CHRB Elaborates on Specifics of Baffert Suspension

Earlier this week, a Kentucky judge denied trainer Bob Baffert's attempts to stay a 90-day suspension related to Medina Spirit's betamethasone-positive disqualification from the 2021 GI Kentucky Derby by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC).

While the appeals process plays out, the question now is: What will happen to the nearly 100-horses in Baffert's California-based stable if the suspension goes into effect on April 4.

As the TDN previously reported, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) will honor the 90-day suspension metered down to Baffert through a system of reciprocity between jurisdictions.

That honor system is laid out in CHRB rule 1484: “If any applicant for a license or any licensee is under suspension, set down, ruled off, excluded from the inclosure, or otherwise barred from any racing occupation or activity requiring a license, it is prima facie evidence that he or she is unfit to be granted a license or unfit to hold a license or participate in racing in this State as a licensee during the term of any suspension or exclusion from racing imposed by any competent racing jurisdiction.”

On Tuesday afternoon, the CHRB elaborated further on the specifics of any such suspension.

Citing CHRB rule 1843.3 which deals with disciplinary actions stemming from medication violations, licensed trainers suspended for 60 days or more shall be banned from all CHRB licensed facilities.

“In addition, during the period of suspension, such trainer shall forfeit all assigned stall space and shall remove from the inclosures all signage, colors, advertisements, training-related equipment, tack, office equipment, and any other property,” the rule states.

The CHRB also prohibits a trainer suspended for more than 30-days from transferring the horses to any licensed family member, or to any other licensee employed by the suspended licensee within the previous year.

“'Licensed family members' means any person who holds an occupational license issued by the CHRB and who is related to the suspended licensee, or the licensee whose license is revoked, by blood, or by marriage or domestic partnership, or who is related by blood to the spouse or domestic partner of such licensee,” the rule adds.

As written, the rules do not preclude a licensed trainer with no immediate ties to Baffert from assuming the running of his stable in whole or in part, including employees, should the relevant owners in Baffert's barn agree to such a replacement, explained an expert on these matters who asked to remain anonymous.

There would, however, be a set of strict stipulations governing such a scenario, the expert explained.

Baffert would not be allowed to directly contact that trainer for the period of the suspension, for example. And all financial duties of the day-to-day running of the barn—such as payroll and other routine stable costs—would also be the replacement trainer's sole responsibility.

The KHRC has yet to weigh in officially on this particular matter. In its original ruling, the KHRC ruling states that, “Entry of all horses owned or trained by Mr. Baffert is denied pending transfer to persons acceptable to the stewards.”

The TDN emailed the KHRC for clarification on who the Kentucky stewards deem acceptable but has not yet received a response.

The post CHRB Elaborates on Specifics of Baffert Suspension appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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$250,000 Stallion Share In Almanzor Tops Fasig-Tipton’s Initial Digital Selected Sale

The March Digital Selected Sale – the first Fasig-Tipton Digital offering – closed Tuesday afternoon with 10 offerings sold for $856,000. Among those sold were a stallion share, racing prospects, broodmare prospects, and in-foal mares. Bidding initially opened on Thursday, March 17.

Top Stallion Share: Almanzor (FR) (Hip 8) for $250,000
Riviera Equine Saarl/Haras d'Etreham went to $250,000 on a share of popular young sire Almanzor (FR) (Wootton Bassett-GB).

Almanzor won five group stakes in 2016 on his way to European Champion 3-Year-Old Colt and Horse of the Year honors, including: in France, the Prix du Jockey Club (G1); in Ireland, the Irish Champion Stakes (G1); and in England, the Champion Stakes (G1). He earned more than $3 million on the track.

Almanzor's first crop of foals are 3-year-olds of 2022 and include juvenile stakes winner Dynastic (also G1-placed) and additional group stakes-placed runners Andalus, Queen Trezy, and Saving Grace.

Top Racing/Broodmare Prospect: Bramble Berry (Hip 18) for $150,000 KiCourt LLC purchased recent Hurricane Bertie S. (G3) runner-up Bramble Berry for $150,000 from the consignment of J. Kent Sweezey, agent.

A 5-year-old Florida-bred daughter of Brethren, Bramble Berry ran a career-best Beyer Speed Figure in the Hurricane Bertie on March 12. To date, she has won nine times in her career, with four stakes placings, on her way to earnings of $286,713.

Bramble Berry is a half-sister to multiple stakes winner Bramble Queen (Silent Name-JPN). She hails from the immediate family of Preakness Stakes (G1) winner Red Bullet and Grade 1 winner Silent Poet.

Top Broodmare: Suchada i/f Knicks Go (Hip 4) for $95,000
Matt Montgomery purchased young broodmare Suchada for $95,000 from the consignment of Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.

A 4-year-old daughter of Frosted, Suchada was offered carrying her first foal, and is the first mare to be offered at public auction in foal to Horse of the Year Knicks Go.

Suchada is a half-sister to Grade 1-winning millionaire Finnegans Wake (Powerscourt-GB) and Grade 2 placed stakes winner Puca (Big Brown).

Top Broodmare Prospect: Wild Empress (Hip 7) for $85,000
Stoneriggs purchased the four-year-old Empire Maker filly Wild Empress as a broodmare prospect for $85,000 from the consignment of Bluewater Sales, agent.

Wild Empress is a half-sister to Champion 2-Year-Old Filly She Be Wild (Offlee Wild). Her sire Empire Maker is responsible for the dams of Grade 1 winners Separationofpowers, Arklow, Mandaloun, Silver State, Valiance, Rock Your World, and Outwork, and of Kentucky Debry hopeful Newgrange.

Top Racing Prospect: Baladi (Hip 9) for $50,000
Intrepid Thoroughbreds/Cary Bloodstock, agent, purchased 3-year-old racing prospect Baladi for $50,000 from the consignment of Godolphin.

A 3-year-old gelded son of Pioneerof the Nile, Baladi was a stakes placed winner last year at two, and ran a career-best Beyer Speed Figure in his last start March 12 in open company at Fair Grounds.

Baladi is out of the Grade 2 winning Tapit mare Dancing House, herself a daughter of multiple Grade 1 winner Tout Charmant.

Also Sold:

  • White Pine (Hip 6), a 3-year-old broodmare prospect by three-time leading sire Tapit, purchased for $60,000 by Glassman Racing from the consignment of Bluewater Sales, agent. White Pine is a half-sister to multiple stakes winner Itsmyluckycharm (Itsmyluckyday), out of a Hard Spun half-sister to Grade 1 winning millionaire Albert the Great.
  • Rogue Too (Hip 3), a 6-year-old broodmare prospect by First Dude, purchased for $50,000 by Happy Horse Stables from the consignment of Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent. Rogue Too won 11 times and won or placed in more than half of her 43 career starts.
  • Blue Diva (Hip 11), a 5-year-old stakes winning daughter of Bluegrass Cat sold as a broodmare prospect to FS, LCC for $50,000 from the consignment of Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent. Blue Diva captured the Miss America Stakes at three and earned more than $250,000 in her career.
  • Risky Analysis (Hip 2), a half-sister to this year's Rebel Stakes (G2) winner Un Ojo, who sold for $40,000 to Ingordo Bloodstock, agent for West Point Thoroughbreds, from the consignment of Sequel New York, agent. A broodmare prospect by Freud, Risky Analysis was a five-time winner on the track and hit the board in 24 of 26 starts.
  • Heston (Hip 15), a 3-year-old ready-to-run racing prospect by Dialed In sold for $26,000 to Daniel Preiss from the consignment of Godolphin. Heston is out of the stakes winning, Grade 1-placed Unbridled's Song mare Stage Luck, a half-sister to Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) and Belmont S. (G1) winner Drosselmeyer.

Buyers may still make offers on horses that failed to meet their reserve by visiting the sale page, and then clicking “Make Offer” next to the horse they are interested in purchasing.

What They're Saying

“The platform is very interactive and I look forward to Fasig-Tipton continuing with this sales format.” – Robert Slack of Stoneriggs Farm, buyer of Wild Empress for $85,000

“I'm very happy with the process and result of the Fasig Digital sale. It fills a need for constant trade in an easy, comfortable, and transparent way. We had a good turnout of people coming to the farm to see [our offerings], and they brought a fair value – a win/win option for sellers and for buyers. It was fun and I'm looking forward to doing it again.” – Meg Levy of Bluewater Sales, consignor of Wild Empress ($85,000) and White Pine ($60,000)

“Overall, it was very encouraging to see that we could successfully sell offerings from across the country, and the world.  We sold racehorses, broodmare prospects, in foal mares – some of which were on 2022 covers — and an international stallion share. We had an impressive number of registered bidders from both within the United States and internationally, and we got a good feel for what the market wants in the digital space.  The sale's average price exceeded $65,000, which was great, and I think that we built positive momentum for the future.  We're already thinking about how and what we can improve for our next sale.” – Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales

 

For more information on buying and selling at future Fasig-Tipton digital auctions, please contact Leif Aaron at laaron@fasigtipton.com

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Track Record Holder Olympiad Returns In New Orleans Classic

Grandview Equine, Cheyenne Stable and LNJ Foxwoods' classy 4-year-old colt Olympiad is set to return to Fair Grounds from his South Florida base as the 8-5 favorite in Saturday's 97th running of the $500,000 New Orleans Classic (G2).

Run at 1 1/8 miles, the New Orleans Classic was carded as Race 9 of 12 with a post time of 4:08 p.m. (all times Central). First post Saturday is noon.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and ridden by Junior Alvarado, Olympiad cruised to a 2 ¼-length score in the $250,000 Mineshaft (G3) last month at Fair Grounds, stopping the timer in 1:42.01 for 1 1/16th miles and shaving .01 off the previous track record set by Pie In Your Eye way back in 1994.

The bay son of Speightstown has only finished worse than second once in his seven-race career – a troubled fourth-place finish in last year's $750,000 Cigar Mile (G1). Olympiad and Alvarado will break from post two.

“That's the kind of horse that makes your work very easy,” Alvarado said following the Mineshaft. “He leaves the gate, you nudge him a little bit, and he takes you for a nice ride the whole way. The longer stretch (at Fair Grounds) helped him today. He's a horse that needs more than a 1/16th mile stretch run to pick it up and he proved that today.”

The Godolphin homebred Proxy hopes to build off an impressive comeback win in his 4-year-old debut on February 25 for Mike Stidham. Second in both the Lecomte (G3) and Risen Star (G2) last year, the son of Tapit fell a bit flat in the Louisiana Derby (G2) and the Lexington (G3) at Keeneland, finishing fourth in both. Apparently, the time off to mature did him some good.

“In the mornings he's a bigger, stronger, better horse now with a little more maturity,” Stidham said. “Last year he'd go out there in the mornings and he wasn't really interested in working well, but you can see from his tab leading up to this, he is doing things a little different now. He ran with blinkers in his last two starts (last year), but watching those races, we didn't see where they helped him so we didn't think twice about taking them off.”

The 5-2 second choice with Brian Hernandez, Jr. back aboard, Proxy will break from post 5.

“I couldn't be happier,” Stidham said. “He's had three really good works since his last race. He ran against top quality horses last year as a 3-year-old. It's just a matter of seeing if he's good enough to compete with the top horses this year, but he's given me every indication that he can. Given the way he ran in his last race, nine furlongs should absolutely be better than 1 1/16 miles for him. He was very relaxed and came home finishing nicely. I'm very much looking forward to the added distance with him.”

With the champion Echo Zulu and Epicenter favored in the Twinspires.com Fair Grounds Oaks (G2) and Twinspires.com Louisiana Derby (G2), respectively, and Midnight Bourbon set to compete in the Dubai World Cup at Meydan, Saturday could be a monstrous day for trainer Steve Asmussen, who also sends forth Erv Woolsey and brother Keith Asmussen's Super Stock in the New Orleans Classic. Joel Rosario will ride from post three.

“He's never raced here but he has worked well here,” Asmussen said. “It's a good opportunity for him. I didn't like the trip he got last time (Razorback at Oaklawn). We think he is better than that and we think the change of scenery may just wake him up a little bit. It's a good race and we are hoping he goes out there and proves us right.”

Trained by Dallas Stewart, Estate of James Coleman's 2021 New Orleans Classic hero Chess Chief narrowly defeated Owendale to win his first graded stakes. The now 6-year-old horse finished his 5-year-old campaign with a victory in the $100,000 Tenacious Stakes at Fair Grounds prior to a sixth-place effort in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) at Gulfstream Park. All five of his career wins have come at Fair Grounds. Reylu Gutierrez will have the call from post six.

The field for the $500,000 New Orleans Classic (race 9 at 5:44 pm CT) with post position, jockey/trainer and morning line odds:

  1. Woodford Thoroughbreds and WinStar Farms' Promise Keeper (Tyler Gaffalione/Todd Pletcher, 3-1 ML), winner of the Peter Pan (G3) last year as a 3-year-old
  2. Grandview Equine and Cheyenne Stables' Olympiad (Junior Alvarado/Bill Mott, 8-5 ML);
  3. Erv Woolsey and Keith Asmussen's Super Stock (Joel Rosario/Steve Asmussen, 8-1 ML);
  4. Lothenbach Stables' Happy American (James Graham/Neil Pessin, 8-1 ML);
  5. Godolphin's Proxy (Brian Hernandez Jr./Mike Stidham, 5-2 ML);
  6. Estate of James Coleman's Chess Chief (Reylu Gutierrez/Dallas Stewart, 8-1 ML).

The New Orleans Classic is part of a tremendous program Saturday at Fair Grounds and is one of eight stakes on the card. The penultimate day of the Fair Grounds season is topped by the $1 million TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby (G2), which will go as the finale and the $400,000 TwinSpires.com Fair Grounds Oaks (G2) (Race 11). The other stakes on the card are the $75,000 Crescent City Oaks (Race 3); $75,000 Crescent City Derby (Race 5); $75,000 Costa Rising (Race 6); $100,000 Tom Benson Memorial (Race 8); and $300,000 Muniz Memorial Classic presented by Horse Racing Nation (G2) (Race 10).

Past performances for all of Fair Grounds races are available on www.Brisnet.com and fans can wager on www.TwinSpires.com, the official wagering provider of Churchill Downs Inc.

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Turf Veterans Sacred Life, Devamani Top Choices In Saturday’s Muniz Memorial Classic

You won't find many graded stakes races on the turf around the country without an entry from the Chad Brown barn.

In the case of Saturday's $300,000 Muniz Memorial Classic (G2) presented by Horse Racing Nation at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots, Brown hopes that not only longer will be better but also some ageless enthusiasm will prevail.

The East Coast-based conditioner sends a pair of long-toothed, French-bred turf veterans in 7-year-old Sacred Life and 8-year-old Devamani, both of whom have traveled near and far for their connections in search of graded stakes glory.

Brown has tasted success in the Muniz before with 2019 Horse of the Year Bricks and Mortar. He also won the 2012 edition with Casino Host and owns a 6-2-1-1 record in this marquee event for older turf horses in New Orleans.

Breaking from post two under Florent Geroux for the first time, Sacred Life was tabbed the 2-1 morning line favorite. Sacred Life has visited the winner's circle just once in his last eight, with that score coming in the Knickerbocker (G3) in October of last year. In his only start of 2022, the son of Siyouni flew late, but was compromised by a slow pace early, finishing a close sixth behind last year's Muniz champ Colonel Liam in the Pegasus World Cup Turf (G1) at Gulfstream.

His stablemate and work partner Devamani comes to the bayou off a pedestrian sixth place finish in the Tampa Bay Stakes (G3) at Tampa Bay Downs last month. Devamani (5-2) has shown an affinity for grass courses with some cut in the them, but with rain not forecasted Wednesday through Saturday, the Stall-Wilson turf course should be in firm condition for closing weekend.

Joel Rosario will break from the third post position outside his stablemate in the nine-horse field scheduled to run 1 1 /8 miles on the turf with the rails down.

Vying for favoritism once again will be Godolphin's homebred Santin (7-2).

Santin was bet down off his 12-1 morning line to the 2.70-to-1 public choice in his 4-year-old debut last month in the Fair Grounds Stakes (G3). The son of Distorted Humor had a compromised trip under Tyler Gaffalione but showed some late interest down the stretch just missing the board. The top four finishers from that race were separated by less than a length.

“He ran well in the Fair Grounds (Stakes) and it will benefit him having a run going into Saturday,” trainer Brendan Walsh said. “He's been working very well. He's only run four times. He showed that he could mix it up with those seasoned, older horses. He just has to improve a little to put him right there again, which I think that he has. Chad's (Brown) two horses look tough, and there are some other proven, seasoned horses in there. It's going to take my horse another two or three starts to get to the point where they already are. All he lacks is experience. If he can stick right with them now, if he keeps improving, that should put him right up there with the very best turf horses this year.”

The lack of early pace in the favorites' running lines could be beneficial for the local longshot contingents like Cavalry Charge, Forty Under and Two Emmys, who used his front-running speed last year to a runner-up finish at huge odds.

Cavalry Charge (10-1) gutted out a determined front-running win in the Fair Grounds Stakes (G3) last month. Trainer Dallas Stewart and jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. could find themselves on the lead once again in this race.

Recent stakes winners Cavalry Charge, Forty Under and Another Mystery will all carry 122 pounds. The rest of the field is slated to carry 118 pounds.

The field for the $300,000 Muniz Memorial Classic Stakes (G2) presented by Horse Racing Nation (race 10 at 4:40 pm CT) with post position, jockey/trainer and morning line odds:

  1. BW and HTS Stables LLC and Jason Grudzien's Peacock Kitten (Devin Magnon/Rylee Grudzien, 30-1 ML), whose only start on the Stall-Wilson turf course was an off the board finish in starter allowance company;
  2. Michael Dubb, Madaket Stables LLC, Wonder Stables and Michael Caruso's Sacred Life (Florent Geroux/Chad Brown, 2-1 ML), a pace compromised sixth last time out in the Pegasus Turf Invitational (G1);
  3. Michael Dubb, Sanford Goldfarb & Samuel Abraham's Devamani (Joel Rosario/Chad Brown, 5-2 ML), off the board last time in the Tampa Bay Stakes (G3);
  4. West Point Thoroughbreds, William Sandbrook & Robert Masiello's Cavalry Charge (Brian Hernandez Jr./Dallas Stewart, 10-1 ML), front-running winner of the Fair Grounds Stakes (G3) last time out;
  5. Three Diamond Farm's Forty Under (Mitchel Murrill/Michael Maker, 10-1 ML), winner of the Colonel E.R. Bradley two starts back at Fair Grounds;
  6. Lothenbach Stables' Captivating Moon (Junior Alvarado/Chris Block, 15-1 ML), sixth in the Muniz last year;
  7. Team Block's Another Mystery (Jareth Loveberry/Chris Block, 12-1 ML), coming off a dead heat victory in the John B. Connally Stakes (G3) at Sam Houston;
  8. Wolfe Racing & Hugh Robertson's Two Emmys (James Graham/Hugh Robertson 10-1 ML), second at 24-1 in this race last year; and the
  9. Godolphin homebred Santin (Tyler Gaffalione/Brendan Walsh, 7-2 ML), fourth as the favorite in the Fair Grounds Stakes (G3) last month.

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