Allowance Winner Conagher Talk Of The Track After Scorching Churchill Performance

Patricia's Hope LLC and Mark Farrar's Conagher dazzled fans Friday afternoon at Churchill Downs with a near track record performance when he scorched seven furlongs in 1:20.62 for his second consecutive allowance victory.

The budding star Conagher, a 3-year-old son of Jimmy Creed, was :0.18 off the Churchill Downs track record set by the brilliant Groupie Doll in 2012. Conagher was given a 106 Brisnet Speed Rating for his performance Friday.

Conagher has six starts under the care of Mike Tomlinson, who received the horse after trainer Robert McCutchen prepared for his debut. As a 2-year-old, Conagher broke his maiden over the turf at Colonial Downs and was away from the races seven months until he resurfaced in February at Gulfstream Park.

“Last year as a 2-year-old he had some minor ailments that we gave him the time to heal from,” Tomlinson said. “He's come back with a vengeance. We started him back on the grass at Gulfstream since that's the surface he broke his maiden on. This colt is now mentally mature and turned into an absolute dream around the barn.”

Conagher was bet down from his 7-2 morning line Friday and went off as the 8-5 post time favorite. He returned $5.20 under jockey Joe Rocco Jr. Conagher won his first start this season at Keeneland at a stout 73-1.

“Let's just say everyone in the barn did very well that day,” Tomlinson joked.

For Farrar and his wife, Dianna, the trip from Oklahoma for Friday's race paid off.

“It's great for all the partners involved in this horse. Mark has been involved in horse racing for 20 years and I'm tickled they are rewarded with a colt like this,” Tomlinson said.

Tomlinson reported Conagher, who was bred in Kentucky by La Bahia Stud from the Niagara Causeway mare You Should Be Here, came out of his race in great shape and was “playing” around the barn Saturday morning before he visited the equine spa.

There are no immediate plans for Conagher's next start.

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Strawberry Fields Forever

“The Derby is a different game,” breeder Gary Robinson told TDN's Alayna Cullen on camera last week, and he now knows that for sure, for his Strawberry Fields Stud just outside Newmarket can proudly boast of being the birthplace of the Derby winner Desert Crown (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}).

While most of Robinson's team from the farm travelled to Epsom to watch their graduate's crowning moment, the stud owner himself took a leaf out of The Queen's book and watched the race at home from the comfort of his own sofa.

As the horse's trainer Sir Michael Stoute received three cheers from the Epsom crowd so delighted to see him back in the winner's circle he first visited on Derby day with Shergar (GB) 41 years ago, Robinson said via telephone, “I'm going to the pub now to tell everyone I don't do handicaps.”

He added, “I stayed at home with my daughter and her partner and it was just so exciting to watch. I wasn't a bit nervous, I have nerves of steel.”

The breeder said that he had believed in the horse from the start, and indeed he had employed a bold marketing approach when offering Desert Crown during Book 2 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, with an advert including the strapline, “A future Classic winner?”

It worked, as Richard Brown of Blandford Bloodstock went to 280,000gns to purchase the half-brother to Hong Kong Group 3 winner Flying Thunder (GB) (Archipenko) for owner Saeed Suhail.

Robinson can now remove that question mark, with Desert Crown having freewheeled around Tattenham Corner and down the hill to a sixth Derby success for Stoute and a second for Suhail, who also owned the 2004 winner Kris Kin (Kris S.), as well as 2000 Guineas winner King's Best (Kingmambo).

“When I sold him I said to people, 'do yourself a favour and buy something for the weekend'. I always knew he was going to be a Classic winner,” Robinson said with a laugh. “But joking apart he was a lovely horse and he went to a fantastic stable.”

Desert Crown's Juddmonte-bred granddam Foreign Language (Distant View) is a half-sister to Binche (GB) (Woodman), whose four stakes-winning offspring for Prince Khalid Abdullah include the Group 1 winners Proviso (GB) (Dansili {GB}) and Byword (GB) (Peintre Celebre).

“We're not breeding sprinters, we've gone for Classic types if we can,” Robinson added. “We're in to the end.”

Those are words that Julian Dollar of Newsells Park Stud would doubtless be pleased to hear more often from breeders of varying sizes, and indeed Robinson has returned to that particular well twice, as Desert Crown's dam Desert Berry (GB) (Green Desert) has a full-brother to the Derby winner at foot and is now back in foal to him. The well-bred Nathaniel, a Group 1 winner at 10 and 12 furlongs and one of the stud's three resident stallions, has had dwindling support from Flat breeders despite producing one of the standout performers of the modern era, Enable (GB), from his first crop. The 14-year-old son of Galileo (Ire) has been busy this season but an increasing number of mares sent to him in Royston are from the National Hunt sector.

“I feel a bit of vindication,” said Dollar as he left Epsom on Saturday. “People have started to doubt him and that has made me question if we can stand him at Newsells Park Stud as he is not fashionable enough.”

He continued, “The owner/breeders who should be supporting him have not been supporting him as much, but he has proven himself over and over again. He's had Enable, and now this horse, who looks seriously exciting, but it's not just them, he's had a French Oaks winner and plenty of other good horses.

“I can't change things and we all know how the market is but it does frustrate me when some horses get so hyped and Nathaniel doesn't get the respect he deserves. But we are governed by the market, and that is just the way it is.”

Prior to Saturday, Nathaniel's five other Group/Grade 1 winners were all fillies: the Classic winners Enable and Channel (Ire), along with last season's Nassau S. victrix Lady Bowthorpe (GB), God Given (GB), and the former French-trained Mutamakina (GB), who won the EP Taylor S. at Woodbine.

Dollar added, “A day like today makes me feel like it's a bit of a two fingers up to the market and to the sales houses who won't take a Nathaniel. I'm overwhelmingly proud of him and it is my privilege to work alongside him. He has three mares left to cover today, and another three tomorrow, and probably three the day after that given the type of mares he is covering these days.

“This is a fantastic day for the breeders. I saw the team from Strawberry Field Stud and had a glass of champagne with them. They are all delighted and so they should be. It's what we all still want to do, to breed a Derby winner.”

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First Foal Out of Paola Queen Makes Impressive Debut

4th-Monmouth, $56,925, Msw, 6-4, 3yo/up, 6f, 1:10.94, ft, 4 1/4 lengths.
PASS AND STOW (c, 3, Medaglia d'Oro–Paola Queen {GISW, $431,490}, by Flatter) was hammered down to 3-2 favoritism for this unveiling and ran to the money with an impressive debut score. Away alertly from his rail draw, the Don Alberto homebred seized the early advantage, dueling through a :22.86 opening quarter and :46.18 half-mile. Opening up on his foes turning for home, the bay strode clear with ease down the lane to graduate by 4 1/4 lengths. Peter Brant's Balantyne (Tapit), a $310,000 KEESEP buy trained by Chad Brown, filled the place spot. Pass and Stow is the first foal out of GI Test S. winner Paola Queen, who Don Alberto purchased for $1.7 million at the 2017 KEENOV sale. Her second foal, a now 2-year-old colt by Into Mischief, topped last year's Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale when selling to Coolmore's M.V. Magnier for $2.6 million. Paola Queen had an Into Mischief filly in 2021 and a Tapit colt Apr. 10 of this year. Sales history: $100,000 RNA Ylg '20 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $34,500. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-Don Alberto Stable; B-Don Alberto Corporation (KY); T-Jerry Hollendorfer.

 

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Apprentice Jockey Sosa Scores First Career Win At Monmouth Park

For 20-year-old Argentine-born Laureano Sosa, it took just three mounts to earn his first win at Monmouth Park.

Riding for Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer, Sosa scored a gate-to-wire victory aboard Road Test on May 30. It was quick validation for a triple bug apprentice whose first career mount came April 1 at Tampa Downs.

“It feels really good to get the first one out of the way (at Monmouth Park) because now people are going to start noticing me and the mounts are going to start coming,” said Sosa. “I'm not rushing into anything. It will come on its own. Nothing comes all at once. I'm just glad to get the first one out of the way.”

Dan Ward, the long-time assistant to Hollendorfer who oversees the Monmouth Park string, gave the mount aboard Road Test to Sosa as a reward for working the horse in the morning.

“He's been working some horses for us and he worked this horse,” said Ward. “So we said, 'Let's give him a shot.' There was no hesitation putting this guy on.”

Sosa, who started as a hot walker four years ago, has two victories in 18 career rides through Saturday. His first-ever win came aboard Sea Trident on April 22 at Tampa Downs in the eighth mount of his career.

“This is my first time in New Jersey,” said Sosa, who moved to the United States when he was six. “I love it. The people are amazing. The people are so professional here. It's a completely different environment.”

Sosa, who plans to call Monmouth Park home for the duration of the summer, has deep roots in horse racing. His father was a jockey and his mother is a hot walker at Tampa Bay Downs. When Sosa first started hot walking, and then galloping, he did so for trainers Arnaud Delacour and Michael Stidham. It was Delacour who encouraged him to get his jockey's license.

Sosa does not have to look far for a role model when it comes to riding. He shares Dylan Fazio as an agent with Isaac Castillo, who is currently second in the Monmouth Park jockey standings. Castillo has a reputation for being one of the hardest works in the riding colony.

“I'm going to keep riding, keep working hard,” Sosa said. “I have to just keep putting in the work. Now that I have the first winner there's no slowing down.”

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