This Side Up: Higher Stakes But No Less Of A Gamble

Well, that was one even I managed to see coming. With sterling bleeding at the bottom of the stairs, the most expensive yearling transaction of 2022 was duly enacted at Tattersalls this week.

It was always going to be a wild market: Keeneland had shown the big spenders to remain impervious to war and inflation, while the local currency had been set aflame after new leaders sent home the babysitter and started playing with fiscal matches.

Sure enough, Book I catapulted to giddy new heights, recording surges of 45 percent in turnover; 30 percent in average; and 25 percent in median. But once you incorporate a 20 percent haemorrhage in the value of a guinea since this time last year, those gains largely maintain the kind of bull run that has continued unabated in the U.S. (where aggregate yearling trade is up 14.8 percent).

This auction did, however, have two additional drivers. One is Frankel (GB), who accounted for the top four prices and is reaching a status in his second career parallel to that he achieved in his first. The other was an extraordinary renewal of ardor, notably for the sale's other dominant stallion, in the man who has long sustained this industry through good times and bad.

Sheikh Mohammed's Godolphin team was again conspicuous by its absence in Lexington last month, having topped the September spending as recently as 2019 at $16 million. At Tattersalls this week, however, Godolphin bought 35 yearlings for 25,355,000gns, up from 15 for 9,375,000gns last year. Astonishingly, that weighed in at 20 percent of the gross!

In the American yearling market, the defection of an investor with apparently bottomless resources has actually stimulated domestic competition. Whether similar sustainability might be discovered in any such vacuum in Europe is hard to know.    Without the Maktoums, breeders there might well find themselves precariously reliant on an export market that will, logically, eventually destroy its own value. For now, the racing product owes much of its competitive validation to sheer heritage. But that cannot continue if a) an increasing portion of the talent pool is exported even before it gets to the track, and b) successor investors don't match the Maktoums' long toleration of inadequate purses.

As it is, the Sheikh appears to have been especially animated by the finite opportunities left to Dubawi (Ire). The stallion he cherishes for redeeming the tragedy of Dubai Millennium (GB) is now 20, and his owner bought as many as 14 of his 21 yearlings sold this week. But even those with no such sentimental spur appeared so devoted to a tiny apex of the sire pyramid that it almost seems credulous. Combining a Book I physique with Frankel or Dubawi was treated as a short-cut to no fewer than 21 of the 28 sales for 750,000 guineas and above. If only the game were that simple!

Dubawi | Darley Photo

Frankel, of course, had posted a timely advertisement in Paris on the eve of the sale. Alpinista (GB) is no mere slogger—she was cruising throughout—even though Frankel has quickly established himself, like his own sire, as a profound staying influence; while the dam is by another such in Hernando (Fr).

It just shows how that elusive concept, class, is crucially underpinned by the stamina that allows you to carry your speed. That's a point I'm always making about dirt blood, but sticking to the European theater let's consider another son of Galileo (Ire) now at stud. Australia (GB) is famously out of Ouija Board (GB) whose prowess over a mile and a half will be remembered in the U.S. Yet he was arguably unlucky when only just beaten by Night Of Thunder (GB) and Kingman (GB) over the mile of the G1 2,000 Guineas. Ouija Board's family has mixed flavors but it's hardly the breeding-by-numbers sprint formula by which many people ended up trying to leaven the stamina of Galileo (Ire). Her third dam, indeed, was by a winner of the Ascot Gold Cup (20 furlongs). Yet perhaps Australia's principal stud achievement to date is a GI Breeders' Cup Mile winner.

That horse, Order Of Australia, returns Saturday to the scene of his finest hour for the GI Coolmore Turf Mile. There will doubtless be much comment about the sponsors inviting Christophe Soumillon to ride this horse for the first time, pending the two-month ban he received for a vividly perilous misjudgement in France last week. Though I have heard some disapproval of this apparent indulgence, it strikes me as a magnanimous gesture to a man who has, besides his suspension, lost a lucrative job and much esteem. This is not the first time these owners have provided a first step back up the ladder for someone who has taken a humiliating fall.

It's the deed you punish, not the consequences, and Sonny Leon's exhibition on Rich Strike (Keen Ice) last weekend looked at least as provocative but for the happy detail that his adversary stayed aboard. Instead it was fun to see Tyler Gafflione's hilarity, and Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow) stifling any ungenerous mutterings about his win ratio.

Both horses showed all the valor and commitment that Calumet so prizes in its stallion roster. Whether that will assist their respective sires in turning the tide remains to be seen, but this is a farm animated by the most edifying priorities even if the execution sometimes shows them to be marching to their own drum.

Rich Strike & Hot Rod Charlie battle it out down the stretch | Coady Photography

Rich Strike notoriously carried the Calumet colors until winning a claimer by 17 lengths last year, and there can be barely less regret over War Like Goddess (English Channel). Both she and her dam were cheaply discarded and nor can her excellence now assist her late sire, who was doing so much to vindicate Calumet's message.

Sold for $1,200 as a weanling, War Like Goddess advanced her value to $30,000 as a 2-year-old when her slow-burning development was identified by Donato Lanni. The agent will have derived much satisfaction from the way she has bloomed since, reiterating the horsemanship that first earned him the kind of clients who can shop right at the other end of the marketplace. Fitting, then, that War Like Goddess was bought for the man who first got Lanni started, 20 years previously, George Krikorian.

Her damsire, North Light (Ire), could well prove the last Epsom Derby winner to stand in Kentucky. When you think of the breed-shaping legacy of so many predecessors, from the inaugural winner Diomed to Blenheim to Roberto, that is a dismal prospect. But you never know, the wheel may turn again someday.

That's the whole beauty of this game: you never know. Perhaps War Like Goddess, in her bid for the GI Joe Hirsch Turf Classic, can remind some of those who have been jumping through Frankel-shaped hoops at Tattersalls why this game is known as a great leveller. Maybe one of the 16 yearlings that made seven figures this week will go on and win the Epsom Derby. But few, if any, will ever run anything like War Like Goddess, who was led out unsold at $1,000 when taking her own turn at a yearling sale. Okay, so we never know. But I reckon that's one thing you know for a fact.

The post This Side Up: Higher Stakes But No Less Of A Gamble appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Weekend Lineup Presented By Del Mar Ship & Win: Fall Stars Weekend

There are 14 “Win and You're In” races for the Breeders' Cup World Championships across North America this weekend, with three scheduled for Friday, seven on Saturday, and four on Sunday.

In addition, there are a total of nine Grade 1 races, nine Grade 2 races, and seven Grade 3 races over the three-day period during which several of the top contenders for next month's Breeders' Cup will have their final prep races.

Highlighting the action is opening weekend at Keeneland Racecourse in Lexington, Ky., which will also be the site of this year's World Championships. Among Saturday's top contests are the G1 Coolmore Turf Mile, which drew a full field of 12 plus four also-eligibles, and the G1 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity, which drew 14 juveniles and two also-eligibles.

Juveniles will also take center stage at Santa Anita, as the G2 Chandelier and G1 American Pharoah have drawn talented maiden winners and a couple proven stakes winners seeking to earn their ticket to Lexington.

The Belmont at Aqueduct meet continues with several big races this weekend, including Saturday's G1 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic featuring the filly War Like Goddess taking on male rivals, as well as the top 3-year-old filly in the country, Nest, getting in her final prep in Sunday's G2 Beldame.

Also worth noting is Saturday's West Virginia Breeders' Classic day at Charles Town Race Course, offering nine stakes for West Virginia-breds.

Here's a quick look at some of this weekend's graded stakes:

Friday

5:16 p.m. – Grade 1 Alcibiades Stakes at Keeneland (WAYI for BC Juv. Fillies)

Fun and Feisty, winner of the Pocahontas (G3) at Churchill Downs going 1 1/16 miles in her most recent start, and D. J. Stable's Wonder Wheel, runner-up in the Spinaway (G1) at Saratoga, headline a field of 14 2-year-old fillies entered for Friday's 71st running of the $500,000 Alcibiades (G1).

A winner of two of four starts, Fun and Feisty is trained by five-time Darley Alcibiades winner Kenny McPeek, whose most recent victory in the race came in 2020 with Simply Ravishing. Julien Leparoux, a two-time Darley Alcibiades winner, has the mount Friday and will exit from post position nine. McPeek also will send out Kentucky Downs maiden winner Stellar Lady.

Wonder Wheel, a winner of two of three starts including the Debutante (L) at Churchill Downs in July, is trained by three-time Darley Alcibiades winner Mark Casse, whose most recent winner in the race was Heavenly Love in 2017. Tyler Gaffalione, who has been aboard for all of Wonder Wheel's starts, has the call Friday from post position one.

Three other fillies that ran in the 7-furlong Spinaway are in the field Friday: third-place finisher Kaling, owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and trained by Todd Pletcher; Valene Farms' Sabra Tuff, who finished fifth for trainer Dallas Stewart; and Clarkland Farm's Just Cindy, who finished sixth for trainer Eddie Kenneally.

Alcibiades Entries

Saturday

4:20 p.m. – Grade 1 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic at Aqueduct

For the past two seasons, War Like Goddess has displayed superiority amongst her staying female counterparts at graded stakes level on grass. In Saturday's Grade 1, $500,000 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic, the talented bay mare will target a new task when facing males for the first time for Hall of Famer Bill Mott. A perfect 4-for-4 at 12 furlongs, her long-distance capabilities has made an ambitious spot like the Joe Hirsch a viable option.

Trainer Christophe Clement will saddle a pair of runners, including Gufo, who finished third in last year's Joe Hirsch. Gufo boasts the most accomplished resume in the Joe Hirsch field with field-best earnings of $2,169,030 and three Grade 1 victories.

Trainer Chad Brown will look for a repeat triumph in the Joe Hirsch with last year's winner Rockemperor [post 5, Javier Castellano] as well as Grade 1 United Nations winner Adhamo [post 3, Dylan Davis], who enter from a respective ninth and eighth in the Sword Dancer Invitational.

Joe Hirsch Entries

4:42 p.m. – Grade 1 First Lady Stakes at Keeneland

Regal Glory, a three-time Grade 1 winner that includes a triumph in this spring's Jenny Wiley here, headlines a field of six fillies and mares entered Wednesday for the $750,000 First Lady Presented by UK HealthCare to be run over a mile on the Keeneland turf course.

Regal Glory is one of three entrants for trainer Chad Brown, who has saddled the First Lady winner the past four years and five times overall. Regal Glory was second in last year's First Lady to stablemate Blowout (GB). Regular rider Jose Ortiz has the mount Saturday and will break from post position five.

First Lady Entries

5:14 p.m. – Grade 1 Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland (WAYI for BC Juvenile)

Forte, winner of the Hopeful (G1) at Saratoga in his most recent start, heads a field of 14 2-year-olds plus two also-eligibles entered for the $600,000 Breeders' Futurity going 1 1/16 miles on the main track. A winner of two of three starts, Forte is trained by Todd Pletcher, a two-time winner of the Claiborne Breeders' Futurity. Irad Ortiz Jr. has the mount Saturday and will break from post position seven.

Pletcher has one other entrant in the race: Harrell Ventures' Lost Ark. A half-brother to multiple Grade 1 winner Nest, Lost Ark is unbeaten in two starts and won the Sapling at Monmouth in his most recent start. Flavien Prat has the mount and will break from post 10.

Breeders' Futurity Entries

5:39 p.m. – Grade 1 E.P. Taylor Stakes at Woodbine

Nine fillies and mares, including Queen's Plate winner Moira, will vie for top prize in the Grade 1 $750,000 E.P. Taylor Stakes. Trained by Kevin Attard, Moira, a bay daughter of Ghostzapper-Devine Aida, will be testing out the turf for the first time. She'll also be chasing history as no filly has ever turned the Plate-Taylor double to date.

Bred in Ontario by Adena Springs, Moira romped to victory in the 163rd running of the Plate on August 21, a seven-length tour de force that came three weeks after a 10 ¾-length, head-turning performance in the Woodbine Oaks Presented by Budweiser. Moira, who has won all three of her 2022 engagements, is now 4-1-0 from five career starts.

Standing in Moira's way is a salty group of turf talents, including fellow 3-year-old filly Mylady (GER). Bred and owned by Gestut Karlshof, the daughter of The Grey Gatsby (IRE)-Minoris (FR) heads into her first start outside of Germany off a third-place finish, just three-quarters of a length behind the winner, highly regarded Toskana Belle, in the Group 1 German Oaks on August 7.

Other notables include Chad Brown trainees Lemista (IRE) and Rougir (FR), as well as graded stakes winner Adventuring, and Flirting Bridge (IRE), conditioned by Brendan Walsh.

E.P. Taylor Entries

5:45 p.m. – Grade 1 Turf Mile Stakes at Keeneland (WAYI for BC Mile)

Santin and Smooth Like Strait, the 1-2 finishers in the Arlington Million (G1) at Churchill Downs in August, head a field of 12 plus four also-eligibles entered for Saturday's 37th running of the $1 million Coolmore Turf Mile (G1).

Trained by Brendan Walsh, Santin is a two-time Grade 1 winner this year with his other Grade 1 triumph also coming at Churchill in the Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic on Kentucky Derby Day, May 7. In his lone Keeneland start, Santin was an allowance winner last fall in his second career race. Tyler Gaffalione will ride Saturday and exit post position seven.

Smooth Like Strait, who has finished in the top three in all eight of his starts in Grade 1 stakes, is trained by Michael McCarthy. In his lone Keeneland race, Smooth Like Strait finished third this spring beaten a nose and a neck in the Maker's Mark Mile (G1). John Velazquez has the mount Saturday and will break from post position two.

In addition to Santin and Smooth Like Strait, four other Grade 1 winners are in the field: Classic Causeway (2022 Belmont Derby), Order of Australia (IRE) (2020 Breeders' Cup Mile), Ivar (BRZ) (2020 Shadwell Turf Mile) and Casa Creed (2022 Fourstardave and 2021-2022 Jaipur).

Turf Mile Entries

6:00 p.m. – Grade 1 Rodeo Drive Stakes at Santa Anita (WAYI for BC F&M Turf)

Last year's Rodeo Drive winner Going to Vegas, was a troubled third in the G2 John C. Mabee Stakes Sept. 10 at Del Mar, has five wins and six seconds from 14 starts over the Santa Anita turf and she has two wins and as many seconds from four tries at the Rodeo Drive distance.

However, trainer Brendon Walsh's classy Family Way rates top billing among a field of seven distaffers after finishing second, beaten 1 ½ lengths in a Grade 3 going a marathon 1 5/16 miles as the 4-5 favorite at Kentucky Downs Sept. 13. Family Way was also a solid third two starts back in the Grade 1 Beverly D at Churchill Downs Aug. 13 and she brings an impressive 2022 resume of 6-1-4-1, all in graded stakes this year.

Chad Brown's New York-based Fluffy Socks, winless this year in five tries but second in four of those races—three of them graded stakes, rates a huge chance from off the pace with Joe Bravo.

Trainer Leonard Powell's consistent French-bred Neige Blanche, who has four wins from nine tries over the Santa Anita lawn, is another multiple stakes winner in search of her first Grade 1 win. Most recently fifth, beaten three lengths as the 4-5 favorite in an ungraded stakes at 1 3/8 miles on turf Aug. 19, Neige Blanche will be handled by regular rider Juan Hernandez.

Rodeo Drive Entries

6:30 p.m. – Grade 2 Chandelier Stakes at Santa Anita (WAYI for BC Juv. Fillies)

Justique, an impressive first-out winner that would appear to be much better suited routing, rates top billing among a talented field of seven juvenile fillies who will each be trying two turns for the first time in Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Chandelier Stakes at 1 1/16 miles. Trained by John Shirreffs and ridden by Victor Espinoza, Justique was off slowly and devoid of early foot in her 5 ½ furlong debut July 31 at Del Mar, but hit her best stride around the far turn and won with consummate ease while geared down some three lengths clear of next-out winner Home Cooking in an eye-catching effort.

Trained by Peter Miller, And Tell Me Nolies was dismissed at 9-1 in the Del Mar Debutante, but ran down heavily favored Home Cooking to win by a head in a solid effort. A game neck maiden winner going 6 ½ furlongs on Aug. 14, she'll be ridden for the fourth consecutive time by Ramon Vazquez as she tries a route of ground for the first time.

Chandelier Entries

7:30 p.m. – Grade 1 American Pharoah Stakes at Santa Anita (WAYI for BC Juvenile)

Easily the most impressive juvenile this past summer at Del Mar, Bob Baffert's undefeated Cave Rock heads Saturday's Grade 1, $300,000 American Pharoah Stakes at Santa Anita as eight juvenile colts go a mile and one sixteenth. A six length first-out maiden winner going 6 ½ furlongs on Aug. 13, Cave Rock was totally dominant as the 2-5 favorite in the G1 Del Mar Futurity Sept. 11, winning by 5 ¼ lengths while earning a 98 Beyer Speed Figure, which followed a 101 Beyer in his debut.

Baffert, who will saddle half the field in the race named in honor of his 2015 Triple Crown Champion, will likely dominate on Saturday as his Hejazi, second as the favorite in a pair of 5 ½ furlong races on Aug. 20 and Sept. 10, should be very tough with Mike Smith riding back.

American Pharoah Entries

Sunday

1:47 p.m. – Grade 2 Beldame Stakes at Aqueduct

Nest has proven her superiority amongst a highly competitive division of sophomore fillies all year long. On Sunday, the talented three-time Grade 1-winner will face a new task of taking on older fillies and mares in the 84th running of the Grade 2, $250,000 Beldame at Belmont at the Big A.

Nest's pair of triumphs in Saratoga's most prestigious races for sophomore fillies came following a game effort against males in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes, where she finished second behind stablemate and fellow Repole Stable color bearer Mo Donegal. Prior to the Belmont, she was second beaten two lengths to Secret Oath in the Kentucky Oaks, and captured the Grade 1 Ashland at Keeneland by 8 1/4 lengths.

Beldame Entries

5:10 p.m. – Grade 2 Bourbon Stakes at Keeneland (WAYI for BC Juv. Turf)

Boppy O, winner of Saratoga's With Anticipation (G3) on Aug. 31, headlines a field 12 2-year-olds plus four also-eligibles entered for Sunday's 32nd running of the $350,000 Castle & Key Bourbon (G2) for 2-year-olds going 1 1/16 miles on the Keeneland turf course. Trained by Mark Casse, Boppy O made his grass debut a successful one by winning the With Anticipation. Dylan Davis, who was aboard for that victory, has the mount Sunday and will break from post position six.

Two other stakes winners are in the field: Reckoning Force and Gigante.

Bourbon Entries

5:45 p.m. – Grade 1 Spinster Stakes at Keeneland (WAYI for BC Distaff)

Letruska and Malathaat will clash for a fourth time as they headline a field of five fillies and mares entered for Sunday's 67th running of the $600,000 Juddmonte Spinster (G1) going 1 1/8 miles on the main track.

Trained by Fausto Gutierrez, Letruska will be bidding to become the fifth horse to win the Juddmonte Spinster in back-to-back years. The most recent was Blue Prize in 2018-2019. Letruska, who has won two of four starts this year, in her most recent race was third behind Malathaat in the Personal Ensign (G1) at the 1 1/8-mile distance. Tyler Gaffalione has the mount on Letruska in the Juddmonte Spinster and will break from post position three.

Malathaat, who also finished in front of Letruska in last year's Breeders' Cup Distaff as well as in the Ogden Phipps (G1), is perfect in two starts at Keeneland. Here she won the Central Bank Ashland (G1) in 2021 and opened her 2022 campaign with a victory in the Baird Doubledogdare (G3). Trained by four-time Juddmonte Spinster winner Todd Pletcher, Malathaat will break from post position one and be ridden by John Velasquez.

Spinster Entries

The post Weekend Lineup Presented By Del Mar Ship & Win: Fall Stars Weekend appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Grade 1 Winner Gretzky The Great To Stand At Ocala Stud In Florida

Gretzky the Great, a Grade 1 winner at two and a son of champion and Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist, has been retired and will stand the upcoming breeding season at Ocala Stud, the farm announced today.

Campaigned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Gary Barber and trained by Mark Casse, Gretzky the Great joined the ranks of Grade 1 stakes winners as a juvenile. Making an auspicious graded stakes debut, Gretzky the Great recorded a scintillating score in Woodbine's $300,000 Grade 1 Summer Stakes at one mile on the turf, defeating a contentious field by 3 ¼ lengths. After stalking the pace throughout, Gretzky the Great entered the lane in the two-path and powered clear late to score under a hand ride in 1:34.53.

Following in the footsteps of his precocious sire, Gretzky the Great demonstrated his precocity from the beginning. He exercised his superiority over a maiden special weight field at Woodbine in just his second career start, running his foes off their feet with a 4 ¼-length front-running romp at six furlongs.

Following his maiden-breaking win and prior to his triumph in the Summer Stakes, Gretzky the Great annexed the 2020 Soaring Free Stakes, also at Woodbine, at 6 ½ furlongs on the turf. At season's end, Gretzky the Great contested that year's Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf where he encountered a rough trip and finished sixth in a field of 14 runners.

The following season at three, Gretzky the Great flashed his customary early foot to win the $150,000 Greenwood Stakes at Woodbine. After pressing the pace throughout, he drove to the lead and determinedly fought to the wire to prevail, notching his third stakes victory. All told, Gretzky the Great, who also finished third in the John Battaglia Memorial Stakes at Turfway Park at three, retires having won four of 11 starts, banking $379,866.

By leading sire Nyquist, a three-time Grade 1 winner at two in 2015 and that season's champion 2-year-old male after winning the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, Gretzky the Great is produced from the stakes-placed Bernardini mare Pearl Turn, and hails from the family of graded stakes winners Saint Anddan, Love Theway Youare, and Luftikus. He was a $295,000 acquisition at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale in 2019.

The post Grade 1 Winner Gretzky The Great To Stand At Ocala Stud In Florida appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

GISW Gretzky the Great Retired To Ocala Stud

GISW Gretzky the Great (Nyquist) has been retired and will stand the upcoming breeding season at Ocala Stud, the farm announced today.

Campaigned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Gary Barber and trained by Mark Casse, Gretzky the Great took Woodbine's GI Summer S. as a 2-year-old.

A $295,000 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling purchase, Gretzky the Great broke his maiden in his second career start at Woodbine. He then took the Soaring Free S. before his win in the GI Summer S., ending his season with a sixth-place run in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf. At three, he won the Greenwood S. and finished third in the John Battaglia Memorial S. before retiring with a record of 11-4-2-1 and earnings of $379,866.

For more information on Gretzky the Great, contact David or Joe O'Farrell at (352) 237-2171, or visit www.OcalaStud.com.

The post GISW Gretzky the Great Retired To Ocala Stud appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights