Mill Reef Takes Centre Stage On Saturday

Newbury’s G2 Dubai Duty Free Mill Reef S. has been won by the sprinting luminaries Harry Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and Ribchester (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}) in recent times and Saturday’s renewal has some potential class acts lurking in the line-up for the six-furlong feature. Setting the standard is John Dance’s Rhythm Master (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) following his third placing in the G1 Prix Morny at Deauville on Aug. 23, but he has several unexposed rivals placing a target on him and will have to be every bit as good as he looked there to ward them off. They include King Power Racing’s highly-regarded four-length Sept. 3 Newcastle novice scorer Fivethousandtoone (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) from the Andrew Balding stable having its finest year to date. He was beaten 3/4 of a length on debut by Bahrain Pride (GB) (Kodiac {GB}) at Windsor on Aug. 17 and that rival re-opposes having subsequently doubled his tally a fortnight later in the Listed Ripon Champion Two Yrs Old Trophy. Shaikh Nasser Al Khalifa’s Line of Departure (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) beat the solid group performer Yazaman (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) comfortably in Doncaster’s Weatherbys Racing Bank £200,000 2-Y-O S. over 6 1/2 furlongs on Sept. 10 and could be open to further progress as a half-brother to Golden Horde (Ire) (Lethal Force {Ire}).

John Dance said, “We’ve been delighted with Rhythm Master and I’m very much looking forward to the race on Saturday. He was very green [at Deauville], particularly in the preliminaries. I don’t think he could believe he could see thousands of people, as there was obviously no crowd at Haydock–it was very much like the first day at school for him. I think the soft ground was a bit of a shock as well, so for him to run as well as he did was very encouraging and also left the impression that there’s hopefully more to come.”

Ed Crisford said of Bahrain Pride, “This has been the plan for him since Ripon. He’s in great form and deserves a crack at a Group 2. It does look a very strong race, but our fellow has done nothing wrong, I think he’s improving with racing and he deserves a crack at a higher grade now.” Andrew Balding has yet to win the race named after his father’s great and commented, “Fivethousandtoone won well at Newcastle and took the step forward we hoped he would after finishing second at Windsor. He is a horse that I think a lot of, but this is a competitive race in a much tougher grade. He has looked very good at home and his work has been impressive. Hopefully he can step forward again.”

At Ayr, where the QTS Ayr Gold Cup takes precedence as one of the leading sprint handicaps of the season, the Listed Jordan Electrics Doonside Cup sees Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum’s Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) enjoy a class drop following a break having last been seen finishing runner-up in the G1 Prince of Wales’s S. at Royal Ascot on June 17. The Mar. 21 G1 Ranvet S. and Apr. 11 G1 Queen Elizabeth S. winner encounters another top-level performer in need of a confidence boost in last year’s G1 Queen Anne S. hero Lord Glitters (Fr) (Whipper). Addeybb’s rider Tom Marquand is keen to renew his partnership with the 6-year-old and said, “He’s a cracking animal. Hopefully the ground doesn’t dry out too much. He certainly looks in good order at home. It’s probably a different path to Champions Day, but it’s perfect for him. He should have his conditions. A mile and a quarter on a galloping track, that’s what he wants. It was a well-spotted race by Willia [Haggas], perfect timing. Hopefully it will set him up nicely for the big day. He’s got the penalty, but he’s a dual Group 1 winner and hopefully he can overcome that.”

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Attfield Aims For Ninth Singspiel Victory With Tiz A Slam

The Woodbine weekend stakes parade includes a trio of complementary added-money events on Ricoh Woodbine Mile Saturday, including the $125,000 Singspiel Stakes (G3).

Trainer Roger Attfield, who won five consecutive editions of the turf race, and eight overall runnings, will look for back-to-back Singspiel victories with Tiz a Slam.

Inaugurated in 2005 as a 1 ½-mile grass marathon, the Singspiel, for three-year-olds and up, will now go as a 1 ¼-mile race, still contested over the E.P. Taylor Turf Course.

After three stakes triumphs last year, including the Louisville (G3) at Saratoga in May, and the Nijinsky (G2) at Woodbine in July, Tiz a Slam has finished fourth, seventh, along with a pair of sixth-place efforts in his two most recent outings. Attfield is hoping the six-year-old son of Tiznow can get back on track and into the winner's circle with a second straight Singspiel title.

“He hasn't been the horse he was last year but right now he's training as well as he ever has,” said the veteran conditioner.

Tiz a Slam, bred and owned by Chiefswood Stables, was sixth in his latest engagement, the 1 1/16 mile main track Seagram Cup (G3), on July 26 at Woodbine. A winner of nine races from 30 starts, Attfield believes the bay millionaire will appreciate the return to turf.

He doesn't see the shorter Singspiel distance as an issue.

“I don't think it matters much. I've never been totally convinced he was a mile and a half horse.”

Nine rivals will challenge Tiz a Slam for top prize in the Singspiel, a group that includes multiple stakes placed Sir Sahib (2-3-7 from 19 starts), multiple stakes placed Standard Deviation (3-2-4 from 13 starts), graded stakes winner Skywire (4-2-0 from 11 starts), graded stakes placed Jungle Fighter (3-3-1 from nine starts), and multiple stakes placed Nakamura (4-3-4 from 16 starts).

The race is named after the Irish-bred son of In the Wings, whose nine victories in 20 lifetime starts include the 1996 Canadian International Stakes.

The $135,000 Woodbine Cares Stakes and the $135,000 Ontario Racing Stakes are also on tap for Ricoh Woodbine Mile Day.

Scheduled as race 10, one race after the Mile, the Woodbine Cares Stakes has drawn seven two-year-old fillies.

Contested at five furlongs on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course, the race features Dirty Dangle, who won her debut for trainer Ralph Biamonte, Forest Drift, also a winner first time out, and Live Oak Plantation's Souper Munnings, who has posted a win and a second in her first two outings.

Last year, Fast Scene took the inaugural running of the race in a time of :56.96. The Kentucky-bred daughter of Fast Anna is owned by Blazing Meadows Farm LLC and Three Chimneys Farm LLC.

Seven two-year-old hopefuls are set to clash in the seven-furlong turf Ontario Racing Stakes, the first added-money feature on Sunday's card (race three).

Souper Classy, an Ontario-bred son of Souper Speedy won his debut on August 27 at Woodbine. Michael De Paulo trains the dark bay for owner Mickey Demers.

Credit River will make his debut in the Ontario Racing, Wesley Ward trainee Amsden looks to go two-for-two to start his career, and Quick Tempo heads north off a strong curtain-raising effort at Arlington on August 20, winning a 4 ½-furlong dash over the main track.

Old Chestnut won the inaugural running of the race last year, notching a 3 ¾-length triumph in a time of :56.85 on the Inner Turf.

First post for Saturday's 12-race card is 1:10 p.m. Fans can watch and wager on all the action via HPIbet.com.

FIELD FOR THE GRADE 3 $125,000 SINGSPIEL

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Say the Word – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Gail Cox

2 – Sir Sahib – Daisuke Fukumoto – Kevin Attard

3 – Admiralty Pier – David Moran – Barbara Minshall

4 – Standard Deviation – Justin Stein – Graham Motion

5 – Skywire – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse

6 – Woodbridge – Sahin Civaci – Mike Keogh

7 – Tiz a Slam – Steven Bahen – Roger Attfield

8 – Count Again – Luis Contreras – Gail Cox

9 – Nakamura – Kazushi Kimura – Graham Motion

10 – Jungle Fighter – Patrick Husbands – Michael Doyle

FIELD FOR THE $135,000 WOODBINE CARES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Silent Mamba – Jeffery Alderson – Harold Ladouceur

2 – Dirty Dangle – Sheena Ryan – Ralph Biamonte

3 – Forest Drift – Rafael Hernandez – Robert Tiller

4 – Chatelet – Kazushi Kimura – Arnaud Delacour

5 – Souper Munnings – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse

6 – Rocket Reload – Justin Stein – Michael De Paulo

7 – Illegal Smile – Luis Contreras – Wesley Ward

FIELD FOR THE $135,000 ONTARIO RACING

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Souper Classy – David Moran – Michael De Paulo

2 – Credit River – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Breeda Hayes

3 – Sky's Not Falling – Luis Contreras – Michael Trombetta

4 – Amsden – Justin Stein – Wesley Ward

5 – Ready to Repeat – Kazushi Kimura – Gail Cox

6 – Too Legit – Daisuke Fukumoto – Barbara Minshall

7 – Quick Tempo – Rafael Hernandez – Christopher Davis

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Veteran Horseman Beau Lane Still Pursuing a Dream

Beau Lane has been in the horse business for half a century. He came to Lexington 23 years ago with six broodmares in tow and $50 in his pocket. Not long after, three of those mares became stakes producers–a harbinger of things to come.

Since then, the veteran horseman has grown his band of breeding stock and now has 30 broodmares at his Woodline Farm near Paris.

While he’s never been able to sign tickets on million-dollar broodmares, he said he doesn’t find it necessary.

“I usually don’t spend over $40,000 for a mare. I don’t think you have to,” Lane said. “I’ve never been able to afford those $500,000 mares, but I’ve had to compete with them. I see the advantage of buying a hard-knocking race mare.”

This year, Beau Lane Bloodstock’s offered six yearlings for Book 1 at Keeneland September. While none approached the coveted seven-figure mark, for Lane it was a successful two days of sale.

His first yearling to go through the ring, a colt by Flatter bred by Lane in partnership, brought $330,000 from Ben Glass, on behalf of Gary and Mary West.

“This colt was about as nice of a Flatter that you’re ever going to see,” he said. “He had a way of moving that would catch your attention. A lot of people looked at him because they knew the family.”

The colt is out of the Smart Strike mare Abraqat, a daughter of dual Grade I winner Spun Sugar (Awesome Again). Lane picked up the mare in foal to Albertus Maximus at the 2016 Keeneland November Sale for $55,000.

“I thought she was a beautiful mare and I love the way she’s bred,” he recalled. “I thought she would bring more than she did.”

The mare had gone through the ring during the 11th of 13 sessions of the sale. Lane said he had not been planning on bidding that day.

While recounting the purchase, Lane nodded toward the back walking ring at Keeneland and said, “If you just wait up there until you see ‘that one,’ it doesn’t have to be the first day, the second day, or even the first week, but when you see that one walk up and you get that feeling, go for it. They’re the ones that will make you money.”

Hip 29 was easily the most expensive of the mare’s three foals Lane has led over to the sales thus far. The Albertus Maximus filly Abraqat was carrying at the time of her purchase made $20,000 here two years ago, while the mare’s colt by Carpe Diem fetched $65,000 last September.

During the second day of Book 1 this year, a yearling filly by First Samurai out of the unraced Unbridled’s Song mare Team Hansen sold for $250,000.

Lane purchased Team Hansen in 2014 at the Keeneland November Sale for $75,000. Two years ago, her Into Mischief filly brought $600,000, the highest-priced yearling Lane has ever sold, and last year, her Awesome Again filly brought $185,000.

Of this year’s First Samurai yearling purchased by Frankie Brothers as agent for Bruce Lunsford, Lane said, “Frankie trained First Samurai [for Lunsford and Lansdon Robbins III] and when we pulled her out he said, ‘Woah, she looks just like the old man.’ She was the real deal–a lot of presence, a lot of class. We knew she was going to be one of the top-selling First Samurai yearlings.”

The filly was the only representative for her sire in the first two books of the sale.

Lane said he prefers to match his mares to stallions that will complement the mare best, rather than always breeding to the traditional commercial sire.

“I spend a lot of time on it. I try to take a young mare to a proven horse when I can, but I will sometimes do the opposite if the pedigree fits,” he explained. “My son-in-law is always telling me I need to breed to more freshman sires because that’s where the market is. I will do that, but I have to see the types match and have the pedigree come together. If you can get on a stallion’s train, like Into Mischief, like Constitution, they will take you far and fast.”

On finding the right mares for his program, Lane said he relies on advice he received years ago from the late Marvin “Junior” Little of Newstead Farm in Virginia.

“Junior told me many years ago, ‘Beau, you can buy mares that aren’t stakes producers, but you’ve got to have a great family.’ So all the mares in our operation are from great families,” he said.

A Virginia-bred himself, Lane got his start in the horse world with show horses.

“I once had the national champion Appaloosa stallion,” he recalled. “I got started breeding Appaloosas and Quarter Horses. But then I found the best Quarter Horses I had were out of Thoroughbred mares. I just kept looking for better and better horses, and I think somebody that does that will end up with a Thoroughbred. The business has been awfully good to me. I’ve been very blessed that I’ve been around good horses and good people.”

For Lane, his greatest pride comes when people seek out horses from his consignment.

“We had a lady come by the other day shopping through Book 2 and she asked what we had,” he said. “When I told her we didn’t have anything, she said, ‘That’s a shame. I’d rather buy a horse from you than anybody because you raise good horses.’ So that always makes you feel good. We really take pride in the horses we raise. We try to be straight with people and we’ll tell them anything we know. We want to represent a good horse,” Lane added.

Beau Lane and wife Gail at their consignment at Keeneland | Katie Ritz

The Beau Lane Bloodstock consignment is a family affair. His daughter J.B. Orem can be found at the end of a shank throughout the day, while Lane’s wife Gail and son-in-law Michael assist with the many tasks of running the consignment. Before long, the next generation will be lending a hand.

“I have a grandson learning the business and I’m trying to keep him in it,” Lane said with a proud smile. “I feel there’s no better business in the world than the horse business.”

Even in the current climate, Lane said he has confidence in the horsemen and women that make up the industry.

“The way the market is going now, I think it’s going to correct itself if we don’t make it more difficult,” he said. “There are a lot of young people coming in that are very intelligent. I see a lot of people that started 15 or 20 years ago that have really sharpened their tools and have gotten really good at what they do. I’m tickled to death for them.”

He cautioned that the industry needs to do better in supporting the underdogs of the business.

“There’s a lot of really good horsemen that feed this industry,” he noted. “From what I can see, we have a tendency to make it harder for them. They have a right to enjoy this just as much as anybody because they work just as hard. To me, money should not qualify you to have a good horse.”

Lane has raised several graded stakes contenders, including dual GISW Carpe Diem (Giant’s Causeway) and this year’s talented undefeated juvenile Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music). But he’s still searching to find a top-class horse to race under his own banner. Luckily, he has a few prospects in the pipeline.

When his Gun Runner colt out of the Grade II-placed Blip n’The Bye (Tale of Ekati) did not meet his reserve and was led out unsold at $435,000 during Book 1, Lane said he was a bit relieved.

“I’ve had that family for four generations and I liked him so much from the time he was born. I really didn’t want to sell him so I put a high reserve on him,” he admitted. “We came within $5,000 of our reserve. But he’s one of the very nicest horses I’ve raised in the last 25 years. I don’t think I’m going to wait for the next one, so I want to keep him and race him.”

The 78-year-old horseman said he finds no place for himself in an “old folks home” until he has reached his ultimate goal.

“I came from a little red-clay farm in southern Virginia. I had a dream. I wanted to raise a really great horse. I’ve raised a lot of really good horses, but I still haven’t raised that great horse yet. I’m running out of time, but I’m getting closer.”

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