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Wandering Eyes

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  1. Explore a multitude of captivating racing promotions offered by horse racing bookmakers on Saturday, November 23. Immerse yourself in the thrill with generous bonus back offers, elevating your betting experience. Delve into these promotions from top-tier online bookmakers to maximise your betting opportunities. The top Australian racing promotions for November 23, 2024, include: Today’s best horse racing promotions Ascot – Same Race Multi 3+ Leg Bonus Back if 1 Leg Fails up to $50 Place a 3+ leg Same Race Multi bet on any race at Ascot this Saturday and if 1 leg of your multi fails, get up to $50 back in Bonus Cash. Available from approximately 8:30am local track time on race day. Neds T&C’s Apply. Login to Neds to Claim Promo Cranbourne & Kembla Grange R1-5 | Run 2nd or 3rd Bonus Back up to $25 Run 2nd or 3rd in Races 1-5 at Cranbourne & Kembla Grange on Saturday and receive a bonus back up to $25. PlayUp T&Cs apply. Login to PlayUp to Claim Promo 25% Boosted Winnings! – Cranbourne & Kembla Grange Get 25% Boosted Winnings paid in BONUS CASH. Fixed win only. First bet only. Cash bet only. Max Bonus $250. Picklebet T&Cs apply. Login to pickleBet to Claim Promo Saturday Bonus Back 2nd or 3rd in R1-3 at 3 Metro Meetings Ascot, Kembla Grange & Cranbourne. Auto-applied in Bet Slip. Min 6 runners. Fixed Odds only. T&C’s apply. Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Top 4 Betting. Extra Place. Every Race. Bet and win up to 4th place. Picklebet T&Cs apply. Login to pickleBet to Claim Promo Punters Toolbox! Supersized Saturday helps you Bet it Out with neds! Get MORE Price Boosts, MORE Bet Backs, MORE Fluc Ups, MORE Back Ups & MORE Extra Nudge tools! Available to use on ANY races of your choice. Neds T&C’s Apply Login to Neds to Claim Promo Roll The Dice! Discover your next deposit match offer. One ‘Roll the Dice’ promotion per day. Promotion expires at midnight AEDT of the current day. Bonus Cash expires seven days after the issue date. Cash deposit must be turned over at least once before being withdrawn. BlondeBet T&C’s Apply. Login to BlondeBet to Claim Promo Owners Bonus – Win a bet on your horse & receive an extra 15% of winnings in cash Account holder must be registered as an official owner of the nominated horse. Fixed odds only. PlayUp T&Cs Apply. Login to PlayUp to Claim Promo Odds Drift Protector If the price at the jump is bigger than the price that you took, we will pay you out at the bigger odds Eligible customers. T&C’s apply. Login to Bet365 to Claim Promo Daily Multi Insurance Any race. Any runner. Any odds. Get a bonus back if your multi loses. Check your Vault for eligibility Login to UniBet to Claim Promo Best Tote and Starting Price Guarantees a dividend equal to the highest of the official win dividend paid by the three Australian TAB pools or the official starting price. Maximum stake: $2,000. 18+ Gamble Responsibly. Login to BoomBet to Claim Promo How does horsebetting.com.au source its racing bonus offers? HorseBetting.com.au meticulously assesses leading Australian horse racing bookmakers, revealing thoroughbred bonus promotions for November 23, 2024. These ongoing offers underscore the dedication of top horse racing bookmakers. In the realm of horse racing betting, when one bookmaker isn’t featuring a promotion, another is stepping up. Count on HorseBetting.com.au as your go-to source for daily rewarding horse racing bookmaker bonuses. Enhance your value with competitive odds and promotions tailored for existing customers. Easily access these offers by logging in to each online bookmaker’s platform. For valuable insights into races and horses to optimise your bonus bets, trust HorseBetting’s daily free racing tips. More horse racing promotions View the full article
  2. 7th-CD, $120K, Msw, 2yo, 6 1/2f, 3:55 p.m. ET. A $1-million buy at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale, YINZER (Twirling Candy) takes the racing stage for the ownership group of West Point Thoroughbreds, CJ Stables and Bill Farish. The Steve Asmussen trainee is out of Rehearsed (Tapit) who is a full-sister to GISP Closing Bell and a half-sister to GII San Felipe Stakes hero Hear the Ghost (Ghostzapper). Also making the races is Aerate (Candy Ride {Arg]). The Stone Farm homebred trained by Brian Lynch was produced by Ducru (Broken Vow), the dam of six foals, three to race and two winners. Her half-brother is current sire Unified (Candy Ride {Arg}). TJCIS PPS 2nd-DMR, $54K, Msw, 2yo, 6 1/2f, 3:59 p.m. ET. Speaking of homebreds, Spendthrift sends out for his debut The Last Straw (Into Mischief). The juvenile is out of GI Del Mar Debutante Stakes heroine Bast (Uncle Mo), who the farm acquired for $4.2 million at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Fall Mixed Sale. This dam is a full-sister to SP Royal Slipper and her extended female family includes GISW Fault (Blame). Unveiled by the barn of Bob Baffert is Rodriguez (Authentic). The dark bay, a $485,000 Keeneland September pick for SF, Starlight and Madaket, is a half-brother to GIII Southwest Stakes victor One Liner (Into Mischief) and MSW Provocateur (Into Mischief). Digging into Rodriguez's third dam, we find GISW Albertus Maximus (Albert the Great) and current sire Daredevil (More Than Ready). TJCIS PPS The post Saturday Racing Insights: Pricey Twirling Candy Colt Yinzer Rehearsed for Churchill Downs Bow appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  3. In this continuing series, we take a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for this Saturday running at Kyoto Racecourse: Saturday, November 23, 2024 5th-KYO, ¥13,720,000 ($89k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1600mT WILD 'N' WOOLLY (f, 2, Bernardini–Merino, by More Than Ready) looks to become the second winner from two to the races from her dam Cableknit, an Unbridled's Song half-sister to champion Speightstown (Gone West) and MGSW/GISP Irap (Tiznow) who was purchased by John Ferguson for $1.7 million at the 2008 Keeneland September Sale. Merino is a half-sister to Capezzano (Bernardini), whose six career victories included a defeat of Thunder Snow (Ire) (Helmet {Aus}) in the G1 Al Maktoum Challenge R3 in 2019. B-Godolphin (KY) 6th-KYO, ¥13,720,000 ($89k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1800m YAEGIRI (f, 2, Gun Runner–Nokaze, by Empire Maker) is out of a mare who has produced five winners from as many to face the starter, including Group 2 winner Air Almas (Majestic Warior), MSW Air Fanditha (Hat Trick {Jpn}) and Group 3-placed Air Sage (Point of Entry). The winning Nokaze is one of nine winners out of Macarena Macarena (Gone West), whose stakes-winning daughter Yuzuru (Medaglia d'Oro) was responsible for MGSW & GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint runner-up Yuugiri (Shackleford). B-Sekie & Tsunebumi Yoshihara (KY) The post Final-Crop Bernardini Filly Debuts For Godolphin at Kyoto appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  4. The inaugural Southern Hemisphere Session catalogue, featuring an octet of mares in foal to Group 1 sire Too Darn Hot (GB), was released by Tattersalls Online and Inglis Digital on Friday. A champion first-season sire in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, the Darley stallion will not shuttle to Australia this year. Set for Dec. 11-12, the sale features the previously announced group-placed duo of Know Thyself (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Sedaka (NZ) (Savabeel {Aus}) and the lightly raced Crimson Coronet (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}). The five new additions to the catalogue are as follows: Frankel (GB)'s winning Believeinmiracles (Ire) (lot 1), who is a granddaughter of G1 Oaks heroine Light Shift (Kingmambo) Belle Isle (GB) (Pastoral Pursuits {GB}) (lot 2), who has a No Nay Never filly at foot, and is already the dam of G3 Cornwallis Stakes hero Abel Handy (Ire) (Arcano {Ire}) and the group-placed Woody Creek (GB) (Zoffany {Ire}) South African Champion 2-Year-Old Filly and Grade 1 winner Cloth Of Cloud (SAf) (Captain Al {SAf}) Kingman (GB) mare Good Liza (Fr) (lot 6), a winning half-sister to multiple group winner and German Group 1-placed Grocer Jack (Ger) (Oasis Dream {GB}) and the stakes winner Ghislaine (GB) (Soldier Hollow {GB}) winner Newton's Night (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 7), who is a full-sister to Grade III winner and stakes producer Dress Rehearsal, the dam of stakes winner and G3 Prix d'Arenberg third Treasure Isle (Ire) (No Nay Never). Supplements will still be accepted through Nov. 29. The post Southern Hemisphere Session Catalogue To Feature Octet In Foal To Too Darn Hot appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  5. The Maryland Jockey Club canceled the Nov. 22 nine-race program at Laurel Park prior to the opener after speaking with jockeys who expressed concerns about riding over the main track.View the full article
  6. A five-horse spill during the opening race of Woodbine's Friday card landed jockeys Justin Stein, Edgar Zenteno, and Da-Sean Gaskin in a local hospital while Woodbine communications reported that all horses involved walked off. The incident happened on the far turn of a $10,000 maiden claimer and appeared to have been triggered by No Layups (Preservationist) clipping heels in front of the pack with Whiskey N Ice (Old Forester). As No Layups tumbled over, the field behind had little time to react and four other trailing horses also went down. Only three runners finished the race led in by Whiskey N Ice who was disqualified and placed behind awarded winner Porsha's Run (Souper Speedy) and runner up Scotty's Love Chil (Mr. Scotty) who narrowly avoided the incident. Stein, Zenteno and Gaskin were each reported by track announcer Robert Geller to be awake and alert and being transported for further medical assessment while the other two riders involved, Juan Crawford and Fraser Aebly, took off their mounts for the rest of Friday's card. This story will be updated. RACE 1 UPDATE: After a spill involving 5 horses in today's first race @WoodbineTB , jockeys Justin Stein, Edgar Zenteno, and Da-Sean Gaskin are being transported to a local hospital for assessment. All horses walked off the track. — Woodbine Communications (@WoodbineComms) November 22, 2024 The post Five-Horse Spill In Woodbine Opener Puts Three Jockeys In Hospital, All Horses OK appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  7. 7th-Meydan, AED165,000, Mdn., 11-22, NH 2yo/SH 3yo, f, 1400m, 1:25.27, ft. ARIGATOU GOZAIMASU (f, 2, Honest Mischief–Woodflower, by Woodman) took over leaving the chute in this first start and raced under pressure down the backstretch. Opening up by several lengths on the far bend, the bay poured it on down the lane to win easily by 8 1/2 lengths. Flama Shunshine (Flameaway) unleashed a rally to take second on the bend, but could not catch the winner and was 17 1/4 lengths in front of third-place finisher Ruby Hamilton (Audible). “At home we know she's a good filly, but we were worried we were rushing them a bit and that others had more work,” said Bernardo Pinheiro. “She trialled well but that was just four furlongs, so we were worried about the distance. She's a great filly, she proved that today and I think we can expect much more from her.” The winner was the eighth for her freshman sire (by Into Mischief), and was purchased by Carson McCord for $235,000 out of the OBS Spring Sale. She worked a furlong in :9 4/5. Her dam, who died this year, has produced Where's Dominic (Midnight Lute), MSP-US, $274,820; Magna Rose (Magna Graduate), SW-US, $167,560; a yearling full-brother to the winner; and Fahnestock (Freud), as her weanling colt. Sales history: $235,000 2yo '24 OBSAPR. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, AED. VIDEO. O-Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum. B-Sequel Stallions New York, LLC (NY). T-Salem bin Ghadayer. *1ST-TIME STARTER. Lovely performance Arigatou Gozaimasu (Honest Mischief) creates quite the impression in the Dubai Islands Fillies' Maiden! A double on the night for @JockeyBPinheiro @SalemGhadayer has a really smart prospect on his hands #DubaiCarnival | #RacingDubai pic.twitter.com/GX73lNN7cP — Dubai Racing Club (@RacingDubai) November 22, 2024 The post Honest Mischief Filly Romps In Meydan Debut appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  8. After speaking with jockeys who expressed concerns about riding over the main track, the Maryland Jockey Club canceled Friday's nine-race program at Laurel Park prior to the opener. Following the cancellation, track officials were in the process of further evaluating the racing surface. Laurel is scheduled to host another nine-race program Saturday headlined by three stakes races – the 6 1/2-furlong Willa On the Move, and six-furlong Dave's Friend and 1 1/8-mile Richard W. Small. Saturday's first race post time is scheduled for 12:25 p.m. The post Laurel Park Cancels Friday’s Race Card Citing Main Track Safety Concerns appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  9. Dixiana Farms' Forever After All will make her second trip out West in search of graded glory in the Nov. 24 $100,000 Red Carpet Stakes (G3T) at Del Mar. View the full article
  10. Anticlimactic goes by the household name of disappointing and there was no disguising the glum faces at Goffs on Friday when Gouache (Ger) (Shamardal), the dam of live Japan Cup hope Goliath (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), failed to sell at €5 million. A collective groan was heard in the jam-packed auditorium when Henry Beeby uttered the words, “I'm afraid that's not enough,” at €5 million. One pressroom colleague suggested that he wouldn't be rushing into a game of poker with the Goffs chief executive any time soon as things seemed to be humming along nicely from one, two, three, and then four into five million euros. Alas, it was never going to be enough and the mare that was billed as the 'jewel in the crown' of the November Sale catalogue was led out unsold by Millennium Stud. Gouache was sourced by Agrolexica International Trading BV for just €200,000 at the December Breeding Stock Sale at Arqana last year. After she changed hands from Schlenderhan, the Francis-Henri Graffard-trained Goliath exploded onto the scene in Europe and accounted for the subsequent Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Bluestocking (GB) (Camelot {GB}) in the King George at Ascot. Goliath is a general 7-1 chance to win the Japan Cup on Sunday. Beeby admitted to being disappointed following the sale on Friday and revealed that the connections of Gouache were hoping to achieve somewhere in the region of €5 million or €6 million. They were understood to value the mare on a par with Alpha Centauri (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) and Alpine Star (Ire) (Sea The Moon {Ger}), who lit up this sale 12 months ago when selling for €6 million apiece. Beeby commented, “As my late father used to tell me, if you haven't got the horse you can't sell it. So you get the horse and work it out after that. The market spoke and they [the owners] valued the mare very highly. That's their prerogative and I respect that very highly. They wanted more than the market valued her at. They took a line through Alpha Centauri and Alpine Star here last year, because they mentioned those mares when we spoke earlier.” He added, “They obviously wanted somewhere between five and six million. It's a bit of a disappointment but that's the way it goes. We're still working, as we have done with the Springfort Park Stud mare [Her Honour (Ire) (Shamardal), who was sold privately to Alex Elliott for €725,000 after failing to reach €850,000 in the ring]. We'll keep working through the weekend and, if Goliath happens to win, we'll ring a few people as well. If it happens, it happens.” More to follow from Goffs The post “It’s Disappointing” – Dam Of Japan Cup Hope Goliath Fails To Sell For 5 Million At Goffs appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  11. Craig “The Whale” Thompson shares his thoughts on Timaru today. View the full article
  12. The Sporting Art Auction, a collaboration between Cross Gate Gallery of Lexington and Keeneland, concluded its 12th edition Nov. 15 by achieving total sales of $2,553,126, Keeneland said via a Friday press release. The auction was headlined by the sale of LeRoy Neiman's To the Wire, a signed oil on board which brought an auction-record price of $334,875. The event drew collectors from seven countries who participated both in person and remotely. Spanning Sporting Art, American paintings and sculpture, 75% of the 203 pieces offered were sold. Click here for more details. The post Sporting Art Auction At Keeneland Concludes With Over $2.5 Million in Sales appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  13. You can say this much for John Stewart, he doesn't think small. Looking to build a stable that can compete at the highest level not only in the U.S. but all over the world, the owner will compete in Sunday's G1 Japan Cup with his newest acquisition, the gelding Goliath (Ger) (Adlerflug {(Ger)}. Stewart purchased a majority interest in Goliath after he won the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Qipco Stakes at odds of 25-1. Since, he has won the G2 Prix du Conseil de Paris Stakes at ParisLongchamp Oct. 20 as a prep for the Japan Cup. “My goal is I want the best horses racing all over the world,” Stewart said by phone from Japan. Goliath was so dominant in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth that Stewart believes he should be considered among the best horses on the planet. “I saw him run in the King George, and before that he really wasn't on my radar,” Stewart said. “And me and [Director of Breeding for Stewart's Resolute Racing] Chelsey [Stone] are big fans of Auguste Rodin, who he beat. We had visited him at Coolmore and we knew he was going to be retiring. We plan to breed to him with some of our horses because 80% of our program is turf. We're big fans of Aidan O'Brien, and we are good friends with the Coolmore team.” All signs point to Goliath, who is four, running a big race in Japan, but he will again have to beat, among others, Auguste Rodin (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), whose wins include the 2023 GI Longines Breeders' Cup Turf and the 2024 G1 Prince of Wales Stakes for the Coolmore team. That's fine by Stewart, as he not only wants to win the biggest races in the world, but to beat the best horses across the planet. “I had fun with Coolmore,” Stewart said. “MV Magnier and I have become pretty good friends. They've sold me some great horses and when I bought this horse he asked 'where are you going to race him?' I said, I don't know, 'Where's Auguste Rodin going to race?' He said 'Why does that matter?' I said, 'Because that's where he is going to go race. I love those guys, but I want to beat them.” Stewart, who runs under the name of Resolute Racing, wants to take on all comers. “Think about it, in my first year I've had a horse in the Kentucky Derby,” he said. “I've had horses at Royal Ascot. I've had a horse in the Golden Slipper. I had a horse in the Everest and now I have a horse in the Japan Cup. It's fun. Who doesn't want to be in all those races?” When it comes to Goliath, he didn't have to be part of a bidding war that included the usual suspects. That's because Goliath is a gelding. While most owners who have the means to buy a horse of his caliber and looking ahead to when the horse can be retired to stud, Stewart doesn't think that way. Goliath | ScoopDyga “With the gelding, you don't have to buy a hundred percent of the horse,” Stewart said. “That's because there are no breeding rights. You just need to control the horse. You're going to see me do more of that.” Still, some wondered why anyone would pay a hefty sum for a gelding. “Remember, my operation is about breed to race,” Stewart said. “So I'm a firm believer that too many of our horses are being retired early.” After the purchase, Stewart could have gone in many different directions, including a start in the Breeders' Cup Turf at Del Mar. But he didn't believe that would be the best spot for his horse. “The reason we didn't go to Breeders Cup, the track is too tight,” he said. “It doesn't set up well for these foreign horses to come over and to run, especially the Europeans where the tracks are a lot wider and bigger and the turns are more sweeping. Trust me, I want to win the Breeders Cup and we finished third [in the GI Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf] with Didia. To me, the ultimate races to win in the U.S. are the Derby and Breeders' Cup races. But with the track configurations it makes it tough for foreign horses. I'm a little frustrated that it's back-to-back at Del Mar.” Another race he wants to win is the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and he is hoping that French racing authorities change the rules so that geldings can compete. “If they want to say it's the best race in the world then geldings shouldn't be excluded,” he said. Stewart wants these races so badly that he often throws in incentives for the winning trainers and jockeys. He has promised jockey Christophe Soumillon and trainer Francis-Henri Graffard that he will buy them each a Porsche should Goliath win the Japan Cup. “I put out incentives for all of my jockeys and trainers,” Stewart said. “If you're a jockey for me and you win a Grade III, you get a $25,000 bonus. For a Grade II, you get $35,000, and for a Grade I you get $50,000. That all started in the New York Stakes with Didia. When Mike Repole and I kind of got into an argument, I told Jose [Ortiz] if he beat Repole, I'd give him a hundred grand. And so he did, and I gave him a hundred grand. I think aligning the incentives is really smart business.” Goliath | photo by Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images Stewart made his first big splash in racing when he spent lavishly at the 2023 November bloodstock sales. He was much quieter this time around. Why? “I had all these people saying I was broke,” he said. “People have no idea how much money I've spent in the industry in the last year. But they said John didn't show up, he must not have any money. Actually, I bought a business for $350 million in Germany during the sales. My private equity business is what affords me the opportunity to do all the stuff I'm doing in the horse industry. So I had to take care of that. I'm not the type of person that's going to have to send somebody else to the auction and buy all the horses because I'm involved in selecting the horses that we're buying. And so I've already got 53 yearlings for next year, and I bought a lot of mares as they were running this year, like Didia and others.” He wishes that more American owners thought the way he does. “In America, we're terrible about taking our best horses and going and racing them elsewhere,” Stewart said. “And that's something I want to do as I build my fan base in the US. I saw the Japan Cup as an opportunity to fast track that whole kind of agenda and create some excitement around this horse.” What's next for Goliath and Didia (Arg) (Orpen) or any of the other star horses he owns now or will in the future.? You can expect anything other than the ordinary. “There's an opportunity globally because I already have horses in Australia,” he said. “I bought some at Arqana and I'm going to have a few over in Europe. My goal is I want the best horses racing all over the world. I have some plans for Didia and when I'm ready to reveal that, I'll let you guys know, but it's going to shock everybody what my plans are for her. This is stuff that other people aren't doing. Because I'm the new guy, I can take more risks and chances even though people write me off. They say I don't know what I'm doing or I'm crazy or whatever. I know exactly what I'm doing.” Today @GraffardRacing and @CSoumillon stopped by @Porsche @PorscheJP to pick out their bonuses for winning the Japan Cup this weekend. Seems fitting they selected Porsche given GOLIATH's German origins. @horseracing_jpn @HR_Nation @WHR @horseracing_jp @jp_horseracing… pic.twitter.com/J3hjtwHpHd — Jstewartrr (@jstewartrr) November 21, 2024 The post Always Aiming High, John Stewart Ready To Tackle Japan Cup With Goliath appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  14. Listed Prix Herod heroine Glamis Road (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) (lot 190) is one of two wildcards that were added to Arqana's Vente d'Elevage on Friday. The sale runs from Dec. 7 to Dec. 10 in Deauville. Offered by Baroda Stud, she was a winner in June on debut, and also ran fourth in the G3 Prix Miesque. The daughter of Pass The Moon (Ire) (Raven's Pass) is currently rated 100. This is the family of Grade I winners Vanlandingham (Cox's Ridge) and Funny Moon (Malibu Moon). Trainer Ollie Sangster said, “Glamis Road is improving and consistent, she showed her class in her best performance to date last time out when impressively winning the Prix Hérod. A mile won't be an issue and she's an exciting filly for next year to be targeting a Guineas trial in the spring.” The second new wildcard is the listed-placed Vasda (Ire) (Shalaa {Ire}) (lot 226), who is part of the Coulonces draft. Trained by Joseph O'Brien, she is rated 98 and is out of the stakes-placed Regina Mundi (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). The 4-year-old filly is also a half-sister to five stakes horses, among them G3 Prix d'Aumale heroine Rocques (Fr) (Lawman {Fr}) and the listed winner Mea Domina (Fr) (Pivotal {GB}), who was also second in the G3 Gladness Stakes. The post Listed Winner Glamis Road And Vasda Join Arqana’s Vente d’Elevage As Wildcards appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  15. WinStar Farm is hoping to see plenty of activity come out of their stallion division in the near future. In 2025, the farm's flagbearer Constitution, currently ranked a top five general sire, will stand for a fee of $110,000 while his son and fellow WinStar resident Independence Hall will see his first 2-year-olds hit the racetrack. Also this coming year, Life Is Good and Nashville will be represented by their first crop of yearlings while Country Grammer and Two Phil's are expecting their first foals. Meanwhile, three new sires have been added to the farm's roster for 2025 with record-setting turf sprinter Cogburn (Not This Time), 2023 GI Champagne Stakes winner Timberlake (Into Mischief) and 'TDN Rising Star' Heartland (Justify). Fletcher Mauk of Small Batch Thoroughbreds was among the breeders that stopped in to check out the newcomers during the past few weeks of open houses at WinStar. “They're exciting stallion prospects,” Mauk said after inspecting the trio. “All three have good bone and nice feet. They were all accomplished as 2-year-olds, which I think is important for a lot of breeders to know that you have the opportunity to have something come running out of a mare. They're all three by very nice sire lines as well.” Four-time graded stakes winner Cogburn leads the charge of new recruits at WinStar with a $30,000 stud fee. He is one of six Grade I winners for Not This Time (featured in Saturday Sires here) and will be the first son of the fast-starting sire to stand at WinStar. WinStar's Liam O'Rourke reported that the multi-millionaire arrived at WinStar shortly after the Breeders' Cup and settled in immediately. “It's rare that you see a stallion come in and have as much composure and as much presence as he's had since the first day he came in,” he said. “He went up there, put his head down, walked like he'd been doing this for 10 years, stood up perfect and didn't move a hair. He's been incredibly well received, a beautiful horse who is going over very well with the breeding public.” Although Cogburn's biggest achievements came this year as a 5-year-old, including a record-setting GI Jaipur victory where he covered 5 ½ furlongs in 59:80 and another memorable win in the GII Turf Sprint Stakes at Kentucky Downs where he completed six furlongs on 1:07.68, O'Rourke said that breeders are also taking note of his earlier resume. The Steve Asmussen trainee broke his maiden by over four lengths on dirt as a juvenile and was runner-up in the GIII Chick Lang Stakes on the main track the following year before he eventually switched to turf. “He really excelled as a 2-year-old and showed a ton of ability on the dirt,” said O'Rourke. “When Steve moved him over to the turf, he definitely hit another level. Speed is speed. It's something that we've always been attracted to here at WinStar. We've had a lot of success with horses like Distorted Humor, Speightstown and More Than Ready who had that really elite speed.” Fletcher Mauk said that he has plans to send an American Pharoah mare to Cogburn that was twice stakes placed going over a mile on turf. “For me, the big thing is incorporating speed into that pedigree,” he said. “More than likely we'll end up with a turf horse just given her female side, but you don't know and that's what's exciting about a horse that has been able to run on every surface. Anything is possible and I don't even necessarily think that he is going to throw just speed given his sire. I think you could get any distance as well.” A 'TDN Rising Star' in his 9 1/4-length maiden win for WinStar and Siena Farm, Timberlake was runner-up in the GI Hopeful Stakes before soundly claiming the GI Champagne over a field that included future 2-year-old champion Fierceness (City of Light). “The Champagne places him as the only Grade I-winning 2-year-old by Into Mischief other than Practical Joke in Kentucky,” said O'Rourke. “We've gotten a great response from breeders on that. He was talented, very precocious, and just a big, strong, handsome horse that people are really falling in love with when they come out here.” Timberlake, winner of the GII Rebel Stakes this year as a 3-year-old, will stand for 20,000. After getting a look at the newcomer, Mauk said he believes the son of Into Mischief shows the potential to become a versatile sire. “I don't think he's necessarily your typically shaped 2-year-old graded stakes winner,” he explained. “To me he has a little bit more range in his body, a longer shoulder and maybe a more slope-y hip. The fact that he did win a very important race as a 2-year-old in the Champagne and then went on to win the Rebel I think is a good indication that you're not limited in your scope of exclusively being a sprinter or a 2-year-old horse.” Rounding out the trio, Heartland made only one career start, but the team at WinStar believes he has the resume to succeed in this next chapter. A homebred for WinStar and a half-brother to juvenile champion Classic Empire (Pioneerof the Nile), Heartland sold for $575,000 at the Keeneland September Sale, going to China Horse Club and Siena Farm with WinStar staying in for a piece. “He was at the head of the class among our 2-year-olds that year,” O'Rourke reported. “David Hanley, Elliott Walden and [trainer] Neil McLaughlin were gushing about this horse. He was our first 2-year-old that we sent on.” Making his debut for Bob Baffert at Del Mar last July, Heartland rated off the pace before picking off rivals around the turn and then opening up over future stakes winner Slider (Jimmy Creed) by two lengths, completing 5 ½ furlongs in 1:03.20 and earning a 90 Beyer Speed Figure. While Heartland was never able to make it back to the starting gate, the WinStar team is hoping he can make his mark as a sire. Standing for $10,000, Heartland will be the second son of Justify to stand in Kentucky after Spendthrift's Arabian Lion retired last year. “It's very intentional that he is here at WinStar,” said O'Rourke. “We are going to support him very strongly in his first several years at stud and we have some creative incentives for our breeders that we think make him a really good value proposition. Justify obviously is doing incredible things as a stallion and I think it's a great access point to Justify at that $10,000 level. He's got the pedigree to back it up being a half-brother to Classic Empire and by one of the most elite sires in the world, so we think he's got a big chance and we're getting some good support from breeders on him.” The post A Lot to Look Forward To for WinStar in 2025 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  16. Last week, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority announced that its Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) standing committee was replacing three outgoing members with new ones. Among them was David Ingordo, arguably the first hands-on horseman the group has seated. The committee is required by federal law to be composed of four independent members and three industry representatives. The committee plays a key role in advising and assisting HISA with the establishment of comprehensive rules and protocols for its ADMC Program, including the prohibited substances list, laboratory testing standards, and in- and out-of-competition testing programs. The daily operations of the ADMC Program are managed by the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU), a subsidiary of Drug Free Sport International, which works to ensure horseracing is conducted in accordance with the ADMC Program. We talked to Ingordo how his years on HISA's horsemen's advisory committee shaped his view of the current rules, what he hopes to bring to the table as an active horseman. SF: When it's working at its best, how does the ADMC Standing Committee function? DI: The purpose of this committee is to recommend the anti-doping and medication rules to the HISA Board who then submit them to the FTC for approval. They also provide guidance on some of the more challenging issues that arise in connection with the enforcement of these rules under the ADMC program. Frankly, its function is a critically important one and it is a serious responsibility to be involved on this committee, making recommendations to HISA and fixing any of the problems with those rules and their enforcement. SF: Do you have monthly meetings? How does it work? DI: I haven't served on the committee yet and the appointment officially starts in January when we have our first meeting. As I understand, that's when we'll lay out the itinerary and the agenda for the year. I understand the expectations are for us to be active and proactive on getting policy right. SF: How many people are on the committee? DI: There is a total of seven members, four “independent,” from outside the industry and three “industry.” The Committee chairman must also sit on the HISA Board. Charles Scheeler is an independent and he is both the chairman of the HISA Board and the ADMC Committee. You have three industry members, who will now be Dr. Jeff Blea, myself, and veterinarian Dr. David Sykes. I had my first introductory conversation with Chairman Scheeler on Wednesday. I was impressed with him and energized by the thoughts that we shared for what he called “ADMC 2.0.” SF: Dr. Jeff Blea obviously works in the trenches, but you are probably the person with the most hands-on horse-training experience that the ADMC has ever had on board. Would you say that's true? And what have they been lacking in practical advice that you can bring? DI: I would like to discuss that. Jeff Blea, who is a world-class veterinarian, and remains on the committee, was quite hands-on before he became the Equine Medical Director for the state of California. I've worked with and respected Jeff since my teens, so I know him first as a practicing veterinarian. Just because he's gone over to the regulatory side doesn't mean he has forgotten how to work with horses and trainers or how racing works. I would contend that Jeff is still hands-on in his current role. His experience on the racetrack is on par with mine, but he is a veterinarian; I'm not. I would say the same about (outgoing member) Dr. (Lynn) Hovda, who is a very sharp person. Barry Irwin is the other outgoing committee member, and he would rightly argue that he has a lot of knowledge about all that is racing as well! To rephrase it that I'm a different type of hands-on appointment, I would say that is very true. I'm different than anyone on the Committee because I'm looking at the rules from a trainer, owner, gambler and even a Thoroughbred auction point of view. I'm not from a veterinary or a regulatory background. I'm coming to this appointment with what I see as a practical, common-sense way of dealing with the X's and O's of training and racing horses safely, because this is my livelihood. SF: Cherie DeVaux, your wife, is a trainer, and you work closely with her in various aspects of the business. How will you represent that viewpoint on this committee? DI: My wife is a horse trainer as are many of my family and friends, so I'm sure I will get a lot of their solicited and unsolicited viewpoints…like it or not! Joking aside, I have great respect for the job of a horse trainer. It is the toughest job in our industry, adding to everything that is the responsibility of the trainer: wins versus losses, the horse and employees, the bills and results of post-race testing. My goal is to listen, represent their viewpoint where pertinent, help improve what rules are already in place and fix those that need replacement. So not only for my wife, but for all the people who train–family, friend or otherwise–it's imperative we to get these rules and their enforcement right. SF: As a follow-up to that question, you've been on the HISA Horsemen's Advisory Committee for two years. What sort of things did you hear from horsemen there that you feel you can bring to this committee that will be helpful? DI: The words that many trainers and owners used when calling and discussing their issues and qualms with HISA were `common sense' and `practical.' I'm hopeful that I can help the ADMC committee and HISA by articulating and helping to understand what rules and regulations might make sense in theory but not in practice. Chairman Scheeler called it the “ADMC 2.0” in acknowledgement of that when we spoke on our call, knowing we need to iron out the issues with the rules that are currently in place that we are all aware of. That was exciting for me to hear and to be able to share with horsemen. SF: In terms of what you've heard from horsemen until this point, where have they been right in their objections and where do you think they've been wrong? DI: They've been right and effective in voicing their objections, pointing out the well-reported issues and helping develop practical solutions by working with HISA. Early on, they drew attention to how some racing jurisdictions were keeping to the old rules, not following the updated HISA rules. There are many great lobbyists inside the Horsemen's Advisory Group and within the broader industry who have done an excellent job communicating when they see a problem and articulating, “This is a problem that needs to be fixed and here is a solution that works for horsemen.” The wise horsemen have used their political clout, to the benefit of all horsemen, to get the ear of HISA and get problems identified and fixed quickly, faster than I have experienced pre-HISA. By working with HISA and through the process, horsemen in general have helped all the participants across the board. My personal experience is that HISA and Lisa Lazarus want to get it right and when you approach HISA professionally, you have a great chance of success getting substantial changes made. SF: And where have they been wrong? DI: I think a broad mistake that horsemen have made is not taking the time to understand HISA and to get a deeper understanding of what the facts are versus the fiction, not developing their own relationship and understanding of HISA. I do not think that horsemen as a group had a good understanding that most of these rules were in place pre-HISA and HIWU, but now they're being enforced more than they were previously. A lot of horsemen got bad professional advice on how to navigate the process to work with HISA. The professionals that are advising horsemen, they need to recalibrate how they work within the new regulatory framework. As is wont at the racetrack, rumors circulate, and horsemen often are getting HISA information from a slanted or wrong viewpoint or interpretation, often from trade organizations that are supposed to be there to help horsemen and advocate for them. Horsemen are getting their understanding of policy from second- or third-hand sources and often the truth is nowhere near what they are being told. Horsemen have been given the impression HISA is against them, and instead of seeking their own understanding and relationship with HISA, they accept what they are told via the rumor mill. It has happened to me so I understand how easy it is to not do your own homework on the subject. SF: You are known for being bluntly honest. You're a huge HISA supporter, but what have they done wrong? DI: You're right. I'm a huge HISA supporter because it's here, and if it's here, we should make a conscious effort to work with it. I didn't agree with the provisional suspensions. I think they were a mistake in how they were executed in the beginning. I don't think HISA understood exactly what happens on the backside as far as how horses are trained and all the interworking parts of a backstretch, the whole ecosystem. I don't think they understood the sport from the bottom to the top. I think they went in with good intentions, but I don't think they initially had enough information on how to build this out the right way. SF: Give me an example. DI: When HISA was created, they had people who were independent from the industry designing the program. And in theory, having people with no conflicts of interest and independent is a good idea because then you're not getting cronyism, you're not getting `well, my mother's mother's mother did it this way, so we've got to do it that way.' But the mistake was not having a good team of horsemen and industry participants advising from the beginning on these rules and being part of that conversation. They needed an experienced Horsemen's Advisory Board from day one. The way I understand it, USADA wrote a lot of these rules without industry input and Lisa and her team inherited them. The analogy I used was they built this beautiful building and then went and tried to put the foundation under it after it was built. And that just doesn't work from a building standpoint. I think the biggest mistake that HISA made in the beginning was not getting more hands-on active industry participants, whether they're trainers, vets, or owners. With that, I think HISA could have figured out some of the operational flaws before it was put into operation. SF: Do you think that the way the drugs of human abuse were treated was a mistake? DI: I think that HISA perhaps didn't know fully what we were dealing with on the backside. I would go as far as to say we all didn't fully know. How many meth positives were there before HISA? I don't remember it being such an issue, but I know people were abusing it before HISA. Maybe they weren't testing for that as much as they should? Maybe it wasn't in the budget of a racing jurisdiction to test for meth or Metformin? Maybe laboratories made judgement calls on what they through were trace amounts? I don't really know the answer, but I think it could have been handled differently. SF: I asked you what HISA did wrong. So tell me what they've done right. DI: I would say the number one achievement of HISA thus far is saving horses' lives. HISA has been a big part of bringing us back from the brink of that awful day at Saratoga in the not-too-distant past. It is important to remember that many of the rules were created pre-Lazarus coming on board, so addressing bad rules and being open to change is something that was much harder pre-HISA. HISA having an open door to horsemen to come in and debate and change bad policies and the willingness to listen and work with industry participants to find solutions. SF: Give me some examples of things that have been changed due to the ADMC. DI: The dropping of the provisional suspensions is huge. Improved communication and working with trainers on their positives over the course of the last year has greatly improved. HISA is making strides towards laboratory unification – testing for the same substances at the same level at all the labs, this has never been done before and it is now standard under HISA. SF: You have a lot on your plate already. How much time do you spend on this and why is it important—both to the industry, but also to you? DI: That I have a lot on my plate is an understatement! Kidding aside, it is important to understand that the people on the ADMC, or the HISA Safety Committee, or the Horsemen's Advisory Committee, are all doing a civic duty to horseracing by giving their time. Participating in the ADMC is one way I can give back to the industry on a subject matter that is critically important that we get right. I spend anywhere from one to three hours a day on HISA issues many days of the week. It's important to me because right now, as we're doing this interview, these are the rules that our game is to follow at a federal level. So, we need them to be the best, the fairest, the most accurate that they can be. It's important to me because people I care about all get up in the morning to play this game. I love racing and it's all I'm interested in doing. I do all the work I do to be able to watch horses compete at the track. It's a passion and if I can be part of a solution, to have this industry around for future generations and help other people enjoy it, then I've done my part. That's what I feel like the task at hand here is: getting this right so we can race horses safely and treat people fairly. SF: As an industry, do we have to get HISA right to survive? DI: Everyone has an opinion on what happened to get HISA here and I believe we had decades to get it right as an industry on our own, and we didn't. I respect that people have different opinions on how to do it, but we need to get HISA right. The country right now is divided politically, and our industry is divided on HISA. If we don't get racing right, and the numerous external forces get their way, we won't have anything to be fighting over, racing will be extinct. We all need to be statesmen and women and to reach across the proverbial aisle and work together. There has got to be give-and-take on both sides because the horsemen aren't 100% right and the regulatory agencies aren't 100% right. So, do I think we need HISA to survive at the end of the day? Yes. The post Q and A With New ADMC Committee Member David Ingordo appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  17. Three of Europe's top 2400-metre gallopers face an 11-strong local challenge in Sunday's G1 Japan Cup, looking to snap an 18-year run of success for Japanese-based horses. While it has become next to impossible for the raiders to walk away with the Tokyo spoils, that was not always the case. In the first 17 renewals, horses from overseas prevailed on no fewer than a dozen occasions, including theretofore unprecedented consecutive winners for Sir Michael Stoute with Singspiel (Ire) and Pilsudski (Ire) in 1996 and 1997, respectively. But since that time, it has been an embarrassment of riches for the home team as the depth in quality of Japanese bloodstock has increased meteorically. Only Falbrav (Ire) in the shortened Japan Cup at Nakayama in 2002 and Alkaased in 2005 have since been able to solve the race for the raiders, while the likes of Deep Impact (Jpn), Epiphaneia (Jpn), Contrail (Jpn), Kitasan Black (Jpn) and the latter's son Equinox (Jpn) have been joined on the local honour roll by top females Gentildonna (Jpn), Vodka (Jpn) and two-time winner Almond Eye (Jpn). It has been an enigmatic version in 2024 of Auguste Rodin (Ire), who becomes the first foreign-based son of Deep Impact to contest a race on the JRA circuit. Never a factor at any point of the G1 Longines Dubai Sheema Classic on seasonal debut, he bounced back to prove best in the G1 Prince of Wales's Stakes at the Royal meeting and all seemed well in the world. Unable to match strides up the hill when fifth to Goliath (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}) in the G1 King George & Queen Elizabeth Stakes in July–a performance trainer Aidan O'Brien attributes to underfoot conditions that were easier than the listed good-to-firm–the 4-year-old was just beaten in the dying strides by the in-form Economics (GB) (Night of Thunder {Ire}) in the G1 Irish Champion Stakes Sept. 14. A victory on Sunday would be the cherry on top of a fantastic career. “We always dreamed that Auguste Rodin could finish off his career in Japan–obviously he's by one of the greatest stallions ever, Deep Impact, and his dam (three-time Group 1 winner Rhodendron {Ire}) is by Galileo (Ire), which is one of the greatest stallions ever in our part of the world,” O'Brien said earlier this week. “So, we always dreamed that he could be a horse for the Japan Cup. We know how difficult it is to win and how competitive it is and it's his third year in training and it's his last race. It was a dream that we could win the Japan Cup, we've tried it before, but no horse was as good as this horse.” Goliath was runner-up in the G2 Hardwicke Stakes at Royal Ascot, and his King George was a bit Harbinger-esque, as he came to win it on the bridle at the furlong, pinched a break and had future G1 Prix de l'Arc de Troimphe winner Bluestocking (GB) (Camelot {GB}) in second and recent GI Breeders' Cup Turf hero Rebel's Romance (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) back in third. A majority interest was subsequently acquired by American John Stewart's Resolute Racing and he prepped for this with a soft success in the G2 Prix du Conseil in heavy ground at ParisLongchamp Oct. 20. Jockey Christophe Soumillon has his first ride in Japan in five years and is bullish on his chances. “I really think I ride the best horse in the race,” the Belgian said. “So, we're going to do our best on Sunday to realize everybody's dream. The team worked hard to bring him 100% fit and I think his owner wants to realize also something big, so we are all very confident.” Germany won the 1995 Japan Cup with the globetrotting Lando (Ger) and Fantastic Moon (Ger) (Sea The Moon {Ger}) will give it a go this weekend. Victorious in Group 2 company at Cologne in June, the bay filled the runner-up spot for the second straight season in the G1 Bayrisches Zuchtrennen July 28 ahead of an eye-catching defeat of Dubai Honour (GB) (Prince of Dubai {Aus}) in the Sept. 1 G1 Grosser Preis von Baden. His ninth in the Arc is arguably better than it looks, he travels kindly and has a smart turn of foot, and the Fuchu course may just suit him. The local charge is headed up by the likely favourite Do Deuce (Jpn) (Heart's Cry {Jpn}), whose sire was just beaten in 2005. Last year's G1 Arima Kinen hero was bothered by a stricken horse when making a run in this year's G1 Dubai Turf and he likely did not get through the conditions when sixth to Blow The Horn (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) in the G1 Takarazuka Kinen in June, but whistled home impressively (final 600m in :32.5) to take out the G1 Tenno Sho (Autumn) over this track Oct. 27. Legendary jockey Yutaka Take looks for a fifth Japan Cup, and first since Kitasan Black in 2016. “I have ridden many excellent horses, and have had joyous moments and frustrating moments,” said Take. “Last year, due to injury, I couldn't ride Do Deuce in the Japan Cup, but this year I'm in all the way. This horse has at most two more starts and I want to ride in such a way that leaves no room for regrets.” Justin Palace (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), a Group 1 winner over 3200 metres, was also inconvenienced by the ground in the Takarazuka Kinen and–particularly when factoring in that he is a stayer–also finished well (:33 flat) in the Tenno Sho to be a close fourth. The extra 400 metres works in his favour here. Cervinia (Jpn) (Harbinger {GB}) disappointed in this year's G1 Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas), but bounced back to take the final two legs of the filly Triple Crown, the G1 Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) May 19 and the Oct. 13 G1 Shuka Sho. Fellow Oaks winner Stars on Earth (Jpn) (Duramente {Jpn}) did not miss the top three in her first 12 starts, but makes her first start since an eighth to Rebel's Romance in the Sheema Classic. She returned from a similar absence to finish an excellent third behind Equinox here 12 months back. The post Capable European Trio Try To Snap Dubious Streak In Japan Cup appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  18. In honor of the 10th anniversary of Silver Charm's arrival, Old Friends is hosting a special event on Sunday, Dec. 1 so fans can celebrate the day with the 30-year-old who is currently the oldest living Kentucky Derby winner, the retirement home said in a release early Friday. Date: Sunday, December 1, 2024 Time: Noon-2:00 p.m. ET Where: Old Friends, 1841 Paynes Depot Road, Georgetown, Kentucky Admission: Free Another highlight will be Mike Middleton, who will be onsite to demonstrate the making of Raku Pottery using some of Silver Charm's hair in honor of the retired stallion's anniversary at Old Friends. The post Silver Charm Celebrates 10 years At Old Friends With Dec. 1 Event appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  19. The Breed Smart Forum: Matings for Markets will take place on Thursday, Nov. 28 in the sales ring at Park Paddocks during the Tattersalls December Foal Sale, the Thoroughbred Breeders' Association (TBA) announced on Friday. Beginning at 5 p.m. and sponsored by Streets Bloodstock, the forum will feature panelists Richard Brown, William Haggas, Alice Thurtle, Patrick Diamond, Clive Webb-Carter and will be hosted by Sky Sports Racing's, Vanessa Ryle. Free to attend, the forum will look at matings and discuss key considerations when it comes to selecting a stallion, the importance of trends, data and statistics in that process, physical assessment; and breeding for the racetrack, as well as considering the potential commercial appeal of each horse in the sales ring. The panelists bring together a wealth of knowledge and expertise from statistical based analysis of pedigrees, finding value in stallion selection, considerations when entering into stallion agreements and the influence of trends. This will be followed by a Q&A session for attendees to get involved with. Claire Sheppard, CEO of the TBA said, “We are really pleased to be able to announce our Breed Smart Forum next Thursday at Tattersalls, with an expert panel assembled to discuss the subject of matings. “We are here to support not only our members but all breeders and help their breeding entities thrive and while there are plenty of challenges for the sector, we want to provide platforms such as this for industry professionals, new entrants and enthusiasts alike to exchange knowledge, ideas and importantly ask questions. Thanks must go to Streets Accountants for their support of this event, Tattersalls for providing the venue and all our panellists.” The post TBA Breed Smart Forum: Matings For Markets Set For Nov. 28 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  20. When Amplify Horse Racing was founded as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in 2020, our goal was to engage youth with the Thoroughbred industry. As 2024 draws to a close, I reflect with immense pride on how Amplify isn't just engaging youth with the Thoroughbred industry-we have become the national youth arm of the U.S. industry. By the end of the year, Amplify will have directly reached over 28,000 individuals through classroom lessons, events, interactive activations, and conference presentations. We recently wrapped up one of our busiest programming weekends of the year, hosting a “Thoroughbred Discovery Day” in Lexington for 4-H students from eight different states, conducting a multitude of behind-the-scenes industry visits for our 2024 mentee award winners, and capped it off with an end-of-year student networking event that fostered connections with industry professionals and got them thinking about careers in horse racing. And we're not done yet-one more high school career fair and a symposium presentation remain on the calendar. This year Amplify: Hosted student programming in Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, and New York; Welcomed 20 mentees into our mentorship program, helping them forge meaningful paths into the industry; Presented to over 20 student groups, inspiring countless young minds to explore careers in our industry; Was represented at five conferences across five states, delivering impactful presentations at three; Participated in various high school career fairs in Lexington to introduce students to career opportunities in Thoroughbred racing; Launched a mentoring partnership with the Horse Racing Women's Summit; Hosted activations at BreyerFest, United States Pony Clubs Championships, and with the Eastern National 4-H Horse Roundup, directly connecting youth from around the country with the Thoroughbred industry. None of this would have been possible without the backing of key industry supporters, including Breeders' Cup, Churchill Downs, Godolphin, Keeneland, The Jockey Club, and nonprofit partners like Horse Country and the KEEP Foundation. These organizations have demonstrated a shared commitment to developing the next generation of horsemen and horsewomen. Amplify has positioned itself as the feeder program for our industry's workforce, ownership, and fan base. However, as an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit, we can only continue this vital work with sustained support from industry stakeholders. Looking ahead, Amplify aims to expand its presence to at least 10 states by 2028. To achieve this vision, we've launched the Amplify Impact Campaign to create more localized opportunities for youth to engage with the industry and access valuable resources. Campaign goals include enhancing educational programs through curriculum creation and implementation, the development of a mobile education unit to bring interactive equine educational experiences to communities nationwide, and expanding outreach by facilitating the development of regional chapters and partnerships. Amplify is proud to lead the way in connecting youth to horses by way of the Thoroughbred industry, through education, mentorship, and career pathways. Together, we can ensure a vibrant future for horse racing by investing in the next generation. I invite the entire Thoroughbred industry to join us in this mission to amplify horse racing's impact among youth. Annise Montplaisir Executive Director, Amplify Horse Racing The post Letter To The Editor: Amplify Has Become The National Youth Arm Of The U.S. Industry appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  21. Oaks heroine Qualify (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) was the first mare to breach the €500,000 mark on Friday, when selling for €650,000 to Ballylinch Stud during the first day of the Goffs November Breeding Stock Sale. Consigned by Godolphin, lot 1158 is the dam of two winners, including G3 Jebel Ali Mile scorer Swing Vote (GB) (Shamardal). The extended family features G1 St Leger hero and sire Brian Boru (GB). The Whisperview Trading-bred mare is in foal to champion sire elect Dark Angel (Ire). 2015 Oaks winner Qualify is off to Ballylinch Stud after being bought for €650,000 @Goffs1866. She is in foal to Dark Angel and is the dam of a G3 winner. She was consigned by Godolphin. pic.twitter.com/7kieyV39Kf — TDN (@theTDN) November 22, 2024 The post Ballylinch Stud Pays €650,000 For Oaks Heroine Qualify In Foal To Dark Angel At Goffs appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  22. By Michael Guerin Sammy Kilgour got her first New Zealand win as a horse trainer when Loteria finally got things right at Alexandra Park on Friday night. But it might have felt more like her first win as a horse psychiatrist. Kilgour has spent much of her life in Australia but has lived on both sides of the Tasman since meeting her now fiancee Joshua Dickie. The pair trained winners in partnership in Australia but when Loteria overcame the unruly to easily leave maidens in the Classique Landscapers Trot it was Kilgour’s first in just her own right, albeit Dickie might have leant her a hand on the odd occasion. The daughter of Majestic Son has always shown ability but Kilgour says her issue has been her nerves so her trainer decided to make her confront them. “She gets really nervous around other horses so I have been making her spend as much time with other horses as possible,” explains Kilgour. “Her manners issues are all because of that, nothing to do with her attitude. “She actually has a lovely attitude which is why Josh and I love her so much, it was just a matter of getting her confidence up. “So to see her come out and win like that was an unbeatable feeling.” Kilgour works Loteria herself most mornings at Dickie’s father John’s property before heading to her day job alongside Joshua at Stonewall Stud. “We love it there and they are great people to work with.” Loteria was one of two horses the couple brought back from Victoria with them, the other being a son of Sweet Lou and the Kilgour-owned Miracle Mile winner Baby Bling, who is currently spelling. Loteria struggled with the standing starts when she first started racing in New Zealand so Kilgour is thrilled her main aim for the end of the season, the $100,000 Golden Gait Trot for three-year-olds on December is a mobile mile. But Kilgour and Dickie also have some even more long-term planning to do, as the couple are engaged but with no wedding date in sight. “We have both been so busy and the hardest part is finding time to go look at some venues. But we will get around to it,” she laughs. Kilgour’s first New Zealand training success was one of the highlights of a night that saw Sooner The Better back in the winner’s circle when he led throughout in the hands of Crystal Hackett after dropping a long way back in grade. And Faith In Manchester kept up her fine form with an almost all-the-way win in the main trot as she prepares for the new $100,000 Group 1 trot the Queen Of Diamonds in three weeks. While she has won three of her last four starts she will still be off the front in the new trot on December 13 so therefore very hard to beat. View the full article
  23. France Galop and the American Racing Channel (ARC) have extended their partnership through 2027, the companies announced on Friday. ARC sponsors the G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest, which will carry prize-money of €380,000. On that same card, all of the remaining races will carry the ARC name, as well as the names of the South American Racing or Breeding Authorities. The partnership began in 2011, and allows French racegoers to wager on races in Latin America. These races are broadcast live on Equidia. Guillaume de Saint-Seine, president of France Galop, added, “We are absolutely delighted with the continuation of the partnership between L'ARC and France Galop. The renewal of this commitment illustrates the quality of the strong relationship between our two organisations. Every summer, this sponsorship agreement is highlighted during a race day at the Deauville meeting. What's more, the taking of bets in France on Latin American races allows us to expand the range of products available to racing enthusiasts, while ensuring an additional return that benefits all those involved in racing.” The post France Galop And American Racing Channel Extend Partnership For Three More Years appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  24. How did we get hooked on this sport? We all have stories about how our love affair developed and blossomed. The TDN will be reaching out to numerous notable people in the industry to get their stories to find out how they got hooked and stayed hooked on the sport. Dave Johnson, Racecaller & Radio Host My mom and dad and then my grandparents on both sides, they all went to Fairmount Park just for fun when I was growing up in St. Louis. Mostly it was just for holidays because Fairmount raced in the afternoon and so on holidays, they could go. We went as family. I'm looking at a picture right now of my grandmother, my grandfather, my aunt and my uncle at Fairmount Park. The picture has to be from the '40s, before I was born. They started taking me to the track when I was a young kid. As it turned out, I was a bit of a tout. My mom told me there was one holiday, I was about five, and we got a box for the afternoon. The guy in next box said, 'I don't know how you can beat the favorite in here? He has the best jockey and the track is fast.' My mom told me I piped up and said 'this horse has no shot.' When I was five or six years old, I was touting. On another occasion, my mother and I took the train from St. Louis to New Orleans to visit my father, who was in the Army at the time. I brought along some Racing Forms that I had collected. It was on that train ride that my mother taught me how to read the Form. I went to Catholic grade school and the principal called my dad and said, `Dave is not the sharpest knife in the drawer, but he's incredible when it comes to fractions. He's teaching the other kids about 3-5, 2 ½, 5-2.' I think I made my first daily double bet when I was 10 years old. Through my parents and my grandparents, I was hooked from the very start . That's really the best way to do it, go to track with family and friends. As for the announcing, I worked for a law firm in St. Louis and was hoping to become a lawyer. That's when Todd Creed the announcer at Fairmont Park got ill for a bit and I moved into the announcer's booth. We became friends and in 1966 he took the job at Ak-Sar-Ben and things opened up for me. I got the job at Cahokia first and then later at Fairmount. I became the announcer, so I left the law firm. So much for becoming a lawyer. Jerry Brown, Thoro-Graph I grew up in Greenwich village, which is not exactly a racing hot bed. When I was a kid the only page of the sports page that I did not read was the racing page. Baseball, football, basketball. I could tell you everyone's batting average but I had no idea about racing. A neighbor of mine, a kid I grew up with named Steve Jones, took me to the track three times and I was impressed with what was going on, but I didn't know anything. I was completely green. One day, I am sitting in the Blimpie Base across from where we played basketball. It was a place we'd go to when we cut school. They actually had a Racing Form sitting at the table by the window. I was trying to figure out how to read the speed ratings. A guy came in. I'm a teenager at this point and he's probably in his forties. He saw me reading the Racing Form and wanted to know if I wanted a job working for him in horse racing. Being the Village in the '70s, I assumed he was trying to pick me up. It was Len Ragozin. My father was literally ready to throw me out of the house if I didn't get a job. So I went to work for Ragozin. I went to work for him first as a clerk. My first day there, listening to the conversation between him and this crazy guy he had working for him, I realized that they knew much more than anybody else who was handicapping, betting or making picks. They were in a completely different league. At that point, all the information was on hand-written file cards. The numbers were color coded for distance. He first hired me as a clerk. When the entries came out, I had to pull that card on every horse. They weren't using computers back then. I went to work for him and I did well betting. Ragozin had his own stable at that point. I got the job managing the stable. We started with three horses and about $20,000. Four years later, we were third in the country in wins. At this point, there weren't even photocopies of the sheets. You had to be okayed by Ragozin to be allowed to used the sheets. If we wanted to go to the track, four or five us would get in a car together, get to the track and share the only copies of these sheets that there were. Ragozin was from the games world, and a lot of these guys were bridge, chess, backgammon players that were so good nobody would play them so they weren't able to make any money. In the first international scrabble tournament, five of the top 10 in the world came from Ragozin's office. They were a sophisticated crew, very smart people who were not part of the general culture. We were generally counter-culture. I liked being part of that. It wasn't so much cashing individual bets. What got me hooked is that we were winning and we knew what we were doing and other people didn't know what they were doing. That was cool and I liked it. I had a dad who was somewhat of an authoritarian. So I've always had a problem with authority. The idea of being my own boss appealed to me, not having to wear a tie appealed to me. The way I came into it, all these sorts of things appealed to me about racing. I could get up when I wanted, and dress how I wanted. Nobody could tell me what to do and that had a lot to do with it. Ragozin and I, to put it mildly, did not get along. When we would argue it would get so loud that the woman who was managing the office would lock herself in the bathroom. Eventually he created a situation where I had to leave. After taking a year off I set up my own shop and went into business against him. To share your own story of how you got hooked on racing, email suefinley@thetdn.com. The post How I Got Hooked on Racing: Dave Johnson, Jerry Brown appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
  25. Two more wildcards have joined the bumper Tattersalls December Mares Sale with listed winner Sakti (Ire) (Caravaggio) set to sell on Tuesday as lot 1771B and maiden winner Naughty Eyes (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) catalogued as lot 1486D on Monday. Three-year-old Sakti, who will be consigned by Gove Stud, is trained by Ger Lyons was placed on all three starts at two, including finishing runner-up in the G2 Debutante and G3 Park Stakes. She won a Dundalk maiden in March before returning to stakes company, winning the listed Cooley Fillies & Mares Stakes over a mile on her most recent start as well as notching two other listed places. The juvenile Naughty Eyes has won her sole start for George Boughey in a Wolverhampton maiden over six furlongs in early November. She is out of an Exceed And Excel (Aus) half-sister to dual Group 1 winner Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}). The post Sakti and Naughty Eyes Added to Tattersalls December appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
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