Tapwrit Colt Dazzles In ‘TDN Rising Star’ Debut

Sent away at a well-backed 7-2 in arguably the toughest and deepest 2-year-old maiden of the fall meet at Keeneland Friday afternoon, Spendthrift Farm and Frank Fletcher Racing Operation's Victory Formation (c, 2, Tapwrit–Smart N Soft, by Smart Strike) led past every pole to become the 10th individual winner and the first 'TDN Rising Star' for his Gainesway-based freshman sire (by Tapit).

Hustled away from gate three by Luis Saez, Victory Formation headed off his rivals as the field linked up with the track proper and got the opening quarter in a solid :23.03 while chased to his inside by favored Communication Memo (Bolt d'Oro) and by Release Mccraken (McCraken) deeper out. Galloping in hand on the turn, the athletic bay pinched a break when asked to lengthen entering the stretch and kicked readily clear through the final eighth of a mile to take it by a space. Release Mccraken was second ahead of Communication Memo.

Weyhill Road (Quality Road), the well-related $1.6-million Keeneland September graduate, was headstrong and checked in traffic down the backstretch, came with an inside run on the turn and flattened out a bit in the final furlong to finish fourth in an effort that can certainly be built upon. Baseline Beater (Flatter) was bothered badly by Schoolmaster (Ger) (Helmet {Aus}) soon after the break, but closed his final quarter in a race-fastest :24.65 to check in a promising fifth.

Gainesway, who stands Classic winner Tapwrit alongside his own extraordinary sire, purchased the winner's dam for $140,000 in foal to Uncle Mo at the 2015 Keeneland November Sale and elected to retain the mare when offered carrying the colt that would become Victory Formation on a bid of $47,000 at KEENOV in 2019.

Victory Formation found his way back into the Keeneland sales pavilion 12 months later, hammering to Black Cat Stable for $100,000, the priciest of 18 foals by Tapwrit to sell in 2020. Resold to Gina Fennell for $150,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton July Sale, the Mar. 3 foal fetched $340,000 at this year's Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale after breezing a quarter-mile in :21 2/5 (see below).

A half-brother to recent GI Rodeo Drive S. third Bellamore (Empire Maker, $184,840), Victory Formation is a grandson of late James Tafel's GSW Softly, while the deeper female family includes GSW/MGISP Til Forbid (Temperence Hill) and her Grade III-winning daughter Scoop (Gone West). Smart N Soft is the dam of a yearling Karakontie (Jpn) filly that was purchased by RGS Enterprises for $130,000 at last month's Keeneland September Sale and a weanling filly by Practical Joke. She was most recently covered by Raging Bull (Fr).

 

 

7th-Keeneland, $99,588, Msw, 10-21, 2yo, 6 1/2f, 1:17.94, ft, 4 3/4 lengths.
VICTORY FORMATION, c, 2, by Tapwrit
1st Dam: Smart N Soft, by Smart Strike
2nd Dam: Softly, by Binalong
3rd Dam: Coragil, by Metfield
Sales history: $100,000 Wlg '20 KEENOV; $150,000 Ylg '21 FTKJUL; $340,000 2yo '22 EASMAY. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $56,575.
Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
O-Spendthrift Farm LLC & Frank Fletcher Racing Operations Inc; B-Gainesway Thoroughbreds Ltd (KY); T-Brad H Cox.

 

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GISW Drain the Clock To Stand At Gainesway In 2023

Drain the Clock (Maclean's Music-Manki, by Arch), a G1-winning sprinter will enter stud at Gainesway for the 2023 breeding season, the farm announced Oct. 21.

The 4-year-old broke his maiden by six lengths as a juvenile at Gulfstream Park and won four of his first five starts going into his 3-year-old season, culminating with a 6 1/4-length score in the GIII Swale S. He also added a victory in the GIII Bay Shore S. before defeating Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) in the GI Woody Stephens S. at Belmont Park. Drain the Clock retired with record of 15-7-3-0 and earnings of $698,000.

“Drain the Clock is an imposing physical with tremendous speed who fits the mold of what breeders are looking for,” said Gainesway's newly appointed Stallion Director Ryan Norton. “That is why we are excited to offer Share The Upside breeding rights in this exciting new stallion.”

Drain the Clock will stand for $10,000 in 2023. Please contact Ryan Norton for details regarding how to earn your breeding right through Gainesway's Share the Upside program.

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‘Tireless Champion For The Horses,’ Southern California Trainer Howard Zucker Dies

Veteran trainer Howard Zucker, a well-respected Southern California horseman with a small barn, passed away Thursday at USC Keck Hospital in Los Angeles at age 74.  Zucker, who had not been feeling well over the summer, had undergone a heart procedure last week and had apparently struggled to recover post-surgery.

Based in New York prior to coming to Southern California circa 1980, Zucker trained for a brief time for Lakers owner Jerry Buss.  Born May 20, 1948, Zucker saddled his last winner on July 24, as his talented 3-year-old filly Gracelund Gray won the 11th race at Del Mar.

Affable and a dedicated Yankees fan, Zucker was also a staunch advocate for the horse, evidenced by his multiple leadership roles with California Retirement Management Account (CARMA).  Zucker joined the board of directors of CARMA in May 2009 and served in many leadership positions including as CARMA president from 2016-'19.

“I am devastated by the news of Howard's passing yesterday,” said Lucinda Lovitt, CARMA executive director.  “He was a tireless champion for the horses and believed so strongly in CARMA's mission, I just can't imagine our board without him.  I know I speak for the entire CARMA Board of Directors when I say he will be greatly, greatly missed.”

Zucker's top horse was Crafty C.T., who won the Grade 2 San Rafael Stakes with Eddie Delahoussaye up on March 2, 2001, and was subsequently second to Point Given in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby.

By Crafty Prospector, Crafty C.T. was owned by Carl Grether and retired with earnings of $832,652 from an overall mark of 18-4-5-5.

Other graded stakes winners conditioned by Zucker were Well Monied, Queen Ofthe Catsle, and Madame Pietra.

Zucker had 2,223 career starts as a trainer and 246 wins.

Howard Zucker is survived by his wife Lorraine.  Memorial services are undetermined at this time.

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From The Brink Of Death To The Thoroughbred Makeover, Jaguar Ridge Is Everything To His Rider

Five months ago, Kaitlynn Buchholz didn't know if her recently-retired Thoroughbred Jaguar Ridge was going to survive the week.

Buchholz, who is based at her Ha'Penny Farms in Aurora, Mo., got a call early one morning that her Thoroughbred Makeover hopeful had come in from the field bleeding profusely from one foot. No one ever figured out quite how, but he had managed to slice his heel bulb with a cut that wrapped around to the inside of his hoof and went as deep as the coffin joint.

It was a chaotic scene, and since he'd incurred the injury overnight, it was impossible to know how much blood the gelding had lost already. Amazingly though, Jaguar Ridge (fondly known as “Jaggy”) was sound on the limb and nonplussed by the hubbub. Though he probably hadn't been through anything quite so dramatic before, Jaggy had by that point seen a lot in life – he is 14 years old and retired after 99 starts, mostly in his native Illinois. Buchholz said it's not in his nature to fret much, which probably helped him in this scenario.

Buccholz loaded Jaggy onto her trailer and rushed him to Pine Ridge Equine Hospital in Glenpool, Okla., which was the closest facility that could accommodate his emergency.

“Pine Ridge was like, 'When can you get here?' and I said, 'I'm three hours away,' and they said, 'Well, drive fast,'” she said. “I'm standing there in the surgery room and the surgeon sticks his finger in the wound and says, 'This is really bad. He said he'd seen horses with this kind of injury before and none of them had lived, and did we want to euthanize him?

“I was like, 'No. Whatever it takes.'”

It took two surgeries and ten days of hospitalization. Since a joint infection was a major risk, surgeon Dr. Andrew McClain opted not to close the wound up immediately to avoid trapping an infection inside the joint. Instead, he put a catheter into the wound and flushed it with corticosteroids for five days before performing a final lavage and closing it up.

McClain warned Buchholz that the outcome was anything but certain; the horse would need a long rehabilitation and even after that, they'd be lucky if he was pasture sound. If there were any complications at all, Buccholz said, she was told it would be too much for the horse to overcome. At the first sign of lameness during those early weeks, she was prepared to accept that she may have to euthanize.

To everyone's surprise, Jaggy never took an off step. At his recheck a few weeks after the injury, veterinarians asked Buchholz what her ambitions were for the horse. She said she'd do anything he was capable of doing. They advised she give him two months off, start him under saddle, and see how far they could get. She got on for her first ride post-injury in early August.

“He was literally a saint,” she said. “I didn't lunge him, I just got on and he was like, 'Cool, what do you want to do now?'”

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The Makeover had been a longtime ambition for Buchholz. She has come to the event as a spectator since 2019, dreaming of the day she could bring a horse herself. Buchholz acquired Jaguar Ridge privately after he had proven the wrong match for a younger rider. Most of her barn is off-track Thoroughbreds.

“I took him to one show before here,” she said. “He's taken it all in stride. He's never told me no. I've always said if anything feels off or weird with him, we'll back off; we'll stick to dressage, do whatever he needs. He's game for whatever I want. He's literally perfect. I was supposed to sell him, and I'm not going to. He's mine forever.”

When Buchholz and Jaguar Ridge arrived in Lexington, she guessed they had completed maybe 20 rides together since he resumed under-saddle work in August. Makeover competitors could begin the retraining process formally at the start of the year, so while many had ten months of consistent work going into the event, Jaguar Ridge had two. Still, he stood quietly in between his flat and jumping portions of the show hunter event, with one leg cocked and his eyes slowly closing in the autumn sunshine, as if he'd done it all before.

They had their own fan club following them to competition in both the show hunters and dressage – Buchholz had family that flew in from out of state, a client that made the ten-hour drive from Missouri to help her on the grounds.

 

“We have the best support group ever,” she said. “This is the dream team. And the dream horse.”

Though they finished out of the top ten in both their disciplines, Buchholz said she was proud of their effort. For many competitors, the simple act of completing ten months of retraining and the subsequent competition is more than enough of a reward. And for Jaggy and Buchholz, it's just the beginning.

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