First Mare in Foal to Code of Honor

The first mare has scanned in foal to multiple Grade I winner Code of Honor (Noble Mission {GB}–Reunited, by Dixie Union), who stands at Lane's End Farm. The stakes-winning mare Initiation (Deputy Minister) is already the dam of multiple stakes placed Forward Thinker (Indian Charlie) and is owned by St. Simon Place.

Code of Honor won the 2019 GI Runhappy Travers S. and GI Jockey Club Gold Cup and was second in the GI Kentucky Derby. On the board in 14 of 20 starts, the 6-year-old chestnut won seven times and earned $2,981,320.

Code of Honor stands for $10,000.

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Jockey ‘Wiggy’ Ramos Came ‘Close To Crying’ After Saudi Cup Win Aboard Emblem Road

For 53-year-old jockey Wigberto “Wiggy” Ramos, the longshot victory in Saturday's $20 million Saudi Cup is certainly the pinnacle of his career. Ramos told Thoroughbred Racing Commentary that the win was made even more special since Saudi Arabia, where the jockey has ridden for 24 years, is his “second home.”

Prior to his time in Saudi Arabia, Ramos rode in the United States beginning in 1989. From 1,470 winners, Ramos' biggest came in the 1993 Florida Derby (G1) on Bull inthe Heather (Ferdinand). He went on to ride the colt to an 11th-place finish in the Kentucky Derby.

Shifting his tack to Saudi Arabia, Ramos earned several leading rider titles but missed the first two editions of the Saudi Cup. First, the jockey was ruled out with a broken hand in 2020, and then when his mount became sick the week before the race in 2021.

This year, local trainer Mitab Almulawah had two entries preparing well for the big race, and his regular jockey Alexis Moreno (also from Panama) got first pick between Emblem Road and Making Miracles. Initially, Moreno chose Emblem Road, but the week before the race Moreno decided he would rather ride Making Miracles.

Ramos picked up the mount on Emblem Road.

While the 4-year-old Quality Road colt's win may have been a pari-mutuel surprise, Ramos had faith in him since the beginning.

“I said in the lead-up to the Saudi Cup that I believed my horse could finish in the first three,” Ramos told TRC this week.I said I would take my time and when I saw my horse in the parade ring I knew he could run a very big race. He went around the horses and was in the clear. I won by half a length and when I pulled him up and realized what I'd done I was close to crying.

“I started to shout, 'I did it, I did it!' Then I celebrated. From that time to now I have been chilling with the Saudi people, people from America, all over the world. The vice-president of Panama sent me a message on my Instagram, and that feels good.”

Closing down the center of the track, Emblem Road bested U.S. challengers Country Grammer and Midnight Bourbon to take his record to eight wins from 11 starts. Emblem Road is owned by Prince Saud bin Salman Abdulaziz.

“Saudi Arabia is now my second home,” Ramos continued. “To ride this winner for these people means a lot. Emblem Road came here as a 2-year-old from America but he is a local horse who beat all the best horses in the world.”

Read more at the Thoroughbred Racing Commentary.

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Vaccarezzas Win $1M Veterinary Negligence Jury Verdict

Carlo and Priscilla Vaccarezza won a $1.06-million jury award in a California court Feb. 25 over a veterinary malpractice and negligence lawsuit against the Equine Medical Center and Dr. Vince Baker, who is the longtime attending veterinarian for trainer Bob Baffert.

The case dates to the 2014 Breeders' Cup and a filly the Vaccarezzas owned and trained, Little Alexis. The couple alleged that she was mistreated by Baker for a lump on her jugular vein and cleared to race. Not only did Little Alexis finish ninth in the GI Filly & Mare Sprint at Santa Anita Park, but her condition became so grave that she was unable to fly to Kentucky right after the Breeders' Cup to sell as planned at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale.

The Vaccarezzas kept her in training, but Little Alexis never again competed in graded stakes. She had been appraised for $1.5 million as a stakes-winning racing prospect who was competitive in Grade I races, but later sold for far less than that amount, at $440,000.

The jury's award represents the difference in valuation from actual sales price, and the defendants will also be on the hook for interest accrued since Nov. 3, 2014, the date Little Alexis would have been sold.

“The case probably sent a message loud and clear that we need to hold vets accountable for their actions,” owner/trainer Carlo Vaccarezza told TDN via phone Tuesday.

“Number one, [Baker] put my filly at risk to get an aneurism or a heart attack,” Vaccarezza said. “Number two, he put the other horses at risk if she broke down. Number three, he put my jockey Joel Rosario at risk. Number four, he put all the other jockeys at risk.

“And number five, not only that, he defrauded the public because they bet over $5 million on that race, and Dr. Baker was the only person who knew that that filly was sick. The public didn't know she was sick. They didn't know she had no shot in the race,” Vaccarezza said.

Asked to comment on behalf of her client, Baker's attorney, Lisa Brown, told TDN via email that, “We believe the case was incorrectly decided and are reviewing all options for further action.”

James Morgan, the lawyer for the Vaccarezzas, told TDN via email that the rapid verdict (after just 2 1/4 hours of jury deliberation) for the full amount of damages requested is a “confirmation as to how the real world will insist on 'accountability.'

“Some battles need to be fought,” Morgan continued. “Of all the battles in and around the horse industry, this was the most satisfying…. It is a victory for those who cherish shining the light on the truth and a defeat for those who choose to harm others by keeping them in the dark by hiding important information.”

Morgan noted that the current controversies surrounding trainer Bob Baffert weren't allowed to be communicated to jurors as they pondered the fate of the veterinarian who for decades has been closely associated with the immensely successful but recently equine-drug troubled trainer.

“The jury received no information about the connection between Dr. Baker and Bob Baffert, Medina Spirit, the 73 pages of accusations filed by the Attorney General for the California Veterinary Medical Board, or the issues pertaining to Dr. [Jeff] Blea,” Morgan wrote. “All the jury heard was the facts of this case.”

Those facts, as alleged in the suit first filed in 2015 in Los Angeles County Superior Court, date to Oct. 31, 2014, the day before Little Alexis was scheduled to start in the Breeders' Cup. The 3-year-old filly had an elevated temperature and Vaccarezza noticed a bump on her left jugular vein.

Baker agreed to treat Little Alexis, and advised the groom to apply hot and cold packs for the bump, Morgan told TDN. Vaccarezza said Baker took a blood sample but did not actually tell him any tests were being done.

Morgan said it would be nearly two years–long after the alleged miscommunication occurred and well after the initial lawsuit was filed–before either he or Vaccarezza learned that Baker had actually gotten test results back the same day they were taken but still didn't mention them to Vaccarezza.

“Instead, on Nov. 1, the morning of the race, Mr. Vaccarezza asked Dr. Baker if Little Alexis would be good to run and reminded him that she would fly out the next morning to be sold at auction in Kentucky,” Morgan explained. “Dr. Baker responded that the filly is good to run. At no point did Dr. Baker tell Mr. Vaccarezza about the complete blood count (CBC) or the serum amyloid A (SAA) test results.”

Morgan argued in court that the CBC was “high and abnormal.” The SAA Value (which measures a protein synthesized by the liver that increases dramatically with inflammation) was an alarming 2,534, far outside a healthy horse's normal range of 0 to 15.

“By concealing the test results, attention was deflected away from the jugular vein issue,” Morgan wrote.

Experts who testified on behalf of the plaintiffs stated that they had never seen an SAA level that high.

“The horse had an inflammatory process going on and the standard of care would have been to advise the owner of the results and scratch the horse,” Morgan wrote.

After Little Alexis beat only one horse in the Filly & Mare Sprint, her temperature spiked again and the jugular bump grew much larger.

“When she came back from the race, she had a 104.7 fever. It's amazing she didn't drop dead,” Vaccarezza said.

With that high a fever, the filly could not get a health certificate to fly out the next morning to sell as hip number 150 at the Fasig-Tipton sale.

The Vaccarezzas gave Little Alexis a five-month break and she returned to racing in April at Gulfstream Park. She ran second, fourth and second in non-graded stakes, then won her final start, the Barely Even H., June 20, 2015.

“The jugular issue would get larger whenever she was asked to go at full speed,” Morgan explained.

Little Alexis sold to WinStar Farm at the Fasig-Tipton mixed sale in November 2015 for $440,000.

Morgan wrote that the exact amount of money coming to the Vaccarezzas via the court judgment will be finalized after the parties “haggle over” the awarding of costs associated with the verdict.

“It was impressive to me how this jury of 12 individuals, none of which had ever seen a horse race, went about their assigned tasks,” Morgan wrote. “Juries typically protect and preserve issues that resonate with them as pertinent to public health and safety. The universal safety standard applicable in our case was that health care professionals must disclose all abnormal test results.

“The unknown back story is that originally this case was based solely on the left jugular vein injury,” Morgan explained. “We were over a year and a half into the case before we obtained a copy of those test results through discovery. The case then changed, and focus was on the nondisclosure of the abnormal CBC and the humongous 2,534 SAA.

“”The negligence claim focused on Dr. Baker's choice to hide the adverse test results from Carlo,” Morgan wrote. “Those results had been concealed. That is negligence. The horse would have been scratched and neither harm to the horse nor damages to the Vaccarezzas would have occurred if the results had been disclosed.”

Morgan also offered a prediction on the defendants' next move.

“In what others have referred to as a 'well-worn playbook,' the predicable next play is to undermine the jurors' verdict, seek immunity from accountability, and to brazenly proclaim vindication will be theirs on appeal,” Morgan wrote.

“Needlessly risking the health and safety of any horse by keeping adverse test results hidden is not the message the public needs to hear…again,” Morgan wrote. “Acknowledging responsibility and accepting the consequences is better for the industry and public perceptions after an avoidable loss occurs.”

Vaccarezza put it this way: “We needed to win [the case] because we need to clear the sport. There's so much pollution and we have to get to the bottom of this. This is a phenomenal, phenomenal sport and we're given bad press every single day. My solution: If a trainer gets 30 days [suspended], the owner should get 30 days, and the vet should get 30 days. You put those rules in place and I guarantee you that people will stop these shenanigans.”

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Clement Stablemates Meet Again In Saturday’s The Very One

Stablemates Beautiful Lover and Sorrel, separated by a neck in the La Prevoyante (G3) Jan. 29, will find themselves in the same starting gate again among a field of nine set to gather for Saturday's $150,000 The Very One (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

The 34th running of the 1 3/8-mile The Very One for fillies and mares 4 and up on the grass is part of a blockbuster 13-race program offering nine stakes, eight graded, worth $1.7 million in purses anchored by the $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) for 3-year-olds on the road to the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) April 2.

Six of the Fountain of Youth Day stakes are scheduled for the turf, led by the $200,000 Mac Diarmida (G2) for 4-year-olds and up going 1 3/8 miles. First race post time is 12:10 p.m.

Moyglare Stud Farm, Ltd.'s Beautiful Lover won the 2019 Boiling Springs and had run second in both the 2020 Hillsborough (G2) and Matchmaker (G3) before breaking through with her first graded triumph in Gulfstream's 1 ½-mile La Prevoyante. Newly minted Eclipse Award winner Joel Rosario negotiated a ground-saving trip before swinging outside in mid-stretch to run down Sorrel.

Augustin Stable and James Wigan's Sorrel won three straight races in England before making her U.S. debut in the 2021 Orchid (G3) at Gulfstream, where she ran third to subsequent Grade 1 winner War Like Goddess. The Dansili mare didn't race again for eight months, returning to be fifth in the Long Island (G3) last November at Aqueduct. She was seventh, beaten less than five lengths, in the 1 3/8-mile Via Borghese Dec. 31 in her La Prevoyante prep.

Rosario is named to ride Beautiful Lover back from Post 8 with Sorrel and jockey Jose Ortiz alongside in far outside Post 9.

Sanford Bacon and Patrick Biancone Racing's Kelsey's Cross won the 2020 Ginger Punch at Gulfstream and was third in the 2019 Wonder Again (G3) and to Beautiful Lover in the 2020 Hillsborough. She will be stretching out to her longest distance since finishing fourth by less than four lengths in the 1 ½-mile Dowager (G3) over a Keeneland turf rated good last October.

“She's not a champion, but she's a nice filly. She runs well all the time. She ran extremely well going a mile and a half at Keeneland at the end of the year, so we wanted to give her another try going long again and see how she does and go from there,” trainer Patrick Biancone said. “She's doing very well at the moment. If you look at her races, the only times she hasn't performed was one time on the Tapeta and one time on the dirt, because she doesn't like it. She's strictly turf.”

Kelsey's Cross drew the rail with jockey Romero Maragh aboard.

Flaxman Holdings, Ltd.'s French Group 3 winner Harajuku ran second, beaten a nose by multiple graded-stakes winner Always Shopping in the Via Borghese, taking a short lead at the top of the stretch and dueling through the lane before coming up just short. Trainer Graham Motion decided pass on the longer La Prevoyante and wait for this spot.

“I kicked myself a little bit for not running back last time on Pegasus Day, but the flipside of that is she's a fresher filly for this race,” Motion said. “I thought she ran very well last time. I think she really appreciates the firm ground, whereas she may not be as effective on softer ground you get in New York and such in the fall.”

Harajuku won the 2021 Prix Cleopatre (G3) at Saint Cloud in her fifth career start, coming to the U.S. late last summer. She joined Motion after finishing third in the 1 3/8-mile Jockey Club Oaks Invitational in her stateside debut, 2 ½ lengths behind subsequent Grade 1 winner Shantisara.

“I do wonder how far she wants to go, and that was part of the reason for not running her last time. I was kind of concerned about the mile and a half. I think she really is like a mile and a quarter type,” Motion said. “Hopefully, we get away with a mile and three-eighths. She almost got it the last time [she tried it]. The mile and a half is a little further than what she wants. That's kind of what it looked like last time.”

Junior Alvarado will be aboard for the fourth straight start, breaking from Post 2.

Bobby Flay's Mezcal will be making just her seventh career start and first against stakes company, exiting a front-running 1 ¼-length optional claiming allowance triumph going 1 ½ miles Jan. 13 at Gulfstream, a race moved from the turf to the all-weather Tapeta. She graduated in a 1 ¼-mile maiden special weight last fall on the Belmont Park turf, and was second as the favorite in a 1 3 1/6-mile allowance at Aqueduct.

“She won on the synthetic, but I think she's a little better on the turf and this is the kind of distance she likes,” Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher said. “She broke her maiden on the turf and then won the off-the-turf synthetic race. She proved she could handle the distance in that, going a mile and a half, and now it's just switching back to the turf. [She's] stepping up in class a bit, but she's a filly that seems to be improving.”

Championship Meet-leading Luis Saez gets the riding assignment from Post 6.

Completing the field are German Group 3 winner Virginia Joy, beaten a neck in her most recent start, the 1 ½-mile River Memories last July at Belmont Park; 2021 Kentucky Downs Ladies Marathon winner Family Way; Onyx, sixth last out in the La Prevoyante; and Quinevere, unraced since finishing off the board in Aqueduct's Winter Memories last November.

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