Jump to content
Bit Of A Yarn

Wandering Eyes

Journalists
  • Posts

    124,717
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by Wandering Eyes

  1. There are 17 horse racing meetings set for Australia on Saturday, December 7. Our racing analysts here at horsebetting.com.au have found you the best bets and the quaddie numbers for Ascot, Ballarat, Rosehill & Eagle Farm. Saturday’s Free Horse Racing Tips – December 7, 2024 Ascot Racing Tips Ballarat Racing Tips Rosehill Racing Tips Eagle Farm Racing Tips As always, there are plenty of promotions available for Australian racing fans. Check out all the top online bookmakers to see what daily promotions they have. If you are looking for a new bookmaker for the horse racing taking place on December 7, 2024 check out our guide to the best online racing betting sites. Neds Code GETON 1 Take It To The Neds Level Neds Only orange bookie! Check Out Neds Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. What are you really gambling with? Set a deposit limit today. “GETON is not a bonus code. Neds does not offer bonus codes in Australia and this referral code does not grant access to offers. Full terms. BlondeBet Signup Code GETON 2 Punters Prefer Blondes BlondeBet Blonde Boosts – Elevate your prices! Join BlondeBet Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. WHAT ARE YOU REALLY GAMBLING WITH? full terms. 3 Next Gen Racing Betting pickleBet Top 4 Betting. Extra Place. Every Race. Join Picklebet Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. What are you really gambling with? Full terms. Recommended! 4 It Pays To Play PlayUp Aussie-owned horse racing specialists! Check Out PlayUp Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. Imagine what you could be buying instead. Full terms. Dabble Signup Code AUSRACING 5 Say Hey to the social bet! Dabble You Better Believe It Join Dabble Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. THINK. IS THIS A BET YOU REALLY WANT TO PLACE? Full terms. Bet365 Signup Code GETON 6 Never Ordinary Bet365 World Favourite! Visit Bet365 Review 18+ Gamble Responsibly. GETON is not a bonus code. bet365 does not offer bonus codes in Australia and this referral code does not grant access to offers. What’s gambling really costing you? Full terms. Horse racing tips View the full article
  2. After a quarter century at the helm of the French division of the Aga Khan Studs, Georges Rimaud will step down from that role at the end of December, making this Deauville December Sale his last. Rimaud leaves the stud stronger than ever, with four homebred sons standing at the farm, including the best sire in France, Siyouni (Fr), the best young sire in France in Zarak (Fr), and two promising newcomers, Vadeni (Fr) and Erevann (Fr). We surprised Rimaud as he was having lunch in the stud's traditional marquee on the Arqana grounds, asking him to talk about his life at the stud and what comes next for him. For Rimaud, it has always been all about the horses, and he was surprised that anyone would want to read about such things. But after some arm-twisting, we persuaded him to relent…reluctantly. SF: Nobody in racing really retires, do they? GR: It seems so, because I've rarely seen so much attention to something fairly random. SF: That must tell you something then about the regard that people have for you. GR: Well, obviously you read kind words and it is great to hear them, but one thing I learned is to be very humble in this industry, and towards the horses and the people in it. This exercise is obviously not quite something I would be very used to anyway. We do it only once in one lifetime, so I suppose it's okay. But it is embarrassing. You just get on with your job, and you try to do the best you can every day. SF: Do you plan to actually retire? GR: Retire is a word with many definitions, I suppose. I'm retiring from my job as the manager of the Aga Khan Studs in France, because that happens when you reach this age in this country. You can opt to stay, but as you all know, I have some mobility issues and to be honest, with my work I need to be out there, which I can't do as well as I have, so, in view of my age, I think it's time that I do something else. But it's not to say that I'm just going to get away onto an island and just not be around to annoy a few people any more. SF: What will you do? Describe your future life to me. GR: I don't quite know, really. I have other interests than just horses, strangely enough. Some people in this industry have no other interests than horses. I like reading. I like politics. I have several centers of interests. I also have to take care of myself, so I will be doing some things like moving house and will do some work in it and things like that. As you grow older, you have grandchildren to mind and I'll maybe travel a bit. I will do some of these things that people do when they retire. SF: If you're going to travel, what will your first trip be? GR: I am going to go to America to travel a little bit there and see some friends that I haven't seen for a long time now. SF: What will you miss the most about the job? GR: The horses. Simply the way of life with the horses. I think that is what drives everybody in this industry, at least everybody with the job that I have. SF: What will you not miss about having a daily job? GR: Truly, I really enjoyed every bit of it. I've been very lucky to do a job, or have an occupation, actually, a life for which I'm being paid for. But, actually, the thing that I will not miss is having to call or inform my superiors or people of bad news. God knows we have enough bad news in breeding horses, and that is one thing that I really did not enjoy. SF: What will you leave behind that you're really proud of? GR: I don't know if I'm proud of anything specific. I think maybe I should be satisfied. It looks like people tell me I should be satisfied with what has been done by this organization, the Aga Khan Studs. In the past few years, it appears that we've experienced a certain amount of success. I'm really proud, if that's the word you want to use, to be part of it, to have been part of it, to have worked for His Highness the Aga Khan, his daughter, Princess Zahra, and to have been able to work with these people who have high standards, and apparently to have done a satisfying job. It has been very enjoyable. SF: In your 24 years here, what has been the best change you've seen in the French breeding industry? GR: I think the thing that has changed in the recent years has been the importance of stallions in France. We have been lucky at the Aga Khan Studs to have provided some good stallions for the French breeders and European breeders. I think stallions that have marked the European book of racing, breeding and racing, to have them stand in France at a high value I think has been a change, a very good change. It needs to be continued. It's not easy. Some people are investing in stud farms and stallions to stand them in France, which is rather encouraging, especially in those years where you could wonder what's going to happen, but people are quite resilient and making good efforts to keep the stallions. That's the major change I think that I can see in the last 20 years. SF: That's not true anywhere more than at the Aga Khan Studs, though, isn't it? You're leaving with the best stallion in France, the best young stallion in France, and two very promising newcomers. GR: We do have some lovely horses. We were very fortunate to be able to breed those horses ourselves. They were bred on the farm, which is something to be very satisfied with. If we've helped the French breeders in general, then that's great. I think that has been one of the objectives of His Highness. It has been great to have these horses and for the French breeders to be able to have them, to use them, and to improve their stock. This was the great thing about working for this organization, and the people following me in this job believe that there's the means. I'm not talking just about financial means, but the envy of doing the utmost to succeed in whatever project is in place, whether it's racing, whether it's breeding, or standing stallions. We try to do everything so we can do it well. Everything is given to us as employees to do these things. Obviously it has helped me and the team to be able to have experienced a certain amount of success. SF: You are still chairman of the board at Arqana, so you can continue to work toward those same goals, can't you? GR: Yes. Staying with Arqana is obviously very satisfying for the moment. I think it's important to not just leave everything. It is great that I was there at the outset of it with His Highness and all the participants in the company, and it's great to be able to continue. The team here has been wonderful in making this company progress. There are challenging years coming ahead of us, I suppose. There have always been challenges, and you think the next challenge is going to be even worse than the past one. But there's a very good team in place. May it go on for a good bit longer. SF: Are you at all conscious as you sit here that this is your last sale? Does it feel a little melancholy, as in `this is the last time I'll be doing this?' GR: No, no. I'm not really that conscious of it. But I'll probably come in here (next year) and give some orders and people here will be saying, `What's this old man saying?' I'm not melancholy about it because, as I heard once in Kentucky, `if the devil don't bother me too much' I will still be here next year, and maybe they will let me come into this room and have a cup of coffee. Time goes on and things change. I think the team in place has loads of energy and knowledge and young minds, new ideas. You can feel it after so many years, your ideas are there and you have your ways of doing things, but there are just so many new ideas coming in. And Pierre Gasnier is coming in. He's been here with me for two years, and I'm not sure he's learned a whole lot from me because he had a lot of knowledge himself coming in. But he's adapting his ways into our own ways, and I think it's working terribly well. It's great to see that it can be done without you. You have a sense of having left something to work with in reasonably good shape. I think there's good years ahead. SF: Last question: we haven't seen you in anything but a green coat for 20 years. Will you go out and buy a coat that's not green? GR: Funny enough, I've gotten used to wearing this. I might go ahead and keep this for a while and try to support the colors. The post `It’s Been a Great Time:’ Georges Rimaud on his Pending Retirement appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  3. New Zealander has been fortunate enough to transition from life as a professional sportsperson into something he’s just as passionate about.View the full article
  4. Trainer indicates different strategy in Sha Tin feature but wouldn’t reveal his likely instructions for Joao Moreira.View the full article
  5. French trainer rode in the city as a young jockey in 2004 and now saddles Calif in the Group One Longines Hong Kong Cup (2,000m).View the full article
  6. Champion trainer aims to go one better with stallion after changing tack for Sha Tin’s biggest meeting.View the full article
  7. Progeny of Highview-based stallion Wrote bookended the card on LONGINES International Jockeys Championship (IJC) night at Happy Valley on Wednesday. Chill Chibi was successful in the Class 2 Japan Handicap (1800m) while The Azure broke maiden ranks in the Australia Handicap (1650m), and became his sire’s sixth winner from six runners in Hong Kong. “He has a 100-percent record in Hong Kong which is quite remarkable,” Highview’s Brent Gillovic said. “All six winners have been bred at Highview and they carry our BM brand.” Five-year-old gelding Chill Chibi is Wrote’s top performer in Hong Kong with six wins including two at Class 2 Level. “Class 2 racing in Hong Kong is the equivalent of stakes or group level here in New Zealand,” Gillovic said. “Class 1 is the elite level and he looks to be headed in that direction.” As a four-year-old Chill Chibi won four races in a row and finished an unlucky fourth in the Hong Kong Derby completing the 2000m feature race in 2:00.34. Chill Chibi was ridden to victory on Wednesday by World Champion jockey James McDonald, who represented New Zealand in the IJC, which made the win all the more special for Gillovic. “It was great to see James win on him,” he said. “I won a lot of trials with James onboard early in his career and his then weight of 45 kg was rather tasty, resulting in the sale of a lot of those winners to Asia.” Chill Chibi was bred by the Hong Kong Breeders Club, whose breeding operation is based at Highview. “Hong Kong Breeders Club chairperson Nicola Chu was a founding partner in the acquisition of Wrote who and they’ve enjoyed a great run of success over the last 12 months as a result,” Gillovic said. Fast Network, a winner of three of four starts, is another exciting prospect for Wrote in Hong Kong who has also reached Class 2 level. “His starts have all been over 1000m and he should be unbeaten as he was an unlucky third two starts ago,” Gillovic said. “He was unreal in his last start at Sha Tin displaying gigabyte speed, he stopped the clock at 55.83 and won easily by over four lengths, he actually ran nearly a second faster than the second place getter.” Gr.1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf (1600m) winner, Wrote is a son of High Chaparral from the family of Sadler’s Wells, Nureyev and Fairy King who carries a double up to Blue Hen mare Special. He has produced a total of 97 winners including Group One winner Pulchritudinous, Group winners Wrote To Arataki and Best Seller, stakes winner Ready About it and stakes performers Imprevu, Love Letter and High Providence. Wrote is represented by two lots in Book 1 of Karaka 2025 and eight lots in Book 2. “He enjoyed a very good sale in Book 2 at Karaka last year and we have a good line of yearlings by him for sale this year too,” Gillovic said. “He’s virtually completed the breeding season and he covered a full book of approximately 100 mares with excellent fertility.” View the full article
  8. Leading Australian jockey Luke Currie will make his first appearance in New Zealand with seven rides on Saturday’s Group One card at Trentham. Currie has ridden more than 1450 winners in his homeland, 13 of them at Group One level. He is perhaps best known for his association with Hey Doc, who he rode to victory in the Gr.1 Australian Guineas (1600m), Winterbottom Stakes (1200m) and two editions of the Manikato Stakes (1200m). He also won the Gr.1 Coolmore Stud Stakes (1200m) and William Reid Stakes (1200m) aboard star filly Sunlight. Riding overseas is nothing new for Currie, who has ridden 20 winners in Hong Kong, 14 in Mauritius, 13 in Singapore and one in Malaysia. But New Zealand is a brand-new addition to that list. “It’s my first time riding here, so I’m really looking forward to it,” the 43-year-old said. “I’ve always wanted to come over and ride here, but for one reason or another it hasn’t worked out until now. This weekend was a nice opportunity to do it, and I jumped at the chance. I’ve been fortunate enough to pick up some nice rides.” Currie has crossed the Tasman after an invitation from Brad Taylor, who spent seven years with Anthony and Sam Freedman’s stable in Victoria before returning home earlier this year to take up the role of General Manager of Racing with RACE, the operator of Awapuni and Trentham racecourses. “I always had a good relationship with Brad Taylor when he worked with Freedman Racing,” Currie said. “I’ve had quite a lot of success riding for that stable over the years, and many of those rides came about through Brad. “He spoke to my manager Travis Johnson about the possibility of coming over. I had a few rides lined up for the Ballarat Cup meeting at home on the same day, but I thought this was a nice chance to come over for a Group One meeting. Hopefully I can build some relationships and possibly set up a few opportunities to ride here again in the future.” That could include the internationally famous Karaka Millions meeting at Ellerslie on January 25. Currie’s rides on Saturday include the unbeaten filly Too Sweet in the Devan Plastics 2YO (1000m). The daughter of Satono Aladdin earned $23,000 from her debut victory at Trentham in October, which is likely enough to secure her a place in the starting gate for the Karaka Millions 2YO (1200m). “Everyone I’ve spoken to has told me what an awesome day’s racing the Karaka Millions is,” Currie said. “So if that happened to work out, it’s definitely one that I’d love to come over and experience for myself.” Too Sweet is trained by Roydon Bergerson, whose Awapuni stable will also provide Currie with his Group One ride in Saturday’s TAB Mufhasa Classic (1600m). Currie will ride Town Cryer, whose 35-start career has produced eight wins, 13 placings and more than $496,000 in prize-money. The daughter of Tavistock has black-type victories to her name in the Gr.3 Taranaki Breeders’ Stakes (1400m), Gr.3 Thompson Handicap (1600m), Listed Anzac Mile (1600m) and Listed Wairarapa Breeders’ Stakes (1600m), and she was runner-up behind Belclare in this year’s Gr.1 New Zealand Thoroughbred Breeders’ Stakes (1600m). “She’s such a consistent mare,” Currie said. “She puts herself on the speed and makes her own luck. No Group One races are easy to win, but I think she’s going to give me a nice chance. I’m looking forward to riding her.” View the full article
  9. Pearl Of Alsace is in foal and entering the final few weeks of her racing career, but trainers Shaune Ritchie and Colm Murray hope a return to her favourite track might allow her to cap her CV with a Group One breakthrough. The six-year-old will line up in Saturday’s Gr.1 TAB Mufhasa Classic (1600m) at Trentham, where her three previous starts have produced three impressive wins including the Gr.3 Cuddle Stakes (1600m). Overall, Pearl Of Alsace has won seven of her 17 starts and more than $339,820 in stakes for owner-breeder Sir Peter Vela. The daughter of Tavistock has contested five Group One races, finishing fourth in last year’s New Zealand Thoroughbred Breeders’ Stakes (1600m) and third in the Livamol Classic (2040m), followed by sevenths in this year’s Breeders’ Stakes, Arrowfield Stud Plate (1600m) and Livamol Classic. Pearl Of Alsace was served by Rich Hill Stud stallion Proisir after her Livamol run in October, and she showed immediate improvement when she returned to action with a last-start second in the Gr.2 Tauranga Stakes (1600m) on November 16. “She was served before that last-start placing and she’s now confirmed to be in foal to Proisir,” Ritchie said. “She was racing a fraction below her best earlier in the campaign. The freshen up did her good, and we were very pleased with her performance at Tauranga. “She heads into Saturday’s race with some excellent stats. She’s unbeaten in three starts at the track, and she’s won five of 10 at the 1600m distance as well. “The only little thing that hasn’t fallen perfectly into place for her is that, as an older mare now, she’s at her best when there’s a little bit of cut out of the track. The likely firm ground at Trentham on Saturday is the only negative we can find in the whole script leading into the race this weekend. “But she’s a Group One placegetter and has always shown us that she had the ability to win one. She’ll probably have only three or four more cracks at it before she goes to become a mum, so we’d love nothing more than to nail a win in one of those. Failing that, hopefully we can at least fill up that pedigree page with some more placings at the elite level, setting her up nicely for the next stage of her career.” Pearl Of Alsace will be ridden by Jonathan Riddell and is rated an $11 chance by the TAB. The market is dominated by La Crique at $2.35, with El Vencedor ($6) and One Bold Cat ($9) the others in single figures. Meanwhile, Ritchie reported that the unbeaten Gr.3 Wellington Stakes (1600m) winner Tuxedo is likely to be seen at Ellerslie on either Boxing Day or New Year’s Day. The Tivaci gelding is being pointed towards the TAB Karaka Millions 3YO (1600m) on January 25, for which he is rated a $12 chance. Further down the track, he is at $16 for the Gr.1 New Zealand Derby (2400m) on March 8 and also at $16 for the inaugural NZB Kiwi (1500m) on the same day. “He’s a pretty exciting young horse,” Ritchie said. “He’s safely in the Karaka Millions field now, so that’s the next target that we’ll work towards. We’re keen for him to have a look around Ellerslie before then, so he’ll definitely line up there at some point over the Christmas and New Year carnival. Then we’ll carry on into the Karaka Millions. He pulled a little bit the other day, so we’re hoping he’ll learn to relax a bit better. “After the Karaka Millions, we’ll have a decision to make around whether we go along an Avondale Guineas (Gr.2, 2100m) and Derby path or whether we try to talk to a slot holder and get into the NZB Kiwi. Those will be some nice conversations to have. As always with nice horses, he’ll tell us what to do. He’s had only two runs, so we’re still learning about him and he’s learning about us. “But he has a tremendous amount of talent. I was really impressed with the determination he showed at Otaki to really stretch out and catch a promising filly (Island Life) that wasn’t stopping. I think we’ve got an exciting few months ahead.” View the full article
  10. New Zealand has a strong association with the Gr.1 LONGINES Hong Kong Mile (1600m), and Kiwi-bred gelding Antino will be out to continue that record at Sha Tin on Sunday. New Zealand-bred or sourced horses have won five of the last seven editions of the race, with both Beauty Generation (2017 and 2018) and Golden Sixty (2020, 2021and 2023) capturing the imagination of local racing fans during their respective dominating runs. Beauty Generation was bred in New Zealand by Greg Tomlinson under his Nearco Stud banner, and was purchased out of Highden Park’s 2014 New Zealand Bloodstock Select Yearling Sale draft, while Golden Sixty is also a New Zealand Bloodstock graduate, with the Australian-bred gelding sold through Riversley Park’s 2017 Ready to Run Sale draft. Golden Sixty’s dominant reign came to a close earlier this year when the multiple Hong Kong Horse of the Year was retired, and Queensland trainer Tony Gollan took that as a sign to try and target one of Hong Kong’s most coveted prizes. “Obviously when Golden Sixty retired it opened that mile up,” Gollan told Trackside. By Westbury Stud resident stallion Redwood, Antino was bred by George Kit Ma’s Blossom Trading & Breeding Company Ltd, and was bought by Jeetu Ramchandani under his New Balance Racing banner out of Cheltenham Stables’ 2020 New Zealand Bloodstock Ready to Run Sale draft for what has subsequently become a bargain price of $27,000. He was initially trained in Australia by Mark Schmetzer and then Adam Campton before joining the stable of leading Queensland trainer Tony Gollan, and the gelding has taken him on the ride of a lifetime. Antino has won 10 races for Gollan, including the Listed The Wayne Wilson (1600m), Gr.3 Sandown Stakes (1500m), Gr.2 Victory Stakes (1200m) and the Gr.1 Toorak Handicap (1600m) at Caulfield in October, which secured his berth to Hong Kong, and a runner-up performance behind fellow Kiwi-bred Mr Brightside in the Gr.1 Champions Mile (1600m) at Flemington last month cemented the decision. “What was a bit of a dream at the start when we were talking about it (Hong Kong Mile), it didn’t really become a reality for me until we got his form up to where I needed it to be in the spring,” Gollan said. “Once he had that consistent Group One weight-for-age form around him, I thought the dream we spoke about could become a reality. “It (spring preparation) has gone perfect. I wanted quite a busy time going into the Toorak, I want to do the two-week, two-week, two-week routine. Then I was really keen off that to go four weeks into Flemington. If I thought I could get him to Flemington in as good a shape, or close to Toorak day, I could probably do the same thing coming here (Hong Kong). “That is what we have tried to emulate. When we see him parade on Sunday, hopefully he will look as good as what we saw him at Flemington. To me he looks fantastic at the moment.” Gollan said he has Antino in peak order, and now the rest is up to the horse and jockey Blake Shinn. “For me, most importantly, all of his work was already done basically back home in Australia. It was just about getting him here, settling him in and keeping him happy,” Gollan said. “It’s all up to him and how he steps away.” The Boomer Bloodstock-managed horse will jump from barrier four after the bloodstock agency’s Craig Rounsefell drew the gate at the LONGINES Hong Kong International Races barrier draw at Sha Tin on Thursday. “Tony gave me strict instructions (to draw) between four and eight, so I think he will be happy,” Rounsefell said after the draw. “The owner, Mr Ramchandani, is a member of the (Hong Kong) jockey club and we have had our sights firmly set on this race all preparation and Tony has left no stone unturned to get a result. “We have got the best jockey in the world on, Blake Shinn, so I think from that barrier he will do his magic and hopefully we will be there at the finish.” Gollan has been enjoying his time in Hong Kong, and said the experience has opened his eyes to the magnitude of the renowned carnival. “I didn’t understand the enormity of this week until I have been here and been a part of it,” he said. “I know what Melbourne Cup week is like, it is very big, and Sydney and The Championships and The Everest Carnival, and our own Winter Carnival in Brisbane, but this is something else. It is a world-class event.” Gollan has plenty of time for New Zealand-breds and said patience is the key virtue with the breed, and he has shown plenty of that with the six-year-old, and they are reaping the rewards. “They are tough. They love their racing and love their work,” he said. “I think a lot of them, if you look after them when they are a bit younger and they can furnish into older horses, you can see what you can see with Antino. He is six now and he is in his career peak.” Gollan said Antino is truly a horse of the world and will have connections in three different countries barracking for him on Sunday. “Born in New Zealand, raced by a guy in Hong Kong, and trained out of Queensland, Australia,” Gollan said. “I am really happy for his owner and connections to enjoy what is their local big day.” View the full article
  11. What 2024 Hong Kong International Races Where Sha Tin Racecourse When Sunday, December 8, 2024 First Race 12:25pm HKT (3:25pm AEDT) Visit Dabble The iconic Hong Kong International Races return to Sha Tin Racecourse on Sunday afternoon, with a bumper 10-race program lined up – including four mouthwatering Group 1 contests alluring some of the worlds’ best horses, trainers and jockeys. The rail reverts to the A course for the meeting, and with no rain forecast to hinder proceedings, punters can anticipate a genuine Good 4 surface throughout the afternoon. The opening event is scheduled to get underway at 12:25pm local time. Race 1: Class 4 Handicap (1200m) The John Size-trained Brilliant Express gets the nod in what appears to be a wide-open Class 4 contest to kick-off proceedings. The son of Starspangledbanner returns after a 21-week spell, and although he was winless in three starts last season, the four-year-old never shirked the task amongst strong company when finishing close up behind the likes of Glory Elite and Lucy In The Sky at this course and distance. Hugh Bowman elects to stick after an eye-catching barrier trial on the Sha Tin all-weather and provided he can land in a handy position with cover, Brilliant Express should get every chance to secure his maiden victory at start four. Selections: 5 BRILLIANT EXPRESS 1 CITY THUNDER 4 MR ENERGIA 6 FORTUNE BOY Race 2: Class 4 Handicap (1400m) Master Phoenix flashed home to finish runner-up on debut at Sha Tin on November 9 and should appreciate the immediate step up to the 1400m. The Divine Prophet gelding had to get too far back from barrier 11 but showed a tremendous turn-of-foot to get within a half-length of the in-form Patch Of Time. Vincent Ho should be able to hold a position from gate one this time around, and provided Master Phoenix is within striking distance as they turn for home, this guy will prove hard to hold out. Selections: 6 MASTER PHOENIX 5 JUBILANT WINNER 3 LEGEND ST PAUL’S 8 ISLAND BREEZES Next Best Race 2 – #6 Master Phoenix (1) 4yo Gelding | T: David Eustace | J: Vincent Ho (59.5kg) Bet with BlondeBet Race 3: Class 3 Handicap (1200m) Lifeline Express gave a good account of himself in his first attempt in Class 3 company, storming home from last at this course and distance on November 17. The son of Shooting To Win had it all to do and just ran out of time as Young Superstar was already off and gone with the prize. Alexis Badel gets an opportunity to press forward from stall six, and with a bit more luck in transit, Lifeline Express can find himself in the finish again at an each-way price with horse racing bookmakers. Selections: 13 LIFELINE EXPRESS 1 SAVVY BRILLIANT 6 HALO OF SUCCESS 8 PATCH OF COSMO Race 4: Group 1 Hong Kong Vase (2400m) The Australian flag is set to fly in the Group 1 Hong Kong Vase (2400m), with the Anthony & Sam Freedman-trained Without A Fight sent over to make a statement second-up. He couldn’t have been more impressive first-up in the Group 1 Champion Stakes (2000m) at Flemington on November 9 after a year off the scene, powering into the minor money despite the lengthy layoff. The 2023 Group 1 Caulfield Cup/Melbourne Cup double conqueror oozes class, and although this contest has plenty of depth with the likes of Stellenbosch and Iresine posing genuine threats, Without A Fight must be considered the one to beat in the 2024 Hong Kong Vase. Selections: 1 WITHOUT A FIGHT 13 STELLENBOSCH 5 IRESINE 2 GIAVELLOTTO Hong Kong Vase Race 4 – #1 Without A Fight (1) 6yo Horse | T: Anthony & Sam Freedman | J: Mark Zahra (57kg) Bet with Dabble Race 5: Group 1 Hong Kong Sprint (1200m) Ka Ying Rising gets his chance to stamp himself as one of the worlds’ best sprinters as he goes around a near unbackable favourite in the Group 1 Hong Kong Sprint (1200m). He dismantled his rivals breaking a track record in Group 2 Jockey Club Sprint (1200m) leading into this event, and simply put, if he replicates that performance, Ka Ying Rising will be justifying the short price with Bet365. Selections: 1 KA YING RISING 12 HELIOS EXPRESS 13 HOWDEEPISYOURLOVE 7 STARLUST Hong Kong Sprint Race 5 – #1 Ka Ying Rising (11) 4yo Gelding | T: David Hayes | J: Zac Purton (57kg) Bet with Bet365 Race 6: Class 3 Handicap (1800m) The best bet goes around in this 1800m Class 3 contest, where the Caspar Fownes-trained Family Jewel should be searching for his fourth-straight victory. The son of Time Test was beaten by the barrier (12) last time out when suffering a half-length defeat at the hands of Bravehearts, with the four-year-old settling too far back in the ruck. James McDonald won’t allow that to happen again drawn in gate five this time around, and provided he can slot in somewhere mid-field with cover, Family Jewel should have no issues taking care of this lot and justifying favouritism with Neds. Selections: 8 FAMILY JEWEL 11 SUNSTRIDER 2 SO WE SING 3 PRAY FOR MIR Best Bet Race 6 – #8 Family Jewel (5) 4yo Gelding | T: Caspar Fownes | J: James McDonald (57.5kg) Bet with Neds Race 7: Group 1 Hong Kong Mile (1600m) Despite being defeated as an odds-on favourite with Picklebet in the Group 2 Jockey Club Mile (1600m) on November 17, Galaxy Patch warrants forgiving as he seeks Group 1 glory in the 2024 Hong Kong Mile. He had excuses sitting wide without cover for the duration of the journey, stunting his usually devastating turn of speed in the concluding stages. Gate 14 should be a positive provided Vincent Ho can sit three-wide with cover in this genuinely run affair, and provided Galaxy Patch can get back to his brilliant best, he has serious claims in this 1600m feature. Selections: 6 GALAXY PATCH 1 SOUL RUSH 3 ANTINO 13 LAZZAT Hong Kong Mile Race 7 – #6 Galaxy Patch (14) 5yo Gelding | T: Pierre Ng | J: Vincent Ho (57kg) Bet with Picklebet Race 8: Group 1 Hong Kong Cup (2000m) The Group 1 Hong Kong Cup (2000m) appears to be at the mercy of Romantic Warrior as he attempts to make history and become the first horse to secure a hat-trick of wins in the weight-for-age classic. The Danny Shum-trained gelding continues to revel in his racing, highlighted by his dominant return in the Group 2 Jockey Club Cup (2000m) on November 17, and it’s impossible to see anything turning the tables on the eight-time Group 1 winner. The Japanese pair of Liberty Island and Tastiera appear the most likely to pose some threat, but all things even, Romantic Warrior should prove too classy for this lot. Selections: 1 ROMANTIC WARRIOR 9 LIBERTY ISLAND 4 TASTIERA 10 CONTENT Hong Kong Cup Race 8 – #1 Romantic Warrior (1) 7yo Gelding | T: Danny Shum | J: James McDonald (57kg) Bet with Boombet Race 9: Class 3 Handicap (1400m) Markwin appears to be a horse worth following as he rises into Class 3 company for the first time. He drops 5.5kg for his latest victory at this track and trip, bounding away from his rivals to score by two lengths. Barrier 12 will be negated by his get-back-run-on style of racing, and with a genuine tempo engaged here, watch for Markwin to be putting in the big strides late at an each-way price with Playup. Selections: 13 MARKWIN 3 JOHANNES BRAHMS 6 CHARMING LEGEND 10 SUPER LOVE DRAGON Best Value Race 9 – #13 Markwin (12) 4yo Gelding | T: Cody Mo | J: Derek Leung (54kg) Bet with Playup Race 10: Class 2 Handicap (1400m) Joao Moreira & Francis Lui combine with Packing Hermod in the Sha Tin finale, where the lightly raced four-year-old will take a power of beating. The son of Rubick suffered his first defeated at the hands of Green N White last time out, peaking on his run in his first attempt over 1400m. Moreira will look to be positive despite the wide draw (10), and provided he can land in the first four in the early stages, Packing Hermod possess the quality to put this lot away and send punters home with a winner. Selections: 10 PACKING HERMOD 12 RUBYLOT 9 YOUNG CHAMPION 13 ALLCASH HKIR Day quaddie tips for Sha Tin Sha Tin quadrella selections Sunday, December 8, 2024 1-3-6-7-12-13 1 3-6-10-13 9-10-12-13 | Copy this bet straight to your betslip Horse racing tips View the full article
  12. Pearl Of Alsace will attempt to cap her career with a first Group One victory in Saturday’s TAB Mufhasa Classic. Photo: Kenton Wright (Race Images) Pearl Of Alsace is in foal and entering the final few weeks of her racing career, but trainers Shaune Ritchie and Colm Murray hope a return to her favourite track might allow her to cap her CV with a Group One breakthrough. The six-year-old will line up in Saturday’s Group 1 TAB Mufhasa Classic (1600m) at Trentham, where her three previous starts have produced three impressive wins including the Group 3 Cuddle Stakes (1600m). Overall, Pearl Of Alsace has won seven of her 17 starts and more than $339,820 in stakes for owner-breeder Sir Peter Vela. The daughter of Tavistock has contested five Group One races, finishing fourth in last year’s New Zealand Thoroughbred Breeders’ Stakes (1600m) and third in the Livamol Classic (2040m), followed by sevenths in this year’s Breeders’ Stakes, Arrowfield Stud Plate (1600m) and Livamol Classic. Pearl Of Alsace was served by Rich Hill Stud stallion Proisir after her Livamol run in October, and she showed immediate improvement when she returned to action with a last-start second in the Group 2 Tauranga Stakes (1600m) on November 16. “She was served before that last-start placing and she’s now confirmed to be in foal to Proisir,” Ritchie said. “She was racing a fraction below her best earlier in the campaign. The freshen up did her good, and we were very pleased with her performance at Tauranga. “She heads into Saturday’s race with some excellent stats. She’s unbeaten in three starts at the track, and she’s won five of 10 at the 1600m distance as well. “The only little thing that hasn’t fallen perfectly into place for her is that, as an older mare now, she’s at her best when there’s a little bit of cut out of the track. The likely firm ground at Trentham on Saturday is the only negative we can find in the whole script leading into the race this weekend. “But she’s a Group One placegetter and has always shown us that she had the ability to win one. She’ll probably have only three or four more cracks at it before she goes to become a mum, so we’d love nothing more than to nail a win in one of those. Failing that, hopefully we can at least fill up that pedigree page with some more placings at the elite level, setting her up nicely for the next stage of her career.” Pearl Of Alsace will be ridden by Jonathan Riddell and is rated an $11 chance with horse racing bookmakers. The market is dominated by La Crique at $2.35, with El Vencedor ($6) and One Bold Cat ($9) the others in single figures. Horse racing news View the full article
  13. Luke Currie. (Photo by Brett Holburt/Racing Photos) Leading Australian jockey Luke Currie will make his first appearance in New Zealand with seven rides on Saturday’s Group One card at Trentham. Currie has ridden more than 1450 winners in his homeland, 13 of them at Group One level. He is perhaps best known for his association with Hey Doc, who he rode to victory in the Group 1 Australian Guineas (1600m), Winterbottom Stakes (1200m) and two editions of the Manikato Stakes (1200m). He also won the Group 1 Coolmore Stud Stakes (1200m) and William Reid Stakes (1200m) aboard star filly Sunlight. Riding overseas is nothing new for Currie, who has ridden 20 winners in Hong Kong, 14 in Mauritius, 13 in Singapore and one in Malaysia. But New Zealand is a brand-new addition to that list. “It’s my first time riding here, so I’m really looking forward to it,” the 43-year-old said. “I’ve always wanted to come over and ride here, but for one reason or another it hasn’t worked out until now. This weekend was a nice opportunity to do it, and I jumped at the chance. I’ve been fortunate enough to pick up some nice rides.” Currie has crossed the Tasman after an invitation from Brad Taylor, who spent seven years with Anthony and Sam Freedman’s stable in Victoria before returning home earlier this year to take up the role of General Manager of Racing with RACE, the operator of Awapuni and Trentham racecourses. “I always had a good relationship with Brad Taylor when he worked with Freedman Racing,” Currie said. “I’ve had quite a lot of success riding for that stable over the years, and many of those rides came about through Brad. “He spoke to my manager Travis Johnson about the possibility of coming over. I had a few rides lined up for the Ballarat Cup meeting at home on the same day, but I thought this was a nice chance to come over for a Group One meeting. Hopefully I can build some relationships and possibly set up a few opportunities to ride here again in the future.” That could include the internationally famous Karaka Millions meeting at Ellerslie on January 25. Currie’s rides on Saturday include the unbeaten filly Too Sweet. The daughter of Satono Aladdin earned $23,000 from her debut victory at Trentham in October, which is likely enough to secure her a place in the starting gate for the Karaka Millions 2YO (1200m). “Everyone I’ve spoken to has told me what an awesome day’s racing the Karaka Millions is,” Currie said. “So if that happened to work out, it’s definitely one that I’d love to come over and experience for myself.” Too Sweet is trained by Roydon Bergerson, whose Awapuni stable will also provide Currie with his Group One ride in Saturday’s TAB Mufhasa Classic (1600m). Currie will ride Town Cryer, whose 35-start career has produced eight wins, 13 placings and more than $496,000 in prize-money. The daughter of Tavistock has black-type victories to her name in the Group 3 Taranaki Breeders’ Stakes (1400m), Group 3 Thompson Handicap (1600m), Listed Anzac Mile (1600m) and Listed Wairarapa Breeders’ Stakes (1600m), and she was runner-up behind Belclare in this year’s Group 1 New Zealand Thoroughbred Breeders’ Stakes (1600m). “She’s such a consistent mare,” Currie said. “She puts herself on the speed and makes her own luck. No Group One races are easy to win, but I think she’s going to give me a nice chance. I’m looking forward to riding her.” Horse racing news View the full article
  14. Lugal stretches out at Sha Tin. Photo: HKJC Only Japanese horses have been able to stop the local talent in the Hong Kong Sprint (1200m) in recent years and the Land of the Rising Sun will launch a three-pronged assault on Sunday’s HK$26 million prize. Just superstar Lord Kanaloa and Danon Smash have been able to prevent a clean sweep for the home team in the last 12 runnings, and Lugal heads a strong Japanese team this time around. Lord Kanaloa won the Sprinters Stakes before both of his Sha Tin victories and Lugal will be bidding to tread a similar path after a spectacular win at Nakayama in September. The breakthrough Group 1 success marked Lugal as the nation’s leading sprinter and was all the more remarkable considering he broke his knee after being sent off favourite for the Takamatsunomiya Kinen (1200m) in March. Reflecting on the horse’s turbulent year, trainer Haruki Sugiyama said: “It was a surprising run in the Sprinters Stakes because that was his first run since his long break. I was a little bit concerned about how he would run, but he ran perfectly. “He had a knee injury after the Takamatsunomiya Kinen. His rehabilitation was good and his preparation for the Sprinters Stakes was good. He ran very, very well there and he has no problem with his knee now. “We don’t have another big race over 1,200m in Japan and this is the biggest opportunity for us, so that’s why we’ve chosen to send him here.” Lugal will be coming up against top opposition from across the world in Sunday’s contest, including Hong Kong’s newest star Ka Ying Rising, the British-trained Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner Starlust and Australia’s multiple Group 3 winner Recommendation. While respectful of the opposition, Sugiyama believes his horse can be competitive on his first overseas venture after drawing barrier nine in the official ceremony on Thursday. He said: “I don’t think it’s going to be easy to compete against the strong Hong Kong horses, but Lugal has won a Grade 1 race and is a high-class horse, so it’s worth trying to compete. “On the first day to the second day in Hong Kong he was a little bit tense because this is his first international trip, but now he’s getting used to the new surroundings. He seems to love it here.” Lugal will also face stern competition from within his home country. Regular rival Toshin Macau pushed him to within a neck in the Sprinters Stakes and showed his quality when landing the G2 Centaur Stakes on his penultimate start. The flashy five-year-old will break from gate five and has also settled in well to life at Sha Tin, with a key grass gallop on Thursday pleasing stable representative Takashi Komine. He said: “We decided to send him to Hong Kong after the Sprinters Stakes. He is in as good form as he was in Japan. He launched his bid in the back stretch and showed great momentum. He seems to be a bit tense, but is in good condition.” The Japanese challenge is completed by rising star Satono Reve, who is drawn next to Toshin Macau in stall four. While Lugal and Toshin Macau will be partnered by Japanese jockeys Atsuya Nishimura and Akira Sugawara, the dual G3 winner will be ridden by former multiple Hong Kong champion jockey Joao Moreira. Horse racing news View the full article
  15. Harry saddles Docklands in the Group One Hong Kong Mile, while Sha Tin’s newest trainer David has three runners on the undercard.View the full article
  16. What Ballarat Cup Day 2024 Where Ballarat Turf Club – 72 Midas Rd, Miners Rest VIC 3352 When Saturday, December 7, 2024 First Race 12:15pm AEDT Visit Dabble It’s Ballarat Cup Day this Saturday, with 10 races lined up at Miners Rest. With rain forecast for Friday and Saturday, it is unlikely that the Good 4 rating holds throughout the day, with a Soft track almost a certainty. The rail sticks to its true position, with the Ballarat races commencing at 12:15pm AEDT. Ballarat Cup Tip: It’s A Wild Night It’s A Wild Night (formerly Wild Night) was quite unlucky when finishing fifth on his Australian debut in the Cranbourne Cup (1600m) on November 23, and he did well to finish within two lengths of the winner, Globe. He steps up to the 2000m for just the second time in his career, with the only other time coming in Group 1 company behind Sharp ‘N’ Smart and Campionessa. Daniel Stackhouse will take him towards the rear of the field from barrier 19, but if It’s A Wild Night can find a back to follow, he is more than capable of overhauling his rivals. Ballarat Cup Race 9 – #10 It’s A Wild Night (19) 5yo Gelding | T: Mark Walker | J: Daniel Stackhouse (56kg) Bet with Dabble Best Bet at Ballarat: Pharari Pharari was desperately unlucky at Caulfield on November 16, flashing home late to be narrowly beaten behind Kin. The four-year-old has been racing in fine form this campaign, winning four of her eight starts. Drawn in barrier one, Dylan Browne McMonagle will likely stalk speed influences Celui and Miraval Rose wherever they go, and any rain that comes will only suit this girl. Best Bet Race 4 – #4 Pharari (1) 4yo Mare | T: Ciaron Maher | J: Dylan Browne McMonagle (58kg) Bet with Neds Next Best at Ballarat: Little Jack Little Jack produced an eye-catching return from a spell at Caulfield over 1400m and looks poised to strike second-up at the mile. The five-year-old gelding is more than capable on firmer footing or wet ground, and he has a win and a second from two second-up runs. Jason Maskiell will likely settle off the speed, and with a genuinely run affair expect, the race sets up perfectly for Little Jack to blouse his rivals. Next Best Race 5 – #8 Little Jack (3) 5yo Gelding | T: Alexander Rae | J: Jason Maskiell (59kg) Bet with BlondeBet Best Value at Ballarat: Juggernaut Joan Juggernaut Joan was a determined winner at Geelong on November 27, leading from barrier to box over 1300m. The step up to 1400m second-up from a spell should not be an issue, and from barrier one, Billy Egan will have the mare close to the speed throughout. Whether Juggernaut Joan leads or takes a sit off the speed, she looks a great each-way play with horse racing bookmakers. Best Value Race 2 – #4 Juggernaut Joan (1) 4yo Mare | T: Patrick & Michelle Payne | J: Billy Egan (55.5kg) Bet with Picklebet Saturday quaddie tips for Ballarat Ballarat quadrella selections Saturday, December 6, 2024 1-2-3-4-9-11 7-14-17 1-3-5-7-10-16 5-7-8-14-17 | Copy this bet straight to your betslip Horse racing tips View the full article
  17. A nearly three-year hiatus from the winner's circle ended Thursday when rider Rajiv Maragh won the third race at Gulfstream Park aboard Dundie (Speightstown). Owned by Ian Parsard and trained by Collin Maragh, Dundie was in for a $12,500 tag and won for the third time in his career. Maragh's last win was with Raise the Rent (Malibu Moon) Dec. 23, 2021, also at Gulfstream. Prior to beginning his comeback in late October, his last ride was in January of 2022. Dundie was his eighth mount since his return. “It's pretty surreal when you think about it, the journey here,” said Maragh. “Three years ago, I stopped riding and tried to step away for a while and get some other things going. I never thought I'd be back riding. Everything just fell into line, and I'm really excited to be back and have an opportunity to ride. These wins are what make all the hard work feel like it's worth it.” The post Jockey Rajiv Maragh Wins First Race Since 2021 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  18. The United States Supreme Court is now unlikely to decide before the end of 2024 which, if any, of the three separate cases involving the constitutionality of the Horseracing and Safety Integrity Act (HISA) the nation's highest court might consider hearing. According to schedule changes posted online Dec. 4 on the Supreme Court dockets for cases originating out of the Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Circuits of the U.S. Court of Appeals, all three of those HISA-related “writ of certiorari” requests are now going to be considered by the justices on the same conference date, Jan. 10, 2025. A writ of certiorari is the legal petition by which an entity asks the Supreme Court to intervene in a case after all other forms of appeal within the federal court system have been exhausted. The writ out of the Fifth Circuit (initiated by the defendant, the HISA Authority, involving a lawsuit spearheaded by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association) had not been previously assigned a spot on the Supreme Court's case distribution schedule. The writs originating out of the Sixth Circuit (stemming from a lawsuit led by the states of Oklahoma, West Virginia and Louisiana) and Eighth Circuit (led by executives out of the Arkansas and Iowa HBPA affiliates) were both supposed to be considered by the justices at a Dec. 6 conference. However, both the Sixth and Eighth Circuit writs came off the case distribution schedule last week, when the docket switched them to “rescheduled” without (at that time) specifying the new date. According to the Supreme Court's website, the case distribution schedule “identifies the dates on which petitions for writs of certiorari, along with corresponding briefs in opposition and reply briefs, will be distributed to the Justices. It also identifies the dates on which those petitions are scheduled to be considered by the Justices at conference, although this schedule is subject to change.” Following Dec. 6, the only other available case distribution conference date for 2024 is Dec. 13. After that, the Jan. 10, 2025, conference is the next one the justices are scheduled to hold. Exactly how the Supreme Court will handle the multiple writs filed by different petitioners is unknown at this point. But the fact that they have now been grouped together for consideration on the same conference date raises the possibility that they could, in some way, be combined. The Supreme Court could choose to individually hear (or deny hearing) any of the HISA constitutionality cases. Or, if it deems the questions of law are similar, the Supreme Court could decide to consolidate them into one larger case for the purpose of coming up with one common judgment that addresses all of the legal issues that have been raised. The Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Circuit appeals courts have all agreed that HISA's rulemaking structure is constitutional. Only the Fifth Circuit has disagreed, in part, by opining that HISA's enforcement provisions are unconstitutional. The post Supreme Court Will Now Consider Whether to Hear Three Pending HISA-Related Cases at Same Conference on Jan. 10 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  19. No star has shone brighter in the thoroughbred racing world this year than New Zealand-bred gelding Ka Ying Rising, and trainer David Hayes is hoping he can assume the mantle of the world’s best sprinter when he heads to Sha Tin on Sunday. The four-year-old son of Shamexpress has been a revelation since making his debut for Hayes at Sha Tin in December last year, winning eight of his 10 starts, including the Gr.3 Sha Tin Vase (1200m), Gr.2 Premier Bowl (1200m), and broke a longstanding track record when running home in 1 minute 7.43 seconds in last month’s Gr.2 BOCJK Private Banking Jockey Club Sprint (1200m) at Sha Tin. He will be looking to repeat the dose when he returns to the Hong Kong venue on Sunday where he will contest the Gr.1 LONGINES Hong Kong Sprint (1200m), for which he will jump a short-priced favourite despite drawing barrier 11 in the 14-horse field. Hayes has been duly impressed with Ka Ying Rising’s trajectory, and he expects him to continue on that path this week and into the future. “He is very exciting,” Hayes said. “He has done everything we have asked of him. This will be his biggest test by far, but I think he will be a short-priced favourite to do it. “I think he is a horse, as his name says, that is getting a little bit better and better. When you see him on the weekend, he is not what I call a furnished big sprinter, he has still got more improvement to come physically. (Although) he can’t run much faster than 1:07. “Barring incidents, it will be an exciting day for the stable and all of his connections.” It will also prove to be an exciting day for his breeder Fraser Auret, who will be watching in anticipation from his home in Marton. While he is a Group One-winning trainer, Auret would also love to add Group One-winning breeder to his name, and from the first horse he bred to boot. Out of five-win mare Missy Moo, Ka Ying Rising was born, raised, broken-in and initially trained at Auret’s property before he attracted plenty of interest from buyers following an impressive jumpout at Levin and a deal was subsequently brokered with Lindsay Park, and he swiftly made an impression with his new handlers. “He looked quite natural (from his jumpout video), but not the best sprinter in the world,” Hayes quipped. “He then went to the boys (sons Ben, Will and JD Hayes at Lindsay Park in Victoria), and the boys identified him as a very smart horse after about eight weeks. He then came to me, and it took me about six weeks and I knew he was very good.” Hayes is developing a similar impression with Kay Ying Rising’s half-brother, Ka Ying Glory, who has recently joined his stable, having had an identical journey to Hong Kong as his brother. Ka Ying Glory is Ka Ying Rising’s only other sibling, with their dam having passed away, and early signs indicate that she could have left another burgeoning star. “He (Ka Ying Glory) has just arrived in Hong Kong, he is doing three-quarter pace,” Hayes said. “He is a different style of horse, much bigger than Ka Ying Rising, but he is a stylish mover and I am looking forward to galloping him in a couple of weeks. “I don’t know if anything is as good as Ka Ying Rising, you shouldn’t compare him, but on his (Ka Ying Glory) movement, he has got the ability to win plenty of races in Hong Kong.” Hayes is developing a great association with New Zealand-breds, as are his sons, with their flagbearer Mr Brightside continuing to aid the start of their burgeoning training careers. “What happened when the boys were struggling at the start of their careers, instead of buying yearlings, we decided to buy some proven horses, just to have city runners, and he was bought to be a city runner and he has certainly eclipsed that,” Hayes said. “He has won eight Group Ones, he has run second as many times and I think with the programme they have got in the autumn, if he can get up to 11 or 12 (Group One wins), he is in rarified air. He is pretty special. “If anyone in New Zealand has got one like him, give me a ring.” View the full article
  20. Breeders' Cup-winning jockey Rajiv Maragh, who ended a nearly three-year absence from riding in October, registered the first win of his comeback Dec. 5 at Gulfstream Park aboard Ian Parsard's 4-year-old gelding Dundie.View the full article
  21. On the eve that Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI) and the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) were scheduled to appear at separate enforcement hearings in front of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority board to address disputes over their non-payment of assessment fees that are based partially on purses, those two prominent Thoroughbred track operators teamed up to sue the Authority and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in federal court, alleging that both the fee impositions and the attempted enforcement actions for non-payment are “illegal.” According to the civil complaint filed Dec. 4 in United States District Court (Western Division of Kentucky, Louisville Division), CDI and NYRA are alleging that the Authority, the FTC, and individuals who run those agencies are violating both the private non-delegation doctrine and Article III of the U.S. Constitution, the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, and four counts of the Administrative Procedure Act. The lawsuit also stated that the Authority and the FTC should be subject to “equitable estoppel,” which is a doctrine a court may invoke to “avoid injustice in particular cases.” The complaint, first reported Thursday by Horse Racing Nation, asked the court to “declare the Authority's enforcement actions in this case to be unlawful and enjoin Defendants from taking any further action to enforce the Authority's unlawful fee assessments against CDI and NYRA.” The Authority, the complaint alleged, “is threatening to prohibit CDI and NYRA from conducting any horse races until they pay the Authority millions of dollars in illegally imposed fees.” In response, the Authority issued a press release Dec. 5 that stated the agency “will aggressively defend itself” against the “meritless lawsuit.” The Authority's press release stated that CDI and NYRA were attempting to “avoid paying their fair share” of fees calculated under a structure designed to “equitably allocate the costs” of operations under the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA). “CDI and NYRA are the only two racing organizations subject to this rule that have refused to remit their share of fees,” the Authority's release stated. Lisa Lazarus, the Authority's chief executive officer, issued a written statement, which said, in part: “CDI and NYRA have both benefited greatly from HISA's uniform safety rules, expertise and oversight, particularly over the past two years. That uniformity must extend to cost assessments as well. To do otherwise would be unfair to other tracks and industry participants who are paying their fair share. [The Authority] will continue to uphold the standards of the sport with integrity and fairness for all racing participants. Our mission is clear, and we will not allow any parties to pick and choose which rules they follow. Every racetrack, including CDI and NYRA, must operate under the same paradigm. No one is exempt.” CDI owns six Thoroughbred tracks (Churchill Downs, Turfway Park, Ellis Park, Fair Grounds, Colonial Downs, and Presque Isle Downs). NYRA controls racing at Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course. NYRA's Saratoga | Sarah Andrew The Authority has been named as a defendant in a number of constitutionality lawsuits since HISA's passage into law in 2020. Such litigation challenging the Act and the Authority had been expected, with predictions from the law's outset that it might take years and intervention from the U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether HISA would remain the law of the land in American racing. Currently, there are three separate requests pending before the Supreme Court to take up three different cases arising from the federal appeals court system. CDI and NYRA outlined their chief beefs in the joint complaint: “The Act requires the Authority to determine each State's proportionate share of the annual fees necessary to fund its operations based on (1) the Authority's budget for the following year; and (2) the projected amount of covered racing starts for the year in each State. “Yet the Authority unlawfully adopted–and the FTC unlawfully approved–an assessment methodology that imposes fees based largely on the size of a racetrack's purses [rather than] a State's share of racing starts. “The only federal court to have considered the question held that the Authority's purse-based assessment methodology violates the Act,” the complaint stated. “CDI and NYRA declined to fund the Authority according to its unlawful purse-based assessment methodology and instead agreed to remit fees to the Authority pursuant to racing-start-based methodologies outlined in the Act. “The Authority endorsed this arrangement for nearly two years, until its ever-increasing budget and fiscal mismanagement prompted it to change course and demand that CDI and NYRA immediately remit all fees due under the illegal purse-based methodology. “When CDI and NYRA refused to accede to the Authority's unlawful demands, the Authority commenced enforcement actions against CDI and NYRA, threatening to prohibit them from conducting any horse races until the fees due under the Authority's illegal assessment methodology are paid in full,” the complaint stated. “Worse, the Authority is illegally conducting its enforcement action through an internal disciplinary process before its Board of Directors. The Act does not empower the private Authority to adjudicate fee-collection disputes in-house but rather envisions that the Authority would exercise its statutory power to bring a civil action in federal court to compel payment of any legitimate fee assessments. “Interpreting the Act to permit the Authority to determine for itself whether CDI and NYRA owe it millions of dollars and impose sanctions based on its own findings would violate the Act and Article III of the Constitution, which require that such disputes between private entities be adjudicated in federal courts–not within administrative agencies and certainly not within private, unaccountable corporations. And it would also violate the fundamental due-process principle that no person may serve as a judge in his own case,” the complaint stated. The late-Wednesday filing of the lawsuit did not affect the Thursday morning and afternoon scheduling of the Authority's separate hearings involving CDI and NYRA. “A three-person board panel conducted hearings [Dec. 5] on the enforcement actions pending against CDI and NYRA,” an Authority spokesperson confirmed to TDN. “All parties were provided an opportunity to present arguments and evidence relevant to the alleged violations.” Patrick McKenna, NYRA's vice president of communications, issued a statement Thursday that said NYRA is aligned with the concept and benefits of HISA, but felt compelled to take legal action to challenge the funding aspect. “NYRA is strongly supportive of the [Authority's] regulatory mission. Since its launch, HISA has formulated and applied rules and safety standards that have successfully improved equine safety. And NYRA will continue to advocate for the importance of national policies designed to protect athletes in competition and protect the integrity of the sport,” McKenna said. “This lawsuit narrowly targets the unlawful, excessive, and disproportionate financial assessments that HISA's Authority is attempting to impose on NYRA. Since 2022, NYRA has disputed HISA's methodology for calculating fees, which is based on a blended rate of starts and purses, as opposed to methodology required by statute based purely on starts. NYRA joined in this action as a last resort only when threatened with illegal HISA enforcement actions,” McKenna said. The post CDI and NYRA Tag-Team in Federal Lawsuit, Alleging HISA’S Purse-Based Assessments Are ‘Illegal’ appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  22. Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) second Vodka With a Twist brings the most experience and earnings to the graded race of the seven in the field.View the full article
  23. Given that his father Neville bred and raced the late Australian champion Northerly, there was only one group 1 Ben Duncan wanted to win when he decided to follow in his old man's footsteps.View the full article
  24. It takes a pretty serious animal to earn $2 million in any racing jurisdiction, let alone accomplishing that feat in a place like Hong Kong. The urban environment is not for every horse–to that end, the Hong Kong Jockey Club operates their state-of-the-art satellite facility in Conghua [shung-pha] on the Chinese mainland–and it takes a special horse to thrive there. Chancheng Glory (Mor Spirit) has done just that over the course of the last 18 months or so. Bred in Iowa by Allen Poindexter, the 4-year-old gelding has won seven times from 20 starts, and while he has yet to nick a stakes victory, he has placed no fewer than four times at the Group 2 and Group 3 level and went within a zop of winning the Hong Kong Classic Cup, the second leg of the 4-year-old Triple Crown, this past February. His earnings to date total better than $1.9 million. Bred on a $5,000 stud fee to the GI Met Mile-winning son of Eskendereya–now based in Indiana–Chancheng Glory was offered three times at public auction before being acquired privately by the Chancheng Racing Syndicate after falling just shy of his reserve at OBS March in 2022. Those that had a hand in his upbringing speak of him in glowing terms, and each is looking forward to watching him take on horses from England, France, Japan and Australia in Sunday's G1 Longines Hong Kong Mile at Sha Tin Racecourse. “We took him to the sale as a baby and he was just a freaking angel,” said Tim Hamlin, who consigned Chancheng Glory with his wife Nancy to the 2020 Keeneland November Sale under their Wynnstay banner. “He never give us one ounce of grief ever. “And he was beautiful,” Tim Hamlin continued. “Correct, he just was an ideal foal, you know? He never had leg problems, feet problems. He was never sick. He never was treated for anything. He just was straight-forward. And those are the best ones. And her mother [second dam Scammer] was the first mare that Nancy and I bought, when we moved to Lexington, she was our first thoroughbred mare purchase. And then Allen, he loved [Chancheng Glory's dam Solid Scam] as a yearling.” Chancheng Glory was sold to an entity called High Spirit for $50,000 at the November Sale, a price deemed more than satisfactory by the Hamlins. “Oh, he was perfect at the sale,” Tim Hamlin said. “He just never turned a hair, the whole time we had him. We were very happy at the time for the $50,000. That colt was just, when you looked at him, he just always looked smart, always looked athletic. He always had good hair and he was always healthy-looking. So I think it doesn't surprise me that he's a useful horse. And the people that bought him at the yearling sales, they're very good horsemen. Very good horsemen. And we were tickled that he got a good home because one of the bad things about selling babies is you don't always get to control where they go for the next year. Or the yearlings for that matter. But babies, they've got to go through two sets of hands.” Chancheng Glory | HKJC Chancheng Glory was part of the Hunter Valley Farm draft at Keeneland September in 2021, and the outfit's Adrian Regan said he just continued to improve with time. “He was a bay horse with markings and everything, good physical,” said Regan. “He was always one of our favorites in prep that year. But in his prep, he was always a lovely individual, great to deal with. He's the kind of horse that you can never really forget about. That's how good he was as a physical.” Regan added, “He was a really, really good horse at the end of the shank. He was tall. He had good action. He was just a very nice horse, great temperament.” Chancheng Glory more than doubled his purchase price when hammering to Covington Farm for $110,000 at KEESEP. “We were very happy because, listen, I'm not being greedy about it because I know he didn't pass all the vets he had out here,” Regan said. “He's a horse that's gone on to race, he's barely had any time away from training and it takes a really good horse to do that.” The colt was subsequently turned over to 2-year-old consignor Al Pike, who began preparing him for the under-tack sales in early 2022. He and owner Don Maddax chose the OBS March Sale, and they could not have been more pleased with the way their youngster had progressed into the auction. “I was in Louisiana at the time, and we loved him,” Pike said. “He's a great big two-turn looking sort of horse, he had a lot of size, a lot of scope. But he's beautiful and very athletic, very smart. Never gave us any trouble. “When we did start knuckling down on him, he showed a lot of talent,” Pike said. “So we went down there with a lot of anticipation that he'd do well, and he lived up to our expectations. He worked in :10 flat, galloped out like he'd run two turns.” Somewhat surprisingly, bidding stalled out at $220,000 when he went under the hammer on day one of the two-day sale. “We were shocked we didn't even get him done.” Pike said, “but I encouraged Mr. Maddox, 'You don't have to give this horse away. I think he's a good one.' And actually, he sent him to Albert Davis out there to keep him going and get him ready for the races. And somebody came along and bought him. “But like I said, we loved the horse. He didn't disappoint us. He did his job every day we had him. He was a really nice horse.” It comes as no shock to Pike that Chancheng Glory has shown off his talent at the races. “We thought he was an athlete,” he said. “Didn't know what surface he'd end up on. He was good on the dirt when I had him. He performed well on the [synthetic] there at OBS. He's just showing who he is.” Like his fellow consignors, Pike will certainly be watching with interest this weekend. “It's just, you get a little bit of pride of ownership,” he said. “And I didn't own a hair on him, but just had him and loved him every day we had him. And just to see him go on and do well, it's very satisfying, I got to tell you.” Editor's Note: The Chancheng Racing Syndicate also campaigned Chancheng Glory (Carpe Diem), a $150,000 purchase out of the Top Line Sales consignment at the 2019 OBS April Sale who compiled a record of 7-7-5 from 44 starts for earnings of better than $1.4 million in Hong Kong for Chancheng Glory's trainer Francis Lui. Karis “Mauritian Magician” Teetan on Chancheng Glory – “The Pride of Iowa,” and his chances this weekend at Sha Tin. @HKRacingUS @TheBrownAndrew pic.twitter.com/TPAnSzdPeb — HPIbet (@HPIbet) December 5, 2024 The post Iowa-Bred Looking For ‘Glory’ In Longines Hong Kong Mile appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  25. According to Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority CEO Lisa Lazarus, HISA and representatives of jockey Paco Lopez agreed on an indefinite suspension following his actions aboard National Law at Parx Racing Dec. 3.View the full article
×
×
  • Create New...