Collusion Illusion and Tamarkuz to Stand at Ballcroy Bloodstock for 2023

GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner Tamarkuz (Speightstown–Without You Babe, by Lemon Drop Kid) and GISW Collusion Illusion (Twirling Candy–Natalie Grace, by First Dude) will stand at Ballcroy Bloodstock in Ontario for 2023.

Collusion Illusion captured five of 13 races with three of those wins coming in graded events. His career high was a win in the GI Bing Crosby S. and he earned over $480,000. He will stand for $6,000.

“Collusion Illusion is an exciting stallion prospect, and we are thrilled to have him standing in Ontario,” said Ballycroy Director of Bloodstock Michaela Kemp. “He is a great addition to our stallion roster, and we look forward to filling his first book of mares this season.”

Tamarkuz, who is in his third year at stud, won eight of 20 races and earned over $1.8 million. He concluded his career with a victory in the 2016 BC Dirt Mile and will stand for $4,000.

“Tamarkuz has been well supported in Kentucky by Shadwell and their mares,” said Kemp. “We are looking forward to seeing his progeny progress more on the track with time as the Speightstowns do.”

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TAKE2 Champion Juniors Agree: Thoroughbreds Make for Better Riders

Fourteen-year-old Harper Tjardes and 17-year-old Cyanea Robine have a lot in common. Both are talented horsewomen who captured the 2022 TAKE2 Junior Rider Award, presented by TCA, in their respective divisions by impressive margins. The two also believe that if you want to elevate your riding skills, get a Thoroughbred.

“He's made me so brave,” Tjardes said of her TAKE2 partner, King of Hearts, who also happens to be 14. “He'd do anything for me, and with him, I've done things I never thought I could do.”

From near Omaha, Nebraska, Tjardes topped the TAKE2 Junior Rider Hunter standings with 447.5 points. Robine led the TAKE2 Junior Rider Jumpers with 431.5 points.

Sponsored by the TAKE2 Second Career Thoroughbred Program Inc. and Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA), the TAKE2 High-Score Junior Rider Award was created for the 2018 season to recognize the junior riders competing on Thoroughbreds in nationwide TAKE2-affiliated Hunter and Jumper classes. Champions receive trophies for their accomplishments, and the top five junior riders in each division earn TAKE2/TCA saddle pads. In addition, all junior riders who are enrolled for the award and compete in TAKE2 classes are eligible for a drawing for a $1,000 scholarship grant from TAKE2. The grant can be used to pay tuition and expenses for higher education anywhere in the U.S. Individuals are eligible as TAKE2 Junior Riders until the end of the TAKE2 season in which they reach the age of 18. There is no fee to enroll.

From an equestrian family, Tjardes had taken a hiatus from riding, then, she said, “I really fell love in with it all over again.” She began jumping a Quarter Horse-Welsh mixed-breed pony before moving to a new barn to gain experience with hunters and equitation.

King of Hearts is her first Thoroughbred. The New Mexico-bred, racing as Dom's Trick, made 62 starts primarily in the Southwestern United States, including appearances at Fonner Park in Tjardes' home state. He stole his rider's heart when she began riding him two years ago.

“He's amazing,” said Tjardes. “He taught me how to ride really well and do bigger shows.”

On the lookout for a bigger horse so that she could take bigger jumps, Tjardes initially thought “Vegas,” as she calls him, was a Warmblood.

“My mom is the one who told me that he's a Thoroughbred,” she said. “He raced until he was eight years old, and he transitioned really well to hunters. It's crazy, because in racing the horses go so fast, and hunters go slow.”

Her mother Michelle grew up riding Thoroughbreds, including while she was eight months pregnant with Harper.

“They are such a great breed,” she said. “They're versatile, they're brave, and they're competitive. Unfortunately, in the competition world in the central Midwest, some judges have a bias towards Warmbloods, despite all the amazing characteristics of a Thoroughbred.”

One of those characteristics is the ability to adapt. It was a long ride from Nebraska for last month's TAKE2 Finals at the Kentucky National Horse Show, but that didn't faze Vegas.

“We hauled him 13 hours to Kentucky, and the next morning, he tooled around two arenas that he'd never been in, and he just took it all in like the champ that he is,” Michelle said.

Competing against adults and 20 rivals in the TAKE2 Hunter Final, Tjardes and King of Hearts finished fifth.

Robine and her horse Riley faced 12 rivals in the TAKE2 Jumper Final and beat them all, winning the event for a second straight year. Like Tjardes, Robine praised her horse for what he's taught her.

“If while we're riding I don't make the right decisions,” she said, “he'll be, 'OK, I'm going to kind of take over and do this for you.' He has a really good heart, and he wants to please.”

Riley, whose Jockey Club name is Pic Me First, hadn't had a regular rider for some time before Robine teamed up with him, so she had to work a little bit to gain his trust.

“Once he trusted me,” she said, “it made a huge difference. He saves me a lot from making mistakes.”

Unlike Vegas, who transitioned from fast track work to a slower pace for Tjardes, Riley is able to use his speed in the jumping ring.

“He's very, very quick,” said Robine, “and I love going fast. We always have a blast in the show ring.”

She had initially gotten involved with Thoroughbreds because they fit more easily into her budget, and she appreciates that the TAKE2 program offers opportunities to earn the kind of prize money available at bigger shows. It was during her triumphant appearance at the 2021 TAKE2 Finals that Robine was encouraged by TAKE2 Executive Director Andy Belfiore to sign up for the TAKE2 Junior Rider Award.

“I didn't think I would win,” she said. “It's really crazy to me, and I'm very, very happy.”

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OwnerView Accepting Nominations For ‘New Owner Of The Year’ Award

OwnerView announced Thursday that it is accepting nominations for the 2022 New Owner of the Year Award, sponsored by 1/ST RACING, which honors a new Thoroughbred owner who has been successful in the sport and has had a positive impact on the industry.

Nominees for the New Owner of the Year Award must have made their first start as a Thoroughbred owner in the past four years (2019), had an ownership stake in a horse at the time it won a stakes race in the past 12 months, and had a verifiable owner license in 2022. Thoroughbred performance as well as a nominee's promotion of the sport will be considered.

Anyone, including current owners, can nominate an owner who meets the criteria for the award. A selection committee that includes industry personnel and established owners will choose the winner.

To submit a nomination, please contact Gary Falter for a nomination form at (859) 224-2803 or gfalter@jockeyclub.com. The deadline to receive nominations is November 6.

The New Owner of the Year Award has been previously presented to Boat Racing, MyRacehorse, Larry Best, the Churchill Downs Racing Club, Charles and Susan Chu, Sol Kumin, and LNJ Foxwoods.

OwnerView is a joint effort spearheaded by The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association to encourage ownership of Thoroughbreds and provide accurate information on aspects of ownership such as trainers, public racing syndicates, the process of purchasing and owning a Thoroughbred, racehorse retirement, and owner licensing.

The need for a central resource to encourage Thoroughbred ownership was identified in the comprehensive economic study of the sport that was commissioned by The Jockey Club and conducted by McKinsey & Company in 2011. The OwnerView site was launched in May 2012.

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Nick Luck Joins the TDN Writers’ Room, Talks BC European Contingent

The Green Group Guest of the Week on the latest edition of the TDN Writers' Room podcast presented by Keeneland, commentator Nick Luck, who works both sides of the Atlantic, was asked what are the best storylines out of Europe when it comes to this year's Breeders' Cup. With a deep and talented group of shippers coming to Keeneland, there was no shortage of answers, starting with the story of Highfield Princess (Fr) (Night of Thunder {Ire}).

“I think Highfield Princess is right up there as one of the great storylines,” Luck said of the Europen sprinting star who will contest the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.  “She's in the Turf Sprint against Golden Pal, so this is one of those races where you can genuinely say the best American in his or her division is facing the best European in his or her division, both with brazen speed. That sets up as a perfect clash. You have the Coolmore ownership on one hand with Golden Pal against the slightly more blue collar origins on the other. It's got everything that a Breeders Cup race should have.”

Then there's jockey Hollie Doyle. She could have two favorites in Nashwa (GB) (Frankel {GB}) in the GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf and The Platinum Queen (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint.

“Hollie Doyle is the most successful female jockey that's ever been in Europe,” Luck said. “She's a ground-breaker, someone who's really threatened to shatter the glass ceiling more than any other female rider has before. She's got meaningful chances with The Platinum Queen and Nashwa in the in the Breeders Cup Filly & Mare Turf, and that's a race that will test her a little bit more against some of the best American turf riders. So we'll see what she's made of tactically there.”

Trainer Charlie Appleby will be well represented with a group led by Modern Games (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), the likely favorite in the Breeders' Cup Mile. Appleby is 14-for-28 in North America since 2021, including wins with Modern Games, Space Blues (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) and Yibir (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) in last year's Breeders' Cup. He is making it look easy.

“If you have the depth of talent that he has, obviously, that makes it easier,” Luck said. “But there have been plenty of high-profile trainers who've had the patronage of high-profile owners before who haven't done as well as him. Even Aidan O'Brien, who has a great record in the United States, pales by comparison when you look at strike rates. One of the things that motivates Appleby most is finding the right opportunities for his horses. And if he has a whole bunch of Grade I or Grade II horses finding where they fit best. He likes to use the international calendar to exploit that. If he has three dozen beautifully bred horses by Dubawi, he knows he can't target them all at the British classics. They'll find their natural metier running in those turf races in the United States. He's just exploited that to a tee. Then he gets them to get confident, then they get better still.

Elsewhere on the show, panelists Randy Moss, Zoe Cadman and Bill Finley took a look back at the stunning defeat suffered by Baaeed (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in the GI Champion S. at Ascot and a look ahead at the prospective fields for the GI Breeders' Cup Classic and the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff. The podcast, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, XBTV, The Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, Three Chimneys, West Point Thoroughbreds and Legacy Bloodstock, also included a discussion of what's next for Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux, whose return is unclear after he recently served a 60-day suspension. The writers jumped on the opportunity to implore other states beyond Kentucky to give the bettors a break and revert to penny breakage, but didn't hold out much hope that it would happen. The penny breakage system in Kentucky has meant an additional $1.1 million has been returned to bettors since the system was implemented at the start of the Ellis Park meet.

Click here to watch the podcast and here to listen.

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