Forbidden Kingdom Off Derby Trail With Possible Epiglottis Issue

After fading to finish last in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, Forbidden Kingdom has been taken off the Kentucky Derby trail. According to bloodhorse.com, the 3-year-old son of American Pharoah could be suffering from an airway issue.

“Trainer Richard Mandella has taken him off the Derby (trail),” Joe Moran, co-owner MyRacehorse's West Coast racing manager, told bloodhorse.com. “He's going to get the epiglottis further inspected to just confirm the issue and what we're exactly dealing with.”

Also owned by Spendthrift Farm, Forbidden Kingdom won the G2 San Felipe Stakes and the G2 San Vicente earlier this year. A $300,000 purchase at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Select Yearling Showcase, the colt has won three of his six starts for earnings of $434,500.

In other Kentucky Derby news, Classic Causeway could also be skipping the first Saturday in May after finishing 11th in the G1 Florida Derby.

“He's got enough points to get in any time we want to get in,” trainer Brian Lynch told bloodhorse.com. “So we are just going to take our time with him and make sure everything is right, and not just get over ambitious to be running a horse in the Derby for the sake of running a horse in the Derby.”

The updated points standings on the Road to the Kentucky Derby are available here: Road to the Kentucky Derby Leaderboard.

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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Japan: 3-Year-Old Filly Stars On Earth Shows ‘Determination’ To Win Oka Sho

Seventh favorite Stars on Earth claimed this year's Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas) in a photo-finish over Water Navillera, capturing her first graded victory in the first leg of the 3-year-old's Classics for fillies.

The dark bay daughter of Duramente scored her first win in her second career start last October and was a neck second in both of her Fairy Stakes (G3, 1,600m) and Queen Cup (G3, 1,600m) challenges this season. Winning trainer Mizuki Takayanagi, who opened his yard in 2010, registered his second graded win and first JRA-G1 victory. For jockey Yuga Kawada, who captured the Oka Sho title once in 2014 on board Harp Star, this is his 19th JRA-G1 victory—his latest was with Danon Kingly in the Yasuda Kinen last year.

Stars on Earth traveled two-wide in mid-pack while third pick Water Navillera broke sharply to sit on the heels of pacesetter Kafuji Tetragon before the field bunched up rounding the final turn. As the fillies gave their all climbing the stretch hill, Water Navillera took command after passing the furlong pole and while trying hard to shake off the persistent Namura Clair, Stars on Earth was searching fiercely for running room a few lengths behind. Finally slipping through a gap and being bumped by Personal High while doing so, the Duramente filly displayed an incredible closing kick in the final strides to snatch the win from Water Navillera at the wire.

“I'm just so glad that she actually snatched the win at the end—I knew we had caught up but couldn't tell who'd won. I'd been aware during workouts that she was a bit difficult to control but besides keeping that in mind, the plan today was to stay in mid-pack and let her run in a comfortable rhythm. It was definitely her strength and determination that shone and gave us the win today. I'm looking forward to how she develops from here,” commented Yuga Kawada.

Sixth favorite Namura Clair tracked the frontrunners around fourth on the rails and was driven to inherit the lead briefly inside Water Navillera but failed to keep up and was overtaken by the eventual winner before the wire while holding off the fast-closing Circle of Life by a neck for third place.

Race favorite and Tulip Sho victor Namur took a wide trip near the rear after breaking from the widest stall and mildly improved position before hitting the straight but lacked the final kick and finished 10th.

Other Horses:
4th: (16) Circle of Life—settled around 13th, angled out, showed fastest late kick, belatedly
5th: (5) Pin High—saved ground around 12th, accelerated at stretch, met traffic 200m out, launched another bid
6th: (4) Personal High—raced around 8th, checked 200m out, showed brief response inside winner
7th: (12) Belle Cresta—traveled around 13th, angled out at top of stretch, quickened in last 200m
8th: (3) Alluring Way—settled around 4th, met traffic at early stretch, lacked needed kick
9th: (7) Sublime Anthem—sat around 8th in front of winner, even paced
11th: (14) Presage Lift—was off slowly, trailed in rear, showed belated charge
12th: (2) Kafuji Tetragon—broke sharply to set pace, weakened in last 200m
13th: (9) Cross Majesty—tracked leaders 3-wide around 4th, gradually fell back
14th: (17) Voller Blute—was off late, raced near rear, circled wide, never fired
15th: (15) Anegohada—ran 3-wide outside winner, ran gamely up to 200m pole
16th: (10) Lilac—broke poorly, traveled near rear, unable to reach contention
17th: (13) Raspberry Mousse—positioned 4-wide around 4th, dropped back after final corner
18th: (11) Lovely Your Eyes—chased leader in 2nd or 3rd, faded after final corner

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‘It’s A Fairytale’: In His Final Ride, Sam Waley-Cohen Guides Noble Yeats To 50-1 Upset In Grand National

Noble Yeats won Saturday's 2022 Randox Grand National at odds of 50-1, defeating 15-2 favorite Any Second Now by 2 1/4 lengths with Delta Work (10-1) third and Santini (33-1) fourth.

His jockey, amateur Sam Waley-Cohen, had announced earlier that week that Noble Yeats would be his final ride before he retires.

Waley-Cohen becomes the first amateur to succeed since Marcus Armytage won on Mr Frisk in 1990. He is also the first amateur jockey to ride the winner of the Grand National and the Cheltenham Gold Cup. He won the Cheltenham Gold Cup on Long Run in 2011.

A seven year old, Noble Yeats becomes the first horse from that age group to prevail since Bogskar in 1940. Seven is currently the minimum age for a horse to run in the Grand National.

The winner was trained by Emmet Mullins and was his first Grand National runner. Mullins is the nephew of leading Irish Jump trainer Willie Mullins and began training in 2016. He is based in Bagenalstown, County Carlow.

Waley-Cohen responded to the victory: “It's a dream! It won't sink in for weeks – it feels like a fantasy, and I just don't know what to say.

“I'm beyond words. He ran for me. He couldn't go the early pace, and I was trying to find pockets to give him a bit of space to run into, and I found myself up the inner and I was going more forward than I wanted to.

“He loved seeing his fences, so I kept trying to find a spot where he could see them. If I asked him, he came, but if I just half-asked him, he wasn't confident, so I was really trying to sit against him.

“He likes the bit in his mouth and your legs on him, so I was just trying to get him in that nice rhythm, and he just ran. As soon as I asked him, he went.

“Jumping the last, I thought, 'I've gone too early!' I really didn't want to get there then, but at Cheltenham I was struggling to stay with them all the time, but when I pulled him out and asked him, he gave me way more than I expected, so half when I went for him, I thought he's got plenty – I know he's got plenty of toe, so as soon as he picked up, I thought, 'he's gone – he's got this'.

“It's ridiculous. I have to say thanks to Dad – he's supported me unwaveringly, lovingly, when others said put someone else on. We've had a partnership, we haven't had one cross word – it's only been for fun.

“We came here thinking, well, you know, the sun's out, it's my last ride, go and have a nice day with no instructions, no expectations, just enjoy. Today Liverpool comes out, Liverpool shows its love, and honestly, you feel like you travel on goodwill at this place.

“You just feel a wave of support and goodwill. These days are big family days, and obviously Thomas isn't with us, so you always think about him on these days. I still always ride with his initials on my saddle, and these are family days.

“I was travelling too well – I just kept trying to fill him up and take my time, and in a way he got there too early, but when he got there he came alive, so I thought, well, you'd better go now. It's amazing.

“When I rode Oscar Time I was on fumes all the way, there was nothing, whereas with him he kept finding and kept going. When the other horse came to me, I was, like, come on! And he picked him.

“I always wanted to go out on a high, and I thought Thursday was going to be that high. It doesn't get better than this, and that's it now – out!

“You need a lot of luck (over these fences), and you need to be on the right horses, and I think, relatively, I've ridden these fences a lot more than some of the other jockeys, and experience does help.

“Honestly, I think it's luck. If you are on the right horse, and things go right for you, or don't go wrong for you…

“This could literally be a moment that I wake up from. It really couldn't be better.

“One of my earliest memories is of trying to ride the Grand National on the rocking horse we have at home, just knowing a few of the horses' names and remembering them.

“We used to come here as kids and there was an ice cream stall where you could get free tasters, and we'd be up and down every race getting free tasters, so it's been part of my childhood, and what's probably kept me trying to ride year after year after year is trying to come back and have a feeling like that.

“I turn 40 next Friday. I've always wanted to ride for the love of it, and one of the reasons I wanted to stop now is because I've always felt when you don't want to go every day and you don't enjoy every race, wherever you come, you should stop, and the days when you don't want to go travel three hours for a small race, no matter where you come, it's time to stop – that's it. Busy family, busy work – enough. That's it.

“Thinking about doing this again is fool's gold – I've made up my mind, I've had the dream ride, and what a way to go out.

“I've always believed… but I could barely hope. I never really bought the seven-year-old story – I thought a seven-year-old could win, because not many seven-year-olds run in it, so there aren't many stats, but you can talk yourself into anything when you're sitting on a seven-year-old.

“I've only really sat on him three times – once at Emmett's, once at Cheltenham and once today. I learnt a lot about him at Cheltenham, and I think without that ride at Cheltenham I wouldn't have had that ride today.

“We were looking for a horse – we were going to run Jett, but he wasn't going to stay the trip. We'd gone up to Wetherby for a hunter chase and we saw Noble Yeats run, and thought, 'that's an interesting one, and he's qualified for the National now – I wonder if they might be interested in doing something'.

“We went and spoke to Emmett, and really liked him – he's a great trainer – and we thought, 'why not? Let's have a crack at it', and one thing led to another.

“I've been so lucky with all the horses I've ridden, and in a way, all those rides build up to today; you keep learning, experience, background – if I hadn't had those days where things haven't gone right, I wouldn't have had today.”

In a separate interview just after crossing the line he told ITV Racing: “It's a dream. I can't believe it. I've got to say thank yous, because it's my last ever ride. To Dad, for unwavering belief and love over 23 years – never a cross word, nothing but a dream. It has been a love affair. To my wife, long-suffering! They aren't all good days. There are bad days in this sport. She's always there to support me….

“This is beyond words. It's a fairytale, it's a fantasy, and I'm just full of love, and happiness and gratefulness.”

Waley-Cohen reflected on his success at Aintree over the years, and also paid tribute to his late brother, Thomas.

Summing up his success he said: “Being on the right horses, getting the luck, having the sun out. I do think Thomas is sitting on my back, I ride with his name on my saddle. These days are family days. Honestly, you couldn't make it up could you?”

Robert Waley-Cohen, who owns Noble Yeats and is Sam's father, told ITV Racing: “It's absolutely a dream come true – I can't speak, I've shouted too much! Just fabulous. You can't go without the horse, but the horse can't go without the jockey, so it's a team and thank God it's really worked. My cup runneth over.”

Asked to sum up his son's talent, he said: “Dedication, hard work. He only rides about 30 races, apart from point-to-points, in the year, and his record is unspeakably good. I'm really emotional.

“It's fantastic, that is what we dreamed about for years. Sam used to ride a rocking horse, pretending he was riding Auntie Dot. That's how far back it goes.”

He added: “It is what dreams are made of. This is it, and you sort of think, 'last ride ever, 40 years old next Friday, and won so many great races' – we've had such fun.”

Asked to sum up his own feelings about it being his son's final ever ride, he added: “Joy and sadness that it's all coming to an end. And the horse is only seven and a novice, so he could be here for a good many years yet, but not with Sam on board.

“I had horses between my retiring and his starting, and I shall have them again.

“It's an amazing story and Sam has been dreaming of winning this ever since he used to ride Auntie Dot on his rocking horse, trained by John Webber, when he was a little kid. So this really is the fulfilment of a life-long dream.”

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Dominic Gardiner-Hill Named Co-Chairman Of Longines World’s Best Racehorse Rankings Committee

Following a meeting of the Executive Council of the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) on March 29, 2022, it was announced that Dominic Gardiner-Hill, Head of Handicapping for the British Horseracing Authority (BHA), has succeeded Phil Smith as Co-Chairman of the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Committee.

The IFHA Executive Council unanimously endorsed Gardiner-Hill's nomination by the European Pattern Committee (EPC), and he joins Nigel Gray as Co-Chairman of the Committee. Smith had served as Co-Chairman of the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Committee since 2014.

“The horse racing industry has an ever-expanding global reach, and that is reflected in the output and composition of the Federation's Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Committee, with those at the helm of the Committee requiring a broad portfolio set of leadership traits and technical ability,” said IFHA Chair Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges. “The IFHA has been extremely privileged to have had Phil Smith co-chair the Committee, and we are equally fortunate that he has been succeeded by Dominic Gardiner-Hill. I wish Dominic a great deal of success, and I am confident that he and Nigel Gray will skillfully lead this Committee going forward.”

Gardiner-Hill joined the BHA in 1993.  After a spell as Deputy Head of Handicapping, Dominic took over as the BHA's Head of Handicapping in June 2018.  He has been part of the International Classification and World Rankings Committees since 1996 as well as a member of the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Executive Committee since 2018.

The Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings are horse racing's equivalent to World Rankings by other major sporting organizations such as ATP Tennis Rankings, World Golf Rankings, FIFA World Rankings for soccer and IRB Rugby World Rankings. The Longines Rankings are based on the ratings earned by horses running worldwide from North and South America, Europe, Middle East, South Africa, Asia through to Australia and New Zealand. The ratings are compiled under the auspices of the IFHA by racing officials and handicappers representing the five continents who compile the ranking order by agreeing on the rating for each horse. The ratings are based on the performance of horses in elite races held during the designated period which takes in account the quality of opposition and achievements of each horse. Throughout the year the Longines Rankings are published at regular intervals and the consolidated annual rankings are released in January.

Further information on the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings is available on the IFHA website, ifhaonline.org.

The next edition of the 2022 Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings will be published on Thursday, April 14, 2022.

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