Restrictions Tighten In Wales, Scotland

The Welsh Grand National on Dec. 27 and Musselburgh's New Year's Day meeting will be held behind closed doors after the Welsh and Scottish governments tightened restrictions in response to the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant. All sporting events in Wales from Boxing Day will be staged behind closed doors, while in Scotland outdoor sporting events are limited to 500 people.

“We've had up to 12,000 people for the Welsh National meeting in recent years, an average of around 10,000,” said Chepstow's Executive Director Phil Bell. “Hospitality had been sold out for about a month. Most of the racecourse was ready to go. We've been having marquees erected for the last three weeks plus all the portable toilets, outside bars and food outlets. It's been a month's worth of hard work in terms of putting the site ready which is now going to go to waste.

“The one thing about the financial impact is we are talking to the Welsh Government about a compensation package. We've been asked to supply our cost and revenue losses to them and that's going into the mix for a decision.”

Musselburgh General Manager Bill Farnsworth said, “It is very unfortunate as this is one of our best and biggest racedays and one of our most popular, attended by a sell-out crowd. However, we all must play our part in keeping people safe and in light of the latest government guidance on the Omicron variant, we feel the responsible decision is to make this a 'BCD' event with only annual members, horse owners, trainers and staff in attendance.

“On a positive note, we hope that the restrictions will break the spread of the Omicron variant so that we can look forward to the Scottish Festival Trials Weekend on Feb. 5 and 6. All ticket holders for the cancelled racedays on Jan. 1 and 3 will be able to transfer to future race days or will receive a full refund. Racecourse staff will endeavour to process all transfers and refunds as quickly as possible.”

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Maryland Stallion Season Auction Opens Jan. 3

The Maryland Horse Foundation will host an online stallion season auction Jan. 3-7, featuring no-guarantee seasons for 20 Maryland-based stallions. Stallions with seasons in the auction are: Alliance, Barbados, Blofeld, Bourbon Courage, Editorial, Fortune Ticket, Friesan Fire, Holy Boss, Hoppertunity, Imagining, Irish War Cry, Kobe's Back, Long River, Madefromlucky, Mosler, Outflanker, Rainbow Heir, Street Magician, Super Ninety Nine, and Uncle Lino.

“We are grateful to the Maryland stallion community for generously supporting the auction again this year,” said Jordyn Egan, MHF director of development. “Purchasing a season is another great way to support the Maryland Horse Foundation's projects and programs.”

Visit the online auction site to preview the available stallion seasons and register to bid.

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Chantal Sutherland On Jockey Fitness, The Importance Of Mental Health

The fitness of a jockey is a complex balancing act of being fit enough to ride racehorses, and being light enough in weight to ride in races in the first place. This means that their fitness routines outside of riding horses are very unique compared to those of other professional athletes, and often an aspect of their job which is unseen by racing fans.

Chantal Sutherland is a well-known multiple graded stakes-winning jockey currently based out of Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla. A native of Canada, Sutherland's professional jockey career began in 2000 at Woodbine Racetrack. She went on to become the first female jockey to win the Grade 1 Hollywood Gold Cup in 2012 and she now has lifetime earnings of $55,838,263 and has won 1,160 races. 

The two-time Sovereign Award winner went into detail about what overall fitness as a jockey means to her and how she personally maintains the balancing act. 

Question: What does your weekly exercise routine look like?

Chantal Sutherland: “Outside of riding I do two types of yoga. I do normal zen-type yoga and also intense yoga. It's like hot yoga, but it's an intense workout where you're being pushed and you're not holding poses for a long time, but you're doing intense-type poses. I also do boxing, but because I'm down to two days off a week, I don't get to do as much as I was. It is not only good for your core and your athleticism, but it's also good for your mind and your confidence. I eat extremely healthy, mostly a pescatarian type of diet, and lots of vitamins and supplements. I think it's important for everyone, not just athletes.”

Q: Do you find that exercise plays a role in your mental health and fitness as well as your physical health and fitness?

C: “Yeah I think that your mental health is just as important as your physical health. It's that mindset of calmness and our sport can be pretty tough, so you can get beat up and you just have to stick through the tough times and just be kind of mentally in tune to be able to prepare yourself for a race. I do my homework at night, sometimes up to two days before a race. I go over the race myself and watch the replays and talk to my trainer to kind of get a sense of what they want in a race. Sometimes they see the pace differently than I do and we talk about it and come to a good place. Communication I've found is so important and just being present for what they have to say. Also, I work a lot of horses. I work every day except for Monday, and I think it's a huge advantage for me. I like to know my horse. I like to know what's going on and be able to tell my trainers how they're feeling and they can tell me how they're feeling. Information is just so much power.”

Q: As mental health has become more talked about and there's been less of a stigma behind it, have you found that correlates with better performance when it comes to riding races?

C: “Yes, for sure. I feel like people are more sensitive to the fact that mental health is so important and you need to take a time or day where you don't do anything. We're on the go a lot and it's hard to take time for yourself, but it's really important. I live alone and I like to be alone in the room and I'm so lucky and blessed to have the girls' room where I can be alone. I just like to study there. I meditate there and I pray there. My relationship has taken a new level with God and myself. The more grateful you are, you feel better about yourself and the world. Being happy and treating others with respect does come back to you. I try to treat everyone on the backside with respect and love and I feel it come back to me in abundance.”

Q: Are there any types of exercise you have to avoid typically to make sure you don't bulk up too much and have trouble maintaining riding weight?

C: “You want to balance everything with cardio and weight training. You don't just want to do a ton of weight training because then you're going to get too big, but you don't want to do too much core because then you're going to get skinny and you're too weak so it's a bit of both and racing horses is the combination.”

Q: What would you say the biggest fitness challenge is for a jockey and how do you tackle that?

C: “I think it's that deep air in a race when you're down and riding and you're pulling and pushing on a 1,200 pound animal and they're getting tired and you have to lift them and help them. I think for me boxing gets that deep cardio and that feeling on a stairclimber when you're getting to that really fast anaerobic part. To be a jockey, you have to have really good air to the point where you almost feel like you're throwing up. That's what it feels like to be in a race.”

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Taking Stock: Danzig Legacy at Claiborne

Claiborne's been running an eye-catching ad on its two young sires War of Will (War Front) and Silver State (Hard Spun) that ties them to their illustrious Claiborne-based grandsire Danzig, under the heading, “The Danzig Legacy continues at Claiborne.”

What really hits home about this ad is that Danzig's legacy in North America is now limited to two stallions, Claiborne's War Front and Darley's Hard Spun, and their sons. In contrast, Danzig is a massive sire-line influence in Europe and Australasia through many different strains, led by Danehill but also including Green Desert (Danzig), through such as Cape Cross (Ire) (Green Desert), Invincible Spirit (Ire) (Green Desert), Sea the Stars (Ire) (Cape Cross), Kingman (GB) (Invincible Spirit), etc.

Abroad, Danzig has also been equally as powerful as a broodmare sire line, again headed by Danehill, whose daughters have had terrific success with Galileo (Ire) (Sadler's Wells) and other sons of Sadler's Wells.

The outstanding example of this cross is Frankel (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), from the Danehill mare Kind (Ire). In fact, Galileo is the sire of 58 black-type winners from Danehill mares–an outstanding 18% black type winners to foals–and there are many others bred on this pattern when including granddaughters of Danehill or mares by other strains of Danzig.

What is also notable about this nick is that it's a sire-line cross of Northern Dancer, because both Danzig and Sadler's Wells were sons of his. Statistically, sire-line crosses–when the sire and the broodmare are members of the same line–tend not to be the most successful, but that's not the case when Danzig and Sadler's Wells are involved.

Danzig was bred by Marshall Jenney's Derry Meeting Farm and Lane's End's W.S. Farish, but stood at Claiborne, which had a relationship to Sadler's Wells. Bred by Robert Sangster's Swettenham Stud and partners, Sadler's Wells's dam, Fairy Bridge (Bold Reason), was bred by Claiborne, which also bred Sadler's Wells's three-quarter brother Nureyev, another outstanding son of Northern Dancer. And speaking of the great Canadian-bred stallion, Claiborne also stood Northern Dancer's best racing son, Nijinsky II, who was an outstanding stallion in his own right.

It's common nowadays to find multiple crosses to Northern Dancer in pedigrees, and this is the case with both War of Will and Silver State. The former, who is out of a Sadler's Wells mare, has four strains (Danzig, Nijinsky, Sadler's Wells, and Northfields), while the latter has three (Danzig, El Gran Senor, and Dixieland Band).

Danzig is frequently the common thread in horses with multiple crosses to Northern Dancer, and that's probably because he injects more “trans-brilliant” speed–Franco Varola called that speed that blends with other aptitudes–than any other son of Northern Dancer. There are more than 1,000 Grade I/Group 1 winners that include Danzig with multiple strains of Northern Dancer in their pedigrees, and that about proves the point, doesn't it?

The puzzle, of course, is why Danzig, who started out with three Grade l winners in his first crop, including Gl Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner and champion 2-year-old colt Chief's Crown, and who led the general sire list in 1991, 1992 and 1993, never found the continuing sire-line success in North America that he's had overseas, until War Front and Hard Spun appeared late in his career.

And these two, as the Claiborne ad notes, could be the source for rejuvenating the legacy of their grandsire on this continent.

War Front is a foal of 2002 and Hard Spun was born two years later–the year Danzig was pensioned after covering mares that spring. Both went to stud after many other sons of Danzig had fired their best shots, and though several Danzig stallions had had intermittent success over here, none rose to the level of their foreign-based counterparts until these two arrived.

War Front, who was bred and raced by Joe Allen, has been an exceptional stallion in particular. Coolmore was quick to recognize his potential, and the Irish farm sent Galileo mares to him after the early success their star sire Galileo was enjoying with Danehill. This reverse cross of Danzig/Galileo through War Front is responsible for 11 black–type winners (11% from foals), including several Group 1 winners. Most of the success for this combination has come in Europe, where turf is the main racing surface, which the Danzigs reveled.

Early on, War Front was quickly labeled a high-class turf stallion, but just as his own sire succeeded on North American dirt, so too has War Front, when given opportunity.

A prime example is War of Will. Bred by European entity Flaxman Holdings, War of Will is from Visions of Clarity (Ire), a daughter of Sadler's Wells, and she descends from blue hen Broodmare of the Year Best in Show. On a surface reading of his pedigree, War of Will was destined for success on the turf. War Front has sired seven black=type winners from Sadler's Wells-line mares (21% to foals), and all seven were stakes winners on turf, and one of those–Gl Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Hit It a Bomb, at stud at Spendthrift–was a stakes winner on all-weather, too.

War of Will is the exception. Though he was Grade I-placed on turf at two, he won the Gl Preakness S. at three on dirt, and at four he won the Gl Maker's Mark Mile S. on turf. Altogether, he won five of 18 starts and earned $1.9 million, and his success in a Classic on dirt gives him all the credentials he needs to succeed in North America on dirt. The same could be said for War Front's high-class Spendthrift-based son Omaha Beach, who was also a dirt horse and a multiple Grade l winner.

Hard Spun is a very good and reliable stallion, standing for about a third of War Front's fee. He was also a better racehorse than War Front, and he's shown an ability to get quality dirt horses, such as Grade l winners Questing (GB) (a champion), Wicked Strong, Aloha West, Hard Aces, Spun to Run (at stud at Gainesway), Zo Impressive, Out for a Spin and Smooth Roller in addition to Silver State.

Silver State was bred by Stonestreet, one of the best breeders in Kentucky; raced by Winchell Thoroughbreds, in partnership with Willis Horton; and trained by Steve Asmussen. Winchell and Asmussen combined to race Gun Runner, and now they are behind the success of most of his 2-year-olds. Winchell is also behind Tapit. Stonestreet's list of sire successes begins with Curlin but also extends to several others, including Maclean's Music and Kantharos.

Silver State is from the black-type winner and Grade lll-placed Empire Maker mare Supreme from the immediate family of Gl Kentucky Derby winner Monarchos. He's a winner of seven of 14 starts and $1.9 million, including the Gl Metropolitan H., long considered a sire-making race.

Claiborne, therefore, has two Grade l dirt winners from the Danzig line, by Danzig's only two major sons currently at stud in North America, and both of them are highly credentialed.

These two young horses put Claiborne very much in position to continue Danzig's legacy in North America.

Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks.

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