Baffert-Trained Grade 1 Winner Eda Ruled Out Of Fantasy Stakes With Fever

Baoma Corporation's Grade 1 winner Eda will not make a scheduled start in this Saturday's Grade 3, $600,000 Fantasy Stakes at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark.

Trainer Bob Baffert told the Daily Racing Form that the filly did not get on Tuesday's plane from Southern California after she developed a fever on Monday.

“Her blood work was not super-perfect, so we didn't put her on the plane,” Baffert told DRF.

The Fantasy is a prep race for the Kentucky Oaks, and offers the winner points on a scale of 100-40-20-5. However, since Eda is trained by Baffert the filly is not eligible for any points on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks.

The 3-year-old daughter of Munnings has won five of her seven starts, including her last four in a row. Eda's major victories include the G1 Starlet Stakes at Los Al, the G3 Santa Ysabel Stakes, the Anoakia Stakes, and the Desi Arnaz Stakes.

Bred in Kentucky by Nathan McCauley, Eda is out of the winning Lemon Drop Kid mare Show Me, who is a half-sister to Grade 3 and multiple stakes winner Aegean. Eda commanded $240,000 as a yearling at the Keeneland September sale, and agent Donato Lanni purchased the filly for $550,000 the following March at the OBS 2-year-old in training sale.

Thus far, Eda has earned $430,000 on the track.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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NY Stallion Incentives Proposed To Reverse ‘Dangerous Trend’

With a 60% majority of New York-bred foals now sired by out-of-state stallions, the board of directors for the New York Thoroughbred Breeding and Development Fund (NYTBDF) is reaching out to the state's stallion owners to try and spark incentivization ideas that might swing that balance back toward in-state sires.

Chief among the concepts that have the most traction so far are 1) recalculating the splits of the fund so that more money flows to stallion owners; and 2) changing rules at tracks so that eligibility in New York-bred races would be based on the virtue of a sire standing in the state, regardless of where his offspring are foaled.

At Tuesday's NYTBDF meeting, board member Joe McMahon, who runs McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds, articulated key points from a recent several-hour conference call he organized among 10 in-state stallion owners to “get the pulse of what they were feeling in the business.”

McMahon said that of those 60% of outside-sired foals dropped in New York, the “vast majority” were by Kentucky stallions.

“The trend is, and it has been over the last 10 years, more and more Kentucky-sired New York-breds,” McMahon said. “So that's having a bad effect on the stallion business in New York. It's having a bad effect on selling the 'get' of New York stallions in New York. It's having a negative effect on selling seasons to New York stallions.”

McMahon said the issue that repeatedly got hammered home during the conference call was, “What can we do to help change that, because it's a dangerous trend? If it continues to go up like that, it's going to be very hard to fund a stallion business in New York if only 30% to 40% of the mares are willing to breed to a New York stallion.”

In the brainstorming session, McMahon said the stallion owners tried to limit the scope of what could be done to things that do not require the cumbersome process of changing the state's breeding laws via the legislature.

One suggestion on the restructuring of fund payments involved changing the owners' awards so that the fund would not pay owners' awards in open races at New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks. McMahon said that change would not apply to Finger Lakes, because its use of that bonus system is an integral part of the racing program there.

Regarding changing the eligibility status, McMahon said such a move would bring New York in line with programs in other states and in Canada.

“We could change that, and get more field size, and get more New York-sired product running in New York races,” McMahon said. “That would be a real incentive for people to use New York stallions, because they would have dual eligibility. They would be eligible for races in New York, and they'd be eligible for races in their own state, wherever they happen to foal.”

McMahon added that the owners of those horses sired by a New York stallion but not foaled in the state would not garner award payments from the fund. It's strictly a way to make them eligible for races.

“The racetracks are desperate to increase entries,” McMahon said. “They are in a terrible situation, and it's going to get worse, because the purses all around the country are getting higher and higher…. As it is right now, they are in a real fight to keep horses racing in New York…

“There's an opening for discussion with NYRA on this thing. It would benefit NYRA by virtue of adding more horses into their eligibility program, and it would certainly incentivize New York people to breed to New York stallions.”

McMahon termed the eligibility-tweaking idea as having “zero impact on the industry from the point of view of taking money from somebody or redistributing money” while also providing “significant value” to the progeny of those New York stallions.

NYTBDF board member Najja Thompson, who serves as the executive director at New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc., said the conference call was “a good first step in meeting with stallion owners to hear their utmost concerns, and now we want to take the steps to get into the research” and seek additional commentary from other stakeholders.

Separately, Adam Lawrence, the NYTBDF's registrar, gave an update on the October 2020 rule amendment concerning mares who sold at public auction for $50,000 or more coming into the state to foal.

Lawrence explained that rather than being required to be bred back to a New York stallion to maintain the eligibility of those foals, those mares are now allowed to leave the state to be covered elsewhere. They can return within 120 days and eventually drop that second foal in New York, with both offspring eligible to be registered as New York-breds.

“We did this to increase the number and quality of mares in the state,” Lawrence said.

In 2021, Lawrence said, 115 total new mares entered the state after being purchased at public auction, with 42 of them having hammered for $50,000 or more. Eight were bred back to New York stallions.

In 2022, 80 auctioned mares came into the state, with 32 of them having sold at $50,000 or above (breed-back numbers for this season are not yet complete).

“I think this is around what we were expecting. We were hoping for maybe 50 or so $50,000-sale  mares,” Lawrence said. “We're a little bit below that, but it's still definitely a big difference–[195] new mares in the state from public auction in the last two years, with 74 total above $50,000.”

McMahon asked Lawrence if the NYTBDF was compiling data on who bought those mares. Lawrence replied that he didn't have those details, but that he could get them prior to the next board meeting.

McMahon said it's important to know, because it was his belief that “the stallion farms bought most of the mares. Of the 115 that were brought in '21, the number was extremely slanted towards people who owned stallions who bought those mares. So I'm just wondering if that's a trend. I think it's something we should be tracking.”

The NYTBDF is a public benefit corporation that oversees the registration process for foals and stallions and distributes incentives in the form of awards. The money provided by the fund comes from a percentage of the state's Thoroughbred racing handle, plus video lottery revenues at Aqueduct and Finger Lakes.

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Laurel Park Launching Spring Meet With Nine-Race Card Friday

Highlighted by the April 16 Spring Stakes Spectacular featuring the $125,000 Federico Tesio for 3-year-olds and $125,000 Weber City Miss for 3-year-old fillies, Laurel Park will open its spring meet with a nine-race program Friday, April 1.

The 22-day spring meet is scheduled to run Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through May 8. There will be no live racing on Easter Sunday, April 17.

A total of nine stakes worth $950,000 in purses will be offered over two weekends during the spring stand. For the seventh consecutive year, the 1 1/8-mile Tesio will headline the Spring Stakes Spectacular and serve as a 'Win and In' qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated horses to the $1.5 million Preakness Stakes (G1), held Saturday, May 21 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

Also on Laurel's Saturday, April 16 program is the Weber City Miss at about 1 1/16 miles, which offers the winner an automatic berth to the 98th running of the $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan (G2) Friday, May 20, the traditional feature on the eve of the 147th Preakness, Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown.

Rounding out the Spring Stakes Spectacular card are the $100,000 Heavenly Cause for fillies and mares going one mile and the Frank Y. Whiteley for 3-year-olds and up sprinting seven furlongs. The Heavenly Cause returns to the Maryland stakes calendar for the first time since 2004, when it was held at Pimlico.

Spring Stakes Spectacular nominations for all four races are due Saturday, April 2.

Racing is set to resume on Laurel's world-class turf course during the spring meet, with the first three grass stakes of the season scheduled for Saturday, April 23 – the $100,000 Henry S. Clark for 3-year-olds and up and $100,000 Dahlia for fillies and mares 3 and older, both going one mile, and the $100,000 King T. Leatherbury for 3-year-olds and up, a 5 ½-furlong turf dash.

A pair of $100,000 stakes will also be contested over the main track – the 1 1/8-mile Native Dancer for 3-year-olds and up and six-furlong Primonetta for fillies and mares 3 and older.

Post time for the spring meet is 12:40 p.m.

Friday's feature comes in Race 5, a seven-furlong maiden special weight for 3-year-old fillies that drew a field of 10 with five first-time starters including Wet My Beak, a daughter of 2012 Belmont (G1) winner Union Rags trained by Graham Motion; Molise, by Hall of Famer Ghostzapper, from the barn of trainer Michael Trombetta; and Beargrease, the Cal Lynch-trained daughter of Grade 1 winner Competitive Edge.

Race 7 is an entry-level allowance for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares 3 and up going about 1 1/16 miles. Among the entrants are Click to Confirm, third last out in the one-mile Beyond the Wire March 19 at Laurel, and the pair of Mit Mazel and Lady Fox from leading trainer Claudio Gonzalez.

Gonzalez won four races over the final racing two days to capture Laurel's 2022 winter meet title, 26-23, over Jerry Robb. Though he had no mounts on the March 27 closing day program, Jevian Toledo finished with a 38-29 advantage over apprentice Jean Alvelo to win the riding title.

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Sunland Derby Wrap: Slow Down Andy Headed To Keeneland, Bye Bye Bobby A Late Triple Crown Nominee

The top two finishers in in Sunday's Grade 3, $500,000 Sunland Derby are both expected to target the 2022 Triple Crown series.

Reddam Racing's homebred Slow Down Andy, the half-length winner, picked up 50 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. The 3-year-old son of trainer Doug O'Neill's Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist is now headed to Keeneland, where he will prepare for the target beneath the Twin Spires.

“He's on a van heading to Keeneland,” O'Neill told DRF on Tuesday. “He'll train out of Keeneland and May 7 is our target date – the Kentucky Derby. We're so excited.”

The Sunland Derby runner-up, B-4 Farms' Bye Bye Bobby, was made a late nominee to the Triple Crown with a $6,000 payment on Monday. His second-place finish earned 20 points toward the Run for the Roses.

Trainer Todd Fincher confirmed the nomination when speaking with DRF on Tuesday, and said the son of Quality Road would also head to Keeneland for a start in the Grade 3, $400,000 Lexington, a 1 1/16-mile race on April 16 which offers the top four finishers Derby points on a scale of 20-8-4-2.

The current Kentucky Derby points standings are available here: 20220327 Road to the Kentucky Derby Leaderboard.

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