Background Check: Diana

In this continuing series, we examine the past winners of significant filly/mare races by the lasting influence they've had on the breed. Up today is Saratoga's GI Diana S., contested at 1 1/8 miles on the lawn.

These days, the Diana is restricted to fillies and mares ages four and up. That wasn't always the case, as a number of 3-year-old fillies have won in the past. That's not the only thing that's changed: the Diana is such a fixture on the grass that it may come as a surprise to learn it was originally run on the dirt, not moving to the turf until 1974. The 84th edition will be run Saturday, but with two divisions run a few times and several mares who won the race twice–including most recently Sistercharlie (Ire) (2018-19)–there have been 78 individual winners of the Diana.

Following are the most compelling Diana winners in reverse chronological order. They haven't been reviewed by their own pedigrees or race records, but simply by what impact they have delivered through their sons and daughters.

Wonder Again (1999, Silver Hawk–Ameriflora, by Danzig): This mare produced more foals that didn't race than ones that did, but her two winners include Japanese MSW & MGSP Red Raven. An unraced daughter produced 2021-22 GI Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational S. winner Colonel Liam, who also captured the 2021 GI Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic S.

Starine (Fr) (1997, Mendocino–Grisonnante {Fr}, by Kaldoun {Fr}): She only had two foals: a gelded son and an unraced daughter. However, that daughter is making the most of her opportunities: she produced Irish champion Order of Australia (Ire), winner of the 2020 GI Breeders' Cup Mile; Iridessa (Ire), multiple Group I winner in Ireland and England and winner of 2019 GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf; and Santa Barbara (Ire), winner of the 2021 GI Belmont Oaks Invitational S. and GI Beverly D. S.

Memories of Silver (1993, Silver Hawk–All My Memories, by Little Current): A Phillips family mare, like Wonder Again above, she produced four stakes winners (two graded), including Winter Memories, also a winner of the Diana and a stakes producer. Five of her six daughters have thus far produced black-type winners.

MGISW Elate has deep family ties to the Diana | Coady

Wild Applause (1981, Northern Dancer–Glowing Tribute, by Graustark): She is the dam of GISW Eastern Echo, MGSWs Roar and Yell, and additional GSW Blare of Trumpets. Her descendants include MGISW Elate, MGSW & MGISP Ironicus, MGSW On Leave and Tax, two full-brothers better known as top sires in GSW & MGISP Congrats and GSP Flatter, and several other GSWs.

Hush Dear (1978, Silent Screen–You All, by Nashua): C.V. Whitney sold this mare and his widow, Marylou, bought her daughter Dear Birdie while trying to revitalize his breeding program. The latter became a foundation mare for Marylou Whitney and was named Broodmare of the Year in 2004. Her descendants include champion and Kentucky Oaks winner Bird Town, Belmont/Travers/Champagne winner Birdstone, and MGSW Bird Song.

Javamine (1973, Nijinsky II–Dusky Evening, by Tim Tam): This mare deserves a mention even though she won't live on in pedigrees. She lived only long enough to produce four foals, only two of which lived past age three. However, those two foals were MGISW Java Gold and English GSW Spicy Story. Both were sires, with the best of their combined progeny being the wonderful Eclipse champion Kona Gold, who was a gelding.

Glowing Tribute (1973, Graustark–Admiring, by Hail to Reason): In addition to producing two daughters who also won the Diana–the phenomenal Wild Applause detailed above and two-time Diana winner Glowing Honor–she also produced MGISW Hero's Honor, Kentucky Derby/Travers/Champange winner Sea Hero, GSW & GISP Mackie, and GSW Coronation Cup (who almost made it a third daughter to win the Diana). In addition to Wild Applause's wildly accomplished offspring, descendants of Glowing Tribute also include European champion Mozart (Ire) and Chilean champion Il Campione (Chi). She was named Broodmare of the Year in 1993.

MGISW Colonel Liam is out of an unraced daughter of Wonder Again | Horsephotos

Tempted (1955, Half Crown–Enchanted Eve, by Lovely Night): This two-time winner of the Diana, for whom Aqueduct's Tempted S. is named, produced only one stakes winner. However, when taking into account her daughters and granddaughters, more than 50 black-type winners trace to her. And the line is continuing; for example, she is the fifth dam of GISW Rutherienne, who won or placed in 17 graded stakes.

Searching (1952, War Admiral–Big Hurry, by Black Toney): A granddaughter of the immortal La Troienne, Searching won the Diana twice and produced multiple champion Affectionately, MSW Priceless Gem, and SW Admiring. She is granddam of the abovementioned Broodmare of the Year Glowing Tribute, as well as Horse of the Year Personality, French Horse of the Year Allez France, and the prolific top-level producer Lady Winborne. Additional Grade I winners who trace to her include the popular Lite Light and La Gueriere.

Misty Morn (1952, Princequillo–Grey Flight, by Mahmoud): Named Broodmare of the Year in 1963, her five stakes-winning foals included champion and Met Mile winner Bold Lad, champion Successor, and Test winner Bold Consort. Among her top descendants were MGISWs Dispute and Adjudicating.

Vulcania (1948, Some Chance–Vagrancy, by Sir Gallahad III {Fr}): She produced two minor black-type winners, but her daughters and granddaughters included a Broodmare of the Year and produced the likes of Horse of the Year Ferdinand and MGISW Tallahto. The latter produced two MGISW and is the granddam of Breeders' Cup winner Artie Schiller.

Busanda (1947, War Admiral–Businesslike, by Blue Larkspur): Another granddaughter of La Troienne, this mare produced Horse of the Year and four-time leading broodmare sire Buckpasser, as well as two other stakes winners. Her female-line descendants include champion Outstandingly, MGISW Polish Navy, and the wonderful La Affirmed line, responsible for (among others) recent MGISW star Maxfield.

Ouija (1947, Heliopolis–Psychist, by Psychic Bid): Epsom Derby winner Henbit and MGISW Queens Court Queen both trace to this mare.

Miss Grillo (Arg) (1942, Rolando {Arg}–Cedulilla {Arg}, by Picacero {Arg}): At first glance, this Argentinean import didn't produce much of note, but her daughters more than took up the slack. Among her descendants are European champion Meadow Court and MGISW Marquetry.

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Alms Chasing Elusive Victory In $100,000 Big Dreyfus At Laurel Park

Godolphin's 5-year-old homebred mare Alms, winless since opening her career with four consecutive victories including a pair of graded stakes, will chase an elusive fifth career triumph in Saturday's $100,000 Big Dreyfus at Laurel Park.

The third running of the Big Dreyfus for fillies and mares three and older and the $100,000 Prince George's County for 3-year-olds and up, both scheduled for 1 1/8 miles on the grass, are among four stakes worth $450,000 in purses highlighted by the $150,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash for 3-year-olds and up sprinting six furlongs on the main track.

Rounding out the stakes action is the $100,000 Alma North for fillies and mares 3 and up at 6 ½ furlongs. All four races are part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series.

Post time for the first of 11 races is 12:40 p.m.

Alms won the 2019 Grade 3 Matron at Belmont Park and G3 Jimmy Durante at Del Mar to cap a perfect 3-0 juvenile campaign. She opened her sophomore season with another win in the 2020 Shantel Lanerie Memorial at Fair Grounds but has been blanked since, placing three times in her last nine starts including a second in the inaugural G3 Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf Jan. 29 at Gulfstream Park and the 2020 G3 Appalachian, where she was third by a head.

Most recently, Alms raced between horses early and ultimately settled inside but trailed her six rivals into the stretch before making a belated move to be fifth, beaten 4 ¾ lengths, in the 1 1/16-mile G3 Eatontown June 18 at Monmouth Park. Finishing last in that race was her stablemate, Princess Grace, who came back to win the G3 Dr. James Penny Memorial for the second straight year July 12 at Parx and become a millionaire.

“She had a real crazy trip last time [racing] last behind a crawling pace. She was supposed to be either on the lead or either sitting right there,” trainer Michael Stidham said. “She made a little run and made up some ground, but had no chance. Princess Grace had the same kind of trip and she came back to win the stake at Parx by three [lengths], so that tells you a little bit about that [Monmouth] race.

“We're expecting Alms to hopefully bounce back and have a big race on Saturday,” he added. “We're hoping to finally get her to win a race.”

Alms has won twice at both one mile and six furlongs and has yet to race beyond 1 1/16 miles, but Stidham is confident the granddaughter of 2003 Belmont Stakes winner Empire Maker can handle the added distance.

“We've been thinking for a while about trying stretch her to a mile and an eighth,” he said. “She's got that natural speed, so I think she'll be close up. She doesn't really seem to have any real distance limitations. She's obviously handled the mile and a sixteenth well, so I don't think the mile and an eighth will be a problem.”

Jevian Toledo gets the riding assignment on Alms from Post 1 in a field of 10.

Entered to defend her Big Dreyfus victory from last summer is Fiasco Farms, Ltd.'s Tightly Twisted. The 6-year-old Hard Spun turned back heavily favored Counterparty Risk by a half-length at odds of 9-1 for her second career stakes win. She has raced just four times since, running fifth in the June 14 Neshaminy at Parx in her season debut and first race in eight months.

William Pape's Deciding Vote was beaten 1 ½ lengths when fourth in the 1 1/16-mile Neshaminy, his second start of the year following a half-length triumph in the one-mile Dahlia April 23 over the Laurel turf. The 5-year-old daughter of Mr Speaker has two wins, one second and one third in seven career tries at Laurel, where she was third by a neck in a 1 1/8-mile optional claiming allowance over yielding ground last fall.

Hall of Famer Shug McGaughey trained Grade 1-winning millionaire Mr Speaker to four graded-stakes wins including the 2015 G3 Commonwealth Cup at Laurel, and is represented in the Big Dreyfus by Stuart Janney III's homebred In a Hurry. The 5-year-old Blame mare was second as the favorite in the Dahlia and most recently third behind Technical Analysis and subsequent G2 Nassau winner Crystal Cliffs in the May 21 G3 Gallorette at Pimlico.

Merriebelle Stable's Bellagamba won the 2020 G1 Enrique Acebal and G2 Federico de Alvear in her native Argentina, both going 1 ¼ miles, but has yet to find success since coming to the U.S. last year. She was second twice, in a Keeneland allowance and the Blushing K.D. at Fair Grounds, last fall and winter, and was third in the Joseph R. Peluso Memorial at Fair Grounds and the Romacaca June 18 at Hawthorne, her lone start this year.

“She didn't have a good trip. She had an inside post [and] she doesn't like that much,” trainer Ignacio 'Nacho' Correas IV said.  “We added some cheater [blinkers] so we're hoping that helps her a little bit more, that little bit of help that she needs to win. I think that she's sitting on a big race. We'll see. I'm very happy with the way she's doing.”

Though his 5-year-old mare has yet to find the winner's circle in North America, Correas is proud of the efforts Bellagamba has put forth. She has been beaten a total of 8 ¼ lengths in her five U.S. runs, and came within a neck of beating Grade 3 winner Summer in Saratoga in the Blushing K.D.

“Summer in Saratoga is a very accomplished mare. She put up a good fight and she lost on the wire,” Correas said. “All the other races she never has a trip that you can say, 'This one was perfect.' I don't to say she had an excuse because she always runs well. Her second time in Fair Grounds she was way far and had too much to do and I don't think that she's that kind of horse. So we are adding those cheater blinkers to see if we can focus her a little bit more and get some stuff out of her way and let her focus more on what she has to do.”

Vincent Cheminaud will ride Bellagamba from Post 4.

Juddmonte homebred Petricor, an English-bred 4-year-old daughter of Frankel, will make her third U.S. start and seventh overall in the Big Dreyfus for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. Group 3-placed in France last spring, she won an April 24 allowance at Keeneland in her North American debut and rallied to be fourth as the favorite following a belated start in the June 5 G3 Mint Julep, both going 1 1/16 miles on the grass.

Also entered are Coconut Cake, third by less than a length in the 1 1/16-mile All Brandy June 19 over the Laurel turf; Fool Yourself, coming off a one-mile allowance win on Laurel's main track June 11; Double Fireball, sixth in the Dahlia; and Tic Tic Tic Boom, making a four-day turnaround after running fifth in the Penny Memorial.

The post Alms Chasing Elusive Victory In $100,000 Big Dreyfus At Laurel Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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This Side Up: Iron Legacy Will Never Rust

He's a rebel with a Causeway. But he is a rebel, all the same; or a maverick, at least; an outlier. Certainly we can't expect everyone to train horses like Kenny McPeek, nor indeed to buy them the same way. Apart from anything else, most people simply wouldn't be good enough.

McPeek's 10 millionaires to date have been sired by the likes of Cuvee, Louis Quatorze, Daredevil, Hit It a Bomb and Tejano–and he signed for most of them himself. As one who marches to his own drum, his style obviously wouldn't work for everyone. Think outside the box, and you'll have to manage without the many investors who feel nervous straying beyond the comforting confines of convention. They will seek sanctuary in the kind of strike rates available with trainers who start horses about as often as Halley does his Comet. Nonetheless, there are some pretty universal lessons to be drawn from the success of Classic Causeway (Giant's Causeway) in the big race at Belmont last weekend, just two weeks after his barn debut.

Because if McPeek is too much of a one-off to be categorized simply as “old school”, there's no doubting the throwback element in Classic Causeway himself, famously one of just three foals from the final crop of the Iron Horse. And if McPeek is to some degree a victim of his own success, in that you tend not to be sent too many yards of silk if you can contrive such fine purses of a relative sow's ear, let's not forget that one of the world's most lavishly resourced stables is supervised by another who believes that Thoroughbreds actually thrive on competition.

 

 

Click the play button below to listen to this week's episode of This Side Up. 

 

Very few elite trainers in Europe, nevermind America, would have drawn out the reserves of Giant's Causeway as boldly as Aidan O'Brien. Already a Group 1 winner at two, Giant's Causeway started his sophomore campaign by fending off a battle-hardened, race-fit 6-year-old in April. Between May 6 and Sept. 23, he then finished first or second in eight Group 1 races, constantly switching distance. After that, as nobody will need reminding, he shipped to run the dirt monster Tiznow to a neck in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

The 'Iron Horse,' Giant's Causeway | Coolmore

We're talking about an exceptional specimen here, clearly, but O'Brien has always operated on the basis that his patrons at Coolmore require reliable exposure of genes they might wish to replicate. And like his mentor Jim Bolger, who last year ran 2,000 Guineas winner Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}) in two other Classics over the next three weeks, he additionally believes that maturing horses flourish for racetrack experience. Peeping Fawn (Danehill) had an aristocratic pedigree, nothing to prove there, but O'Brien still worked her like a stevedore. She had already been beaten three times in April when breaking her maiden on May 16. Eleven days later she ran third in a Classic over a mile. FIVE days later she was beaten half a length in the G1 Oaks at Epsom, over a mile and a half. Did she recoil from this dazing sequence of examinations? She did not. Instead, going up and down in distance every time, she won four Group 1 prizes in 54 days.

As it happens, Peeping Fawn has proved a fairly disappointing producer, albeit unlucky that her best daughter derailed. Giant's Causeway, however, has emulated his sire Storm Cat as a hugely important crossover influence. That's unsurprising, after his own slick transfer to the American racing environment, and he stands as a withering rebuke to the prescriptive approach we see, both sides of the water, to racing surfaces. He came up with a worthy heir in Europe at the first attempt in Shamardal, whose maternal pedigree was shaded very green, but has book-ended his career with an outstanding young Kentucky sire in Not This Time, whose own family obviously contains no less resonant dirt names.

Interestingly, Classic Causeway is out of a mare by Thunder Gulch, whose breeder Peter Brant has always been so far-sighted in this regard. Thunder Gulch himself, of course, combined a sire who had won benchmark races for the recycling of dirt speed–the GI Hopeful S., the GI Met Mile H. twice, the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint–with a turf mare whose dam had finished second in the G1 Gold Cup at Ascot over two and a half miles.

Most horses are more versatile than we will ever know. We should always start with the animal in front of us, and how it all fits together, rather than meekly obey herd presumptions. Sure enough, having only recently taken Classic Causeway into his care (after Brian Lynch laid some excellent foundations), McPeek urged a switch to turf because “the horse has a foot like a pancake”.

But often it's simply a question of opportunity. It was only the search for outcross blood at Coolmore, for instance, that allowed War Front and Scat Daddy to penetrate European myopia as coveted “turf” influences. And while John Magnier and his partners seem to be doing pretty well without my advice, I will just dust off my plea that they might indulge European mare owners by allowing American Pharoah at least one spring in Co Tipperary. (Especially as I keep reading that the home farm may apparently be a little short of fresh blood just now.)

Bleecker Street | Sarah Andrew

After last week's glimpse of how a more wholesome future might look, we revert to business as usual in the first Grade I of the Saratoga meet, with Chad Brown having to generate his own competition on grass. In fact, just one other American trainer has mustered a runner in the Diana S. It's striking, however, that most exciting member of the field is also the only one bred in America.

Bleecker Street was hardly a blatant turf prospect the day Brant purchased her as a yearling, down the road at Fasig-Tipton, but her sire Quality Road has a very flexible genetic background. (Just his first two dams will tell you that, as daughters of Strawberry Road and Alydar–and there's plenty more when you get down in the wheat.) Even Chad Brown has been prepared to start Bleecker Street in four graded stakes already this year, so presumably McPeek or O'Brien would by this stage have sent her to the moon and back.

Just as surface aptitude tends to be self-fulfilling, so you have to wonder to what extent pessimism about the constitution of the modern racehorse would stand up to horsemen actually going out there and testing it properly. But if we won't train them like McPeek, then the least we can do is breed them like Classic Causeway. As it was, no farm in Europe or Kentucky offered Bolger enough for Poetic Flare. And that's why, when so much of our commercial glister washes out the moment a horse has to break sweat, it will be the Japanese who end up with the horses of iron.

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Preventing ‘Covert Injuries’: CHRB Committee Discusses Proposal To Limit High-Speed Furlongs

During Wednesday's meeting of the Medication, Safety, and Welfare Committee of the California Horse Racing Board, committee members discussed a proposal to limit the number of high-speed furlongs accumulated by racehorses, both in training and racing.

The discussion was based on research conducted by Dr. Susan Stover and published in the Journal of Orthopedic Research in March of 2022, titled “Exercise history predicts focal differences in bone volume fraction, mineral density and microdamage in the proximal sesamoid bones of Thoroughbred racehorses.”

When researchers examined racehorses euthanized due to proximal sesamoid bone fractures versus those euthanized for injuries unrelated to the sesamoid bone, they found that horses suffering a proximal sesamoid bone fracture “participated in over twice as many lifetime works and races, accumulated nearly twice the lifetime work and race distance, had over twice as much time in training since last layup, and performed nearly twice the distance, events, and works each month, 1–12 months before death.”

Alan Balch, executive director of the California Thoroughbred Trainers, along with California equine safety task force members Dr. Dionne Benson and Dr. Tim Carpenter, has been hosting discussions on how this research might be applied to a rule which would help to prevent catastrophic breakdowns.

Balch said: “Summarizing, the question would be: based on research and objective standard, when would a horse reach a threshold level of high-speed furlongs where that horse's history would be flagged in some way, and that flag would result in extra scrutiny? Not just extra scrutiny by the attending and or the regulatory veterinarian, but potentially a mandatory nuclear scan, PET scan, or something.

“The types of injuries we're worried about here are things in particular that are not readily evident to the attending or regulatory vet. Implicit in Dr. Stover's research is that these are covert injuries of some kind, that would only be revealed in a diagnostic exam.”

Dr. Benson echoed Balch's concerns: “Quite frankly, some of the horses that get injured, we've looked at. They are doing extremely well and they are passing vet exams, both by their attending vet and by our vets. So, I think maybe we need to look at being a little bit more aggressive in those horses with the PET scans, the MRIs, the bone scans, those kinds of diagnostics.”

The discussion regarding a specific rule was ultimately tabled due to concerns about a lack of specific numbers and costs of the diagnostic exams.

In addition, there was concern that such a rule would only protect horses while they are in the state of California, thus would not be effective unless enacted as a national rule. Dr. Benson suggested that the idea might be best presented as a suggestion from California stakeholders to the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority.

In another move aimed at decreasing major musculoskeletal injuries, the committee and subsequently the CHRB approved for 45-day public comment rule amendments to increase scrutiny on horses which have not recorded a work or race for 90 days.

“An initial examination will be required by both a regulatory veterinarian and the attending veterinarian, including review of veterinary and training records for the previous 60-day period, prior to the horse going to the track to train,” the CHRB meeting packet explains. “Additionally, a follow up examination will be required between 30 and 45 days. The goal is to provide a baseline examination and identify any at-risk factors that may predispose a horse from suffering a catastrophic injury related to the shins, tibias, shoulder, pelvis, etc.”

Further details on the potential new rule may be found here: CHRB meeting packet.

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