Spendthrift Erects Malibu Moon Statue; B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center to Open Nov. 1

Spendthrift Farm has erected its new Malibu Moon memorial statue that will serve as the centerpiece at the front of the B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center, which is set to officially open Nov. 1 during Breeders' Cup week.

“The B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center has really come together, and the addition of the Malibu Moon statue in front is a special highlight that we are all very proud to see go up,” said Ned Toffey, Spendthrift General Manager. “We look forward to unveiling the visitors center Breeders' Cup week as part of the celebration surrounding our industry's championship event.”

At nearly 1,700 pounds, the bronze sculpture of Malibu Moon is scaled at 110% life size and portrays him as the mature breeding stallion he was during his time at the farm. He faces his old paddock in the foreground and old stall at the stallion complex in the background.

“Malibu Moon put the Hughes/Gustavson version of Spendthrift Farm on the map,” said Spendthrift owner Eric Gustavson. “He was a consistent leading sire at the time Wayne purchased the farm, and for years following. You could say, as Wayne often did, 'Malibu Moon made Spendthrift Farm'”.

The Malibu Moon statue was sculpted by artist Douwe Blumberg at the foundry in Norman, OK. Blumberg and his team began the year-long project in September of 2021.

A foundation stallion for Spendthrift, Malibu Moon was a perennial leading sire in North America for the better part of this century, siring 17 Grade I winners to date including 2013 Kentucky Derby winner Orb and champion 2-year-old colt Declan's Moon among several other top-class millionaires on the racetrack.

The B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center will serve as Spendthrift's new home for tourism. The 7,000 square-foot, two-story building is located in the heart of the historic farm, interconnecting Spendthrift's stallion complex to the main office. The facility contains a trophy room, a gift shop, outdoor & indoor entertainment space and office space, and it features the farm's collection of prized trophies, artifacts, and other memorabilia on display.

The post Spendthrift Erects Malibu Moon Statue; B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center to Open Nov. 1 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Rich Strike Is For Real, And Other Thoughts

The Week in Review, by Bill Finley

Reflections on an interesting weekend of racing:

(*) No, Rich Strike did not win the GII Lukas Classic S. at Churchill Downs. A very game Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow) had a second surge and came back just before the wire to nip him by a head. But not only was there no shame in losing, this was the best race of Rich Strike's career-better, yes, the GI Kentucky Derby-and finally put to rest that he was a one-race wonder who just got lucky on the first Saturday in May.

There was plenty of reason to doubt this horse after the Derby. He was 80-1, probably should have been even higher, and benefitted from a massive pace meltdown and a perfect trip under the unheralded rider Sonny Leon. It looked like a fluke and even more so when he never threatened in the GI Belmont S. and finished sixth, beaten 13 1/4 lengths.

He came back in the GI Travers S. and certainly didn't embarrass himself, running fourth behind the immensely talented divisional leader Epicenter (Not This Time). But fourth is not first and he lost by 5 ½ lengths.

Trainer Eric Reed then made the decision to skip the GI Pennsylvania Derby and take on older horses in the Lukas Classic. He didn't exactly find an easy spot. With Hod Rod Charlie, Happy Saver (Super Saver) and Art Collector (Bernardini), the race was loaded. Considering the quality of the field and that the race was for 3-year-olds and up, you can make the argument that the race was a tougher assignment than the Derby. And he ran his heart out, losing to an accomplished and tenacious Grade I winning 4-year-old who has bankrolled more than $5.5 million.

“He hooked the toughest horses he has ever ran against and ran on the outside the whole way,” Reed said after the race. “Look how far he has come since May. I can only imagine what it's going to be like next year.”

Good point: this colt is obviously improving and should be an outstanding 4-year-old.

It's also worth noting that he was much closer to the pace than normal in the race Saturday at Churchill. He was never further back than fourth and never more than 2 ½ lengths off the lead. That should serve him well as trying to win races from 15 lengths off the pace is never an easy way to go.

Reed hasn't said yet if Rich Strike will go next in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic. The other option is the GI Clark S. on Nov. 25. Considering the depth of the Classic and the presence of a certain horse named Flightline (Tapit) and Rich Strike's affinity for the Churchill surface the Clark looks like the better option. Either way, it looks like he will show up and be competitive. He's not Flightline, he may not be Epicenter, but he is what he is–a very good horse and a deserving winner of the Kentucky Derby.

(*) The Lukas Classic was not without controversy. Aboard Rich Strike, Sonny Leon appeared to be leaning into Tyler Gaffalione on Hot Rod Charlie and elbowing him as the two horses neared the wire. Retired jockey and TV analyst Richard Migliore took to Twitter to criticize Leon and claim that his actions cost Rich Strike the race.

“After watching the Lukas classic numerous times @SONNYLEON1 cost Rich Strike the win by pulling him over to Hot Rod Charlie and putting his elbow into @Tyler_Gaff instead of going forward and driving to the wire,” he tweeted. “When does this BS stop? It's horse racing not jockey racing. Enough.”

NYRA linemaker David Aragona also had his say on Twitter.”As much as I'd like to praise how well Rich Strike ran today, this is pretty bad stuff from the jock,” he wrote. “Obviously crossing a line. A suspension is warranted for these kind of shenanigans.

Others on Twitter were kinder, arguing that Leon's saddle slipped and that was what caused him to lean into Gaffalione, which, the head-on replay shows, he clearly did.

(*) Maybe the GI Woodward S. was nothing more than a paid public workout for Life Is Good (Into Mischief) and all he needed to do was get around the racetrack. He did in fact het the job done. But with his reputation and his odds of 1-20 weren't you expecting more than a 1 1/4-length win and a 97 Beyer figure? There was even a moment when it looked like eventual runner-up Law Professor (Constitution) was going to beat and post what would have been a colossal upset.Take nothing away from Life Is Good. He's won three Grade I races this year and if not for Flightline would be the favorite for the Horse of the Year title. But if he is going to be in competitive in the Classic he will need to run much better than he did Saturday.

(*) The GI Awesome Again S. was a chance to enhance Flightline's reputation, if such a thing is possible. The race included, in Country Grammer (Tonalist), Royal Ship (Brz) and Express Train (Union Rags), the horses who were second, third and fourth when Flightline turned in his electrifying performance in the GI Pacific Classic. Had that group come back with strong collective efforts in the Awesome Again it would have made Flightiline's race look even better.

It didn't happen.

The race was won by Defunded (Dialed In), who was coming of a sixth-place finish in the GII Pat O'Brien S. Country Grammer was second but was a disappointment at odds of 11-10. Express Train was fourth and Royal Ship was sixth. Neither ran well.

This doesn't mean that Flightline isn't a once-in-a-lifetime talent, but it's clear that, beyond him, the older male division in California is a weak one.

(*) Horse racing remains the only gambling game where you can cash a winning bet and feel like a chump. It happened again in the Awesome Again. When the field was loading into the gate Defunded was 8-1. The gate opened, he got out front and, lo and behold, he was 5-1 on the next flash. He paid $12.

Once again, the computer players got fat and happy at the expense of the everyday player who wagered on Defunded thinking they had bet on a horse that would pay in the neighborhood of 8-1. The winners were made to feel like losers. And the problem is not going to go away. The CAW players wager far too much money for any track to refuse their bets.

Fixed odds can't come soon enough, but it looks like industry is in no hurry to at least give them a try. Why? In fact, FanDuel is prepared to offer bets on racing on its sports betting platforms, but with pari-mutuel odds. You think the sports bettor would be OK with betting the Mets at -160 only to be told after the first pitch the odds were really -210? Of course not. It's hard to imagine a marriage of sports betting and racing working without fixed odds.

(*) Chad Brown keeps getting better and better with young dirt horses. When he won the GI Champagne S. at Aqueduct with Blazing Sevens (Good Magic), it was his second straight win in the race and his fourth overall. Blazing Seven's sire, Good Magic (Curlin), was second in the 2017 Champagne.

The post Rich Strike Is For Real, And Other Thoughts appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘This Horse Moved Forward’: Champagne Victor Blazing Sevens Sets Sights On Breeders’ Cup Juvenile

Rodeo Creek Racing's Blazing Sevens earned a career-best 91 Beyer Speed Figure for his victory in the Champagne (G1) Saturday at Aqueduct and is possible to ship to Keeneland next weekend to prepare for the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) November 4 at the Lexington, Kentucky oval.

Blazing Sevens bested a field of six 2-year-olds, all of which were winners at first asking. He settled at the rear of the field early on under Flavien Prat, and advanced through each point of call down the backstretch and moved in between horses around the far turn. Swinging five-wide at the top of the stretch, Blazing Sevens collared Verifying just outside the sixteenths pole and drew off to a 3 1/4-length score.

Blazing Sevens provided four-time Eclipse Award winning trainer Chad Brown with his fourth victory in the prestigious one-turn mile test for juveniles, having also won with Practical Joke [2016], Complexity [2018] and Jack Christopher [2021]. The dark bay colt additionally provided freshman stallion Good Magic, second to Firenze Fire in the 2017 Champagne, with his first Grade 1 winner as a sire.

“He looks good this morning,” Brown said on Sunday. “Some of them are leaving today, but there's a good chance I'll ship most of them over there [to Keeneland ahead of time].”

Brown expressed concern over the sloppy and sealed track conditions on Saturday after Blazing Sevens ran a distant third over similar conditions in the Grade 1 Hopeful on September 5 at Saratoga Race Course under Manny Franco.

“I could tell he hated the track. The fact that he got third and galloped out OK was amazing because Manny [Franco] told us that day he hated the track and that he never felt good under him,” Brown said. “These young horses, you're always learning about. They're going to catch different surfaces. These are inexperienced horses and you're going to learn a lot about them as you go. Sometimes it's going to go your way and other times you're going to have to retreat. It went our way and this horse moved forward.”

The victory was a sweet one for owners John and Carla Capek of Rodeo Creek Racing, who have three other 2-year-olds that also are trained by Brown.

“[They] are at different stages of getting on the track. Blazing Sevens is the farthest along in that endeavor, but we're excited for all of them,” said John Capek. “This is our second crop of racing horses. We're looking forward to these 2-year-olds and we have a crop of yearlings that are in training right now that we're excited about as well.”

Blazing Sevens was initially slated for a start in next Saturday's Grade 1 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland, but the connections ultimately ruled in favor of running locally in his final prep for the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, citing an extra week in between races.

“We were booked for Keeneland a while ago on the probability we might get there and at the last minute we decided to race here as opposed to racing there next weekend, so I think all in all we made the right choice to come here,” Capek said. “Even given the conditions today, the horse ran really well. We were a little concerned with the slop, but he came through and turned it on at the end. Flavien did a great job.”

Purchased for $225,000 from the Eaton Sales consignment at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Yearling Sale, Blazing Sevens is the first progeny out of the two-time winning Warrior's Reward mare Trophy Girl.

The post ‘This Horse Moved Forward’: Champagne Victor Blazing Sevens Sets Sights On Breeders’ Cup Juvenile appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘We’re Focused On The Classic’: Life Is Good Takes Aim On Breeders’ Cup

WinStar Farm and CHC Inc.'s Life Is Good, now a four-time Grade 1 winner, garnered a 97 Beyer Speed Figure for his 1 1/4-length victory in Saturday's Woodward (G1) at the Belmont at the Big A fall meet.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, the accomplished Life Is Good broke sharply from the inside post under regular pilot Irad Ortiz Jr. and was quickly maneuvered off the rail and into the three-path to lead the compact field of four at each point of call with Law Professor tracking in third.

At the three-quarters call, Law Professor was called on by Jose Ortiz to take up second position and make his run at Life Is Good, swinging three-wide and steadily making up ground. Life Is Good dug in when asked by Ortiz, Jr., drifting out a bit in the stretch while Law Professor inched closer. Life Is Good would not be denied, and valiantly fought off Law Professor's game bid to secure the victory in a final time of 1:49.57 in his first outing over sloppy going. It was another 10 1/4 lengths back to Pletcher's other trainee, Keepmeinmind, in third.

Pletcher said he was pleased with Life Is Good's effort, noting the demanding fractions late into the race.

“They were coming home pretty good. The last three-eighths went in :36 and one, and going a mile and an eighth, it's hard to come home that fast, especially on an off and heavy racetrack,” said Pletcher. “I thought it was probably a little better than people might consider just looking at the final margin. Law Professor ran a good race and I'm happy to accomplish what we were hoping to.”

The win was Life Is Good's third Grade 1 this year, adding to scores in the Whitney in August at Saratoga Race Course and Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January at Gulfstream Park. His lone start at 1 1/4 miles was an even fourth-place effort in the Group 1 Dubai World Cup in March.

Pletcher said he is confident the 4-year-old son of Into Mischief will handle stretching back out to 10 furlongs in the $6-million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) on November 5 at Keeneland.

“From all indicators talking to [WinStar President/CEO] Elliott [Walden] and those guys yesterday, we're focused on the Classic,” said Pletcher. “He'll ship to Keeneland tomorrow afternoon and train towards that. If you watch yesterday, he continued to gallop out past the wire. All of his training has given us the confidence he'll do it.”

The post ‘We’re Focused On The Classic’: Life Is Good Takes Aim On Breeders’ Cup appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights