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14:00 Haydock A competitive race that will test the stamina of many. Ami Debois ran a cracker to finish third in the Welsh Grand National Trial at Chepstow earlier this month, with the winner Ramses De Teillee going on to finish second in the National itself just two days ago. A prior winner at the course, […] The post Picks From The Paddock Best Bet – Sunday 30th December appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
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It was a familiar pair teaming up to win the best race on Saturday’s card, with John Size and Joao Moreira taking out the Class Two Shek Mun Handicap (1,400m) with Mr So And So. But despite the four-year-old holding out the impressive Superich, Size was realistic about a horse that has now won two on the trot. “He did a good job. He’s not over endowed with talent, I wouldn’t think, but he’s a good little workman horse, he does his job,” Size said. “Both... View the full article
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We all like the idea of ‘stallion-making races’, even if such a concept is clearly nonsense. We rarely, if ever, hear of ‘broodmare-making races.’ If we did, it seems safe to assume that the 1990 G1 Prix de Diane would often be mentioned. With Rafha (GB) beating Moon Cactus (GB), that race produced not merely a quinella for their sire Kris (GB) (Sharpen Up) and their trainer Henry Cecil, but also for two fillies who would go on to become hugely influential broodmares (it should be noted that Moon Cactus actually finished third, but was promoted to second when Colour Chart was taken down two places for having caused interference). From Moon Cactus we had four stakes winners in the first generation headed by the Sadler’s Wells full-siblings Moonshell (Ire) and Doyen (Ire), with the likes of Miss Finland (Aus) (Redoute’s Choice {Aus}), Stay With Me (Aus) (Street Cry {Ire}) and Miss World (Bernstein) coming along afterwards. Rafha has been an even greater gem, and 2018 has seen further chapters written in her story. Born in 1987, Rafha was a first-generation Prince Faisal homebred. Operating as Nawara Stud, Prince Faisal started to build up his stud through the 1980s. Both the stud and Rafha’s influence on it are still going strong, with its credits in 2018 including the homebred Prix de Saint-Patrick winner Orbaan (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who is inbred 2×3 to the great mare. Prince Faisal bought Rafha’s dam Eljazzi (Ire) (Artaius) for 92,000gns as a yearling in 1982, presumably aiming to have a smart filly who could become one of his foundation mares. He could hardly have chosen more wisely. Eljazzi would have made a lovely broodmare even if she had not been a good racehorse. She was a half-sister to two high-class sons of Petingo: Pitcairn (Ire) and Valley Forge (Ire). The former was particularly topical as he had been champion sire of Great Britain and Ireland two years previously (albeit that he was already standing in Japan by that time) largely thanks to the exploits of his outstanding 4-year-old son Ela-Mana-Mou (Ire). Border Bounty (GB) (Bounteous {GB}), dam of Pitcairn, Valley Forge and Eljazzi, had been a terrific filly, runner-up in both the Yorkshire Oaks and Park Hill S. in 1968, while Border Bounty’s half-sister Brief Chorus (Counsel) was also placed in the Yorkshire Oaks (in 1966). As it was, Eljazzi, trained by Henry Cecil, retired to stud with a racing record which was decent, if not quite as smart as her pedigree. She was an impressive winner on debut as a juvenile at Leicester and, while she did not win at three, she ran extremely well in defeat at Newmarket when beaten in a photo-finish by Scottish Derby winner and GI Breeders’ Cup Turf and GI Hollywood Turf Cup Invitational S. place-getter Raami (Ire) (Be My Guest). Conceived in 1986, the year after her sire Kris had been champion sire of Great Britain and Ireland thanks to his fillies’ Triple Crown-winning daughter Oh So Sharp (GB), Rafha proved to be the best of Eljazzi’s 10 winners. She was a very good 2-year-old, winning a six-furlong maiden at Goodwood on debut and ending her campaign by beating subsequent G1 Irish Oaks victrix Knight’s Baroness (GB) (Rainbow Quest) in the G3 May Hill S. over a mile at Doncaster. At three she was at least as good, winning the Princess Elizabeth S. at Epsom by 10 lengths, beating Spurned (Robellino) who subsequently became dam of seven black-type performers headed by Passing Glance (GB) (Polar Falcon); the Lingfield Oaks Trial S., again beating Knight’s Baroness; and the G1 Prix de Diane at Chantilly. Nearly as good was Rafha’s half-sister Chiang Mai (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells), who landed the G3 Blandford S. over 10 furlongs at The Curragh, while another black-type performer among Eljazzi’s 10 winners was Al Anood (Aus) (Danehill), who was born in Australia when her dam was aged 22. All three of these fillies became excellent broodmares. Chiang Mai’s several winners are headed by Chinese White (Ire) (Dalakhani {Ire}), winner of five black-type contests including the G1 Pretty Polly S. and the G2 Blandford S. Al Anood has bred one even better: Pride Of Dubai (Aus) (Street Cry {Ire}), who completed the G1 Blue Diamond S. and G1 AJC Sires’ Produce S. double in 2015 and now spends his time shuttling between Coolmore in Australia and Ireland. Rafha is the true star, though, with 11 winners to her credit. Four of them are stakes winners headed by G1 Haydock Park Sprint Cup and G3 Duke Of York S. winner Invincible Spirit (Ire) (Green Desert) and G3 John Porter S. and G3 Ormonde S. winner Sadian (GB) (Shirley Heights {GB}). Even more to her credit is that she has bred two top-class stallions: Invincible Spirit and his three-parts brother Kodiac (Ire) (Danehill). The extent of their achievements is illustrated by the fact that in 2019 they will be standing at the Irish National Stud for €120,000 and at Tally Ho Stud for €65,000, having started out at those properties for €10,000 and €5,000, respectively. Invincible Spirit and Kodiac have both had yet another extremely good year with their runners. The former (whose progeny tally of Group 1 victories currently stands at 32) was represented by three top-level winners in 2018: G1 Commonwealth Cup winner Eqtidaar (Ire), G1 Vertem Futurity Trophy winner Magna Grecia (Ire) and G1 Criterium International winner Royal Meeting (Ire). He came very close to making it four as Inns Of Court (Ire) failed by only a short head in the G1 Prix de la Foret. Kodiac has had two Group 1 winners this year: the remarkable Best Solution, winner in 2018 of the G1 Grosser Preis von Berlin, the G1 Grosser Preis von Baden and the G1 Caulfield Cup, and Fairyland, who showed herself to be more typical of her sire’s stock by taking the G1 Cheveley Park S. over six furlongs at Newmarket. Fairyland thus became Kodiac’s second Cheveley Park S. heroine following the brilliant Tiggy Wiggy (Ire), who won the race in 2014. Jash (Ire) came close to making it three individual Group 1 winners in 2018 for Kodiac by finishing second, beaten only half a length, in the G1 Middle Park S. at Newmarket. Another aspect of the excellent year enjoyed by Invincible Spirit is how well some of his sons are doing at stud. The real star is the remarkable I Am Invincible (Aus), who finished second to Snitzel (Aus) (Redoute’s Choice {Aus}) in Australia’s general sires’ premiership last season and who is currently lying second behind the same horse this term. Particularly creditable is the fact that I Am Invincible has had at least one stakes winner this season (which is particularly good as the season is not yet five months old) from each of his crops of racing age, ie., of ages seven to two inclusive. Two of these winners have scored in Group 1 company this season: G1 Winterbottom S. hero Voodoo Lad (Aus) and G1 NZ 1,000 Guineas victrix Media Sensation (Aus). Lawman (Ire) ranks as the senior Invincible Spirit stallion in Europe thus far, particularly now that he is getting established as a broodmare sire too, largely thanks to the brilliantly fast Battaash (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}). However, Kingman (GB) is looking particularly promising. His first batch of 2-year-old runners through the season has marked him down as potentially a leading sire of the future; while one could also make bullish noises about Charm Spirit (Ire). Mayson (GB) continues to churn out winners, and high hopes are held for the likes of Shalaa (Ire), Territories (Ire), Profitable (Ire), National Defense (GB) and Cable Bay (Ire). The ongoing success of both Invincible Spirit and Kodiac will be very encouraging for Coolmore, who not only have Pride Of Dubai on the roster, but also Gustav Klimt as a new recruit for 2019. Kodiac’s full-sister Massarra (GB) has proved to be the most notable of several distinguished fillies produced by Rafha, a group which also includes G3 Princess Royal S. winner Acts Of Grace (Bahri). On the track Massarra’s finest hour came when, trained (like Invincible Spirit, Kodiac and Acts Of Grace) for Sheikh Faisal by John Dunlop, she landed the Empress S. at Newmarket in 2001. Later that season she was placed in the G2 Prix Robert Papin at Maisons-Laffitte, while the following spring she finished second in the G3 Nell Gwyn S. at Newmarket. At stud she has, like her dam, been a great producer. Her 10 winners are headed by G1 Gran Criterium heroine Nayarra (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}) who was trained for Prince Faisal by Mick Channon. She has also bred four black-type performers by Galileo: Wonderfully (Ire), Cuff (Ire), Mars (Ire) and Gustav Klimt (Ire). The latter showed himself to be one of the best colts in Europe in both 2017 (when he won the G2 Superlative S. at Newmarket) and 2018, when he took the 2000 Guineas Trial S. at Leopardstown as well as finishing second in the G1 St James’s Palace S. at Royal Ascot and third in the G1 Irish 2000 Guineas at The Curragh, the G1 Haydock Park Sprint Cup and the G1 Prix Jean Prat at Chantilly. One presumes that Prince Faisal was hoping that Eljazzi would be a useful asset to his stud when he bought her as a yearling back in 1982. Not even in his wildest dreams, though, could he have foreseen just what a pearl she would prove to be. Her Classic-winning daughter Rafha can take the lioness’s share of the credit for her influence, and recent evidence is that that influence is still very, very strong. View the full article
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Affable trainer Chris So Wai-yin feared he would not make it in Hong Kong during his first day on the job so his relief was clear for all to see when he notched up his 200th career winner on Saturday at Sha Tin. The 50-year-old showed up to the first meeting of the 2013-14 season with just 23 horses in his stable after working as an assistant trainer under legendary horseman Tony Cruz. So admitted he had come a long way since he first started after his classy galloper Tianchi Monster romped to... View the full article
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He is one of Hong Kong’s most recognisable faces and singer, actor and dancer Aaron Kwok Fu-shing was the star attraction on another stage on Saturday, with his horse Dancing Fighter saluting at Sha Tin. Looking the part with resplendent yellow hair, Kwok was subject to a media scrum rarely seen at Sha Tin after the Caspar Fownes-trained Dancing Fighter hung tough to win the Class Four Lee On Handicap (1,000m) in his first start. “Thank you to my great trainer Caspar, my old friend... View the full article
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13:20 Leopardstown As always it’s been a fantastic week of top-class action from Leopardstown so far this week but the Rich Ricci silks haven’t been as dominant as years gone by. With Getabird losing earlier in the week and Faugheen’s unfortunate fall yesterday it’s up to Limini to help lift the spirits of the once […] The post Picks From The Paddock Best Bet – Saturday 29th December appeared first on RaceBets Blog EN. View the full article
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The California Thoroughbred Business League (CTBL), responsible for overseeing funds utilized for providing workers’ compensation insurance relief to horsemen, has seen steadily increasing workers’ compensation rates in the state of California. The cost of the 2019 program is expected to increase by 3% over 2018, or by more than $13.7 million for Thoroughbreds. Per-start fees will be increased from $100 to $106 to cover the owners’ portion of funding. As before, the per-start fee will be automatically deducted from the owner’s paymaster account every time that owner starts a horse, effective Jan. 1. The Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) board voted unanimously to increase Guaranteed Participation Purses by $6 per start to offset the costs. In addition, starting Jan. 1, owners of horses who finish fifth or beyond–whenever their share of purse money is less than the Guaranteed Participation Purse–will be paid $300 per start at Golden Gate Fields and $351 per start at Southern California tracks to include increased costs for third party Lasix administration and jockey fees. View the full article
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As part of continued restructuring at Santa Anita Park, two long-time employees, Andy LaRocco and Jason Spetnagel, have been promoted to the positions of Track Superintendent and Vice President of Operations, respectively. LaRocco, who has been part of Santa Anita’s track maintenance crew for 37 years, replaces Dennis Moore, who is resigning effective Dec. 31. LaRocco has been Moore’s chief assistant for the past five years. “It’s really an honor to be following Dennis in this position,” said LaRocco. “I believe Santa Anita is the top track in the country and I know I speak for my entire crew when I say we’re ready and that we will continue to have the same track maintenance program that we’ve had the past five years. We intend to provide the jockeys, horsemen, and the betting public with the safest and most consistent surface we possibly can every day.” Spetnagel first worked as part of Santa Anita’s turf course crew in 1994 and eventually held several positions at Golden Gate Fields. He returned to Santa Anita in 2007 as Director of Facilities and Grounds. “I am grateful for this opportunity and I’m looking forward to being part of Santa Anita’s continuing success,” said Spetnagel. “Santa Anita is obviously a very special place and we intend to keep it that way. I think our employees take a special pride in working here and I’m blessed to have such a talented team. We’re all excited for the future.” View the full article
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Santa Anita Park has announced that a pair of longtime employees, Andy LaRocco and Jason Spetnagel, have been promoted to respective positions as track superintendent and vice president of operations. View the full article
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French-born jockey Christophe-Patrice Lemaire rode four winners on Friday’s year-ending program at Nakayama Racecourse to finish on 215 victories, breaking the previous record of 212 winners in a season set in 2005 by the legendary Yutaka Take. Lemaire, who will turn 40 next May, had eight mounts on the card, each of which was well-backed, and he equaled Take’s mark with a victory aboard favoured Schwarzwald (Jpn) (Black Tide {Jpn}) in the day’s fourth race, a 2-year-old maiden over 1800m. After just missing in the next on the program, Lemaire partnered with the white 2-year-old colt Maillot Blanc (Jpn) (Johannesburg) to post a 1 3/4-length success in a 1200-metre newcomers’ test on the dirt to secure the record. For good measure, he added wins aboard even-money Red Anela (Jpn) (Casino Drive) in race eight and astride 32-5 shot Andes Queen (Jpn) (Turtle Bowl {Ire}) in the 10th. He guided Admire Justa (Jpn) (Just a Way {Jpn}) to a runner-up effort in the G1 Hopeful S. Lemaire rode at a 27.8% clip in 2018 and easily outdistanced Mirco Demuro to win the premiership. His mounts finished in the top three 58% of the time and also allowed Lemaire to post a single-season earnings mark of ¥4.66 billion (£33.3m/€36.9m/A$59.9m/US$42.2m). Lemaire’s marquee mount was the 3-year-old filly Almond Eye (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}), who provided the rider with a second G1 Japan Cup success in addition to a sweep of the Japanese Filly Triple Crown. He also piloted 2017 G1 Japanese Derby hero Rey de Oro (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}) to win the G1 Tenno Sho (Autumn). WATCH: Maillot Blanc gives Christophe Lemaire his record-breaking 213th win of 2018 View the full article
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On late Wednesday night, I learned reading the TDN that Dan Kenny passed away. In November 2002, both Keeneland and Fasig-Tipton committed to a 3-year promotional strategy, coordinated through KTOB, that sought to broaden our buying bench with overseas buyers from Mexico, South Korea and Western Canada. There was universal support for involving Dan to be involved in activities in Alberta, and I first got to know him on a July 2003 trip to Alberta. His most memorable lines from a seminar at Northlands was a story he attributed to Woody Stephens about the importance of checking a yearling’s tail before purchasing. We had an abundance of Canadian horsemen and women from Alberta and BC by the fall sales (some lifting tails in September), which led to Dan accompanying Tom Thornbury and me to Chile, Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil in March 2004. In the Andean highlands well south of Santiago, Dan told us the story about his trip to Russia to attempt repatriating Leo Castelli; apparently Gracioso’s paddock and surroundings at Haras Paso Nevado was like what he’d seen at Vozkhod Stud. It occurred to me on Wednesday evening that having Dan along on those first attempts of a fledgling initiative were vital to its eventual success, and that his qualities as a horseman, along with being sincerely affable and confident, are the same regional traits that attracted strong business investment from those areas, not only bloodstock, but now some of our most important farms. Canada is a vast country and not uncomplicated business culture, and Dan earned respect of horsemen, oilmen, miners, biotech and brewing moguls from coast to coast. I shall miss him. Chauncey Morris Kentucky Thoroughbred Association Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners & Breeders, Inc. View the full article
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If Christophe Lemaire was the human star of the final day of racing on the JRA circuit, Carrot Farm’s Saturnalia (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}) was his equine counterpart, as the impeccably bred colt ran his record to a perfect three-from-three and quite probably locked up the juvenile championship with a soft victory in the G1 Hopeful S. First to break the line beneath second-leading rider Mirco Demuro, the odds-on pop led by the stands for the first time, but was overtaken by 40-1 Cosmo Calendula (Jpn) (Novellist {Ire}) at the first corner and was only too happy to take the sit from just off the leader into the back straight. Into the box seat when the Lemaire-ridden second favorite Admire Justa (Jpn) (Just a Way {Jpn}) rolled up approaching the entrance to the far turn, Saturnalia still traveled comfortably on the back of the pacesetter, but there were some nervous moments entering the final 350m when short of racing room. But Demuro never panicked aboard the favourite and the duo finally bulled their way between Admire Juste and Breaking Dawn (Jpn) (Victoire Pisa {Jpn}) at the furlong grounds before going on to a relatively easy success. Nishino Daisy (Jpn) (Harbinger {GB}) closed well for third. “I knew I was riding the strongest 2-year-old of the season, but it was his first time over 2000 metres, so I was a little worried,” Demuro admitted. “He really showed his strength though, squeezing his way through the narrow opening. I am really looking forward to his 3-year-old season.” Pedigree Notes: Saturnalia is one of a remarkable 140 winners from the first two crops of his impressive young sire and joins Mile Championship hero Stelvio (Jpn) and Japan Cup victrix Almond Eye (Jpn) as top-level winners in just the last month. He becomes the sixth GSW for Lord Kanaloa. Saturnalia’s champion dam was a star in her own right, winning five of six in the Carrot Farm green and white, including the 2005 Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) before annexing that year’s GI American Oaks at Hollywood Park by a resounding four lengths in stakes-record time (video). Cesario has been equally important at stud, her seven winners from eight to race include G1 Japan Cup and G1 Kikuka Sho hero Epiphaneia (Jpn) (Symboli Kris S.), champion 2-year-old colt Leontes (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}) and the latter’s full-brother Globe Theatre (Jpn), third to future G1 Japanese Derby hero Rey de Oro (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}) in this event in 2016 when still contested as a Group 2 race. Epiphaneia’s full-sister Rosalind (Jpn) is the dam of Arden Forest (Jpn) (Rulership {Jpn}), a maiden winner at second asking at Hanshin Dec. 2. Cesario is the dam of a yearling filly by King Kamehameha (Jpn) and a weanling colt from the first crop of Horse of the Year Maurice (Jpn). Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. Friday, Nakayama, Japan HOPEFUL S.-G1, ¥135,380,000, Nakayama, 12-28, 2yo, 2000mT, 2:01.60, fm. 1–SATURNALIA (JPN), 121, c, 2, by Lord Kanaloa (Jpn) 1st Dam: Cesario (Jpn) (Ch. 3yo Filly & MSW-Jpn, GISW-US, $2,578,568), by Special Week (Jpn) 2nd Dam: Kirov Premiere (GB), by Sadler’s Wells 3rd Dam: Querida (Ire), by Habitat *1ST GROUP 1 WIN. 1ST GROUP WIN. O-Carrot Farm; B-Northern Farm; T-Kazuya Nakatake; J-Mirco Demuro; ¥70,966,000. Lifetime Record: 3-3-0-0, ¥94,141,000. *1/2 to Epiphaneia (Jpn) (Symboli Kris S.), MG1SW-Jpn, $6,693,376; Leontes (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}), Ch. 2yo Colt & G1SW-Jpn, $1,112,892; and Globe Theatre (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}), GSP-Jpn, $858,734. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. 2–Admire Justa (Jpn), 121, c, 2, Just a Way (Jpn)–Admire Teresa (Jpn), by Helissio (Fr). (¥140,000,000 Wlg ’16 JRHAJUL). O-Riichi Kondo; B-Northern Farm; ¥28,276,000. 3–Nishino Daisy (Jpn), 121, c, 2, Harbinger (GB)–Nishino Hinagiku (Jpn), by Agnes Tachyon (Jpn). O-Shigeyuki Nishiyama; B-Tanikawa Farm; ¥18,138,000. Margins : 1HF, 3/4, 1HF. Odds: 0.80, 5.20, 5.60. Also Ran: Cosmo Calendula (Jpn), Breaking Dawn (Jpn), Vin de Garde (Jpn), Hiruno Dakar (Jpn), King Listeia (Jpn), Mikki Black (Jpn), Madre Voice (Jpn), Just a Gigolo (Jpn), Hakusan Taiyo (Jpn), Tanino Drama (Jpn). WATCH: Saturnalia far too classy in the Hopeful S. View the full article
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Dale Romans is among the sport’s top trainers. His wins include the G1 Dubai World Cup, the GI Preakness, the GI Travers, three Breeders’ Cup races, and in 2012 an Eclipse Award as the sport’s top trainer. But there’s a lot more to the person than what you see on the racetrack. In this edition of “The Last Word,” we touch all the bases with Dale Romans. TDN: You once said your most prized possession is a watch that came from Bill Clinton. What’s the story behind that? DR: When we won the (GI) Travers, we got a Longines watch. I decided to give it to my assistant. One of the owners of Keen Ice was a very close friend of Clinton’s and he was really impressed by that gesture I made giving the watch to my assistant. Clinton had had 10 Shinola watches made up and my owner and his friend had one of them. They have the presidential seal on the back and the Bill Clinton presidential seal on the front. He took it off his wrist and gave it to me and said he’d have no problem getting another one for himself from the president. TDN: You’re a big guy. You have the perfect body to be, say, an offensive lineman. Did you play any sports in high school and were you any good? DR: I played high school football and I had an opportunity to play at Morehead State, but my grades weren’t very good. So I didn’t make that, so I went into training horses instead. My struggles in high school have been well documented. TDN: You struggled academically because you have dyslexia. To this day, how does that affect your life? DR: I have never sent an email and I’ve only read one book in my life. But I’ve found a perfect career for someone like myself. Dyslexia is a very broad term. There are a lot of different versions. My mother, she worked around the clock with me to make sure I got all the best treatments, all the best help. To me, the most impressive thing I’ve ever seen a person do is sit down in front of a computer or a typewriter and write a letter. For me, that would never be possible. TDN: School must have been a nightmare for you? DR: School was a nightmare, but I had a lot of good support. We didn’t have much money, but my mother was never going to let me slip through the cracks. She did everything she could to make sure I survived. She made a deal with me when I got to high school. She said, “I’ll never talk about your grades. Just get straight A’s in context and do whatever you have to do to graduate high school.” And I did. TDN: If I gave you a shot of truth serum, would you still tell us you really thought you were going to beat American Pharoah in the Travers with Keen Ice? DR: I thought we had a very good chance to beat American Pharoah and not because we were a better horse than him. He was obviously a great, great horse. But we had a great horse and we had a great horse that was going in the right direction and we just thought Pharoah had to be getting a little bit tired. If we were ever going to beat him, it was going to be that day. TDN: What do you consider your biggest accomplishment in the sport to be? DR: My biggest accomplishment has been being able to do it with my family and the crew of people working with me. It’s not an individual race because we’ve had so many great moments in individual races. One of the great things about the game is it’s a family game. My family is always together and my team is also my family. My assistant and I have been together for 30 years and his wife has been with us the same amount of time. I have grooms that have been with us for 20 years. I’m proud of the fact we are all one big family and one team. TDN: You are a second-generation trainer, following in the footsteps of your father, Jerry. Will there be a third generation from the Romans family to go into training? DR: Probably not. I have two children, Bailey, 25, and Jacob, 22. He’s now an agent. Jacob is in the industry and doing very well and I’m very proud of him. Bailey, as soon as she got out of college, went to work on the political scene. She worked for Hillary Clinton for two years, then she ran a campaign for someone trying to win a house seat in New Jersey. Now she lives in Chicago raising money for Democratic candidates. TDN: Few trainers interact with the fans as much as you do. You have a podcast where fans can send in questions and you answer them and you never turn down an interview. Why are those things important to you? DR: There are two people who put money into this game and that’s the owner and the bettor. The forum the fans have to get inside the industry is through the media or with social media. To me, it’s just logical. This is such a great game from all aspects. It’s not just about betting $2. The more we can expose them to the greatness of the game, the more we can develop fans and the bigger and stronger the game is. Click here to read the rest of this story in the December TDN Weekend. View the full article
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What a time to be alive! I’ve seen it said on Twitter and elsewhere that the Triple Crown races are nothing more than a series of “restricted” races for 3-year-olds, and, therefore, not as important as the “unrestricted” Grade I races for older horses. To diminish the accomplishments of Triple Crown winner Justify (Scat Daddy) in this way is either ignorance or a line of historical revisionism used by some to make a case for Accelerate (Lookin At Lucky) as Horse of the Year. Racing is a microcosm of society, and just as some longstanding institutions of the social order are under threat these days, perhaps it’s not that surprising to see the Triple Crown, one of racing’s greatest institutions, spoken of so cavalierly. We are living through a period where the significance of the past is being conveniently ignored for the construction of newer narratives within a historical void. But this conceit won’t hold water in the long run because it is on precedence that historical significance is measured. And historical significance should be at the heart of the debate of Accelerate versus Justify for Horse of the Year. In the modern era of the last 50 years or so, there have been five Triple Crown winners in the U.S.: Secretariat (’73), Seattle Slew (’77), Affirmed (’78), American Pharoah (’15), and Justify (’18). Each of these colts had to win the 10-furlong GI Kentucky Derby, the 9.5-furlong GI Preakness, and the 12-furlong GI Belmont S. within a period of five weeks, which is a debilitating task and an exceptional achievement, and it’s why there have been so few to accomplish the feat. In fact, as the 37 years between Affirmed and American Pharoah dragged along, there was talk from many quarters about changing the format of the Classics, either by reducing race distances or extending time between them, as a method for manufacturing the possibility of another Triple Crown winner. That’s how hopeless things seemed, and breeders specifically were blamed during this span for producing softer and speedier horses lacking toughness and the requisite stamina. But in the end, the institution stood as it had, despite repeated efforts for change, and American Pharoah and Justify arrived as examples of excellence that linked them by achievement to America’s past Golden Age. Some have forgotten this. Others, including Andy Beyer, who recently said that Accelerate should be Horse of the Year over Justify, have changed their minds. But what Beyer compellingly wrote in the Washington Post in ’93 is still the case today: “The Triple Crown is exceptionally demanding and difficult–but that’s what it’s supposed to be. There are no tests in horse racing, and few in any sport, that are so reliable as a measurement of excellence. One might think that in a weak year a moderately talented animal might be able to get lucky and dominate his rivals over a five-week period. But this never happens. The four horses who have swept the series in the last 45 years–Citation, Secretariat, Seattle Slew, and Affirmed–ran among the very best of all time.” The Classics are for 3-year-olds–as they are in Europe, from where they were modeled–and the best of each crop is aimed for them. They are the races that make reputations, garner the most prestige for owners and breeders, and have the greatest fan interest, particularly when a Triple Crown is on the line. And as Beyer wrote, to sweep all three has never been easy. There have been only 13 Triple Crown winners dating back almost 100 years. And every Triple Crown winner since the ’70s, except for Justify–who was retired after the Belmont because of an injury–has also gone on to defeat older horses. More tellingly, however, each was voted Horse of the Year at three, because those voters at the time knew the enormity of their accomplishments. Some Case Histories Justify was undefeated and the winner of four Grade l races in six starts. He didn’t race at two. The last horse to win the Kentucky Derby without a start at two was Apollo in 1882, which is quite something when you think about it. Justify’s rise to Triple Crown winner, then, was as historic as it was meteoric and improbable, but the fairytale ended when a bothersome ankle forced his premature retirement. Out of action for the second half of the year, Justify’s brief campaign became fodder for the what-have-you-done-for-me-lately crowd, especially on Twitter. With a big syndication price around his neck and the notion that his record was being protected; a trainer, Bob Baffert, who’s not popular on social media; an ownership group of multiple partnerships, including the ubiquitous Sol Kumin, that was ridiculed on social media; and the stigma of not having beaten older horses, Justify’s popularity started to wane as the year wore on and Accelerate’s wins accumulated. Accelerate had an excellent year and won six of seven starts, including five Grade l races and the important year-end target of the last quarter-century, the Gl Breeders’ Cup Classic. He became a natural “populist” opponent to Justify for Horse of the Year, a disruptor to the establishment. I won’t address the “social furor” surrounding Justify and his connections, but I can address the issue of the colt not defeating older horses with this: Neither did Seattle Slew or Affirmed as 3-year-olds. Seattle Slew lost to J.O. Tobin, the English champion 2-year-old of ’76, in his only start after the Triple Crown and never faced older horses at three, while Affirmed, who did, lost to Seattle Slew and Exceller the only two times he faced his seniors. That didn’t stop either from being named Horse of the Year during their Triple Crown seasons, because of the weight of those three elusive wins. I don’t necessarily believe that winning the Triple Crown should guarantee automatic Horse of the Year selection–and for the record, I don’t vote–but as I said on Twitter recently, a Triple Crown winner’s “competition must be of such lofty status as to deny him the honor. In ’77, Forego wasn’t enough to deny Slew, and in ’78 Slew wasn’t enough to deny Affirmed.” In fact, the vote for Horse of the Year in ’77 was close. Forego, an all-time great and the reigning three-time Horse of the Year, had won four of seven starts and was weighted at 136 pounds for the Grade I Marlboro Cup after winning the Grade I Woodward under 133 pounds to end a three-race losing streak. Unfortunately, the popular weight carrier’s famously fragile ankles didn’t hold up and he was forced to miss the Marlboro Cup and was put away for the year. Had he won that race, he’d have been the first to pass the $2 million earnings mark and would likely and deservedly been voted his fourth consecutive Horse of the Year title over a Triple Crown winner. The next year, Exceller defeated both Seattle Slew and Affirmed in the Grade I Jockey Club Gold Cup to finish the season with a sparkling record of seven wins from 10 starts, including six Grade I races on turf and dirt, but he won no awards, with Affirmed voted Horse of the Year and Seattle Slew best older horse. That was a tough break for a thoroughly top-class horse. In this context, Accelerate doesn’t stack up next to such greats as Forego or Seattle Slew and maybe not even Exceller, and if those three couldn’t turn the tables on Triple Crown winners, it beggars belief that Accelerate could topple Justify. But we’re living through some strange times where norms have been discarded, and the ultimate decision on which horse is voted Horse of the Year will probably say more about us than him. Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks. View the full article
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Members of the TDN staff reveal what TDN Rising Star they’re most excited to see race in 2019. When a trainer as patient as Hall of Famer Bill Mott unleashes a win-early, blowout maiden winner on the dirt–standouts like Royal Delta, Close Hatches, Elate, To Honor and Serve and Speightster all come to mind–there’s a very good chance that you may have just witnessed something special. The lightly raced Mucho (Blame) obviously has a long way to go to join that illustrious honor roll, but he certainly hinted that he could be any kind after airing by 9 3/4 lengths at the Spa and earning a 90 Beyer Speed Figure at second asking this past summer. The Claiborne Farm and Adele Dilschneider homebred’s subsequent runner-up finish a month later with a wide trip as the even-money favorite in the prestigious GI Hopeful S. may look even better in hindsight now as well after Walker Hancock revealed in TDN APBs last week that the bay exited that performance with an ankle issue. After getting plenty of time to recuperate-no surgery was required–Mucho is back in training at Mott’s Payson Park base and could launch his highly anticipated sophomore campaign in an allowance race in late February. –Steve Sherack, Senior Editor View the full article
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An intriguing cast of locally based runners and East Coast invaders will square off in Saturday’s GI American Oaks at Santa Anita. Alice Bamford homebred Californiagoldrush (Cape Blanco {Ire}) took the first two starts of her career locally before checking in third in the GI Del Mar Oaks Aug. 18. She made the reverse journey to Belmont to annex the GII Sands Point S. over yielding sod Sept. 15 and will be looking to provide Hall of Famer Neil Drysdale with a first American Oaks trophy. Paved (Quality Road) also merits consideration among California contingent mostly due to the strength of her second-place finish over this course and 10-furlong distance when facing her elders in the GI Rodeo Drive S. Sept. 29. The winner was Vasilika (Skipshot), who was taking her seventh of eight straight that day. Paved also boasts a convincing victory in the GII Honeymoon S. here in June, but is looking to bounce back from a 12th-place run in the much-tougher GI Breeders’ Cup F/M Turf Nov. 3. Amandine (GB) (Shamardal) is now two-for-two in the States after an impressive score in the Lady of Shamrock S. here Wednesday. Trainer Jeff Mullins told TDN‘s Bill Finley Friday that a decision about wheeling back on short rest likely wouldn’t be made until raceday. Colonia (Fr) (Champs Elysees {GB}) was extremely impressive going last to first in her Stateside debut in Arlington’s Hatoof S. in July, but she settled for fifth and third, respectively, behind Californiagoldrush in the Del Mark Oaks and Sands Point. She returned to winning ways in Keeneland’s Oct. 19 GIII Pin Oak Valley View S. after weaving her way through horses and then avoiding a foe who crashed into the rail. Ken McPeek shipped in Daddy’s Lil Darling (Scat Daddy) to score here 12 months ago, and he’ll look to double up the Nov. 23 GII Mrs Revere S. upsetter Princess Warrior (Midshipman). Chad Brown will look to check another Grade I off his ever-shrinking career checklist with Competitionofideas (Speightstown). A $325,000 KEESEP yearling, the relatively under-the-radar runner paired up maiden and first-level allowance wins at Belmont before finishing a late-on-the-scene third in the rained-off Winter Memories S. going a one-turn mile at Aqueduct Nov. 22. Brown teamed up with pilot Joel Rosario earlier this month at Del Mar to annex both the GI Hollywood Derby and GI Matriarch S., and he sent out fellow Klaravich Stables colorbearer Identity Politics (Into Mischief) to a runner-up finish in the GI Malibu S. here on opening day Wednesday. View the full article
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TDN: What was your favourite racing moment of the year? HW: Probably Roaring Lion beating Saxon Warrior in the QIPCO Irish Champion S. TDN: Name a horse that stood out for you in 2018 HW: Roaring Lion. TDN: And an outstanding achievement by a breeder, owner or trainer? HW: Amy Murphy’s handling of Kalashnikov. Brilliantly produced all last season, ran an almighty race at the Festival losing nothing in defeat and she looks to have him bang on track this season as well. TDN: What is your big hope for 2019? HW: Hot Streak’s first 2-year-olds on the track–a really exciting bunch that look precocious. TDN: What is your New Year’s resolution? HW: To take a few more days off! View the full article