Champion Sakhee Dies

G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and G1 Juddmonte International winner Sakhee (Bahri-Thawakib {Ire}, by Sadler's Wells) was euthanized on Friday at Shadwell's Nunnery Stud due to the infirmities of old age. He was 24.

Bred by the late Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum, Sakhee was born at Shadwell Farm in Kentucky before being sent to Newmarket to join trainer John Dunlop, who had trained Sakhee's sire and dam to wins in the G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. and G2 Ribblesdale S., respectively, in the Shadwell blue and white. Sakhee won two of his three starts at two and opened his 3-year-old account with victories in the G3 Classic Trial and G2 Dante S. before finishing second to Sinndar (Ire) in the Derby after being collared in the final 150 yards. Sakhee ran just once more at three, finishing fourth behind Giant's Causeway in the G1 Eclipse S.

Resurfacing at four under the care of Saeed bin Suroor and carrying the Godolphin blue of Sheikh Hamdan's younger brother Sheikh Mohammed, Sakhee won the Listed Steventon S. before his prolific Group 1 double under Frankie Dettori, where he took the Juddmonte International by seven lengths over Grandera (Ire) and Medicean (GB) and the Arc by six over that year's G1 Prix de Diane and G1 Prix Vermeille scorer Aquarelliste (Fr) (Danehill). Sakhee rounded out his season with a second-place finish by a nose to Tiznow in the Breeders' Cup Classic on the dirt in one of the most famous finishes that meeting has ever seen. Sakhee's exploits at four earned him champion older horse honours.

Sakhee ran three times at five, winning a Nad Al Sheba conditions race before finishing third to Street Cry (Ire) in the G1 Dubai World Cup. He retired after a third in the G3 Prix Gontaut-Biron with eight wins from 14 starts and a shade over £1-million in the bank.

Standing at Shadwell all bar one season from 2003 to when he was pensioned in 2016, Sakhee didn't light up the world as a sire but he provided a few notable Group 1 winners in the G1 Audemars Piguet Queen Elizabeth II Cup and G1 Dubai Duty Free winner Presvis (GB), the earner of more than £4-million; G1 Poule d'Essai des Poulains victor Tin Horse (GB) and the G1 July Cup scorer Sakhee's Secret (GB). Sakhee had been living out his retirement at Nunnery Stud.

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Hall Of Famers Mandella, Smith A Powerful Combo For Royal Ship In Pacific Classic

Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella and Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith have a combined 27 “participations” in the $1 million TVG Pacific Classic.

They have four wins apiece and a combined 18 in-the-money finishes.

For Mandella, the record shows 17 starters, four wins, six seconds and a third. Dare And Go's phenomenal upset of Cigar in 1996 was the first victory for Mandella with Gentleman (1997), Pleasantly Perfect (2004) and Beholder (2015) following.

For Smith, it's 10 mounts, four wins, one second and two third-place finishes. The victories were guiding Came Home (2002), back-to-back with Richard's Kid in 2009-10 and Shared Belief in 2014.

It's all been separately. The two have never combined on a TVG Pacific Classic runner.

“It's about time,” was Mandella's immediate reaction.

“It's about time,” were Smith's first words when apprised of the fact a few days later.

The time will come Saturday in the 31st running of the signature event of Del Mar's summer meeting. Mandella will saddle and Smith will ride Fox Hill Farm and Siena Farm's Royal Ship, a Brazilian-bred 5-year-old son of 2008 Del Mar Futurity winner Midshipman, the 7-2 second choice behind 3-1 favorite Express Train on the morning line.

If Mandella and Smith haven't hooked up for the Classic before this, it's because they were orbiting at different, albeit exceptionally high, levels when selecting riders for mounts or mounts to ride.

Gary Stevens (Beholder and Gentleman), Jerry Bailey (Pleasantly Perfect) and Alex Solis (Dare And Go), Hall of Famers all, piloted Mandella's TVG Pacific Classic winners. Three of Smith's four Classic victories came for Hall of Fame trainers – Bob Baffert with Richard's Kid and Jerry Hollendorfer with Shared Belief.

And there was one notable near miss.

“I was riding Pleasantly Perfect, but I had already (committed to) Came Home,” Smith recalled. Pleasantly Perfect finished fourth to Came Home in 2002, skipped the Pacific Classic in 2003 but won the Breeders' Cup Classic and returned as a 6-year-old in 2004 to win the Dubai World Cup and the Pacific Classic.

“You don't know what would have happened if I'd have been able to stay with him,” Smith said. “But he won just about everything the next year and the year after that.”

That Mandella and Smith are together on Royal Ship is in a major part attributable to John Fulton, a former Southern California-based trainer who is now a bloodstock agent and equine talent scout in South America, and the late Rick Porter of Fox Hill Farms.

“John Fulton contacted Mr. Porter and sent him some films of the horse that he thought looked really good,” Mandella said. “Mr. Porter sent them to me and I agreed, so they bought him.”

Porter's recommendation that Smith get the call was based on years of success together. Smith provided Porter, who died from cancer on June 6, with his first Grade I win on Jostle in 2000. More recently, Smith rode the filly Songbird through a career of 13 victories in 15 starts, 12 of them stakes, Eclipse Awards in filly divisions as a 2-year-old in 2015 and 3-year-old in 2016. And, in one of the most memorable races of recent years a runner-up to Beholder by a nose in the 2016 Breeders' Cup Distaff at Santa Anita.

Royal Ship was on a five-race winning streak in his native Brazil, capped by a victory in the Group I Estado do Rio de Janeiro in February last year, when the call came to send him to America. There was quarantine upon arrival and four months acclimating under Mandella's care before his first U.S. start. It came on August 23, 2020 in the Del Mar Mile and resulted in a third-place finish, beaten 4 ¼ lengths by Mo Forza.

It took three more starts, all in Graded events, and the “ultimate equipment change” of being gelded before notching a victory in the Grade II Californian in April, a close second in the Grade I Hollywood Gold Cup in May and third, beaten 1 ¼-lengths by TVG Pacific Classic favorite Express Train in the San Diego Handicap on July 17.

“He has always trained like a really good horse,” Mandella said. “He's done well, but as he got older he got a little studdish, and that that's when we gelded him. He was having trouble in his races, but he was making his own trouble.”

Smith has been a co-contributor through the work-in-progress stage with Royal Ship

And now speaks with enthusiasm about the horse.

“When he first came over, he was not a very mature horse,” Smith said. “He would never stand straight in the gate, didn't break that well. All his races had been on turf and we thought of him as a turf horse at first.

“His first few races here were good, but he wasn't really giving his all. I knew there was more left in him. We wound up gelding him and it made a difference. He's been standing in the gate well, jumping really well and he hasn't run a bad race since.

“The horse is really coming around at the right time and he has really found a home and a place to excel at the mile-and-an-eighth to mile-and-a-quarter distance.”

With Smith in the irons, Royal Ship breezed a half-mile in :47.80 last Monday in his final TVG Pacific Classic tune-up

“He was in the bridle, wanting to do it and finished strong,” Smith said. “Hopefully he'll get a good run, do what I believe he can do and combine for a fifth win apiece.”

For the first-time TVG Pacific Classic combination of Smith and Mandella.

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Notable US-Breds in Japan: Aug. 22, 2021

In this continuing series, we take a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for Sunday running at Kokura, Niigata and Sapporo Racecourses. Sunday's G3 Kitakyushu Kinen at Kokura, one of a couple of steppingstones to October's G1 Sprinters' S., has attracted US-bred GISW Mozu Superflare (Speightstown) and GSW/G1SP Gendarme (Kitten's Joy) going the metric six furlongs:

Sunday, August 22, 2021
1st-SAP, ¥9,680,000 ($88k), Maiden, 2yo, 1500mT
SEA VIXEN (f, 2, Into Mischief–Sly Warrior, by First Samurai) is out of a four-time winning half-sister to MSP Pull Dancer (Pulpit), the dam of the versatile Good Samaritan (Harlan's Holiday), a two-time graded winner and Grade I-placed on the main track and GSW/GISP on the grass; and GSW Brave Nation (Pioneerof the Nile). The February foal's third dam Emmaus (Silver Deputy) produced Wise Dan's sire Wiseman's Ferry (Hennessy) and was a half-sister to GSWs Della Francesca (Danzig), Country Cat (Storm Cat) and Bernstein (Storm Cat). A $130K Keeneland September yearling, Sea Vixen fetched $500K from Yuji Hasegawa after breezing a furlong in the bullet time of :9 4/5 at OBS this past March. B-Breeze Easy LLC (KY)

3rd-NII, ¥13,400,000 ($122k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1800m
HANA KIRI (c, 2, Tapit–Tamarack Bay, by Dehere) was snapped up for $325K by trainer Hideyuki Mori on behalf of owner Tsuyoshi Ono at KEESEP last fall and looks to become the eighth winner from nine to race from his GSP dam. Of the seven previous winners, four have earned full black-type, including GISW Tamarando (Bertrando), GSW turf marathoner Ward 'N Jerry (Lucky Pulpit)–third in a Del Mar optional claimer Thursday–MSW Luckarack (Lucky Pulpit) and SW U'narack (Unusual Heat). To date, the all-conquering Tapit is the sire of 37 winners from 41 starters in Japan. Mirco Demuro sees fit to ride. B-Mr & Mrs Larry D Williams (KY)

5th-KOK, ¥13,400,000 ($122k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1200mT
JEAN GROS (c, 2, More Than Ready–Goodbye Stranger, by Broad Brush) was acquired by John Mayer's Nursery Place for $120K carrying this full-brother to MGSW & GISP Tom's Ready at Keeneland January in 2019 and led the colt out unsold on a bid of $130K at KEESEP in 2020. Pike Racing consigned the early March foal to this year's OBSMAR sale, where he was knocked down to the aforementioned Mori for $265K after breezing in :10 flat. Jean Gros is out of a half to the MSW dam of Deep Opus (Exchange Rate), a four-time winner of better than $600K in Japan. B-Nursery Place & Partners (KY)

6th-KOK, ¥9,680,000 ($88k), Maiden, 3yo, 1000m
LA LA CHANDON (c, 3, Street Sense–Divine Praises, by Medaglia d'Oro) cost $260K at KEESEP in 2019 and is out of a full-sister to MGSW & GISP Valid and a half to GISW Malibu Prayer (Malibu Moon). The colt's third dam Lyrical Prayer (The Minstrel) produced future GISW Swagger Jack (Smart Strike) when she was 18 years of age, a decade after foaling GSW Tap Dance (Pleasant Tap). The now 2-year-old out of Divine Praises, a filly named Harper's Road (Quality Road),was purchased by the Albaugh Family for $400K at KEESEP last fall. B-Three Chimneys Farm LLC (KY)

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What’s in a Name? O Captain and Leopold Bloom

On this side of the Atlantic, Gulfstream 2-year-old winner O CAPTAIN (c, 2, Carpe Diem–Mama Nadine {SW}, by A.P. Indy) connects Walt Whitman's most famous poem (“O Captain, My Captain,” on the death of President Lincoln) with Roman bard Horace's “Carpe Diem/Seize The Day,” probably via the 1989 movie “Dead Poets Society,” where an English lit teacher played by Robin Williams inspires his students to great ambitions with the help of both poets.

On the other side of the pond, Thirsk juvenile winner LEOPOLD BLOOM (c, 2, Ulysses {Ire}–Zuhoor Baynoona {Ire} {SW-Eng}, by Elnadim) is tied to his sire's name via the 1920 modernist masterpiece novel by James Joyce, whose protagonist is so called and represents an everyman on a personal odyssey, one June day in Dublin in 1904. ULYSSES (the book) is notoriously not an easy read: this did not prevent the final chapter–the sensual stream-of-consciousness monologue by Leopold's wife Molly– from becoming very popular. I therefore expect that somewhere there is a filly called MOLLY BLOOM waiting in the wings.

8th-Gulfstream, $45,000, Msw, 8-14, 2yo, 5 1/2f, 1:05.27, gd, 9 1/4 lengths.
O CAPTAIN (c, 2, Carpe Diem–Mama Nadine {SW}, by A.P. Indy) Sales History: $17,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $27,000. O-OGMA Investments, LLC; B-WinStar Farm, LLC (KY); T-Gustavo Delgado.

1st-Thirsk,10,100, Novice, 8-13, 2yo, 7fT, 1:28.00, gd.
LEOPOLD BLOOM (GB) (c, 2, Ulysses {Ire}–Zuhoor Baynoona {Ire} {SW-Eng}, by Elnadim) Sales history: 25,000gns Ylg '20 TATOCT; 95,000gns 2yo '21 TATBRE. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $7,531.
O-Dewhurst, Batters & JCH Bloodstock; B-Cheveley Park Stud Limited (GB); T-David Loughnane

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