Frank’s Rockette Pleases Mott With ‘Smooth’ Move, Leaning Toward Facing Males Males In Sprint

Trainer Bill Mott has four of his six Breeders' Cup pre-entrants at Keeneland, and he put that quartet through works on a breezy Sunday morning over a fast surface on the Lexington, Ky., track.

First at 6:30 a.m. was Frank Fletcher Racing Operations' Frank's Rockette going the half in :49 under Neil Poznansky. Next working together were Juddmonte Farms' Tacitus and Wachtel Stable, Gary Barber, R. A. Hill Stable and Reeves Thoroughbred Racing's Channel Maker with Tacitus going 5 furlongs in 1:00 and Channel Maker a half in :47.40. Finally, There's A Chance Stable, Medallion Racing, Abbondanza Racing, Parkland Thoroughbreds, Paradise Farms and David Staudacher's Horologist worked in a half in :47.40 under Poznansky.

Frank's Rockette is pre-entered in both the Filly and Mare Sprint (G1) at 7 furlongs and the Sprint (G1) against males going 6 furlongs.

“She went nice and easy,” Mott said of the work. “She went smooth and was really relaxed. I was very happy. She was very typical of when she works by herself.

“I will speak with the connections later today, but I am leaning toward the Sprint. There are advantages and disadvantages to both. The Sprint will be a tough race, but we know she is good at 6 furlongs. The Sprint probably will have a full field, probably 14 horses, whereas the Filly and Mare Sprint will probably have no more than 10. That does come into the equation. The seven-eighths of a mile in the Filly and Mare Sprint comes into the equation as well.”

Tacitus (Classic) worked with Felipe Castro aboard while Poznansky was aboard Channel Maker (Turf).

“Tactitus and Channel Maker went very good,” Mott said. “Tacitus was tracking Channel Maker. We went just a half-mile with Channel Maker. He was nice and sharp and doing it the right way. Tacitus tracked him a couple of lengths back and joined him in the stretch. We had Tacitus go out another furlong afterward and then gallop out.”

The post Frank’s Rockette Pleases Mott With ‘Smooth’ Move, Leaning Toward Facing Males Males In Sprint appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Rossi Aims To Seal Best Season With BC Win

For several centuries, Chantilly has been considered the heartland of the French racing industry and the hub for the country’s major trainers. But in recent years, a number of names have proved that it is possible to dine at racing’s top table while maintaining the bulk of your stable away from the Paris region.

Currently leading the trainers’ list and set to be crowned champion for the third time is Jean-Claude Rouget, whose main stable is in Pau but who also has a fairly major satellite operation farther north in Deauville. He leads the Chantilly duo of Andre Fabre and Francis Graffard, and in fourth, after a breakthrough season, is Marseille-based Frederic Rossi.

Rossi is a familiar name in the French provinces, where the trainer’s father Henri carved a hugely successful niche in the saddle, mopping up the major provincial races in which the Parisian jockeys would rarely be sighted. Henri turned his hand to training and was followed in this profession by Frederic and his brother Jacques, who now no longer trains but has in turn been followed by his two sons Charley and Cedric.

For Frederic, this strange year following racing’s spring shutdown could hardly have started in better fashion when Dream And Do (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) became her trainer’s first Group 1 and Classic winner in the Poule d’Essai des Pouliches. The season has ended pretty well, too, with juvenile Sealiway (Fr) (Galiway {GB}) posting one of the most impressive performances of the Arc meeting in winning the G1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere by eight lengths. In a year of firsts, Rossi will next week make his Breeders’ Cup debut as Sealiway attempts to round off his year in style in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf.

He says, “Sealiway left France on 30 October and it’s very exciting for us to have our first runner in America at the Breeders’ Cup. It could be the perfect end to what has so far been a very good year.”

That very good year could have been an extraordinary one had Alkuin (Ire) (Maxios {GB}) not been run down close home by Princess Zoe (Ger) (Jukebox Jury {Ire}) in the G1 Prix du Cadran 24 hours before Sealiway’s memorable triumph. As it was, the meeting will long be remembered by the extended Rossi family as Frederic’s nephews Charley and Cedric saddled the winner and the third in the G1 Prix Marcel Boussac, Tiger Tanaka (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}) and Rougir (Fr) (Territories {Ire}). The latter followed up that performance with victory in the G3 Prix des Reservoirs at Deauville on Oct. 20.

“It has been a bit of a strange year because it was the year of Covid, so for most people it has been a bad year but for me it has actually been very good,” says Rossi, who, like his nephews is based at Calas training centre near Marseille in the south of France. “I knew I had a good 2-year-old last year when Dream And Do won the Prix Miesque, and she went through the winter perfectly and managed to confirm how good she was in the Guineas.”

Only Rouget has trained more winners this year than Rossi, whose tally at the time of writing was 95. It is a figure all the more remarkable given that the 52-year-old has had something of a stop-start career since he took out his training licence in 1992. For ten years he was employed as a private trainer for one of France’s leading owner-breeders, Jean-Claude Seroul, and, though that arrangement ceased in 2017, Rossi currently trains three horses for Seroul.

“I started again four years ago with four horses and I now also have a team of about 25 at a satellite stable in Chantilly,” says Rossi, who has raced 144 different horses this season. “I received a few new horses, like Alkuin, and the 2-year-olds came in and they were a good bunch.”

He continues, “When you start working as a trainer you dream of having runners at the Arc meeting. It was an unbelievable day. To have Charley winning with Tiger Tanaka and Cedric being third, as well as Alkuin being second in the Cadran. It was just amazing.”

Dream And Do was sold privately to Katsumi Yoshida’s Northern Farm not long after her Classic success and is no longer with Rossi. Sealiway has swiftly taken her place as stable star and races for a partnership of two of Rossi’s major patrons, the colt’s breeder Guy Pariente, who also stands Sealiway’s sire Galiway at his Haras de Colleville, and the Chehboub family’s Haras de la Gousserie, which has 13 horses in training with Rossi.

The trainer says, “When I worked for Jean-Claude Seroul I had very good horses in training and that gave me great experience in learning how to travel horses. Then when I got new owners and the Calas training centre was improved it was a huge help. We used to have 30 yearlings in training every year and now we have 50 and the quality has also gone up. Haras de la Gousserie have started to invest and sent me better horses and the timing was perfect.”

Rossi continues, “But all of us [who train in the south] have to thank Jean-Claude Rouget for showing us what was possible. He made us think bigger. In the old days when you were in Marseille or the west you didn’t move from there unless you had a really good horse, and then it was likely that the horse would be sold. Now it doesn’t matter where you are based. You can train in Calas or in Chantilly and go to places like Royal Ascot.”

The trainer now pays a weekly visit to his smaller team in Chantilly, where he once served as assistant trainer to John Hammond.

“This is the second year I have had horses there and I go up on Wednesday evening and then watch them at exercise on Thursday morning,” he explains. “I send up the horses who I feel are better suited to the Parisian programme and the only way that works is to have someone you really trust. Juando Chavarrias runs the yard there and he works so well with me.”

In Sealiway, Rossi is of course entitled to dream of further Classic success in 2021, but first there is one final important engagement this year in Kentucky.

He says of his first Breeders’ Cup challenger, “To begin with Sealiway was regarded as a fast horse, a six-furlong horse, but then I realised that was maybe not the case, so we went to the Prix Roland Chambure and he got a bit lost over seven. Though he’s fast he needs some time to find his momentum. As he has matured he has got better with his early speed but he still needs time to work his way into a race.”

Sealiway, who won one of the first 2-year-old races of the season in France when racing resumed on May 12, has now triumphed in four of his six starts, with all his wins coming on ground ranging between good to soft and heavy, as it was at ParisLongchamp for Arc weekend.

Rossi continues, “It looks like the ground at Keeneland could be softer than usual. The soft ground at Longchamp may have helped him a bit but perhaps not as much as one might think. He has been maturing all season and he peaked at that time.”

The trainer is also unconcerned about Sealiway stepping up to a mile for the first time at the Breeders’ Cup.

“Next year we will probably start him in the Prix de Fontainebleau before the Guineas, but I think he will stay farther so I wouldn’t rule out the [Prix du] Jockey Club,” he says. “But first we will see what happens at the Breeders’ Cup. This is a great way to end this year we are very excited about going to America.”

The post Rossi Aims To Seal Best Season With BC Win appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Nine From Asmussen Stable Work; Nashville Status Undetermined

Trainer Steve Asmussen was pleased with the Sunday works by his nine pre-entrants to the Breeders' Cup World Championships Sunday on Friday and Saturday at Keeneland race course in Lexington, Ky.

Among them was J. Kirk and Judy Robison's undefeated two-time Grade 1 winner Jackie's Warrior, expected to be the favorite in Friday's $2 million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) Presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance. Jackie's Warrior worked a half-mile over a track labeled fast in :48.80. It was his second work at Keeneland, where he covered five furlongs in 1:00.20 Oct. 25.

“He had a nice, easy half-mile,” Asmussen said. “Thought he moved well over the race track. The circumstances were excellent today. We're very excited about running him on Friday.”

After opening his career June 19 at Churchill Downs, Jackie's Warrior recorded a three-length win in the Aug. 7 Saratoga Special (G2) at six furlongs, a 21/4-length win in the Sept. 7 Hopeful (G1) at seven furlongs and a 51/2-length win in the Oct. 10 Champagne (G1) at 1 mile. The Juvenile is at 1 1/16 miles.

Asmussen is confident in the colt's ability at the Juvenile distance.

“I think what gave us the most confidence was his Champagne, two brilliant races at Saratoga and for him to carry that (talent) over to another surface – and he looked brilliant doing it,” he said. “This will be his first two-turn race. He is very speed-influenced in his pedigree but physically and mentally he is doing exceptional.”

Asmussen's other Juvenile contender, Winchell Thoroughbreds' Calibrate, also worked four furlongs in :48.80.

Asmussen's three pre-entrants to the $2-million Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) – Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt's Yaupon, L and N Racing's Echo Town and CHC Inc. and WinStar Farm's Nashville – each turned in three-furlong works. Yaupon in :36.80, Echo Town in :37.40 and Nashville in :36.40.

The work was the fourth at Keeneland for Yaupon, who is undefeated in his four career starts this year.

“Got a very laid-back attitude with a tremendous amount of talent. (Assistant) Scott (Blasi) and I were talking about what were the odds of the Heiligbrodts replacing (last year's Sprint winner and champion) Mitole with Yaupon because they have a similar demeanor and both of them have tremendous ability.”

Nashville wore his Sprint towel Sunday. The colt also is pre-entered in the $2 million Big Ass Fans Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) and is nominated to Saturday's Perryville on the Breeders' Cup undercard.

Elliott Walden, President/CEO and Racing Manager for WinStar, said no decision had been made regarding Nashville's next race.

“Everything's on the table.” Walden said. “He's an extreme talent. He's only 3. He's only run twice. It seems like a big ask to run against the accomplished sprinters that he would have to run against. Not that he wouldn't be capable.

“I think he'll go a mile. I think he'll use his speed to stretch out as well naturally. We'll see how it goes. Great problem to have. Blessed to have him. He's got a cool name: Nashville.”

Other Asmussen workers were Heider Family Stables' Thoughtfully (Juvenile Fillies), four furlongs in :49.40, and West Point Thoroughbreds, William Sandbrook and Anna Marie Shannon's County Final (Juvenile Turf Sprint) and Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt, Madaket Stables and Spendthrift Farm's Cowan (Juvenile Turf Sprint), three furlongs in :39.20 and 38.80, respectively.

Crawford Farms Racing's Archidust (Turf Sprint) worked three furlongs on the good turf course in :38.

The post Nine From Asmussen Stable Work; Nashville Status Undetermined appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Bumper Books For Busiest Stallions of 2020

The coronavirus pandemic may have come into full force halfway through the 2020 covering season but, generally, breeders appear to have stuck to their plans and carried on with their matings. The total number of coverings did drop slightly to 19,961 (from 20,819) with 19% of the mares in production being sent to a stallion with a book in excess of 200.

This year, according to the recently published Return Of Mares from Weatherbys, there were 17 stallions in Britain and Ireland in that bracket, 12 of which are standing at National Hunt studs. Of the Flat stallions, Coolmore’s dual Guineas winner Churchill (Ire) was kept busiest, with 250 mares on his list, and he was one of three sons of Galileo (Ire) in the top 20 on book sizes, along with Frankel (GB) on 175 and Gleneagles (Ire) on 173.

One freshman sire, Tally-Ho Stud’s Inns Of Court (Ire), commanded more than 200 mares, and was second overall with 218. His fellow first-season sires Blue Point (Ire), Magna Grecia (Ire), Calyx (GB) and Soldier’s Call (GB) all made the top 20, with the latter all but matching his sire Showcasing (GB) for popularity.

Building on his success as the champion first-season sire of 2019 was Night Of Thunder (Ire), who led the Darley stallions with 213 mares.

Sea The Stars (Ire) and his son Sea The Moon (Ger) both made the top 20 on 206 and 164 and, notably, another son of Sea The Stars, the 2016 Derby winner Harzand (Ire) received some decent support from a number of National Hunt breeders and covered 142 mares in total, up from 95 last year.

Just outside the top 20 on numbers was Dubawi (Ire) on 155, while champion sire Galileo (Ire) covered 120, including the champion miler Goldikova (Ire) (Anabaa), crack sprinters Mecca’s Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and Quiet Reflection (GB) (Showcasing {GB}), as well as Darley’s Eastern Joy (GB) (Dubai Destination) and the Niarchos family’s Alpha Centauri (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) among a predictably star-strewn book.

Middle-distance Flat stallions often find a boost in popularity once switched to the National Hunt sphere and the latest to have benefited from that change of fortune is the former Gestut Fahrhof stallion Maxios (GB). Sons of Monsun (Ger) have long been prized assets in the jump sire world and Maxios was the most active of all stallions in Britain and Ireland this season, covering 298 mares.

There was a fair bit of gnashing of teeth when Sir Evelyn de Rothschild’s Crystal Ocean (GB), the joint-highest-rated horse in the world last year, was retired straight to The Beeches Stud without being given a chance among the Flat sires, but it’s hard to argue with the commercial sense of this decision as the son of Sea The Stars covered 280 mares in his first season—30 more than the busiest of the Flat boys.

Poet’s Word (GB) lasted just one season at Shadwell’s Nunnery Stud, where he covered 30 mares, and once transferred to Boardsmill Stud in Ireland he was another to enjoy a boost in support, with 221 mares covered in 2020. Similarly, the Derby winner Wings Of Eagles (Fr) received limited support in his debut season at his home stud of Haras de Montaigu, where he covered 62 mares in 2018. Switched to The Beeches Stud he has covered more than 200 mares in the last two seasons. Eight of the 12 jump stallions with books in excess of 200 stand under Coolmore’s National Hunt division, which consists of 17 sires in total.

Berkshire (Ire) is another to have benefited from a switch of codes, as did his late sire Mount Nelson (GB). When he started out at Haras de Gelos in France in 2018, Berkshire covered 22 mares. This year, in his second season at Kedrah House Stud, he sneaked into the 200 Club on 201.

The 20 Busiest Flat stallions

Churchill                     250
*Inns Of Court            218
Ten Sovereigns          214
Night Of Thunder       213
Sea The Stars            206
*Blue Point                 198
*Magna Grecia          180
Kingman                    179
Lope De Vega           178
Frankel                      175
Gleneagles                173
Footstepsinthesand  169
Saxon Warrior           166
Kodiac                        66
Showcasing               165
Sea The Moon           164
*Soldier’s Call            164
*Calyx                        163
Dark Angel                 163
Dandy Man                159

Jump Stallions With 200+ mares

Maxios                        298
Jet Away                     288
*Crystal Ocean           280
Order Of St George    250
Getaway                     242
Wings Of Eagles        241
Walk In The Park       235
Soldier Of Fortune     224
Poet’s Word               221
Affinisea                     209
Idaho                          204
Berkshire                   201

* denotes first-season sires

 

The post Bumper Books For Busiest Stallions of 2020 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights