Short Skirt, who was second in the Yorkshire Oaks for Sir Michael Stoute, and I rode lots of good horses for Barry Hills like Red Jazz.” Also successful with Magical Romance (Ire) (Barathea {Ire}) in the 2004 G1 Cheveley Park S., the 1999 champion apprentice would have gone close to being crowned champion jockey in 2004 but for a season-ending fall at Ayr. “Whether I would have been champion that year I don’t know, but I’d have been in the top two for sure–but there was still a long way to go,” said Winston. “I’d have been first or second, but I’m taking nothing away from Jamie [Spencer] as he earned it that year. “Of course I’m sad it’s all ending, but I feel much happier in myself now. I had a fruitful career and am thankful for the help and support I’ve had along the way. I’ve met some great people and I’ll still be around and open to other opportunities.” The post Jockey Robert Winston Retires appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  7. Editor’s Note: The Jockey Club has asked for public comment on their proposal to cap at 140 the number of mares a stallion can breed annually. In this ongoing series, we will publish the perspectives of breeders, stallion farms and others on the proposal. Antony Beck, Gainesway Farm It’s a matter of equilibrium. Horsemen at every level need to strike a balance between, on the one hand, the commercial imperatives on which their livelihoods depend; and, on the other, the long-term interests of the breed. Sometimes the free market can develop its own restraints. But sometimes it requires a disinterested intervention of this kind to get everyone on the same page. And, in the end, we may well find that apparently opposed agendas will be reconciled by outcomes that satisfy both. We know that commercial support for certain types of stallion will tend not only to be premature but also, very often, too impatient. And, with that in mind, we should welcome this challenge as an opportunity. Farms should recognize that greater equilibrium will ultimately bring commercial benefits to their stallion rosters–quite apart from the manifest benefits to the breed, in terms of genetic diversity. Because the bottom line is always that whatever serves the interests of the Thoroughbred, in the long term, will ultimately serve our interests as well. Want to share your opinion? Email suefinley@thetdn.com The post Opinions on the Cap: Antony Beck appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  8. Connections of Stewards’ Cup winner Khaadem (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) said they believe a lingering foot problem could have contributed to the 3-year-old colt’s lacklustre performance in Saturday’s G1 Sprint Cup, where he was last of 11 runners behind Hello Youmzain (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}). “He had a bit of a bruised foot at the end of last week, but he trotted up sound on Friday night and again on Saturday morning, so there was no reason not to run him,” said Angus Gold, racing manager to owner Sheikh Hamdan. “We didn’t think beforehand the soft ground would be a problem, but Jim [Crowley] felt he wasn’t letting himself down. That may have been down to the foot problem, but unfortunately the horse can’t tell us. “I’m not saying that’s the only reason [he disappointed], but I know [trainer Charlie Hills] was very happy with him going into the race and clearly he hasn’t run up to his best on the day.” The post Foot Problem Could Have Hindered Khaadem appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  9. Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed’s Raffle Prize (Ire) (Slade Power {Ire}), winner of the G2 Queen Mary S. and G2 Duchess of Cambridge S. and a neck second to Earthlight (Ire) (Shamardal) in the G1 Prix Morny, is set to line up next in the G1 Juddmonte Cheveley Park S. at Newmarket on Sept. 28. “The Juddmonte Cheveley Park S. was the only place we wanted Raffle Prize to go after her run in the Morny,” said Charlie Johnston, assistant to his father trainer Mark Johnston. “She’s in great order and it’s been ‘all systems go’ with her since France. She did everything bar win a very good renewal of the Morny. That performance proved that she was the leading filly in Europe and we’ve not seen anything since, in the Lowther S. or anywhere else, that might scare us. If she turns up at Newmarket in the same form as we had her in France she should take plenty of beating. “Raffle Prize handled the heavy ground in the Morny simply because she is very good, but I’m pretty sure that testing ground does not play to her strength as she has so much speed,” Johnston continued. “It was Earthlight’s stamina that came into play and won him the day in the last 100 yards. She’s only had five starts and they’ve been nicely spaced out, so she’s not had a crazily busy campaign and we are looking forward to Newmarket. Win, lose or draw, that is almost certain to be her last start of the season.” Looking ahead to next year, Johnston said, “Her potential stamina over more than six furlongs is a question for next spring, though I would like to think that any filly who wins the Cheveley Park would be given a Guineas preparation with the option of then dropping back in trip for the Commonwealth Cup.” Godolphin’s Earthlight, trained by Andre Fabre, remains among the entries for the same card’s G1 Middle Park S. The post Raffle Prize Cheveley Park-Bound appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  10. by Jessica Martini, Christie DeBernardis, Brian DiDonato LEXINGTON, KY – After a powerful initial session Monday, the Keeneland September Yearling Sale only gained strength through Tuesday’s second of three Book 1 sessions, with a colt by Curlin bringing the auction’s highest price since 2010 when selling for $4.1 million to Godolphin. Sheikh Mohammed’s operation purchased the top two lots at Monday’s opener and was again the major player at the top Tuesday. In addition to the session topper, Godolphin also purchased a colt by War Front for $2.9 million and a filly by Union Rags for $1 million to secure three of the day’s five seven-figure yearlings. Sheikh Hamdan’s Shadwell Estate Company was responsible for the day’s other two million-dollar transactions. “What an incredible day,” said Keeneland’s Vice President of Sales and Racing Bob Elliston. “When we were up here yesterday, obviously it was a very upbeat attitude, but I think we exceeded that today.” With a smaller Book 1 this year, comparisons to last year’s auction are difficult, but figures from day-to-day prove Elliston’s point. During Tuesday’s session, 109 yearlings sold for $49,150,000. The average, which was $432,065 Monday, jumped to $450,917 Tuesday, and the median rose from $325,000 during the first session to $375,000 during the second. “It’s hard with the comparisons again until we get to the fifth session, but the numbers we can compare are today from yesterday,” Elliston said. “Today, the average horse sold for $451,000 and the median jumped $50,000 more from yesterday. So that’s just staggering. There was depth–that median jumping like that shows it wasn’t just two horses that caused the jump.” Through two sessions, a total of 216 yearlings have grossed $95,381,000 for an average of $441,579 and a median of $350,000. The buy-back rate stands at 29.64%. After two sessions of a four-day Book 1 in 2018, 306 yearlings had sold for $114,455,000. The average was $374,036, the median was $300,000, and the buy-back rate was 27.83%. Through two sessions, 12 horses have topped the million-dollar mark–there were 27 at the entire 2018 sale–with Godolphin responsible for five. The group made its biggest splash with the $4.1-million purchase of the Curlin colt out of Bounding (Aus) (Lonhro {Aus}), who was consigned by Eaton Sales on behalf of Barbara Banke’s Stonestreet. Bidding on the yearling featured an old-fashioned slugfest between powerhouse buyers Coolmore and Godolphin reminiscent of the boom market of the early 2000s. “All the bidding stopped out front, and for the last at least $2 million it was all out back,” Elliston said. “And it was $100,000 a pop. It sounded like the old days and it was. Sheikh Mohammed against the Coolmore gentlemen and it was a great battle that Sheikh Mohammed ended up taking, but it felt like ’04 and ’05 back in the old days when the market was really incredible.” Through two days, Godolphin has purchased six head for $13,250,000. The operation’s bloodstock agent Anthony Stroud admitted bidding was competitive for the right horses. “I think the market is buoyant at the top,” Stroud said. “There is a demand for good horses.” Taylor Made Sales Agency was the session’s leading consignor with 20 sold for $7,275,000, while Curlin led all stallions on the day with 10 yearlings bringing $8,525,000. The September sale continues with a final Book 1 session beginning at noon Wednesday. Following a dark day Thursday, the auction resumes Friday at 10 a.m. and continues through Sept. 22. Curlin & Godolphin Continue to Dominate Curlin has been red hot at the yearling sales this season with three seven-figure colts at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale and another at Monday’s opening session of the Keeneland September Sale. Demand for sons of the Hall of Famer reached new heights Tuesday at Keeneland when a colt out of New Zealand champion Bounding (Aus) summoned $4.1 million from Godolphin. Coolmore was the under bidder on the bay colt, who is the highest-priced yearling to sell at KEESEP since Mr. Besilu (A.P. Indy) brought $4.2 million in 2010. “He is a very athletic horse, a lovely, well-balanced horse from a good farm,” said Godolphin’s bloodstock advisor Anthony Stroud as Sheikh Mohammed and the team dispersed just after signing the ticket in their usual spot by the back walking ring. When asked if the price was above what he expected Hip 274 would reach, Stroud said, “Oh gosh, yes. I needed oxygen. We were gasping for air at that stage. Luckily, we are under the leadership of Sheikh Mohammed and he is a decisive man. He is completely in control and is the one who makes these decisions. In this particular case, he told me to continue. As a group, it was definitely more than we anticipated him to make.” With Sheikh Mohammed in town for the sale, Godolphin led all buyers during Monday’s session and repeated that feat Tuesday, buying six horses for $13.25 million for an average of $2,208,333. “The love of horse racing and the hope of finding a champion is the thing,” Stroud said. “He loves the sport, he loves coming to America and he loves Keeneland. That is why he is doing what he is doing.” Hip 274 was consigned by Eaton Sales for breeder Stonestreet Stables. Barbara Banke’s operation went to 1.9 million AUD, which is $1,374,080 USD, to acquire the bay colt’s dam Bounding (Aus) (Lonhro {Aus}) at the 2016 Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale. A champion sprinter in New Zealand, the 9-year-old mare is a half-sister to MGSW & MG1SP Anthony Van Dyck (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Hip 274 is Bounding’s first foal and she has since produced a War Front filly Mar. 17 and was bred back to Medaglia d’Oro. “She is spectacularly beautiful,” Banke said of Bounding. “She was very fast. She was a sprint champion, so she brings the speed. [Curlin] has speed. Some may say his best race was when he was sprinting early in his career. So, he has speed, she has speed. The colt is beautiful. He has a really good head on his shoulders. He has never done anything wrong. He has just been perfect from day one.” —@CDeBernardisTDN Strong September Sale for Stonestreet Between their star-studded broodmare band and their flagship stallion Curlin, Stonestreet has been having a very good September sale thus far. The Lexington nursery sold two yearlings Monday, an $800,000 son of Curlin out of blue hen Scarlet’s Tango (French Deputy) (Hip 68) and a $2.15 million colt out of that mare’s Grade I-winning daughter Tara’s Tango (Unbridled’s Song) (Hip 138). Barbara Banke’s operation made an even stronger showing Tuesday, topping the session with a $4.1 million Curlin colt out of New Zealand champion Bounding (Aus) (Lonhro {Aus}) (Hip 274). They also sold a Curlin daughter of their Grade I-winning homebred Dreaming of Julia (A.P. Indy) for $1.05 million (Hip 368) and a Medaglia d’Oro colt out of her MGISW mother Dream Rush (Wild Rush) for $550,000 (Hip 370). (Click here for a TDN video feature on Stonestreet broodmares that includes Dreaming of Julia). “I brought all my colts except for one and that is the one out of Rachel’s Valentina [Hip 42, scratched Monday], which is a special sentimental favorite, shall we say,” said Banke. After the ordeal we had with Rachel Alexandra, we wanted to preserve that line at home. Anyway, I brought them all and this is the one [Hip 274] I liked the best.” Curlin carried the burgundy and gold Stonestreet colors to seven Grade I victories, including the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic and G1 Dubai World Cup. They have heavily supported at him at stud and been rewarded with the likes of champion Good Magic, who summoned $1-million at KEESEP, after which Banke stayed in as partner. The Hill ‘n’ Dale stallion has been a big part of Stonestreet’s sale success this season with a son of his and the operation’s Yes Liz (Yes It’s True) reaching $1-million at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale, in addition to their pair of seven-figure colts this week. This far at Keeneland September, 16 Curlin yearlings have sold for a total of $12.625 million and an average of $789,063. “Curlin is having a wonderful sales year,” Banke said. “This should really take him over the top. He is a family member to me. I want the best mares for him. I want to see [the Curlins] do the best on the track. I want to produce those Classic winners for many years to come, I hope.” Banke continued, “We have one at the farm, who is a full to Good Magic, and he is the friendliest thing and so pretty. We also have a full to Union Jackson. We continue to breed our best to him and buy mares that we think will go well with him.” —@CDeBernardisTDN Believe You Can Keeps Rewarding Joneses Believe You Can (Proud Citizen) had already supplied the Jones family of Airdrie Stud with a lifetime of memories when she won the 2012 GI Kentucky Oaks, but the mare added to her legacy when her colt by War Front sold for $2.9 million to Godolphin Tuesday at Keeneland. “That first Friday in May of 2012, we had the whole family there and she wins the Kentucky Oaks and we have all those memories,” said Bret Jones, while holding his young son, out back after the yearling sold. “Now years later, we are making new memories with family members who weren’t even there back then. So it’s really special when you have a family farm like this. It’s very special to share it with the people that you love.” Believe You Can’s first foal is graded-placed Believe in Royalty (Tapit), who sold for $900,000 at the 2016 Keeneland September sale. Her second foal, a filly by Tapit, sold for $1 million at the 2017 Keeneland September sale. The Airdrie Stud team was high on the War Front yearling (hip 258) all year, according to Jones, who said the dark bay colt may be the best horse the farm, founded by his father and former Kentucky governor Brereton Jones, has bred. “He has every chance to go on and prove that,” Jones said of his lofty expectations for the yearling. “That’s really the feeling we had from an early time. Everything about him says racehorse and I hope he is even better on the track than he was in the sales ring.” Of the colt’s $2.9-million price tag, Jones admitted, “You never expect it, but we brought him up here thinking we had a chance to have a really special Tuesday. And we were fortunate that everything worked out and so thankful the horse handled everything as well as he did, because you never know. You can have all the class in the universe back at the farm, but he handled it like the really special horse that he is. He showed himself as well as one could and thankfully he sold very, very well.” Believe You Can produced a filly by Uncle Mo this year and was bred back to Airdrie’s new stallion Collected. “The foal by Uncle Mo that we have at home is a very special filly as well,” Jones said. “This is two years in a row that this mare has had the best foal on the farm. She is already a graded stakes producer and she has the opportunity to keep going on. That’s a great feeling.” Jones gave credit to the team at Airdrie for the sales success, with some of the farm’s long-time employees there to share the moment. “We have to say thank you to everybody at the farm,” Jones said. “We had so many of them here. Mark Cunningham has been with us almost 40 years and he came to the sale. And Tim Thornton, who was our general manager for so many years, was right there sitting next to dad and you think what memories they have to together. So it really is so special for the team to have a day like this.” Hip 258 was another big-ticket purchase for Sheikh Mohammed’s Godolphin. “Sheikh Mohammed really liked this horse,” said Godolphin’s Anthony Stroud. “It was a great deal of money, but he liked him. He is obviously by a great stallion in War Front and out of a Group 1 mare. He’s bred by Brerry Jones, at a fantastic stud farm. He had the conformation to suit and we thought he was a really, really good horse.” —@JessMartiniTDN KEESEP Super Sires Responsible for Million-Dollar Filly While sires War Front and Tapit are typically slugging it out at the top of the yearling market, they joined forces to produce a War Front filly who brought $1 million from Shadwell Tuesday at Keeneland. Offered by Gainesway, Agent LIV, hip 351 is the first foal out of 2015 GIII Monmouth Oaks heroine Delightful Joy (Tapit). “She’s a super filly,” Gainesway’s Michael Hernon said. “We got her about four months ago. She’s thrived every day. I’ve got a great amount of confidence in her–she will run. We really appreciate Shadwell’s support of this filly, and other bidders of course. She’s just a special filly–very strong, very Danzig with a lot of strength. I expect her to appear and do herself justice next year at Royal Ascot.” Oussama Aboughazale’s International Equities Holding paid $700,000 for Delightful Joy at the 2017 Keeneland January sale. In addition to her own exploits on the track, she is a daughter of GSW/GISP Graeme Six (Graeme Hall) and half to GSW Cali Star (Street Cry {Ire}). A Pioneerof the Nile half-sister to Delightful Joy cost $1.05 million here 12 months ago. Delightful Joy has a filly foal by Medaglia d’Oro and was bred back to American Pharoah. “What can I say? Tapit keeps writing his story,” said Hernon when asked about the Gainesway stalwart’s emergence as a top broodmare sire. “He’s a wonderful horse. He’s left an indelible mark on the stud book and we’re a long way from the finish line. Given the mares he has been bred to–super mares and high quality–and if they get 50% females, he’s going to put a lot of fillies on the ground with top pedigrees and consequently he’ll be a leading broodmare sire. It’s inevitable.” —@BDiDonatoTDN Dreaming of Julia Filly Makes Another Seven Figure Sale For Curlin/Stonestreet/Denali Denali Stud, Stonestreet Stables and Curlin have been a very profitable combination at Keeneland this week. The trio enjoyed their second seven-figure transaction of Book 1 when a Curlin filly out of Grade I winner Dreaming of Julia (A.P. Indy) summoned $1.05 million from Shadwell Farm. Denali also represented Stonestreet on a $2.15 million Curlin colt (Hip 138) during Monday’s session and a $1 million son of the Hill ‘n’ Dale stallion that sold at Fasig-Tipton’s Saratoga Sale. “To be honest, it is not like we were surprised,” Denali’s Conrad Bandoroff said of the daughter of Dreaming of Julia (Hip 368). “She was a ‘Wow’ filly. She was balanced, she had quality, she oozed class. Right before she went in, I said to my dad, ‘If you want to win the [GI Kentucky] Oaks, you buy a filly like that. That is what she is bred to do. She is another testament to the Stonestreet program. She is out of a mare they raced and won a Grade I with. She is an amazing filly and she is going to get every chance. Best of luck to Sheikh Hamdan and the whole Shadwell team.” Bandoroff continued, “A filly like her makes our job easy. She is worth that price as a broodmare all day long. You look at her and blue hen comes to mind with that family. It is an amazing family and she doesn’t have to do much to be worth it. She looks like one who could get you there.” Stonestreet privately purchased two-time Grade I winner Dream Rush (Wild Rush) and Dreaming of Julia was her first foal. Trained by Todd Pletcher, the bay mare opened her account with a trio of victories, including the 2012 GI Frizette S. and won the following year’s GII Gulfstream Park Oaks. Dreaming of Julia is a half-sister to MGSW Dream Pauline (Tapit) and stakes-winning young sire Atreides (Medaglia d’Oro). Hip 368 is the 9-year-old mare’s third foal, following a 2016 Ghostzapper colt and 2017 Medaglia d’Oro filly named Golden Julia. Dreaming of Julia produced a colt by Medaglia d’Oro this year and was bred back to Curlin. “She is a nice horse and has the kind of pedigree we are looking for,” said Shadwell’s Rick Nichols. “Curlin is a top sire and we have had Curlins over the years and had good luck with them. For dirt racing in America, that is one of the sires you need.” Shadwell has purchased a total of 12 yearlings through the first two sessions of Keeneland September for a gross of $7.67 million and an average of $639,167. The Dreaming of Julia filly and a colt also by Curlin (Hip 162) were their most expensive purchases at $1.05 million each. —@CDeBernardisTDN Point of Honor Half Sis to Godolphin With Sheikh Mohammed in the building, the Godolphin team was quite active during Monday’s opening session, buying three yearlings for a total of $5.25-million. The operation kept busy during Tuesday’s session as well, causing early fireworks when securing a Union Rags half-sister to GSW & MGISP Point of Honor (Curlin) for a cool $1-million. “She has been bought for America to race here,” said Godolphin’s bloodstock representative Anthony Stroud. “Sheikh Mohammed wants to buy some fillies to race in America and she fits the bill. She is well-bred, she is very athletic and a nice filly.” When asked if her half-sister’s success this year was part of the team’s attraction to Hip 199, Stroud said, “That helped, but she was just a nice filly. She was a good, easy mover with a good pedigree and from a good farm.” Siena Farm bred Hip 199’s dam Zayanna (Bernardini), who is a half-sister to graded winners Mr Freeze (To Honor and Serve), Heavenly Ransom (Red Ransom) and Dilemma (Grand Slam). She has produced four winners from four foals to race, topped by GII Black-Eyed Susan S. heroine Point of Honor, who was most recently second in the Aug. 17 GI Alabama S. at Saratoga. The 10-year-old mare is also responsible for SW Velvet Mood (Lonhro {Aus}) and SP Admiral Jimmy (Jimmy Creed). Zayanna’s 2-year-old filly Wicked Whisper (Liam’s Map), a $500,000 KEESEP purchase by Alex and JoAnn Lieblong, romped by 6 1/4 lengths in her Saratoga debut for Steve Asmussen Aug. 25, earning the ‘TDN Rising Star’ moniker. Taylor Made Sales Agency consigned the bay filly on behalf of her breeder. Siena Farm has sold five yearlings through the first two sessions with Hip 199 being the most expensive. Their total gross so far is $2.76 million with an average of $552,000. “She is a great-looking filly from a great family,” said Duncan Taylor. “I just want to say thank you to Sheikh Mohammed. He has been great not only to Keeneland, but to our family. He just buys horse after horse. I hope that filly can be a Grade I winner for him. She certainly looks the part. She has a lot of her father in her. Siena has been raising some great horses.” —@CDeBernardisTDN Beach Patrol Half Goes to Best A Flatter half-brother to MGISW, $2.5-million earner and ‘TDN Rising Star‘ Beach Patrol (Lemon Drop Kid) became the latest pricey buy by Larry Best’s OXO Equine when Best fended off all challengers to take him home for $900,000. The Mar. 6 foal was consigned as hip 250 by Jody and Michelle Huckabay’s Elm Tree Farm on behalf of breeder and longtime client Nancy Shuford. “He was just one of those horses who never had anything go wrong,” said Jody Huckabay after shaking hands with Best. “From the time he foaled, he was just a very nice colt, a special horse. We had a couple different people come to the farm and look [at him], and in particular Mike Ryan, whose opinion I value, and he told me he was a special horse. I thought he was, but when Mike said that it really made me feel good and pump my chest up. He’s been very well-received here. We had a lot of breeders and racehorse people on him. We had no idea what he was going to bring, but the reserve was nothing compared to what he brought. He’s just a very special horse and we hope he goes on to run like Beach Patrol.” Shuford paid $90,000 for dam Bashful Bertie (Quiet American)–a full to Grade II winner Allamerican Bertie and half to MGSW Hurricane Bertie (Storm Boot)—in foal to Mr. Greeley at the 2010 Keeneland November sale. She failed to produce a foal from that first mating, but her Malibu Moon colt the following year was a $205,000 weanling and $450,000 KEESEP yearling. Beach Patrol was a $250,000 weanling at KEENOV ’14, and a Speightstown colt born in 2015 brought $400,000 that November. Now 2-year-old Carolina Bertie (Speightstown) was a $335,000 buyback at KEENOV ’17. Bashful Bertie produced an Into Mischief colt May 6 and was bred back to Candy Ride (Arg). When asked to compare hip 250 to Beach Patrol, winner of the 2016 GI Secretariat S. and 2017 GI Arlington Million and GI Joe Hirsch Turf Classic S., Huckabay said, “We sold Beach Patrol as a weanling, so I didn’t get to finish him out. I think this is going to be a little bigger horse. Chad Brown looked at this horse at the barn as well, and Peter Brant had been back there and looked at him–didn’t comment, but thought he was a nice horse. The mare, you can about breed her to anything and she gets a nice horse.” Claiborne Farm resident Flatter has been responsible for the last two Fasig-Tipton July toppers, and had a $500,000 colt sell at Saratoga. His top earner, 2017 champion 3-year-old West Coast, cost $425,000 here. “We’re big fans of Flatter,” Huckabay said. “It was down to several [stallions] when we bred this mare, and we settled on Flatter just because we really enjoy doing business with Claiborne [Farm], their horses are very fairly priced and obviously you can make a big profit with their stock.” Hip 250 is bred on the same cross as GSW Economic Model, and produced by a version of the same A.P. Indy–Quiet American cross responsible for the likes of Bernardini. As for the KEESEP market so far, Huckabay said, “If you bring the right horse, there’s all the money in the world, but they better vet and they better be the right kind for Book 1. If they’re not, then it’s pretty tough sledding.”—@BDiDonatoTDN Tapit Filly for Al Shira’aa A filly by Tapit has joined the roster at Al Shira’aa Stable after bloodstock agent Shawn Dugan bid $900,000 to acquire the Gainesway-bred and consigned yearling. The bay is out of Courtisane (Arg) (Silver Finder) and is a half-sister to multiple Grade I placed Madame Stripes (Arg) (Equal Stripes), a mare Dugan is very familiar with. Her husband Neil Drysdale trained the mare on behalf of Antony Beck’s Gainesway Stable. “How about absolutely everything,” Dugan said when asked about the yearling’s appeal. “I know I’ve said that before, but this was just a queen. Neil trained Madame Stripes, we were very lucky that Antony Beck sent us that gorgeous filly who had already been second in the G1 Argentine Guineas. She came to us and she did nothing but try her heart out for a number of seasons. She was very sound and she had a great mind and she was absolutely stunning. And this filly is an even more elegant version of Madame Stripes. So we were trying very hard for her.” Madame Stripes won last year’s GIII Megahertz S. and was third in the GI Gamely S. among her nine on-the-board finishes in graded company. The mare joined the Gainesway broodmare band and was bred to Tapit this year. Immediate plans for the yearling filly are still to be decided. “We are going to reconvene with the principal and take a look at what is next,” Dugan said. The Abu Dhabi-based Al Shira’aa operation includes a newly purchased farm in Ireland. “She is definitely going to be something that will never be sold,” Dugan said of the yearling. “We are hoping that she will have two careers.” Dugan has now made four yearling purchases at the September sale. She went to $750,000 to acquire a filly by Curlin (hip 10) and $300,000 for a filly by Candy Ride (Arg) (hip 180) during Monday’s session of the auction and also purchased a filly by Malibu Moon (hip 237) for $525,000 Tuesday. The bloodstock agent was also active at last month’s Arqana August Yearling Sale where her five purchases were topped by a 700,000 euro daughter of Frankel (GB) (hip 4). “It’s terribly strong,” Dugan said of the international yearling market. “It’s very difficult to buy something that has both pedigree and conformation. Vet issues are at hand, as well, so it’s very tough. But it’s great to see such strong markets in our industry because I am hoping that this will be the same situation next year and the year after that and the decade after that.” —@JessMartiniTDN Kellys Grab Pharoah Filly A filly from the second crop of Triple Crown winner American Pharoah lit up the board toward the end of Tuesday’s KEESEP session when agent Jamie McCalmont, bidding on behalf of owners Jon and Sarah Kelly, went to $875,000 to acquire the Feb. 15 foal. Out of GISP Connie and Michael (Roman Ruler), the bay was consigned by co-breeder Bill Betz’s Betz Thoroughbreds, Inc. as hip 321. “I thought she was as nice a filly as there was in the sale,” said McCalmont after revealing that the new purchase would be trained by Hall of Famer Richard Mandella. “She’s by a stallion who’s looking to be pretty hot, she’s got a beautiful head on her and we found it very hard to find fault with her. The filly never put a foot wrong. At no point could I find a negative with her.” Hip 321’s dam, also bred by Betz and partners, was a head-turning 7 3/4-length debut winner over the Keeneland all-weather in 2009 and was second in the GI Mother Goose S. the following year. The $80,000 KEESEP yearling most recently sold for $375,000 in foal to Uncle Mo at Keeneland November in 2014. The resulting colt brought $260,000 here, and a Pioneerof the Nile colt cost $360,000 24 months ago. Connie and Michael produced a Malibu Moon filly Mar. 31 and was bred back to Good Magic. Just a few hips after scooping up hip 321, McCalmont struck again for the Kellys to add hip 333, a $340,000 War Front colt out of GI E. P. Taylor S. winner Curvy (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) from the family of European Group 1 winners Power (GB), Footstepsinthesand (GB) and Pedro the Great. The California-based Kellys, who made their family fortune via the development of television stations by their Kelly Broadcasting Co., have campaigned the likes of graded winners Vacare, Sporting Art, Meridiana (Ger) and Lady at Peace. Sarah Kelly co-owns this year’s $420,000 Fasig-Tipton Santa Anita Two-Year-Olds in Training topper with Jane Wiltz. Now named Eclair (Bernardini), the Bob Baffert pupil was third sprinting on the turf in Del Mar MSW company Aug. 24. —@BDiDonatoTDN Stonehaven Steadings Makes It Look ‘Easy’ The Stonehaven Steadings team was almost all smiles–and a few happy tears–after selling a $700,000 Quality Road filly (hip 374) to Don and Donna Adam’s Courtlandt Farms Tuesday at KEESEP. Jeff and Chiquita Reddoch’s operation paid just $60,000 for stakes-placed dam Easy Living (Big Brown) at the 2015 Keeneland November sale. This was their second big sale out of the mare–her first foal, now named Life on the Road (Street Sense), brought $450,000 from Phoenix Thoroughbreds last year and took his debut by 3 1/2 lengths at Ellis for trainer Steve Asmussen Aug. 30. “We’re overwhelmed,” said Stonehaven’s Leah O’Meara after congratulating the Courtlandt team alongside her family, including husband and director of bloodstock Aidan O’Meara. “It’s been a great start to the sale for Stonehaven and this is definitely one for the record books for us. We’ll never forget today–it’s been special. We’re very thankful, blown away and appreciative of everything. The whole team deserves a lot of credit.” Easy Living is a half to 11 winners, including SW/GSP Jaramar Rain (Thunder Gulch)–a producer herself of three stakes horses; SW Harbor Mist (Rockport Harbor); and another graded stakes-placed-producing mare. This is the extremely deep extended female family of Grade I winners Stormello, Marlin, Madcap Escapade, et al. “She was just big and stretchy,” O’Meara said when asked about Easy Living’s appeal when Stonehaven acquired her. “She was by Big Brown, which we liked, and she’s obviously out of a good mare herself. She’s a really nice filly and she’s been a fantastic mare, so we continue to hope for good things.” Easy Living produced an American Pharoah filly Mar. 30 before being bred back to More Than Ready. —@BDiDonatoTDN Spivey Back on Home Soil Catlyn Spivey, who has acted as director of bloodstock for Equine Analysis and as sales and bloodstock consultant at Vinery Sales in Kentucky, relocated to New Zealand following her marriage to Kiwi native Scott Calder last fall, but Spivey is back in Lexington for the September sale and has already signed for two yearlings on behalf of an overseas client so far at the 13-day auction. “I’ve been buying for these people privately for the last few years,” Spivey said of the client. “I’ve been buying horses off the racetrack for them. And that’s gone pretty well. So they’ve asked to switch it up and buy some yearlings.” During Monday’s first session of the sale, Spivey purchased a colt by Hard Spun (hip 17) for $130,000 and she followed up Tuesday purchasing a son of Uncle Mo (hip 322) for $510,000. “I was really surprised to get that colt honestly,” Spivey said of the Uncle Mo colt out of graded-placed Conquest Curlgirl (Curlin). “I knew he would be in that range, but I thought he might go over it just because of the way the market has been. He is such a quality colt. He reminded me so much of Uncle Mo. He just moves really well and he was a really solid colt.” The yearlings will head to Randy Bradshaw’s Ocala base to be broken, but eventually will head to race in Dubai. Spivey expects to continue shopping throughout much of the September sale. “It’s really about the physicals and they want primarily colts, but I’ve looked at a few fillies here and there,” Spivey said of her clients. “They are a good addition to the sale. They haven’t bought yearlings for a while. This last year, I’ve bought a few for them and they’ve gone over and they liked them, so we’ve bought a few more. I’ve spent a bunch of my budget already, but I’m going to keep looking through Book 5 and see what happens.” Spivey and Calder, who worked in sales and marketing at Coolmore America for five years and now is part of the sales and nominations division at Cambridge Stud, are also active on the New Zealand sales scene. “We have bought into a few foals and we bred a foal, so we’ll sell at the Karaka sales in January,” Spivey said. Of differences in the breeding industries in the two countries, Spivey said, “I think a good horse is a good horse anywhere, but they definitely have a different style. New Zealand is really good at breeding stayers, that’s kind of their bread and butter and the Australians often come over to get those kind of horses. So it’s a bit of a different style of horse. This big, dirt horse that we have over here, wouldn’t work over there. They are a bit smaller and more refined types. So I am still getting my head around that, but I am really enjoying it. The people are so nice, everyone has been so welcoming. I’m happy to be back [in Kentucky], but I’m happy to live there as well.” —@JessMartiniTDN The post Keeneland September Powers Ahead appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  11. Citing a flawed bidding process and a “secret master plan” that was allegedly floated by the New York Racing Association (NYRA) and discussed among state officials nine months before the state issued an official request for proposal (RFP) to build a hockey arena at Belmont Park, the Village of Floral Park, where Belmont is located, has filed a lawsuit to block the $1.3 billion project. Newsday first broke the story late Tuesday afternoon. The Empire State Urban Development Corporation (ESD), the New York State Franchise Oversight Board (FOB), and New York Arena Partners, LLC (NYAP), are listed as the defendants in the Sept. 9 filing in the Supreme Court of New York State (County of Nassau). NYRA itself is not listed as a defendant, although the suit says that “even more shockingly” than the existence of an allegedly secret master plan, “the plan contained multiple NYRA-related improvements in addition to all of the elements of the NYAP proposal [later] submitted in response to the RFP.” “The discovery of this secret plan is consequential because it was identical to NYAP’s project in all material respects,” the suit states, adding that Floral Park officials only discovered the plan’s existence via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. “The implications of the secret Master Plan are grave, as it appears there may have been a coordinated effort among State officials at the highest level to clear the path for the NYAP proposal,” the suit contends. Floral Park’s FOIA request turned up a Nov. 14, 2016, document on which every page was marked “CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT—NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION.” Three days later, an email that referenced that document and discussed development details at Belmont was allegedly sent out to a number of state officials by then-NYRA president Christopher Kay. Beyond the hockey arena, the allegedly secret master plan also detailed the inclusion of a “synthetic track for winter racing” at Belmont and “light stations for nighttime racing in warm weather months.” A large sports bar, restaurants, luxury suites, and terraces overlooking the paddock were also proposed. “It appears that State officials were impressed, as NYRA’s transmittal to the State of the secret Master Plan update came less than one month before ESD abruptly cancelled an ongoing RFP process, begun in 2012, aimed at redeveloping Belmont Park,” the suit contends. According to the suit, the FOB then released a new RFP for the racetrack/arena development on July 28, 2017—more than nine months after the allegedly secret Belmont master plan first was circulated. “The public was never intended to see this Master Plan, even though it involved the development of State-owned land,” the court documents allege. Patrick McKenna, NYRA’s communications director, told TDN via email that NYRA will decline comment on the litigation. “However,” McKenna added. “NYRA’s position on the redevelopment of Belmont Park is clear–this is a transformative project that will create jobs and economic opportunity for Nassau County and the entire region for decades to come and will compliment and contribute to the future of Thoroughbred racing at Belmont Park.” The plaintiffs in the lawsuit disagree. “This lawsuit concerns a project proposed to be developed for private use on a portion of Belmont Park that is, by any objective standard, completely at odds–in terms of purpose, proportionality and compatibility–with the suburban communities that surround it,” the lawsuit states. “If the project is allowed to proceed, the consequences will be irreversible.” “Belmont Park is State-owned land held in trust on behalf of the public–not the whims and desires of public developers,” the suit continues. The official groundbreaking for the $1.3-billion development project for the future hockey home of the New York Islanders is slated for later this month. NYRA officials have already announced extensive scheduling changes to accommodate it, such as adjusting Belmont post times and moving a portion of the Belmont fall meet to Aqueduct Racetrack. The earlier July 11 start to the Saratoga Race Course this summer was also a result of NYRA’s pre-emptive concerns over construction conflicts with live racing. Belmont and its neighbors, the suit states, have co-existed “in relative harmony for over 100 years. For the residents of Floral Park, Belmont Park is not just a neighbor; it has long represented a bulwark against the encroachment of New York City’s development to the west.” The post Lawsuit Alleges ‘Secret Plan’ for Belmont Development Among NYRA, State Officials appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  12. Blake Shinn doesn’t quite know how to feel about the opening to his Hong Kong racing career, with the star Australian doing everything but win in a start that has been good but could have been so much better.The 31-year-old has ridden five seconds without a winner across the first two meets, proving he has settled in well to his new home, but he knows it counts for little when all is said and done.“The game’s all about winning and I haven’t won yet, so I’m a little bit upset,” he said. “But we… View the full article
  13. Meagher brings Lim's Samurai back to races this Friday View the full article
  14. Raffles Cup draws 19 nominations View the full article
  15. For most players, SuperCoach Racing will be all about selecting the well-known horses for the big feature races. The Melbourne and Caulfield Cups, the Everest, and a Winx-less Cox Plate for the first time in years will make for an open field. View the full article
  16. The only two MATCH Series competitors with two wins each in their respective divisions are poised to have a major impact in the Sept. 28 championship round at Monmouth Park. View the full article
  17. Lady's Golden Guy marked the first winner for freshman sire Golden Ticket when he rallied to a debut victory Sept. 10 at Finger Lakes Gaming and Racetrack. View the full article
  18. Coming off a very quiet week in the Classic Division, the latest Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings remain virtually the same as the results from last week's poll. McKinzie leads the Top Ten, with the next six positions staying intact from Sept. 3. View the full article
  19. The spring carnival will be without Winx for the first time in five years but that hasn’t diminished the quality vying for Group 1 glory this year. View the full article
  20. Horse racing on the thriving Kentucky circuit shifts to Churchill Downs Friday, Sept. 13 with a 10-race program at 12:45 p.m. EDT as the Louisville racetrack opens its seventh September Meet for an action-packed 11-date run through Sunday, Sept. 29. View the full article
  21. The seven-figure purchases continued late into the Sept. 10 second session of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale as Sheikh Hamdan's Shadwell Estate Company went to $1 million for a War Front filly. View the full article
  22. Shadwell Stable’s two-time GII Bernard Baruch H. winner Qurbaan (Speightstown–Flip Flop {Fr}, by Zieten) has been retired to stand at Nashwan Stud on Shadwell Farm in 2020 for a fee of $5,000 live foal. “Qurbaan has a slight injury, but it will require some stall rest, forcing him to miss the main objectives this fall, so the decision was made to retire him,” stallion manager Kent Barnes said. Out of stakes winner and GISP Flip Flop, he was purchased for $300,000 as a KEENOV weanling. The MGSW & MGISP 6-year-old retires with a record of 22-7-3-6 and earnings of $854,408. He was bred in Kentucky by Justin Carthy. Shadwell also announced that its 2016 GIII Gotham S. winner Shagaf (Bernardini–Muhaawara, by Unbridled’s Song) has been retired and will stand at Indiana Stallion Station for $2,500 live foal. The Shadwell homebred won three of seven starts and earned $331,700. Both horses will be available for inspection in Lexington throughout the Keeneland September Sale between 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The post Qurbaan Retired appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  23. Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Wednesday’s Insights features a full-brother to MG1SW The Gurkha (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). 1.50 Listowel, Mdn, €17,500, 2yo, 7fT LOUISIANA (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) bids to build on his promising debut third behind the subsequent G2 Futurity S. third Geometrical (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}) and stablemate Mogul (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) in a Gowran maiden last month. Ballydoyle’s full-brother to the G1 Poule d’Essai des Poulains and G1 Sussex S. hero The Gurkha (Ire) is the pick of the stable to run in this maiden won 12 months ago by Japan (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) and he has a smart yardstick to be measured against in His Highness The Aga Khan’s Shekhem (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), the Dermot Weld trainee who was second to Mogul at The Curragh last month. The post All Eyes on Louisiana at Listowel appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  24. Three-time graded winner Slim Shadey (GB) (Val Royal {Fr}–Vino Veritas, by Chief’s Crown) has been retired to Old Friends. The 11-year-old gelding was pensioned by current owner Michael Hui after a nine-year career. Slim Shadey concluded his career with 83 starts, 14 wins, and earnings of $1,278,855. “I stalked Slim Shadey for more than two years,” Old Friends Founder and President Michael Blowen said. “From a sunny day in the winner’s circle at Saratoga two years ago when owner Michael Dubb agreed to retire him to Old Friends when his racing days were finished until Michael Hui, who claimed him from Dubb, agreed to do the same. And he’s finally here.” The post Slim Shadey to Old Friends appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  25. With no grade 1 races contested this past weekend, there was little movement in the NTRA Top Thoroughbred Poll released Sept. 9. View the full article
×
×
  • Create New...