Champion Enable Scanned In Foal to Kingman

Champion and dual G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe heroine Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) was scanned in foal to Kingman (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Juddmonte announced via Twitter on Monday. The 7-year-old was retired in October last year after ending her career with a sixth in the Arc earlier that month. She was covered by the fellow Juddmonte homebred just over two weeks ago.

“Fifteen days after cover, champion Enable was this morning successfully scanned in foal to Kingman,” Juddmonte tweeted. “Hopefully an exciting new chapter in this remarkable mare's story.”

One of the greatest racehorses owned and bred by the late Prince Khalid bin Abdullah, Enable graced the racecourse for five seasons with 11 Group 1 wins from 19 starts including the Oaks, Irish Oaks, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe twice and three victories in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S. Her earnings stand at £10.7 million.

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‘A Good Test For Him’: Unbeaten Maxfield Confirmed For Santa Anita Handicap

Trainer Brendan Walsh confirmed to the Daily Racing Form on Sunday that the undefeated 4-year-old Maxfield will make his next start in Saturday's Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap in Arcadia, Calif. The Godolphin-owned son of Street Sense has won four stakes races in his stop-and-start career, including the Feb. 13 Mineshaft (G3) at his winter base, the Fair Grounds in New Orleans, La.

“It will be a good test for him to go a mile and a quarter and in a Grade 1 as well,” Walsh told drf.com. “It would be nice to win a Grade 1 as an older horse.”

Florent Geroux will travel west to ride the colt in the Big 'Cap.

Maxfield won the G1 Breeders' Futurity as a 2-year-old and was one of the leading contenders for the 2019 Breeders' Cup Juvenile before he an injury derailed those plans. Re-appearing as 3-year-old in the G3 Matt Winn Stakes at Churchill in May, Maxfield again dominated his competition, but another injury suffered in that race forced a seven-month layoff.

The colt returned to win the listed Tenacious Stakes at the Fair Grounds on Dec. 19, and added the Feb. 13 Mineshaft to his resume with a 3 1/4-length triumph. Maxfield has won all five of his career starts and boasts earnings of $615,262.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Toast To Vino Rosso: Stallion’s First Foal Is ‘Not Afraid Of A Thing’

Throughout the breeding season, the Paulick Report will be sharing photos of foals from the first crop of Spendthrift Farm's Breeders' Cup Classic winner Vino Rosso in the “Toast to Vino Rosso” series.

This time around, we're turning our focus on a history-making filly in the stud career of Vino Rosso. This is the first foal out of the Grade 1-winning son of Curlin, born at Brandywine Farm in Paris, Ky., on Jan 5.

She's the second foal out of the Malibu Moon mare Shine Time.

The dam is a half-sister to Grade 3 winner Royal Mo and stakes winner Tara From the Cape. Her extended family includes Grade 2-winning second dam Irish Linnet, and Grade 2-placed stakes winner Irish Art.

“She's very correct,” breeder Pam Robinson of Brandywine Farm said of the foal. “She's balanced, precocious, and smart. From day one, she's loved people, and she's not afraid of a thing. She'll march right up to you and expects to have attention.”

While Brandywine Farm is frequently a supporter of Spendthrift's incoming stallions, Robinson said they were especially drawn to Vino Rosso in his first season at stud.

“We bred four mares to that stallion, and we hardly ever breed that many mares to the same horse, so we're pretty high on him,” she said. “We're sending three mares back to him this year, so we're counting on him being well received by the public. I think he will be.”

Vino Rosso, a 6-year-old son of Curlin, stands at Spendthrift Farm for an advertised fee of $25,000.

Vino Rosso won won six of 15 starts and earned $4,803,125 on the racetrack. In addition to his signature Breeders' Cup Classic score, the stallion picked up victories in the Grade 1 Gold Cup at Santa Anita Stakes, and the G2 Wood Memorial Stakes.

A first-crop Vino Rosso filly out of Shine Time.

A first-crop Vino Rosso filly out of Shine Time.

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Norm Casse Hoping Olliemyboy Takes ‘Another Step Up’ In New Orleans Classic

It's probably fitting that Norm Casse trains Olliemyboy. Up and coming trainer. Up and coming horse. Both are hoping to snag a big prize on the national scene when Casse saddles Olliemyboy as a live longshot in the New Orleans Classic (G2) on the March 20 undercard of the TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby (G2) program at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.

Dennis Narlinger's JMJ Racing Stables' owns Olliemyboy, an Ontario-sired 4-year-old son of Union Rags who has impressed winning a pair of 1 1/16-mile dirt starts at the meet. He arrived in Casse's barn toward the end of 2020 after going 1-for-6 with trainer Arnaud Delacour and Sid Attard combined. He ran primarily over the Tapeta at Woodbine, including finishing 11th in the Queen's Plate in September against fellow Canadian foals, and came to Casse more by circumstance than anything else.

“Dennis wanted him to be based at the Fair Grounds,” Casse said. “He has a lot of trainers, but I was his only trainer that has horses here. I basically got the horse by default from Sid. I didn't do much with him, just put him into our program, and got him ready.”

Casse initially wanted to run Olliemyboy on the turf in an entry-level allowance here Jan. 14 but when the race was washed off the grass, he left him in and the result was a somewhat surprising, yet convincing 4 ¼-length win. Casse still went seeking turf but another allowance race didn't fill, which prompted him to enter back on the dirt in a Feb. 20 optional-claimer. Olliemyboy lagged well off a solid pace, made a wide, menacing move on the far turn, and drew away strongly late for a 1 ½-length win over a very solid group of accomplished runners.

“We've really been better lucky than good,” Casse admitted. “Having the race come off the turf and it was kind of an easy race. Then we were in between running him back on dirt or trying him on the turf, and the turf race didn't go. So, our hands have been played for us.”

The win last-out prompted Casse to look ahead to deeper waters, and with the big $400,000 purse of the New Orleans Classic, a 1 1/8-mile race over a Fair Grounds main track that Olliemyboy clearly likes, the time is right to take a shot with a horse who continues to improve. It also doesn't hurt that the undefeated Maxfield, who is 2-for-2 at the meet, is shipping out to California for the March 6 Santa Anita Handicap (G1).

“It's another step up, but I think it's a pretty wide-open race,” Casse said. “He's going to have to have some help on the front end, but I think he'll be very, very competitive in it. We're not going to try and reinvent the wheel. We're just going to train him the same way he came into the last two; just some nice solid works and hopefully he shows that next progression.”

Casse knows what it's like to be around a top-quality horse, as he served as his dad Mark's top assistant before going out on his own in 2018. Norm Casse was integral in the success of champions like Tepin and Classic Empire, who helped Mark Casse earn racing's highest honor in 2020, when he was elected to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame.

Norm Casse had sent horses to Fair Grounds in the past, but also split his stock at Palm Meadows in Florida while running at Gulfstream Park. This year he decided to focus solely at Fair Grounds, and has enjoyed plenty of success, going 21-5-1-3 at the meet. With trainers like Brad Cox, Steve Asmussen, and Tom Amoss stabled locally, Casse knows New Orleans is the perfect place to earn his keep.

“Two-thirds of the guys that were nominated for the Eclipse Award for leading trainer are based here, so it's obviously a very good place to be,” Casse said. “I've got 24 here and that's my entire barn. It was an easy decision. Fair Grounds gave me the opportunity to have all my horses in one place instead of being spread out and that allowed me to concentrate on one racetrack.”

Casse brought a mix of maidens, claimers, and allowance horses with him and is constantly trying to build a stable he would like to see number reach 60-70 horses in the future. Whether it was learning from his Hall of Fame father, or competing on a day-in, day-out basis against the likes of a Hall of Famer and Eclipse Award winner in Asmussen, Eclipse Award winner Cox, and 11-time local champion in Amoss, Casse has tried to soak as much in as possible.

“I feel like if you're not learning something every day, you're not approaching it the right way,” Casse said. “You try to win every race but when you don't win, hopefully you learn from that. I hold my program and my stable in high regard, and I believe that when I bring horses over, even if it's a straight maiden race against Brad, Steve, or Tom, that we can compete with them and I believe in that.”

A Louisville native, Casse will head back to Churchill Downs after the meet and then to Saratoga over the summer. Where Olliemyboy runs at during those meets is still to be determined, but it's been so far, so good with a horse that might not fit the mold of most of Casse's horses.

“He's a cool horse,” Casse said. “He's not the style of horse that I like. I like a horse that shows good early speed and is tactical, he honestly drops back and makes one run. In the morning he's unremarkable. You wouldn't think he'd be a horse that's won two pretty good allowance races back-to-back and is being pointed to a Grade 2 in his next start, but he obviously takes care of business in the afternoons.”

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