Portamento to Hedgeholme Stud

The MGSP Portamento (Ire) (Shamardal-Octave, by Unbridled’s Song) will stand his first full season at Hedgeholme Stud in 2021. Racing from the age of two through January of his 8-year-old year, the Mohd Khalifa Al Basti colourbearer won six times and was second in the 2015 G3 Hackwood S. and third in the G2 Meydan Sprint, the latter in 2019. Bred by Darley in Ireland, he was placed a further three times at listed level. The grey retired to Hedgeholme with a record of 38-6-4-5 and $263,308 in earnings. Portamento joined the Hedgeholme roster in late April of 2020 and his fee will be announced later.

“I have always liked Portamento and was anxious to breed from him,” said current owner Malih Al Basti. “I am delighted to stand him alongside my other horse with Andrew and Deborah at Hedgeholme Stud, Intrinsic (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}–Infallible {GB}, by Pivotal {GB}) who from a small book of mares, has enjoyed considerable success with his stock.”

Added Hedgeholme Studmaster Andrew Spalding of the former Godolphin silkbearer, “Portamento is an exceptionally good looking horse and we are looking forward to seeing his first foals in the spring. He proved to be a very fertile horse and has developed well over the summer.”

Out of the MGISW and dual Breeders’ Cup placed Octave, Portamento is from the extended family of MGISW Ms. Eloise (Nasty and Bold).

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Calumet Farm’s 2021 Stallion Roster Features Newcomer Bravazo

Calumet Farm in Lexington, Ky., has released the advertised fees for its 2021 stallion roster, including newcomer Bravazo.

Bravazo, a son of leading sire Awesome Again, will stand for $6,000 LFSN with discounts given for multiple mare packages and quality mares. A homebred runner for Calumet Farm, the D. Wayne Lukas trainee was an honest racehorse who danced every dance.

Bravazo accumulated over $2 million in career earnings. At two, he was second in the Grade 1 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity Stakes. Early in his 3-year-old season he won the G2 Risen Star Stakes, which propelled him into the Triple Crown, where he finished a close second in the Preakness Stakes, only beaten a half-length by Justify, the eventual Triple Crown Winner and Horse of the Year.

Bravazo continued his 3-year-old summer campaign with a second-place finish in the G1 Betfair.com Haskell Invitational Stakes followed by a third in the G1 Runhappy Travers Stakes. Bravazo went on to run for a third place finish in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile and a second in the G1 Clark Handicap.

“Bravazo was an iron horse on the track,” said Calumet Farm's Eddie Kane. “He was a fierce competitor with great resolve and determination. I'm confident he will establish this toughness in his progeny.”

Bravazo joins the Calumet roster headlined by perennial leading turf sire English Channel, a six time Grade 1 winner and Breeders' Cup Turf champion.

English Channel continues to experience great success as a sire with proven runners on both the turf and dirt. In 2020, English Channel is the #1 turf sire by earnings with eight individual black type winners, five graded stakes winners and one Grade 1 winner in Channel Maker.

Ransom the Moon, the only Grade 1-winning sprinting son of Malibu Moon to go to stud, offers breeders with a dirt-speed option on an incredible sire line and is off to a strong stud career having covered 162 mares in his first two years at stud.

After breeding 298 and 221 mares through their first three years at stud respectively, G1 Travers Stakes winner Keen Ice (Curlin) and Brazilian Triple Crown winner Bal a Bali (Put It Back) will have first-crop 2-year-olds in 2021.

Oxbow continues to show great potential, with his biggest and best crops yet to come. He has bred bigger and better crops each year at stud, with next year's 3-year-old crop coming from 153 bred and his following crop coming from 187 bred. Hot Rod Charlie, a 2-year-old son of Oxbow, most recently finished second in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile.

“Our roster features a wide variety of bloodlines possessing soundness, quality conformation, and a propensity to winning classic two-turn races on both dirt and turf,” said Calumet's Bryna Reeves. “We are focused not only on building long-term relationships with breeders but also sharing in the commercial and racing success of our stallions. I am certain we will have something to fit the needs of almost any breeder.”

Following is the complete list of advertised fees for Calumet Farm's 2021 stallion roster.

English Channel – $27,500
Keen Ice – $12,500
Oxbow – $7,500
Ransom The Moon – $7,500
Bravazo – $6,000
Bal a Bali – $5,000
Big Blue Kitten – $5,000
Real Solution – $5,000
War Correspondent – $5,000
Hightail – $4,000
Mr. Z – $2,500
Optimizer – $2,500
Producer – $2,500
Raison D'Etat – $2,500

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Integrated Racetrack Tester Next Step in Racetrack Safety

The definition of insanity, some smart person once said, is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.

In a twist on that aphorism, Kaleb Dempsey, laboratory manager of the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory (RSTL), explained one recent afternoon how part of the problem with the way racetracks maintain their surfaces is that, by virtue of their tools, they have been restricted to doing the same things over and over and expecting the same kind of results.

Which is where a new bespoke piece of equipment, currently undergoing teething tests, promises something of a quiet revolution.

“The goal is to help improve the surface if it needs improving,” said Dempsey, of a device called the Integrated Racetrack Tester, which combines into one the role of various surface measurement tools, and relays information in real time for quick consumption.

We had met at Del Mar–what was then the latest destination in Dempsey’s whistle-stop tour of racetracks as part of a real-world baptism of fire for the tester, a product of The Jockey Club funding.

“It has been a work in progress, and still is,” he said, of the new tool. “There’s only one way to find out if it works and that’s field testing.”

According to Mick Peterson, head of the RSTL and pioneer of the Maintenance Quality System (MQS), the data collection service used by a number of racetracks, the new tool when ready will be delivered into the hands of superintendents at several places, including Churchill Downs, Maryland Jockey Club and New York Racing Association tracks, Keeneland, Del Mar, and Santa Anita.

So, why the need for the new tool?

Traditionally, racetrack superintendents have used two main devices to measure the relative soundness and consistency of a surface–the GoingStick, to test the going on the turf, and the FieldScout TDR Meter, which can measure moisture content in both the turf and the dirt.

The GoingStick measures both the amount of force needed to penetrate the soil and the “shear,” which is the force required to pull the device through the ground–two vital measurements to understand how a horse’s hoof will behave on a given surface.

The problem, Dempsey explained, is that the GoingStick is user dependent–or what he describes as “strain-rate” dependent. In other words, “If I take a measurement, and hand it to you, and you take a measurement, it’s going to be different,” he said.

Different track superintendents, therefore, run the risk of coming up with different going measurements.

The process of gauging surface moisture can be a similar data minefield.

The FieldScout TDR 300–the model that most tracks possess, said Dempsey–can measure moisture content only. And while the latest model, the FieldScout TDR 350, has the ability to measure additional details like salinity and ground temperature, they both come with an in-built glitch: “They’re both so heavily impacted by salt content,” said Dempsey.

What this means is that a track like Del Mar where the irrigation water can be extra salty runs the risk of producing moisture content readings that are off base, sometimes markedly so, said Dempsey. It might tell the operator that the track is saturated, for example, when in fact it’s just fine.

Frustratingly for track crews seeking important data readings at the touch of a button, it can also take many hours for the information that GoingSticks and TDR meters collect to be beamed back to the Kentucky headquarters of the MQS, where they’re processed into a palatable format.

“Ten years ago, nobody was collecting this data, and it’s time to improve it,” Dempsey said. And he hopes the Integrated Racetrack Tester will do just that.

Dempsey and his colleagues have taken a Longchamp penetrometer-a surface measurement device used in Europe–and modified it a number of ways. The first is the introduction of probe-like sensors that read moisture content, salinity, dielectric constant–the permittivity of the surface–and soil temperature.

As compared to the TDR meter, Dempsey said he has “much more faith” in the Integrated Racetrack Tester’s ability to accurately measure moisture content in even high saline environments.

Dempsey has left the ground penetration system intact–what amounts to a little weight that drops like a guillotine down an enclosed shaft and thumps a measuring stick into the soil. But he has attached an electronic sensor to collect that information digitally.

Importantly for track maintenance crews hungry for up-to-the-minute information, the device has been kitted with a sophisticated GPS system that logs the location of each measurement–both moisture-related and ground penetration–and beams it directly back to the MQS in Kentucky.

“It’s all moving in real time,” said Peterson. “That’s where we’re headed.”

As with most prototypes, teething troubles are inevitable, and the Integrated Racetrack Tester is no different, with one of the tool’s key sensors working perfectly well in the cool air-conditioned laboratory, but proving finnicky in the heat of the real world.

“We’re at the point to where basically if I can get the temperature problem fixed, which I’ve gotten a lot closer to, we’re ready to roll out five more of these,” said Dempsey.

The tester was recently trialed at Keeneland during the Breeders’ Cup meet. “The one thing I like and appreciate about it is that it takes the human element out of testing the surface,” said Tim Fahrendorf, assistant track superintendent at Keeneland.

“With the current probe, the TDR 300, it can be affected if you just slightly wriggle it–when the air gets down to where the probe tips are on the surface,” Fahrendorf explained. With the Integrated Racetrack Tester, however, “You stick it in the ground and it remains still,” he added.

Fahrendorf did, however, raise a potential wrinkle on the map: The way in which handicappers will have to adjust to a new data set.

“Most people are used to seeing the going reports,” he said. “With the new device, it might take a little bit of time for people to look at it, understand it, and then ultimately use it to handicap and make their wagers.”

When the Integrated Racetrack Tester is up and running smoothly, Dempsey hopes to attach the GPS system to other commonly used tools, like the ground penetrating radar–a device used to map the composition of a track subsurface–and the water truck.

By harnessing the ability of the GPS system to transmit real-time data on a variety of different machines, Dempsey hopes to gather into their centralized system a broad array of information about the condition of many of the nation’s racetracks.

From this rich data set, analysts might be able to refine what information points are necessary and which are superfluous with an eye to streamlining the current approach to racetrack maintenance, said Dempsey.

“What do we actually need to be measuring on these surfaces to check the consistency?” said Dempsey, who suggested that such an analysis could be completed within the year.

“Maybe what we’re going to find is that we definitely want moisture from the TDR. We don’t want penetration from the GoingStick, but we want shear from the GoingStick,” he added. “Maybe those are going to be the metrics that we find are useful.”

Peterson posited that the data currently being funneled into the MQS could also be a useful tool for better understanding the factors underpinning equine fatalities–especially if integrated with some of the industry’s other data systems, like the Equine Injury Database.

The key, Peterson emphasized, is that the information is detailed, accurate and comprehensive. “We need so many measurements through so many circumstances before we understand what the risk is to the horse and rider,” he said.

 

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Trainer Jonathan Sheppard Set to Invade Europe

Hall of Fame trainer Jonathan Sheppard has accomplished everything there is to accomplish in U.S. steeplechase racing. He’s been leading steeplechase trainer 25 times, has trained 15 champions and has won every major steeplechase race run in the U.S.-many of them numerous times. But the native of Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England who came to America in 1961 has never won a race in Europe. In the months ahead, he hopes to change that.

With the U.S. steeplechase season having ended Nov. 15 and because only a limited number of races were held this year due to the coronavirus, Sheppard has a barn full of fresh horses who could be sitting on wins. Rather than waiting until next spring for them to race again, Sheppard has mapped out a bold plan to send some of his best horses to Europe.

Six Sheppard-trained horses arrived in Ireland on Nov. 24.  They are based at James Doyle’s stables in Wexford and the string is being overseen by Sheppard’s assistant, Keri Brion. Gerard Galligan, a native of Ireland who was the leading steeplechase rider in the U.S. this year, will be working with Brion.

“There’s no steeplechase racing here in the winter and most of these horses only ran once or twice this year,” said Sheppard. “We thought it would be a fun thing to do and could be productive. It used be that our horses had a pretty busy summer schedule here and then we gave them a break over the winter. It didn’t work out that way this year because racing was curtailed. They’re not super horses but they are good horses. They are all sound and fit and ready to go.”

Lonesome Glory is the only U.S.-trained steeplechase horse to have won in Europe. In 1992, he won the Sport of Kings Challenge at Cheltenham. He returned in 1995 and won a race at Sandown. Sheppard twice sent his top horse at the time, Flatterer, to Europe. He finished second in the French Champion Hurdle in 1986 and was also second in the 1987 Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham.

Sheppard’s return to Europe comes at a time where he is enjoying an unexpected resurgence. The trainer, who will turn 80 Wednesday, was edged out for the trainer title in 2011 and finished behind Jack Fisher over each of the next eight years. But everything clicked for Sheppard this year as his 20 wins from 79 starters was more than enough for him to reclaim his position on top of the steeplechase standings. Sheppard sewed up the training title with four wins at Charleston on the final day of the jumps season.

“It’s just the way the chips fell,” he said. “You do the same thing every year. Some of our borderline horses turned out to be better than that and it was the reverse with a couple of other horses trained by other people. It’s not just how good our horses were. You’re only as good as the horses you are running against. I was very happy for the owners because they are loyal and supportive and they deserved to have some success.”

He said he will not be making the trip overseas.

“I’m turning 80 in a couple of days and I don’t get around quite as nimbly as I did at one time,” he said. “My assistant has been with me for about 10 years and has been over there and knows the ropes.”

Sheppard hopes his momentum carries over to the European campaign. His best chance of success could come with Winston C (Ire) (Rip Van Winkle {Ire}). The 6-year-old gelding began his career in Europe before selling at the 2018 Tattersalls February Sale and being exported to the U.S. He won two Grade I races in 2019 and was named champion steeplechase horse that year. Plagued by minor problems, he has not started in 2020. Sheppard is hopeful he can make it to the Cheltenham Festival.

“He had a minor problem at the end of last year,” he said. “I was nothing major like a bowed tendon or a fracture. He just wasn’t quite himself so we took our time with him and hopefully it has paid off. We are hoping to race him at Cheltenham. We will give him a race or two and then see if he’s good enough. If any of our horses are going to make it to Cheltenham he’d most likely be the one. He’s a pretty nice horse. But we don’t want to run at Cheltenham just to say we had a runner at Cheltenham. We want to be competitive.”

Winston C may make his return to competition at Punchestown on Dec. 31.

With U.S. jumpers having run so few times in Europe, it may be difficult to know where the horses belong. After Winston C, the best of the group is French Light (Fr) (Muhtathir) {GB}), a two-time winner this year, including an allowance race at Saratoga. Baltimore Bucko (GB) (Sholokhov {Ire}), a lightly raced 4-year-old, has shown promise and ended his year with an allowance win. Clondaw Camp (Ire) (Sans Frontieres {Ire}) was an easy winner of his only start in 2019. Fancy Pance (Ire) (Arcadio {Ger}) is a maiden. Francois (Fr) (Muhtathir {GB}) has not started since winning in France at Maisons-Laffitte in 2018.

“I am really looking forward to this,” Sheppard said. “It’s a new angle, something we haven’t attempted before. We shipped the odd horse over there but have never done anything like this. It will be interesting to see how it all works out.”

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