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Everything posted by Wandering Eyes
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Joao Moreira and the might of Godolphin stand in the way of Hong Kong raider Lucky Bubbles in Sunday’s Group One Sprinters Stakes at Nakayama. The three-time Hong Kong champion jockey has been a dominant force since moving to Japan and will partner second-elect Nac Venus, while Godolphin’s Fine Needle is the $2.50 favourite in early markets after three wins in his past four starts. The Francis Lui Kin-wai-trained Lucky Bubbles is rated a $16 hope. The Magic Man, who won 31 races... View the full article
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Bold Thruster to bypass Garden City Trophy View the full article
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CC Wong suspended three days View the full article
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Vasilika and Cambodia, the top finishers from the Sept. 1 John C. Mabee Stakes (G2T) at Del Mar, will meet again with a grade 1 on the line Sept. 29 in the $300,000 Rodeo Drive Stakes (G1T) at Santa Anita Park. View the full article
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As news of the death of Anita Madden circulated through the Thoroughbred community and Lexington social circles, Thursday’s passing of the well-known philanthropist and sportswoman whose family bred dual-Classic winner Alysheba is being wistfully hallmarked as the end of a bygone era that fused high-society Bluegrass opulence with compassion and activism. But beyond the headlines recalling the flamboyantly lavish, celebrity-studded GI Kentucky Derby Eve galas that Madden hosted to help raise money for charitable causes for nearly four decades, the enthusiastic and passionate humanitarian was also a determined civic leader who worked diligently to make her community better. The Lexington Herald-Leader confirmed with a hospital spokesperson that Madden died at 7:30 p.m. Sep. 27 while surrounded by family and friends at the Willows Health Center in Hamburg, Kentucky. No cause of death was listed, but Madden had been in declining health for several years. She was 85. Longtime broadcast handicapper Caton Bredar recalled Madden with a Twitter posting that read, “One of the more influential women in my life, Anita Madden, has passed away. Strong, unapologetic and most importantly Anita always honored the underdog, the person trying in spite of everything else.” Arthur B. Hancock III of Stone Farm told the Herald-Leader that “Anita was a great woman. She was great at promoting Kentucky and the horse industry. She was a wonderful, vivacious person who really cared about people. We’ll all miss her.” Born Anita K. Myers on February 3, 1933, in Ashland, Kentucky, a Wikipedia article describes her as growing up as a “tomboy” who competed on high school basketball and cheerleading teams. She attended Western Kentucky University for two years before transferring to the University of Kentucky (UK) in 1952. While attending UK she met her eventual husband, Preston West Madden. The two married in 1955, and strove together to uphold the Thoroughbred breeding success of the Madden family’s Hamburg Place Farm, which had been founded in 1898 by Preston’s grandfather, the legendary horseman John E. Madden. Hamburg Place produced five GI Kentucky Derby and five GI Preakness S. winners, including the first Triple Crown winner, Sir Barton. Some seven decades later, Hamburg Place Farm produced Alysheba, and sold him as a $500,000 yearling who went on to win the 1987 GI Kentucky Derby and GI Preakness S. Over the decades, Madden championed charitable causes that benefitted troubled youths, AIDS research, and social justice for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender citizens. She also served as an honorary chairperson for such organizations as the Blue Grass Farms Chaplaincy and the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation. In 2008, the Lexington Chapter of the National Association of Women Business Owners honored Madden with the organization’s Winner’s Circle Award, and in 2012 the Ohio River Valley Women’s Business Council named her the first recipient of its Woman of the Year Trailblazer Award. Upon receiving that award, Madden told the Herald-Leader in 2012 that “I am thrilled to be named as the Trailblazing Award recipient. But actually, all these organizations are doing such marvelous, life-changing work that I was more than willing to help out in any way I could.” Still, those over-the-top Derby parties appear destined to remain a focal point of Madden’s legacy. In the first few years during the early 1960s, the gatherings were horse industry-centric affairs. But as more and more high-society guests nationwide wanted coveted invites, Madden hit upon the idea of making them open-to-all ticketed balls that raised money for Bluegrass Boys Ranch. The parties often had raucously decadent themes, complete with scantily clad male bartenders and topless women swimming in the pool dressed as mermaids or swinging from trapezes suspended from the ceilings. In 1990, the New York Times described one gala event as such: “Kentuckians do not think small when it comes to Derby entertaining. At least 1,800 people are expected at the Maddens’ annual party…. Guests are invited to appear in black tie or ”kinky kimonos,” and the decor, featuring Japanese bridges, waterfalls and cascading flowers, may turn as many heads as the celebrities who invariably attend.” The Maddens’ final Derby party was in 1998. Anita Madden is survived by her husband of 63 years; their son Patrick and his wife, Jennifer; two grandchildren, and a brother, Marc Stuart. Visitation will be Wednesday, Oct. 3, from 2-6 p.m. at Milward Man o’ War Funeral Home on Trent Boulevard in Lexington. The funeral will be private. Donations in memory of Madden can be made to the Bluegrass Boys Ranch, PO BOX 12128, Lexington, Ky. 40580. View the full article
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Former Eclipse Award-winning jockey Eddie Donnally has launched his third book entitled “The Golden Altar, Selling Souls for a Horse With No Name.” It is available on Amazon and Kindle or by order from any bookstore or library. Set in 1972 at the beginning of horse racing’s “Golden Age,” the book features a once-barred jockey battling addiction, the fledgling female trainer he loves, and her criminal father who together race a mysterious, super-talented horse with no legal papers all the way to the Kentucky Derby while a crusading track detective is fixated on foiling their ringer scheme and putting them in jail. Donnally won over 10,000 races over a 19-year career, winning nearly 1,200 of them, but is better known as a turf writer. He has published well over 100 articles and won an Eclipse Award in 1984 while with the Dallas Morning News. Today, Donnally holds a Doctorate of Ministry and is a professional hospice and hospital chaplain in Clearwater, FL. Donnally is Vice President of Jockeys and Jeans, a group of former jockeys he helped start in 2014 that thus far has raised over $1 million for catastrophically injured jockeys through the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund. View the full article
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The opening of the 2018 Aqueduct Fall Meet Friday, Nov. 2 will see the unveiling of a new, renovated inner turf course. The new inner turf course is similar in design to the outer turf course, which replaced the winterized inner track in 2017. Completed in July, construction of the new inner turf included the installation of a new sand drainage layer and an improved irrigation system to match that of the outer turf. Also like the outer course, new Kentucky Blue Grass sod was installed on the seven-furlong course and chute. It was the first significant renovation to the inner turf course since the mid-1970s and results in an additional rail setting as well as a much more consistent racing surface. “These improvements are significant and will allow NYRA to card additional races over the inner turf throughout the fall and spring,” said Glen Kozak, NYRA VP of Facilities & Racing Surfaces. “The modernized irrigation and drainage systems will add consistency to the surface and will allow the course to recover much more quickly than in the past. Jockeys, as well as horsemen and horsewomen, can look forward to a completely renovated second turf course when racing returns to Aqueduct on Nov. 2.” View the full article
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A field of 10 juvenile fillies, including three stakes winners and a main track only entrant, have been entered for the GII Ms. Grillo S. at Belmont Park on Sunday, yet it’s one of the contenders with only one start to her name that will be heavily favored. ‘TDN Rising Star’ Newspaperofrecord (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}), trained by Chad Brown, made her lone start at the same 1 1/16-mile distance over a yielding Saratoga course in a Aug. 19 maiden special weight and won like a good horse should, powering clear to a 6 3/4-length victory while being geared down. She brings by far the field’s highest Beyer Speed Figure of 78 to the contest. Miss Technicality (Gio Ponti) can’t be overlooked in this field either. She has done nothing wrong in her short career for conditioner Christophe Clement, taking a July 6 maiden special weight at Belmont after hitting the gate at the start. She then parlayed that effort into a six-length win in the Exacta Systems Juvenile Filles S. at Kentucky Downs Sept. 1. Her half-sister Stays in Vegas (City Zip) is a Grade III winner over the lawn as well. The cleverly named Dogtag (War Front–Diamond Necklace) faltered to fourth in her rained-off Aug. 5 debut at the Spa, but her connections thought enough of her to go straight into the P.G. Johnson S. at the Spa Aug. 30 at this same distance for her grass debut as a maiden. She didn’t disappoint, winning by a length. Her trainer, the aforementioned Brown, has won this race six out of the last 10 years. View the full article
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This past June in the TDN, Chris McGrath wrote about the luck that first-time partners West Point Thoroughbreds and R.S. Evans had had when their $230,000 2017 Keeneland September yearling purchase, now named Egyptian Storm, had when her then-unraced brother turned out to be the Triple Crown winner Justify. Since August 9, the daughter of Pioneerof the Nile has had four workouts at Saratoga. Christie DeBernardis caught up with Egyptian Storm’s trainer Christophe Clement to get an update on her highly anticipated debut. TDN: Did you have a hand in picking out Egyptian Storm as a yearling at Keeneland? CC: Absolutely. I liked her as a yearling, and we decided to form a partnership because Mr. Evans was worried about the filly being too expensive. As it turned out, she was expensive, but she was still reasonable. But I’m delighted. It’s a great partnership. I’ve been lucky with West Point before. Egyptian Storm at the time was just a beautiful yearling. Justify did not exist as such, and he had not raced about the time we bought the filly in September. Mr. Evans thought she was going to be expensive. We formed a partnership. We’ve been lucky with the stable. We gave her plenty of time. She’s in full work. I expect her to be ready to run sometime this fall, in late October or November, and I’m actually pretty excited about her. TDN: It has to be pretty exciting for you and for the owners when Justify comes along, and now, little did you know, you own the sister of the Triple Crown winner. CC: Sometimes, you get great news in public sales. You also have bad news, but it’s nice to also have a few good-news occurrences. TDN: I saw she had started working at Payson, and she took a little break, and now she’s been steadily working at Saratoga. CC: I just did not want to rush her. I wanted to keep her with us and just to give her time. Until September, she never came off the bridle in any of the works. Now we’re being a little more aggressive because we’re getting closer to the race. She’s a very tall, leggy filly. She’s going to be a very big three-year-old, and the idea is to keep her strong and give her a chance to level up and to have a career. TDN: What are your initial impressions of this filly as she starts gearing up and getting closer to a race? CC: She’s very good mentally. Physically, being such a large frame, you cannot be too hard on her. You just have to go one step at a time. But she’s pretty exciting to be around because she’s been getting stronger all the time, her works are getting better, and she seems to be enjoying her training, so that’s pretty exciting. TDN: Obviously, you didn’t train her brother, but you’ve seen him. Any initial comparisons? Any similarities? CC: Well, if she’s half as good as the brother I would really like her. The brother obviously was a top-class horse. The only similarity I could tell you is she’s not chestnut, she’s a bay, but she’s a very large frame. She has plenty of size to her body. View the full article
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Fresh off her hard-fought victory over ‘TDN Rising Star’ Elate (Medaglia d’Oro) in the GI Personal Ensign at Saratoga Aug. 25, last year’s champion 3-year-old filly Abel Tasman (Quality Road) enters Sunday’s GI Zenyatta S. at Santa Anita, a Breeders’ Cup ‘Win and You’re In’ event, as the clear-cut horse to beat. Abel Tasman has kept Grade I company for 10 of her last 11 starts winning six, including the 2017 GI Kentucky Oaks. The bay has been on the move this year, finishing a dull fourth on Kentucky Oaks day in the GI La Troienne S. before a monster 7 1/2-length victory in the GI Ogden Phipps S. on Belmont day. Meeting Elate for the third time in the Personal Ensign, the two put on a show for the ages, dueling and bumping down the stretch. Abel Tasman, the 2-5 morning-line favorite here, has put in four strong works since, including a bullet, to prepare for this. Her strongest challenge may come from her own stablemate, the fellow Bob Baffert-trainee Vale Dori (Arg) (Asiatic Boy {Arg}). After winning six straight from 2016-17, including the GI Santa Margarita S., she has struggled to find her best form, but may be improving. A two-month break before her last start in the Aug. 24 Tranquility Lake S. at Del Mar resulted in a good runner-up performance. View the full article
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A nine-month-old Thoroughbred was shot with a rifle while turned out in a Kentucky paddock with other horses during the overnight hours of Sep. 27-28 on a Tates Creek Road farm near the borderline of Jessamine and Fayette counties. The weanling had to be euthanized because of its injuries when it was found Friday morning, said an investigator from the Jessamine County Sheriff’s Office. Lieutenant Anthony Purcell confirmed via phone to TDN on Friday afternoon that deputies from his department responded to Springhouse Farm at 6585 Tates Creek Road early Friday to investigate a report from someone at the farm about a gunshot horse. “I don’t think it was shot at close range. It was in a paddock. From where the horse was found and was probably trying to get up, I’d say it was no more that 120 yards from the road,” Purcell said. “There were maybe 10 to 13 other horses in that paddock. I don’t know that it was specifically targeted as much as that was just the one that ended up being hit. “It was a rifle round. I think it ended up paralyzing the horse, probably injuring its spine. The owner found it in the morning, and had to euthanize the animal. We did recover numerous shell casings on the roadway; they’re all the same caliber. There were no other animals injured that we’re aware of, only that one.” Purcell continued: “It’s a rural area. There are several horse farms and houses in the area, so I couldn’t rule out somebody being on foot. More than likely it was somebody in a vehicle, but that’s strictly conjecture at this point. Hopefully this was a random cruel act. I hate to think that somebody would start driving around and targeting these horses, but I really can’t rule that out.” Purcell urged home and farm owners in the area to be vigilant. He said his department would appreciate tips or leads in the case. Anyone with information is asked to call the sheriff’s office at (859) 885-4139. @thorntontd View the full article
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Vasilika and Cambodia, the top two finishers from the Sept. 1 John C. Mabee Stakes (G2T) at Del Mar, will meet again with a grade 1 on the line Sept. 28 in the $300,000 Rodeo Drive Stakes (G1T) at Santa Anita Park. View the full article
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4th-Belmont, $75,000, Msw, 9-28, 3yo/up, f/m, 7f, 1:24.96, sy. CHAMBER (f, 3, Tapit–Sightseek {MGISW,$2,445,216}, by Distant View)was backed down to 4-5 for her 6 1/2-furlong unveiling upstate Aug.16, but she settled for fourth after missing the break. Pounded down to 45-100 here, she once again made a mess of the start from the rail, but quickly recovered to settle in a perfect stalking spot along the fence drafting behind the pacesetters. Asked for a bit more heading for home after a :47.20 half, the grey tipped out at the head of the lane and gobbled up ground to draw off by 7 1/2 lengths. Front-running Hurricane Sheila (Congrats) held on to complete the exacta. The winner is a half to young Calumet sire Raison d’Etat (A.P. Indy), GSP, $134,055; unraced 2-year-old filly Solent (Hard Spun); and a filly foal by Flintshire (GB). Her talented dam, who racked up six highest-level wins at Big Sandy alone, most recently visited another Juddmonte luminary in Arrogate (Unbridled’s Song). Sightseek is a half to MGISW Tates Creek (Rahy) and from the deep female family of European champion Special Duty (GB) (Hennessy), MGISW Etoile Montante (Miswaki), etc. Lifetime Record: 2-1-0-0, $46,350. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton. O/B-Juddmonte Farms Inc (KY); T-Chad C. Brown. View the full article
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Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Today’s Observations features a trio of sale toppers. 1.35 Navan, Mdn, €15,000, 2yo, 5f 164yT WESTERN FRONTIER (Scat Daddy) was the sale-topper at €825,000 at the Arqana May Breeze-Up Sale, ahead of other high-priced lots Kadar (Scat Daddy) and Fashion’s Star (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}), both of whom have scored on their respective debuts in recent weeks. Aidan O’Brien has charge of the half-brother to the GII Futurity S. runner-up Carried Interest (Henny Hughes), whose rivals include the similarly-unraced colt Good Answer (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}), Malih Al Basti’s half-brother to the Group 1-winning sprinter Krypton Factor (GB) (Kyllachy {GB}) who represents the Joseph O’Brien stable. 4.15 Newmarket, Mdn, £10,000, 2yo, f, 7fT MAQSAD (FR) (Siyouni {Fr}) debuts in the Shadwell silks for William Haggas, having topped the 2016 Goffs November Foal Sale at €775,000. Part of the Wildenstein dispersal, the granddaughter of the high-class Aquarelliste (Fr) (Danehill) meets another newcomer in Lady Bamford’s Richard Hannon-trained Truly Adored (Fr) (Dabirsim {Fr}), last year’s Arqana Deauville October Yearling Sale topper at €500,000 who is out of an unraced sister to the Wertheimer black-type winner Flash Dance (Ire) (Zamindar). View the full article
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There are four Group races at Naas on Sunday, which is fantastic for the County Kildare venue. The graded action and prize money on offer has attracted some quality animals on home ground and from across the Irish Sea. The Group 3 Weld Park Stakes is the first graded race of the day and its for two-year-old fillies over seven furlongs. Aidan O’Brien is responsible for the favourite in the form of Hermosa, who finished third in the Group 1 Moygalre Stud Stakes behind Skitter Scatter at the Curragh. The daughter of Galileo seems to be steadily progressive and is the leading candidate in this contest. Paddy Twomey has an incredible record and in particular with his two-year-olds. Normally Twomey sells his charges on after they have found the winning bracket but this is not the case with Foxtrot Liv who he trains for Martin Schwartz. The daughter of Foxwedge took three starts to get her head in front but she was contesting some hot race on each occasion. She ran extremely well in her most recent start when just going down by a head in a listed race at Leopardstown and looks sure to give another good account of herself here. Sir Mark Prescott sends over Brassica on the back of a novice victory in Beverley at the beginning of the month. This was just her second racecourse appearance but with the way Prescott’s horses improve with racing she may have more to offer and can take home some of the place money. Other to consider include Elleanthus, Servalan and Trethias. Selection: Foxtrot Liv Dermot Weld’s Falcon Eight puts his unbeaten record on the line in the Group 2 Loughbrown Stakes where in truth there doesn’t seem to be much quality opposition. Declan McDonogh’s mount has only stepped foot on Ji the racecourse twice but beat a decent yardstick in Light Pillar by over five lengths at Killarney. This represents a big step up in class but this half-brother to Free Eagle has lots of potential and is the one to side with. The main resistance to the favourite will most likely come from Twilight Payment who is one of the most consistent stayers in training and very rarely runs a bad race. Jim Bolger’s five-year-old was last seen finishing fourth in the Irish St Leger which is very decent form but you’d like to think that Falcon Eight is a class above him. The only other viable contender is the Aidan O’Brien trained Cypress Creek who looked on an upward curve until blowing out in the Irish St Leger behind stablemate Flag Of Honour. The race conditions suit the son of Galileo and with more positive tactics, perhaps he can reverse form with Twilight Payment. Selection: Falcon Eight Julia’s MagicOnly seven go to post in the Renaissance Stakes, which is a Group 3 race over six furlongs for three-year-olds and upwards. It looks like another slightly weak version of this contest with the exception of the globetrotting veteran Gordon Lord Byron. The apple of Tom Hogan’s eye finished fifth only eight days ago in a Group 3 in the Czech Republic and it’s understandable why Hogan turns out his ten-year-old quickly again. The former Group 1 winner faces opposition from the Eddie Lynam trained Fas who is six years younger than her rival. Formerly trained in France, the son of Fastnet Rock has been placed in Group company in France and at the Curragh in July. It will be interesting to see if the younger legs can outsprint his elder. St Patrick’s Day has been a bitter disappointment since joining Aidan O’Brien from Bob Baffert following a victory at Del Mar. This full brother to the triple crown winning American Pharoah finished third on European debut but has run dismally on three stars since. The only other three-year-old in the field is Julia’s Magic and she may just be the surprise package having finished fourth in a listed race over course and distance. She then finished midfield in the sprint handicap on Champions Weekend and may improve past some of her more experienced rivals. Selection: Julia’s Magic The Group 2 Beresford Stakes is the final Group race on Sunday and it’s once again for two-year-olds. Aidan O’Brien trains the first three in the betting, with chief among these being Mount Everest who took three starts to get his head in front but will stay this trip well and looks sure to give a good account of himself under Ryan Moore. Japan and Sovereign make up the remaining O’Brien representatives and both could easily improve past their more fancied stablemate but it is very hard to know with these O’Brien two-year-olds. The only unbeaten horse in the field is the Ger Lyons trained Pythion who dead-heated with Howling Ridge on debut at Leopardstown. The joint-winner had previously finished third in a strong Curragh maiden, so the form has a very solid look to it and given normal improvement this son of Olympic Glory may upset the Ballydoyle apple tart. Selection: Pythion The post Sunday Preview – Group Action Galore At Naas appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
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Harry Minassian Sr., former president of the New England Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Association and a graded stakes winning owner and breeder, died Sept. 23 in Stoughton, Mass. at the age of 96 following a period of declining health. View the full article
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4th-BEL, $75K, Msw, 2yo, 7f, 2:17 p.m. ET Joe Allen and Peter Brant teamed up to acquire U S NAVY CROSS (Curlin) for $550,000 at last year’s Keeneland September sale and he makes his career bow in this test for trainer Chad Brown. The bay is a half-brother to GSW & MGISP Recepta (Speightstown), GSW Taqarub (Aldebaran) and SW & GSP Defiant Honor (Speightstown). His dam is a half-sister to champion Soaring Softly (Kris S.). TJCIS PPs. 5th-BEL, $75K, Msw, 2yo, f, 1mT, 2:54 p.m. ET Chad Brown unveils a pricey juvenile of the fairer sex in this test in $1.6 million KEESEP purchase BALON ROSE (War Front), owned by Larry Best’s OXO Equine. The bay is out of GSW Aloof (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was purchased by Mandy Pop for $3.9 million carrying a full-sibling to this filly at the 2014 Keeneland September Sale. Out of English Highweight Airwave (GB) (Air Express {Ire}), Aloof is a half-sister to SW & GSP Meow (Ire) (Storm Cat), who is the dam of European Highweight Churchill (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Jimmy Toner sends out a well-bred second-time starter in Tip At Tapit (Tapit), who adds blinkers in this spot after finishing eighth on debut over a yielding course at Saratoga Aug. 19. Out of SW & MGISP Ellie’s Moment (Kris S.), the Phillips homebred is a full-sister to Grade I-winning turfer Time and Motion; and a half to SW & GSP Awesome Bet (Awesome Again) and GSP Moment in Dixie (Dixieland Band). Ellie’s Moment is a half-sister to MGISW Brian’s Time (Roberto). This is also the family of MGISW grass runners Winter Memories (El Prado {Ire}) and Memories of Silver (Silver Hawk). TJCIS PPs. 1st-SA, $50K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 3:00 p.m. ET Bob Baffert can never be overlooked, especially with a first timer, and he saddles a blue-blooded firster in Godolphin homebred COMICAL GHOST (Ghostzapper). Out of GISW millionaire Hysterical Lady (Distorted Humor), the dark bay is a half-sibling to Lady Montdore (Medaglia d’Oro), a graded winner at Saratoga and GSP in Europe. His second dam is Chilean champion Sacramentada (Chi) (Northair). Baffert also unveils $200,000 KEESEP buy Improbable (City Zip) in this test. The chestnut gets the morning-line nod off a very speedy worktab, most recently breezing a best-of-24 six panels in 1:12 4/5 in Arcadia Sept. 23. Also making his first trip to the post here is Kaleem Shah’s $600,000 FTFMAR buy Stretford End (Will Take Charge), trained by Simon Callaghan. He hails from the family of graded winners Hour Glass (Petionville) and Time Limit (Gilded Time). TJCIS PPs. 4th-SA, $50K, Msw, 2yo, 1mT, 4:33 p.m. ET Gary and Mary West’s POWER PLAYER (Distorted Humor) looks to get his career off on the right hoof for Hall of Famer Bob Baffert in this test. Out of MGSW turfer Cambiocorsa (Avenue of Flags), the $280,000 KEESEP purchase is a full-brother to GSW Schiaparelli; and a half-sibling to GSW Moulin De Mougin (Curlin), SW & GSP Bronson (Medaglia d’Oro), SW Alexis Tangier (Tiznow) and the dam of MG1SW Roaring Lion (Kitten’s Joy). Fox Hill Farms’ blue-blooded Omaha Beach (War Front) closed well to be third in his debut going a mile at Del Mar Sept. 2 and makes his second trip to the post here. The dark bay is a half-brother to champion Take Charge Brandi (Giant’s Causeway) and his second dam is MGISW blue hen Take Charge Lady (Dehere), who is the dam of champion Will Take Charge (Unbridled’s Song) and GISW Take Charge Indy (A.P. Indy). TJCIS PPs. —@CDeBernardisTDN View the full article
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Two of the season’s most exhilarating juveniles take to Newmarket on Saturday and if all goes to script then the headquarters of British racing could witness the coronation of the leading colt and filly of their age in ‘TDN Rising Star’ Ten Sovereigns (Ire) (No Nay Never) and Pretty Pollyanna (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}). Both performers have shown a dynamism which has set them apart from their peers and with the dry spell lingering on into the autumn the odds are stacked against their respective rivals in the G1 Juddmonte Middle Park S. and G1 Juddmonte Cheveley Park S. While Ballydoyle’s Ten Sovereigns has yet to be seriously challenged as he killed off the opposition in an Aug. 25 maiden and the Sept. 1 G3 Round Tower S. by a cumulative margin of 10 3/4 lengths over this six-furlong trip at The Curragh, the Gredleys’ Pretty Pollyanna left a lasting impression with her seven-length romp in the G2 Duchess of Cambridge S. here July 13. Made to pull something from her considerable reserves when besting Signora Cabello (Ire) (Camacho {GB}) in the G1 Prix Morny at Deauville Aug. 19, she may be running at this trip for the last time. Trainer Michael Bell is not putting any undue pressure on the homebred, with her next step already being pondered. “I have not over-trained her and she is still carrying condition, which should stand her in good stead next year,” he said. “She does hold an entry in the Fillies’ Mile and is joint-favourite for that race, but we need to get Saturday out of the way before thinking about that. I have always looked forward to stepping her up in trip. She does not look like a short runner and I am very confident that she will get a mile. All I would say is that if she has a hard race on Saturday, either in victory or defeat, it would make her running again less likely.” Aidan O’Brien, who along with Ten Sovereigns also saddles the May 20 Listed Rochestown S. scorer and June 19 G2 Coventry S. third Sergei Prokofiev (Scat Daddy) in the Middle Park, said, “Obviously it’s not long since Ten Sovereigns’s last run, but we’re happy with him since. We’ve been delighted with his two runs and he couldn’t have done any more than he’s done. Sergei Prokofiev is in good form. He’s a fast horse and he was a little bit keen in the Phoenix S., so we’re hoping he’ll settle better this time.” Ten Sovereigns meets another exciting unbeaten colt in Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum’s ‘TDN Rising Star’ Jash (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), whose two outings on the July Course here Aug. 25 and at Salisbury Sept. 14 have yielded successes by a total of 13 1/2 lengths. There was the kind of vivacity in those displays usually reserved for the highly-talented, and Shadwell’s racing manager Angus Gold is keen to see how he shapes up. “I spoke to Simon [Crisford] during the week and he’s very happy with him. It’s a huge step up in class for him after winning a couple of small races, but he couldn’t have done any more than he has and we’ll see how he gets on,” he said. “Simon doesn’t think he’s an out-and-out sprinter. He’s a big, long, tall sort of horse who will hopefully step up to a mile at some stage, so it will be interesting to see whether he has enough pace for a Group 1 over six furlongs.” If he is to get in the shake-up in a strong-looking Middle Park, Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum’s recent acquisition Emaraaty Ana (GB) (Shamardal) has to improve on his latest half-length defeat of ‘TDN Rising Star’ Legends of War (Scat Daddy) in a renewal of York’s G2 Gimcrack S. Aug. 24 which looks no more than average at present. Trainer Kevin Ryan, who has twice completed the Gimcrack-Middle Park double, is full of confidence in his charge. “Emaraaty Ana is a very uncomplicated horse who has come out of his Gimcrack win in good form. He is fresh and well,” he commented. “I have held him in the highest regard from a very early stage and he has never let us down. I don’t like to compare my horses from different generations; Amadeus Wolf and Astaire were both very good horses in their own right as is this fellow. This will be his last run of the year and he will be much bigger and stronger next season.” Switching back to the Cheveley Park, Phoenix Thoroughbred and Zen Racing’s June 20 G2 Queen Mary S. and July 22 G2 Prix Robert Papin scorer Signora Cabello wears resilience like a badge and trainer John Quinn was never going to shy away from a rematch with Pretty Pollyanna. “There’s not a lot between them, it’s a different day on a different track and that’s the way I look at it,” he said. “She had an easy week after France and then we’ve just prepped her for Saturday. She did her last piece of work on Sunday morning and we were happy with her. It’s difficult to compare, but The Wow Signal was the best 2-year-old colt we’ve trained and she is by far the best 2-year-old filly we’ve trained.” Despite the deterring presence of Pretty Pollyanna and Signora Cabello, Ballydoyle threaten to intervene once again with a pair of ‘TDN Rising Stars’ in Fairyland (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) and So Perfect (Scat Daddy). Sporting the Evie Stockwell silks carried to success here by Brave Anna (War Front) two years ago, the former denied The Mackem Bullet (Ire) (Society Rock {Ire}) in the Aug. 23 G2 Lowther S. at York while So Perfect holds the distinction of being the last filly to beat the Irish sensation Skitter Scatter (Scat Daddy) in The Curragh’s G3 Grangecon Stud S. July 1. So Perfect was subsequently second to Advertise (GB) (Showcasing {GB}) in a renewal of the G1 Phoenix S. which is hard to rate at a high standard back at that Kildare venue Aug. 12, but like Fairyland is a filly coming from a stable whose runners may have been underperforming for most of the summer. Despite her exposure, she could yet have more to offer and Aidan O’Brien said he is hopeful. “We thought that Fairyland would come forward from York and she seems to be working nicely,” he said. “We’re looking forward to seeing her run again. So Perfect ran very well in the Phoenix S. and we were delighted with her run. We’ve been happy with her work since then as well.” Another genuine Irish threat arrives via the Sept. 16 G1 Moyglare S. runner-up Lady Kaya (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), who could find this stiff six furlongs ideal after her stamina was stretched beyond its limit last time. “I think Newmarket will suit her way of running. The only big worry I have is that it is soon after the Moyglare,” commented trainer Sheila Lavery on the eve of another red-letter day for the yard. “She came home from that, ate up and hasn’t turned a hair. Until you put them back on the track you don’t know, her being a 2-year-old and travelling over, but she is giving no indication she’s suffering from her racing.” Last year’s G2 Juddmonte Royal Lodge S. saw the zippy Roaring Lion (Kitten’s Joy) upset the marathon runner Nelson (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), and Saturday’s renewal features a clutch who could fit into either category. There has to be significant substance in the fact that Phoenix Thoroughbred Limited’s newcomer Kadar (Scat Daddy) was able to subdue TDN Rising Star Waldstern (GB) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) in a mile novice stakes at Haydock Sept. 6 and the €700,000 relative of Kalanisi (Ire) has the world at his feet. “I’m very happy with him since Haydock, I haven’t over-worked him since,” trainer Karl Burke explained. “It’s always a concern stepping up in class like this, but he’s a high-class colt we think a lot of and this is the type of horse we think he can be. If we were in a different part of the year, ideally you’d like to put him into a stepping-stone race before going into a race like this, but at this end of the season we haven’t got many choices. He’s a lovely horse, a top-class horse in the making. Maybe throwing him into a race like this on his second start could be tough, but hopefully he comes through it.” Another Scat Daddy colt with a bright future at this juncture is Roaring Lion’s stablemate Beatboxer, who also demonstrated his readiness for this kind of test when domineering rivals over this trip in a novice at Haydock Aug. 10. “He is in good form, he worked with Frankie on Wednesday and we are very happy with him. He is doing everything right,” trainer John Gosden said of Princess Haya of Jordan’s unbeaten Classic prospect. “We are going a mile on Saturday and the ground will be quick enough for all of them, but we are pleased with him. You know me, I take it one race at a time. We will see how he runs and what we want to do.” Chasemore Farm’s homebred June 23 Listed Chesham S. winner Arthur Kitt (GB) (Camelot {GB}) was four-lengths second to TDN Rising Star Too Darn Hot (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) in Sandown’s G3 Solario S. over seven furlongs at the start of the month and could potentially up his game over this extra distance. “We chose this race because he wouldn’t want soft ground and I think we are going to lose the current decent ground in a minute, and because I think he will be ideally suited to stepping up in trip and running over this straight mile,” trainer Tom Dascombe explained. “The further he goes, the better he will go–I think he will be a mile-and-half horse next year. He has the highest official rating in the race, although there are bound to be a few improvers in the field and Karl Burke’s horse is probably very good.” View the full article
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Making her debut on the Polytrack in Dundalk’s seven-furlong Irish Stallion Farms EBF Fillies Maiden, the almost-white 2-year-old filly Frosty (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) produced enough to take home the spoils and emulate her esteemed full-sister Winter (Ire) who also got off the mark here two years ago. Tracking the pace in fourth initially, the 9-1 shot was full of running passing the two-furlong pole and when eased around Fancy Feat (Ire) (Rajj {Ire}) and into the lead soon after asserted for a comfortable length success. 1st-Dundalk, €15,000, Mdn, 9-28, 2yo, f, 7f (AWT), 1:25.78, st. FROSTY (IRE) (f, 2, Galileo {Ire}–Laddies Poker Two {Ire}, by Choisir {Aus}) Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $10,758. Video, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton. O-Mrs John Magnier & Michael Tabor & Derrick Smith; B-Laddies Poker Two Syndicate (IRE); T-Aidan O’Brien. View the full article