Saratoga: Tarabi Christens Redesigned Wilson Chute With First Stakes Win

The one-mile Wilson Chute at Saratoga Race Course was christened on Opening Day Thursday with a sharp victory by LBD Stable, Manganaro Bloodstock and David Ingordo's Tarabi in the first running of the $135,000 Wilton for sophomore fillies.

Trained by Cherie DeVaux, the daughter of First Samurai kept a perfect in-the-money record intact with her off-the-pace victory under Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, scoring the first stakes win of her career after two Grade 1 placings as a juvenile.

Sent from post 6 as the 6-5 favorite in the field of 7, Tarabi broke well and was settled behind the pace set by Angitude with Gina Romantica tracking to her inside in third. Castellano sat calmly aboard Tarabi as Angitude marked splits of 24.75 seconds for the opening quarter mile and 48.70 for the half-mile over the fast main track.

Tarabi inched closer to Angitude as the field rounded the turn, chipping away at the pacesetter's precarious lead before the two matched strides at the top of the lane. Tarabi came away with the lead at the eighth pole as a stubborn Angitude was left to battle on for place with the rail-skimming Goddess of Fire, who split rivals and showed a good turn of foot under Hall of Famer John Velazquez.

Tarabi kept to task with a few taps of the crop from Castellano, reaching the wire three-quarter lengths the best in a final time of 1:38.53. Goddess of Fire got her head down to secure place honors over Angitude, who finished 6 1/4-lengths in front of Gina Romantica in fourth. Favor, St Maarten Girl and A Mo Reay rounded out the order of finish. Sweet Solare and Let's Be Clear were scratched.

DeVaux said that a good break made the difference for Tarabi.

“On paper, some of the speed horses had scratched out of the race. We were trying to figure out what works best for her and her running style,” DeVaux said. “She had been on the chase from a bad break or hitting the gate. It was nice to see that she settled, came with a run and she persevered through the wire.”

Castellano said he was pleased with the way Tarabi broke from the new Wilson Chute.

“It felt great. There was plenty of room,” Castellano said. “I liked the way my horse did it and fell into the race. Tuesday's test run absolutely helped.”

A debut winner in August at Ellis Park, Tarabi posted two impressive placings in Grade 1 company behind subsequent Champion 2-Year-Old Filly Echo Zulu in the Spinaway at the Spa and the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies at Del Mar in her first start beyond the sprint distance. Her other start this year was a good second in a seven-furlong optional claimer in June at Churchill Downs.

With her first stakes victory now on her resume, Tarabi may make the step back up to Grade 1 company next time out in the seven-furlong $500,000 Longines Test on August 6 at Saratoga.

“The Test is definitely what our goal would be so we're going to have to shorten her back up, but she had a race over the track and she's run two good races here,” said DeVaux. “It gives you a lot of confidence to point towards a race like that.”

Bred in Kentucky by Hinkle Farms, Tarabi returned $4.40 for a $2 win wager and banked $74,250 for her victory, boosting her total purse earnings to $370,250. Out of the Indian Charlie mare Indian Bay, Tarabi is a full-sister to Japanese Group 3-winner Shivaji and was purchased for $240,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Velazquez said he had hoped for more pace for Goddess of Fire to run into.

“I had to come out running to get a little position. They went pretty slow, so I was forced to be where I was,” Velazquez said.

Live racing resumes on Friday at Saratoga with a 10-race card, featuring the $150,000 Coronation Cup in Race 8 and the Grade 3, $175,000 Forbidden Apple in Race 9. First post is 1:05 p.m. Eastern.

Saratoga Live will present daily coverage and analysis of the summer meet at Saratoga Race Course on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Saratoga Race Course, and the best way to bet every race of the summer meet. Available to horse players nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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Tattersalls Ireland July Store Sale Concludes With Part 2

The Tattersalls Ireland July Store Sale ended with 163 horses sold of 250 horses offered (65.2%) during the Part II session on Thursday. The gross came in at €1,074,300, with an average of €6,591 and a median of €5,000.

Topping Thursday's proceedings was lot 506, a dark bay gelding by Stormy River (Fr) named Karisto (Fr) at €30,000. James Doyle of Baltimore Stables signed for him under the D/J Bloodstock banner from the draft of Mocklershill Stables.

A gelding by Affinisea (Ire) (lot 534) was next at €25,000 from the Moyfinn Stud draft. Steven Crawford raised his hand for the relative of the stakes winner and Grade 3-placed Morley Street (Ire) (Deep Run {GB}).

Tattersalls Ireland CEO Simon Kerins said, “What a summer of store sales… it's been spectacular. Finally after two years our sales returned to where they belong on the sales calendar and each one of them told their own hugely successful story. This week's July Store Sale firmly cemented its position in purchasers' diaries and the significant increase witnessed in turnover, average and median justifies the move from an August date.

“All these stats and achievements couldn't be reached if it wasn't for our vendors who supply the goods. It has been simply incredible what we have witnessed at Tattersalls Ireland this summer and it is a true reflection of the superb quality of National Hunt horses being produced by Irish and UK breeders and consignors. We are extremely grateful to our vendors who have entrusted us with their top-class stock and our returns this year only proves that we deliver.

“Likewise, our thanks must also go out to each purchaser who flocked to Fairyhouse and dug deep to fill their stables. There was an extensive range of buyers involved across each sale and at every level. I would like to take this opportunity to thank all the team for their hard work and Charles O'Neill and the ITM team for all their support.”

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Fayette County Community Bands Together Against Soccer Complex Development

In response to the approval for a soccer complex in an agricultural-rural zone, once home to Ashwood Training Center on Russell Cave Road just outside of Lexington, Ky., members of the equine and agriculture communities in Fayette County came together for a meeting, hosted by the Fayette Alliance at Greg Goodman's Mt. Brilliant Farm, the evening of Wednesday, July 13, to discuss the implications and potential next steps.

Fayette Alliance, a non-profit of citizens dedicated to achieving equitable, sustainable growth in Lexington-Fayette County through land-use advocacy, education, and research, addressed the issues the soccer complex poses to the land, surrounding equine and agricultural operations, and existing zoning ordinances that protect rural areas in a letter published to the public Monday.

The proposed plan for the soccer complex was presented to the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government Board of Adjustment June 28 by Anderson Communities, on behalf of Lexington Sporting Club, who applied to change the zoning of the land so the 12-field soccer complex and 750 parking spaces could be built.

The application was submitted for conditional use of the land in the agricultural-rural zone. Under current policy, outdoor recreational facilities are permitted as a conditional use, which guarantees that under certain circumstances and in certain locations, those can be approved.

The City of Lexington's professional planning staff recommended approving the plan for conditional use, though it was subject to 19 conditions that were outlined in order to support that recommendation for approval.

Despite dozens of community members voicing their opposition to the development at the initial hearing, the Board approved the complex on a 60-acre portion of a larger 150-acre agricultural parcel, located between Russell Cave Road, Newtown Pike, and Interstates I-75 and I-64. The site plan has the soccer fields located near the southeast border of Fasig-Tipton Kentucky's sales grounds, with the fields adjacent to trainer Ken McPeek's Magdalena Farm.

The Board also chose to remove the “most critical and protective” conditions that were recommended by the planning staff, including those that dictated that Lexington Sporting Club would be required to work with Fasig-Tipton in terms of what times/dates soccer tournaments would be held, and those that were intended to preserve the integrity of the agricultural-rural zone.

“As a result of that, the next two pieces of the soccer proposal will continue to move forward. They will be zoning text ordinance amendments, which means the policy proposed is changing the language of our ordinance that guides how we develop in a rural area, and the first is to permit lights, concessions and retail sales associated with the 12-field soccer complex,” said Brittany Roethemeier, Executive Director of the Fayette Alliance, at Wednesday's meeting.

“This means that anywhere in the agricultural-rural zone, that is adjacent to the economic development zone, would be permitted to have these uses. The second is going to be to permit soccer stadiums in an economic development zone. By permitting a soccer stadium, we're also changing the intent of what is supposed to be achieved within the economic development zone.”

Along with amending existing zoning ordinances, the Lexington Sporting Club plans to build a 10,000-person stadium and thousands of more surface parking spaces in the nearby economic development zone, which is designated specifically as a zoning category to promote jobs and job creation.

Vince Gabbert, who recently departed Keeneland, is the Sporting Club's president. Dixiana Farm's Bill Shively is the majority owner of the new club.

The Fayette Alliance, and supporting industry members and stakeholders, fear that approval of the complex, along with the zoning policy changes, would not only destroy the protection granted to them by Lexington's Urban Service Boundary, allowing extensive development to begin across the bluegrass, but also directly impact the equine and agriculture industries that make a $2.3 billion economic impact annually.

Roethemeier emphasized the detrimental precedent this would set for how uses in the agricultural-rural zone will be evaluated going forward.

“This land is finite. Once it's developed, there is no do-over, there is no decision that can be reversed. The land in our agricultural-rural zone is protected to preserve the rural character of our service area by promoting agricultural uses. It is meant to discourage all forms of urban development, except for a limited amount of conditional uses,” she said. “If we allow these types of commercial, urban uses in our agriculture area, what's next? This isn't about soccer. It may be a soccer complex this time, it's going to be something else next time, and as urban sprawl continues to move out, that threatens the finite resource that is the farmland that all of us care so much about.

“This fight and this opposition are not about soccer. It's about land use, because land use impacts generations to come. Your kids, your grandkids, our future, that's what's impacted by these types of policy decisions.”

Fayette Alliance is in the process of filing an appeal of the Board of Adjustment's decision to the Circuit Court, which must be filed within 30 days from the date the decision was made. They are also filing an Open Records Request to understand how the decision was made, at what point the decision was made, and how the decision was made to remove so many of the conditions presented by the planning staff.

“While it's not our job to help Lexington Sporting Club to find another location, we're absolutely willing to keep the lines of communication open to identify a solution. We believe there are countless other parcels of land and existing facilities throughout the community that can be used for soccer, but our farms are irreplaceable,” said Roethemeier.

Nearly 100 community members attended Wednesday's meeting to show their support, including Thoroughbred industry stakeholders such as Ned Toffey, General Manager of Spendthrift Farm; Everett Dobson, Owner of Cheyenne Stables and Candy Meadow Farm; Bret Jones, Vice President of Airdrie Stud; John Phillips, Owner of Darby Dan Farm; Tony Lacy, Vice President of Keeneland Sales; Boyd Browning Jr., Fasig-Tipton CEO and President; Chauncey Morris, Executive Director of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association (KTA) and Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders (KTOB); Gary Biszants, Owner of Cobra Farm; Lee Carter, Executive Director of the Kentucky Horse Park; Helen Alexander, Owner of Middlebrook Farm.

Bruce Simpson, an attorney specializing in land use law that is representing Fayette Alliance in their appeal, spoke on the process of overturning a Board of Adjustment decision and why filing the appeal is so important.

“Make no mistake about it, this is not just soccer fields and a soccer stadium, this is an entertainment complex. They want to have concerts, political rallies, all sorts of things that stadiums do to generate money,” said Simpson. “As a land use lawyer, this case that the Board of Adjustment approved is a serious threat. I'm not overstating this case. Anytime you can get a precedent like this, like what happened with the soccer fields, it's going to be seized upon somewhere else.”

Goodman also shared that Lexington's Mayor Linda Gorton, though she was unable to attend the meeting, was in full support of opposing the development of the soccer complex, which she has made clear in letters to the planning staff, Planning Commission, and in an upcoming Op/Ed in The Herald-Leader.

“For the last 10 years, along with other local organizations, we've been able to deal with the land use issues and they haven't been that public. This could not be worked out, so we need to fight for this,” said Goodman.

Samantha Will-Bacarri, whose farm neighbors Goodman's, raised the question of what would come next if the soccer complex, along with the proposed zoning text ordinance amendments, were approved.

“If under some wild circumstance we are unsuccessful in the fight against these two zoning text ordinance amendments that are upcoming, our next step is to propose zoning text ordinance amendments to close the loopholes in our zoning ordinance. That's what our next step is, to do similar work in proposing language that will prevent this from happening again. Frankly, it's probably something we're going to do regardless,” said Roethemeier. “After this fight, there will be another, and there will be another one, and the policies matter. This is why. Moving forward, we have to be really cognizant of those policies.”

Along with the farm owners and industry members in attendance, Cathy Ploman, serving her third term as Lexington's 12th District Councilmember, was there to show her support.

“We are the horse capital of the world. That is our brand. We are known worldwide, and yet here we are violating the integrity of that wonderful thing that we are, that we have and that we're lucky to have. To put those soccer fields, plus parking spaces, next to Fasig-Tipton is just a total violation and it's reckless. We've got to do better than that,” said Ploman.

Support for opposing the soccer complex was strong, and Roethemeier and Simpson emphasized the importance of maintaining and growing that moving forward, particularly when it comes to the upcoming Planning Commission meeting, which will be held Thursday, July 28 at 1:30 p.m. in City Hall.

“It is absolutely critical, in my almost 30 years of doing these cases, that you all show up [to the Planning Commission meeting July 28] en masse,” said Simpson.

For more information on the upcoming Planning Commission meeting, the Fayette Alliance and how you can get involved, visit fayettealliance.com/soccercomplex.

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