Stunning Rose Wins Shuka Sho, Denies Stars On Earth Japan’s Filly Triple Crown

Third choice Stunning Rose, second in her previous Grade 1 attempt in the Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks), put a stop to Stars on Earth's bid to secure Japan's Triple Crown for fillies in the Shuka Sho (G1) Sunday at Hanshin.

Stars on Earth was aiming to become the seventh filly Triple Crown winner in her autumn comeback after recovering from chip fractures in both forelegs.

Debuting in last June as a 2-year-old, Sunday Racing Co.'s Stunning Rose, a King Kamehameha filly, broke her maiden in her second career start but was third at best in her following three graded stakes starts.

Two wins in her 3-year-old debut, the Kobushi Sho and the Flower Cup (G3), the latter becoming her first graded victory, was followed by a runner-up effort in the Japanese Oaks and another graded victory in the Shion Stakes (G3) before registering her first Grade 1 title Sunday.

Trainer Tomokazu Takano scored his second Shuka Sho victory since winning with Shonan in 2014 and fourth JRA Grade 1 title while Ryusei Sakai who made his jockey debut in 2016 landed his first career Grade 1 victory in the race and 10th graded win overall.

Stunning Rose broke sharply and positioned nicely behind the leaders and two-wide in fourth along the backstretch. Making headway 600 meters out, she shifted out slightly entering the short stretch and wasted no time pinning Art House and Sound Vivace in the stretch while holding off a fast-closing Namur and Stars on Earth to a half-length victory.

Stunning Rose covered the approximate 1 1/4 miles on good to firm turf in 1:58.06.

“I was able to assess the filly's maneuverability the last time I rode her and I was able to position her near Art House during the trip,” Sakai said. “Her response at the straight was way much better than her last start and although I was aware of the horses coming strongly from behind, I felt her power under me would carry us to the wire in front.”

Namur was rated in midpack, made headway along the outside with 600 meters to run, circled wide into the homestretch, and showed a good turn of speed while having to make up ground to finish second.

Race favorite Stars on Earth missed a beat coming out of the gate, was pinched back and had to race near the rear up to the final corner where the Duramente filly split horses and get into contention inside the final furlong. While displaying the fastest finishing speed, she was short of reaching the top two, finishing a nose behind Namur, in her failed bid for Triple Crown glory.

The post Stunning Rose Wins Shuka Sho, Denies Stars On Earth Japan’s Filly Triple Crown appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

The Week in Review: Small-Circuit State-Breds Spark Underdog BC Appeal

The Breeders' Cup is always a bit more interesting when underdog horses from smaller circuits are in the mix, and both Slammed (Marking) and Tyler's Tribe (Sharp Azteca) have the potential to bring outsized attention to their respective breeding programs in New Mexico and Iowa when they run in the Nov. 4 and 5 championships.

In the entire history of the Breeders' Cup dating to 1984–out of a pool of 4,344 horses–those two states have accounted for just one state-bred starter each.

Slammed will represent New Mexico, and you could say that she arguably has the better chance in her race, the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint. After breaking out at Del Mar this summer, she's more proven at the national level, and she also owns a recent sharp win over the Keeneland surface, having earned a Breeders' Cup berth with an Oct. 8 GII Thoroughbred Club of America S. victory.

But figuratively, Slammed has to outrun the oddball specter that lingers from the only other Land of Enchantment-bred to give the Breeders' Cup a go: Ricks Natural Star, whose start in the GI Turf in 1996 rates as one of the most captivatingly bizarre happenstances in the history of the series.

As Andrew Beyer wrote in his Washington Post preview of that year's championships, “On a morning when the world's best horses were entered for Saturday's Breeders' Cup, the main object of attention at Woodbine Racetrack was a hopeless 7-year-old from New Mexico…. In the view of many at Woodbine, [Ricks Natural Star] is making a mockery of the sport's biggest event. To others, this quixotic venture epitomizes the romance of the game.”

When the gelding's offbeat owner and trainer, William Livingston, took out a loan and submitted a surprise $40,000 entry to enter his one and only racehorse against the planet's top turfers, Breeders' Cup officials were both appalled and perplexed. This was the era prior to the current stricter qualifying standards and more enlightened veterinary oversight, and to say the entry was off their radar would have been an understatement: Ricks Natural Star hadn't raced in over a year and hadn't won a race in three years, since besting $3,500 claimers on the dirt at Sunland Park.

Livingston, a veterinarian from New Mexico who claimed to treat everything from “parakeets to elephants,” had only gotten his training license just prior to the Breeders' Cup, and he told the media that he had conditioned Ricks Natural Star by driving alongside him on a ranch in a pickup truck.

Livingston then drove the gelding to Canada in a one-horse trailer, keeping his Turf entrant in a makeshift pen in the parking lots of motels when he stopped for the night. Informed by Breeders' Cup officials along the way that Ricks Natural Star lacked a required published workout that would preclude him from starting, Livingston made a side trip to Remington Park in Oklahoma so the gelding could stretch his legs in a leisurely six furlongs in 1:21.46.

There were border-crossing difficulties getting into Canada and Livingston arrived without proper tack and equipment, yet he delighted in showing off Ricks Natural Star, even allowing onlookers to climb atop the gelding's back for photo opportunities. This was the Breeders' Cup that would feature the mighty Cigar's final race (he'd finish third in the GI Classic), but all of the pre-event attention was riveted on Ricks Natural Star, with Livingston insisting he would win the Turf.

Local jockey Lisa McFarland was recruited (or perhaps drew the short straw) from the local riding colony to pilot Ricks Natural Star, and if her strategy was just to let him run freely then get out of the way of everyone else, she executed it with precision. Far underlaid in the betting at 56-1, the popular gelding forced the pace for a half-mile then was eased back through the field, distanced well behind winner Pilsudski (Ire).

Ricks Natural Star made one more start a couple months later in New Mexico for a $7,500 tag (sixth, with the chart caller's comment “showed nothing”), but was claimed out of that race by new connections solely for the purpose of retiring him.

Conversely, the unbeaten 2-year-old Iowa-bred Tyler's Tribe, who has never been headed while winning five dirt races by an aggregate 59 3/4 lengths, is on target for the GI Juvenile Turf Sprint.

Tyler's Tribe will bring a little more “undefeated appeal” into his Breeders' Cup appearance (his connections are opting for first-time turf rather than stretching out to two turns against what looms as a deep GI Juvenile field on dirt). But his Iowa roots don't come with any oddball back story like his New Mexico counterpart. The only previous Iowa-bred in the Breeders' Cup was Topper T (Bellamy Road), who ran eighth in the 2018 GI Juvenile.

End Zone Athletics Hits 200 Wins

With a pair of victories at Remington on Saturday night, End Zone Athletics, the stable name for horses owned by trainer Karl Broberg, quietly hit the 200-victory mark for the year–again.

End Zone, which operates at numerous tracks throughout the South and Midwest, is well on its way to leading the continent for wins as an owner, as it has every year since 2016.

Save for the pandemic-altered 2020, when Broberg's outfit won “only” 165 races, End Zone has now cracked the 200-win mark every season since 2017.

Even more impressively, consider for perspective that during that entire time frame, only one other owner has reached 200 victories in a single season (Loooch Racing Stables in 2018).

In the North American trainer standings, Broberg is currently second on the year for victories. He was the continent's winningest trainer by that metric between 2014-19, and was second in wins in 2013, 2020 and 2021.

No Walk in the Park for 'Beverly'

Beverly Park (Munnings) came a neck shy of winning his 12th race of the year on Saturday at Keeneland. But the third-place effort might have been gutsier than any of the 11 victories racked up so far this year by North America's winningest horse for 2022.

Facing $20,000 starter-allowance company for the second straight time after feasting primarily on $5,000 starter-allowance foes during the earlier part of the season, the 5-year-old forced the issue under jockey Rafael Bejarano while widest in a four-way speed duel, put away those three rivals by the quarter pole, led until the eighth pole, then couldn't withstand a pick-up-the-pieces late rally from a fresh closer.

Beverly Park, who races for owner/trainer Norman Lynn Cash (Built Wright Stables), still has a three-victory cushion over his next closest competitor, Exit Right (Effinex), who ran sixth and last in a $5,000 starter/optional claimer at Delaware Park on Friday.

No North American Thoroughbred has won more than 12 races in an entire calendar year since 2011.

The post The Week in Review: Small-Circuit State-Breds Spark Underdog BC Appeal appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Ron Magers Reflects On His Decades In Racing And Breeding

“It all happened only because my wife, Elise, is very careful about where she walks…especially around horses.”

A Chicago-area veteran and established local TV news anchor, Ron Magers knows a good story when he hears one. It was Gulfstream Park in the spring of 1990 when Ron, accompanied by his wife, Elise, were making their way out of the paddock on their way to the airport at the end of the day's races. When something shiny in the dirt caught Elise's eye, she bent and scooped up what was an unassuming and fake-appearing diamond tennis bracelet. In a hurry to make their flight back to Chicago, the pair decided to figure out the identity of the missing bracelet's owner the next day.

“The next morning in Chicago, we were closing on a real estate purchase,” Magers said. “Elise pulled a pen out of her purse and the bracelet was caught on the clip. We told our attorney about the find and he suggested we start by getting it appraised to see if it is real.”

A local jeweler examined the piece and determined that not only were the stones real, but that they were of high quality and worth quite a bit of money. Ron's attorney made a quick phone call back to Gulfstream Park to inform them of the found item of value and, within a couple of days, heard back from a man in California whose wife had lost her bracelet while visiting Gulfstream.

“It turns out that the California man knew Chicago jeweler Lester Lampert, [so] we took the bracelet to Lampert who had it returned to the owners in California. The owner had offered a reward so we gave him the name of a Chicago charity we supported and suggested he send the reward as a donation.”

A story with a happy ending. But, little did Magers know, his story was just beginning.

“Another attorney, Howard Feinstein, called me [later] to say that he knew our attorney and had heard about the bracelet story. He had also been told of our love of horse racing and that we were thinking about buying a racehorse,” Mager said.

From humble beginnings, a partnership was formed.

“[Howard asked], did I have $10,000 that I'd be willing to throw out the window in hopes of having some fun and learning about racing? That's the way he [Howard] approached things. He also joked that anyone dumb enough to return that bracelet was the kind of person that he wanted to take advantage of. [I liked that], Howard was fun.”

As the pair settled into their partnership, Ron's love for the sport only grew and by the summer of 1991, he was ready to buy a horse on his own.

“Trainer Bob Voelkner turned down several horses I proposed claiming,” Magers said. “He finally agreed to put in a claim for a filly named Lemhi Go who was running for a tag of $16,000.”

Lemhi Go (Lemhi Gold), a 3-year-old Virginia-bred, won the race and there were four other claims put in for her besides Magers's. One winning shake of the dice later, Ron Magers was now the owner of his own racehorse.

And what a horse she would go on to become. Racing under the aptly named Diamond Stable, Lemhi Go picked up wins in the GIII Arlington Matron H. and the GII La Prevoyante H. before retiring with a record of 41-12-5-6 and earnings of over $330,000

“When her racing career was over, we sent her to Needham/Betz Farm in Kentucky to be sold as a potential broodmare,” Magers remembered. “That choice came at the urging of longtime horseman, Rob Marcocchio, who had done business before with that farm.”

Thankfully for Magers, he was talked out of the decision to sell.

“A few weeks later, the farm owner, Bill Betz, called me to say he didn't want to see this mare sold. I told him I knew nothing about the breeding business and wasn't sure it was for me. His proposal was to have the mare appraised, the farm would buy half, and we would be equal partners sharing the same risk while I would learn about breeding.”

In what would prove to be a wise choice, Magers kept Lemhi Go and bred her that first year to GISW Gone West. The resulting filly, named Triple Treasure, sold for $650,000 as a yearling. Magers retained Lemhi Go's second foal, a filly by MGISW Summer Squall, before finally selling Lemhi Go, in foal to 3-year-old champion colt and GI Kentucky Derby winner Unbridled, in the 1996 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale for $400,000. That Summer Squall filly, later named Temporada, would go on to produce a Kentucky Derby contender in 2016 GII Xpressbet.com Fountain of Youth S. winner Zulu (Bernardini).

“Elise and I continued to breed a band of mares with Needham Betz and other partners for more than 25 years,” said Magers. “We had great success along the way and one of our last crops of yearlings included champion 2-year-old filly Echo Zulu (Gun Runner).”

Echo Zulu wins the GI NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies | Eclipse Sportswire

As Magers prepares to step away from the racing and breeding industry after over 30 years, he couldn't help but go back to where the whole story started.

“We stepped away from the breeding business in 2019 but, in wrapping [that up], we bought back three babies from the partnerships out of a line that traced back to Lemhi Go,” said Magers. “All three raced at Gulfstream Park with trainer Ralph Nicks and all three were mid-level claiming winners running in bright, coral-colored silks with a black diamond on the back.”

Magers admits, “It is a delightful way to end our career with horses.” He continued, “Diamonds will last forever and, for us, so will the stories and memories that came with a career in racing and breeding.”

The post Ron Magers Reflects On His Decades In Racing And Breeding appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Asmussen Quintet Tunes Up for Breeders’ Cup

Trainer Steve Asmussen sent five Breeders' Cup contenders out to work Sunday at Keeneland.

Grade I-winning fillies Clairiere (Curlin) and Society (Gun Runner), working in company, went five furlongs in a bullet :59.80 (1/34) in preparation for the Nov. 5 GI Breeders' Cup Distaff. The duo worked through fractions of :11.80, :23.80, :35.60, :47.60, :59.80 and out six furlongs in 1:13.20.

Epicenter (Not This Time), off since winning the GI Runhappy Travers S. Aug. 27, worked five furlongs in company in 1:00.20 (3/34) in preparation for the Nov. 5 GI Breeders' Cup Classic. The sophomore worked through fractions of :12.60, :24.60, :37.40, 1:00.20 and out six furlongs in 1:14.

Champion Echo Zulu (Gun Runner), aiming for the GI Breeders' Cup F/M Sprint, went five furlongs in company with maiden winner Marsalis (Curlin) in 1:02.80 (25/34). The filly, who suffered the first loss of her career when fourth in the GI Kentucky Oaks, rebounded with a win in the Sept. 24 GII Dogwood S. last time out.

Also working Sunday at Keeneland, GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies contender Grand Love (Gun Runner) went five furlongs in 1:00.60 (7/34) while working with maiden winner Bella Runner (Gun Runner).

“They put in good, solid moves,” Asmussen said Sunday. “They came out of it good and cooled out nicely, and we've got Jackie's Warrior [working] tomorrow. I am extremely pleased with how the preparation has gone. The weather has been excellent. The race track is in good shape and I love the shape they are in.”

Trainer Wesley Ward had a pair of Breeders' Cup contenders work Sunday at Keeneland. Kimari (Munnings), considered possible for the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint or the GI Breeders' Cup F/M Sprint, worked five furlongs in 1:00.60 (7/34). Nakatomi (Firing Line), a possible Sprint candidate, worked a half-mile in :48.80 (10/50).

The post Asmussen Quintet Tunes Up for Breeders’ Cup appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights