Catalog Released For Wanamaker’s September Sale

Opportunities abound in the 2022 Wanamaker's September Sale catalog, with 24 horses set to sell on Thursday, Sept. 29. The catalog features horses in training, 2-year-olds, yearlings, broodmare prospects, and broodmares in-foal.

Bidding will open on Thursday, Sept. 29 at 8 a.m. ET, with the first listing set to close at 5 p.m. ET. Subsequent listings will close in three-minute increments. Detailed information on the buying process can be found at wanamakers.com/buy.

Qatar Racing is set to sell Ti Sento, a talented 2-year-old son of Invincible Spirit. He exits his first start in the United States when running in the Grade 3 Del Mar Juvenile Turf earlier this month, and before that competed in the prestigious G2 Coventry Stakes at Royal Ascot. He is eligible for a first-level allowance condition and sports a flashy, European turf pedigree.

Multitasker is a broodmare being offered in foal to the Grade 1 winning son of Speightstown, Lexitonian. She is the producer of two winners from three starters, highlighted by Bueno Bueno, a 3-year-old son of Lord Nelson who placed in the Palm Beach Stakes at Gulfstream Park earlier this year. She is also a half-sister to Eclipse Award champion 2-year-old, Shared Belief.

Other offerings include My Margaret Anne, a 4-year-old filly with black type-producing siblings being sold in foal to Thousand Words, as well as Crystal Avalanche, a 7-year-old half-sister to Grade 3 winner Cookie Dough who is currently in foal to Higher Power.

For more information on those being offered in the 2022 Wanamaker's September Sale, see wanamakers.com. Prospective buyers may browse the website to view pedigrees, pictures, and videos of each hip offered. In-person inspections may be scheduled by contacting sellers with the information provided in the catalog.

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In Sweden, A Seamless Transition Whip-Less Racing

When Sweden instituted a ban of the whip at the beginning of the 2022 racing season, racing official Dennis Madsen was pretty sure what would happen, which was nothing. The races would still be competitive, the betting wouldn't be impacted and there would be no issues when it came to safety.

Five months into the racing season in Sweden, Madsen, the head of horse racing for the Swedish Horse Racing Authority, says he has been proven right.

“There has been no negative impact on racing at all after we took away the whip,” he said.

Along with Denmark and Norway, Sweden is one of three Scandinavian countries where jockeys are no longer allowed to use the whip to encourage a horse to run faster. They are still allowed to carry them in a race in the event the whip may be needed for safety reasons.

Norway, Sweden and Denmark form a circuit attracting the same jockeys, trainers and horses and the three countries have worked toward having uniform rules.

The whip has been banned in Norway since 2009. In Sweden, racing authorities have limited its use over the years, starting with allowing only 10 strikes during race until that limit was reduced to three. The whip was banned all together in 2-year-old races and in steeplechase events.

The three-strikes rule may have remained in place for at least a few more years, but the sport faced a crisis last year when harness driver Joakim Lövgrens was banned for a a year, not by racing officials, but by a local municipality for what was deemed excessive use of the whip. “You have intentionally inflicted unnecessary physical and mental suffering on an animal in order to win a competition and money,” read the ruling regarding Lövgrens.

Around the same time, some jockeys were reported for animal abuse after the crop left marks on the horses during racing. Rather than allowing the situation to escalate into what could have become a huge problem for the sport, a decision was made to simply ban the whip in Sweden. Racing officials in Denmark made the same decision.

“The civil authorities were starting to take action against jockeys and drivers,” Madsen said. “We thought it was time to move on. We wanted to be proactive.”

Not that everything has gone perfectly. Because there was a concern that the jockeys may try to take the reins in their hands and use them to slash at the horses, rules were written that seemed to require that the riders keep their hands on their mount's mane or neck at all times. If that were the case jockeys could not change hands on the reins. The jockeys threatened to strike but we appeased when the wording of the rule was changed.

Otherwise, Madsen said, the jockeys have adapted.

“They have accepted the rules,” he said. “There have been no complaints. We've only had one race in all Sweden where there has been an issue. One rider tapped his horse on the shoulder with the whip and got a one-day suspension. Our jockeys have accepted the rules and are following the rules.”

Madsen said that not only have there not been any safety issues in the races, but that horses seem to be keeping straighter courses and that there have been fewer problems with interference.

“The stewards have experienced less interference so far this year,” he said. “We rarely see dangerous situations or dangerous riding in Scandinavia anymore. On the minor interferences we've seen about 10% less this year compared to 2021, though it would be premature to draw any definite conclusion at this stage.”

When it came to how the bettors would react to races run without whips, the Swedish Horse Racing Authority had reason to believe the handle wouldn't suffer. Prior to the ban being instituted, the Swedish tote surveyed bettors and asked if they had noticed cases where horses are being badly treated within the framework of competitions. Thirty percent answered yes.  Of those 30%, 91% said the reason was due to too hard or too frequent use of the whip.

Madsen said that total handle on Swedish Thoroughbred racing has increased this year.

“We haven't seen any negative impact on the betting,” he said.

Madsen admits that even he once believed that the whip was an essential and necessary part of horse racing.

“It was the culture at the time,” Madsen said. “I was told that the horse responded to the whip and I couldn't see a problem with that. That was more than 20, 30 years ago. We all get more clever over the years. I can see now that Thoroughbred racing can do without the whip. The races are just as exciting as ever. There was a time where people were hitting their children. You would never see that today.”

And his message to other countries where the whip is still allowed?

“There's less interference,” he said. “We've had international jockeys come in and they have not complained. Most importantly, the same trainers still dominate. The same jockeys dominate. There have been no real changes for the stakeholders. In your country, if you took away the whip, the same jockeys, Irad Ortiz Jr., Flavien Prat, they would still be on top. Racing here has shown that taking away the whip is not a problem at all.”

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National Horseracing Museum To Host Anne Ward Exhibition

The Racehorse: Past & Future, the first major exhibition by painter Anne Ward, will run at Newmarket's National Horseracing Museum from Sept. 17-Feb. 19. Showcasing 10 retired racehorses and 10 unnamed foals, some of the paintings are of such stars as Sire De Grugy (Fr), Big Buck's (Fr), Ouija Board (GB), Prince Of Arran (GB), and Oasis Dream (GB).

“Deciding upon a final list of retired racehorses was a gradual process, but I wanted to achieve a balance across several factors–code of racing, gender, distance specialism, plus a variety of colours,” said Ward. “It was also important for each individual not only to be either well-known itself, to have a recognisable achievement or a connection to a famous horse, but to have gone on to a happy and productive phase of life after retirement from racing.”

“The title given to each of the foal studies represents the mood of the painting and the impression that I hope it gives to those who see it, and not the subject's registered name.”

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Bloodlines Presented By No-No Cribbing Collar: A Mid-September Check-In On The Freshman Sire Race

Juvenile champions are an elite subset of the population, and for many years now, Coolmore has made a project of collecting as many of these as possible to stand at its Ashford Stud outside Versailles, Ky.

This has worked well, most notably with champion Uncle Mo (by Indian Charlie), champion and classic winner Lookin at Lucky (Smart Strike), as well as champion and subsequent Triple Crown winner American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile).

Coolmore doesn't catch 'em all, however, and a pair of juvenile champions that went to other studs were responsible for the winners of the juvenile stakes at Churchill Downs over the weekend. The 2008 Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner and champion Midshipman (Unbridled's Song) sired Fun and Feisty, who won the Grade 3 Pocahontas Stakes. The dark bay filly is owned by Lucky Seven Stable and was selected out of the Fasig-Tipton July sale last year by trainer Kenny McPeek for $100,000. The filly has now earned more than a quarter-million.

Midshipman, the most successful stallion son of Unbridled's Song to date, stands at Darley's stallion operation at Jonabell. The Godolphin/Darley combine had acquired the colt shortly before the Breeders' Cup as part of a giant package deal for the broodmares, farm, and racing stock of Robert and Janice McNair, which paid immediate and lasting dividends.

Following Midshipman in 2008, Coolmore acquired five of the next six juvenile champions, excepting only the eminently talented Shared Belief (Candy Ride), who was a gelding. Darley picked up the 2015 juvenile champion Nyquist (Uncle Mo), who subsequently won the 2016 Kentucky Derby. Coolmore bought the 2016 juvenile champion Classic Empire (Pioneerof the Nile), and Hill 'n' Dale stepped into the ring by securing the 2017 champion Good Magic (Curlin).

The latter's first foals are juveniles this year, and he sired the winner of the Churchill Downs companion feature to the Pocahontas, the Iroquois Stakes.

That race featured the odds-on favorite Echo Again (Gun Runner), winner of an impressive maiden special at Saratoga, and the unbeaten Damon's Mound (Girvin), winner of the Sanford Stakes at Saratoga. That pair led much of the race but collapsed in the stretch to finish unplaced as Curly Jack (Good Magic) and Honed (Sharp Azteca) pulled away to finish one-two in the 8.5-furlong Iroquois.

Curly Jack is the second stakes winner (both graded) for freshman sire Good Magic, and Honed is the fourth stakes horse for freshman sire Sharp Azteca (Freud; Three Chimneys), who leads all freshmen by number of winners (18).

At the moment on the first-crop sires list, the two freshmen sires above stand in reverse order to the finish of the Iroquois. Sharp Azteca is in fourth place to Good Magic's fifth, with progeny earnings of $1.03 and $1.01 million.

The freshman leader at the moment is Bolt d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro; Spendthrift), who is narrowly ahead of Army Mule (Friesan Fire; Hill 'n' Dale) $1.24 million to $1.20. The leading freshman by number of stakes winners is Justify (Scat Daddy; Ashford), who has four and earnings of $1.12 million. He's in third place on the freshman list.

With less than a quarter-million dollars separating the top five freshmen sires, this is a competitive and tightly bunched group, and we're only now into the turn for home.

At this point, Sharp Azteca leads with total number of winners (18) from Bolt d'Oro (16), but they are tied for total starters with 52 from crops of 117 and 141.

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Volume matters and not simply the number of starters. Only eight freshmen sires have more than 100 foals in their first crop, and five of those (Bolt d'Oro, Justify, Sharp Azteca, Good Magic, and Mendelssohn) are in the top seven crop leaders at present. Not only are these the most popular young prospects to go to stud for the 2019 breeding season (foals of 2020), but the leaders by number of foals also have more numerical opportunity to hit the long ball that goes over the fence, clears the bases, and makes that lucky stallion the all-star of the game.

The crop leader by number of foals among the 2022 freshmen is the “other” son of Scat Daddy, Mendelssohn, who stands at Ashford, like Justify, and is a half-brother to Into Mischief (Harlan's Holiday) and to champion Beholder (Henny Hughes).

The only two young sires to have broken through against the power of numbers are Army Mule (89 foals; 40 starters; 15 winners) and City of Light (79; 17; 8).

The offspring of these well-intended young sires will continue to make competitive racing this fall, and we have miles to go before we sleep, as Mr. Frost might say.

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