Anchor Down Colt Tops Record-Setting Iowa Fall Sale

A colt by recently relocated Iowa sire Anchor Down drew the highest bid on Thursday at the Iowa Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Association Fall Sale, propelling all-time high returns for the auction.

A total of 55 horses changed hands on Thursday for revenues of $810,900, more than double last year's gross of $402,350. The gross surpassed the previous high-water mark of $475,000 in 2017.

The average sale price of $14,743 was also a record performance, besting last year's previous high mark of $11,176. The median price finished at $8,000.

Albaugh Family Stables and Allen Poindexter partnered up to purchase the sale-topper, a colt by Anchor Down, for $60,000.

The Iowa-bred chestnut colt is out of the winning Bwana Charlie mare Damaris, whose first foal to race is a winner. His extended family includes Grade 2 winners Aspen Rose and Kyle's Our Man, as well as Grade 3 winner Low Tolerance.

Iowa State University consigned the sale-topper as agent for Poindexter. Anchor Down relocated to Iowa State for the 2022 breeding season after beginning his stud career in Kentucky at Gainesway.

The university program was also the sale's leading consignor by gross, with 26 horses bringing a combined $521,200.

The partnership of Chleborad, Prairie Gold Diggers, and Poindexter was the top buyer, with five purchases totaling $138,000. Leading their haul was Hip 59, an Anchor Down filly out of the Consolidator mare Solid Scam, who hammered for $37,000.

To view the auction's full results, click here.

The post Anchor Down Colt Tops Record-Setting Iowa Fall Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Finger Lakes Thoroughbred Adoption Program Awarded TCA Grant

Finger Lakes Thoroughbred Adoption Program (FLTAP) was recently advised by the Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) that it would be receiving a 2022 grant in support of FLTAP's work to transition equine athletes to a productive and fulfilling life after their time competing on the track. The TCA Board of Directors determined the grant request upheld the mission of the TCA, which is to fund and facilitate the support of Thoroughbreds and the people who care for them. As part of the evaluation process, FLTAP received a designation from Irish Hill and Dutchess Views Stallions, and a portion of the grant is made possible by the Race to Give. The Race to Give is an online giving and awareness campaign designed to raise money for Thoroughbred aftercare programs and initiatives, created by the Hagyard Equine Medical Institute.

The grant marks the 11th time that the TCA has recognized FLTAP since its inception.

“We are honored and appreciative of the TCA's continued support of our commitment to give Thoroughbreds a second chance at a productive career after their racing days,” stated FLTAP Board President Kim DeLong. “These funds will support our daily operations that support the health and well-being of Thoroughbreds currently in our care while we transition them to their next home.”

The post Finger Lakes Thoroughbred Adoption Program Awarded TCA Grant appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Op/Ed: Opportunity to Make a Difference

This weekend the baton will be handed off from our traditional summer focal points of Del Mar and Saratoga to Franklin Kentucky and the Kentucky Downs meet. Full fields, big crowds, and a vibrant atmosphere made possible by Historic Horse Racing (HHR) machines, and an ownership group willing to invest in its potential. Kentucky Downs embodies great hope for Kentucky racing and our industry's future, and it was almost taken away Feb. 10, 2021.

It was a cold, nasty February evening in Kentucky, when the Kentucky House of Representatives took up debate on Senate Bill 120, the legalization of HHR machines. The intellectual property argument, which created HHR, was brilliant as it guaranteed revenue generated from the machines would flow through the Horsemen's purse account to supplement purse money. Lessons learned from other state's “racino” experiments were applied in Kentucky and masterly played by our industry leaders, to whom I am forever grateful.

It goes without saying, we are enjoying a boom period since the passage of HHR. Purse money is sky rocketing, handle increasing with more full fields, and investments being made around the commonwealth in our racing product. This boom period is thanks to our industry leaders and lobbying organizations who spent time in Frankfort, and across Kentucky, to secure HHR's passage, and it was not a small feat.

If you recall that night, many floor speeches were given from various representatives around the commonwealth, and many were not in favor of support. Many opposing our industry, took the opportunity to declare to their constituents why they “could not support” our industry. Many who supported the passage of HHR have since been voted out by their constituents. Let me say that again…many who voted to support HHR have since been voted OUT by their constituents. I would bet that if HHR was brought to the floor today, it would not pass…how's that for sobering.

In Kentucky alone, there are dozens of newly elected people who ultimately make the rules for our industry: HHR, taxes, workers comp, etc. Expect them to support us because “we are Kentucky's signature industry,” and know this “boom period” will quickly bust. Many who supported us, in Frankfort, have been voted out. We cannot sit idly and expect their replacements to make their same choices.

We are enjoying this period of incredible growth thanks to the tireless work of our industry leaders, however, for many years we have let too few carry our water. We are harvesting their hard work and it's time for more of us to engage. We are responsible for our future. Now is the moment to get involved.    Please join us at Midway University in Midway Kentucky on Tuesday Sept. 6, to learn how we continue to step forward towards a bright future.

To learn more please click here and RSVP to brittany@horseswork.com.

The post Op/Ed: Opportunity to Make a Difference appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

JCGC Longshots: Chess Chief ‘A Real Warrior,’ Tax Will ‘Break Out Of That One Hole Running’

The Estate of James J. Coleman Jr.'s graded stakes winning Chess Chief looks to light up the tote board in Saturday's Grade 1, $1 million Jockey Club Gold Cup, a “Win and You're In” qualifier for the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic in November at Keeneland.

Contested at the Classic 10-furlong distance on Saratoga Race Course's main track, Chess Chief will break from post 4 under jockey Manny Franco.

The 6-year-old son of Into Mischief was fifth in this event last year and most recently was third in the Alydar August 4 at the Spa. He closed out his 2021 campaign with a win in the Tenacious at Fair Grounds Race Course, where he has posted all five of his wins through 34 career starts and purse earnings of $894,369.

The hard-knocking Virginia-bred made the grade in March 2021 in the Grade 2 New Orleans Classic and finished sixth in his title defense this spring.

Despite being made the longest shot of 30-1 on the morning line, trainer Dallas Stewart said he is expecting his horse to run a big race.

“He's a real warrior. He ran in this race last year but was coming off a bad grass race,” said Stewart. “This year he's had a race over the track and a couple of real good works over the main track. He galloped as fresh as a 2-year-old this morning.”

Chess Chief's most recent work was at five-eighths on August 28 over the Spa main track, covering the ground in 1:01.25.

Stewart is no stranger to Grade 1 success at the Spa, including the 2017 Personal Ensign with Forever Unbridled and the 2015 Ballerina with her full-sister Unbridled Forever.

“We won a couple Grade 1s here before,” said Stewart. “We only bring a small amount of horses, but it's just like any other race. You've got to get in there and fight it out.”

It has been a long road back to top company for 2019 Grade 2 Jim Dandy winner Tax, who returned to the races from a 19-month layoff in July to score a wire-to-wire victory in the Battery Park at Delaware Park. The 6-year-old son of Arch will now try for a Grade 1 victory in Saturday's $1 million Jockey Club Gold Cup going 10 furlongs for 3-year-olds and up at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained and co-owned by Danny Gargan with R.A. Hill Stable, Tax last faced Grade 1 company in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January 2021 at Gulfstream Park, his last race before an injury that forced his lengthy respite.

“Off that big a layoff, it was so rewarding,” Gargan said of the Battery Park effort. “And they made him the favorite when he hadn't run in 532 days. He's a really cool horse.”

Tax made a quick ascent to the graded ranks as a juvenile, graduating at second asking in a maiden claiming race at Keeneland where he was haltered by Gargan for $50,000. He followed with a third in the Grade 2 Remsen before making the grade in his sophomore debut with an off-the-pace score in the Grade 3 Withers, both at Aqueduct Racetrack. He punched his ticket to the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby with a runner-up finish to Tacitus in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial that April and subsequently finished 14th in the “Run for the Roses.”

Tax went on to have a prosperous second half of his 3-year-old season that included a close fourth in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes, his determined three-quarter-length score over Tacitus in the Jim Dandy and a runner-up finish to Performer in the Grade 3 Discovery at the Big A to close out the year. As a 4-year-old, he competed in his first Pegasus World Cup and won the Grade 3 Harlan's Holiday at Gulfstream Park.

Gargan said he is excited to have Tax back in Grade 1 company.

“We didn't know it would take this long, but it's pretty cool,” Gargan said. “It's a big step forward and he's going to have to run a big step forward, so it will be fun to see if he still has that desire to be in that kind of caliber. If he does, we'll keep doing it and if not, we'll go back and figure it out. I would love to see him hit the board.”

Tax will run 10 furlongs for the first time since an even fifth-place finish in the 2019 Travers at the Spa. Gargan said the dark bay gelding, who is 3-for-3 going 1 1/16 miles, may be at his distance limits in the Jockey Club Gold Cup, but that his class will carry him when he exits the inside post under Kendrick Carmouche.

“He'll be on the lead and hopefully he runs big. We'll break out of that one hole running,” said Gargan. “The only thing that worries me is that the mile and a quarter might not be his best distance. It's funny to say this, but he's undefeated at a mile and a sixteenth. But he ran good in the Belmont. There were a couple different options here, but we waited on this race and we'll see how it goes. He likes this track and he's a happy horse.”

The post JCGC Longshots: Chess Chief ‘A Real Warrior,’ Tax Will ‘Break Out Of That One Hole Running’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights