Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Catalogue Features Bellabel Half

The catalogue for the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale is now online. Featuring a half-sister to the catalogue will offer 480 yearlings during Part I of the sale on Sept. 20-21 and another 128 lots for Part II on Sept. 22. Past graduates continue to excel on the racecourse, with Bottle Of Bubbles (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) taking the G3 Premio Primi Passi, and Sir Busker (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}) trotting up in the G2 York S. recently.

Several yearlings are full- or half-siblings to group winners, among them a Tamayuz (GB) half-sister to G3 Gladness S. winner Markaz Paname (Ire) (Markaz {Ire}) (lot 254) from Rockton Stud; Ballybin Stud's lot 424, by Holy Roman Emperor (Ire), received a timely update when the 3-year-old half-sister Bellabel (Ire) (Belardo) took out the GII San Clemente S. at Del Mar on Saturday evening.

Runaway first-season sire Havana Grey (GB), who is already the sire of a stakes winner and 27 other winners, has 10 yearlings on offer, with Universal Stud, Ltd. selling lot 386, a half-sister to the group-placed Sam Maximus (GB) (Showcasing {GB}).

There are also yearlings set to sell out of 54 black-type mares, including a Kingman (GB) colt (lot 153) out of multiple Group 2 heroine Riposte (GB) (Dansili {GB}) from The Castlebridge Consignment; lot 214, a daughter of Too Darn Hot (GB) out of multiple Group 3 winner and Group 1-placed Suffused (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) is also consigned by Castlebridge; and lot 433, a filly by No Nay Never out of G3 Prix Minerve victress Forces Of Darkness (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}) will be offered by Castledillon Stud.

All yearlings catalogued will be candidates for the €300,000 Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction Sales S. at the Curragh in 2023. The vendor of the winning horse will also drive away in an Overlander 2-stall horsebox. In addition, over 80% of the yearlings catalogued are IRE qualified and eligible to win a sales voucher of €10,000 per qualifying race in Ireland and Britain.

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Why Have Standardbreds Gotten Faster and Thoroughbreds Have Not?

It's been almost 55 years since Dr. Fager set a world record for the mile distance when winning the 1968 Washington Park Handicap at Arlington Park in 1:32 1/5, a record that has yet to be broken. In 1973, Secretariat won the GI Kentucky Derby, covering the 1 1/4 miles in 1:59 2/5, a record that still stands 49 years later. There are other examples, all leading to the same conclusion–the Thoroughbred racehorse is not getting any faster.

Some believe that horses have gotten as fast as they can get, have reached their physical limits and that there's no room for improvement. That was the conclusion reached by Stanford University biologist Dr. Mark Denny, whose 2008 study looked at the evolution of racehorses, greyhounds and human runners.

“While all such extrapolations must be used cautiously, these data suggest that there are limits to the ability of either natural or artificial selection to produce ever faster dogs, horses and humans,” Denny wrote.

But Denny failed to take into account that the Standardbred is doing exactly what he concluded could no longer be done. When Dr. Fager set his record, the fastest time ever by a Standardbred in a one-mile race was the 1:55 clocking turned in by pacer Bret Hanover in 1966. (Trotters are a few seconds slower than pacers).

Today, a 1:55 time would barely get it done in a mid-level race at a mid-level track as there doesn't seem to be any slowing down of this breed. Earlier this month, the record for the fastest mile ever by a Standardbred was set again as Bulldog Hanover won the William Haughton Memorial at the Meadowlands in 1:45 4/5. Since 1968, Dr. Fager's one-mile record has not been surpassed. (In 2003, Najran essentially equaled Dr. Fager's record, going a mile in 1:32.24 while winning the GIII Westchester H.). During that same time frame, starting in 1968, the record mile for a Standardbred has come down by 9 1/5 seconds.

“By far, our horses are just better horses than they were before,” said prominent harness trainer Mark Ford.

Harness racing breeders, owners and trainers say that the Standardbred is still evolving. Bill Solomon owns the Pennsylvania Farm Pin Oak Lane, which breeds both Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds. He says that the trotter or pacer of 2022 looks nothing like their predecessors from 50 or 60 years ago.

“Thoroughbreds have been bred for speed and for racing for a long time, for centuries,” Solomon said. “Don't forget the Standardbred was still used for transportation and commerce into the 1900s. So they evolved a lot later. We're breeding a totally different kind of horse. We used to breed a horse that had more of a Coldblood appearance and now we breed a horse that looks more like a Thoroughbred. Go back and look at a picture of [1951 Little Brown Jug winner] Tar Heel and compare that with sons of Meadow Skipper on to Speedy Crown and today to Somebeachsomewhere and that will answer your question. You will see a horse in Tar Heel that looked like a draft horse and when you get to Speedy Crown you'll start to see horses that look like fashionable Thoroughbreds.”

“I remember when I first got involved, our horses were the proverbial jugheads,” said Murray Brown, the retired general manager and vice president of Standardbred Horse Sales Company. “They were big, they were coarse, they were built more for endurance than they were for speed. It wasn't unusual back then for a horse to go three prep miles before the race. They were bigger and perhaps tougher, but they weren't this fast. They're now being bred predominantly for speed. Look at  conformation pictures of the horses by Tar Heel. You got big, coarse, kind of plain horses. Today's horse is so much more streamlined.”

Another factor has been the advances the industry has made when it comes to equipment, primarily the sulky. They have become lighter and more aerodynamic.

“You hear all the time that the bikes are built so much more for speed now,” Brown said. “There's almost no friction and there's more loft and they just go faster because of that.”

The drivers are another part of the equation. Bret Hanover was driven by his trainer, Frank Ervin, typical of the time when the concept of the “catch driver” had yet to take hold. The trainers who drove their own horses might have weighed 200 pounds and weren't particularly skilled as drivers. Today, the vast majority of the horses are driven by individuals who do nothing but drive. The best invariably weigh in the neighborhood of 140 pounds.

“The main factor is probably the evolution of the breed, but there are other extraneous things like the dominance of the catch driver,” Brown said.

It's not that Thoroughbreds have always been this fast. Based on times for the Kentucky Derby, the Thoroughbred breed did evolve and get faster in the early 1900s. Between 1896, the first year the race was run at a 1 1/4 miles, and 1910, the average Derby time was 2:09.8. Over the next 14 years, from 1910 through 1923, the average winning time fell to 2:06.1. By 1962, the record for the Derby had fallen to 2:00.4, the time turned in by Decidedly. Every Derby since 2002 has been run in a slower time. Northern Dancer's time of 2:00 in 1964 has been eclipsed just twice, by Secretariat and by Monarchos in 2001. If there is a way to produce faster species, no one has figured that out.

The Standardbred will never be as fast as the Thoroughbred, but how close can they get? The consensus is that the Standardbred will eventually hit its peak as a breed but that may still be years away.

“When will we see a mile in 1:44?” Ford said. “I don't think we'll have to wait 10 years. The way things are going, it might be 10 weeks.”

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Oklahoma And Texas Announce Hair Testing Partnership For Quarter Horses This Fall

The following press release was distributed by the Oklahoma Quarter Horse Racing Association–

The Oklahoma Quarter Horse Racing Association will partner with Will Rogers Downs and Lone Star Park to administer the collection of hair testing samples for the 2022 Fall Quarter Horse season at each track.

This will be the second year that Will Rogers Downs has required a negative hair test prior to entry. Lone Star Park made an announcement in the spring that they intended to implement the same procedure at Lone Star Park this fall. OQHRA has successfully implemented the program in Oklahoma and has agreed to assist Lone Star Park in building their program. With support from the TQHA and the Texas Horsemen's group, OQHRA will oversee the program at Lone Star in 2022, while also training their personnel, who will continue the program in future years. The OQHRA Board of Directors are very passionate about improving the integrity in the racing industry and feel fortunate to help other states as we all work towards what is best for the industry nationwide.

Along with the partnership between OQHRA and the racetracks, both Will Rogers Downs and Lone Star Park have agreed to use the same test results so horsemen will get a “two for one” special. For $240 (on-site fee) horsemen can have the hair tested and the results will be reciprocated by both tracks, making the horse eligible for entry at both places. With Lone Star Park running on Friday and Saturdays and Will Rogers Downs moving to a Sunday, Monday, Tuesday schedule, we hope this allows for more racing opportunities for the horsemen.

Also new for the fall, hair tests will now be good for 90 days. All horses would have to be re-tested before the 90 days have passed to remain eligible, regardless of whether they have started in a race or not. Horses that qualify for Futurities and Derbies at Will Rogers Downs will be required to have a negative hair test between the trials and finals. Test results can take up to 10 business days for a negative test (some instances it may take longer), with the extended good through time, horsemen are encouraged to test early. Results must be back before a horse is allowed to enter, no exceptions.

Because of the unique circumstances with the testing window for opening weekends, the OQHRA testing crew will be traveling to Ruidoso Downs and Retama Park. Anyone needing a horse tested at Ruidoso Downs for the Lone Star or Will Rogers meet will need to schedule for Aug. 3 & 4, these will be the only days testing is conducted at Ruidoso Downs. For horses at Retama Park you can schedule Sunday, Aug. 7, Monday, Aug. 8 and Tuesday, Aug. 9. Any horses stabled on track or that wish to haul in to Retama will be able to have their hair tested then. It is possible additional days will be added at Retama the following week if needed.

On Aug. 11 the team will set up the first of two offices as they begin testing for the Will Rogers meet. The first four days of testing at WRD will be Thursday, Aug. 11 and Friday, Aug. 12, followed by Aug. 18 and 19. The second office will be set up on Monday, Aug. 22 at LSP and testing will take place that Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning Aug. 23. At that point the normal testing schedule will be Mon/Tue at Lone Star Park and Thur/Fri at Will Rogers Downs.

For horses not at Lone Star Park, Will Rogers Downs, Ruidoso Downs or Retama Park, there is the option of testing off-site at another track. The collection must be done by a veterinarian working under the auspices of the State Racing Regulator. A complete schedule with times and location for August and September, hair testing information and off-site testing information will be available at oqhra.com soon. Schedules and information will also be available in the racing offices for both tracks.

The cost for an onsite test is $240. For offsite tests the cost is $275 plus vet fees and shipping. To schedule for either track or for more information text or call the OQHRA hair testing hotline at 405-881-5120. Scheduling will be open Monday through Friday 9:00-5:00 starting Monday, July 25th

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Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: Horses Teach Clapham ‘Something New Every Day’

“Are you all right to talk while I hold a horse?”

Alice Clapham's first words to a reporter who had scheduled an interview say everything about her. Horses always come first. And she is always pressed for time as a traveling assistant to highly-respected trainer Graham Motion. Clapham, 52, has been all horses, all day since she grew up on a farm in Basington, England that was owned by her parents, Jennifer and Derck. They developed event horses and oversaw a modest breeding operation.

Clapham came to the United States in 1996.

“Originally I came for three months just to get experience,” she said. “I was always of the belief that you have to keep learning, and with horses you learn something new every day. I wanted to do something different for a couple of months and come over and see how everything is done over here. And I ended up staying.”

Motion is forever grateful that she did. She joined his Herringswell Stables in 2007 and, with her riding ability and horsemanship, eventually became an integral part of an operation that sometimes goes global.

“She is my right-hand person,” said Motion, also born in England. “She will run the show where I am not. She goes to far locations with the best horses.”

Clapham and 3-year-old Spendarella (NY) made a strong impression in June at Royal Ascot with a valiant second-place effort in the Coronation Stakes (G1). She will forever treasure her memories of Animal Kingdom's 2013 Dubai World Cup triumph – even if a mishap during the journey cost her feeling in her right index finger.

Although the 2011 Kentucky Derby winner knew Clapham well and she knew him as well as anyone could, he represented an enormous challenge while they were together so far from home.

“He was tricky at best, especially when he was out of the country,” Motion said. “I remember that week in Dubai we were kind of on pins and needles because we knew how well he was doing but at any minute he could explode.”

With the help of Clapham's calming influence, Animal Kingdom kept it together for the most part and the $10 million Dubai World Cup was every bit as special as his Derby triumph.

“To go and have a horse there and for him to win like he did,” she said, “it was just an amazing experience.”

Clapham will never forget the sight of Animal Kingdom, after tracking pace-setting mare Royal Delta, changing leads on cue and surging into the lead for jockey Joel Rosario as they stormed around the final turn. She worried that Rosario might have moved too soon.

“You are waiting all the way up the stretch,” Clapham said. “You could see some horses coming, but he just had gone so easy and so well. It's an amazing feeling just watching them go and you're like, 'He's going to win this!' “

The moment was so thrilling that Clapham forgave the transgression that followed while they were in England and nearly claimed her right index finger.

“He can get a little full of himself. He was a big, strapping colt,” Clapham said of Animal Kingdom. “I was just brushing him and he was getting a little tickly and he turned and my finger happened to be in the way. He just grabbed a hold of it.”

By the time he was done, the bone was exposed and the surgeon faced a tall task.

“They basically stitched it back together and said, 'Hopefully, it will mend right.' Luckily, it did,” she said. “I don't have much feeling in there, but that's all part of life. Things happen.”

Fortunately, Spendarella is a much safer traveling companion.

“She can be a little feisty, but she's lovely,” Clapham said. “She's got a great temperament for a 3-year-old. She's been like that since she came in as a 2-year-old. She's always been professional and wants to do the right thing.”

Clapham adjusts to whatever comes her way. In addition to her travel abroad, she has ventured to California, Florida and Kentucky for Motion, who operates out of Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. She is currently overseeing a string of approximately a dozen horses or so at Saratoga. She has no idea what might be next.

“It's always just you get to the end of the meet and see where we need to go,” she said. “It's all part of the job I have. It's the way it is.”

Motion appreciates Clapham's team-first approach and her willingness to ask questions even when she is quite sure of the answer. They typically think along the same lines.

“Listen, it's irreplaceable,” Motion said. “To have confidence in somebody the way I have confidence in Alice, that's something that comes over a very long period of time. It's something that doesn't happen overnight. It's a body of work and I feel extremely fortunate to have her.”

Clapham stopped galloping horses 18 months ago in a concession to a sore back and bad knee.

“I had to learn to watch rather than feeling,” she said of the transition.

As for the interview conducted while Meander, a 2-year-old filly, grazed on some grass outside Barn 82, that went well except for one interruption. Meander abruptly sank to the ground and proceeded to roll in the dirt like a playful child.

Clapham laughed with delight.

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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