Upstart Filly Runs To The Money, ‘Rising Star’ Honors

Sent off a mortal lock at odds of 2-5, Team Valor International's Green Up (Upstart) improved off a big-figure debut second for previous connections and galloped her six overmatched rivals into the ground, earning 'TDN Rising Star' honors for a 6 3/4-length tour-de-force.

Having dramatically outrun odds of 25-1 to be runner-up at Churchill Downs last May behind the subsequently stakes-placed Ontheonesandtwos (Jimmy Creed) for owner Leonard Mattingly and trainer Chris Melton, the $10,000 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling graduate was acquired by these high-profile connections a short time thereafter, according to Team Valor's Barry Irwin.

“She's tall and immature. She had a few issues and we gave her plenty of time,” he explained. “We were actually going to run her next week going a mile, but we started getting worried that the race wouldn't fill, so we sprinted her even though she doesn't want to sprint.”

Green Up's most recent breeze, a five-furlong bullet at Palm Beach Downs in 1:01 Mar. 6, had the Virginia-bred sitting on ready. Irwin said the drill was very much in character.

“Her works are unbelievable,” he said. “She goes out there, she stays with her company and just before the wire, she moves a little bit ahead and then on the gallop out she opens up 12 or 15 lengths every time.”

Off to an uneventful beginning for the in-form Irad Ortiz, Jr., Green Up tracked longshot pacesetter Teasing (Tapit)–a full-sister to GI Belmont S. winner Tapwrit–through solid opening splits. Easing alongside that one as the quarter pole loomed, Green Up quickly put daylight on her rivals and stopped the timer in 1:10.04 while never asked through the final eighth of a mile.

“It was as much as I expected and I expected a lot,” Irwin commented. “About three weeks ago, Todd called me and goes, 'this Green Up, she's a graded stakes winner, she's unbelievable.' He says, 'I know trainers never call people up with anything but bad news, so I want to call you with some good news and tell you what a good filly you've got. Pretty exciting to have one like this.”

The winning jockey added: “She did everything right. She did it the right way. She put me in a good position. She did everything so easy. Going to the turn, I just rode her, biding my time. When I asked her she responded really well. She took off.”

A May 9 foal, Green Up is out of an unplaced half-sister to the solid Midlantic handicap horse Just Call Kenny (Jump Start)–also a paternal descendant of A.P. Indy–who counted the GIII Philip H. Iselin S. as his major career victory and who won the 2014 Spectacular Bid S. over this main track. Green Up holds an entry for the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks and is the second Rising Star for Upstart, who is already represented on the Oaks trail by GII Davona Dale S. heroine Kathleen O.

4th-Gulfstream, $53,000, Msw, 3-13, 3yo, f, 6f, 1:10.04, ft, 6 3/4 lengths.
GREEN UP, f, 3, by Upstart
1st Dam: Green Punch, by Two Punch
2nd Dam: Green Jeans, by Green Dancer
3rd Dam: Duds, by Ack Ack
Sales history: $10,000 Ylg '20 EASOCT. Lifetime Record: 2-1-1-0, $44,360. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG. Click for the free Equineline.com catalog-style pedigree.
O-Team Valor International LLC; B-Althea Richards (VA); T-Todd A Pletcher.

 

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Costa Appointed New Trainer at Jebel Ali Stables in Dubai

Australian trainer Michael Costa has been appointed as His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Rashid Al Maktoum's trainer at Jebel Ali Stables in Dubai. The contract was signed in the emirate on Friday. Costa, who runs Michael Costa Racing, will continue to operate his stable in Australia for the majority of the 2021/2022 season and, after all of his horses and staff have been placed with new trainers and positions, will move to Dubai and take up his new role. The horseman will oversee sourcing a large band of racing talent every year. The best-known horse to race in Sheikh Ahmed's colours is the globetrotting multiple Group 1 winner Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}), who has earned Group 1 wins in both hemispheres.

Costa released a statement via Michael Costa Racing's YouTube channel which read in part: “I went over with an objective mindset, but I was absolutely blown away by the facility, the horses and the people. The opportunity that was presented was far bigger than I could have ever anticipated. The facility itself is world class and I can't image there being a better facility and training establishment in the world.

“What the job entails is to take up the training operation and purchasing a large bloodstock band every year, as well as travelling the Carnival horses all around the world to compete at the highest level. After viewing the operation and meeting the lovely team at Jebel Ali, I had some hard conversations with my wife and family on what has been the hardest decision of my life. I've decided to take up the position of the head role for Jebel Ali and for His Highness Sheikh Ahmed.

“I'm extremely grateful for all of our owner support, growing a stable with one of the best strike rates in the country. This could only be done with the support of all of our owners. I'd also like to thank all of my staff who've shared this journey with me.”

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Homebred Gives Ailing McAnally First Winner Of Santa Anita Meet

Although he remains sidelined with a persistent throat infection, Hall of Fame trainer and Santa Anita mainstay Ron McAnally and his wife, Debbie, were no doubt all smiles following Friday's first race after their 5-year-old homebred mare Red Diamond easily won the day's first race under Jose Valdivia Jr.

The Kentucky-bred daughter of Afleet Alex finished the six-furlong maiden claiming event for fillies and mares in 1:09.80 on firm turf while winning by three lengths as the 6-5 favorite .

“This was our first start of the meet, so we wanted to make it count,” joked longtime McAnally assistant Dan Landers. “Ronnie's watching from home, but he's getting better and he should be back to the track in another week.”

A native of Covington, Ky., McAnally, who will turn 90 on July 11 and will forever be remembered as the trainer of seven-time Eclipse Award winner and two-time Horse of the Year John Henry, ranks fifth on Santa Anita's all-time list of stakes winning trainers with 113, behind fellow Hall of Famers Charlie Whittingham (204), Bob Baffert (211), Bobby Frankel (146), and Richard Mandella (128).

A three-time winner of the Santa Anita Handicap (G1), with John Henry in 1981-1982 and with Mr. Purple in 1996, McAnally won the 1976 Santa Anita Derby (G1) with An Act.

A three-time Eclipse Award-winning conditioner whose uncle Reggie Cornell trained the legendary come-from-behind winner of the 1958 Santa Anita Derby, Silky Sullivan, McAnally has also trained such stalwarts as Bayakoa, Candy Ride, Cassaleria, Hawkster, Northern Spur, Olympio, Paseana, Tight Spot, and many others.

By races won at Santa Anita's Winter/Spring meetings, McAnally ranks sixth, with 784.

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Wadham Looking To Sky For Poignant First Festival Win

“You start to feel like you're waiting for Godot,” says Lucy Wadham, referring to the fictional character who never actually appears in Samuel Beckett's play of the same name.

It has been a long winter and the days can seem to pass agonisingly slowly when you have a horse aiming for a big-race target, but the sand in the Cheltenham Festival hourglass has now nearly all run through. Wadham has only to wait until Tuesday afternoon to unleash the bonny grey mare who has been at the forefront of the trainer's excellent season.

As we meet a week ahead of the start of the Cheltenham Festival, it is not just the thought of her forthcoming runners that are occupying Wadham's mind, however. Step into any trainer's yard at 6.30 in the morning and ordinarily they will be busying themselves with getting first lot out and about, but these are strange times and, as Wadham appears, conversation turns instantly to the appalling  situation in Ukraine. She doubtless speaks for many when she says, “It's hard to think about anything else at the moment really.”

But in the bubble of British and Irish National Hunt racing, minds have been focused on Cheltenham for months. For many it is more exciting than Christmas and now here we are: jump racing's Christmas Eve. Early on Tuesday morning, Wadham will be on her way to the Cotswolds with Martello Sky (GB) (Martaline {GB}), who is set to line up for the G1 Close Brothers Mares' Hurdle.

The exuberant 6-year-old has a lightness of action and could be mistaken for a Flat horse amid Wadham's predominantly jump-orientated string, but within her smaller frame is contained an enormous will to win. In just 12 starts since she first stepped onto a racecourse just over two years ago, Martello Sky has come home in front eight times. When she won on debut, her breeder Tim Wood, was there to see it. Tragically, Wood, who had been paralysed in a hunting fall six years earlier, died 18 months ago, leaving his brother Simon and sister Kate Dixon to continue racing his pride and joy with friends Toby Sexton and Mark and Dawn Dewson under the name of The Sky Partnership. 

“Tim would have loved all this. Every time she wins, and she does that quite often, we all get rather tearful,” says Wadham, whose eye never leaves her horses as they stroll past en route to the gallops, the diminutive Martello Sky, ridden by Polly Gunn, tucked in behind the strapping seven-time winner Potters Legend (GB) (Midnight Legend {GB}), now 12.

The stable has also been home to Martello Sky's half-sisters Mystic Sky (GB) (Midnight Legend {GB}) and Iconic Sky (GB) (Sixties Icon {GB}), who won eight races between them, as well as their dam, the Cloudings (Ire) mare Kentucky Sky (GB). She was also a winner in Wood's black-and-white silks and finished runner-up in the Listed EBF Mares' Bumper at Sandown.

“We've trained all the girls in the family,” Wadham recalls. “And Martello Sky has just been very straightforward to train really. We always liked her at home and then first time out at Fakenham she looked like she was going to be nowhere, but then suddenly the penny dropped and she overtook the whole field and won going away by a few lengths. That was the beginning and she's now won eight. And she's a dual Cheltenham winner, which is always encouraging going into the Festival.”

She continues, “Her jumping has improved out of all recognition this year. We ran her in the mares' novices' hurdle at the Festival last year and she just wasn't experienced enough. She took a dive over the second and Bryony [Frost, jockey] had to give her a bit of time to recover. She finished very well–it wasn't actually a bad run given that she had nearly fallen at the second hurdle–but her jumping is a lot sharper now.”

Indeed, since that eighth-place finish at Prestbury Park last year, Martello Sky's progress has been eye-catching. She won the Listed hurdle on the all-mares card back at Cheltenham last April before a triumphant reappearance this season at Market Rasen. Her only defeat in that time has come when fourth behind Brewin'upastorm (Ire) at Aintree in November, and Martello Sky has since downed the colours of the equally tough mare Indefatigable (Ire) at Cheltenham and then landed her second Listed success at Sandown in January. 

Wadham adds, “She's very athletic and light on her feet, and handles soft ground surprisingly well. She's versatile on ground, which is helpful. When they are small and light like that it really can help from a soundness angle.”

The trainer also credits Bryony Frost with having played an important role in the mare's development even though that for four of Martello Sky's last five starts she has had to be riding elsewhere to fulfil her commitments to her boss Paul Nicholls.

During that time, Frost has endured the contentious court case which saw her fellow jump jockey Robbie Dunne banned for 18 months for bullying and harassing Frost. That episode has not yet been concluded as Dunne has appealed against his ban and the appeal will be heard by the BHA on March 30.

Along with the champion trainer Paul Nicholls, Wadham is one of only a handful trainers regularly using the services of Frost, who in 2019 became the first female jockey to ride a Grade 1 winner at the Cheltenham Festival aboard Frodon (Fr). Frost returns with that old friend in the G3 Ultima Handicap Chase on the opening day of this year's Festival, with Martello Sky being her only other ride on Tuesday. 

“Bryony has become a good friend and I think she is a wonderful jockey,” says Wadham, a staunch supporter of the woman who started race-riding in point-to-points, just as she did. 

“She has an extraordinary way of improving horses. Last year some of our fillies, like Regarding Ruth, Sorbet, and Martello Sky, they all improved for having her riding them. And that's a real gift. Also the horse always comes first for her. She would never carry on on a horse that couldn't, and she comes to ride them all here and gets to know them. She's been a real asset to the yard.”

That yard, despite housing a much higher number of jumpers than Flat horses, is based firmly in the Flat racing heartland on the edge of Newmarket Heath at Moulton Paddocks. If that name sounds familiar it is because it is more commonly associated through the summer with Charlie Appleby's Godolphin stable, which is right next door. While her neighbours in blue greatly outweigh Wadham's relatively small string numerically, the trainer, always ably assisted by her husband Justin, has very much upheld the good run of that corner of Newmarket over the years. 

The Dark Lord (Ire), trained for the Wadhams' great friends Anthony and Victoria Pakenham, became her first black-type winner in a Listed hurdle in 2004 carrying the colours worn by the Marcus Tregoning-trained Sir Percy (GB) to win the Derby two years later. The next major success for the stable came with another mare, United (Ger) (Desert King {Ire}), winner of the G1 Champion Four-Year-Old Hurdle at the Punchestown Festival. United also brought Wadham the closest she has come to winning at the Cheltenham Festival when she was second to the mighty Quevega (Fr) in the same race Martello Sky contests on Tuesday. 

But the stable is far from one-dimensional. For the Pakenhams, Wadham has also trained the Flat stakes winners Cassique Lady (Ire), Crystal Gal (Ire) and Lady Tiana (GB), with the latter, winner of the G2 Lancashire Oaks, being extra special for her owner/breeders as she is a daughter of Sir Percy.

“I think jumping is really our main love,” says Wadham, whose daughter Mimi is one half of the increasingly prominent sales consignment company WH Bloodstock, with her friend and business partner Violet Hesketh. “We enjoy the Flat but jumping just seems a bit more noble somehow, I don't know why.”

She continues, “I love being here in Newmarket though. I think it keeps us under the radar which I quite like. But the lads all follow the jumping and when we're riding out they will call across and say 'how is she?' Everyone is really interested. Newmarket loves Cheltenham, and you don't feel like you're not part of the team here. There's a lot of banter on the Heath, which is fun.”

The last time Newmarket welcomed a Cheltenham Festival winner home was in 2006, when the James Fanshawe-trained Reveillez (GB) won the Jewson Novices' Chase for JP McManus. Prior to that, Fanshawe had been represented by two Champion Hurdle winners in Hors La Loi (Fr) and Royal Gait (GB), the latter for Sheikh Mohammed, who also owned the 1990 Champion Hurdle winner, Kribensis (GB), trained by Sir Michael Stoute. In the 1970s, Harry Thomson 'Tom' Jones trained the outstanding Tingle Creek from Newmarket, but brilliant though he was, the great two-mile steeplechaser never won at Cheltenham. Go back farther still to the 1930s and you'll find an even greater name from the National Hunt annals, Golden Miller (Ire), the winner of five Cheltenham Gold Cups and the Grand National, who was trained in Newmarket's neighbouring village of Exning by Basil Briscoe.

“Historically loads of good jumpers have been trained here,” Wadham says. “So there's no reason not to train jumpers in Newmarket. The facilities are fantastic for any type of horse. I think really if you can't train a horse in Newmarket you might as well give up.”

Wadham certainly has no reason to do that. With another mare, Miss Heritage (Ire) (Pour Moi {Ire}), having provided the stable with a Grade 2 victory in the Yorkshire Rose Mares' Hurdle at the end of January, she is on course to record her best season since first taking out her licence some 30 years ago, and on the back of her previous personal best in 2020/21. A Grade 1 win at the Festival would cap it all, even if the circumstances would once again have Martello Sky's owners and trainer in tears. The wait is almost over.

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