TDN Snippets: Weeks of Apr. 4 – Apr. 10

Karma, football, a wild longshot in the Santa Anita Oaks, and one of the industry's oldest farms striving to break new ground in new areas. Let's also not forget the big Twin Spired shadow looming over us. Here's how the controlled chaos went down this week.

Defying the odds…again
Taiba will be up against all sorts of historical norms by forging ahead to the Kentucky Derby off just two lifetime starts. Since 1937 (the advent of detailed start statistics), only four horses have ever even attempted the Derby in career start number three: China Visit (sixth in 2000), Disposal (18th in 1992), Senecas Coin (DNF in 1949) and Perfect Bahram (ninth in 1946).

It's a dry heat…
Arizona will get a chance to bring that lovely weather with them to the Kentucky Oaks after Desert Dawn's shocking upset of the GII Santa Anita Oaks. Her AZ-based owners Hollis and Elena Crim (racing under the farm name of H & E Ranch) kept the faith in their homebred through a three deep string of off-the-board finishes against graded company in California, and were rewarded with a gutsy breakthrough win. A lifetime of dreams are now poised for a run on the first Friday in May.

Pioneerof the Nile's enduring legacy…
The passing of any horse is difficult, doubly so when they're poised for a future like what WinStar experienced with Pioneerof the Nile even if he hadn't sired a Triple Crown winner. As his final crops start racing, the loss becomes more noticeable. Which makes the arch of the universe all the more curious when one considers that his GIII Beaumont S. winning daughter Matareya was born two days before her sire died in 2019: the filly hitting the ground March 16, and Pioneerof the Nile passing away March 18. And so, the world turns and the karmic arc bends more in his favor every day.

Football and the ponies…how very Kentucky
War of Will's syndicate announced a N.I.L. (Name, Image and Likeness) deal with the University of Kentucky's starting quarterback Will Levis. Both Wills love a good race, so the opportunity poses an interesting approach to marketing the sport to a younger, more diverse audience and the stallion to the hardcore UK fans in the breeder ranks. Claiborne Farm is the first such operation to partner with a Division I athlete, and it'll be interesting to see how this all plays out for horse and man.

Through Prevalence, Enrichment is prevalent…
It's a remarkable feat for a broodmare to get two winners on the same card. In Enrichment's case, they came during the incredibly competitive opening weekend at Keeneland. Emirates Road, the youngest of racing age, charged home in the second race on Saturday to win in his second lifetime start. Three races later, Prevalence outran fellow 'Rising Star' Nashville and eight others to capture his first graded stakes, the GIII Commonwealth, for their shared connections of Godolphin and trainer Brendan Walsh. With a blue hen, a two-time leading Ecuadorian sire, and a variable assortment of graded stakes winners beneath her in the pedigree, Enrichment is set to reap ever more bountiful rewards.

The post TDN Snippets: Weeks of Apr. 4 – Apr. 10 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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NYTB Legislative Update: State Budget Includes Financial Protections For Horse Racing

Najja Thompson, executive director of the the New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc., issued the following legislative update on Monday:

Following two weeks of budget negotiations, early Saturday morning on April 9, voting was finished and the New York State Fiscal Year 2023 State Budget was finalized.

Below, please find updates from the state budget which includes protection for horse racing and the Thoroughbred breeding industry.

We are thankful and appreciate the support of Governor Kathy Hochul, Senator Joseph Addabbo, Jr. (D-15), chair of the New York Senate Racing, Gaming and Wagering Committee, Assembly member Gary Pretlow, Jr. (D-89), chair of the State Assembly Racing and Wagering Committee, and all members of the New York Senate and State Assembly who continue to recognize the importance of horse racing to the New York State economy.

NYTB and our legislative affairs team in Albany continue to work on your behalf to ensure New York's thoroughbred breeding and racing industry continues to be the best in the nation.

We will carry on with our work alongside the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, (NYTHA), the New York Racing Association (NYRA), Finger Lakes Horsemen's Protective and Benevolent Association (FLHPBA), and We Are New York Horse Racing coalition partners to ensure our voice is heard.

New York Fiscal Year 2023 State Budget Thoroughbred Breeding Industry & Horse Racing Updates

  • FINANCIAL PROTECTIONS FOR HORSE RACING – The budget includes financial protections to ensure there will be no reduction or elimination of revenue-sharing payments that go now from video lottery terminal gambling operators if those facilities win licenses to become full gaming casinos. The legislation maintains racing financial support payments from video lottery terminal processes – in the event an existing VLT facility, such as those at Aqueduct Racetrack gets a new, full-casino license – at the same levels as in 2019. Annual adjustments would be made based on the consumer price index. These racing support payments from existing VLT machines fund the purse account on the NYRA circuit, the New York State Thoroughbred Breeding & Development Fund, and capital improvement projects at NYRA.
  • ENHANCES TAX CREDITS FOR FARMERS – The budget amends the Tax Law to enhance the investment tax credit (ITC). Currently, the ITC is equal to four percent of the investment credit base under the personal income tax or 5 percent of the first $350 million of the investment credit base and four percent of the investment credit base more than $350 million under the corporate franchise tax. This subpart would increase the credit under both taxes to 20 percent of the investment credit base for eligible farmers for property principally used by the farmer in production of goods by farming, agriculture, horticulture, floriculture, or viticulture.
  • DOUBLES FARM WORKFORCE TAX CREDIT – Doubles the per employee amount for the farm workforce retention credit. This credit would start for the 2021 tax year and be extended through 2026.
  • FARM EMPLOYER OVERTIME TAX CREDIT – Creates a refundable tax credit for overtime wages between 40 and 60 hours of work per week. Eligible farms are corporations, sole proprietor, partnerships, or LLC. An advanced refund for the credit can be applied for after July 31 and before November 31. The application will be made to the Department of Agriculture and Markets who will verify the request and send over to the Department of Taxation and Finance for payment. Farms can then submit for a second refund for the rest of the tax year on their annual tax filings. Farmers will be reimbursed up to 118 percent of their overtime expenses to account for withholdings and interest on payroll loans.
  • IMPLEMENTATION OF CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR AND GREEN JOBS ENVIROMENTAL BOND ACT – Amends former “Restore Mother Nature Bond Act” to rename it the Clean Water, Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act of 2022. Total amount of general obligations bonds would be $4,200,000,000. This includes, among other funding, $150 million for farmland protection and $1.5 billion for climate change adaption. Project will be subject to prevailing wage requirements. Large projects using over $25 million will be subject labor peace agreements.
  • FRESHWATER WETLANDS REGULATORY PROGRAM – Allows DEC to regulate freshwater wetlands at least 7.4 acres in size, or if less than 12.4 acres, the wetland is deemed of “Unusual Importance”.
    Lands that are in active agricultural and silvicultural use that engage in activities such as grazing and watering livestock, making reasonable use of water resources, harvest natural products out of the wetlands, selectively cut timber, and drain wetlands for agricultural products would be excluded from obtaining a permit.
    However, structures that are not for the enhancement or maintenance of the agricultural activities would not be exempt. Additionally, if the land qualifies as a wetland and the agricultural or silviculture activities end on that land, it is to be subjected to wetland regulations.
    DEC will no longer rely on wetland maps, but will continue to delineate wetland boundaries as needed.
    This exemption goes into effect January 1, 2025.
  • CAPITAL BUDGET
    $5 million for county fair projects
    $5 million for CALS climate adaptive research farms for applied infrastructure and demonstration projects
    New state fair horse and sheep barn construction

There is a perpetual need for advocacy for our sport and industry. NYTB will continue our work on your behalf and also appreciates your support in these efforts.

The post NYTB Legislative Update: State Budget Includes Financial Protections For Horse Racing appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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EHV-1: Prairie Meadows Implements Health Requirements For Horses From Fonner Park

The barn area at Prairie Meadows in Altoona, Ia., is scheduled to open this Friday, April 15, for race horses.

Out of an abundance of caution, the I.R.G.C. State Vet's Office, the Iowa HBPA, and Prairie Meadows Racing Administration and Security have agreed to the following health requirements for all horses shipping from Nebraska's Fonner Park to Prairie Meadows starting April 15 and continuing until May 2:

  • From April 15, 2022 through May 2, 2022, all horses shipping from Fonner Park racetrack will be required to have a valid health certificate issued within 72 hours prior to arrival at Prairie Meadows.
  • The health certificate must show vaccination record of each horse that includes being vaccinated with an FDA approved modified live or killed virus vaccine for EHV-1 not less than 14 days and not more than 120 days prior to date of entry and the veterinarian must provide the date of vaccination. A current copy of a negative coggins test dated within twelve (12) months must accompany the health certificate. A negative coggins result listed on the health certificate is NOT ACCEPTABLE. You must provide an actual copy of the coggins test form.

All other horse health requirements remain in effect and have not changed for horses shipping from other jurisdictions. Any questions regarding this updated change on horse health requirements for horses shipping from Fonner Park, please contact the I.R.G.C. State Vet's Office 515-967-1213 or 515-240-8731 or Prairie Meadows Racing Office at 515-967-1205.

To receive information about Prairie Meadows 2022 live horse racing season, visit https://www.prairiemeadows.com/signmeup

The post EHV-1: Prairie Meadows Implements Health Requirements For Horses From Fonner Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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On The Trail of the Next Breeze-Up Star

NEWMARKET, UK–His photo, needless to say, adorns the front of the catalogue. But those seeking another one at the first European breeze-up auction of the year will scarcely require that prompt when the horse himself will be surfacing halfway through the sale, just up the road on the Rowley Mile, as an unbeaten champion juvenile and favourite for the G1 Qipco 2,000 Guineas. Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) was found here last year as Lot 56 in the Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Sale. On Wednesday afternoon, before the second of two post-racing sessions at Park Paddocks, Charlie Appleby will saddle the dual Group 1 winner at long odds-on for the G3 Bet 365 Craven S., the historic Classic trial that shares its name with this sale.

Whatever he can do at three, Native Trail has already catapulted his stud value way beyond the 210,000gns paid by Godolphin to secure him from the Oak Tree consignment of Norman Williamson. In turn, however, he had already been brilliantly found by Williamson and colleague Mags O'Toole for just 67,000gns from Kildaragh Stud in the same ring the previous October. That was less than a third of the average transaction in Book 1 that year. Certainly, Williamson and O'Toole were expecting him to make a lot more as a yearling. They didn't even get him vetted. But you never know in this game, and Williamson followed the colt into the ring–just in case.

And, sure enough, suddenly the horse was stalling at 50,000gns, 55,000gns. It looked like he might slip through the cracks. Williamson had already made a bid before he spotted Roderic Kavanagh, whose father Peter had perceived the colt's potential at an even earlier stage, pinhooking him (through Sam Sangster) as a foal for €50,000 at the Arqana December Sale, where he had been offered by breeders Haras d'Haspel.

Williamson, after breezing three colts here on Monday morning, reiterated his gratitude to the vendors. “I saw Roderic standing in front of me and I went over and said, 'Is this horse okay?'” he recalled. “And when he said, '100%, in every way,' I bid again–and next thing I knew, I had bought him. You do need that bit of luck. But then I suppose that's why we go through all the sales, why we walk round and work so hard. I bought one horse out of Book 1, and that was him. It just shows that everyone has a chance.”

But they do say that you make your own luck. And, quite apart from showing the necessary diligence in a prohibitive catalogue for pinhookers, Williamson had already been prepared to see past the obvious. This was not a model that would necessarily have appealed to everyone, for this particular job, whatever his price.

“I suppose he was very big and looked like he might take time,” Williamson said. “But I thought he had a great hip on him–and that he wouldn't. I suppose the other thing that swayed me was the pedigree. [Juddmonte family of Distant Music (Distant View), Calyx (GB) (Kingman {GB}) etc.]. But looking at him, you'd have to say he didn't look like a breezer; he didn't look a fast, sharp horse–which he probably isn't. But he's a very, very good one.”

While he acknowledges that Native Trail's success since can only be good for Oak Tree, Williamson stresses that the colt has also contributed to a wider awareness.

“It does a lot for the business but it does a lot for breeze-ups, too–and that's the 'brand' we're all trying to sell,” he said.    “We're not selling two-furlong horses. We're trying to sell racehorses. It's gone more and more professional, all the vendors are doing a fantastic job, and the results are amazing.”

Other graduates from last year's sale duly include Asymmetric (Ire) (Showcasing {GB}), brought here by Greenhills Farm and subsequently winner of the G2 Richmond S.; and Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), sold by Aguair Bloodstock before winning the G2 Railway S. Both were knocked down for 150,000gns (respectively in the names of Stephen Hillen Bloodstock and A.C. Elliott, Agent/Amo Racing).

But then the standard of breeze-up stock has been progressing for several years now–along, it must be said, with its value. For the vogue to be sustainable, however, it's been essential for the horses to show that they are not merely precocious. A lot of people claim that the stopwatch is only one factor in their investment, but that's not always apparent in their spending. It's worth stressing, then, that Native Trail himself would have caught the eye of any horseman doing things the old-fashioned way.

“He changed his legs a lot,” Williamson recalled. “But the best part of his breeze was when he passed the line. When others are slowing down, he met the rising ground like he'd have gone on to the clock tower. He wasn't stopping. And it was the same in the [G1] Dewhurst, and the same in the Curragh. When he gets to that last furlong, he's starting to motor. He was still probably in top 30, I supposed, time-wise. But a lot of judges saw beyond the clock, and of course you have people reading the gallop-out, too. Anyway, thankfully there's no point going back through the top 10 times now. He was the best horse here, and he's proved it.”

Happily, Williamson feels that the European market has matured in such a way as to resist the exorbitant value sometimes placed on the “bullet” breeze at 2-year-old sales in the U.S., where times are official.

“Here there's people reading two furlongs, there's people reading the second furlong, there's people reading the gallop-out,” he explained. “So you've three or four chances of selling your horse. Whereas in America you have that one time, and that's it. But then racing on dirt is different. They're flat out from the start and it's the horse that goes the fastest for the longest. Here they have to settle. If you see a horse at the breezes here jumping off and running away, well, bar he's a sprinter, he's going to be no good. They need to start off half-relaxed and to keep quickening. So you have to train them that way, to end up with a good horse.”

The breadth of the available spectrum explains why Alan King and Anthony Bromley of Highflyer, for instance, have long enjoyed dredging the breeze-ups for staying pedigrees, most notably finding star stayer Trueshan (Fr) (Planteur {Ire}) at the Guineas Sale here in 2018 for just 31,000gns. Before that, Federico Barberini bought subsequent G1 Ascot Gold Cup winner Trip To Paris (Ire) (Champs Elysees (GB) for 20,000gns at the equivalent auction; while Williamson himself once sold another smart stayer, Nearly Caught (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}), to Hughie Morrison.

“He was a beautiful ride and I was thinking that I'd love to keep him as a bumper horse,” Williamson recalled. “But I'd have had to wait two years to run him, so when Hughie showed an interest I said, 'Listen, take the horse home for two weeks and see what you think.' And a couple of weeks later he rang me, said he liked him, and we did a deal, for not a lot of money. And the horse went on to be a Group 2 winner and was placed in the [G1 Prix du] Cadran. But everyone had walked past the door, because he'd be 'too slow'. So it's fantastic that everyone has a chance, if they're prepared to go beyond the clocks.”

That said, this particular sale obviously showcases elite prospects and there was corresponding tension as they showed their wares on the Rowley Mile. While spectators could enjoy the spring sunshine, there was a challenging headwind and due credit should go to those youngsters that saw out the climb towards that distant horizon with enthusiasm.

Williamson was delighted with all three of his charges, stabled in boxes adjacent to the one that housed Native Trail last year.

He sounds especially excited by the War Front colt offered as Lot 39. Out of a graded stakes-placed Giant's Causeway mare, he's another to be sieved out of a Book 1–this time at Keeneland. Perhaps it will prove worth reminding ourselves that Williamson fished another son of the same stallion from the front of the same sale in 2017, and he became GI Preakness S. winner War Of Will before joining his sire at Claiborne. Just like with Native Trail, that was a case of putting in your groundwork: he was a half-brother to Pathfork (Distorted Humor), who'd done so well in Europe, and Williamson was quick to do a deal once he had failed to meet expectations in the ring.

“But I can't take any credit for this one,” Williamson said. “My brother-in-law Tim Hyde [Jr.] rang me said that there was this beautiful War Front that wasn't sold, he sent me a video and I said, 'Jesus yes, see if you can get him.' He breezed beautiful, and I heard he did a very good time. He's a big horse, 16.1, but I wasn't worried about the [drying] ground, he's got such a lot of ability I knew he'd handle it. I do think a lot of him.”

But the pair selling on Wednesday also stepped right up to the plate. “The Camelot [126] is going be a mile-and-a-quarter horse,” Williamson said. “He's a really good-looking horse, a great mover, with a lot of strength. The Oasis Dream [128] is another beautiful, great-moving horse, he was good on the clock too. He's out of a sister to Mecca's Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), so he needs to be quite sharp–but he looks it.”

Despite an exotic preliminary leg in Dubai this year, this auction marks the start of the regular European breeze-up calendar. And for all the remarkable resilience of the bloodstock market during and after the pandemic, it's plainly a relief to get back onto an even keel. This sector, after all, was not only the first to be broadsided by Covid, in 2020, but was also first to test the water last year.

“Absolutely,” Williamson said. “For the last two years you've had sales moving, you've been at home with horses ready to roll, and the next thing it's another two weeks; or horses going to France had to go to Doncaster; all that kind of thing. So it has been a bit of a nightmare. Going into the yearling sales last year was very uncertain, and the market was remarkable. It was very hard to buy, horses were making triple what you thought they were worth.

“Remember the breeze-up vendors are now buying better-class horses, better pedigrees, and they're really putting their necks on the line. If you go out there and your horse doesn't do respectably–if it doesn't face the headwind, or it ducks across the track–it's over, bar you love him so much that you put him into training. But it's all telling in the results on the track.”

Native Trail, moreover, is also a poster boy for a bonus scheme introduced by Tattersalls last year. He received £125,000 (split 4:1 between buyer and vendor) as the first 2021 Craven Breeze-Up graduate to win any of the 15 European Group 1 prizes open to 2-year-olds. The same sum will also be offered, again, to the first to win any of the juvenile prizes at Royal Ascot this summer. Along with the standard bonus of £15,000 for winners of qualifying Bonus Scheme races, many of these “breezers” are going to benefit from a following wind.

Whether our industry can remain immune to fresh turbulence in the wider world remains to be seen. But there's certainly a helpful slipstream from Native Trail.

“Listen, it's what we do it for,” Williamson concluded. “You obviously have to make a living: you have to make the money that pays for everything else. But at the end of the day, it's fantastic to have gone to Book 1 and found a champion.”

The first session begins at 5.30 p.m. on Tuesday. By then, who knows, this sale may have enjoyed yet another boost. Cachet (Ire) is disputing favouritism in the G3 Lanwades Stud Nell Gwyn S. after her Group 1 podium on the same track last autumn, and then going down by just a length at the Breeders' Cup. This time last year, she was in town as an Aclaim (Ire) filly from Hyde Park Stud, listed as Lot 68. She was bought by Highclere Agency for 60,000gns.

One way or another, the breeze-up Trail remains hot.

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