The Jockey Club President Jim Gagliano Joins TDN Writers’ Room

There are few positions more prominent or scrutinized in racing than president of The Jockey Club, and that goes double for years as tumultuous for the sport as 2019 and 2020 were. With a plethora of game-changing topics to discuss, The Jockey Club’s president and chief operations office Jim Gagliano joined the TDN Writers’ Room presented by Keeneland Wednesday in the show’s first episode of 2021. Appearing as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Gagliano discussed how the industry can potentially pay for the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act, the rationale behind a 140-mare cap for stallions, racing’s inability to permanently do away with repeat-offender trainers and more.

“I don’t think it should come out of the horseplayers’ pockets,” Gagliano said of the HISA cost. “Every state funds its regulation differently. The problem that we faced when we were considering that matter, is there’s really no one-size-fits-all that we could push down to the states. The most important thing we want to do is make sure we capture first the current expenses, and then that those were brought forward. After that, the Authority will work with each state and through its racing commission to determine what the number is. I suggest the simplest way is to share [the costs] between the tracks and the horsemen. But honestly, there’s a lot of details to be considered.”

Now that the HISA is a reality, Gagliano was asked what else The Jockey Club will focus on in the coming years.

“There’s plenty,” he said. “How we market the sport. The opportunity of television, which thank goodness, during this pandemic, to see the amount of live televised hours of horse racing has been a godsend. We’ve talked about scheduling. We need to put the product in a place where it can have the best showcase. Other areas: HISA is going to put USADA into a role and there are now rules that will be in place that will change the sport, we believe. Investigations, that’s something that racing has not done very well over the last bunch of years. I anticipate The Jockey Club will continue to invest in those kinds of resources to make sure that things we don’t want to happen in our sport, don’t happen.”

Elsewhere on the show, in the West Point Thoroughbreds news segment, the crew reacted to some huge performances on the track over the past few weeks and the surprisingly positive handle numbers in 2020, plus host Joe Bianca announces that he and producer Patty Wolfe have won an Eclipse Award. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version.

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Champion British Idiom Sold To Northern Farm In Japan

British Idiom, the champion 2-year-old female of 2019, has been sold to begin her broodmare career at Japan's Northern Farm, BloodHorse reports.

Bloodstock agent Liz Crow, an advisor for the filly's ownership group during her on-track career, told BloodHorse that the 4-year-old daughter of Flashback's sale was finalized in June, and she was exported to Japan in September. Her final start came in the Grade 3 Fantasy Stakes, which she exited with a chip in her right-front ankle.

British Idiom retired with three wins in five starts for earnings of $1,442,139.

She went unbeaten in three starts during her championship season, breaking her maiden by 3 1/2 lengths at Saratoga Race Course, then jumping up in class to take the G1 Alcibiades Stakes by a whopping 6 1/2 lengths. She secured her Eclipse Award in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies at Santa Anita Park, catching favorite Donna Veloce to win by a neck.

Trained by Brad Cox, British Idiom raced for the partnership of Madaket Stables, Michael Dubb, and The Elkstone Group.

British Idiom was bred in Kentucky by Hargus Sexton, Sandra Sexton, and Silver Fern Farm.

Read more at BloodHorse.

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Baldwin Bloodstock Debuts at Keeneland January

The Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale will mark the inaugural consignment of Amy Bunt and John Barton’s Baldwin Bloodstock, which will offer 21 horses during the four-day auction next week. Bunt, who was a partner in the now-disbanded Select Sales Agency and a principal in Machmer Hall Sales which debuted at the yearling sales last fall, brings a wealth of international experience to the new endeavor.

“When we sat down earlier in the spring and talked about Machmer Hall Sales and the direction they wanted to go in, Carrie [Brogden] just wanted to concentrate on the yearlings, so she could buy more mares and be more proactive with helping her clients purchase horses, rather than selling horses at the mixed sales,” Bunt said of her decision to launch the new consignment. “And it just kind of popped into my head. ‘What about me? In January the sales are kind of small, would you mind if I did my own consignment?’ And graciously, she and her mother [Sandy Fubini] said yes and they are supporting me, as well as some of our clients. It was just a happy accident.”

Bunt traces her love of horses to a trip to the park when she was just a toddler.

“I am literally the only horse person in my family,” Bunt said with a laugh. “My dad took me to a park when I was a little kid, I think I was about three years old, and these people had pulled up to go trail riding with their horses. I probably had never even seen a horse before and I just had a temper tantrum until he let me go over and they kindly let me sit on one of their horses. So somehow I was just born with a desire to be around them.”

Bunt grew up riding horses and graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in Animal Sciences before finding her way to the Bluegrass as part of the Kentucky Equine Management Internship.

“I really just wanted to learn how to breed horses,” Bunt said. “I thought I might breed riding horses. But when you get to Central Kentucky and it’s so beautiful, you just kind of get the bug.”

Bunt spent a year working for Coolmore in Australia and returned to Kentucky where she initially worked as a veterinary technician at Hagyard Davison McGee. She also served as sales coordinator for Van Meter Sales, Niall Brennan Stables and Eaton Sales and served international stints in Ireland and in England with Ted Voute before joining Select Sales in 2013. She became a partner in that operation in 2016.

“When Select disbanded last year, Carrie maintained a small number of clients,” Bunt said. “She has worked really hard and was trying to take a step back and enjoy life a little bit more and enjoy their success. She downsized and focused on quality over quantity. So a lot of the clients that stayed with Machmer Hall Sales are selling with us [at Baldwin Bloodstock] and then I have acquired a couple new clients.”

She also acquired a partner for the new venture in John Barton, who is a cousin of bloodstock agent Bob Feld.

“John knows Mr. [B. Wayne] Hughes from Spendthrift really well–I think it goes back to his uncle and Mr. Hughes who were best friends growing up in Temple City, California. And he is close with our family as well. I met him through the Felds. He came to the sales spending some time with Spendthrift and he was part of the MyRacehorse team that had Authentic. He was interested in shadowing me around the sales, so he came and hung out with me at the sales for a little bit. And as it turned out, he was looking to make a career change.

Bunt continued, “He got the bug coming here and it just kind of happened. I said, ‘I am starting my own small consignment, I’m looking for someone to help me out with it because I pretty much have a full-time job with Machmer Hall. It would be nice to have someone there to take over some of the duties, so I’m not doing it all myself.’ He kind of jumped at the chance and it’s been a really happy partnership so far. He is super enthusiastic and super positive. I don’t ever see him being in a bad mood and that’s the kind of personality that you want to bring in.”

The name Baldwin Bloodstock is a nod, both to the entrepreneurial spirit of Santa Anita founder E J “Lucky” Baldwin, and a personal tribute to a spunky horse near and dear to Bunt’s heart.

“I have an old retired Thoroughbred named after [Baldwin],” Bunt explained. “The horse has been–he’s just a brat, to be honest with you. He is the coolest horse and I think his attitude is what made him a successful racehorse and he was a successful show horse for me. He raced over 70 times and earned almost $300,000 the hard way. When I got him, I didn’t even know if he was going to be sound enough to do anything. He’s just one of those really awesome hard-knocking horses. I showed him up through the preliminary level eventing, which is a more extensive level than I thought I would personally ever do and definitely more than I thought he was going to be able to do.”

The now 23-year-old Lucky Baldwin (Crafty Prospector) won 10 times in 74 starts and earned $255,468 before embarking on his show career with Bunt.

“He’s still terrorizing the farrier and everyone and he still goes foxhunting and I ride him a couple times a week just to keep his joints limber,” Bunt said. “I thought it would be nice to honor him [with the consignment’s name] because he’s kind of what we are all here for and what we are all working for. Just to have happy endings for horses like that that provide a living for us.”

She added, “And then the story of Lucky Baldwin himself, he was a famous prospector in California and obviously started Santa Anita and had a lot of entrepreneurial success. I just thought it would bring some luck to us.”

Bunt is excited about Baldwin Bloodstock’s first consignment at the Keeneland January sale.

“Physically, I think we have a really, really super group,” she said. “And we have some great sire power.”

The Baldwin Bloodstock consignment features a pair of yearling fillies by Union Rags (hip 324 and hip 376), as well as a yearling filly by Brody’s Cause (hip 984)–both stallions who have been in the news lately.

“Union Rags has been on fire lately,” Bunt said. “He’s had [Jan. 1 Cash Run S. winner] Gulf Coast, [GII Los Alamitos Futurity winner] Spielberg and [Fair Grounds maiden winner] Defeater, who won so impressively they already think he’s a Derby-type horse. And Brody’s Cause has Kalypso, who just won the GII Santa Ynez and was second in a Grade I.”

Bunt continued, “We also have a mare in foal to Outwork (hip 882) and he’s number four on the freshman sire list and second by number of winners. And our Tapiture colt (hip 1079) is really nice–Tapiture is third on the second crop sire list and first by number of winners.”

Bunt will bring a vast array of knowledge to the new consignment, but her philosophy is simple and straightforward.

“I just really want to focus on accurately representing my clients and the horses and being really forthcoming with buyers,” she said. “There is so much information and it’s such a close-knit network, I just want everyone who sells with me to be as happy as they can be and everyone who buys off me to be as happy as they can. And just hopefully do the best job for everyone. Some people are more focused on the selling part, some people are more focused on the buyers. I want to accommodate everyone as well as I can and just present a product that people can trust.”

Baldwin Bloodstock will also have consignments at the upcoming Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s Winter Mixed Sale, Jan. 26 and 27, and the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale, Feb. 8 and 9.

“I really want to focus on the winter sales,” Bunt said. “I think January and February are great times to sell horses who have good conformation. A lot of times in November they can get overlooked.”

Looking ahead to the fall, Bunt said, “In November, I still help Machmer Hall, short-listing for them, and I really enjoy that. So I don’t know if we’ll have a November consignment going forward. But Carrie and I have spoken and she was all for me doing the Fasig-Tipton November consignment. She didn’t particularly want to sell at that one anymore and if I wanted to do it, she said she would filter horses my way. So right now, I have a consignment at Keeneland January, OBS January and Fasig-Tipton February. And we’ll look at doing the November sale this fall at Fasig-Tipton.”

With the ongoing global pandemic and political uncertainty, this might be a daunting time to start a new endeavor, but Bunt sees reasons to be optimistic.

“You always worry about the economy and politics can seem to play a part,” she said. “But today I read handle was only down 1% in 2020, so I think that’s super optimistic for our sport. We need all the good news we can get. I thought that was great to know that people are still gambling and still interested even when they couldn’t attend live racing. And the numbers in the economy and the stock market have remained pretty steady compared to what could have happened. So, I am cautiously optimistic. It’s not an ideal time to start this, but if you can get through this, then you should be able to make it through anything.”

The Keeneland January sale begins Monday with bidding commencing at 10 a.m.

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‘A Serious Horse’: Maiden Winner Caddo River To Point For Smarty Jones

Powerful maiden winner Caddo River will make his stakes and two-turn debut in the $150,000 Smarty Jones for 3-year-olds Jan. 22 at Oaklawn, the colt's trainer Brad Cox said Tuesday morning.

The one-mile Smarty Jones is Oaklawn's first of four Kentucky Derby points races, a series that continues with the $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) Feb. 15, $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2) March 13 and the $1 million Arkansas Derby (G1) April 10.

A homebred for Arkansas lumberman John Ed Anthony's Shortleaf Stable, the lightly raced Caddo River finished second in his first two career starts in New York, both 7 furlongs, before concluding his 2-year-old campaign with a front-running 9 ½-length maiden victory Nov. 15 at Churchill Downs. Caddo River, as the odds-on favorite, covered a mile over a fast track in 1:35.22 to earn a career-high 104 Equibase speed rating, a 15-point increase over his previous start.

“He's a very good colt,” Cox said. “He ran against two really good colts in New York. He was able to break his maiden, one turn at Churchill. He's big, tall, rangy, leggy colt. I really do think that he's going to be better around two turns. He's got what I think it takes to be a serious horse. He's got speed and he can carry it.”

Caddo River has been based at Oaklawn since late December and already logged two half-mile workouts locally, including a :48 move over a fast track Sunday morning that ranked the third-fastest out of 85 published at the distance.

Caddo River is by 2007 Kentucky Derby runner-up Hard Spun and out of the Anthony-raced Pangburn, an allowance winner at the 2015 Oaklawn meeting. Pangburn then finished third in the $150,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and fourth in the $400,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3), Oaklawn's two biggest events for 3-year-old fillies. All three races were 1 1/16 miles.

“It appears as though he can carry it,” Cox said, referring to Caddo River's speed. “We'll find out this next race around two turns, but I think he's a very, very good colt.”

Cox has several other promising Kentucky Derby prospects, notably probable juvenile champion Essential Quality, who is unbeaten in three career starts. The Fair Grounds-based Essential Quality is under consideration for the Southwest, Cox said.

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