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Wandering Eyes

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  1. Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 600 entries for its Midlantic Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, to be held Monday and Tuesday, May 20-21, at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium, Maryland. “We will have a barn area full of 2-year-olds once again next month in Timonium,” said Midlantic Sales Director Paget Bennett. “Successful results in the sales ring and on the racetrack continue to improve the profile of this sale each year. Our consignors have once again stepped up to support us with quality horses for buyers of all budgets.” Among the sale’s recent Grade I-winning sales graduates are Discreet Lover (Repent), Fourstar Crook (Freud), and Secret Spice (Discreet Cat). “This year’s catalog cover features graded stakes winners at two and three, and as older horses,” said Bennett. “Our graduates are winning from coast-to-coast, and over all surfaces.” The under tack show will be held over three sessions, on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, May 14-16. Each under tack show session will begin at 8:00 am. The 144th Preakness Stakes will be held at nearby Pimlico Saturday, May 18 and the sale will follow May 20 and 21. Each sale session will begin at 11 am. The catalog may now be viewed online and will be available via the equineline sales catalog app. Print catalogs will be available beginning Apr. 23. View the full article
  2. A plan for Japanese star Almond Eye to contest the Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1) has been abandoned in the wake of the brilliant filly's trip to Dubai, where she won the March 30 Dubai Turf Sponsored by DP World (G1) at Meydan. View the full article
  3. Like Tuesday’s G3 Nell Gwyn S. winner Qabala (Scat Daddy), Skardu (GB) (Shamardal) entered his Guineas trial with just a course win to his name but like that filly emerged from Wednesday’s G3 bet365 Craven S. with his reputation significantly enhanced. Only 3-1 this time as opposed to the 33-1 he had been when scoring with panache over seven furlongs here in September, Abdulla Al Khalifa’s homebred was restrained by James Doyle in last of the tightly-bunched field throughout the early stages. Waiting for Set Piece (GB) (Dansili {GB}) to move first, the chestnut swooped on the outer of that rival to lead passing the furlong pole and outstay Momkin (Ire) (Bated Breath {GB}) by a neck, with 1 3/4 lengths back to Set Piece in third. The 13-8 favourite Royal Marine (Ire) (Raven’s Pass) never threatened to land a blow and wound up a further 3/4 of a length behind in fourth. “That was pretty smart and you’d have to be impressed,” the winning rider said. “It’s proven hard yesterday and today to make up ground and it was just a mediocre pace, so you can upgrade the performance. He showed a blistering turn of foot and he wandered around in front, so he’s still learning and will come on for that. All the right signs are there.” SKARDU (GB), c, 3, Shamardal–Diala {Ire}, by Iffraaj {GB}). O/B-Sheikh Abdulla Bin Isa Al Khalifa (GB); T-William Haggas; J-James Doyle. £34,026. Lifetime Record: 2-2-0-0, £40,595. View the full article
  4. Maximus Mischief, once a prospect for the classics when he capped a 3-for-3 juvenile season with a victory in the Remsen Stakes (G2), has been retired with a soft-tissue injury to his right front leg. View the full article
  5. Japanese superstar filly Almond Eye (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}) has been removed from consideration for this year’s G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe by owners Silk Racing. Masafumi Yonemoto, representative of the large ownership group, posted a statement on the company’s website that cited the filly’s recent journey to Dubai, where she won the G1 Dubai Turf on Mar. 30, and potential track conditions as reasons for swerving ParisLongchamp’s October showpiece. Yonemoto said the remainder of Almond Eye’s 4-year-old campaign is under consideration and that domestic and overseas races would be considered. Second on debut at two, Almond Eye has not lost since. Her unbeaten 3-year-old campaign included a sweep of Japan’s Filly Triple Crown and the Japan Cup, and she bested former race winner Vivlos (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) in the Dubai Turf. View the full article
  6. Talented two-year-old filly Folk Dress made it back-to-back wins on her home track when successful in the Matamata Glass & Joinery (1000m) on Wednesday. Ridden by Craig Grylls, Folk Dress sat just forward of mid-field and rounded her rivals up comfortably. Trainer Jamie Richards said Folk Dress and stablemate Louis Luck, who closed well for fifth, would head towards the Listed Waikato Equine Veterinary Centre 2YO Stakes (1100m) at Te Rapa on May 4. “Good draws win races and Craig g... View the full article
  7. In less than two weeks, 61 southern bred yearlings will make their sale ring appearance at New Zealand Bloodstock’s South Island Sale – many presented by the same vendors of stakes-winning graduates of the Sale. Often seen leading the vendors by aggregate table, perennial consignor White Robe Lodge will present the largest draft at the Sale with 12 lots catalogued. Not only have they succeeded in the sale ring, but they have also produced stakes winners Civil Disobedience (NZ) (Raise the Fla... View the full article
  8. In an act of generosity, Valachi Downs principals Kevin and Jo Hickman have gifted a regally bred filly to the CatWalk Spinal Cord Injury Research Trust, founded by Little Avondale Stud’s Catriona Williams. The weanling filly is by Darley stallion Brazen Beau, who will stand at a fee of A$49,500 this coming season. She is out of Stepanova, a Danehill Dancer mare whose dam, Dance On By, is a full-sister to six-time Group One winner and champion sire High Chaparral. “It’s a beautiful, strong... View the full article
  9. Trainer Tony Pike has all bases covered with his quintet of runners set to tackle Saturday’s bumper meeting at Ellerslie. The Cambridge horseman will be represented by hardy veterans Endless Drama and Rangipo in the Gr.2 Manco Easter Handicap (1600m), while earlier on the program the stocks of his up-and-comers are set to rise. Among those progressive youngsters is the lightly-raced filly Intrigue, who tackles stakes company for the first time in the Gr.2 Valachi Downs Championship Stakes (210... View the full article
  10. The California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) announced that they had filed a complaint against trainer William Morey, alleging that his assistant trainer administered a substance containing an alkalinizing agent via a “dose syringe” to three horses that were entered to race at Santa Anita Park on Friday Mar. 29, 2019. Mar. 29 was the day Santa Anita re-opened its doors to live racing after a hiatus of nearly three weeks, due to a rash of equine fatalities at the track this winter. The three Morey-trained horses—Tick Tock, Gate Speed, and Lord Guinness—were scratched about 30 minutes before the first race on Mar. 29. According to multiple sources familiar with the case, Morey’s assistant was seen administering a substance orally to the horses that morning—a violation of CHRB rules—via the video surveillance system installed throughout the Santa Anita backstretch. According to the press release, the stewards at Santa Anita will conduct a hearing on May 2. Morey, who has held a license since 2001, has not started a horse since Mar. 29. According to the DRF, Morey subsequently dispersed his stable among a variety of different trainers. Tick Tock, for example, is now with Andrew Lerner. Morey did not immediately respond to a call and text message. View the full article
  11. Racing Minister Winston Peters says the Government will introduce two new pieces of legislation this year to revitalise the domestic racing industry. Cabinet this week considered its response to the ‘Messara Review of the Racing Industry’ as well as advice from the Ministerial Advisory Committee (MAC) on Racing. “The New Zealand racing industry is in a state of serious decline,” Peters said. “The Coalition Government supports the overall intent of the Messara Report and is committed to... View the full article
  12. Kentucky Equine Medical Director Mary Scollay advocated a multi-pronged approach to regulating and preventing improper use of bisphosphonates, which experts have linked to catastrophic breakdowns when used in young horses. View the full article
  13. Nimble back on his feet for five-from-five bid View the full article
  14. Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella has accomplished some of horse racing's greatest feats. Now 15 years after his most recent two Kentucky Derby (G1) runners, the California native is preparing to return with Fox Hill Farm's Omaha Beach. View the full article
  15. In what he called the most difficult decision of his Hall of Fame career, jockey Mike Smith has chosen to rider GI Arkansas Derby winner Omaha Beach (War Front) in the GI Kentucky Derby, he told the TDN. His other choice was to ride ‘TDN Rising Star‘ and GI Santa Anita Derby winner Roadster (Quality Road). “[Omaha Beach] is coming off races where he beat two of the very best 3-year-olds out there in Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}) and then Improbable (City Zip),” Smith said. “The connections of both horses fully understood my decision and there were no ill feelings. [Roadster’s trainer] Bob [Baffert] was great about it. I know how much talent Roadster has. I just hope I’m not put in a position where I see him running right by me in the stretch in the Derby.” Baffert has won five Kentucky Derbies and Omaha Beach’s trainer Dick Mandella has never had a horse finish on the board in six Derby tries. Smith said that Baffert’s record was definitely something he weighed when making his decision. Last year, Smith rode Justify (Scat Daddy) to a Triple Crown sweep for Baffert. “Bob’s record is one of the things that made this decision so difficult,” he said. “I chose to take off a horse trained by one of the greatest trainers of all time.” Via text, Baffert confirmed that he had chosen Geroux to take over on Roadster. Smith’s decision could very well tilt the odds in the Derby as his decision will carry a lot of weight with handicappers and could make Omaha Beach the race favorite. View the full article
  16. According to Takayuki Ui, horseman's relations manager for the Japan Racing Association's New York office, a decision to allow online wagering on the May 4 Kentucky Derby in Japan was made April 15. View the full article
  17. In a crowded and open ante-post market, Qabala jumped to the head of the betting for the QIPCO One Thousand Guineas (G1) as she defeated stablemate Mot Juste to give trainer Roger Varian a one-two in the classic trial. View the full article
  18. Windsor Park Stud shuttle stallion Charm Spirit was provided with his third stakes winner when Qatar Racing’s three-year-old colt Kick On lead throughout to land the Listed Feilden Stakes (1800m) at Newmarket. A course maiden winner over a mile at two, the John Gosden-trained colt built on his sixth-place finish in the Gr.1 Vertem Futurity Trophy (1600m) at Doncaster in October to hold off a sustained surge from Walkinthesand by a neck, with that pair pulling four and a half lengths clea... View the full article
  19. Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella has accomplished some of horse racing's greatest feats. Now 15 years after his most recent two Kentucky Derby (G1) runners, the California native is preparing to return with Fox Hill Farm's Omaha Beach. View the full article
  20. NEWMARKET, UK—Four purchases, and the top four prices of the session—adding up to a third of total turnover on the night. That was the game-changing commitment made by Godolphin to the opening session of the Tattersalls Breeze-Up Sale, with the presence of its founder in person a welcome boost to the morale of a sector that had, overall, suffered such a rocky time last year. In fact any jitters were redressed within minutes of the bell, the fifth lot into the ring achieving a spectacular 850,000gns payday for Tally-Ho Stud, having been acquired for just 92,000gns in the same ring last December. Lot 6 is the most expensive filly bought at this sale, and its third highest lot ever. She contributed to a marginal increase in turnover, up to 5,261,000gns from 5,222,500gns at the opening session last year, from a smaller offering of 57 down from 66 (after withdrawals). But a considerable improvement in the clearance rate, 43 (75%) finding a new home compared with 38 (just 58%) last year, meant that the median took a small slide to 70,000gns from 75,000gns; while the average dwindled 11% to 122,349gns from 137,434gns. The record filly very soon became the subject of a straight shootout between Anthony Stroud and Kerri Radcliffe. But while Radcliffe could not see who was standing beside her rival, with a partition wall in the way, the rapidity with which Stroud answered her own quickfire bids must have given her a sinking feeling. Sure enough, on finally yielding, she may have glimpsed the Sheikh’s back as he left Stroud to sign the docket. Only a couple of hours previously the Sheikh had seen one potential Queen Mary filly make a winning debut for Charlie Appleby, up the road on the Rowley Mile, in Chasing Dreams (GB) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}). And you would like to think, at this kind of money, that she could yet be joined by this filly. “Who knows?” said Stroud with a smile. “That’s the idea anyway. She certainly looks quick, breezed very well in a good time, vetted well, and is from a good hotel.” That hotel’s Roger O’Callaghan had acquired this filly through Matt Coleman. “She was from the Blue Diamond dispersal and Roger and I thought she looked quick,” the agent said. “She was quite small and light-framed but looked very fast, very racy, and her dam had gone on to finish second in the Queen Mary after herself breezing well. She’s by the sire of the moment, did a very fast breeze, and the stars aligned really.” The dam in question is Shyrl (GB) (Acclamation {GB}), who has already produced a zippy animal by Dream Ahead in Raucous (GB), twice placed in Group 2 sprints as a juvenile. Minutes later Stroud gave 375,000gns for lot 15, a May colt by Night Of Thunder (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) out of a Street Cry (Ire) mare who won her only start, herself out of a half-sister to his patron’s Grade I winner Balletto (UAE) (Timber Country). This colt’s half-sister had earned her first graded stakes placing at Santa Anita after Christmas. Godolphin was duly the toast of another delighted pinhooker in Johnny Collins of Brown Island Stables, who picked this lad out of Book 2 last autumn for just 48,000gns. “I’m a bit speechless,” Collins said. “But he was a very nice yearling who’s had some great updates since I bought him. He’s a very uncomplicated horse, very sound with a very good temperament, a pleasure to deal with. There’s been a good word for the sire, and if this one is anything to go by he is going to do very well.” And Godolphin’s own stallion, whose overall sales reception to date sits very well with a £15,000 fee, got another boost from the operation when Stroud signed a 260,000gns docket for lot 23. A February colt presented by Powerstown Stud, he is out of a Street Cry half-sister to the tragic Kentucky Derby runner-up Eight Belles (Unbridled’s Song). He previously went through this ring as a 200,000gns December foal. But even these excellent returns for Night Of Thunder were not going to dislodge Kingman as sire of the session, with Jane Chapple-Hyam adding to his laurels by giving 250,000gns for lot 25, his son out of one of the many daughters—this one by Dansili (GB)—of the great Ballymacoll racemare Islington (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells). Consigned by Willie Browne of Mocklershill, he had been bought in for €90,000 at the Orby Sale. Farhh Colt Takes Wing for Williamson His excellent result with lot 41, a colt by Farhh (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) sold to Godolphin for 300,000gns, appeared to be a typically professional job by Norman Williamson. But the Oak Tree Farm consignor admitted afterwards that there had been an element of luck in unearthing the colt, out of a Nayef daughter of Irish Oaks winner Winona (Ire) (Alzao), for just 35,000gns in Book III here last October. “I couldn’t get a flight home,” Williamson explained. “So I had a look through and thought a Farhh could do a job, he’s going really well, and so I went to have a look. And he was gorgeous. I just thought: ‘Wow.’ He’s wintered really well and is a really beautiful horse, so let’s hope he’s lucky.” The fourth dam is none other than My Bupers, dam of the first $10-million yearling: the infamous Snaafi Dancer, who never made the racetrack. Following in Footsteps of Sand Peter Swann’s Cool Silk operation has become one of the most adept on the breeze-up circuit, and will be hoping the 230,000gns he gave through his regular advisor Matt Coleman for lot 47, a More Than Ready (Southern Halo) filly presented by Mayfield Stables, proves money as well spent as the £75,000 that secured a subsequent Group 1 winner in Sands Of Mali (Fr) (Panis) at Ascot a couple of years ago. A good hike in value, certainly, after she was unsold a second time for $67,000 at Fasig-Tipton’s October Yearling Sale. “We probably had to pay a little more than we wanted but that’s how it can be when one strikes you, and then does such a good time,” Swann said. “She has a good conformation, a very good page, and the way she got through that ground, when there quite a few coming up with splints and bits and pieces, you’d hope she hopefully won’t take too long to get to the track.” Swann indicated that his new recruit, whose fifth dam is the great El Prado (Ire)’s Classic-winning mother Lady Capulet, will probably join Sands Of Mali’s trainer Richard Fahey. “He just knocked into himself a bit at Meydan,” he said of his star sprinter. “But he’s fine and coming back into full training. If he is ready in time we’ll look at York but otherwise it’ll be straight on to Royal Ascot.” Rewards for a Job Well Done Ed Walker’s achievements with Stormy Antarctic (GB) (Stormy Atlantic)—a 200,000gns graduate of this sale in 2015—were highlighted by colleague Emma Berry in yesterday’s TDN and gained due recognition from that remarkable horse’s lucky owner P.K. Sui when Alastair Donald gave a similar sum on his behalf for lot 63, an April colt by Wootton Bassett (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) consigned by Kilminfoyle House Stud. A €120,000 Arqana October graduate for Five Star Bloodstock, he is from the same Aga Khan family that produced his sire’s champion son Almanzor (Fr). “He’ll be more one for the second half of the season and next year,” Donald said, after signing a 210,000gns docket. “The way he moved in his breeze reminded us a bit of Stormy Antarctic, he’s a really lovely mover.” There had likewise been a dividend for good work with a graduate of this sale for Gay Kelleway. Global Spectrum (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}), picked up here last year by Charlie Gordon-Watson for 130,000gns, has won all three starts to date, including a valuable prize in Qatar last time, and today faces his biggest test yet in the G3 Bet 365 Craven S. up the road. Win, lose or draw, Kelleway has already done a fine job and was rewarded when Gordon-Watson signed for lot 45, a February colt by Kodiac (GB) (Danehill) consigned by Church Farm & Horse Park Stud, on Hon’s behalf for 150,000gns. “Better than the pennies I had to spend at Ascot,” Kelleway said. “He’ll need a bit of time, this horse, but he has a bit of size and scope for a Kodiac.” Gordon-Watson was in good fettle after watching his yearling purchase Solid Stone (Ire) (Shamardal) win the last race on the opening card of the Craven meeting—invariably a signpost to a very smart horse in the making. View the full article
  21. A day after horses worked into a significant headwind, times picked up noticably Tuesday at the second session of the under-tack preview of the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s April Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training, with four horses sharing the bullet furlong time of :9 4/5 and a pair of juveniles working a quarter-mile in :20 1/5. Torie and Jim Gladwell’s Top Line Sales sent out two of the bullet furlong workers. A son of Sky Mesa (hip 242) covered the distance in :9 4/5. The bay is out of Lady Lavery (Elusive Quality), a half-sister to multiple graded stakes winner Skylighter (Sky Mesa). Top Line consigns the youngster on behalf of Zayat Stables, which purchased him for $75,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton October sale. “When he came off the trailer after the October sale, I fell in love with him immediately,” Torie Gladwell said of the colt. “He is a beautiful horse and has always done everything right. We almost sent him a quarter today. He galloped out really good.” Top Line also sent out hip 281, an English-bred filly from the first crop of multiple Group 1 winner Make Believe (Makfi {GB}), to work in :9 4/5. The dark bay is out of stakes winner Lisselan Diva (Ire) (Barathea {Ire}) and sold for 27,000gns ($37,379) at last year’s Tattersalls October sale. “We traveled over to Newmarket to the Tattersalls sale last year and [bloodstock agent] Justin Casse showed us around and helped us short list horses a little bit,” Gladwell explained. “We ended up buying two with the goal in mind to bring them back to breeze at the April sale. We tried to buy horses that we thought were kind of turf families that we thought would breeze really well here at OBS on the synthetic track.” Also from its Tattersalls shopping spree, Top Line will offer hip 883, a son of Pivotal (GB) who was purchased for 65,000gns ($89,756) last October. “We went over there to focus on fillies because I think there is a demand for European-pedigreed fillies here for broodmares to cross with the American stallions,” Gladwell said. “But we fell in love with the Pivotal colt over there as well. He’s just a beautiful colt altogether.” Make Believe, who stands at Ballylinch Stud in Ireland for €12,000, won the 2015 G1 Prix Le Parisien and G1 Prix de la Foret before concluding his racing career with a fifth-place effort in that year’s GI Breeders’ Cup Mile. His first-crop daughter has impressed Gladwell. “She is a really compact filly,” Gladwell said. “She is smart and laid back and does everything right. She actually surprised us–we didn’t know she was going to go that fast today. That was a pleasant surprise.” Due to quarantine restrictions, the two European imports got a later start in their training than their American counterparts. “These horses were all a little bit behind the eight ball just because the quarantine process took so long to get them over here,” Gladwell explained. “We didn’t actually start breaking them until November and the other horses get broke pretty soon after the yearling sales. That’s why they are a little behind everybody else. That was reflected in [hip 281’s] gallop-out. She went fast, but then she kind of got tired on the gallop-out and that’s probably because she’s a month behind everybody else that we have. She’s a May foal, so we tried to go pretty easy on her getting her ready for the sale. She does everything right and does it easy, so we didn’t have to over-train her.” Hip 319 also worked the furlong in the co-fastest :9 4/5. Consigned by Crupi’s New Castle Farm, the bay colt is by Blame out of Marie Antoinette (Stormy Atlantic), a half-sister to stakes winner Crimson China (Giant’s Causeway) and from the family of Elusive City. Completing the :9 4/5 bullet furlong workers was hip 386, a filly by The Factor out of multiple stakes winner My Redbyrd (Royal Academy). The 2-year-old is consigned by Nice and Easy Thoroughbreds. A filly from the first crop of multiple graded stakes winner Commissioner (A.P. Indy) (hip 365) shared the quarter-mile bullet breeze time of :20 1/5 Tuesday. She is out of Money Madness (Rahy), a half-sister to stakes placed Feminine Girl (Kingmambo) and Payday Peril (Officer), and is consigned to the April sale by Jenn and Quincy Adams’s Q Bar J Thoroughbreds. The Adamses purchased her for $40,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton July Sale. “We believed she was very fast and she’d prepped very well,” Quincy Adams said of the filly. “She has been a rock star all year.” Of the youngster’s appeal as a yearling, Adams said, “She had all the pieces she just needed to grow and come into herself. And she has. She has filled in in all the right places and is just a beautiful filly to look at on the shank.” Also working in :20 1/5 was hip 240, a colt from the first crop of multiple graded stakes winner Amira’s Prince (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}). Consigned by Blue River Bloodstock, the dark bay is out of Lady Halite (Medaglia d’Oro). Adams said conditions had improved for the preview’s second session Tuesday. “The headwind was a little tough to fight through Monday, but I thought it was pretty even all day today,” Adams said. “No headwind today made all the difference in the world. When that headwind blows in the babies faces, it’s hard on them.” Gladwell agreed the wind had a major effect on Monday’s works. “People were talking about the track surface, but I think it was mostly about the headwind,” she said. “Today there was a tailwind all day and yesterday the headwind was just brutal. Horses that are immature, they really haven’t experienced anything like that on the farm before. I think it shocked a lot of horses and it rattled them.” The under-tack show for the April sale continues through Saturday with sessions beginning daily at 8 a.m. Hips 407 through 608 are scheduled to breeze Wednesday. The four-day auction will be held next Tuesday through Friday with bidding beginning each day at 10:30 a.m. View the full article
  22. The ITV racing team are bringing us a nice mixture of action on Wednesday with four races from Newmarket and a Grade 2 from Cheltenham. This should satisfy both lat and jump racing enthusiasts. The opening day’s action was very exciting with Qabala looking impressive in the Nell Gwyn to provide trainer Roger Varian with […] The post Newmarket Craven Meeting Preview – Wednesday appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. 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 son of Oaks heroine Dancing Rain (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}). 4.10 Newmarket, Mdn, £10,000, 3yo, f, 7fT OJOOBA (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) debuts for Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum who has long held much store in this Rossdales Maiden Fillies’ S. which he has won six times since 2000. This time, it looks to be the Owen Burrows-trained daughter of the G1 Epsom Oaks third Rumoush (Rahy) who carries the hopes of her owner-breeder and she is bred to be smart as a full-sister to the group-winning Muntazah (GB) and half to the classy Wadilsafa (GB) (Frankel {GB}) and Talaayeb (GB) (Dansili {GB}). She will have to be to get the better of Juddmonte’s Wolverhampton third Clerisy (GB) (Kingman {GB}), a Sir Michael Stoute-trained half-sister to the high-class Expert Eye (GB) (Acclamation {GB}). 4.45 Newmarket, Novice, £10,000, 3yo, 10fT JALMOUD (GB) (New Approach {Ire}) was second on debut on Newcastle’s Tapeta in November, which could be the tip of the iceberg given that he is a son of the G1 Epsom Oaks heroine Dancing Rain (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}). Charlie Appleby saddles Godolphin’s February-foaled half-brother to last year’s G1 Fillies’ Mile third Magic Lily (GB), who is met by Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum’s Newcastle scorer El Misk (GB) (Dansili {GB}), a John Gosden-trained son of the owner-breeder’s South African luminary Igugu (Aus) (Galileo {Ire}). 5.45 Dundalk, Mdn, €15,000, 2yo, 5fT KING NEPTUNE (War Front) is Ballydoyle’s second 2-year-old runner of the season and highly significant on breeding, as a full-brother to the highly-regarded ex-Shadwell runner Faydhan who failed to meet his potential with just a placing in the Listed European Free H. to show at the end of his career. A late May foal, he faces a decent form standard in the recent course-and-distance runner-up Yesterdayoncemore (Ire) (No Nay Never), a Fozzy Stack-trained filly who races for Deron Pearson, Paul Shanahan and M V Magnier. View the full article
  24. An Arizona bill to direct 1% of pari-mutuel handle to Arizona-bred purse awards that got vetoed by Governor Doug Ducey (R) last week will have its language resurface again in a separate racing bill. Representative David Cook (R), who is backing the new amendment after the veto of his original bill, told the Arizona Mirror Apr. 15 that a subsequent stakeholders’ meeting among horse breeders, track operators, and the governor’s office has resulted in an agreement to allow the measure to go forward after the parties resolved confusion over what “in-state handle” meant in the original legislation. It had been unclear if Arizona-based wagers on out-of-state simulcast races were part of the formula. According to the negotiated clarification, they aren’t. “We want to make sure… if you’re [betting] on another track in another state, that those aren’t part of this formula that is going to fund the breeders’ award,” Cook told the Mirror. “We have our agreement. We will be sending it back up there, with their blessing.” The existing bill (SB 1144) that is slated to include the new language has nothing to do with breeding awards or purses. Its purpose is to clarify who may be ejected or excluded from race meets for conduct “detrimental to the integrity of horse racing.” View the full article
  25. Churchill Downs’ second-annual Champions Day presented by Twinspires.com will be held on Tuesday, Apr. 30 during GI Kentucky Derby week. In addition to a full racing card, the day will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the American Triple Crown and honor its winners. Triple Crown-winning jockeys, trainers and owners including Bob Baffert, Mike Smith, Victor Espinoza, Steve Cauthen, Jean Cruguet and Elliott Walden will be on hand to sign autographs; fans will have an opportunity to pose with rare Triple Crown memorabilia from the Kentucky Derby Museum vault; and a special handicapping seminar will be held. Tickets starting at $12 can be purchased here. View the full article
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