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Wandering Eyes

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Everything posted by Wandering Eyes

  1. If the Runhappy Metropolitan Handicap (G1) still rates as "The Race of the Year," then the 92nd running of the $1 million Whitney Stakes (G1) looms a nice option for completing the exacta. View the full article
  2. Hastings trainers Paul Nelson and Corrina McDougal will take a trio of runners to Riccarton on Saturday, but they are slightly concerned with the heavy track conditions heading into the weekend. “We are just not too sure about the track. It appears that it is getting worse, it has gone to a Heavy11,” Nelson said. “I think the rain has gone through, but it will be what damage it has done really.” No Change will be their first runner of the day in the Racecourse Hotel & Motor Lodge Sydenh... View the full article
  3. Five horses are in contention for the Champion Jumper title at the 2019 New Zealand Thoroughbred Horse of the Year Awards. New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing has announced another batch of finalists for the 2018-19 season. Jackfrost, winner of both the Grand National Hurdles (4200m) and Great Northern Hurdles (4200m), joins the major steeplechase winners Chocolate Fish (Great Northern Steeplechase, 6300m), Gagarin (Wellington Steeplechase, 5500m), Perry Mason (Hawke’s Bay & Pakuranga Hunt Cup) and Shamal (Grand National and Waikato) as finalists in the jumping category. Finalists have also been confirmed in the trainer, jockey, jumps jockey and owner categories. The winners will be announced at a gala dinner in Auckland, at the Ellerslie Racecourse, on Sunday, September 8. Champion jumper: Chocolate Fish, Gagarin, Jackfrost, Perry Mason, Shamal. Trainer of the Year: Murray Baker & Andrew Forsman, Jamie Richards. Jockey of the Year: Lisa Allpress, Opie Bosson, Matthew Cameron, Johnathan Parkes. Jumps Jockey of the Year: Aaron Kuru, Buddy Lammas, Shaun Phelan. Owner of the Year: Archer Equine Investments, China Horse Club Racing, JML Bloodstock, Kevin Hickman, Kamada Racing and Bloodstock, Brendan and Jo Lindsay Partnership, NZ Thoroughbred Holdings, Raffles Dancers (NZ), Kelvin Tyler, Sir Peter Vela. View the full article
  4. Glory Days winning the Gr.1 Auckland Cup (3200m). Group One-winning stayer Glory Days made a pleasing return to the track at the Foxton trials on Tuesday in preparation for a Gr.1 Melbourne Cup (3200m) campaign this spring. The pride of Waverley finished unplaced in her 1000m heat, but pleased trainer Bill Thurlow with her efforts. “I was happy with her, she went well,” he said. “We didn’t ask much of her, but she did everything she was asked of. “She’s been back in about eight weeks. She has been through to New Plymouth and had a gallop last Saturday between races and we were happy with that. “She has come through it well and she had another nice trip away today. She’s back home now and has come through that well. “We will just keep doing a few different things with her and see where we end up. She is good at this stage, we haven’t got any problems.” The rising seven-year-old mare took her connections on a great ride this season, winning seven of her 13 starts, including the Listed Wanganui Cup (2040m), Gr.2 Avondale Cup (2400m), and Gr.1 Auckland Cup (3200m). She then travelled to Sydney and put in a bold run to finish third in the Gr.1 Sydney Cup (3200m) at Randwick in April. “She was awesome this season, but sometimes they don’t come back up,” Thurlow said. “Hopefully she will and it looks like she is going to. We are pretty happy at this stage.” Thurlow is now eyeing the only remaining two mile Group One race in Australasia this year, the Melbourne Cup. Glory Days after securing Group One success in the Auckland Cup (3200m) Trish Dunell While Thurlow has marked her major target this spring he is still yet to finalise a path to get to Flemington on the first Tuesday of November. “The Melbourne Cup is the main aim, it’s where we would like to end up,” he said. “We have just got to pick a path to get there. “Our style would be to try and stay away from the best for a while if we could. “At this stage she will probably kick-off at Otaki on the 17th (of August). I was told the Otaki track was as heavy as it has ever been the other day, which is disappointing because we haven’t really had that much rain. “If it was like that we would have to reconsider. If it is reasonable we will go there, otherwise we may have to go straight to Australia. “We haven’t mapped out a set in stone programme with her. We have got two or three races on the radar that we could run in as a lead up to the Melbourne Cup. “We just wanted to get through today and get through the next couple of weeks and make sure she is all good and then we will set those programmes in stone.” Meanwhile, Thurlow’s star filly of the season, Beyond The Fort, will likely make a raceday return later this spring. The daughter of Niagara had an impeccable three-year-old season, winning three of her four starts, including the Listed Warstep Stakes (2000m), and finished runner-up in the Gr.1 New Zealand Oaks (2400m). “We had a great season with her,” Thurlow said. “She really stepped up and is a really nice filly. She is back in work, but she is a little bit behind at this stage. “She won’t be out in the early part of the spring, but we will look forward to (seeing) her later in the spring or early summer.” View the full article
  5. Leading Japanese stallion Deep Impact has passed away after suffering a cervical fracture. The sire of 39 individual Group One winners stood at Shadai Stallion Station in Japan. Deep Impact was crowned Horse of the Year in Japan in 2005 and 2006 and recorded two Group One victories on the track, including the Japan Cup (2400m) and Takarazuka Kinen (2200m). Deep Impact is the sire of Rich Hill Stud stallion Satono Aladdin, who served 91 mares in his debut season at stud in New Zealand. He is also the sire of Novara Park Stud’s new stallion Staphanos, who will be available to breeders in the upcoming season for a fee of $7,000+GST. View the full article
  6. Tan plots Revolution as favourite race nears View the full article
  7. The deadline for the 2019 Pete Pedersen Awards has been extended to Sept. 15, it was announced by the Racing Officials Accreditation Program (ROAP). The Pete Pedersen Award is presented annually to stewards who have made important contributions to the Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing industries. The award is named in honor of the longtime outstanding steward and noted journalist Pete Pedersen. The recipients will be recognized Tuesday, Dec. 10, at the annual awards luncheon at the University of Arizona Race Track Industry Program’s Global Symposium on Racing and Gaming in Tucson, Ariz. Click here for more information. The post Pete Pedersen Outstanding Steward Awards Nominations Deadline Extended appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  8. When Joe Murphy purchased the 350-acre Stoneleigh Farm 13 years ago, the Lexington businessman admitted the land was mostly for “relaxation,” but the operation hit the big time as the breeder of multiple Grade I winner Exaggerator (Curlin) and again when selling that star’s half-sister by Medaglia d’Oro for $1.3 million at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale last August. Murphy returns to Saratoga next week with a yearling full-sister to Exaggerator who sells as hip 206 through the Warrendale Sales consignment during Tuesday’s second session of the auction. Murphy, who owns Buds Gun Shop and Range, credits his father, J.B. Murphy, with his interest in racing and breeding. “It pretty much all started with my dad,” Murphy said. “He was always around horses and he got involved in the Thoroughbred business in the mid-80s. He bought a mare and bred her and his intention was to sell the offspring, but he got too attached and decided to keep them and started racing them. He did that through the late 80s and early 90’s and then got out of the business.” Murphy purchased Stoneleigh Farm in Paris in 2006, but racing and breeding wasn’t originally in the plan. “I bought the farm with the intention of just having the green space,” he explained. “But then I kind of got the bug and decided to buy a few mares.” The fledgling breeding operation soon became a partnership between Murphy and the man who had first introduced him to the sport. “I started buying some mares and my dad realized that I probably didn’t know what I was doing, so he said, ‘I’ll tell you what. I’ll split the mares with you.’ So we started going in 50-50 on them and that’s where I am today.” Murphy and his father partnered to purchase then 3-year-old Dawn Raid (Vindication) for $50,000 at the 2008 Keeneland November sale. The filly raced in their colors just once, finishing a well-beaten seventh in a Turfway optional claimer that December. “We sent Dawn Raid to Ken McPeek and she really didn’t perform very well,” Murphy said. “We didn’t know if she had a breathing issue or what, so we sent her to Rood and Riddle [Equine Hospital] and they did a treadmill test with her. They said she was the fastest horse that they’d had on a treadmill. My dad was trying to find a treadmill race and he couldn’t find any, so we decided to breed her.” Exaggerator, who was Dawn Raid’s third foal, sold for $110,000 at the 2014 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. The dark bay went on to win the 2016 GI Preakness S., GI Haskell Invitational and GI Santa Anita Derby. He was second behind Nyquist (Uncle Mo) in the GI Kentucky Derby. Asked if there were mixed emotions in watching a horse he had bred have such success on the track, Murphy said pragmatically, “I went up to the Derby and watched him and that was really exciting and we went up to the [GI] Belmont [S.]. It was a really fun experience. But the way I look at it, if we had owned him, he probably wouldn’t have been where he was. That’s just Murphy’s law. I was just glad for the success of the owners.” The Murphys campaigned Dawn Raid’s Pioneerof the Nile filly Nile Queen, who was claimed away before Exaggerator made headlines. “My dad was miffed about that,” Murphy said of the claim. “I tried to claim her back–this was when Exaggerator was a 2-year-old and he was starting to get hot. She was entered in a claiming race and I had it set up to try and put a claim on her, but they ended up scratching her and she didn’t race again. They ended up breeding her [to Bernardini] and flipping her for $525,000 [at the 2016 Keeneland November sale].” The father-son team have maintained one member of the family for their two-horse broodmare band partnership. Dawn Raid’s 3-year-old daughter Mischieviousmaximus (Curlin) will be bred next year. “She cracked her sesamoid last year,” Murphy said of the unraced filly. “We thought, with the way she was progressing, we could probably race her and there was a chance, but it really wasn’t worth the risk. Dr. [Larry] Bramlage thought there was a good percentage that she would reinjure it, so we just decided to turn her out. I wasn’t in any rush to breed her, so she’s just been enjoying the grass.” Exaggerator’s six-figure yearling price tag was the most Murphy had ever sold a horse for–until last year’s Saratoga sale when Phoenix Thoroughbreds made the final bid of $1.3 million to acquire the filly now named Morning Dream (Medaglia d’Oro). “It was really neat,” Murphy said of the experience. “My dad’s health is marginal. So my wife and I went a couple days before and then I flew my dad up the day of the sale. As the numbers kept getting higher, my dad was sitting there saying, ‘We shouldn’t have sold her. We shouldn’t have sold her.’ And my mom was sitting next to him and she was saying, ‘Thank you, Jesus.’ She is a CPA and she’s seen the numbers, from back in the ’80s when he was involved, and she works on my finances–being in this industry can be tough. He was struggling letting go and she was all excited that we’d finally broken even.” Murphy admitted last year’s success will be difficult to duplicate with Exaggerator’s full-sister this year. “This filly looks really, really good and I think she’ll do well,” Murphy said of Dawn Raid’s Curlin yearling. “But I’d say it would be hard to top last year.” Dawn Raid produced a colt by Medaglia d’Oro this year and Murphy has high expectations for the weanling. “He looks phenomenal,” Murphy said of the foal. “The wise thing would probably be to sell him, depending on my dad’s temperature. He’s 83 years old and, like I said, he doesn’t really like to sell anything. So I don’t know what we’ll do. Chances are we will sell him, but there is still a possibility that we might keep him.” In addition to the two mares he owns in partnership with his father, Murphy also has two mares of his own with the main goal of breeding to sell. “Our intent is to sell–that’s why I got into it,” he explained. “It was more for the breeding. I don’t mind racing, but it’s really hard to make money on the racing side. But if we have something we think is quality and we aren’t going to get the right price, we’ll keep and race it and see what happens.” Murphy downsized Stoneleigh Farm three years ago, selling 300 acres to Archie St. George. “I’ve got a little over 50 acres,” he said. “It’s more manageable. Even before I sold to Archie, I probably still had the same number of horses and was using almost the same space that I use now. But it’s taken some of the pressure off, I don’t have to worry about mowing or neighbors complaining about fencing or anything like that.” The Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale of Selected Yearlings will be held next Monday and Tuesday at the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion. Each sessions begins at 6:30 p.m. The post Murphy’s Success No Exaggeration appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  9. McKinzie leads Thunder Snow, Vino Rosso and Preservationist in the latest Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings poll, and are all expected to start in Saturday's $1 million Whitney (G1) from Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. View the full article
  10. Given that his own sire had overcome a pretty mediocre family to become no less potent, it might seem misplaced to insist on due credit for the other genetic contributors to the legacy of Deep Impact (Jpn). On the face of it, after all, the career of Sunday Silence might suggest that the bull–in his case, Halo–really can be more than half the herd. For some of us, however, even the most successful sire-line can only ever be one strand in a complex mesh–and, as such, there will always be latent influences that combine to produce a runner and/or stallion. To cling stubbornly only to the sire-line, or a combination of sire-lines, is a lazy conflation of statistical convenience (above all, in this era of such huge books) with statistical fact. And it would be churlish, as such, to survey the striking balance in Deep Impact’s pedigree–matching influences starkly associated with both turf and dirt–without wondering whether it might contain lessons for an industry so prescriptive, nowadays, in keeping apart the bloodlines perceived to serve those different disciplines. Deep Impact was out of Wind In Her Hair (Ire), and duly keeps alive the memory of a true gentleman in her late trainer, John Hills. In finishing second in the Oaks, Wind In Her Hair extended the distinctions clustered around her grand-dam Highclere, who won Classics in England and France in the royal silks and also produced an exceptional matriarch in Height Of Fashion, dam of Nashwan, Unfuwain and Nayef among others. Height Of Fashion was by Bustino, a son of Busted; while Wind In Her Hair’s dam Burghclere was by Busted himself, a slow-burning source of stamina. Highclere’s grand-dam Hypericum, meanwhile, won the 1,000 Guineas in the silks of King George VI, while the next dam was placed in both that Classic and the Oaks. So this is a bottom line saturated not just with quality but with chlorophyll–and it was lined up squarely against a great dirt runner in Sunday Silence. The first thing that leaps out at you, given that Deep Impact was by a son of Halo out of a mare by a grandson of Northern Dancer, is that here is another stallion of international influence (like Danehill) who doubles up the great Almahmoud–as second dam of both Halo and Northern Dancer. For what it may be worth, moreover, her sire Mahmoud also recurs, top and bottom, lurking behind the dams of both Sunday Silence and Alzao–whose dam Lady Rebecca was by Sir Ivor, a son of Mahmoud’s grand-daughter Attica. As an exported Derby winner, Mahmoud is only one of several dynamic European conduits in Lady Rebecca’s background. She carries Princequillo and Sir Gallahad on both sides. Turn-To and the brothers Pharamond and Sickle are also there, while her own sire, Sir Ivor, famously made the reverse trip to win at Epsom. In those days, happily, people didn’t have the same fatuous prejudice that turf is turf, and dirt is dirt, and never the twain shall meet. At the top of Deep Impact’s pedigree, Halo replicates some of these transatlantic influences, notably as a grandson of Turn-To. Pharamond was grandsire of Halo’s dam, Almahmoud’s daughter Cosmah; while his sire Hail To Reason’s grand-dam was a Sir Gallahad mare. But it was Sunday Silence’s maternal family, combined with a build that found equal disfavour with purists, that made him a serial reject–both in the sales ring, and also when it came to finding a domestic farm prepared to match the Japanese valuation of a superlative dirt runner. Wishing Well, his dam, was a grand-daughter of Promised Land, a hard-knocking performer in the 1950s. Himself out of a Mahmoud mare, Promised Land achieved his most immediate celebrity as broodmare sire of Spectacular Bid, so while Wishing Well was a Grade II winner on turf you might say there’s a bit of dirt efficiency in that neighbourhood. But Sunday Silence’s next several dams were notoriously lacking in accomplishment. True, there was dormant brilliance in his seventh dam, the English Classic winner Cinna. A grand-daughter of a genuine track legend in La Fleche, Cinna was inbred 3×3 to La Fleche’s mother Quiver, who was also second dam of her great sire Polymelus. But nobody can get too carried away by these parchments of scroll. Perhaps there was more alchemy than could be guessed, however, through Wishing Well’s dam–who was by an Argentinian grandson of Hyperion named Montparnasse. His first four dams were all bred in the Pampas, so who can say what kind of hybrid spark may have been preserved down there, igniting only once restored to the Northern Hemisphere mainstream? The theory goes that Sunday Silence fortuitously stumbled on a gene pool that gave him a chance he would never have taken in Kentucky. But the fact is that his principal heir brought together genes of a breadth and balance you only get with the kind of adventure largely resisted by American and European breeders in recent times. Even in creating his own empire, in Japan, Deep Impact himself suffered from the way reputations become self-fulfilling according to environment. His most proficient European runner, Saxon Warrior, had a turf family but a running style tailormade for dirt. Kept to grass, he ended up being viewed as rather an enigma, without an optimum distance. Who knows? Had Saxon Warrior been tried on dirt, he might now be standing at Ashford, instead of in Co Tipperary. That way, the legacy of his grandsire might yet have found some expression on the surface across which Sunday Silence achieved greatness. As it is, Deep Impact has been taken from us at 17, living only a year longer than his sire. And, with his books dominated by turf mares, you have to doubt whether the versatility and variegation stored in his pedigree will ever be allowed to percolate with the same freedom. The post Impact Only So Deep Because Broad as Well appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  11. He keeps on playing the same old tune and never with less than a bravura performance, as was wonderfully evident yet again when flat racing's supreme marathon man Stradivarius made Qatar Goodwood Cup (G1) history July 30. View the full article
  12. Day 3 of the festival sees dual 1000 Guineas heroine Hermosa try to get her season back on track having come up short at Ascot. Threat looks the standout runner in the Richmond Stakes, with Aidan looking to complete a quickfire double with Constantinople in the Gordon Stakes. Goodwood Handicap Walkinthesand has to give lots […] The post Glorious Goodwood Day 3 Preview – Hermosa Has Nassau Notions appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
  13. Natagora (Fr) (Divine Light {Jpn}-Reinamixa {Fr}, by Linamix {Fr}), winner of the 2008 G1 1000 Guineas for owner Stefan Friborg and trainer Pascal Bary, has died at Shadwell Stud aged 14, according to Racing Post. A €30,000 Arqana October yearling purchase by Patrick Barbe, Natagora was never worse than second in seven starts at two and posted five wins, including the G1 Cheveley Park S., G2 Prix Robert Papin and G3 Prix du Bois. She won the 1000 Guineas by a half-length under Christophe Lemaire and while she wouldn’t visit the winner’s enclosure again in six starts, she was third in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club and G1 Prix Jacques le Marois, and also picked up placings behind the brilliant older milers Goldikova (Ire) (Anabaa) and Paco Boy (Ire) (Desert Style {Ire}) in the G1 Prix Rothschild and the G1 Prix de la Foret. She was retired upon the conclusion of her 3-year-old campaign and sold privately to Shadwell. Natagora produced nine live foals, headed by the listed-winning Mankib (GB) (Tamayuz {GB}) and the listed-placed Raaqy (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), and she is also the second dam of the G3 Sweet Solera S. winner Tajaanus (Ire) (Arcano {Ire}). She has an as-yet unraced 2-year-old colt by Invincible Spirit (Ire) named Haidarah (GB), a yearling filly by Frankel and a colt foal by Sea The Stars (Ire). The post Guineas Winner Natagora Dies appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  14. With Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) delivering for Frankie on Tuesday, the weight of expectation now rests on Too Darn Hot (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) to maintain the run in Wednesday’s G1 Qatar Sussex S. at Goodwood. In many ways, the Lloyd-Webbers’ ‘TDN Rising Star’ was the one who at the start of the season promised most to make this a memorable season for Dettori with his unbeaten streak culminating in juvenile champion status. That it has hardly gone to any kind of plan so far in 2019 is well-documented, but now that his year has been redeemed in authoritative style in the G1 Prix Jean Prat at Deauville July 7 he comes to these famous Downs with confidence of horse and jockey at an optimum. Tuesday’s rain was insufficient to stretch his stamina beyond its limit and John Gosden has no concerns on that score. “He handles any ground,” he said. “Finally, we are letting the horse do what he wants to do–run and show his speed and class. He is an extremely fast horse with bundles of natural speed and we were stupidly trying to take that away from him. When you watch him, he is powerful and Frankie said that his stride pattern is so quick. We went to France with a lot of confidence, because his work was brilliant going in. He just showed he had come back to himself, because he went through a hellish spring.” Surprising many at a rain-afflicted opening day at Royal Ascot, Circus Maximus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) bids to repeat his G1 St James’s Palace S. heroics having been trained specifically for a miling campaign in the interim. Aidan O’Brien spoke after that June 18 contest of how the Niarchos colour-bearer had been rushed into the race having run sixth in the G1 Epsom Derby 17 days beforehand, but he will arrive here with greater fine-tuning to cope with a more pronounced speed test. “He gets that mile well,” his trainer commented. “He was left in the Guineas up to a late enough stage, as we always thought he was a very nice horse last year.” Disappointing when sixth in the St James’s Palace, Tony Wechsler and Ann Plummer’s Phoenix of Spain (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) has been revitalised at home by Charlie Hills in an attempt to engage the spirit of the dynamic G1 Irish 2000 Guineas winner. At least part of that May 25 Classic-winning performance is due to The Curragh’s crazy pace bias when the ground rides fast and he has a question to answer now. “It was horrible conditions for that race [the St James’s Palace] and it was getting quite loose on top. I felt he didn’t handle that surface too well,” Hills explained. “He ran a huge race in Ireland after a long lay-off, so there was always a chance of a bounce. He was quite stiff after Ascot and not quite 100% sound, but he came good after three or four days. I am really pleased with the way he is moving now and I think he must have just tweaked a muscle at Ascot. He seems in a much better place and I am really happy with him.” The older milers continue to beat each other in turn, but veteran journeymen horses have managed to win this for the past two years in the 7-year-olds Here Comes When (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) and Lightning Spear (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) and Lord Glitters (Fr) (Whipper) and Zabeel Prince (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) take up the mantle this time. Both Group 1 winners at or around this trip, they have been ignored by the punters largely due to the fact that they have been exposed in unfavourable conditions. Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum’s Zabeel Prince in particular is a fascinating contender over a distance at which he was second in the G2 Joel S. at Newmarket in September. Roger Varian said of Zabeel Prince, “I don’t think it’s gone his way over 10 furlongs. Unfortunately I’ve run over that trip at two of the stiffest tracks in the country, in Ascot and Sandown. I still feel he might get an easy 10, but we are bringing him back for the time being. At Ascot the ground was bottomless and in the Eclipse nothing was going better two out, but he got stopped in his run so Andrea [Atzeni] had to check him which lost him his momentum. You don’t find easy Group 1s and the Sussex is certainly no exception, but I think he’s still in great form. He deserves his chance and I think he’s capable of running a big race.” In the five-furlong G3 Molecomb S., Liberty Beach (GB) (Cable Bay {Ire}) bids to confirm the impression that she created with an emphatic success in the Listed Dragon S. at Sandown July 5. Her trainer John Quinn is a master when it comes to bringing smart 2-year-olds to these signature races, had the winner of Tuesday’s maiden here and is happy with his latest filly sensation. “She’s been a revelation and this looked the logical place to come after Sandown,” he commented. “We’ve been very pleased with her and she seems in very good form, but this is another step up for her. All these races she has to run in are very competitive, but we’re happy with her and we’re hoping for a very big run. She’s won on quick ground twice, but she coped with very soft ground at Ascot so you can’t say she’s ground-dependent.” Richard Ravin’s Maven (American Pharoah) held on to win Chantilly’s G3 Prix du Bois over this trip last time June 29 and has to improve off that. Wesley Ward said, “I know they called it good-to-soft at Chantilly and, while I wasn’t there, I don’t see how it could have been because they moved the meeting back a few hours as it was so hot. He really wouldn’t want much rain. The horse is in great form. He’s been training really well, so we’ve just got to hope there’s not much rain. The same thing happened a couple of years ago when we wanted to run Happy Like a Fool–the heavens opened. We’ve got the right man on board anyway, the magic man Frankie, so we’ll see what happens.” Clive Cox saddled a top juvenile prospect in Positive (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}) to be second in Tuesday’s G2 Vintage S. and supplies Hand On My Heart (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) for the Molecomb. She took a Windsor conditions event on the same day that Maven captured the Bois and is well-regarded by connections. “Clive has always spoken highly of her since day one,” Sam Hoskins, representing owners Hot To Trot Racing, said. “We’ve been lucky enough to be associated with her two sisters–Heartache who won the Queen Mary and Heartwarming who is very talented. She wouldn’t want too much rain, but from what Clive is saying it won’t be lack of ability that will beat her. In saying that, it is a hot race and Liberty Beach will be very hard to beat. We’ve definitely got an each-way shout and it’s great to have Ryan Moore on board as well.” The post Over Too You appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  15. Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency 3rd-SAR, $78,000, (S), Msw, 2yo, f, 6f, post time: 2:12 p.m. ET Jeff Drown’s RISKY MISCHIEF (Into Mischief), a $350,000 Fasig-Tipton New York-Bred Yearling purchase last August, who had been expected to debut on the Saratoga card which got rained out last Thursday, makes her first trip to the post here for trainer Jeremiah Englehart. She is a daughter of multiple stakes winner Risky Rachel (Limehouse) and her second dam is graded stakes winner Dancin Renee (Distinctive Pro). Her half-brother Yale (Scat Daddy) sold for $1-million at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale. TJCIS PPs 6th-SAR, $90,000, Msw, 2yo, f, 5 1/2f, post time: 4:03 p.m. ET Spendthrift’s Into Mischief has been on a hot streak and he has a pair of debuting juveniles in this affair. Rodolphe Brisset sends out Magic Cap Stables’ SLAM DUNK, a $450,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga yearling acquisition. The dark bay filly worked a best-of-eight five furlongs in :59 3/5 July 22. Chad Brown saddles Klaravich Stables’ Figure of Speech, a $200,000 KEESEP yearling who tuned up for her debut with a bullet three furlongs in :36 (1/9) July 27. Courtlandt Farms will be represented by firster One Time Around (Empire Maker), a $400,000 KEESEP yearling out of Sip Sip (Bernardini) trained by Mark Hennig. G. Watts Humphrey’s homebred Power of Magic (Honor Code), a daughter of graded placed Magical Ride (Storm Cat) and a half to MGISP Ride On Curlin (Curlin), debuts for trainer Rusty Arnold. TJCIS PPs. The post Wednesday’s Insights: Plenty of Juvenile Mischief at Saratoga appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  16. A filly by Dark Angel (Ire) Lot 91 is one of the stars on paper of the Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale catalogue, which is now available online. One of 167 slated to sell at Ascot Racecourse on Sept. 10, the Plantation Stud-consigned bay is out of the SP Loaves And Fishes (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}). Some of the other sires with yearlings on offer are Holy Roman Emperor (Ire), Showcasing (GB) and Starspangledbanner (Aus). Graduates of last year’s edition have already left their mark and include £250,000 Weatherbys Super Sprint winner Bettys Hope (GB) (Anjaal {GB}), and black-type winners Flippa The Strippa (Ire) (Outstrip {GB}), Liberty Beach (GB) (Cable Bay {Ire}) and Shadn (Ire) (No Nay Never). Last year’s edition totaled £1,096,000 for 111 lots sold. The average was £9,874, while the median settled at £7,000. The top lot was by breakout stallion No Nay Never, which was knocked down for £46,000. The post Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Catalogue Features Dark Angel Filly appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  17. Chester Thomas' Mr. Money, the winner of three consecutive graded stakes, is the 6-5 morning-line favorite for the Aug. 3 West Virginia Derby (G3) at Mountaineer Casino, Racetrack & Resort. View the full article
  18. The catalogue for the Goffs Uk Premier Yearling Sale, which includes a Kodiac (GB) half-brother to Grade I winner Slumber (GB) (Cacique {Ire}) (lot 121), is now online. Slated for Aug. 27-28, the sale sees 469 yearlings set to go under the hammer. Notable graduates from the sale include six-time Group 1 winner Laurens (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), Royal Ascot Group 1 winner Advertise (GB) (Showcasing {GB}), and this year’s G2 Norfolk S. and G3 Albany S. winners A’Ali (Ire) (Society Rock {Ire}) and Daahyeh (GB) (Bated Breath {GB}), respectively. Consigned by Cooneen Stud, lot 121’s second dam is GI Hollywood Oaks victress Sleep Easy (Seattle Slew), while under the third dam is MGISW Aptitude (A.P. Indy). Yeomanstown Stud offers a full-brother to MSW and G2 Queen Mary S. bridesmaid Easton Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) as lot 131; while an Exceed And Excel (Aus) colt (lot 435) out of a half-sister to English highweight and MGSW Best Terms (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) hails from the Skyline Thoroughbreds draft. Glenvale Stud’s lot 91, a daughter of Fastnet Rock (Aus) out of French Group 3 victress Sharamana (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) is also a yearling of note, as is a Frankel (GB)-sired daughter of MGSW & G1SP Ainippe (Ire) (Captain Rio {GB}) (lot 210) for Jamie Railton. Lot 298 is a Le Havre filly out of a half-sister to SW & MGSP Whatdoiwantthatfor (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) from the Coulonces Sales draft, and a WH Bloodstock-consigned granddaughter (lot 395) of SW & GSP String quartet (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells) by Siyouni (Fr) is also catalogued. “The Doncaster Premier Yearling Sale is enjoying another superb year with the highlight thus far being the group winning treble at this year’s Royal Ascot meeting,” said Goffs UK Managing Director Tony Williams. “In addition, the Premier & Silver Yearling Sales are the world’s only yearling sales to have sold winners of one of the feature races of the Royal meeting, the G1 Commonwealth Cup, a race won by Premier graduate Advertise this season. The 2019 Premier catalogue shapes as one with the firepower to continue this fine record and we look forward to welcoming an international audience to Doncaster on Aug. 27-28.” In 2018, 473 yearlings changed hands and grossed £19,066,500 over the two-day stand. The average was £45,396 and the median was £35,000. A colt by Gleneagles (Ire) took top honours when selling for £380,000. The post Kodiac Half to GISW Part of Goffs UK Premier Catalogue appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  19. Roaring Lion (Kitten’s Joy), named 2018 Cartier Horse of the Year on the back of a quartet of Group 1 wins, is recovering well so far since undergoing emergency surgery for colic. Cambridge Stud staff reported the stallion “much brighter” on Tuesday following his weekend operation shortly after arriving to take up winter stud duties in New Zealand. The 4-year-old, owned by Qatar Racing and housed at David Redvers’s Tweenhills in Gloucestershire, was shipped to Cambridge Stud but then taken ill after leaving quarantine on Saturday morning. Cambridge Stud’s surgeon Dr. Alanna Zantingh and vet Dr. Rob Hitchcock have both provided cautiously upbeat bulletins on his well-being. Dr. Zantingh told tweenhills.com, “Roaring Lion is doing much better today. He’s much brighter than he was yesterday. We’ve given him handfuls of grass every couple of hours–and he’s eating it really, really well, wishing for more. His stomach has been handling it well and his vitals have been within normal limits all day. He’s starting to get a little annoyed with us–which I think is a very good sign.” Added Dr. Hitchcock, “It’s still fingers crossed, but we’re happy with him this morning.” The grey was one of the middle distance stars of last summer in Britain-running third in the G1 Investec Derby before rattling off his four top-level triumphs for John Gosden, culminating in the Queen Elizabeth II S. at Ascot–before retiring to stud at the end of the season. The post Roaring Lion Showing Improvement appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  20. After a damp and windy start to the festival, Bjorn Nielsen’s Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) put the “Glorious” back into the fixture that once held that title with a third G1 Qatar Goodwood Cup, equalling the feat of the similarly-loved Double Trigger (Ire) (Ela-Mana-Mou {Ire}) in the nineties. Settled in mid-division early by Frankie Dettori, the 4-5 favourite was cajoled to the front with 1 1/2 furlongs remaining and asserted for a cosy neck defeat of Dee Ex Bee (GB) (Farhh {GB}), with Cross Counter (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) 1 3/4 lengths back in third. “He’s a push-button ride, a stayer with a turn of foot who follows any pace and has everything covered,” Frankie said after recording a remarkable 10th group win in two months. “He’s got that burst, but then thinks he’s done enough. The pace was very strong and I had the perfect race. I just put him there and he puts his head in front. He knows he’s good.” 1–STRADIVARIUS (IRE), 135, h, 5, by Sea the Stars (Ire) 1st Dam: Private Life (Fr) (MSP-Fr), by Bering (GB) 2nd Dam: Poughkeepsie (Ire), by Sadler’s Wells 3rd Dam: Pawneese (Ire), by Carvin II (330,000gns RNA Ylg ’15 TATOCT). O/B-Bjorn Nielsen (IRE); T-John Gosden; J-Lanfranco Dettori. £283,550. Lifetime Record: 17-12-1-2, £2,274,581. *1/2 to Persian Storm (Ger) (Monsun {Ger}), Hwt. 3yo-Ger at 9.5-11f & MGSW-Ger, $121,198; Rembrandt Van Rijn (Ire) (Peintre Celebre), GSP-Eng, $167,081; and Magical Eve (Ger) (Oratorio {Ire}), SP-SAf. The post Third Goodwood Cup For Stradivarius appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  21. Chester Thomas' Mr. Money, the winner of three consecutive graded stakes, is the 6-5 morning-line favorite for the Aug. 3 West Virginia Derby (G3) at Mountaineer Casino, Racetrack & Resort. View the full article
  22. Back in November 2015, we were privileged to welcome American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile), “a horse of a lifetime” to our roster of stallions at Ashford Stud. With his arrival came many inquiries and phone calls from the public and fans looking to visit Ashford; we knew we had a responsibility to the industry and we wanted to find a way to allow access. We met with Visit Horse Country and set a schedule to enable fans to come and see their equine heroes. Shortly afterwards they launched sales to visit Ashford and tickets sold out in short order. Since then we have been fortunate enough to add another Triple Crown winner, Justify (Scat Daddy), to our roster and have welcomed thousands of fans through the gates, with proceeds from tours going to local equine and human charities. Horse Country came around at the perfect time for us, and I give great credit to Anne Hardy and her team for their professionalism and stewardship of the organization. They have provided the infrastructure and support we needed to be able to offer regular and expanded access. We know it’s important to welcome the public, but that doesn’t change the fact that it requires work and commitment. Visit Horse Country has made it possible. Horse Country has created a rising tide for our industry and the bottom line is: everyone in our industry should be supporting Visit Horse Country in whatever way they are able. When it comes to public relations and fan development, there is no better ambassador than the horse. Our industry should be unified in supporting this effort that provides access to our best asset, promotes our best story, provides transparency and inspires passion for our sport. The post Letter to the Editor: No Better Ambassador than the Horse appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  23. There were some doubts about whether Godolphin’s Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal) could maintain his unbeaten run in Tuesday’s G2 Qatar Vintage S. after the rain, but the answer was as conclusive as it gets as he surged to a five-length success in the Goodwood mirk. Having put TDN Rising Star Lope Y Fernandez (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) in his place when winning Royal Ascot’s Listed Chesham S. June 22 by by 3 1/4 lengths, the homebred tracked the leading trio under James Doyle, took control approaching the two-furlong pole and sprinted clear of Positive (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}), with Lope Y Fernandez and fellow TDN Rising Star Visinari (Fr) (Dark Angel {Ire}) well beaten in third and fourth. “He is a true professional, he jumped and travelled well, got into a lovely rhythm and galloped out strongly to the line,” trainer Charlie Appleby said. “I said to James that there is stamina on the dam’s side and he had won over a stiff seven at Ascot so to keep it simple and keep pushing forward on him. I’ll speak to Sheikh Mohammed, but it will probably be the [G1 Vincent O’Brien] National Stakes [at The Curragh Sept. 15] now.” 1–PINATUBO (IRE), 127, c, 2, by Shamardal 1st Dam: Lava Flow (Ire) (SW-Fr), by Dalakhani (Ire) 2nd Dam: Mount Elbrus (GB), by Barathea (Ire) 3rd Dam: El Jazirah (GB), by Kris (GB) 1ST GROUP WIN. O/B-Godolphin (IRE); T-Charlie Appleby; J-James Doyle. £113,420. Lifetime Record: 4-4-0-0, £206,596. The post Shamardal’s Pinatubo Excels In the Vintage appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  24. Group One-winning stayer Glory Days made a pleasing return to the track at the Foxton trials on Tuesday in preparation for a Gr.1 Melbourne Cup (3200m) campaign this spring. The pride of Waverley finished unplaced in her 1000m heat, but pleased trainer Bill Thurlow with her efforts. “I was happy with her, she went well,” he said. “We didn’t ask much of her, but she did everything she was asked of. “She’s been back in about eight weeks. She has been through to New Plymouth and had a g... View the full article
  25. Five horses are in contention for the Champion Jumper title at the 2019 New Zealand Thoroughbred Horse of the Year Awards. New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing has announced another batch of finalists for the 2018-19 season. Jackfrost, winner of both the Grand National Hurdles (4200m) and Great Northern Hurdles (4200m), joins the major steeplechase winners Chocolate Fish (Great Northern Steeplechase, 6300m), Gagarin (Wellington Steeplechase, 5500m), Perry Mason (Hawke’s Bay & Pakuranga Hunt Cup) an... View the full article
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