Bidding Open for F-T August Digital Selected Sale

Fasig-Tipton has catalogued 65 entries for its August Digital Selected Sale, which may now be viewed at digital.fasigtipton.com. Bidding is officially open and will close Tuesday, Aug. 30, at 2 pm EDT.

The catalogue offers selected horses of racing age and breeding stock. Included among these are 37 offerings from the partial reduction of Lovacres Ranch, which are catalogued as hips 33-69.

“This is our first digital sale following a summer break, and we are very pleased with the quality of our catalogue as there is something for everyone in here,” said Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales. “The partial reduction of Lovacres Ranch should draw significant interest from both breeders and racing stables, as the Lovacres program is annually at the top of breeding and racing ranks in California.”

For the complete catalog, click here.

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Trainer Michael Tomlinson Chasing First Grade 1 With Conagher In Allen Jerkens

Trainer Michael Tomlinson has come to Saratoga Race Course with a serious 3-year-old sprinter in the past, saddling graded stakes-winner Barbados to a game third-place finish in the 2015 Grade 2 Amsterdam. On Saturday, he returns to the Spa for the first time in four years with Patricia's Hope and Mark Farrar's Conagher in the Grade 1, $500,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial for sophomores sprinting seven furlongs.

“He's doing very well. He got up here on Monday night and has trained well since,” said Tomlinson. “He'll gallop tomorrow.”

Conagher, a chestnut son of Jimmy Creed, enters from a 2 1/4-length victory going the Allen Jerkens distance on August 1 in Colonial Downs' Housebuster, going wire-to-wire and defeating Old Homestead, who won the Lafayette in impressive fashion in April at Keeneland. The effort came on the heels of a runner-up effort in the 1 1/16-mile Iowa Derby on July 9 at Prairie Meadows where he was defeated by Ain't Life Grand, who will race later on Saturday's card in the Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers.

“The horse that ran second was quality,” Tomlinson said of the Housebuster effort. “He had won a stakes race at Keeneland, so he didn't beat a slouch. We wanted that race as a prep to back up to sprinting after going two turns in Iowa. It was a good race with pressure all the way and he drew off.”

Conagher's best effort to date was a dominating allowance optional claiming victory going seven furlongs on June 3 at Churchill Downs. He showed his usual frontrunning tactics and drew off to a 5 1/4-length win under returning rider Joe Rocco, Jr., earning a career-high 104 Beyer Speed Figure.

Of nine entrants in the Allen Jerkens, only multiple graded stakes-winner Jack Christopher owns a higher figure, boasting a 107 for his 10-length win in the Grade 1 Woody Stephens presented by Mohegan Sun at Belmont Park.

In that June 3 effort, Conagher soundly defeated returning rival and Grade 1-winner Gunite, who was making his first start back off an eight-month respite. Tomlinson said it gives him confidence that Conagher has already beaten one of the most formidable foes he will face on Saturday.

“He handily beat Gunite and I realized that was Gunite's first race back off the layoff,” said Tomlinson. “He did it the right way and well see what happens. His efforts have shown that a Grade 1 is within his grasp.”

Tomlinson said both speed and a smart ride from Rocco, Jr. will be key to success on Saturday.

“He's obviously got a lot of speed and he can go quickly. He has a lot of ability and can carry at least a mile,” Tomlinson said. “It's a very tactical jockeys' race and there are several in there with speed, so it will be a test.”

A win with Conagher would mark the first Grade 1 triumph for Tomlinson, who has scored at the graded level with top trainees Kettleoneup, Sir Cherokee, Barbados and Jordan's Henny. Tomlinson said winning a Grade 1, especially at Saratoga, would be very meaningful.

“This would be my first Grade 1, but we've won several Grade 2s and 3s with some other horses,” said Tomlinson. “It's exciting; we'll see.”

A $9,000 purchase at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, Conagher has amassed total purse earnings of $312,353 through a record of 9-4-3-1. He is the second foal to race out of the Niagara Causeway mare You Should Be Here, a direct descendant of Grade 1-winning and producing mare Fall Aspen.

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Travers: Brad Cox Relying On Florent Geroux To Find ‘Right Trip’ For Cyberknife

When it comes to the strategy for Cyberknife in Saturday's Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers, trainer Brad Cox knows the two-time Grade 1 winner is in good hands.

Florent Geroux gets the riding assignment for the eighth straight race aboard Cyberknife, who drew the rail in a field of eight for the 1 1/4-mile Travers and was made the 7-2 second choice on the morning line behind 7-5 program favorite Epicenter, runner-up in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby and Grade 1 Preakness and winner of Saratoga's Grade 2 Jim Dandy July 30.

Geroux broke Cyberknife's maiden in his 2-year-old finale last December at Fair Grounds, and was also in the irons for wins this year in the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby, Grade 3 Matt Winn and Grade 1 Haskell, the latter July 23 at Monmouth Park in his Travers prep.

“Just break and go forward is our plan. We're going to let the field kind of sort themselves out going into the first turn,” Cox said. “Florent obviously knows him really well. He's very capable of running from down on the inside. He did it in the Arkansas Derby, he did it in the Haskell. It's nothing that he can't do.

“I think the most important thing is seeing how the track's playing, seeing how quick it is, and if the rail's the place to be,” he added. “That's probably the main concern, as opposed to where we are in regard to where we land in the race.”

Cyberknife is by 2017 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Gun Runner and out of the Flower Alley mare Awesome Flower. While Gun Runner was third in the 2016 Travers, Flower Alley won the Travers in 2005 and sired 2012 Derby and Preakness winner I'll Have Another.

In his only previous try at the Travers distance, Cyberknife raced up close to a wicked pace for a half-mile before dropping back and fading to be 18th in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby behind Rich Strike, the 80-1 upset winner who also returns in the Travers.

“I don't really think [distance] is [a question]. Gun Runner was able to handle a mile and a quarter in the Classic. The broodmare sire sired a Derby winner. He seems to stay on in his races well enough, so I don't think it's about the distance as much as it is getting the right trip on the right part of the racetrack,” Cox said.

“We just watched how he came out of the Derby. We knew we wanted to make a run at the Haskell and we thought the Matt Winn made the most sense getting there, as far as a race or a prep. The Kentucky Derby itself was a complete throw out. They could run that race 100 more times and it would be tough to get a similar result,” he added. “We were part of the pace presence unfortunately with two of my horses in Zozos and Cyberknife. I wish we weren't, but it is what it is. We regrouped, and it's worked out really well for Cyberknife ever since.”

Cox said Cyberknife's versatility should serve him well in the Travers. He raced just off the lead before getting up by a nose in the 1 1/16-mile Matt Winn June 12 at Churchill Downs before a patient Geroux unleashed his run with a quarter-mile left in the 1 1/8-mile Haskell to win by a head, earning a career-best Beyer Speed Figure of 102.

“I don't think this horse has to necessarily sit off of horses. He's pretty honest; he can be right where he needs to be. I wouldn't even be opposed to him being on the lead if the right opportunity presented itself,” Cox said. “I don't want to take away anything that comes easy. If they just break with their natural speed, you can't fight with them. [At a] mile and a quarter, I don't know how aggressive these other guys are going to be. We'll see how it goes.”

Geroux is riding in the Travers for the second time, having finished fifth on the Cox-trained Owendale in 2019. The two-time defending Eclipse Award winner as leading trainer, Cox won last year's Travers with Essential Quality, the Champion 2-Year-Old Male of 2020 and 3-Year-Old Male of 2021.

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Thoroughbred Charities Of America Awards Over $780,000 In Annual Grants

Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) announced Thursday that grants totaling nearly $783,000 were awarded this year.

83 grant applications were received during the organization's annual grant cycle. Ultimately, 74 organizations were approved for a grant including 49 aftercare organizations, 17 backstretch and farm worker programs, four equine-assisted therapy organizations, three Thoroughbred incentive programs, and one research organization. Grant recipients can be found on www.tca.org.

TCA's 2022 grants to aftercare, Thoroughbred incentive, and equine-assisted therapy organizations were bolstered by support from Hagyard Equine Medical Institute's Race to Give online fundraising campaign. During last year's inaugural Race to Give over $100,000 was raised for approved organizations. Hagyard's 2022 Race to Give campaign will begin on October 7.

“We are thrilled to award grants to 74 organizations working tirelessly on behalf of Thoroughbreds and backstretch and farm workers,” said Erin Halliwell executive director of TCA. “Each one of our grantees does amazing work and positively impact the lives of the population they serve. TCA's annual grants are only possible because of our generous donors, and we sincerely thank them all for their continued support.”

Grant applications for the 2023 grant cycle will be available in mid-January.

TCA's mission is to fund and facilitate the support of Thoroughbreds and the people who care for them. TCA distributes grants to several categories of Thoroughbred-related nonprofits including rehabilitation, retraining, rehoming and retirement organizations; backstretch and farm employee programs; equine-assisted therapy programs; and research organizations. Since its inception in 1990, TCA has granted over $26 million to more than 200 charities. TCA is the charitable arm of the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (TOBA).

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