Donegal Racing to Give Season in Mo Donegal to Irad Ortiz, Jr.

Donegal Racing, the co-owner of GI Belmont S. winner Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), will give a stallion season in the colt to jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr., who guided the horse to victory in the final leg of the Triple Crown, Donegal CEO Jerry Crawford revealed during his guest appearance on this week's TDN Writers' Room podcast.

Crawford said that, going forward, any jockey winning a Grade I race aboard a Donegal horse will receive a stallion season for that horse.

“It's something we've done with trainers for a long time,” Crawford said. “We've been very supportive of our trainers and think doing something like this is very appropriate. We think that giving a season to any jockey that wins a Grade I for us is manageable from an expense standpoint and it recognizes the accomplishments by the best jockeys out there.”

Donegal owns Mo Donegal in partnership with Mike Repole.

Crawford said he was inspired to give stallion seasons to jockeys by efforts being made in California to do the same for riders. The California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) is exploring a rule that would make it mandatory that a rider be given a season when winning a graded race aboard a future stallion. CHRB Executive Director Scott Chaney told TDN that the proposal is part of an effort to keep high-profile riders from leaving the Southern California circuit for greener pastures.

“After I started thinking about it, I saw that the people out in California have been talking about this for a while,” Crawford said. “I spoke to (CHRB Vice Chairman) Oscar Gonzales about this and he said they were trying to get some momentum behind this. I thought that if we did this and it helped push things along in California that would be a good thing.”

Crawford said that Ortiz, who rode Tuesday at Royal Ascot, did not know about his intentions before the Belmont. Ortiz chose to ride Mo Donegal over stablemate Nest (Curlin), the filly who finished second in the Belmont.

“We got separated after the Belmont because I went to the press conference and Irad had to ride in the next race,” he said. “I spoke with him on Monday and told him about this and he was pleasantly surprised.”

When asked if a rider would get a season with each subsequent Grade I win after the first, Crawford replied: “I know we need to have an answer for that, but at the moment I don't.”

The post Donegal Racing to Give Season in Mo Donegal to Irad Ortiz, Jr. appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Bay Bridge At The Centre Of Wednesday’s Royal Ascot Action

   At the beginning of 2022, it would have taken an almighty leap of the imagination to envisage Sir Michael Stoute having one of the best years of his career but within the space of just over a month from mid-May it has become a reality. Quite what Desert Crown (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) can go on to achieve is anybody's guess and the non-believers are rightly in a minority where the Derby hero is concerned, but in Bay Bridge (GB) (New Bay {GB}) Newmarket's longstanding doyen has another to take to the world stage. Judged on his emphatic return success in the May 26 G3 Brigadier Gerard S., Sandown's key 10-furlong launchpad that the head of Freemason Lodge has harvested down the years, the 4-year-old who represents James Wigan and Ballylinch Stud is heading to the toppermost of the poppermost. Kept at a light simmer last term, the son of Ballylinch's rising star sire came violently to the boil last time. For Bay Bridge, read Mtoto (GB) or Pilsudski (Ire) or, more recently, Poet's Word (Ire) (Poet's Voice {GB}). He was that good. The G1 Prince Of Wales's S., a 'Win And You're In' for the GI Breeders' Cup Turf, is his first reckoning on Wednesday.

 

Is This The Breakthrough?

   Surprisingly, Japan is without a Royal Ascot winner and have fared no better than sixth from the eight that have tried to date, but that could have been so different six years ago when A Shin Hikari (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) went to post as the 8-13 favourite for this race only to falter and finish last. In a year where it feels like the tide has finally turned for the nation's fortunes on the international stage, it is another son of the late, great sire that comes forth this time in Shahryar (Jpn), Hideaki Fujiwara's G1 Tokyo Yushun and G1 Dubai Sheema Classic winner. Yasuhiro Matsumoto, manager of Northern Farm, is full of hope. “As a horseman, I want to win races in the UK with Japanese horses,” he stated. “It is a dream and a real honour for us to have runners at Royal Ascot. Many people think the Arc is the pinnacle, but I think many of the best sire-making races are in the UK.”

 

The International Playground

It is a measure of how far this contest has come since it was shifted to Group 1 status in the millennium year that it contains winners of top-level prizes in Dubai, Japan, the States and Australia as well as France and Britain despite there being just five runners. The only one to prevail in this company on British soil is Lord North (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), whose success in the COVID Prince of Wales's two years ago was followed by an outright win and dead-heat for first in the last two renewals of the G1 Dubai Turf. He could be suited by a potentially tactical affair, which may not apply to State of Rest (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) who has a Cox Plate to boast of and at this stage is on a par with the 2011 winner of this race, So You Think (NZ). They met last time when State of Rest was a place ahead of Lord North in third in the G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup at The Curragh on May 22, but John Gosden believes there is the prospect of a reversal. “I think that he raced a bit too close to the strong pace at the Curragh and the one mile and two and a half furlongs there just stretched him a bit,” he explained. “He's a grand horse, but he needs to be ridden a little differently to Ireland.”

 

Back To Earth

In the G2 Duke of Cambridge S., last year's 1000 Guineas and G1 Prix Rothschild heroine Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) bids to provide Aidan O'Brien with a first edition and get on track again after misfiring when seventh in Newbury's G1 Lockinge S. May 14. On what could be a big day for New Bay, his daughter Saffron Beach (Ire) re-opposes the Ballydoyle stalwart having galloped her into submission in Newmarket's G1 Sun Chariot S. in October. There is also the unknown quantity that is Cheveley Park Stud's Bashkirova (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), who is here just 10 days after her G3 Princess Elizabeth S. win, and 'TDN Rising Star' Sibila Spain (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) who came of age last time when winning the G2 Prix du Muguet at Saint-Cloud May 8.

 

A Day Of Contrasts

   While the future stayers get their chance in the 14-furlong G2 Queen's Vase, the G2 Queen Mary S. and Listed Windsor Castle S. provide for the fast juveniles. Roger Varian has a live contender for the Vase in KHK Racing's unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' Eldar Eldarov (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), while Wesley Ward may have suffered a demoralising reversal on day one but in Stonestreet's sensational Keeneland winner and 'TDN Rising Star' Love Reigns (U S Navy Flag) he has the archetypal Queen Mary filly. Looking for a landmark fifth renewal, he is in reach of Fred Darling's record of seven winners of the five-furlong contest and if he keeps bringing radically fast types like this daughter of Coolmore's first-season sire he could even get there in this decade. “Every horse that kind of engaged her, she just exploded away from them,” Ward warned.

 

More Rising Stars

Another 'TDN Rising Star' in the Queen Mary is Clipper Logistics' impressive Newmarket maiden winner Dramatised (Ire) (Showcasing {GB}), who according to Karl Burke is in a league of her own as far as pace is concerned. “Her figures for her first run at Newmarket were pretty good and I'm adamant and convinced she's come on from that,” he said. “She's as quick as I've trained anyway, so we'll see.” Adding intrigue to the contest, there are a total of five others from the first crop of Havana Grey (GB), James Garfield (Ire) and Tasleet (GB) who had such a breakthrough moment on Tuesday. They include the Listed National S. winner Maria Branwell (Ire) by Rathbarry Stud's James Garfield and Havana Grey's Salisbury and Windsor winner Katey Kontent (GB), who looked special last time. In the Windsor Castle, Ballydoyle's 'TDN Rising Star' Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never) looks to hold the aces following his impressive Naas maiden success while the Roger Varian-trained Leicester novice scorer Bolt Action (Ire) (Kessaar {Ire}) is one of the more intriguing home-trained contenders.

Click here for the group fields.

The post Bay Bridge At The Centre Of Wednesday’s Royal Ascot Action appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Tugel Joins Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners As VP Of Bloodstock

Sean Tugel has joined Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners as the company's vice president of bloodstock.

 Tugel, 38, has an extensive background within the industry in Kentucky dating back to 2005 when he served a seven-year stint at Hill 'n Dale Farm as a foreman and assistant broodmare manager before transitioning to Winstar Farm for nine years where he ultimately acted as director of bloodstock and assistant racing manager. Since 2020 Tugel has served as the director of stallion sales and recruitment for the famed Gainesway Farm.

 “Sean brings to Eclipse an extraordinary depth of experience in all realms of the thoroughbred business” stated Aron Wellman, Eclipse president and founder. “As Eclipse continues to grow domestically and abroad in Europe and Australia, it is essential that we continue to add personnel capable of contributing to our partners' world-class racing experience and for us to be able to sustain the level of success we've established for our partners in our first 10 years of operation.”

 Tugel's responsibilities with Eclipse will be broad-based, as his role will be all encompassing in the day-to-day operation of the stable and partnership company. Tugel will also be tasked with expanding Eclipse's holdings into various sectors of the industry so as to diversify the variety of ways in which Eclipse partners can enjoy their horse racing endeavors.

 “The Eclipse brand has become synonymous with success and winning. I am excited to join the world class team that Aron and Brian Spearman have built and to play a role in advancing the vision of Eclipse with their partners,” Tugel said.

 “In Sean, we have added an all-star to the Eclipse team,” Wellman added. “He brings to Eclipse a tremendous skillset which he has developed over the years while working for some of the most esteemed operations in the industry and learning from some of the sharpest players in the game. We are ecstatic to add an individual of Sean's caliber to our team and we have every confidence that he will play a big role in taking Eclipse to the next level as we continue our mission of being a force throughout the industry.”

Tugel will establish an Eclipse base in Lexington, Ky., which will complement the company's offices in New York, California and South Carolina.

The post Tugel Joins Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners As VP Of Bloodstock appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights