The Longer Game Extends Foal Demand

NEWMARKET, UK—Both the quality and the quantity were hiked, but the energy remained pretty seamless on the second day of the Tattersalls December Foal Sale. Once again business far surpassed the equivalent session last year, no surprise by this stage despite the unexpected resilience of that market, and measured up pretty closely to the tempo recorded in the pre-Covid innocence of the 2019 sale.

With the pinhookers meeting conspicuous competition from end-users, especially for well-bred fillies, turnover soared by 32% to 9,225,000gns from 7,014,800gns, also eclipsing the 8,532,700gns banked in 2019. With a bigger catalogue for this session, however, that translated into an average 39,225gns, up 16% from 33,888gns last year while just shy of 40,826gns in 2019; while the median rallied to 30,000gns from 25,000gns (not quite matching 33,000gns in 2019).

The pinhookers will doubtless find themselves under still greater pressure in Friday's third session, which traditionally sees a further upgrade.

 

The Thought That Counts

It's not often that the top price of the day looks equally good business for buyer and vendor alike, but that was arguably the case with the Sea The Stars (Ire) filly who topped the day's trade at 225,000gns.

After all, her sire stands at €150,000 and you can put an additional premium on foaling and raising a healthy foal to stride out as purposefully as did lot 691. To that extent, the clients of purchaser Richard Brown are entitled to feel that their investment looks very fair value as things stand. For Whatton Manor Stud, even so, this was an authentic “touch”, as the foal-share launch of a very young mare.

Moreover it was fitting that this should be one of those occasions when everyone could feel a winner, because both parties to the transaction had actually contributed to its inception. For it was Brown who bought the filly's dam Careful Thought (Brazen Beau {Aus})—a half-sister to G2 Queen Mary S. and G2 Lowther S. winner Best Terms (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), with a famous fourth dam in Time Charter (GB)—for the Player family. While things did not work out for her on the racetrack, all has ended well now.

“It's quite a good story,” explained Ed Player. “We'd had a good yearling sale, and we always say to Richard that if he sees a future broodmare prospect anywhere, that we are always in the market. And he found this lovely filly in Book 3 from Newsells—and he immediately thought, 'I'll have some of that money back off the Players!' So we bought her for 20,000gns and sent her to Mark Johnston. He thought she was quite useful, but she got injured after one run. We retired her, and it has now all come full circle.”

Reflecting on her elite maiden cover, Player noted that Best Terms had promptly produced Star Terms (GB) by Sea The Stars to become a Group 1-placed listed winner, among plenty of other stakes action.

“The pedigree was very current,” he reasoned. “Things were happening in the family, and she's a lovely individual, so we thought we had better give her the best chance we could. Obviously the Sea The Stars filly out of Best Terms topped Book 1 at 1,500,000gns, so other people are thinking that works pretty nicely as well.

“Sadly, the mare is not in foal, but we'll enjoy the moment. We're absolutely over the moon, flabbergasted. She'd been very popular, vetted a lot of times, and we hoped she'd make up to the 200,000gns mark. But to actually get it, we couldn't be happier.”

Player noted that the most expensive foal sold by the farm to this point was Nando Parrado (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), who made 165,000gns en route to his 150-1 G2 Coventry S. success. He has just started out at the Irish National Stud.

Brown, for his part, could put this acquisition—on behalf of Andrew Stone of St. Alban's Bloodstock—in the same category as Careful Thought, as a young filly bought with a long-term eye on her second career.

“Andrew had a phenomenal Book 1 sale, he sold a Frankel (GB) for 925,000gns and a Lope De Vega (Ire) for 725,000gns, and he's had a great year on the racecourse too,” Brown said. “We're always looking for opportunities, and she's been bought to race before hopefully being a broodmare for the future. Andrew is trying to build a boutique, high-quality broodmare band and she'd be a great addition to that.

“I manage quite a few horses at Whatton Manor, we do quite a bit together, so I've seen this filly all the way along. In the summer she was a bit 'first foal'-like, she probably lacked a little bit of muscle, but she's just improved and improved and turned into a very nice filly. She's on a very steep upward trajectory, although I had a bit of an advantage having seen where she's come from.”

 

French Target Petches Draft

This auction obviously owes much of its impetus to pinhookers but this was a day when plenty of end-users saw the merit of “cutting out the middle man”. Among them was Arthur Hoyeau, who gave 110,000gns for a filly from the first crop of Magna Grecia (Ire) (lot 595). This is a new strategy for the French agent, whose clients have clearly decided that a year's keep will ultimately represent a saving.

“She is to race, she'll go to the owner's farm in France,” Hoyeau explained. “We were looking for fillies, it's been tough to buy yearlings this year so we're trying to find a bit of value, to buy some foals and get them into the system. They may eventually be bred from, we'll have to see how good they are, but buying as foals is really a response to the strength of the yearling market more than anything. This is a lovely, scopey filly, a good mover, with a good mix of [grandsire] Invincible Spirit (Ire) and [damsire] Fastnet Rock (Aus).”

Consigned by Petches Farm, the filly represents an accomplished international family—most notably a second dam whose siblings include multiple group winner/G1 Sussex S. runner-up Nayyir (GB) (Indian Ridge {Ire}) and G1 St Leger runner-up Highest (Ire) (Selkirk). Her dam, who won in a light career for Willie Mullins, was acquired for 80,000gns here three years ago.

All three of the farm's draft in this session will cross the Channel, as Hoyeau also gave 45,000gns for its Calyx (GB) filly (lot 597) while Fairway Partners went to 80,000gns for the colt offered in between, a Masar (Ire) half-brother (lot 596) to the stakes-placed dam of those hardy stayers Subjectivist (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) and Sir Ron Priestley (GB) (Australia {GB}).

Simon Venner, whose father Paul owns the farm, was delighted with their export trade. “The Magna Grecia filly has been stunning since day one, knockout, very straightforward,” he said. “We got her into prep and she never put a foot wrong. Every time she came out of the box, she just marched around.

“The Masar colt is a different type, and looks like he should from the family. I was a little unsure how popular he would be as a foal and slightly surprised how busy he has been. The Calyx has a lovely temperament, again she just came out and walked, just lovely and relaxed. They've been prepped very well by the new team under Ollie [Costello], so very well done to them. It's hard work up here, for them and the foals, and they've done a great job.”

Magna Grecia, incidentally, returned another handsome yield on his €22,500 start-up fee (now offered at €17,500) when Tom Malone gave 100,000gns for lot 649, a March colt from Glashare House Stud. The agent explained that he was acting on behalf of Megan Nicholls, who had picked him out but could not stay for his arrival in the ring.

“He's been bought for Roger Peel,” Malone added. “He'll board at Branton Court Stud, and will be re-consigned next year by Hillwood.”

 

Ladyswood Also Focus on the Female

Another playing a longer game was Harry Fowler in giving 105,000gns for the first foal—a filly by Coolmore's soaraway Wootton Bassett (GB)—out of Italian listed winner Lorelei Rock (Ire) (Camacho {GB}) on behalf of Alex Frost's Ladyswood Stud.

“Ladyswood is looking for some fillies to race, and we loved this one, she has a great action,” Fowler said after signing the docket for lot 668. “The mare was fourth in a Group 2 in Ireland, she was class, and she was early type: she won on her debut, in the May of her 2-year-old season. Alex is looking for a couple of fillies to go back and join the broodmare band, if they are good enough.”

The filly was sold by Altenbach Bloodstock, Lorelei Rock having originally been acquired by Powerstown Stud as a €40,000 yearling and retained after a fruitless trip to the breeze-ups. She has repaid that perseverance now, as well she might with a page featuring some smart black type, notably under her granddam, one of whose daughters gave us the elite runner and producer Jacqueline Quest (Ire) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}).

Yet another filly bought to work on her residual value was lot 740, a daughter of Acclamation (GB) from the family of Farhh (GB) and Fame And Glory (GB) consigned by Riversfield Stud. That was a resonant formula for Ross Doyle and his father Peter, who bought Acclamation's G2 Richmond S. winner Harbour Watch (Ire) from the same farm at the 2010 December Yearling Sale here, for just 58,000gns.

“I haven't seen an Acclamation filly like that for a long time,” declared Doyle Jr. after signing a 115,000gns docket. “I thought she was an outstanding physical. She has been bought for long-term connections to race, though it hasn't yet been confirmed where she'll go.”

 

But Pinhookers Still Mean Business

Needless to say, the pinhookers remained pivotal to trade—albeit knowing they pretty much need to have Book 1 in mind if finding themselves on the leaderboard after the first day. That seemed a pretty legitimate aspiration to as good a judge as Michael Fitzpatrick for a filly presented by Overbury Stud as lot 591, and rightly so: though an Apr. 29 foal, she had both the make and page to suggest some margin for improving even on an outlay of 130,000gns.

Her half-sister Ayacara (GB) (Violence) was placed at graded-stakes level in the United States, while their unraced dam is a half-sister by Pulpit to three others of whom the same can be said. And the third dam is Kostroma (Ire) (Caerleon), who was a Group 2 scorer in Ireland before being exported to win three Grade Is in California.

“I would only really pinhook a filly who is likely to get into Book 1,” Fitzpatrick said after signing the docket for JC Bloodstock. “It's difficult to get a filly by a proven stallion and with a pedigree. But this one has a champion on her page, and she's out of a young mare with two winners from four foals. She's been bought off a good farm, and hopefully there will be a good few updates next year.”

Perhaps these might start with the yearling half-brother by Showcasing (GB) bought out of Book II by Stroud Coleman for 200,000gns.

 

Moon First to Rise

In the early exchanges of a marathon session, bidders were repeatedly exhorted from the rostrum to emulate “the early bird”. But only one six-figure transaction was registered all morning, when a Sea The Moon colt (lot 490) was knocked down to Yeomanstown Stud for 110,000gns.

A Mar. 31 colt out of an unraced sister to dual group winner Pearls Galore (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), he was presented by Kellsgrange Stud on behalf of Clive and Pamela Brandon of Haddenham Stud Farm.

“He'll be coming back next year, he could go to any sale,” remarked Robert O'Callaghan of Yeomanstown. “He's a very simple colt: a big, strong horse with a great walk, he kinda has everything: we were mad to get him. He has a good page and we've had luck with Sea The Moon, who seems to get better year on year, and with better crops to come. And of course his own sire Sea The Stars is doing phenomenal things.”

The dam, who is still only six, was bought from Saint Pair through Blandford Bloodstock at the Arqana December Sale three years ago for €52,000, her page featuring an illustrious granddam in G1 Prix Vermeille winner Pearly Shells (GB) (Efisio {GB}).

“We were hoping he might stay under the 100,000gns mark, but for the good ones you have to stretch,” O'Callaghan added. “Hopefully he'll come back here heathy next year and leave us a bit of profit. Trade has been strong, you just have to pick and choose your battles and not get too carried away. We bought 20 [at Goffs] last week, between ourselves and Grangemore, and we'll be looking to buy about the same again here. Time to get stuck in and stock up.”

Sure enough, Yeomanstown landed four others on the day, notably a colt (lot 706) from the first crop of Ten Sovereigns (Ire) for 130,000gns at the other end of the session.

Though this lad was presented by the National Stud, manager Tim Lane acknowledged, “We met him here: he was bred by Andrew Rosen and has been reared at Kilshannig Stud. He's been very popular, with a lot of vets.”

 

Foley Answers His Own Stallion's Call

Poignant as the circumstances are, the Shadwell cull has been one of the big drivers across the market this year. But the empire was always on a scale that permitted opportunity to an alert prospector, as was the case when Con Marnane picked up the unraced Safeenah (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) for just €7,500 at Fairyhouse in 2018. She's out of a stakes-placed half-sister to champion sprinter Muhaarar (GB), who was of course by the same sire.

It looks as though there may have been a degree of seller's remorse, as the mare's first foal by Invincible Spirit (Ire) brought 150,000gns at this sale last year—from Shadwell. This time round she again produced a handsome return, with her colt by the rookie Soldier's Call (GB) making 100,000gns from Joe Foley.

“Safeenah is a queen of a mare,” enthused Marnane, whose daughter Amy consigned the colt as lot 659. “Her first foal is a very good sort, and hopefully he's a good horse for Shadwell next year.”

Foley, of course, stands Solder's Call at Ballyhane Stud. “Joe is an absolute gentleman to deal with,” Marnane said. “And two of the stallions he has there at the moment were with me, too: Prince Of Lir (Ire) and Sands Of Mali (Fr). I'm absolutely delighted with this result. I told Joe after this foal was born that I thought he was special, and Joe obviously thought so too. The stallion is getting gorgeous, gorgeous stock. I sent him two mares—I should have bought a share in him.”

The post The Longer Game Extends Foal Demand appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Champion Whitmore Returns To Oaklawn With New Goal In Mind

Whitmore won Oaklawn's Hot Springs Stakes for older sprinters a record four times and if the feisty 8-year-old gelding cooperates, he'll be leading the field again in 2022.

Whitmore has returned to Arkansas, but instead of preparing for the Hot Springs, a race he won in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020, the now-retired Eclipse Award winner is about to take baby steps toward a possible second career as a stable pony for Ron Moquett, who trained the gelding and campaigned him in partnership with Robert LaPenta and Head of Plains Partners (Sol Kumin).

“Our ultimate goal, right now, the short-term goal, is have him lead the post parade for the Whitmore,” Moquett said Tuesday morning. “That's our goal, Doesn't mean we're going to do it. It just means we're trying.”

Oaklawn announced in early September that it had renamed the Hot Springs to honor Whitmore, the 2020 Breeders' Cup Sprint winner, the country's champion male sprinter of 2020 and among the most popular and successful horses in Oaklawn history. The inaugural $200,000 Whitmore Stakes is March 19, a centerpiece of “Whitmore Day.” Oaklawn also renamed the Count Fleet barn, Whitmore's longtime home in Hot Springs, after the gelding.

Whitmore was retired after suffering a leg injury during a fifth-place finish in the $600,000 Forego Stakes (G1) Aug. 28 at Saratoga. A chestnut son of Pleasantly Perfect, Whitmore bankrolled $4,502,350 – 88th in North American history through Tuesday – after winning 15 of 43 starts. Much of Whitmore's best work came at Oaklawn, where he compiled a 9-6-1 record from 16 starts and earned $1,752,600. Whitmore also won Oaklawn's signature race for older sprinters, $500,000 Count Fleet Sprint Handicap (G3), a record three times (2017, 2018 and 2020). Swift Ruler, a local star during the 1960s, is the only other horse in Oaklawn history with seven career stakes victories.

Moquett said Whitmore was sent to Rebecca Maker's equine rehabilitation and breaking facility in Kentucky following the Forego. Whitmore has normally decompressed there the last several years before returning to Oaklawn – his winter home at every meeting since 2016 – to begin preparing for a new campaign.

Moquett said his wife/assistant Laura will be trying to re-train Whitmore for pony work, which encompasses escorting horses to and from the track during morning training hours. She was Whitmore's regular exercise rider.

“I have no idea,” Ron Moquett said, when asked if he believed Whitmore knows he's not running again. “This is kind of the same schedule he's been on. We're hoping he does. We're going to feed him different. Obviously, he's going to leave every day and come back.”

Moquett said Whitmore could eventually occupy his same stall in the renamed barn and be re-trained at Oaklawn or sent to more tranquil surroundings at the track's satellite training center about 25 miles east of Hot Springs, where the trainer keeps horses. Moquett said Whitmore left Kentucky Tuesday and is now at the training center. The gelding will return to Oaklawn after Thanksgiving, Moquett said.

Whitmore was a noted bad actor at two and gelded before his first start. Although he mellowed with age, Whitmore would buck and kick before loading into the starting gate for some races.

“We couldn't get him around the track as a 2-year-old, so he's changed a whole lot,” Laura Moquett said the morning after Whitmore won the 2020 Count Fleet. “We can actually train him now. He's softened his edges a little. He still has the tattoos of the barbed wire around his arm, but he has like a heart and mom on there as well now.”

Ron Moquett said Whitmore will now be going back to school, with his wife as tutor.

“Go out there and watch training,” he said. “Ride up there and sit there at the end of the day, when nobody's around, and watch a couple of horses train and then come back home. After a while, the hope is, he understands that this is what I do. I don't go train. Not go around kicking stuff. Laura will be on him. Laura's horse.”

Another former Ron Moquett trainee, Meanbone, successfully transitioned to pony work following his final career start in July 2020. Meanbone, a 9-year-old Silver Train gelding, worked as Moquett's stable pony during the 2021 Oaklawn meeting.

“We're just going to start like we did Meanbone,” Ron Moquett said. “Remember, he's a pony now and these other horses that we've re-homed and made ponies – we're going to try to do it with Whitmore and, hopefully, it sticks.”

Moquett said his wife would be aboard Whitmore to lead the post parade for the Whitmore Stakes, which is the final major local prep for the $500,000 Count Fleet Sprint Handicap (G3) April 16. Whitmore ran second in both 6-furlong races in 2021.

The post Champion Whitmore Returns To Oaklawn With New Goal In Mind appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Attard Has Solid Options In Both The Grey And Mazarine Stakes On Sunday’s Card

A pair of $150,000 rookie stakes, the Grade 3 Grey and Grade 3 Mazarine, highlight Sunday's 12-race card at Woodbine.

The 1 1/16-mile Mazarine has attracted a field of nine 2-year-old fillies, including Moira, a daughter of Ghostzapper who had a stellar debut in the Princess Elizabeth Stakes on Oct. 23 at the Toronto oval.

With jockey Justin Stein at the controls, the Adena Springs-bred miss put in a stunning rally to win going away by 4 ¼-lengths in the 1 1/16-mile tilt. The final time was 1:44.63.

Trained by Kevin Attard for owners X-Men Racing LLC, Madaket Racing LLC and SF Racing LLC, Moira managed to surpass the conditioner's lofty pre-race expectations.

“She's a very nice filly,” said Attard, who is enjoying another prosperous campaign at the Toronto oval. “I was very keen even before we ran her. Obviously, to be running in a stake and going two-turns first-time out is a bit of a risky undertaking, but I thought it was a very calculated risk. I was confident in her and it worked out really well. I thought she looked pretty impressive. This race, the Mazarine, is open company and a big step up in class but she's trained really well in the interim and I'm really excited to see her continue to develop and possibly be a very nice horse.”

High-profile bloodstock agent and owner Donato Lanni was equally impressed by Moira's curtain-raising performance.

“I was not necessarily expecting that,” admitted Lanni. “I was at the Yearling Sale [in Kentucky] and we stopped looking at the horses and went into the bar there to watch her. I was really nervous because I didn't know a whole lot about her, but Kevin mentioned that the race was coming up and he didn't want to run her short. When he told me he wanted to run her in the stake, I was initially thinking, 'Are you kidding me?' He told me not to worry. That was it.

“When I was watching the race and saw her make that move, I was stunned for a bit after that. She was really impressive. Kevin is a good friend of mine and I've known him for 20-plus years, and he's a hell of a trainer. Him knowing about Moira ahead of that race is a great example of that.”

Lanni, a Montreal native who moved to Kentucky 25 years ago, will be at Woodbine along with other owners of the bay filly to watch her run in the Mazarine.

“I'm excited about going to Woodbine,” said Lanni. “I'm bringing some of the owners from Kentucky with me. It's going to be a good crowd of people and it's going to be a lot of fun to attend the races at Woodbine this late in the year. Some of these guys have never been to Woodbine, so they're pretty excited about going up there and seeing what it's all about and watching her race.”

Although the 2022 edition of the Woodbine Oaks Presented by Budweiser is far down the road, Stein thought of the country's pre-eminent race for Canadian-foaled 3-year-old fillies just after the finish line in the Princess Elizabeth.

Those thoughts haven't changed.

“She was really impressive,” praised Stein. “Kevin thought she belonged in there and I rode her like she belonged in there. She ran better than I expected. It was pretty amazing for a first lifetime start. She looks the part, she behaves like it, and she ran like it. There's a lot of talent there.”

Among the past Princess Elizabeth winners who have gone on to take the Woodbine Oaks are Nipissing (2012), Roan Inish (2009), Ginger Gold (2001) and Dancethruthedawn (2000).

Attard and Lanni will also be represented in the 1 1/16-mile Grey, sending out Be Like Clint and Hicksy.

Bred in Kentucky by Woods Edge Farm and owned by the same connections as Moira, Be Like Clint is 1-1-1 from four starts and will contest his first career stakes race on Saturday.

The son of Point of Entry arrives at the Grey off a second-place finish in a 1/16-mile Tapeta race on November 6.

“I was a little disappointed in his last start,” said Attard. “He lost a little bit of ground around the turn and then regained some momentum and ran on to be second. He's a colt that still seems to be figuring things out, so we're hoping he takes another step in the right direction and shows a little bit more improvement.”

Hicksy, owned by Lanni through the Lanni Bloodstock LLC banner, heads into the Grey on a two-race win streak, including a three-quarter length score in the seven-furlong Display Stakes on October 30.

The son of Hootenanny, bred by Richard Forbush, debuted on Sept. 12 at Woodbine, finishing fourth in a 5 ½-furlong main track race.

“He's a very nice colt,” praised Attard. “He's won his last two races and is a stakes winner now. He's stretching out in distance for the first time. I don't think it's going to be an issue for him. He seems to be rateable. He has some early foot, and he can be positioned anywhere you need him to be. Hopefully, he's just good enough.”

$150,000 MAZARINE STAKES 

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Queen Judith – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Mark Casse
2 – Chocolateaddiction – Luis Contreras – Josie Carroll
3 – Mrs. Barbara – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse
4 – Kanta – Kazushi Kimura – Jonathan Thomas
5 – Guileful – Simon Husbands – Nathan Squires
6 – Moira – Justin Stein – Kevin Attard
7 – Aubrieta – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse
8 – Souper Hoity Toity – Gary Boulanger – Mark Casse
9 – Sake (FR) – Shaun Bridgmohan – Jean-Claude Rouget

 

$150,000 GREY STAKES 

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Heat Merchant – Gary Boulanger – Ralph Biamonte
2 – Speak Unity – Sahin Civaci – Norman McKnight
3 – Ironstone – Ademar Santos – Willie Armata
4 – Stowaway – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse
5 – Shamateur – Steven Bahen – Michael Doyle
6 – Be Like Clint – Justin Stein – Kevin Attard
7 – On Thin Ice – Kazushi Kimura – Mark Casse
8 – Churchtown – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Roger Attfield
9 – International – Shaun Bridgmohan – Jean-Claude Rouget
10 – God of Love – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse
11 – Hicksy – Antonio Gallardo – Kevin Attard
12 – The Minkster – David Moran – Daniel Vella

The post Attard Has Solid Options In Both The Grey And Mazarine Stakes On Sunday’s Card appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Full Fields On Tap For Thanksgiving Weekend At Laurel

Thanksgiving weekend continues at Laurel Park with a strong Saturday program featuring full fields and competitive racing led by a trio of post-holiday stakes worth $300,000 in purses.

 A total of 97 horses were entered for the nine-race card, an average of 10.7 starters per race, all scheduled for Laurel's recently refurbished main track. Post time is 12:25 p.m.

 Race 2 is a 6 ½-furlong claiming sprint for maidens age three, four, and five that attracted a field of 14 including Gold Fellow from fall meet-leading trainer Claudio Gonzalez and Damon Dilodovico-trained stablemates Divine Proportion and Creative Storm.

Eleven fillies and mares three and up were entered in Race 4, a six-furlong claimer, including Fudge Cake, exiting the Maryland Million Distaff Starter Handicap. A field of 12 will contest Race 5, a 6 ½-furlong claiming sprint for 3-year-olds and up, where Interesting Legacy (12), Stroll Smokin (10), Getoffmyback (15) and Mr. Pete (11) combining for 48 career victories.

The stakes come in succession – the seven-furlong, $100,000 City of Laurel for 3-year-olds in Race 6, where stakes winner Everett's Song goes after his fourth straight victory and Pickin' Time seeks to regain his graded-stakes winning form; seven-furlong $100,000 Safely Kept for 3-year-old fillies in Race 7 featuring stakes winners Street Lute, Prodigy Doll and Malibu Beauty; and 1 1/8-mile, $100,000 Richard W. Small for 3-year-olds and up in Race 8.

Friday's nine-race card at Laurel, featuring a pair of $75,000 stakes, attracted 96 entries. Laurel's world-class turf course has closed for the season, meaning Races 3 and 6 will be contested over the main track. Race 3 is a 5 ½-furlong claiming sprint for fillies and mares three and up, while Race 6 is a Maryland-bred/sired allowance for 3-year-olds and up to be run at one mile.

Hello Beautiful will go after her fourth straight win and ninth career stakes victory in Race 4, the six-furlong Politely for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares 3 and up, where the 4-year-old filly drew Post 1 in a field of eight and was installed as the 1-2 morning line favorite.

Brittany Russell-trained stablemate Whereshetoldmetogo is the narrow 3-1 program favorite in Race 8, the seven-furlong Howard and Sondra Bender Memorial for Maryland-bred/sired 3-year-olds and up. The 6-year-old gelding is a 12-time career winner, nine in stakes.

The post Full Fields On Tap For Thanksgiving Weekend At Laurel appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights