Haughty Could Provide Big Update for Hidden Brook Consignment

A year ago, the Hidden Brook team was shopping for breeder John Gardiner when it acquired the then-16-year-old mare Soaring Emotions (Kingmambo), in foal to Hard Spun, for $57,000 at last year's Keeneland November sale. The mare's Hard Spun weanling (hip 251) will go through the ring during the second session of this year's Keeneland November sale next Thursday and between now and then the foal's 2-year-old half-sister Haughty (Empire Maker) could provide the colt with a timely update. The filly goes postward in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at Del Mar Friday.

“We've bought mares like that for him. Mares that have a little bit of age on them that are stakes producers,” Hidden Brook's Dan Hall said of the purchase. “That's kind of what he likes to do.”

Soaring Emotion was already the dam of multiple stakes winner and multiple graded stakes placed Souper Colossal (War Front) when she went through the November ring in 2020.

“Obviously, we didn't know she would be in the Breeders' Cup–I wish we were that smart,” Hall said with a laugh when asked if Haughty was at all on the team's radar last November. “We saw her at the 2-year-old sale [where she sold for $310,000 to Bradley Thoroughbreds at OBS April]. I'd been communicating with Pete Bradley about the filly and they had been high on her all along.”

Haughty appeared to graduate on debut at Belmont Park in September, but was disqualified for interference and placed third. After failing to draw into the field for the GII JPMorgan Chase Jessamine S., she graduated by an emphatic four lengths at Keeneland Oct. 17 and was promptly tabbed a 'TDN Rising Star.' She is 10-1 on the morning-line for the Juvenile Fillies Turf.

“The mare is already a proven graded stakes producer, but honestly having a current Breeders' Cup 2-year-old filly would be a huge boost,” Hall said. “He is a nice foal and we figured we were going to do well with that, but then the filly came along as well.”

Of Haughty's half-brother, Hall said, “He is very nice. Not to knock Hard Spun, but he's prettier than most Hard Spuns. He's a well-balanced colt with good size and a good walk to him. He should sell well.”

The November breeding stock sales come on the heels of an ultra-competitive yearling sales season.

Asked if he expected that type of market to continue for bloodstock, Hall said, “Especially for weanlings, it will still be a strong market. I think the better mares will continue to sell well. The breeding side of it, we will see, I wouldn't necessarily be feeling that it's definitely going to be the same as the yearling market. People seem to be more interested in racing and pinhooking than actually being breeders right now. But that should cycle back, I hope.”

The Keeneland November sale opens with a single-session Book 1 section next Wednesday with bidding beginning at 1 p.m. The auction continues through Nov. 19 with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

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Breeders’ Cup Report: Stars Emerge Through the Del Mar Fog

DEL MAR, CA – With trainer Peter Miller looking on–and sporting a hoodie from his two-win performance at the 2018 Championships at Churchill Downs–streaking GI Breeders' Cup Mile contender Mo Forza (Uncle Mo) took a stroll through the Del Mar paddock on a brisk and cloudy Wednesday morning just before 7 a.m.

Del Mar President and General Manager Joe Harper made his way to the well-attended WinStar and Fasig-Tipton Trackside Breakfast Marquee as GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies co-second choice Juju's Map (Liam's Map) galloped strongly with her neck arched.

The imposing Wesley Ward-trained duo of last year's GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Golden Pal (Uncle Mo) and unbeaten filly Averly Jane (Midshipman), meanwhile, jogged the wrong way along the outer rail. Both speedsters are favored on the morning-line for their respective engagements in the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint and Juvenile Turf Sprint.

With the turf course open for action just before 7:30 a.m., defending GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare victress Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) and Breeders' Cup Mile morning-line favorite Space Blues (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) were among the headliners strutting their stuff.

Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow) and legendary former Doug O'Neill-trained three-time GI Hollywood Gold Cup winner turned stable pony Lava Man exited the barn area at 7:55 a.m. as the main track was being harrowed during the break. Co-owner Bill Strauss was on hand to watch the GI Pennsylvania Derby winner prepare for his first attempt against older horses in Saturday's GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

Globetrotting reinsman Frankie Dettori, riding crop in hand, talked all things Breeders' Cup with TVG's Michelle Yu as the cloud cover and accompanying fog intensified with temperatures hovering in only the high 50s.

With the action fast and furious from here on out, there was no shortage of talent on display.

Looking to catch a closer glimpse at some of the Classic contenders? In addition to the aforementioned Hot Rod Charlie, fellow standout sophomores such as champion and GI Belmont S. winner Essential Quality (Tapit) and controversial GI Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit (Protonico) were also out during this window.

With Hall of Famer Bill Mott handling ponying duties once again, 4-year-old Art Collector (Bernardini) also looks to be heading into the main event in top form off a career-best win in the GI Woodward S. There were some anxious moments, however, as a loose horse shortened the Bruce Lunsford homebred's gallop some.

Trainer Aidan O'Brien looked on as his troops–including Love (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (F/M Turf), Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) (Mile) and Japan (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) (Turf)–marched down the outer rail single file, much to the delight of media assembled on the clubhouse turn.

This was also a good time to see the leading GI Breeders' Cup Distaffers, headed by the last two GI Kentucky Oaks winners and a four-time Grade I winner this season.

There may not be a horse on the grounds that exudes more class or presence than the brilliant Malathaat (Curlin). What a treat to watch her train.

Fellow Oaks heroine Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil), last year Distaff third Dunbar Road (Quality Road) and Clairiere (Curlin) all filled the frame quite nicely as well.

And that aforementioned division leader with all those Grade I wins this year?

Letruska (Super Saver), wearing a red shadow roll, put an exclamation point on the morning, gliding down the Del Mar stretch during her 1 1/2-mile gallop shortly after 9:00 a.m.

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Breeders’ Cup Distaff Notes: Malathaat ‘Enjoys A Target,’ Shedaresthedevil Fulfilling Plan To ‘Peak In November’

As Time Goes By/Private Mission – Amazingly, for all his success in Breeders' Cup Championships as the winningest with 17 victories, Bob Baffert will be seeking his first victory in the $2 million Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff when he sends out two starters in the nine-furlong event this Saturday.

Private Mission, a once-beaten sophomore, will be facing older opponents for the first time.

“I didn't like her drawing the rail,” Baffert said. “She's going to need to break well.

“I turned her out for a while after her only loss (last November). She's such a royally bred filly and she should only get better with both age and racing distance.”

She galloped once around the main oval this morning.

Baffert's other entrant, the 4-year-old filly As Time Goes By who will get a new rider in Luis Saez, was also out for a morning gallop of a mile this morning.

“Both of my fillies are training well, but I think As Time Goes By might prefer more distance, maybe a mile and one-quarter,” Baffert said. “This is a very tough race. It's a deep field.”

Blue Stripe (ARG) – Pozo de Luna's Blue Stripe (ARG) jogged twice around the main track with exercise rider Alex Jimenez aboard for trainer Marcelo Polanco.

The half-sister to 2019 Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Blue Prize (ARG) will be making her U.S. debut in Saturday's $2 million Distaff. It will be her first start since winning the Group 1 Gran Primo Criadores at Hipodromo Argentino De Palermo on May 1 going 1 1/4 miles.

Polanco said there have been no setbacks for Blue Stripe since arriving in his barn in May.

“The plan all along was to wait and run in the Distaff,” Polanco said of Blue Stripe, who has had 18 works since first appearing on the Santa Anita work tab June 30.

Frankie Dettori, a 14-time Breeders' Cup-winning rider, will have the mount on Blue Stripe in the Distaff and possibly may have a get-acquainted session with the 4-year-old filly before Saturday's race.

“It is not likely, but still a possibility,” Polcano said.

Clairiere – Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen has a lot of confidence in Stonestreet Stable LLC's 3-year-old filly Clairiere heading into the Distaff. The filly is a daughter of Curlin, his 2007 Classic winner and two-time Horse of the Year also owned by Stonestreet.

“I'm extremely excited about Clairiere in the fact that she has always been a quality filly, always kept or stayed in the highest level of competition and has continuously gotten better from it,” Asmussen said. “She had solid races over the winter in New Orleans, including the victory in the Rachel Alexandra and then the placing in the Fair Grounds Oaks and the fourth in the Kentucky Oaks. From there, the Mother Goose, Coaching Club and Alabama, just solid runs, getting a little better all the time. And, then for her to break through in her last start in the million-dollar, Grade 1 Cotillion, closing the way she did behind a slow pace.

“She has trained lights out since she's been out here in California. Obviously, we're well aware of the quality of the field of this year's Distaff, but Clairiere gives us a tremendous amount of confidence in her. We believe her best race to date will be this Saturday. It's special it is to train a filly like her for Stonestreet. It means everything as far as why you do this. A millionaire, a Grade 1 winner and a daughter of Curlin after what he meant to us. And, then she's out of the unbelievably brilliant race mare Cavorting trained by Kiaran McLaughlin. It's just a great reason to be in horse racing.”

Dunbar Road/Royal Flag – The Chad Brown-trained Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) duo of Dunbar Road and Royal Flag each went out for one-mile gallops of the Del Mar main track Wednesday morning just after the break.

W. S. Farish homebred Royal Flag is fresh off a dominant 4¼-length win in the Beldame Invitational and seeks her first Grade 1 victory. She will break from post two under Joel Rosario in the field of 11 and was assigned a morning line of 8-1.

“She's training very well and I like how she's coming in,” Brown said. “Her Beldame was very good.”

Peter Brant's Dunbar Road will make her final start in the Distaff and will be reunited with jockey Jose Ortiz, who piloted her to her biggest win, Saratoga's Alabama (G1) in 2019. Ortiz also teamed with the daughter of Quality Road to win Belmont's Mother Goose (G2), Churchill Downs' Shawnee Stakes and broke the six-time winner's maiden in March 2019 at Gulfstream Park.

“I'm looking forward to riding her one more time,” Ortiz said. “I'm getting back on her and I have a lot of respect for her and have some big wins on her. For this race, I'm excited because she's coming into the race in good form.”

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Horologist – Bill Mott-trained Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) contender Horologist galloped just over one mile of the Del Mar dirt track on Wednesday morning and, per her conditioner, has trained well for her formidable Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) test on Saturday.

Owned by There's a Chance Stable, Medallion Racing, Abbondanza Racing, Parkland Thoroughbreds, Paradise Farms and David Staudacher, she enters off pace-setting runner-up effort in the Beldame Invitational (G2), a race she won last year prior to finishing ninth of 10 in the Distaff.

Letruska – Early in 2020, trainer Fausto Gutierrez thought Letruska might be a sprinter good enough to compete in the Breeders' Cup at Keeneland. One race later, he changed his mind and put the 5-year-old mare on a course that has brought her to Del Mar as the 8-5 favorite in the $2 million Distaff.

During the early part of her career in Mexico and in the 2019 Copa Invitacional del Caribe Stakes she was unbeaten in distances from 5 ½ furlongs to 1 ¼ miles. An impressive win in the Added Elegance on June 27 at Gulfstream Park made Gutierrez think he had found her best distance.

“She ran one mile, just one turn, and she crossed the six furlongs in 1:08 and change,” Gutierrez said. “At that moment, I thought that maybe we had a spot for the Breeders' Cup, the Sprint.”

To test his theory, Gutierrez took her to Saratoga for the seven-furlong Ballerina. When she finished fifth, beaten 6 ¼ lengths, after contesting the first half-mile in 43.74 seconds with eventual winner Serengeti Empress, Gutierrez said he realized that his Breeders' Cup plan would not work and stretched her out again to nine furlongs.

“We switched our plans and went to the Shuvee, three weeks after,” he said. “I reconsidered very quickly and we moved again to the long distances.”

Letruska has run nine times since the Shuvee, all at a mile or more and has a 7-1-0 record. Using her speed, she has flourished at two turns and has won five straight races.

“If we go a mile and a quarter, I think it is even better for her,” Gutierrez said. “The more distance, she has the chance to go a little bit more relaxed.”

Letruska galloped 1 ½m Wednesday morning with exercise rider Roger Horgan aboard.

Malathaat – Words of praise for come easily from Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher for Shadwell Stables' 3-year-old filly Malathaat, who is testing older horses for the first time Saturday in the $2 million Distaff.

Purchased for $1,050,000 as a Keeneland yearling in 2019, Malathaat has won six of seven starts, including the Kentucky Oaks.

“She's a very special filly,” Pletcher said. “Part of it is that we trained the dam. Secondly, she has a tremendous personality. A very kind filly. Very professional. Really easy. She is a pleasure to have in the barn.”

Pletcher handled the dam, Dreaming of Julia, during her two-season, eight-race career. She was third in the 2012 Juvenile Fillies, her lone appearance in the Breeders' Cup.

The Distaff has drawn a field of 11, but a lot of the attention figures to be focused on the first meeting between the speedy 5-year-old mare Letruska, who has won five consecutive stakes, and Malathaat, the most-accomplished 3-year-old in the country. Letruska is the 8-5 morning line favorite, while Malathaat is the co-second choice with Shedaresthedevil at 4-1.

“It's what you would expect from any Breeders' Cup Distaff,” Pletcher said. “It's a collection of the best fillies and mares in the country. You've got some speed in there. You've got some closers. You've got some 3-year-old fillies, the best older mares. It's what you'd expect to see in the Distaff. Hopefully, there is a good, honest pace to run at and we can let our filly do her thing. She is kind of ideally suited to be a stalker. She enjoys a target.”

Malathaat drew post three and will be ridden by Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez.

Marche Lorraine (JPN) – U. Carrot Farm's Marche Lorraine (JPN) had a walk day following a three-furlong breeze Tuesday.

Shedaresthedevil – Flurry Racing Stable, Qatar Racing Limited and Big Aut Farm's Shedaresthedevil had an easy gallop under Edvin Vargas Wednesday morning before what is likely to be her last race in the Breeders' Cup Distaff. She is scheduled to be sold at the Fasig Tipton November sale a few days after the race. However, first she will try to secure championship honors in a race that has been the plan since skipping the race last year after she finished third in the Spinster Stakes at Keeneland. One race earlier, she pulled the upset in the Kentucky Oaks at odds of 15-1.

“This is obviously a bigger, tougher race this time around than the last one, but she's training really well,” trainer Brad Cox said “And we've been waiting for this. I told someone earlier, we've been pointing for this race with her basically since the day after the Spinster last year. We decided to pull the plug on her, give her a break and campaign this year in an attempt to get her out here and have her peak in November. So far, that plan is working.”

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Legislation Introduced to Ease Tax Burden

U.S. Congressman Andy Barr, a Kentucky Republican who represents Lexington, has reintroduced the Equine Tax Fairness Act, which, if passed would make changes to the tax laws favorable to horse owners and breeders, it was announced by his office Wednesday.

The bill calls for new regulations that would make the three-year depreciation schedule permanent for racehorses, no matter their age when put into service. Currently, Congress must reauthorize this provision in the tax law on an annual basis.

The legislation would also reduce the holding period for equine assets to be considered long term capital gains, putting them on a level playing field with other similar assets.

“Permanently delivering tax incentives for owners and breeders will strengthen investment in our signature equine industry,” Congressman Barr, who serves as Co-Chair of the Congressional Horse Caucus, said in a statement. “I want to continue the momentum started with the enactment of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act to push another key industry initiative across the finish line that will help solidify the sport for decades to come.”

Barr's bill has been endorsed by the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, the Jockey Club, the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, Keeneland, and the American Horse Council.

“The three-year depreciation of racehorses (similar to other investment assets) is critically important to encourage robust investment in Thoroughbred horses and to maintain the vibrant economy and trade we have seen throughout this Thoroughbred sales cycle and consistently over the past 85 years at Keeneland,” Shannon Arvin, President and CEO of Keeneland said in a statement. “We appreciate Congressman Barr's consistent support of this legislation and the entire Thoroughbred industry.”

“The Jockey Club wholeheartedly supports the Equine Tax Fairness Act, introduced by Congressman Andy Barr,” Jockey Club President & CEO Jim Gagliano said in a statement. “This bill will put horse ownership on par with other investment assets. The bill addresses two key deficiencies of the tax code. First, the bill will decrease the depreciation schedule eligible to racehorses from seven years to three, permanently rescheduling racehorses that are put into service before the age of two into the three-year depreciation asset class. The three-year depreciation schedule accurately reflects the typical career of a racehorse since nearly three-quarters of foals that race have a career of four years or less. This change has been enacted by Congress on a temporary, year-to-year basis since 2008, and needs to be permanent law.

“Second, the Equine Tax Fairness Act will reduce the holding period required for equine assets to be considered long-term capital assets from 24 months to 12 months, putting them in line with other investments, such as homes, stocks and bonds.”

Along with Congressman Paul Tonko, Barr was the original sponsor in the House of Representatives of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act.

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