Bloodlines: What A Difference A Year Has Made For Runhappy

The dark bay colt Smile Happy (by Runhappy) remained unbeaten in two starts with his victory in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs and pushed his lifetime earnings to $284,810. This son of champion sprinter Runhappy (Super Saver) tops a lustrous year for the Claiborne Farm stallion, who now stands third among second-crop sires.

Not only an Eclipse Award winner, Runhappy was a handsomely pedigreed son of a classic winner with a classic pedigree. In addition, Runhappy's sire, Super Saver (Maria's Mon), won the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at two before going on to classic success the following May.

Yet 11 months ago at the end of 2020, Runhappy was toiling in 15th place on the freshmen sires list, with nine winners, but no stakes winners. Not a one! There's no need to describe how rapidly breeders left what they perceived was a sinking ship, even though the horse's stud fee was slashed to account for the lack of immediate stakes horses.

What a difference a year makes!

In 2021, with another month of racing left, Runhappy is in third place on the national list for second-crop sires, with progeny earnings of $4.1 million. That's 10 times the earnings from the first season results.

And how can something like that happen, you might ask?

Part of it's luck. If only a few of the nicer prospects have a bump in the road, get sick, or get into the hands of someone who wants them to do something they aren't equipped to do, the results are usually nil.

Part of it's planning. With the first-crop racers by Runhappy, there were some extremely attractive bonuses for winning races at key racetracks, and who knows how many horses went cockeyed from trainers and owners pointing their young stock for those spots.

Part of it's pedigree and aptitude. Although he was champion sprinter and winner of the Breeders' Cup Sprint in record time, Runhappy is the son of a Kentucky Derby winner out of a mare by a classic-type son of Unbridled in Broken Vow.

Now the second crop is doing the job in spades, with 15 winners and four stakes winners so far, and overall, the stallion has a half-dozen stakes winners and 10 total stakes horses, all this year. In achieving 10 times the progeny earnings, black type is where most of the added earning power comes from.

One other point of importance is that Runhappy's 3-year-olds and juveniles both have had much better seasons in 2021. And if the second crop of current juveniles finds as much improvement over the next 12 months as the first has made, what will 2022 bring for this young stallion?

Doubtless, one of the things it will bring is more good mares, especially since Runhappy's stud fee is $12,500 for next year, half of the figure he stood for his first four seasons at stud.

One of the mares sent to the horse in his second season was a daughter of the highly accomplished racehorse Pleasant Tap (Pleasant Colony). Pleasant Smile is the dam of Smile Happy, and he is the mare's fourth winner and second stakes horse.

A half-sister to stakes winner Miracle Mets (Metfield), Pleasant Smile is out of a mare by Relaunch, and the next dam is by the top sire Graustark (Ribot).

That third dam is Bunch of Smiles, a full sister to Cherished Moment, who ran second in the 1984 Ashland Stakes, and they are out of Pumpkin Patch, a foal of 1966 who was a daughter of the legendary Bold Ruler, probably the best of all the great stallions ever to stand at Claiborne Farm.

Pumpkin Patch is a daughter of the important broodmare Bravura (Niccolo Dell'arca), and Bravura and her early foals were bred by John Galbreath of Darby Dan Farm. The mare's second foal was Candalita (Olympia), who won the 1964 Spinaway and Matron and was nearly the best filly in the country that season.

The very best juvenile filly of 1964 was champion Queen Empress (Bold Ruler), and as must have seemed obvious at the time, Bravura, dam of a top juvenile filly, was sent to Bold Ruler, the sire of both juvenile champions in 1964, for the breeding seasons of 1965 and 1966. The racetrack results were dreadful. Pumpkin Patch did not race; the 1967 foal, a filly named Lizanne Dear, only managed to place at two.

After the mare produced Candalita, Galbreath's son Daniel acquired Bravura and bred the Bold Ruler disappointments, but then the younger Galbreath bred the mare to Hail to Reason (Turn-to) and got Hail the Pirates, who won the Gallinule and Desmond Stakes abroad, then won the Widener, Seminole, and Queen's County Handicaps here in the States.

Sired by a high-class racehorse and half-brother to Nearco, Bravura was out of a half-sister to American leading sire Alibhai (Hyperion). This was a pedigree of international significance, and it has continued to play a role at the top level.

In fact, the 2003 Kentucky Derby winner Funny Cide and runner-up Empire Maker (Unbridled) both have Bravura as their fifth dam. The line comes to Funny Cide through the Graustark mare Cherished Moment (mentioned above), and Empire Maker descends through Bravura's first foal, the Swaps mare Ortalan. She produced Walker's (Jaipur), winner of the Sanford Stakes at 2 and a sire in California, and is the granddam of multiple stakes winner Image of Reality (In Reality), who is the dam of Toussaud (El Gran Senor), the 2002 Broodmare of the Year and producer of four G1 winners.

With Smile Happy, this family is back in the limelight again.

The post Bloodlines: What A Difference A Year Has Made For Runhappy appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

2022 Thoroughbred Makeover Rulebook Now Available Online

The 2022 update of the rulebook for the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, presented by Thoroughbred Charities of America, is now available to be read online at TBMakeover.org! Print copies will be available for purchase at a later date.

Notable rule changes for 2022:

  • All applicants, regardless of past Makeover experience, must submit video no more than two years old demonstrating riding ability on the flat as well as any discipline-specific skills, such as a barrel pattern, cattle work, stick and ball work, or obstacle work. All applicants declaring expertise in a jumping discipline should furnish video demonstrating a course at 2'6” or higher. All video should be submitted on a more finished horse, not current Makeover hopefuls
  • All team members must submit an application. The application fee for team captains remains at $300; the application fee for team members is $150
  • Ribbons (1st-10th) and special awards will be awarded at a Friday night competitors' party based on preliminary competition. The top five in each discipline will return for Saturday's Finale, which will be judged on a blank slate and placed as separate championship event

The 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover Rulebook outlines all rules and information relevant to the competition, with changes for 2022 marked in red and clarifying information marked in blue.

Note the new schedule for applications!

Starting on Dec. 15, the trainer application will be available for preview and drafting at TBMakeover.org. You'll be able to work on your application and save your progress within the trainer portal.

Starting on Jan. 3, 2022, trainer applications can be submitted with all required additional documents (signed waiver, letter of recommendation from a vet, riding videos, and application fee), through end of business day on Jan. 21, 2022.

It's time: starting today, Dec. 1, 2021, horses may begin training for the 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium! As a reminder, eligible horses are Jockey Club-registered Thoroughbreds (or foreign equivalents) who marked a timed workout or raced on or after July 1, 2020 and do not have more than 15 retraining rides prior to Dec. 1, 2021.

The post 2022 Thoroughbred Makeover Rulebook Now Available Online appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Ryan Moore Named Longines World’s Best Jockey

Ryan Moore has won the title of 2021 Longines World's Best Jockey with 112 points. He was a previous recipient of the award in 2014 and 2016. This year, Moore won six qualifying races-from the world's top 100 Group or Grade 1s–aboard five different horses in four countries. His qualifying races are as follows: Longines Hong Kong Vase (Mogul {GB}), G1 Al Quoz Sprint Sponsored by Azizi Developments (Extravagant Kid), Prince of Wales's S. (Love {Ire}), Diamond Jubilee S. (Dream of Dreams {Ire}), Coral-Eclipse (St Mark's Basilica {Fr}), and Irish Champion S. (St Mark's Basilica {Fr}).

Second in the standings was William Buick with 104 points, while James McDonald was third with 96 points. Moore will be honoured in mid-January when the 2021 Longines World's Best Racehorse and Longines World's Best Horse Race winners are announced. For more information, please visit the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities website.

The post Ryan Moore Named Longines World’s Best Jockey appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Resurgent Kent Desormeaux Voted Jockey Of The Week

Veteran jockey Kent Desormeaux closed the Del Mar Bing Crosby meet on a high note by winning two graded stakes during the track's turf festival. His achievements earned the title of Jockey of the Week for Nov. 22 through Nov. 28. The honor, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

The holiday weekend card featured seven stakes races on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course. Riding for trainer Phil D'Amato on Friday, Desormeaux was aboard the stretch-running Say the Word for the first time in the G2 Hollywood Turf Cup. Say the Word was last in the field of seven for the first mile of the 1 1/2-mile contest for 3-year-olds and up. Desormeaux swung Say the Word to the outside at the top of the stretch and in a drive to the wire overtook his stablemate Acclimate to win by a length in 2:27.62. The win was Desormeaux's first in the Hollywood Turf Cup.

Trainer John Shirreffs gave a leg up to Desormeaux on Beyond Brilliant in Saturday's G1 Hollywood Derby. In the field of 14, Desormeaux was riding Beyond Brilliant for the third time. From an inside post, the duo made every pole a winning one finishing the nine furlong test over Santin by a neck in 1:48.84.

“All the credit for this win goes to the barn,” said Desormeaux to the Del Mar publicity office. “They've done wonders with this horse the past month. When I rode him last time (10/31) at Santa Anita, he was a handful to control. Today he was easy.”

The victory was the first for Desormeaux in the Hollywood Derby. He has 87 stakes wins at Del Mar, ninth most of all riders.

After a slow start to the meet, Hall of Famer Desormeaux came on strong to finish 4th in the Del Mar standings with 10 wins and $1,153,196 in purses.

Desormeaux outpolled Tyler Gaffalione who was the leading rider in wins for the week, Jose Lezcano who won three stakes races, Jose Ortiz with two Grade 1 stakes and one Grade 3, and Irad Ortiz, Jr. who won four stakes races.

The post Resurgent Kent Desormeaux Voted Jockey Of The Week appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights