Report: Idol Out Of Breeders’ Cup Classic

Idol, winner of the Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap in March, will not be entered in Saturday's Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic, according to a tweet from Jay Privman of Daily Racing Form.

Trainer Richard Baltas noted that after Idol's workout on Sunday morning the 4-year-old son of Curlin was “tight behind” while cooling out at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif., site of this year's Breeders' Cup World Championships. Idol breezed five furlongs in 1:02.40, according to Equibase.

Owned by Calvin Nguyen, Idol has one win in three starts in 2021. A sixth-place finish in the G1 Awesome Again Stakes on Oct. 2 was his first start since the Santa Anita Handicap.

With Idol's defection, the G1 Classic has nine likely starters, including Essential Quality, Knicks Go, Medina Spirit, and Hot Rod Charlie. Post positions for the Nov. 6 G1 Classic will be drawn Monday, Nov. 1.

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Cox BC Contingent Work At Churchill Downs Ahead Of Trip to Del Mar

With rain moving out of the Louisville area Saturday afternoon, trainer Brad Cox's Breeders' Cup stars Essential Quality (five furlongs, :59.40), Knicks Go (five furlongs, 1:01.20), and Shedaresthedevil (five furlongs, 1:00.80) logged their final works Sunday at Churchill Downs prior to shipping to Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif., for the Nov. 5-6 world championship event.

Cox's $6 million Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic contenders Essential Quality and Knicks Go both worked following the 7:30 a.m. (all times Eastern) track renovation break. Essential Quality, with jockey Florent Geroux in the saddle, breezed outside of stablemate Colonel Bowman. The multiple Grade 1-winning 3-year-old started one length back of his workmate and finished five lengths in front through splits of :23.40 and :47. He galloped out six furlongs in 1:13. Shortly after his move, likely Classic favorite Knicks Go, with regular exercise rider Hugo Garcia up, clipped through fractions of :24.40, :36.40, and :48.60 with a six-furlong gallop out in 1:13.80 and seven furlongs in 1:27.60.

About 90 minutes later, Grade 1 Longines Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresthedevil, preparing for the $2 million Grade 1 Longines Distaff, worked with Geroux aboard through early fractions of :24 and :48.20.

“It was a great morning and all three horses put in great works,” Cox said. “It was exactly what we were looking for heading into the Breeders' Cup next week. All three of these horses were scheduled to work (Saturday) but we got a lot of rain in the area so we moved them all to (Sunday). Overall, it worked out really well. I thought it was a good track. It was still a little wet but it was drying out as the morning was going on.”

Owned by Godolphin, Essential Quality has been off since winning the $1.25 million Grade 1 Travers Stakes two months ago at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

“Essential (Quality) really loved the track this morning and it was probably the Tapit coming out of him a little bit,” Cox said. “There was a set of horses slowing down in front of them and I told Florent on the radio to gallop out by them. It was a really, really good move. A lot of people scratch their heads the way he trains in the morning compared to running in a race. That's just who he is but I think he's really developing at the right time.”

Korea Racing Authority's Knicks Go, who is the likely favorite in the Classic, will attempt his second-straight Breeders' Cup victory after winning last year's Grade 1 Dirt Mile. The speedy Maryland-bred has won his last three races, including a victory in the $400,000 Grade 3 Lukas Classic at Churchill Downs.

“He's just a really cool horse,” Cox said. “He's very kind when he's in his stall but he's very aggressive, in a good way, outside of the barn. He knows his job and puts a lot into his training and works. I don't see anything from his previous races than he can't get the extra eighth-mile distance in the Classic. In the Whitney, against a field of really good horses, I thought he showed he could get an extra quarter-mile. He seems to clear off around the turn from his competition and able to go fast and kick on.”

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Qatar Racing, Flurry Racing, and Big Aut Farm's Shedaresthedevil defeated likely Distaff favorite Letruska earlier this year in the $350,000 Grade 2 Azeri. The talented 4-year-old filly is scheduled to sell at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale following the Distaff.

“She always gets into a good rhythm in her training and races,” Cox said. “We saw that again today. Florent worked her and she was just cruising around there. She always seems to be under the radar, even going back to when she won the Kentucky Oaks (at odds of 15-1). I thought I ran her a little too quickly back in the (Grade 1) Spinster last year. She's gotten the job done in three out of four starts this year. She doesn't run bigger figures than some of the older mares but she is a racehorse through and through. When she gets in a battle, she shows all heart and determination to get the job done.”

Cox has six local Breeders' Cup contenders. Along with the trio who worked Sunday, he'll also target the $2 million Grade 1 Juvenile Fillies with Juju's Map, $1 million Grade 1 Juvenile Turf with Ready to Purrform and $1 million Grade 1 Juvenile Fillies Turf with Turnerloose.

All of the local Breeders' Cup hopefuls are scheduled to van to Indianapolis on Monday at noon (all times Eastern) for a 4 p.m. flight.

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Ferguson Riding High Into Del Mar After First Group 1 Win

NEWMARKET, UK–There's grey, cloud-stuffed sky hanging over Newmarket as the mild autumn is bustled along by an impatient winter. Exactly a week ago, it felt like spring was still in the air in Paris as a sun-dappled day saw second-season trainer James Ferguson announce his presence in the international stage with a first Group 1 winner.

The diminutive El Bodegon (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) passed almost literally under the noses of observers on the paddock rails who mostly had eyes for his bigger, stronger rivals, but the little colt has the heart to match his talent and continued his upward climb to the top rank of European juveniles with a bold, front-running win in the G1 Criterium de Saint-Cloud. 

Fergsuon's former boss Charlie Appleby, in line to be Britain's champion trainer for the first time this year, had the favourite, Goldspur (Ire) ((Dubawi {Ire}), but he and his jockey William Buick were on this occasion happy to settle for third as they slapped their old colleague on the back in the winner's enclosure, knowing just what such a victory means to a young trainer.

This Saturday morning, Ferguson is back in his regular groove of training the horses at his Exeter Road stable, overseeing some stalls practice for an inexperienced juvenile ridden by his younger brother Alex, and happily chatting to TDN in between bouts of activity. Come Friday, however, he will be back in the sun, this time at Del Mar, to saddle Qatar Racing's Wise En Scene (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}), who will become his first runner at the Breeders' Cup in the GI Juvenile Fillies Turf.

“I was absolutely gobsmacked to be honest,” says the usually eloquent Ferguson as he reflects on El Bodegon's breakthrough triumph. “I get a bit carried away and I'd cheer home a 0-55 at Catterick, but this time I couldn't even speak. I thought Ioritz Mendizabal gave him a great ride. He was very confident even though it wasn't the plan to go forward, but from that draw he just found himself there.”

Mendizabal has been the go-to jockey in France for Aidan O'Brien while Covid restrictions have prevented him from sending his own riders from Ireland, and he has been involved in some notable wins for the Ballydoyle team, not least two Classics on St Mark's Basilica (Fr). But the Basque-born jockey was only too keen to renew his acquaintance with El Bodegon following their win in the G3 Prix de Conde at Chantilly at the end of September, and at Saint-Cloud, O'Brien had to settle for second with Peter Brant's Stone Age (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), ridden by Christophe Soumillon.

“It was a plan ever since he ran at Chantilly and Ioritz got off and said 'you've got to run him in the Criterium de Saint-Cloud',” Ferguson continues. “It had already been in the back of our minds if we won, but it cemented the idea in our minds as obviously Ioritz knows the tracks well [in France]. But even when he won the Prix de Conde I don't think he actually realised how tough the horse is and how well he really stays.”

It is certainly unusual to see a son of Kodiac staying on so well over 10 furlongs in testing conditions, but then El Bodegon is no ordinary Kodiac. Neither was his full-brother, Godolphin's treble Group 1 winner Best Solution (Ire). The siblings, bred by Cecil and Martin McCracken, hail from a stout family which includes the St Leger winner Brian Boru (Ire) (Sadler's Wells) and Derby and Arc winner Workforce (GB) (King's Best).

He adds of the colt, “He's come out of the race really well. He's the kind of horse that you could run again the next day if you wanted to but that will obviously be him done for the season now. I'll probably keep him on the go just very lightly as he can get very fresh but he's exciting for next year.”

Ferguson, whose father John was the former bloodstock advisor and main buyer for Sheikh Mohammed's Godolphin operation, turned 32 the day after saddling his first Group 1 winner. Obviously having family ties within the game is an advantage which will helped him compile a strong line-up at his Newmarket stable, which he rents from Willie Musson. But it would be wrong to conclude that Ferguson's connections have been the key to his success. 

The trainer has served a lengthy apprenticeship, spending two years as pupil assistant to Sir Mark Prescott, who suffers neither fools nor shirkers. He also had a stint in America and a lengthy period working under Appleby at Moulton Paddocks, during which time he successfully oversaw that stable's runners in Australia. Following his time with Godolphin he was also assistant trainer to Brian Meehan for a year at Manton before setting out on his own.

His approach to his own operation clearly revolves around including his generally young team as much as possible. Alex Ferguson is one of his key work riders, Freddie Morley is his assistant, and Katie Thurtle, an experienced horsewoman with an instantly likeable disposition, looks after the office and owner liaison. 

“I can't stress enough that James Ferguson Racing isn't just James Ferguson, it's the whole team,” says the man whose name is on the gate. 

“Dad has always been a big part of this team. Even though he doesn't live in Newmarket he keeps up to date with everything that's going on and manages a few horses in the yard. He's been a tremendous help and to draw on his experience–and he's been doing this an awful long time–has been hugely beneficial to me.”

The immediately obvious benefit is that John Ferguson bought El Bodegon for his owners the Nas Syndicate and Tony O'Callaghan (who stands his sire at Tally-Ho Stud) for 70,000gns. Five years earlier he had also bought the subsequent G1 Caulfield Cup winner Best Solution for Sheikh Mohammed for 90,000gns.

James Ferguson adds, “He's a big part of it and it's very handy when you have someone with his experience buying your yearlings because you're minimising your risk in order to get a good one.”

Mise En Scene, on the other hand, was bred at Tweenhills Stud by The Gadfly Partnership before being kept to race in the Qatar Racing silks. A winner on debut in July, she leapt straight into Pattern company the following month when winning the G3 Prestige S. at Goodwood and most recently finished fourth in the G1 Fillies' Mile at Newmarket.

“Mise En Scene showed a lot of ability early,” Ferguson says. “She wasn't necessarily forward but she always had an aura of class. I didn't actually have many fillies so she ended up working with colts and she always gave you the feeling that she was going up the canter quite easily, whereas El Bodegon was quite different. El Bodegon would sort of only just do what you asked him, but she is desperate to please.”

He continues, “She had a racecourse gallop at Chelmsford before she ran so we went to Haydock knowing that we had a good 2-year-old on our hands but obviously you never quite know. When she went to Goodwood the massive step up in class was obviously a question mark but I was confident enough that she would go and do us proud. I didn't really want to run in a novice and I was working backwards from the Fillies' Mile so in my mind it was either go to the Prestige or the May Hill at Doncaster, and I didn't want to step up to a mile straight away. As a team, with Qatar Racing, we decided on the Prestige. 

“When you look at Mise En Scene she looks like a 3-year-old so we felt that she wasn't a horse you'd want to be giving lots of runs to at two. We knew that we'd have three or maybe four runs this year, so Del Mar will be her fourth. It's very exciting.”

Mise En Scene touched down safely in California on Friday evening in the experienced care of Alison West. Her trainer will join her on Monday. 

He says, “She's going there a fit horse so there's not a lot that needs to be done. I've worked in America for Eoin Harty but that was at Saratoga. I've never actually been to Del Mar so I don't know the backstretch situation but Alison used to work for Sir Mark Prescott and she took Marsha to Del Mar so she knows what she's doing.”

Could lightning strike twice within two weeks for the young trainer? There's certainly no lack of confidence in the camp, but the mood is also sensibly measured. 

Ferguson says of the filly rivalling El Bodegon for the title of stable star, “Mise En Scene is quite relaxed and she wasn't disgraced at all in the Fillies' Mile. I very much came out of the race feeling that she was the one to take out of it–whether it was the track, or a little bit of trouble in running, there was nothing lost and actually the benefit of her situation is that she is very lightly raced and she is going to Del Mar a fairly fresh filly.”

He adds, “We're very lucky to be in this position and we want to be known as people that if we are given the right horses we can do a good job with them. We are also very grateful to Sheikh Fahad and the Qatar team to put such such faith in us so soon after starting out. It would be great to go to Del Mar and get a big win for them but obviously we've got to stay grounded and enjoy the moments when they come. We know they are very hard to come by.”

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Horse Welfare And Anti-Doping Technology To Be Used At 2021 Breeders’ Cup

With the new Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) in place, racing industry leaders in the United Stares have continued to embrace sweeping reforms. One of the most recent changes will be the use of Kildare-based Equine MediRecord's (EMR) revolutionary anti-doping and horse welfare software at the Breeders' Cup World Championships at Del Mar.

The agreement is the latest notch in the belt of a company that launched its system just three years ago, but has already amassed an impressive list of clients including the Thoroughbred Owners of California, Irish Veterinary and Welfare Commission, Irish Harness Racing Association, Kentucky Thoroughbred Association and the Arabian Racing Organization. EMR first provided their system to the Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky., last year. With the event moving to California's Del Mar Racecourse and falling under the supervision of the California Horse Racing Board,  EMR has developed a new system to comply with this year's rules and regulations pertaining to equine welfare and anti-doping protocols.

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EMR sells and maintains a revolutionary software platform that allows for the full veterinary history of the horse to be recorded securely, ensuring the best possible horse welfare as well as aiding with crucial anti-doping procedures. The new system EMR has developed for the Breeders' Cup World Championships will automatically inform trainers from across the world of the safety and integrity regulations that need to be followed and what documents need to be submitted through the system to allow horses to run in the Breeders' Cup at Del Mar. The Breeders' Cup has been a leader in adopting and creating stringent regulations to ensure the welfare and safety of the human and equine athletes competing at its event.

EMR already boasts a number of endorsements from key stakeholders in the U.S., including the Executive Director of the California Horse Racing Board, Scott Chaney and Dr. William Farmer, the Equine Medical Director of Churchill Downs. “The Equine MediRecord system is a major breakthrough in providing the latest and most comprehensive medical and testing records for all participants in this year's World Championships,” said Dora Delgado, Breeders' Cup Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Officer, “We are proud to partner with EMR again for this year's Breeders' Cup World Championships at Del Mar.”

Once records are entered into the system, they cannot be altered, providing integrity and transparency for all concerned. With strict requirements in place for the competition at the Breeders' Cup, such a tool is needed to ensure the integrity of the records while also allowing them to be digitally submitted to regulators like the California Horse Racing Board and Breeders' Cup officials. This procedure also eliminates passing around paperwork to various partners who are following COVID-19 protocols.

Equine MediRecord CEO, Pierce Dargan said: “It was an amazing privilege to work with the Breeders' Cup for the first time last year and we are of course extremely happy to work with them for the World Championships at Del Mar this year. Given it is in a different regulatory jurisdiction this year, California instead of Kentucky, changes had to be made to ensure it complied with the state rules. We believe our system has a role to play in the movement to help ensure that our children will be able to enjoy horse racing the way we have for generations – to be a part of that work is an honor and highly rewarding.”

The Breeders' Cup has always been a leader when it comes to adopting best welfare and anti-doping protocols. With the sport and its integrity in the spotlight, the Irish innovation is sure to be adopted by more top racing organizations that are looking to ensure thevbest possible welfare and anti-doping practices for the horses in their care.

For more information, click here.

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