As Time Goes By, Merneith Retired To Begin Broodmare Careers

Graded stakes winners As Time Goes By and Merneith have been retired from racing to begin their broodmare careers, Daily Racing Form reports.

Both mares are 5-year-old daughters of American Pharoah who were trained by Bob Baffert, and they finished their careers after scoring graded victories in what would be their farewell starts.

As Time Goes By went out with a victory in the Grade 1 Beholder Mile Stakes on March 5 at Santa Anita Park, capping off a three-race winning streak that also included the G3 La Canada Stakes and the G3 Bayakoa Stakes. She also notched Grade 2 victories in the Santa Maria Stakes and Santa Margarita Stakes, and she retires with seven wins in 14 starts for $955,600.

As Time Goes By raced as a homebred for the Coolmore partnership, out of 2014 Broodmare of the Year Take Charge Lady. She is slated to visit Spendthrift Farm's Into Mischief for her initial mating.

Merneith won five of 12 starts and earned $493,620 for owner Prince Sultan Bin Mishal Al Saud. She finished her career with a win in the G2 Santa Monica Stakes on Feb. 5, defending her victory in the same race in 2021.

Mating plans are still to be determined for Merneith.

Read more at Daily Racing Form.

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Tattersalls Guineas Breeze Up, Horses in Training Catalog Now Online

The catalog for the 2022 Tattersalls Guineas Breeze Up and Horses in Training Sale can now be viewed online at www.tattersalls.com.

Numbering 206 breeze up 2-year-olds and 120 horses in training, the sale will take place April 26 – 28 with the 2-year-olds breezing at Newmarket's Rowley Mile Racecourse on Tuesday, April 26 starting at 9 a.m.

Graduates of the Tattersalls Guineas Breeze Up Sale enjoyed an excellent year on the racecourse in 2021 with international Group success in Britain, France, Germany and the U.S. led by Grade/Group 1 winners Shantisara and Trueshan, purchased for just 10,000 guineas and 31,000 guineas respectively. The sale has produced a remarkable 46 individual Group/Listed performers since 2017 with five Group/Listed performers already from last year's sale including Hierarchy, beaten only a head when runner up in the Group 2 Mill Reef Stakes.

No less than 46 of the stallions with 2-year-olds cataloged have already sired classic or Group/Grade 1 winners, including Acclamation, Australia, Exceed and Excel, Iffraaj, Invincible Spirit, Kodiac, Make Believe, Mehmas, New Bay, Night of Thunder, No Nay Never, Oasis Dream, Sea the Moon, Showcasing, Starspangledbanner, Wootton Bassett, Zoffany, and Zoustar. A strong contingent of overseas sires are represented including the French-based duo Galiway and Zelzal, American stallions Astern, Caravaggio, First Samurai, and Stormy Atlantic and German three-time Champion sire Soldier Hollow.

Several sires who made a favorable impression with their first crop of runners in 2021 feature prominently with a total of 32 lots cataloged by Ardad, Caravaggio, Chirchill, Cotai Glory, Galileo Gold, Profitable, Time Test, and Zarak. In addition there are 18 first crop sires with 2-year-olds catalogued including Group 1 winners Cracksman, Expert Eye, Harry angel, Havana Grey, Hawkbill, Lightning Spear, Roaring Lion, Saxon Warrior, U S Navy Flag, and Sioux Nation, who has already produced an impressive debut winner. They are joined by exciting U.S.-based contemporaries Accelerate and Bolt d'Oro.

Owners and trainers looking to benefit from additional incentives will be well catered for with 18 fillies registered for the Great British Bonus Scheme and 14 2-year-olds qualified for French Owners' Premiums. Three juveniles are entered in the 2022 Swedish Derby and Oaks Series and three are entered in the £150,000 Tattersalls October Auction Stakes, with one lot additionally entered in the £100,000 Tattersalls Somerville Auction Stakes.

The Horses in Training section of the Guineas Sale has been a consistent source of high-class performers and the 2022 renewal features several promising 3-year-olds led by the progressive Belardo colt My Little Tip. Timeform rated 95 following wins in his last three starts, he will be consigned by George Boughey's Saffron House Stables. The listed placed More Than Ready colt Kaboo is another highly rated 3-year-old colt to feature with a Timeform rating of 101, he will be consigned from Karl Burke's Spigot Lodge Stables. He will be joined by Grenoble and John the Baptist, rated 96 and 93 and consigned by Somerville Lodge and the Castlebridge Consignment respectively.

Several highly-rated older performers with recent winning form are catalogued including Night on Earth, Sanaadh, and Whittle Le Woods. The consignment of five lots from Juddmonte Farms looks certain as always to attract interest, including the 3-year-old War Front colt Fraction out of Group 1 winner Proportional, who ran with promise on his only start at Deauville. The draft also features several well-bred unraced colts, including Winterscape, a Frankel full-brother to Group 1 Nassau Stakes winner Winsili, and Polemon, a Frankel half-brother to Group 1 placed Weekender.

Commenting on the catalogue, Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony said:

“The Guineas Breeze Up enjoyed yet another outstanding year on the racecourse led by the Champion stayer Trueshan and U.S. Grade 1 winner Shantisara, both of whom illustrate the quality, diversity and value for money that buyers have come to expect from the sale. This year's Guineas Breeze Up has been very well-supported by consignors and we are confident the selection of 2-year-olds will appeal to domestic and international buyers in all sectors of the market, alongside the second largest horses in training section in the sale's history.”

Catalogs will be available from Tattersalls and Tattersalls overseas representatives from Monday, April 11. The breeze for the Tattersalls Guineas Breeze Up will take place at Newmarket's Rowley Mile Racecourse on Tuesday, April 26 starting at 9 a.m. The breeze will be shown live on the Tattersalls website via Sale Day Live and on the Tattersalls Facebook page.

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Patch Reduces Attraction Of Flies To Horses

Equiwinner™, an electrolye-balancing treatment that is best known for resolving and prevention of anhidrosis (non-sweaters) and exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage (EIPH), can also reduce the attraction flies have to horses, it has been recently shown.

“In the same way that sweat, manure and urine attract flies, so too, do improperly balanced fluids,” said Barbara Socha of Signal-Health, the North American distributer of Equiwinner. “Because improperly balanced fluids in skin moisture or bodily secretions actually attract flies, particularly fluid exuding from the eyes, when the electrolytes are balanced and working properly, it can deter flying insects.”

Deanna Searles, an AQHA trainer who has used Equiwinner for more than four years for horses that have trouble sweating in the summer heat of Scottsdale, Arizona, has noticed over time that her horses treated with Equiwinner patches have significantly less flies and bugs bothering them than their herd mates.

“Recently we tried Equiwinner on a horse that had tons of flies–just swarms of flies on his neck on both sides,” said Searles. “After using the Equiwinner patches for 10 days, the flies don't seem to bother him anymore.”

For additional information, click here.

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Trainer John Ortiz Took Lesson From Coach To ‘Heart,’ Enters Barber Road In Arkansas Derby

To win the biggest race of his career, trainer John Ortiz will have to topple one of the biggest names in Thoroughbred history.

Ortiz will send out the consistent Barber Road in Saturday's $1.25 million Arkansas Derby (G1), which is Oaklawn's fourth and final points race for the Kentucky Derby. The 1 1/8-mile Arkansas Derby also attracted star filly Secret Oath, who is trained by D. Wayne Lukas, 86, a four-time Kentucky Derby winner and member of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame.

Ortiz was just 13 when Lukas, a former high school basketball coach, captured his fourth Kentucky Derby in 1999, the same year he was inducted into the Hall of Fame. A former assistant to Kellyn Gorder, Ortiz, 36, struck out on his own in 2016 and is seeking his first Kentucky Derby starter.

“It's fun to run against Wayne Lukas – period,” Ortiz said following Barber Road's final work for the Arkansas Derby Sunday morning at Oaklawn. “I turned to the 'Coach' one time with the first stakes filly that I had. Her name was Sully's Dream and I was actually on her. He was sitting on his pony and we were actually standing by the gate here at Oaklawn. I looked at him and said, 'Coach, I know we don't talk much and I'm just new, but I've got a little conflict.'”

Ortiz said he wasn't sure whether to run Sully's Dream in an allowance race or the $50,000 Houston Distaff Stakes in January 2018 at Sam Houston. Ortiz said he believed Sully's Dream could win the Houston Distaff, but she also still had an allowance condition. Reaching this fork in the road, Ortiz asked Lukas to point him in the right direction.

“He goes, 'Johnny, go with your heart,'” Ortiz said. “He's like, 'I've won more stakes races that I shouldn't have been in than the ones I point to.' Guess what? I turned around and won that race.”

Sully's Dream provided Ortiz with his first career stakes victory. Four years later, Barber Road is trying to give Ortiz his biggest career stakes victory in the Arkansas Derby, which highlights Saturday's 13-race card. The Arkansas Derby will go as the 12th race, with probable post 6:35 p.m. (Central). First post is noon. Weather permitting, the infield will be open.

The Arkansas Derby will offer 170 points (100-40-20-10, respectively) to the top four finishers toward starting eligibility for the Kentucky Derby. While Secret Oath is 3 for 3 at the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting (winning her races against 3-year-old fillies, including two stakes, by a combined 23 lengths), Barber Road is still seeking a breakthrough victory.

Barber Road finished second in the $250,000 Smarty Jones Stakes at 1 mile Jan. 1 and $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) at 1 1/16 miles Jan. 29 and third in the $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2) at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 26. Barber Road collected 18 points for those finishes and ranks 20th on Kentucky Derby leaderboard, according to Churchill Downs. A top three finish in the Arkansas Derby likely would secure Barber Road a spot in the Kentucky Derby, which is limited to 20 starters.

“It's just exciting to be in this position for the first time,” said Ortiz, who trains Barber Road for former Walmart executive William Simon. “I'm pumped. It's crazy.”

Ortiz, even without the Barber Road storyline, continues to author a spectacular 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting. He was tied for third in victories (22) and ranked third in purse earnings ($1,904,226) through Sunday, Day 47 of the scheduled 66-day live season.

Remarkably, 15 of Ortiz's victories have come in races worth $100,000 or more, highlighted by the $150,000 Nodouble Breeders' Stakes for Arkansas-bred sprinters March 5 with Gar Hole, who became the meet's first four-time winner. The Nodouble marked the first career Oaklawn stakes victory for Ortiz after five runner-up finishes during the 2021 and 2021-2022 meetings.

Ortiz already has shattered his previous single-season Oaklawn bests – 15 victories and $721,658 in purse earnings – set last year. In addition to the Nodouble, Ortiz runners have captured 14 six-figure allowance races, a $90,000 maiden special weights race and two $84,000 maiden special weights events.

“Our goal was to win one race every weekend and we've been very blessed to have multiple wins,” Ortiz said. “Our goal was to win a stakes at the meet this year and we finally got that off the bucket list and to win 20 races. Now, we're at 22 for the meet. I have a great team.”

Ortiz's stable, roughly 60 horses, is split between Oaklawn and The Thoroughbred Training Center, which is near his home in Lexington, Ky. Ortiz normally makes the 9 ½-hour drive each week, leaving after Sunday's final race at Oaklawn and arriving home early Monday morning. Ortiz then returns early Friday to Hot Springs for a new race week.

“This is a team effort, from Kentucky to Arkansas,” Ortiz said.

The projected Arkansas Derby field from the rail out: Kavod, Mitchell Murrill to ride, 122 pounds, 15-1; Chasing Time, Jose Lezcano, 119, 12-1; Barber Road, Reylu Gutierrez, 119, 8-1; Doppelganger, John Velazquez, 119, 3-1; Un Ojo, Ramon Vazquez, 122, 6-1; Secret Oath, Luis Contreras, 117, 5-2; Ben Diesel, Jon Court, 119, 15-1; Cyberknife, Florent Geroux, 119, 8-1; and We the People, Flavien Prat, 119, 7-2.

Lukas won the 1984 Arkansas Derby with a filly, Althea, and again in 1985 with Tank's Prospect.

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