Turf Writer Scheinman Captures MJC Champions Handicapping Tournament

John Scheinman of Baltimore, a two-time Eclipse Award-winning writer, finished with a balance of $1,691.10 to top of field of 131 entrants and capture the Maryland Jockey Club's Champions Handicapping Tournament held Saturday at Laurel Park.

The fall edition of the bi-annual Champions Tournament was hosted in Laurel's refurbished second-floor sports bar. James Staub of Ellicott City, Md. captured the spring event in March with a final bankroll of $3,672.

The tournament was open to players for a fee of $300. In addition to prize money, the top four finishers qualified for automatic berths to the National Handicapping Championship (NHC), Breeders' Cup Betting Challenge (BCBC), or Pegasus World Cup Betting Challenge (PWCBC).

After making a minimum of 10 win, place and/or show wagers on races from Laurel, Gulfstream Park, Santa Anita, Belmont Park at Aqueduct and Keeneland, Scheinman ended with a $51.90 cushion over runner-up Robin Buser and earned $12,000 in prize money.

Given his choice of four tournament berths, Scheinman, author of the novella Bal Harbour Blues, selected the BCBC to be held November 4-5 at Keeneland.

Buser, of Delran, N.J., finished with a bankroll of $1,639.20 to earn $8,000 in prize money and a berth in the NHC, scheduled for March 10-12, 2023 in Las Vegas.

Third place went to Joe Walzog of Nottingham, Md., who finished with a balance of $830 and earned $4,000 and is headed to the PWCBC in January 2023 at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla. Gilson Fontz of Millersville, Md. was fourth with a balance of $821.20 and earned $2,400 and a seat at the NHC.

Rounding out the top 10 finishers were Robert Bandzwolek with a tournament balance of $600.80, William Miller ($541), George Carr ($426), Michael Sweeney ($380), Gregory McBeth ($364.90) and Frank Barnhart ($315). Each player earned $2,400 in prize money.

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WinStar Farm Announces 2023 Stallion Roster, Fees

WinStar Farm has set 2023 stud fees for its stallion roster, headed by Constitution, who will stand for $110,000 S&N, and Speightstown, who will stand for $80,000 S&N for the upcoming breeding season.

The roster will be bolstered further by new arrivals Life Is Good, a multiple Grade 1 winner who will stand for $100,000 S&N and Nashville, the track-record-setting son of Speightstown who will stand for $15,000 S&N.

Stallions will be available for showings at WinStar's Open House, Nov. 7-15, during the Keeneland November Sale.

“We are excited about our roster for 2023, and feel we offer a range of quality horses and value to all breeders,” said Elliott Walden, president, CEO, and racing manager for WinStar Farm. “We will also be offering a limited number of seasons to Life Is Good before the Breeders' Cup Classic.”

Constitution, sire of Belmont Stakes (G1) winner Tiz the Law from his first crop, is among this year's leading sires once again with progeny earnings of more than $9 million. The sire of eight individual runners who have earned 100+ Beyers in 2022—no stallion has more—Constitution is represented by We the People, a romping 10 ¼-length winner of the Peter Pan (G3) with a 103 Beyer; Glass Ceiling, winner of the Distaff Handicap (G3) and Barbara Fritchie (G3); Ridin With Biden, victorious in the Greenwood Cup (G3); and Breakpoint (CHI), winner of the San Juan Capistrano S. (G3).

In addition to the success of his progeny on the racetrack, Constitution has also been well represented in the auction arena this year with in-demand yearlings selling for $1,800,000 and $1,300,000 at the Keeneland September Sale and $1,250,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale. Of the Top 12 yearling colts sold in North America in 2022, three of them are by Constitution.

Perennial leading stallion Speightstown is the sire of 25 Grade 1 winners on every surface from six furlongs to 1 ¼ miles all around the globe—with nine Grade 1 winners in the last three years. He is once again a Top 10 General Sire in 2022 with progeny earnings approaching $10 million and is represented on the racetrack by five-time Graded stakes winner Olympiad, and additional Grade 1 winners Shirl's Speight, winner of the Maker's Mark Mile (G1), and Switzerland, winner of the Dubai Golden Shaheen (G1).

Life Is Good, a four-time Grade 1 winner thus far in his career and among the leading contenders for the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1), will stand his first season at stud in 2023. Life Is Good's highly anticipated arrival at stud follows a sensational racing career that has seen him rattle off Grade 1 victories in the 2021 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1), the $3,000,000 Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) over Horse of the Year Knicks Go, the Whitney (G1) and most recently the Woodward (G1).

Into Mischief's fastest son, Life Is Good has earned eight consecutive triple-digit Beyers in America, topped by a career-best 112—the co-second highest Beyer up to one mile on the main track this year—in winning the John A. Nerud (G2) at Belmont Park in July. Life Is Good tipped his hand early, winning a Del Mar maiden special weight by 9 ½ lengths in his career debut at two, registering a 91 Beyer and earning a TDN Rising Star designation. A winner in nine of 11 starts, Life Is Good has amassed earnings of $4,361,700 for CHC Inc. and WinStar Farm and trainer Todd Pletcher.

Nashville, a track record-setting son of Speightstown, will stand alongside his esteemed sire at WinStar Farm in 2023. Nashville set a new track record at Keeneland over six furlongs on Breeders' Cup Day in 2020—1:07.89. The final clocking was nearly a second faster than subsequent Eclipse Champion Sprinter Whitmore's time of 1:08.61 in winning the Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) that same day.

Improbable, an undefeated Grade 1-winning two-year-old and Eclipse Champion Older Male of 2020 with the consecutive Grade 1 wins in the Awesome Again S. (G1) with a 108 Beyer, the Whitney (G1) with a 106 Beyer, and the Hollywood Gold Cup (G1) with a 105 Beyer, will stand the upcoming season for $25,000 S&N. Improbable, a son of City Zip, welcomed first foals in 2022 and will be represented by first weanlings this fall.

Audible, WinStar's most popular first year-sire ever, having bred more than 400 mares in his first two years at stud, will stand for $25,000 S&N in 2023. The son of Into Mischief was one of the most consistent 3-year-olds of his crop, winning the Florida Derby (G1) and the Holy Bull S. (G2) and finishing third in the Kentucky Derby (G1) to undefeated Triple Crown winner Justify. The No. 2 Freshman Yearling Sire by average, Audible saw his first yearlings light up the board this year, selling for up to $725,000, $675,000, $575,000, etc.

Notably absent from WinStar's roster for the upcoming season is world renowned stallion More Than Ready, who was euthanized in August due to the cumulative effects of old age. His passing marked the end of one of the most remarkable stallion careers in history. The breed-shaping stallion enjoyed record-breaking success and was a Champion Sire in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. He is the No. 1 Sire of Breeders' Cup winners in history with seven wins in the marquee event, accomplished with six different winners of four different races at both sprint and route distances, and he is the only sire to have an Eclipse Award Champion each year from 2017 to 2020.

For more information on WinStar's stallions, please visit the website at WinStarFarm.com. The 2023 roster of stallions and fees for WinStar Farm are as follows:

Stallion S&N Fee
Constitution $110,000
Life Is Good-New $100,000*
Speightstown $80,000
Audible $25,000
Improbable $25,000
Nashville-New $15,000
Always Dreaming $10,000
Global Campaign $10,000
Independence Hall $10,000
Outwork $10,000
Take Charge Indy $10,000
Tom's d'Etat $10,000
Yoshida (JPN) $10,000
Good Samaritan $7,500
Paynter $7,500
Promises Fulfilled $5,000
Tourist TBD

*Stud fee subject to change pending Breeders' Cup results.

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Constitution Leads WinStar ’23 Roster

With Constitution leading the way at $110,000, WinStar Farm has released the 2023 stud fees for its stallion roster. Constitution, the sire of eight individual runners who have earned 100+ Beyers in 2022, has been represented this year by GIII Peter Pan S. winner 'TDN Rising Star' We the People, GIII Distaff H. winner Glass Ceiling, GIII Greenwood Cup S. winner Ridin With Biden and GIII San Juan Capistrano S. winner Breakpoint (Chi). He was also responsible for a pair of seven-figure yearlings at the Keeneland September sale. Constitution stood the 2022 season at $85,000.

WinStar Farm's  roster will be bolstered next year by the addition of multiple Grade I winner and fellow 'Rising Star' Life is Good (Into Mischief), who will stand his first season at $100,000, pending results of the upcoming Breeders' Cup championships.

Also new to the roster in 2023 is track-record setting Nashville (Speightstown), yet another 'Rising Star' who will stand for $15,000. His sire Speightstown will stand for $80,000, down from $90,000 in 2022.

“We are excited about our roster for 2023, and feel we offer a range of quality horses and value to all breeders,” said Elliott Walden, president, CEO, and racing manager for WinStar Farm. “We will also be offering a limited number of seasons to Life Is Good before the Breeders' Cup Classic.”

The WinStar roster also includes: Audible, $25,000; Improbable, $25,000; Always Dreaming, $10,000; Global Campaign, $10,000; Independence Hall, $10,000; Outwork, $10,000; Take Charge Indy, $10,000; Tom's d'Etat, $10,000; Yoshida (Jpn), $10,000; Good Samaritan, $7,500; Paynter, $7,500; Promises Fulfilled, $5,000; and Tourist, TBD.

Stallions will be available for showings at WinStar's Open House, Nov. 7-15, during the Keeneland November Sale.

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‘A Horseman’s Horseman’: Canadian Hall Of Fame Trainer Mike Keogh Retires

It was only fitting that trainer Mike Keogh, sporting a subtle but unmistakable smile, stood close to the Woodbine finish line Oct. 8.

On a day that showcased some of horse racing's top grass horses competing in prestigious events run on a world-renowned turf course, the Canadian Racing Hall of Fame trainer, eyes firmly focused on a 7-year-old dark bay by the name of Wedgewood, watched intently as the horse loaded into the starting gate.

Keogh's final race didn't produce a fairytale finish. Wedgewood, at 18-1, would finish sixth in the Nearctic (G2).

At the end of the race, the 65-year-old Keogh made his way to the main track to greet his horse and jockey Jason Hoyte, wearing the familiar red-and-black striped silks of late owner-breeder Gus Schickedanz.

Even in defeat, the horse embodied a Keogh starter: meticulously prepared, competitive, and resolute to the last stride.

Keogh's journey to that afternoon and those moments was 45 years in the making, one the man of few words had never envisioned taking.

Growing up in Epsom, England, Keogh, the son of respected horseman Norm Keogh, was drawn to horses at an early age. His first racing role came riding jump races at numerous tracks close to his home.

It was a trip to Canada in the mid-1970s to visit his sister and brother-in-law that would cement Keogh's hope of a career in horse racing.

But the pursuit of that goal would come with its share of hurdles.

Turned down for a visa on several occasions, Keogh remained undaunted. His persistence would eventually be rewarded.

During one of his visits to Canada, he found out that trainer J.C. Meyer had a penchant for helping Europeans get into the country. A visit with the future Canadian Racing Hall of Fame inductee opened the door for Keogh.

By the next spring, he was here to stay.

Keogh worked horses for Meyer and then moved on to assist trainer Mike Doyle in Florida at what's now known as Payson Park, before he galloped the great Deputy Minister for John Tammaro.

“Mike came away with us – I think it was my first year of training – to Payson Park to gallop horses and he was just such a natural and did great work, and loved the whole deal,” recalled Doyle. “You could tell he was going to be very, very good if he decided to stay and do it.”

The odds of Keogh's longtime hope of becoming a trainer grew significantly when he worked under the tutelage of another future hall of famer, Roger Attfield.

Taking the reins as Attfield's assistant from 1986-93, Keogh was surrounded by an A-list group of horses, names like Izvestia, With Approval, Carotene, Alywow, and Peteski.

The aspiring trainer had the treasured opportunity to travel with Play the King, Canada's 2008 Horse of the Year, who was enshrined in the country's Racing Hall of Fame two years ago.

“He was a great horse,” lauded Keogh. “Having the chance to be around talent like that allowed you to learn so many things. You soaked all of it up like a sponge.”

It was a meeting with owner and breeder Gustav Schickedanz that would ultimately change both men's lives.

“He was a great man,” said Keogh, who started training for Schickedanz in 1993. “We seemed to click right away. He believed in me, which really helped with my confidence. It also helped that he had great horses for me to train. Like everyone who trains in Canada, I had dreamed of winning the Queen's Plate and we were lucky to do that twice, the first with Woodcarver in 1999.”

There were many other standouts for Schickedanz and Keogh during what would be their 27 years together.

Langfuhr, a handsome homebred son of Danzig, made headlines, several of them, for his connections.

Debuting at 3 on April 22, 1995, the son of Danzighe won that opener and then eight more times over 23 starts, his victories including Grade 1 triumphs in the Vosburgh, Carter and Met Mile. Langfuhr received the Sovereign Award in 1996 as Champion Sprinter and was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2004.

Ten years after they joined forces, Keogh and Schickedanz reached the pinnacle of Canadian racing when Schickedanz homebred Wando swept the Canadian Triple Crown and put his name in the history books.

His stablemate Mobil, also a homebred, would also carve out a highly successful racing life, including a second to Wando in the Queen's Plate.

Nearly equal in talent, the horses, both sired by Langfuhr, couldn't have been any different in personality.

“Wando, he would be the one to go shopping with the ladies,” offered Keogh in 2003, days ahead of the Queen's Plate. “Mobil, he'd be the one to have your back in a bar fight.”

Both were spectacular on the racetrack.

After his nine-length Plate tour de force, Wando won the Prince of Wales at Fort Erie Race Track, and then prepared for the Breeders' Stakes, final jewel in the Canadian Triple Crown.

It wasn't only the demanding 1 ½ miles on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course Wando would have to contend with.

Seven horses, including a trio of Sam-Son silk bearers, stood in his way.

Despite the best efforts of many to deny Wando the rare triple, the striking chestnut and jockey Patrick Husbands persevered, crossing the wire 1 ½-length winners and into the history books.

In the winner's circle, a beaming Schickedanz exclaimed, “He was Wando-ful.”

“He was just a fantastic horse,” said Keogh, of the eye-catching chestnut colt, who passed away of an apparent heart attack in January of 2014. “When you look back and watch his races, you see how huge of a heart he had, just giving everything he had whenever he would run.”

Husbands still sports a big smile when he recalls that amazing run.

“It was unbelievable,” said the champion rider. “Winning the Triple Crown was something I always dreamed about, but to have it come true… I still get emotional about it. Mike, he had the horse perfect for all those races.”

Still, Keogh, admittedly superstitious, was a bundle of nerves from the moment the gates opened on the Plate until the last strides of the Breeders'.

“I was overly superstitious,” he said with a laugh. “I'm also a worrier, so all of the fanfare after the Plate and throughout the Triple Crown was a lot.”

Wando would win two Sovereign Awards, voted Canada's Horse of the Year, and top 3-year-old Colt, for that magical 2003 campaign.

Mobil carved out a celebrated career too, selected Champion Older Male Horse in 2004.

In their time together, Keogh and Schickedanz, inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2020 and 2009, respectively, won over 300 races together to go along with $21-plus million in purse earnings.

Framed photos of their successes adorned the walls of Keogh's office on the Woodbine backstretch.

“Great memories,” said Keogh. “It's always nice to look at those pictures and they take you back to those moments and the great people, too many to list, who I worked with over the years.”

Recollections he was reminded of by the many who came to see him off on a crisp autumn day at the Toronto oval.

It was no surprise, perhaps only to Keogh, that so many people came out, called or texted, on his retirement day.

Kind words were plenty, each compliment as much about the man as it was the horseman.

“That means a lot to me. Everybody wants to be liked and it's just wonderful to hear people say all those nice things, it was a big surprise, to see how many people came out that day. It was very nice to see a lot of friends show up. It was great.”

Not just for Keogh.

Husbands, now a two-time Plate winner with eight Sovereign Awards as Canada's top rider to his name, remembered the first time the two met.

“He was always a class man, so good to me right from the start. He was always a humble man. There is no one that ever said anything bad about him. Working with him and Wando was unbelievable.”

Jesse Campbell, who also enjoyed great success riding for Keogh, sent a video message from his home in Illinois.

“It was a pleasure riding for Mike. He treats his horses like they were family, and that's how he treated me. I think the one thing I could say is that you are the definition of a horseman's horseman. When you led a horse over, it didn't matter the situation, I always knew that we had a chance, and that horse was being led over 100 percent.”

A sentiment echoed by both Attfield, and Lauri Kenny, longtime farm manager for Schickedanz.

“Mike is a very, very good friend and I thank him for everything he's done for me and the Schickedanz family over the years,” said Kenny.

“You were the best I ever had, no question about it,” added Attfield with a smile. “We had a great rapport. We had some great times together, didn't we? A lot of laughs and a lot of hard work.”

Both of which were staples throughout Keogh's training life.

The many successes would not have been, he noted, if it wasn't for his wife, Lou.

“She's been the backbone. I know for sure I wouldn't have been able to run my own business without Lou. She's taken care of everything behind the scenes. I suppose her unofficial title would be CEO of the barn. She came into the barn with me every day. She was a troubleshooter. If someone didn't show up, she'd be in the stalls, walking hots, going over with runners. We worked together for 30 years, and it was an amazing partnership.”

Not just on the racetrack.

When Keogh was diagnosed with prostate cancer a few years ago, Lou, just as she did at her husband's stable, was right by his side.

“After I got sick, she took care of me. I don't think I would have made it without her. Things are pretty good at the moment. My numbers are pretty good. The main reason I'm retiring is that I don't have the energy for it. I hardly come back to the races in the afternoon once I'm done in the morning. I'm knackered. But I did the radiation and that really helped with my numbers. But it is in my bones. They can't cure that, but as long as it stays quiet, I'm good.”

One of many things that came to mind after an emotionally draining last day as a trainer.

“We've had a lot of fun over the years,” Keogh said. “I've always had a great rapport with the fans, especially with Wando. I've never seen as many fans as I did on Breeders' day, cheering for him when he loaded into the gate. It was amazing and a reminder of how many nice horses I was fortunate enough to be part of. Even the ones that didn't have ability, they were still nice to be around. They become family. Horses, they have so much character. They're special.”

Just like Keogh.

Regrets are few.

“I wanted to run a horse in Epsom, my hometown. We nearly did it with Last Answer, but it just didn't work out.”

And now, not far removed from that final race, Keogh will embark on a new beginning, a less stressful life with more time for a low-key existence, and the odd adventure or two.

“Lou and I want to do a little bit of travelling, to see Canada in a way we never have had the chance to. When you work in horse racing seven days a week, you don't get to do anything, really. I've been to a lot of places in North America, but it's been in the back of a horse van or flying.”

When the 2023 Woodbine Thoroughbred season gets out of the gates, Keogh will once again be trackside, but not anywhere near the number of times he was during his training days.

On those occasions, he will likely find his way to his preferred spot on the apron, yards from the finish line, close enough to get an up-close view of what he will miss the most.

“There are lots of things you will feel nostalgic for. But I will always feel a connection to the horses. Whether they won or lost, every single one was like family to me. They've given me a lifetime of happiness I could never measure. I was blessed to have had so many nice horses. I won't be the one sending them over any more, but I'll still love watching them. That won't ever change.”

Nor will the man who had a knack for making a great first impression and leaving a lasting one.

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