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The Cheltenham festival handicaps are the most hotly contest handicaps all year, We have studied all the races and have picked one standout horse in a handicap on each day of the festival. The last time we previewed handicaps we put up Royal Hunt Cup winner at Royal Ascot at odds of 33/1, don’t miss […] The post Cheltenham 2019 Handicap Hopefuls appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
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After two quiet days, the training track at Santa Anita re-opened Friday morning—an obvious relief to those trainers whose horses have been restricted to exercise around the barn. But at the forefront of many minds among those present at Santa Anita early Friday morning was the issue of what safety protocols, other than track maintenance, will be instituted to reduce the high fatality rates that have marred the track’s current winter-spring meet. Indeed, this issue was raised at a trainers meeting Friday morning at Santa Anita, said California Thoroughbred Trainers executive director, Alan Balch. “There’s no question that the attention is on horsemanship and preparation of horses, and everyone needs to be extremely careful, even in sending horses out to jog, gallop and everything else,” said Balch, when the meeting concluded. “It should go without saying, with an abundance of caution we want to make sure that trainer have a heightened sense of responsibility.” Balch also said that the horsemen had an “extended conversation” about a number of other safety and racing-related issues, including the condition book, numbers of races, race distances on turf, and intimidation of horsemen to run. “We as an organization do not have the authority to approve the condition book,” Balch added. “Our understanding is that the [Thoroughbred Owners of California] shares our concerns about number of races, use of the turf course, and the levels of races being run.” On Thursday, TDN spoke with California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) Executive Director, Rick Baedeker, who explained that Santa Anita and the CHRB could employ a similarly rigorous version of safety initiatives instituted at Del Mar in 2017 to tackle the high numbers of equine fatalities that occurred the year prior. “Reinvigorating the program that was implemented at Del Mar is apparent to all of us,” he said. Though many of the same initiatives are already in place at Santa Anita, officials explain they haven’t been enforced as intensely as at the San Diego venue. During the 2016 summer meet at Del Mar, 17 horses were fatally injured during training and racing. During the 2017 summer meet, that number was cut to five. These numbers were again relatively low during last year’s summer meet. Perhaps the most visible step that Del Mar took in 2017 was to employ veteran track superintendent Dennis Moore to reconfigure the dirt surface to match the geometric shape of Santa Anita’s main track. On top of that, the facility used the Jockey Club’s InCompass system to provide a daily itinerary of horses that fell within two categories: horses that hadn’t raced for a period of 120 days or more, and those that hadn’t started before four years of age or older. That same list also included other important information, like whether the horse had previously been on the vet’s and Steward’s lists, as well as the date of its last two workouts, the distances and times. Two additional state veterinarians were drafted in to assist the usual team of official veterinarians to routinely monitor horses flagged a relative risk of catastrophic injury. By the time any flagged horse made it to the usual pre-race examination, they had been seen-typically multiple times-in the preceding weeks and months. As an additional layer of scrutiny, past performances were pulled on entry day, to identify other horses not included on the daily InCompass list, but whose profiles caused concern. This included horses being dropped in claiming price, and those shipping in from Northern California or out-of-state—horses that hadn’t been previously examined by the track or state veterinarians. What’s more, the horsemen along with a state veterinarian and safety steward posted on the grounds seven days a week were asked to keep their eyes peeled for any warning signs during training. Interestingly, two official veterinarians were posted at the Santa Anita training track Friday to watch morning exercise. According to officials, many of the same procedures employed at Del Mar have been in place at Santa Anita. For example, the InCompass system is still used to produce the same list of possible at-risk horses for added scrutiny. However, these same officials explained that a reduced number of official veterinarians at Santa Anita, as compared to Del Mar, meant these flagged horses weren’t examined as frequently. At Del Mar, for example, a state veterinarian was situated on the racetrack grounds seven days a week. At Santa Anita, an official veterinarian was only required to be on the grounds five days a week. Balch expresses surprise that the safety measures instituted at Del Mar weren’t enforced as vigorously at Santa Anita. “That’s a surprise, as I thought they were. I don’t know why they wouldn’t be,” said Balch. “I thought that was standard operating procedure for the racing board now,” Balch added. “We support that [same intensely enforced set of safety policies] 100%.” Baedeker admitted that a lack of personnel at Santa Anita made the program difficult to maintain at the same level as at the San Diego venue. “Admittedly, we haven’t had as many veterinarians examining the horses as we used to during the Del Mar meets, but that’s a scenario that can be addressed, and will be,” he said. “There’s going to be expense involved, but that’s fine, we have no choice.” One of the biggest benefits of the intensive pre-race examination system, said Baedeker, was the increased awareness it generated. “The trainers became more used to it,” said Baedeker. “They may not have known a horse they had gotten a month ago had issues. Then they were.” Baedeker stressed the up-in-the-air nature at the moment behind any possible alterations to safety and integrity protocols at Santa Anita. Mirroring Balch’s comments, Baedeker flagged the Santa Anita condition book as a possible place for change—”restrict the condition book to a degree, so that certain horses in certain races aren’t run,” he said. Baedeker also raised the possibility of curbing the races on a card to a “reasonable” number. “Those 11 race cards may not be appropriate,” he said. Baedeker said that the state “can only do so much,” and that “we really need the association to step up. All indications show they are, and they’re willing to do what they can going forward,” he said.” He added that the CHRB is eager to hear “any idea” that could be employed as a potential fix. The next board meeting is scheduled Mar. 21. “In terms of board action, anything and everything is on the table when it comes to solving this problem,” he said. TDN reached out to Santa Anita and the TOC for comment on what safety protocols could be employed in the immediate future at Santa Anita. This story will be updated if necessary. View the full article
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Ed DeRosa of TwinSpires.com takes on TDN’s Steve Sherack and Brian DiDonato as they handicap each prep race leading up to the GI Kentucky Derby. The three will make $100 Win/Place bets-highest bankroll after Arkansas Derby/Lexington day wins. DiDonato: GII Fountain of Youth S. – Bourbon War (+$250) obviously got a set-up, but he ran a very nice race to be a fast-finishing second. Bankroll: $9420. GII Tampa Bay Derby – The Right Path strikes me as a horse who will clearly appreciate two turns. He looked good winning his six-furlong debut back in November, and had every right to pack it in last out at Gulfstream when a very awkward spot pretty much throughout, but fought on well for third before being moved up a slot by the stewards. I’m not entirely sure where he’ll be early, as he’s got a lot of cruising speed and could get sucked into sitting too close to the front, but if he works out the right stalking trip he should keep going in the lane. He’s by Quality Road out of an unraced Bernardini half-sister to Fed Biz from a huge female family, so the pedigree appeal’s certainly there. Selection: #8 The Right Path (15-1). GIII Gotham S. – My first inclination was to just take Instagrand–who still has every right to pick up where he left off and prove one of the best members of a pretty promising crop–but the amount of other speed signed on and the cross-country ship makes me hesitant to take too short of a price. Haikal was very brave to eventually squeeze up a tight spot on the rail in the Winkfield. He’s the one I’m most confident will be finishing late. He may be closing into a distant second behind Instagrand, but place money’s fine too. Selection: #5 Haikal (6-1). GIII Jeff Ruby Steaks – I really struggled with this one… How about Five Star General? It looks like his connections were trying to get him on the grass last year, but he won twice in off-the-turfers. He was floated pretty wide into the first turn of the Sam Davis last time, and just ran an overall weird race–maybe he didn’t like that quirky surface. He figures to work out a much cleaner stalking trip this time, and that could mean a return to form pver a turf-friendly surface he may appreciate. Selection: #3 Five Star General (6-1). Sherack: GII Fountain of Youth S. – Bourbon War fell too far back early for his own good and put in a huge stretch rally to finish a promising second. In your face, DiDonato. Oh.. wait. You picked him too? Bankroll: $830. GII Tampa Bay Derby – Dream Maker and Win Win Win are both awfully imposing and worthy favorites off their last two victories, but I’ll shop for a little value with Outshine. The son of Malibu Moon wasn’t the flashiest 1x winner by any means while covering plenty of ground in his seven-furlong comebacker at Gulfstream, but he certainly ran like a horse that would appreciate more distance after leveling off nicely in deep stretch with first-time blinkers. Considering all the success that trainer Todd Pletcher has had at Tampa Bay in these preps in recent years, this is a hard horse to pass on if he’s anywhere near his morning-line quote. Selection: #6 Outshine (8-1). GIII Gotham S. – With so much speed signed on in the Gotham, my immediate inclination was to go with a closer. While the talented stretch-running Haikal certainly makes a ton of sense from a dynamics standpoint, a horse he defeated last time is where I’ll end up. Tikhvin Flew broke his maiden like a good thing first out in a live race over this course in early January, then was really against the track when third with a wide trip as the favorite in the Jimmy Winkfield. He’s drawn well on the outside here, has a bullet five-furlong work since and could get first run on what figures to be a lively early pace at a big price. Selection: #8 Tikhvin Flew (12-1). GIII Jeff Ruby Steaks – Somelikeithotbrown, third in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf and a sharp winner of Turfway’s Battaglia Memorial in his comebacker, is clearly the horse to beat and should work out a perfect trip sitting just off pacesetters Dynamic Racer and Five Star General. Take the short price. Selection: #10 Somelikeithotbrown (8-5). DeRosa: GII Fountain of Youth S. – Vekoma was third. Bankroll: $680. GII Tampa Bay Derby – Selection: #7 Win Win Win (5-2). GIII Gotham S. – Selection: #6 Instagrand (1-1). GIII Jeff Ruby Steaks – Selection: #8 Twelfthofneverland (12-1). Click for Tampa Bay Derby, Gotham & Jeff Ruby Steaks Ultimate PPs from Brisnet.com. View the full article
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6th-AQU, $68K, Msw, 3yo/up, 1m, 4:07 p.m. Eric Fein, Stonestreet Stables and Peter Leidel teamed up for the $1 million FTSAUG buy LITANY (Curlin) and the sophomore debuts in this spot for trainer Chad Brown. The son of Grade I winner River’s Prayer (Devon Lane) has been working steadily at Brown’s Palm Meadows winter base, most recently breezing a half-mile in :49 3/5 (4/32) Feb. 24. The Brown stable is also represented by Shadwell Stable’s $360,000 KEENOV buy Hizaam (Bernardini). The 4-year-old is out of an unraced half-sister to champion Untapable (Tapit) and GISW millionaire Paddy O’Prado (El Prado {Ire}). TJCIS PPs View the full article
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It’s always among the key questions on everyone’s mind as 2-year-olds begin racing when Keeneland opens in April and the first-year sires have their first chance to show off their progeny. In this ongoing series, we have sought the opinion of several top judges as to who will be on top of the podium when 2019 is in the books. LINDA RICE, Trainer AMERICAN PHAROAH “Based on what I saw at the yearling sales last year, American Pharoah is the obvious choice. He had a lot of very attractive physicals at the yearling sales. They may not be the precocious types, but they really stood out among the yearling crop. I think the American Pharoahs are going to be pretty pricey at the 2-year-old sales. They certainly were as yearlings. I’d love to have a few along the way, but I don’t think I’m going to go after him at this stage because I worry that with all the hype, and considering he was a Triple Crown winner, they’ll be overpriced. Then again, maybe he’ll be such a good sire that they’ll get even more expensive in years to come and these ones will prove to be a value. “I’m a little biased on this one, but a horse I am rooting for is Palace as a juvenile sire. He is a son of City Zip and I trained him and City Zip. He is a multiple Grade I winner at Saratoga (the 2014 Forego and Vanderbilt). He was a great physical himself and from what I saw at the yearling sales, I think they may come out running as 2 year-olds. Compared to his stud fee, he did very well at the yearling sales. He had a modest book of mares and they were selling quite well. There’s been some buzz about his babies. I don’t have any yet, but I will make sure I see all of them that are selling at the 2 year-old sales.” View the full article
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The Curragh will host its first official meeting after a two-year redevelopment slightly later than planned, on May 6 rather than Apr. 13. The originally scheduled Apr. 13 card will be transferred to Naas. Brian Kavanagh, Chief Executive Officer of Horse Racing Ireland, said, “While the redevelopment is progressing well, the HRI Board has decided to de-risk the situation and give certainty to the industry and public by delaying the public opening of the new Curragh facility until it is completely finished and fully tested. Instead a trial raceday will take place during the week commencing Monday, Apr. 15, which together with the extra time, will allow all operational elements of the racecourse to be fully tested.” The official opening of The Curragh will then take place on Friday evening May 24, the beginning of the newly-formed three-day Curragh Spring festival which will also feature the Tattersalls Irish 1000 and 2000 Guineas on May 25 and May 26. View the full article
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Michael Trombetta is one of a number of trainers of aspiring 3-year-olds looking for success, but also looking for questions to be answered this time of year, as he sends out his young star Win Win Win in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2). View the full article
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5th-TAM, $22.5K, Msw, 3yo, f, 1mT, 2:14 p.m. LNJ Foxwoods homebred ZIP DRIVE (FR) (City Zip) makes her career bow in this test for trainer Arnaud Delacour. LNJ advisors Alex Solis and Jason Litt scooped up this first timer’s blue-blooded dam, SW & MG1SP Hi Dubai (GB) (Rahy), for $320,000 carrying a foal by Medaglia d’Oro at the 2013 Keeneland November Sale. A full-sister to European champion Fantastic Light, Hi Dubai also hails from the family of Australian Group 1 winner Your Song (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}); MGISWs Swift Temper (Giant’s Causeway), Turbulent Descent (Congrats) and Alpha (Speightstown); and Canadian champion Key to the Moon (Wajima). Gainesway homebred and fellow firster Indigo Gin (Lemon Drop Kid) also boasts a big pedigree. Her dam Lady Bingo (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) is a daughter of GISW Sharp Lisa (Dixieland Band) and a full-sister to Irish Highweight Housesofparliament (Ire) and GISW Foundry (Ire). This is also the family of GISW millionaire Sprint at Last (Silver Deputy) and MGSW & GISP Sharp Susan (Touch Gold). e Five Racing Thoroughbreds’ Repatriated Gem (GB) (Medaglia d’Oro) also makes her career bow in this spot. Out of a full-sister to GISW Awesome Humor (Distorted Humor), the gray hails from the family of MGISW and freshman sire Constitution (Tapit); GISW Emcee (Unbridled’s Song); and GSWs Jacaranda (Congrats) and Surfer (Distorted Humor). TJCIS PPs View the full article
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Jockey Scott Stevens has been selected by a nationwide vote of his peers as the winner of Santa Anita’s 2019 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award. In winning this year’s Woolf Award, Stevens, 58, joins his Hall of Fame brother Gary, the 1996 Woolf winner, in becoming the only pair of brothers to win the Award since its inception in 1950. One of five Woolf Award finalists, Stevens outpolled fellow riders Joe Bravo, Kerwin Clark, John Davila, Jr. and Julien Leparoux. Born Oct. 6, 1960 in Caldwell, Idaho and the son of a trainer and former rodeo queen, Stevens was raised with horses and broke his maiden on May 30, 1976 at Les Bois Park in Boise, at the age of 15. Stevens has amassed more than 4,800 wins from more than 32,400 career mounts. A helpful source of information and guidance to younger riders, Stevens remains active this winter at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, AZ, where he’s a nine-time leading rider. Stevens, who resides in Phoenix with his longtime partner Pam Isles, has two grown children, a daughter, Jessica and a son, Jake. View the full article
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Well, if they were being anything like as prescient, at the end of last summer, as they have proved to be in flying him across a continent for his first run since, then everything is going to work out just fine. For while Bob Baffert has had the rug pulled from under his feet, with the abrupt suspension even of training over the track where he was about to relaunch two rather more accomplished colts, OXO Equine’s Instagrand (Into Mischief) had already booked a magic carpet east. Flying 2,500 miles for the GIII Gotham S. at Aqueduct Saturday has turned out a lesser logistical challenge than trying to run on his home track. No less paradoxically, however, Instagrand resurfaces under nearly as much scrutiny as will (eventually) Baffert’s divisional champion, Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), and his fellow Grade I winner Improbable (City Zip). That’s because of owner Larry Best’s decision to take Instagrand off the track after he duplicated a 10-length maiden success in the GII Best Pal S. last August. His unorthodox intervention generated plenty of comment at the time—and a lot of people will now be curious to see whether it pays off. In fairness, Best’s whole point was to take the long view. Hoping to see the horse fulfill his potential with maturity, at three and even four, he resolved to stop on a thriving 2-year-old—after a total 126.2 seconds of competition—in the hope of avoiding the burnout he’d seen in so many adolescent horses sacrificed, so to speak, at the Triple Crown altar. He noted how Instagrand had graduated from the rigours of a 2-year-old sale, while showing the kind of wholehearted attitude that might soon send the fuel gauge the red if not managed carefully. As such, a Grade III race in March is not where Best’s strategy should be judged. Because even if Instagrand begins to look like a Kentucky Derby horse today—and whether he is really in that mould is another story—then his owner will continue to do only what he feels best for the horse’s long-term interests. (He has already specified that he would rather win the Derby and Travers than the Triple Crown.) What most provoked some observers, however, was not so much the specifics of his argument as the fact that he was candidly over-ruling a veteran horseman in Jerry Hollendorfer. In Europe, certainly, owners of the old school historically consider it not just foolhardy, but somehow ungentlemanly, to seize the steering wheel from the professional horsemen they hired. (Albeit you do see cases over there where trainers would actually benefit from a little less tenderness to their vanity.) That would seem rather less true in the U.S., these days at any rate. After all, hard-headed barn transfers and jockey switches have long been routine when a horse suggests that he could reciprocate proven, elite handling. But the bottom line today seems to be—well, the bottom line. The guy who pays the bills (and let’s not forget Instagrand cost Best $1.2 million; nor that he essentially does his own shopping) will typically feel entitled to have his opinion not only heard but heeded. In this case, moreover, we’re looking at a fellow whose self-same “gut” feel for a left-field decision put him in a position to spend all this dough in the first place. Increasingly, even Hall of Fame trainers find themselves dealing with a vocal new generation of owners, many much younger than Best but fully accustomed to having their voices heard. Compared with the era of the old breed-to-race sportsmen, then, it can be nearly as important to read and guide a patron, with empathy and tact, as to be able to manage his horse. Now the irony is that many horsemen would urge Best that the way to get a runner to last is actually to give him a foundation at two; that early seasoning is not just about the Triple Crown, but about his chances of coming out the other side. To some, then, the fact that so many horses derail after the Classics is precisely because they typically get a shallower grounding than great names of the past. To others, yes, the way Justify (Scat Daddy) tore up the rulebook will only encourage the vogue for a lighter schedule. But he didn’t last either. Perhaps longevity is sooner about the type of horses we breed today, than the kind of options they take in their youth. Anyway, who said ‘rulebook’? What rulebook? Horses come with as many different needs as people (including owners). Just look at the different paths Hollendorfer is taking with Gunmetal Gray (Exchange Rate) and Galilean (Uncle Mo). Sure, it was a risk for Best to turn down a bird in the hand, with Instagrand. But training Thoroughbreds, as the same barn was tragically reminded just days ago with Battle Of Midway (Smart Strike), is never free of risk. It’s perfectly reasonable to back off a bullet breezer, bred the way Instagrand is, who has detonated like that in two races; and just to let that bone grow without constant strain. Nor are there rules about the type of horse he can or can’t be. Last year, remember, Into Mischief managed to get a son (and one out of a Gilded Time mare) into the Derby frame. True, the little we’ve seen of Instagrand has been wild speed; and, sure enough, he is being flown coast to coast for a one-turn mile. But there was something auspiciously controlled and fluid about the way he attacked the 11 fleeting furlongs of his juvenile career. So it’ll be fascinating to see how he gets on today, and hereafter. But he’s a horse. He’s not trained with a cookie cutter. There’s never a ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ way to plan a horse’s career, so long as the people around him keep doing what they believe will serve his interests best. View the full article
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Phoenix Thoroughbreds’s Phoenix Ladies Syndicate, which has been in operation in Dubai since November, has expanded into Saudi Arabia, and will having horses running by the start of that nation’s new season. Phoenix Thoroughbreds Chief Executive Officer Amer Abdulaziz recently visited Saudi Arabia to attend it’s top race, The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup, and he said, “I am very grateful to the Prince, the Equestrian Club and [leading owner] Khalid Mishref for their invitation and hospitality to attend such a wonderful event. It was an honour to witness such a great race up close and have a look around the fantastic facilities at Riyadh Racecourse. Saudi Arabia is a country with huge ambitions for the sport, and we want to be part of that, in addition to opening new opportunities for ownership. I had some very productive discussions, and without the support and encouragement we received we wouldn’t be able to proceed down this path. I want to thank everyone involved in those meetings, and I look forward to having regular runners there with Phoenix Ladies.” View the full article
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Jerry Hollendorfer originally chose to re-route ‘TDN Rising Star’ Instagrand (Into Mischief) from Santa Anita’s GII San Felipe S. to Aqueduct’s GIII Gotham S. Saturday because he thought the latter’s one-turn mile was preferable for his undefeated charge’s first start in seven months. That decision seemed wise due to the presence of the unbeaten Bob Baffert pair of champion Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}) and GISW Improbable (City Zip) in the San Felipe. It proved to be even wiser when racing was canceled indefinitely in Arcadia Tuesday night due to the amount of equine fatalities that have occurred at the track since the opening of the meet. Instagrand looms large in the Aqueduct feature, where he looks to pick up points towards the GI Kentucky Derby. A dazzling 10-length debut winner going five panels at Los Alamitos June 29, the $1.2 million FTFMAR co-topper was ultra impressive yet again with a 10 1/4-length tour de force in the six-furlong GII Best Pal S. Aug. 11. After that triumph, owner Larry Best opted to rest his colt in hopes of a strong sophomore campaign and the layoff looks like Instagrand’s main obstacle in this test. “We’re very happy to have Javier Castellano riding,” said Jerry Hollendorfer. “I feel like our horse has speed and I think he can also rate if we have to.” The likely favorite will still have to face a Baffert runner, albeit not of the caliber of Game Winner or Improbable, in Much Better (Pioneerof the Nile). Stakes-placed on the grass, the dark bay was third in the GIII Sham S. when getting back on dirt Jan. 5 and scored a decisive win in a 6 1/2-furlong main track optional claimer at Santa Anita last time Feb. 9. The New York-based contingent should certainly have a say with the presence of GIII Gotham S. runner-up Not That Brady (Big Brown) and Jerome S. hero Mind Control (Stay Thirsty). A three-length victor of the Damon Runyon S. against fellow Empire-breds over this track and trip, Not That Brady made a strong showing when missing by just a head after setting the pace in the nine-panel Gotham Feb. 2. Upending the GI Hopeful S. at the end of the Saratoga meet, Mind Control was seventh in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Nov. 2 and made easy work of the course-and-distance Jerome on New Year’s Day. “Going into the Gotham, this race appears to be a tougher race with Instagrand coming and Not That Brady was very impressive in the Withers,” said Mind Control’s trainer Greg Sacco. “Our horse is going to have to improve, but we’re expecting an effort like the Jerome. He’s going into this race better than he went into the Jerome in terms of maturity and filling out. He’s really starting to put the muscle on in the right places.” Another locally based contender of interest is Haikal (Daaher), who followed his second-out graduation in Ozone Park Dec. 15 with a win in the seven-panel Jimmy Winkfield S. going seven panels here Feb. 9. Blowing up the tote when winning the GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity S. at 70-1, Knicks Go (Paynter) checked in second to the aforementioned Game Winner in the BC Juvenile, but failed to fire when 11th in the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. Nov. 24. He was last seen finishing a disappointing fifth as the favorite in the Feb. 9 GIII Sam F. Davis S. at Tampa and his trainer chose this one-turn spot over the GII Tampa Bay Derby Saturday. View the full article
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The top three finishers from the Feb. 15 John Battaglia Memorial S., led by winner Somelikeithotbrown (Big Brown), face off once again Saturday in the GIII Jeff Ruby Steak S. going a sixteenth further at Turfway Park. Runner-up in both the Aug. 29 GIII With Anticipation S. and the Sept. 29 GIII Pilgrim S., Somelikeithotbrown was third beaten just over a half-length in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf at Churchill Downs Nov. 2. The bay was making his seasonal bow in the Battaglia, which was delayed a week due to bad weather, and scored a facile 3 1/2-length victory. His trainer Mike Maker has done well here in the past, winning four prior renewals of this test. Battaglia runner-up Dynamic Racer (Run Away and Hide) owns a win over this strip as well in a one-mile optional claimer Jan. 3, while third-place finisher Dabo (Temple City) has just one win in four starts, a debut score at Arlington in August. Somelikeithotbrown’s biggest threat is likely to come from the undefeated Skywire (Afleet Alex). The bay opened his account with a victory sprinting over the Woodbine synthetic Dec. 9 and romped by six lengths next out when stretched to two turns on the dirt at Gulfstream Feb. 13. View the full article
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A total of 72 juveniles have been catalogued for Keeneland’s April Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, which will be held in Lexington on Tuesday, Apr. 9 starting at 2:00 p.m. The catalog can be viewed online now, and print catalogs will be mailed the week of Mar. 18. The sale will also feature a horses of racing age section, with entries closing Friday, Mar. 15 and that catalog to be released digitally on Friday, Mar. 22 complete with Daily Racing Form past performances and Thoro-Graph and Ragozin sheets. Print catalogs for the horses of racing age section will be available Friday, Mar. 29. Keeneland will continue to accept supplemental entries for the sale. It will host a Preview Day with breezes on both the dirt and turf on Monday, Apr. 8 starting at 11 a.m. “The return of the April Sale adds further excitement to Keeneland’s Spring Meet opening weekend, which begins April 4 and includes the $1-million [GI] Toyota Blue Grass,” Keeneland Vice President of Racing and Sales Bob Elliston said. “This is a high-quality, boutique auction that boasts a proven record of success, evidenced by the two Eclipse Award winners, Lady Eli (Divine Park) and Roy H (More Than Ready), who sold at the last edition of the April Sale in 2014.” The Keeneland April 2-year-old sale had been held 1993 to 2014. View the full article
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In these days when we are all encouraged to reduce our carbon footprint, two stud masters have come up with an unusual way of saving on multiple trips with mares to visit a stallion. Captain Gerrard (Ire) has been a stalwart of Richard Kent’s Mickley Stud in Shropshire for the last nine seasons and was rewarded with his first Group 1 winner last year courtesy of the Coolmore Nunthorpe S. victory of Alpha Delphini (GB). His popularity may have waned a little over the years but one breeder who has kept the faith is Mick Channon, who combines his successful training career with his interest in Norman Court Stud in Wiltshire. Channon has been so pleased with the foals he’s bred by the son of Oasis Dream (GB) that he has decided to send him 12 mares this season. With just a handful of other mares booked, Kent and Channon decided that the sensible thing to do was for the stallion to visit Norman Court Stud rather than the other way round. “It seemed silly to drive the mares all the way up to Shropshire,” said Channon. “We have plenty of room here and we’re all set up with Sixties Icon (GB) and Coulsty (Ire) so it seemed a good idea to shuttle Captain Gerrard here. He’ll stay for a month or so and it’s not really a commercial arrangement as such but if anyone wants to use him while he’s here they can, and he’ll be back at Mickley in time to cover any other mares booked to him.” Winner of the G3 Cornwallis S. at two and later the G3 Palace House S., Captain Gerrard stayed in training until he was four, winning six of his 27 starts for trainer Bryan Smart and owner Reg Bond. He stands for a fee of £1,500. “He gets winners all over,” Channon added. “We’ve got six or seven 2-year-olds to let loose by him this year. I’ve always liked him and always supported him.” The trainer and breeder has previously put the might of his broodmare band behind his long-term resident Sixties Icon with good effect. The St Leger-winning son of Galileo (Ire) and the Oaks winner Love Divine (GB) (Diesis) took the breeding world a little by surprise when his first-crop juveniles hit the track in 2012. His first 2-year-old winner came as early as April 8, while Chilworth Icon became his first black-type winner in the Woodcote Stakes on Derby day. “Sixties Icon is our big gun. He continues to defy convention, but then he is a Group 1 winner with a proper pedigree,” Channon added. “He’s got a good book of mares this year, and there’s the nice filly of Tom Dascombe’s, Iconic Choice (GB), who won the Radley Stakes and is entered in the 1000 Guineas. We also have Coulsty here now, who has come over from Rathasker Stud. He gave me a pleasant surprise when he arrived. He’s a lovely horse, but Maurice Burns has always had an eye for a good-looking horse.” While the trainer is looking forward to unleashing his juveniles once the turf season starts at the end of the month, his immediate priority is the Cheltenham Festival, where, among his trio of runners, he will saddle Glen Forsa (Ire) (Mahler {GB}), who is one of the leading fancies for the G1 Racing Post Arkle Novices’ Chase on Tuesday. View the full article
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‘TDN Rising Star’ Winter Sunset (Tapit) hopes to keep her perfect record in tact and earn her first graded stakes victory in Saturday’s GIII Florida Oaks at Tampa Bay Downs. The gray ran them off their feet on debut at Fair Grounds Nov. 29, taking the field from gate-to-wire for a 4 1/4-length graduation, and followed suit with a win in the Shantel Lanerie Memorial S. there Feb. 9. The runner-up from that Fair Grounds stakes Elsa (Animal Kingdom) also returns in this spot. Unlike Winter Memories, the Godolphin homebred is already a graded winner having captured the GIII Jimmy Durante S. at Del Mar Nov. 24. Concrete Rose (Twirling Candy) looks to return to winning ways in this seasonal bow. Following her first-out graduation at Saratoga Aug. 20 with a victory in Keeneland’s GIII Jessamine S. Oct. 10, the dark bay finished eighth last time in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf Nov. 2. Chad Brown can never be ignored in a turf stakes and he saddles two in here, Blowout (GB) (Dansili {GB}) and La Feve (Fr) (George Vancouver). Owned by Peter Brant, Blowout made a wide, late bid to capture her career bow over this course and distance Jan. 23. Winner of one of six starts in France for owner/trainer Bruce De Montzey, La Feve was privately purchased and transferred to Chad Brown after finishing third in the G3 Prix d’Aumale Sept. 9. The chestnut filled the same spot in her American debut in Gulfstream’s GIII Sweetest Chant S. Feb. 3. View the full article
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Former Newsells Park Stud Yearling Manager Gerry Meehan and Simon and Dr. Emma Capon have teamed up to launch Skyline Thoroughbreds, a boutique nursery that will raise weanlings and yearlings for the major European sales. Skyline Thoroughbreds will operate from Glebe Stud in Cheveley, which was purchased by the Capons recently. Simon Capon said, “Emma and I are delighted that Gerry Meehan has joined us as partner in Skyline Thoroughbreds and we are all very excited about the new venture. We are determined to work hard to prepare yearlings to the highest quality for clients.” Meehan, who was yearling manager of Newsells for the last 15 years, added, “I am very excited to have been offered the good fortune of becoming a partner of Skyline Thoroughbreds. I’ve always wanted to do this for myself but never had the funding to go out on my own, and this is the perfect opportunity for me. Glebe Stud is an ideal place for a boutique Thoroughbred nursery as it is situated on the edge of a very peaceful village, with plenty of lush pasture to naturally raise yearlings. “We have a unique business model whereby we will only raise weanlings and yearlings on the stud, and we will also offer yearling preparation for clients who still wish to consign their own yearlings. Simon and Emma are carrying out extensive works to enhance the existing facilities here at Glebe Stud and I am very much looking forward to our inaugural yearling preparation season.” View the full article
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Big Impression From Le Havre Colt A Chantilly
Wandering Eyes posted a topic in The Rest of the World
Sent off the 17-10 favourite on this debut, Shadwell’s Motamarris (Ire) (Le Havre {Ire}) quickly imposed himself at the head of the affairs in this newcomers’ affair at Chantilly. Always travelling well within himself, the homebred bay had killed the contest halfway up the straight and hit the line with purpose seven lengths ahead of Youmna (Fr) (French Fifteen {Fr}). The listed-placed dam’s first foal was the useful Riqa (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), who managed three seconds at that level before producing this stable’s G3 Prix de Cabourg, G3 Prix de Meautry and G3 Prix du Petit Couvert scorer Tantheem (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}). Freddy Head knows this family well, having handled most of the immediate relatives and masterminded the career of the dam’s half-brother Tamayuz (GB) (Nayef), hero of the G1 Prix Jacques Le Marois and G1 Prix Jean Prat. The fourth dam is Allegretta (GB) (Lombard {Ger}), dam of the incomparable megamare Urban Sea (Miswaki). Thamarat, who also threw the listed-placed filly Saraaba (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}), has a 2-year-old colt by Invincible Spirit (Ire) named Sharib (GB). 3rd-Chantilly, €25,000, Debutantes, 3-8, 3yo, c/g, 9 1/2f (AWT), 1:57.07, st. MOTAMARRIS (IRE) (c, 3, Le Havre {Ire}–Thamarat {GB} {SP-Fr}, by Anabaa) Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, €12,500. Video, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton. O-Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum; B-Shadwell Estate Co Ltd (IRE); T-Freddy Head. View the full article -
It’s been great to have runners again and get some routine back at Bankhouse. We have already had 3 winners in the past few days and we are getting much needed runs into some of the horses. All eyes will be on Cheltenham next week but unfortunately it looks like we are not going to […] The post Donald McCain Blog appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
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Sweden’s Lady Jockeys’ Thoroughbred World Championship has been re-branded the Women Jockeys’ World Cup, and will be contested this year on June 30 at Bro Park in Stockholm. The event is designed to expand international opportunities for professional female jockeys and has attracted riders from as far afield as Hong Kong, New Zealand and South America. Dennis Madsen, Svensk Galopp’s Director of Racing, said, “We are looking forward to welcoming some of the world’s most accomplished female riders to Sweden at the end of June for what is guaranteed to be another competitive event. “Races for female jockeys have become a popular feature at Bro Park since the opening meeting in June 2016 when three of the races were dedicated to female riders, and we are delighted to have this opportunity to showcase the talent of female elite athletes from around the world and provide them with a platform to inspire future generations.” View the full article