Preakness Stakes To Offer Automatic Starting Position In Breeders’ Cup Classic

Officials of the Breeders' Cup and The Stronach Group today announced that the winner of the 145th Preakness Stakes (G1) for 3-year-olds on Oct. 3 at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore will earn an automatic starting position into the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1). The announcement marks the first time that a Triple Crown race will be a part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

The Breeders' Cup Challenge is an international series of stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into corresponding races of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, scheduled to be held this year on Nov. 6-7 at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky. The $7 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, contested at 1 ¼ miles, will be run on Saturday, Nov. 7.

Both the Preakness, run at 1 3/16 miles, and the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, will be broadcast live on NBC.

“We are delighted to join The Stronach Group and the Maryland Jockey Club in welcoming the Preakness to this year's Breeders' Cup Challenge Series, and that we will be able to provide the winning connections with an added incentive to run in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic,” said Drew Fleming, Breeders' Cup President and CEO. “As a foundation race of the Triple Crown, and the premier event in the proud history of Maryland racing, we look forward to working together with The Stronach Group, and our partners at NBC Sports, to promote an exciting fall season for Thoroughbred racing.”

“The events of 2020 have for all of us been about responding to unforeseen challenges and making the best of them,” said Craig Fravel, Chief Executive Officer, Racing Operations, 1/ST. “Many of those challenges including the changes to the Triple Crown have been unwelcome but becoming part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series is most welcome and a fitting finale to the three-year-old season as the horses and their connections make their way to Baltimore for the last leg of the Triple Crown. We look forward to hosting the best of America's three-year-old horses on October 3 at the Preakness and to enjoying their success thereafter in the Breeders' Cup Classic.”

“With terrific racing ahead, we're excited that the two biggest events of the fall months will be further connected with the Preakness Stakes winner earning a coveted berth in the Breeders' Cup Classic,” said Jon Miller, President of Programming for NBC and NBCSN.

Due to scheduling changes caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the Preakness date was shifted from May 16 to Oct. 3, and will be run as the third jewel of the 2020 Triple Crown. This year's Triple Crown began on June 20 with the Belmont Stakes (G1), won by Tiz the Law, at Belmont Park, and will be followed by the Kentucky Derby (G1), which will be run on Sept. 5 at Churchill Downs.

Four Preakness winners have won the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic. In 2015, American Pharoah swept the Triple Crown and the Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland to become racing's first “Grand Slam” winner. Preakness winners Sunday Silence (1989), Alysheba (1987) and Curlin (2007) also won the Classic. Alysheba captured the Classic in 1988.

As part of the benefits of the Challenge series, the Breeders' Cup will pay the $150,000 in entry fees for the Preakness winner to start in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, which is limited to 14 starters. Breeders' Cup also will provide a travel allowance of $10,000 for all North American starters based outside of Kentucky to compete in the World Championships. The Preakness winner must already be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program or it must be nominated by the Championships' pre-entry deadline of Oct. 26 to receive the rewards.

There are six horses who have thus far earned automatic starting positions into this year's Longines Breeders' Cup Classic through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Mozu Ascot, winner of the February Stakes (G1) at Tokyo Racecourse on Feb. 23; Tom's d'Etat, who took the Stephen Foster Stakes (G2) at Churchill Downs on June 27; Authentic, winner of the TVG.com Haskell Stakes (G1) at Monmouth Park on July 18; Improbable, who won the Whitney (G1) at Saratoga Race Course on Aug. 1; Ghaiyyath (IRE), winner of the Juddmonte International Stakes (G1) at York on Aug. 19 in Great Britain and Maximum Security, who won the TVG Pacific Classic (G1) at Del Mar on Aug. 22.

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The Weekly Wrap: Multi-Tasking Trainers

It has been a good week for trainers on the breeding front. Francois Doumen, who retired from the French ranks in 2017, popped up alongside the G1 Prix Jean Romanet winner Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) in the winner’s enclosure at Deauville. Her trainer James Fanshawe was unable to travel under the new quarantine rules, and Doumen could at least take some of the credit as the filly’s breeder, with his wife Elisabeth, through their Haras d’Ecouves.

Audarya, who races in the colours of Alison Swinburn, was the third winner of the Jean Romanet in seven years for Fanshawe after Ribbons (GB) (Manduro {Ger}) and Speedy Boarding (GB) (Shamardal) but the 4-year-old represents a family which has been strongly associated with the Doumens for four generations.

Audarya’s fourth dam Jimka (Fr) (Jim French) was bought as a yearling by the trainer in 1979. A hardy sort, she won seven of her 76 starts but greater success was to come in her second career as a broodmare. She clearly passed on her durability as her 10 winning offspring snared 56 races between them, the best of the bunch being the brilliant globetrotter Jim And Tonic (Fr) (Double Bed {Fr}), whose eight group victories included the G1 Hong Kong Cup.

Audarya’s dam Green Bananas (Fr) (Green Tune {Fr}) was another who had a lengthy racing career, and she displayed versatility, too, as her 59 runs and four wins were interspersed with a spell playing polo with the Doumen children. Audarya should then have a lengthy racing career to look forward to, though she has now made herself an extremely enticing broodmare prospect. Her only previous claim to black type came when second in the listed Prix Coronation at Saint-Cloud last season and she has been down the field in two listed races this year. On the face of it, her presence in Sunday’s field looked a little over-ambitious following her previous handicap win at Newcastle, but Fanshawe has long proved himself to be an astute judge and his string has really been hitting form in recent weeks. Furthermore, it was a gamble he had landed previously with Elite Racing’s Ribbons, who went straight to the Prix Jean Romanet after finishing second in a Class 2 handicap three months earlier.

It’s rare for Jim Bolger to let one get away but he can enjoy some reflected glory as the breeder of Mark Johnston’s G3 Acomb S. winner Gear Up (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}), and in fact Bolger has himself enjoyed success with this particular family, notably through the colt’s dual Group 3-winning brother Guaranteed (Ire).

Johnston bought Gear Up at last year’s Orby Sale for €52,000 from Bolger’s Redmondstown Stud and the colt is now unbeaten in his only two starts. His has been a light campaign compared to some of Johnston’s juveniles but we can expect to hear plenty more from him in the months to come.

Bolger unleashed one of his own star 2-year-olds on Saturday when winning the G2 Futurity S. at the Curragh for the sixth time with Mac Swiney (Ire). The chesnut colt was following in the footsteps of both his sire New Approach (Ire) and damsire Teofilo (Ire) in winning this particular contest. Those two champions sailed unbeaten through their 2-year-old seasons and while Mac Swiney weakened in the closing stages in his previous run in the G3 Tyros S., there was something very likeable about his tenacious win at the weekend. We’ll see how he shapes when he steps up to Group 1 company, with the National S. seeming a likely next step.

Bolger’s key role in the early days of Galileo’s career has already been well noted and, as a breeder who doesn’t shy away from fairly close inbreeding, it’s no surprise to see him succeeding with a colt who is inbred 2×3 to Galileo.

Between 2006 and 2012, Bolger won the G1 Dewhurst S. on five occasions, with three of those winners featuring prominently in Mac Swiney’s pedigree. Along with New Approach and Teofilo, the latter’s son Parish Hall (Ire) is out of a Montjeu half-sister to Mac Swiney’s dam and is thus inbred 3×3 to Sadler’s Wells.

Ho Ho Ho
There has also been plenty to celebrate for Tally-Ho Stud this week, both as breeders and through success for various offspring of the stud’s stallions.

Kodiac (GB) needs little spruiking. Currently fourth in the sires’ table, he notched his sixth Group 1 winner in the Darley Prix Morny, when Campanelle (Ire), who was bred at the farm and sold at October Book 1 last year for 190,000gns, continued her unbeaten run for Stonestreet Stables and trainer Wesley Ward, who notched his third win in the race.

Campanelle was last seen out prior to Sunday at Royal Ascot, where she won the G2 Queen Mary S., while her Morny runner-up Nando Parrado (GB), another by Kodiac, won the G2 Coventry S. The pair has contributed to their sire being out in front on the table for leading sires of 2-year-olds with 29 winners to date this season. His nearest rival in that field is his own stud-mate, the leading freshman Mehmas (Ire).

In the five months that he raced, Mehmas did little wrong. The son of Acclamation (GB) bounced out with two smart wins in May, was runner-up in both the listed National S. and G2 Coventry S. before landing back-to-back Group 2 wins in the July S. and Richmond S. before closing out his season with two Group 1-placed finishes in the Vincent O’Brien National S. and the Middle Park S.

Bred on the same Acclamation-Machiavellian cross as the successful and popular Dark Angel (Ire), Mehmas also followed that Yeomanstown Stud sire in not racing beyond his 2-year-old season. His residency at Tally-Ho Stud gave him an excellent chance of gaining access to a wide range of fast mares to get his second career off to a flying start and, indeed, this is exactly what he has done so far. Admittedly, we are effectively only halfway through a delayed season, but the early signs of Mehmas playing a part in the burgeoning reputation of his speedy sireline can only be read as positive.

He is not short on ammunition but the precocity of his stock is apparent in the fact that a whopping 69 of the 108 foals from his first crop have already been seen on the racecourse. With 21 winners, his strike-rate stands at 30%, and among that tally are four stakes winners.

The Clive Cox-trained Supremacy (Ire) emulated his sire with a four-length victory in the G2 Qatar Richmond S. at Glorious Goodwood—his second win in three starts—while Method (Ire) is unbeaten for Martyn Meade in two starts, including the listed Rose Bowl S.

On Friday at York, Mehmas had the first and third in the G2 Al Basti Equiworld Gimcrack S., when Minzaal (Ire) played his part in a four-timer on the day for Sheikh Hamdan and Jim Crowley at York. King Power Racing’s Mystery Smiles (Ire) was less then three lengths behind him in third, having won his first two races of the season.

Then a day later, Acklam Express (Ire) gilded the lily by landing the listed Julia Graves Roses S. to win for the third time in a row for Nigel Tinkler.

Ringfort’s Favourite Meeting
Minzaal also contributed to an excellent Ebor Meeting for his breeders Derek and Gay Veitch of Ringfort Stud. Not only was he their second consecutive Gimcrack winner after Threat (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}) but he was also their second Group 2 winner in 24 hours after Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}) won the Lowther S. for Ken Condon.

While they both ended up in black-type races during one of Britain’s most prestigious meetings, the sales histories of the two juveniles are markedly different. Minzaal, a colt by a first-crop sire, was bought as a foal from Ringfort’s Tattersalls December draft for 85,000gns and was then reoffered by Glenvale Stud at October Book 2, where he sold for 140,000gns. Miss Amulet, a filly by a stallion who this year was sold to California’s Rancho San Miguel from his former home alongside Mehmas at Tally-Ho, went to the Goffs November Sale when she sold for just €1,000 as a foal. The following September at the Ascot Yearling Sale, her price increased, but not much, to £7,500 when BBA Ireland bought her for Colm Griffin. It’s safe to say that you could add a nought or two to find her current value as Miss Amulet has been a star for Ken Condon this season, winning three of her six starts, including beating the very smart Frenetic (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the listed Marwell S. just over a fortnight before taking the Lowther.

Derek Veitch, though clearly delighted, is keeping both feet on the ground regarding the stud’s run of success.

“Times like these are great when you’re out at night changing the rugs on yearlings. It helps us remember why we do it in the first place,” he said.

Veitch bred Minzaal’s dam Pardoven (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}) and later bought her back after the death of her racing owner. He sold her filly foal by Tamayuz (GB) for 11,000gns at last year’s December Sale and she will be returning to Newmarket for the relocated Tattersalls Ireland yearling sale (lot 309)

“The mare has a colt foal by Belardo (Ire) and she’s in foal to Footstepsinthesand (GB), who is a bit of an under-rated sire. Sir Prancealot has suffered from that a bit too, but that’s the breeding game,” he added.

Veitch has done well with both of those stallions, the former the sire of Threat and the latter the sire of not just Miss Amulet but also of listed winner Pepita (Ire), whom he bred in partnership with Roger O’Callaghan.

“I had a breeding right in Sir Prancealot so he owes me nothing,” said Veitch, who keeps 25 mares at the family’s farm in Co Offaly.

“We’ve been very lucky just to have have healthy horses going to good people. Sheikh Hamdan plays such a crucial role in the industry and I’m very pleased that Minzaal looks a really good colt for him.”

He added of the disruption to the forthcoming sales season, “Generally we are foal sellers but it’s hard to know what to do this year, or whether any foals will be sold in Ireland. I’m thinking this year it might be best to keep them until they are yearlings.”

Feel The Force
The inaugural €320,000 Irish EBF Ballyhane S. on Sunday drew plenty of praise from trainers and, such was its popularity when launched in February, that an €80,000 consolation race, for those who missed the cut, was also staged on the same card at Naas. With a winner’s pot of €149,200, the main race is the most valuable juvenile contest in Ireland and it has given a boost in the rankings to Ashford Stud’s freshman sire Air Force Blue, who has had just eight runners and two winners in Europe but is now in third place in the first-crop sires’ table on earnings behind Mehmas (Ire) and Goken (Fr).

His winning son, Chief Little Hawk, trained by Aidan O’Brien, has had a busy campaign so far, winning on debut in June and finishing runner-up to the talented Frenetic (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) on Aug. 14 in the listed Curragh S. among his seven starts. In fact, Air Force Blue was responsible for three of the 19-runner field, with the trio all trained at Ballydoyle.

Along with the generous prize-money on offer for the Ballyhane S., stud owner Joe Foley had also promised a €50,000 bonus if the winner happened to be by a Ballyhane stallion. His money is safe for this year, but the Jack Davison-trained Moniesta (Ire), by Dandy Man (Ire), gave it a good try when third at 50/1.

Dandy Man did take leading honours in another valuable juvenile contest last week, however, when his daughter Happy Romance (Ire) landed the Goffs UK Premier Yearling S. at York. That win came on the heels of her victory in the Weatherbys Super Sprint, boosting her earnings, even in this depleted year, to £177,630. Not bad for a £25,000 yearling purchase by the Hannon and Doyle team which has excelled in that particular sales race over the years, including with the 2019 winner Mums Tipple (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}).

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Broberg Says Remington Won’t Give Him Stalls and He Can’t Understand Why

Karl Broberg got off to a quick start at Remington Park, winning the opening night feature, the $75,000 Governor’s Cup S., with Hunka Burning Love (Into Mischief). But Broberg is resigned to the fact that there won’t be many more winners for his stable at the Oklahoma track. A mainstay at Remington throughout his career, Broberg was denied stalls at the meet which opened Friday, and he says he’s yet to get a reasonable explanation as to why.

“I really wish I knew the answer,” Broberg said. “It was what I deem a very bizarre decision on their part and I have had multiple meetings now trying to get a straight answer as to why.”

Broberg is allowed to race at Remington, but said that without stalls he has cut back drastically on his division in Oklahoma and has 16 horses there at a nearby training center when he normally has about 80 based at the track. He is planning on moving most of the horses that would have raced at Remington to Hawthorne.

Broberg made 289 starts last year at Remington and finished second in the standings behind Steve Asmussen with 57 winners. He had hoped to do as well, if not better, this year until he was told he would not be getting stalls. He said the decision was made by Remington Vice President of Operations Matt Vance. At deadline for this story, Vance had not returned a phone call seeking comment.

Broberg said Vance has said little about the decision to deny him stalls, which has left him to guess what the reasons might be. He said one issue is likely comments he has made on social media about Remington and Lone Star Park, tracks owned by the same company, Global Gaming Solutions. Broberg admits he hasn’t mastered the art of political correctness and that his outspoken nature can get him into trouble.

On Aug. 19, he tweeted: “My best friend was wrong when he predicted Twitter would end my career quickly because I lack a filter. So far it has only resulted in losing stalls at a track near and dear to my heart while allowing me to share wisdom, humor, nonsense, and disgustingly self promote.”

On Twitter, he has complained a number of times about Remington’s decision to do away with main track-only entries in turf races, calling it the “Steve Asmussen rule.”

“I confirmed this morning that the no MTO entry rule change is still in place,” he tweeted. “However, I would prefer to reference it as the Steve Asmussen rule since I am focused on being positive about every venue I have the privilege of partaking in.”

He said he will try to be careful when it comes to what he posts on social media platforms.

“I will just worry about running my own barn in the future instead of trying to make the world a better place,” he said of his social media posts.

Another factor, Broberg said, could be his criticism of the local horsemen’s group, the Thoroughbred Racing Association of Oklahoma.

“They have created a culture there at Remington Park where they constantly cave to the horsemen’s organization,” he said. “It’s just strange the way that track is run. They’ve created a culture where the inmates are running the asylum. They have tendency to bow down to the trainers that have an Oklahoma driver’s license.”

Broberg, who led the nation in wins every year from 2014 through 2019, has had his problems at Remington in the past. In 2013 he was banned outright for an entire meet after The Jockey Club denied him the privileges of the American Stud Book, the result of having three or more medication violations over the course of a 365-day period. In 2017, he was fined $20,000 after his stable mixed up the identity of two horses, both of whom raced under the wrong name.

“I’ve made more than my fair share of mistakes in racing,” he said.

After being fined in 2017, Broberg was allowed to stable and race at Remington in 2018 and 2019 and he said he has done nothing since then to warrant losing his stalls.

“I am in a spot where I am the villain and I don’t get it,” he said. “My help is respectful and quiet. We keep to ourselves and do everything right. There’s always been this dark cloud that hangs over us in Oklahoma City and I don’t have that anywhere else that I run.”

Broberg said he is confident the Remington ruling has nothing to do with any medication violations.

“It’s not like we’re (Jorge) Navarro or (Jason) Servis and winning at some phenomenal rate and doing incredible things that you can’t figure out when you look at the Racing Form to see how this horse is running in such a matter,” he said.

While losing stalls at Remington has been a setback for his operation, losing them at Lone Star would hurt even more. Broberg lives in the Dallas area and stabling at Lone Star affords him more time with his children.

“I have been told there won’t be a problem at Lone Star, but I know if I cry about what’s going on at Remington too much, it will be uncertain where this could go,” he said. “To not have stalls at Lone Star would really pain me because that is home to me. It’s my chance to do what I love while being able to stay home with my kids.”

Broberg, who is second in the nation in wins this year behind Asmussen, still has plenty of outlets for his horses. That’s not a problem. He is also currently racing at Louisiana Downs, Canterbury Park, Evangeline Downs and Prairie Meadows. He said he is ready to move on and accept the Remington decision, even if he doesn’t understand it.

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Fev Rover Camp Mulls Group 1 Options

Saturday’s G2 Prix du Calvados heroine Fev Rover (Ire) (Gutaifan {Ire}) emerged in good order following her Deauville triumph. The filly’s is a potential starter in either the G1 Qatar Prix Marcel Boussac Criterium des Pouliches at ParisLongchamp on Arc Day, Oct. 4, or the Oct. 9 G1 Bet365 Fillies’ Mile at Newmarket. Second in her first two starts, including the G2 Duchess fo Cambridge S. in July, the Nick Bradley Racing 43 and Partner flagbearer took the Listed Star S. on July 21 before her successful French foray.

“She’ll have to go into a Group 1 now, either at Newmarket or back to France,” said Fahey. “She’s a talented filly. Everyone said she’s good on the soft, but I think she wants fast ground–it’s just that she’s very good. She’s a great moving filly and I’m actually surprised she’s running so well on the soft. She’s improving and is just very smart. She’s in the Boussac and we’ll keep an eye on the Fillies’ Mile as well.”

Fahey’s Rhythm Master (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), third in the G1 Darley Prix Morny to Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), will be taking another crack at Group 1 level, the trainer revealed. Owned by John Dance of Laurens (Fr) (Siyouni {Ire}) fame, the bay won a maiden at Haydock in July, his only other start to date. He is under consideration for the Oct. 10 Darley Dewhurst S. at Newmarket.

“It was a huge ask going from a maiden to a Group 1 and he did show a little bit of inexperience,” said Fahey. “He half missed the start a beat and then had a think when he squared him up to get racing. I’m not saying I’d have beaten the winner, but I’d like to have been on her tail.

“Good horses go on any ground, but I would prefer to see him on better ground. He’s got plenty of options, but I’d just like to see how he comes out of this one first–maybe something like the Dewhurst–we do like him, he’s a smart horse.”

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