Authentic’s Foal Derby: Well-Bred Colts Face Off In Week 3 Finals

The first foals by Spendthrift Farm's Horse of the Year Authentic have begun to arrive, and to celebrate, Spendthrift is hosting a “Foal Derby” to share photos of the stallion's debut crop and reward breeders and fans with prizes.

Each week leading up to the Kentucky Derby, a group of Authentic's foals will be displayed on Spendthrift Farm's social media channels. The two foals with the most likes and shares will face off in the finals each Friday to decide the favorite. Both finalists will then be among 20 horses eligible to win the grand prizes, based on the results of this year's Kentucky Derby. Voters will also be eligible for weekly prizes.

To learn more about the rules and prizes for both breeders and voters, click here.

Authentic, a 5-year-old son of Into Mischief, stands at Spendthrift Farm for an advertised fee of $70,000. He was named Horse of the Year in 2020, following a campaign that saw him earn Grade 1 victories in the Kentucky Derby, Breeders' Cup Classic, and Haskell Stakes.

A pair of colts go head-to-head in the Week 3 finals matchup, each out young mares from success-producing families, giving them plenty of blue sky for the future.

Click here to vote on the Week 3 finalists. Voting is also available on Spendthrift's Facebook and Twitter feeds.

Let's take a look at this week's finalists…

Foal: Colt o/o Incredible You 

Bred by: Glencrest Farm

Click here to cast your vote on Facebook

The first foal out of the unraced Uncle Mo mare Incredible You, who is a half-sister to Grade 1 winners Zo Impressive and Zaftig. The foal's second dam is the Grade 1 winner Zoftig, whose daughters have produced the likes of Grade 2 winner Souper Tapit, Group 1-placed Zip Top, and Grade 2-placed stakes winner Spinoff.

“He's a really nice, solid maiden foal,” said John Greathouse III of Glencrest Farm. “He weighed about 135 pounds coming out, which is big for a maiden. We're really happy with him. He's a good, correct foal. He has all the right angles, moves really nice out in the field. He's one of my nicest foals on the farm.

“We just thought Authentic was such a spectacular racehorse,” he continued. He was a horse that could really carry his speed. He's a well-bred, good looking horse. For me, he was a no-brainer. I couldn't breed to his dad, couldn't afford it, so he was the next option for me. He was a horse that I doubted would go a mile and a quarter when he was in the Kentucky Derby, and he proved me wrong. I thought it was a good, classic family that we could stretch out. The dam can probably get you a two-turn horse with that family, and we thought breeding a little speed into her would benefit her.”

Foal: Colt o/o Cyrielle

Bred by: Erik Johnson

Click here to cast your vote on Facebook

The second foal out of the winning Animal Kingdom mare Cyrielle, who is herself a half-sister to Grade 2-placed Dewey Square and stakes-placed Something Super. His second dam is the Grade 3-placed stakes winner Somethinaboutbetty, and the extended family features the multiple Grade 3 winner Eskenformoney.

“He's a very nice colt, looks a lot like his father,” said Mike Heitzmann of Stone Bridge Farm, where the mare and foal are boarded. “He's very athletic, got a good head and eye, good bone with a lot of substance. Everything you're looking for in a foal. “

The post Authentic’s Foal Derby: Well-Bred Colts Face Off In Week 3 Finals appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Farewell To A Friend: Go For Gin’s Legacy So Much More Than His Derby Win

Go for Gin died Tuesday, March 8, due to heart failure at the Kentucky Horse Park, where he had lived since retiring from stud duty in June 2011. The 31-year-old was the oldest living Kentucky Derby winner. Horse racing photographer Ciara Bowen penned the following “goodbye” to the champion Thoroughbred, reprinted here with permission.

When morning came on May 5, 2018 we all knew we were in for a long day – and not only because it was Derby Day. It was raining already; there was no hope of a partially dry day or a fast track. When I got to Churchill, I greeted my fellow media friends and did my usual tour around the grandstand before the gates opened to the fans and before I headed off to shoot for the day.

There are a few spots I go without fail, looking for a particular name, as if I'm afraid that it'll be gone for some reason. It never is; it sits up there, solid, written in history forever.

Ritual complete, I went about my day. It was miserable weather to be shooting in. No matter what I did, I couldn't get away from the water. I went through a couple ponchos throughout the day and sacrificed a third to make another makeshift cover for my camera after the first one died its valiant death. I'd moved up to the stand at the second gap on the backside, ducking under the roof to get a momentary respite a couple races before the Derby, when I heard someone behind me speak.

“This weather absolutely sucks. This has got to be the wettest Derby since…”

He trailed off and there was a slight pause.

“Go for Gin. May 7, '94,” I finished for him.

He and his buddies laughed and agreed – which I didn't need. I can't list all the Derby winners, and sometimes I can give you a name but not the year they won. But I don't need any help or supplementing on that one.

I felt the wind shift, rain hitting my face and hands again, and added, “He's probably enjoying this today.”

“You act like you know him or something.”

“Just a little.”

The track was a disgusting mess, with water literally streaming off of it around my feet as I waited for the horses to load in the gate later, and then standing in hoofprints until they dragged the track again. The field raced by and as I heard the thunder of their hooves, I imagined I was watching a bay horse, his strides strong and confident as he glided through the mud easily, those yellow silks clean and the small yellow shadow roll across his nose striking in contrast to his dark coat.

I've watched his Derby thousands of times. Some were on my laptop late at night, where the only light in my room was that of the video as I pretended to be at Churchill. Some were at the Derby Museum, played on repeat as friends watched other editions close by. Most of them were at the Park.

I know the call like I know the back of my hand.

His winning time is tattooed on my wrist.

If you've ever been out to the Kentucky Horse Park at the same time as me, and have come up to the Hall of Champions, you've probably seen me standing at the back of the pavilion with a camera around my neck, eyes on the screen up above me, mouthing the words until the precise moment I knew Gin would head into the ring.

I can recite the facts that Cindy or Kathy would tell during his portion of the show, facts that I don't need to list here because they are all things that are easy to know. The things that anyone can Google. Things like who his connections were, what he accomplished at stud, and the fact that his arguably best son, Albert the Great, lived in nearby Georgetown at Old Friends. There were other things too, like how he was part of the welcoming committee to the barn and sometimes a line about how he loved treats.

But those shows, fabulous as they are, are just a small portion of the time I spent with Gin. I only met him a couple times before moving to Kentucky, but I had already been a big fan of his. When I moved here, I was thrilled to be able to visit him just about whenever I wanted. And oh, did I.

There were visits on days that I only said a handful of words to Dave, Gene, Jenny, Kelly, Laura, Paul, or Rob and anyone else in the barn, and they always understood that I just wanted to be by Gin. I would stand at his window or by his stall door and talk to him, pet him, give him a few treats. If he was out in his paddock, I'd just watch him graze. Other days, when I wanted to talk, everyone would wait until I'd at least greeted him and, temporarily appeased, would spend some time with them laughing and conversing. Thanks to Gin, I've gotten to know all of them and to some degree or another with each of them, consider them friends.

I'm glad to have spent that time with him, no matter what people may have thought of it. He wasn't mine but I loved him like he was, and I'm so, so lucky that I got that opportunity. I made it no secret what I thought of him – many of you will attest to that. There are some people who initially only knew me because of that love. The first time I officially met Wendy Wooley was at the Park on my way to go visit Gin, actually. She was showing her horse that day and we passed each other on the path and she said something along the lines of, “You're the Go for Gin girl, aren't you?!”

That's me. Forever.

I'm not going to list every single thing I loved about him, or every little thing that I'm going to miss. Not today, at least.

There haven't been any books written on Gin yet, and there's a part of me that says I should save those for the first one. I'm not a nonfiction writer, but I think I could make an exception.

And the next time I'm at Churchill and the field is dashing across a sloppy track, I'll look at the twin spires that are woven into the very being of our sport, and I'll smile. The people around me will think I'm crazy, no doubt. But it won't be the weather I'll be smiling about.

It'll be you, Gin. Always.

The author feeds Kentucky Derby winner Go For Gin a peppermint

The post Farewell To A Friend: Go For Gin’s Legacy So Much More Than His Derby Win appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Alittleloveandluck a Dual-Surface Threat in Florida Oaks

With a near 100% chance of precipitation in greater Tampa, Saturday's GIII Florida Oaks is at the mercy of Mother Nature, but whether the race remains on the grass or is transferred to the main track, the Mike Dini-owned and -trained Alittleloveandluck (Arrogate) stands an excellent shot of getting her picture taken post-race.

The gray tried open company in her first three appearances, rounding out the triple in a one-mile Parx maiden in October before besting her fellow Florida-breds by a nose in a sythetic-track test at Gulfstream Nov. 12. Up late to take the grassy Ginger Brew S. Jan. 1–in which she had next-out GIII Sweetest Chant S. heroine Opalina (Optimizer) back in third–Alittleloveandluck was second–albeit well-beaten–behind the promising Nest (Curlin) in the Feb. 12 Suncoast S. over the local main track.

Domain Expertise (Kitten's Joy) gave trainer Chad Brown a second Florida Oaks last year and the conditioner has a pair of entrants to try to put them back-to-back. Spicer (Quality Road), a debut third at Belmont Oct. 9, was a convincing 3 3/4-length maiden winner–with Ambitieuse (Medaglia d'Oro) third–at Aqueduct Nov. 19 and adds Lasix for this potential return to action. Brown also saddles French import Dolce Zel (Fr) (Zelzal {Fr}), well-beaten in her Dieppe debut last July, but a latest 24-1 winner of a ParisLongchamp maiden for Alessandro and Giuseppe Botti Oct. 14. The bay would almost certainly come out of the race if removed from the turf.

Ambitieuse progressed from her debut third to graduate when tried over the Gulfstream Tapeta Dec. 29 and finished full of run when going down by three-parts of a length in the Sweetest Chant. Bred on the same cross that has produced MGISW Elate and a similar one to multiple champion Songbird, Ambitieuse is also a candidate to contest a main-track Oaks.

The post Alittleloveandluck a Dual-Surface Threat in Florida Oaks appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Classic Causeway Looks To Hold Serve in Tampa Bay Derby

Currently ranked number one on the TDN Triple Crown Top 12, Kentucky West Racing LLC & the Clarke M. Cooper Family Living Trust's Classic Causeway (Giant's Causeway) will attempt to further cement his position as a chief protagonist of the 2022 sophomore crop when he jumps a warm favorite in Saturday's GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby on what projects a pretty wet afternoon on Florida's Suncoast.

One of three from the final crop of the 'Iron Horse' and one of two in the race, the blaze-faced chestnut made the most of a late start to his freshman campaign with an eye-catching debut score at Saratoga in September and was third from a horror draw when favored at 19-10 in the GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland the following month. A clear runner-up–with GIII Holy Bull S. hero White Abarrio (Race Day) second–in what has become a key running of the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. at Churchill Nov. 27, Classic Causeway made all the running in this track's GIII Sam F. Davis S. Feb. 12, controlling the pace while stuck down inside of a longshot rival before charging home 3 3/4 lengths to the good of New York-bred Shipsational (Midshipman).

“He came out of the [Sam F. Davis] very well, he's carrying good weight and he has great energy, so we're counting our blessings,” trainer Brian Lynch said. “He seemed to really like the racetrack, so we thought the smart thing was to take him back over there and have a crack at the Tampa Bay Derby.”

The last to complete the Davis/Derby double was Destin–a son of Giant's Causeway–in 2016, while the stallion's Carpe Diem took the 2015 Derby. Giant's Causeway is also the broodmare sire of 2013 Tampa Derby hero Verrazano (More Than Ready).

Giant Game (Giant's Causeway), third in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile, but well beaten in the Holy Bull, resurfaces here after being scratched out of last weekend's GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S.

Perfect in a pair of juvenile appearances, WinStar Farm and Siena Farm's Major General (Constitution) makes his 3-year-old bow Saturday. The $420,000 Keeneland September grad narrowly bested a group of Saratoga maidens on debut Aug. 21 and made it two straight with a neck success in the GIII Iroquois S. in Louisville Sept. 18. The dark bay tries two turns for the first time here.

The well-tried Strike Hard (Flashback) won a Gulfstream allowance going the one-turn mile Dec. 5, earning 4-5 favoritism for the Jan. 1 Mucho Macho Man S. over the same track and trip. Beaten four lengths into second by Fountain of Youth hero Simplification (Not This Time) on that occasion, he endured a difficult wide trip in the Davis and although he failed to make up any ground in the final furlong, clawed his way past three rivals to finish fourth. He's slightly better drawn here and gets a significant jockey upgrade from Leonel Reyes to Luis Saez.

New shooters include Happy Boy Rocket (Runhappy), a good-looking allowance winner going two turns in Hallandale Jan. 29; Money Supply (Practical Joke), who Beyered 91 in breaking his maiden at first asking going six furlongs over this strip Feb. 12; and Belgrade (Hard Spun), who topped the horses-of-racing-age section at Keeneland January on a bid of $700,000 and exits a determined entry-level allowance score over six furlongs Feb. 19.

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