“It’s Been a Good Run So Far:” Ward Prepares for Possible Last Dance with Campanelle

Wesley Ward would be the first to admit that he has a soft spot for his globe-trotting Breeders' Cup contender Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB} – Janina {GB}, by Namid {GB}).

“It's hard not to like a filly that has accomplished what she has,” he said with a smile. “Just from being around her, you know how special she is.”

For over two years, Campanelle has been a consistent presence in Ward's converted tobacco barn adjacent to the Keeneland grounds. The Stonestreet Stables representative has thrived on racing's biggest stages throughout her career, earning two victories at Royal Ascot and claiming the 2020 G1 Darley Prix Morny in Deauville, but soon she will make what could well be the final start of her career on her home turf in Lexington.

Over the weekend, the 4-year-old put in her final work over the Keeneland turf, going five furlongs in 1:03.80 on Saturday in preparation for the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.

Ward spoke highly of how Campanelle is coming into the race.

“She thrives at Keeneland and I'm sure she's probably going to run the race of her life. Every workout is better than the next and she's glowing right now. I think she's going to have a great chance here.”

From there, Campanelle will take one of the shorter journeys of her career to travel to Fasig-Tipton for the 'Night of the Stars' Sale, where she will sell as Hip 272 with Eaton Sales as a racing or broodmare prospect.

Ward has been high on the Irish-bred daughter of Kodiac from the beginning. Picked out by Ben McElroy from Book 1 of the 2019 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, Campanelle stood out as soon as she arrived in Lexington in the spring of her juvenile year.

“She was a big, beautiful filly and you could tell that physically, she was the standout of that particular group that Ben had sent in,” Ward recalled. “When we started training her we could really see the athleticism, and as soon as we got her on the grass, it was like a fish to water. She just took right off.”

The winner of the G2 Queen Mary S. and G1 Darley Prix Morny during her juvenile season, Campanelle returned to the prestigious Ascot meet at three to defeat males in the 2021 G1 Commonwealth Cup.

This year, the long-striding turf sprinter opened her season with a win in the Giant's Causeway S. at Keeneland, finished in a dead heat for third in the G1 Platinum Jubilee S. in her third trip to Ascot, and then got her first graded stakes win on American soil in the GIII Mint Ladies Sprint S.

“The thing about this filly is that she runs on any track and on any surface as far as conditions go,” Ward explained. “She'll run if it's a deep, soggy going or if it's a hard, firm turf. She just runs on anything there is. Every time you lead her over she tries so hard and physically, she's just a beautiful filly. Anyone could take a look at her and know that she's at the upper echelon of Thoroughbred racing right now.”

 

Stonestreet's Barbara Banke echoed that Campanelle has the looks and the heart to rank her among the elite members of Stonestreet's accomplished racing stable.

“It's really special to have a horse that can win among stakes competition in three different countries in England, France and the United States,” Banke said. “She carries herself well and she has a sense of dignity. She's got a lot of fight and she always gives it her best effort.”

Placing Campanelle in the Fasig-Tipton November Sale was no easy decision for Banke, but the commercial breeder said that ultimately, she believes that it will put Campanelle in the best position for success as she moves on to the next chapter of her career.

“When she goes on to be a broodmare, I think that she's worthy of the best turf sires in the world,” Banke explained. “Those are found more in Europe or Japan. Stonestreet is a very hands-on, detail-oriented breeding operation here in Kentucky and I don't think I could give her the focus and oversight she deserves if she were somewhere else. I think she needs to go to the elite turf sires. Someday we will have those here in America as well, but for her, I think this is the best thing. She will become the queen of someone's breeding operation.”

“Campanelle really reflects the international nature of our business today,” said Fasig-Tipton's Boyd Browning. “She's a tribute to the vision and the passion of an owner like Barbara Banke. Barbara's commitment to racing and breeding is really second to none and it's cool to see how they developed a plan of pointing these brilliant horses to Royal Ascot and they been able to succeed with it on several occasions.”

“I think the thing that makes Campanelle so attractive to buyers around the world is the combination of speed and consistency,” he continued. “She has answered the bell at Royal Ascot for three years in a row. She's by Kodiac, who has certainly done it the hard way but has been a tremendous stallion in Europe for many years. She's got worldwide appeal. It would not be surprising to see her produce major runners wherever she happens to go from here.”

Sara Gordon

Before Campanelle goes through the ring at Fasig-Tipton, Banke is looking forward to watching the brilliant filly represent her gold and burgundy colors one last time.

“I'm feeling pretty confident going into the Breeders' Cup and the people in the barn are feeling pretty confident in her as well,” Banke said. “She has some good competition in the race, including her stablemate Golden Pal (Uncle Mo), but she's a fighter and so I think my money is on her.”

Ward is also anticipating the return to the Breeders' Cup with his star filly, but he added that he is holding out hope that it won't be their last race together.

“When she goes in the ring, I'll have mixed emotions,” he admitted. “I'll be proud of what our team has accomplished with her, but I'll be sad if she doesn't come back to our barn. She is very lightly raced and is very sound. She is just peaking right now. I believe that with whatever hands she lands in, she's going to have a big year next year. Hopefully she comes back to our tobacco barn here, but whatever happens, it's been a good run so far.”

To take a look at more 'Spotlight on the Night of the Stars' features, click here.

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TDN’s Emma Berry Shortlisted For HWPA Award

The TDN's European Editor Emma Berry is among the writers shortlisted for the 2022 HWPA Awards, which take place in London on December 5.

Berry, whose work was depicted by the judges as “authoritative and well-informed articles, written in a very clear and entertaining style, most enjoyable to read”, is nominated in the Specialist Writer of the Year category along with Jonathan Harding and Alan Sweetman of the Racing Post, and Jon Lees of Thoroughbred Racing Commentary.

The Racing Writer of the Year nominees are freelance journalists Lydia Hislop and Daragh Ó Conchúir, Adam Houghton of the Sporting Life, and the Racing Post's Peter Thomas. Ó Conchúir and Harding are also shortlisted in the Reporter of the Year category, along with Nick Luck for his Nick Luck Daily podcast and Lee Mottershead of the Racing Post.

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’23 Kentucky Dates Set; Ellis Urged to ‘Strongly Consider’ More Racing

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission approved a 211-date Thoroughbred slate for 2023 at its Monday meeting.

The calendar largely mirrors the template from the past two years, although one commissioner did voice an opinion that the new owner of Ellis Park should “strongly consider” adding race dates.

A copy of the race dates provided to TDN by a KHRC staffer shows 24 dates for Ellis over the July 4-Aug. 30 meet, although every other day during that span is marked “optional” on the calendar.

The gaming company Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), which also owns Churchill Downs Racetrack and Turfway Park in the state, last month purchased Ellis Park.

“Ellis Park [has] a long and valued tradition [that is] successful, safe, and cherished by the people in that part of the state,” said commissioner Bill Landes III. “And for no more dates than [those] being requested is not respecting Ellis for what it is or what it can be under its new ownership.

“I'm giving you the benefit, in knowing Churchill Downs's track record, that it will be successful,” Landes continued. “So on behalf of the Thoroughbred horsemen, I respect that Churchill strongly consider expanding these dates in order to return Ellis Park to the standards [of] about 30 years ago, when you couldn't fit people into that grandstand with a shoehorn. That's my message.”

Landes made his comments after the vote had already passed, so his words had no effect on the outcome of the commission's approval. No other KHRC members chose to speak up on the subject.

Back on Sept. 20, when the KHRC greenlighted the $79-million transaction in just 6 1/2 minutes after a perfunctory read-through of the basic terms of the deal, not a single member of the commission posed any questions to CDI executives about the gaming corporation's future plans for Thoroughbred racing at Ellis.

At that Sept. 20 meeting, a KHRC staffer read into the record that CDI intended to honor a 2023 race dates request for 24 programs (up one date from 2022) that Ellis had already submitted to the KHRC.

In addition to the Thoroughbred calendar, the commission on Oct. 31 approved 74 Standardbred and six Quarter Horse race dates.

Here's a chronological look at the 2023 Thoroughbred schedule:

Turfway Park: Jan. 4-Apr. 2 on a Wednesday-Saturday schedule through February, then Thursday-Saturday through the balance of the meet. In addition, Sundays are all marked “optional” on the calendar provided by a KHRC spokesperson.

Keeneland Race Course: Apr. 7-28 on a Wednesday-Sunday schedule (dark for Easter Sunday, Apr. 9).

Churchill Downs: Apr. 29-July 3, largely Thursday-Sunday to start the meet, with Tuesday and Wednesday additions and no Sunday racing during GI Kentucky Derby week. Added Monday dates on Memorial Day and July 3. Also, Wednesday programs will be added in June.

Ellis Park: July 4-Aug. 30. The KHRC calendar has Ellis penciled in for a seven-day weekly template, but every date except for Friday-Sunday during the entire meet is marked “optional.”

Kentucky Downs: Aug. 31 and Sep. 2, 3, 7, 9, 10, 13, with “optional” dates Sept. 4 and 6.

Churchill: Sep. 14-Oct. 1 on a Wednesday-Sunday schedule.

Keeneland: Oct. 6-28 on a Wednesday-Sunday schedule.

Churchill: Oct. 29-Nov. 26 on a Wednesday-Sunday schedule.

Turfway: Nov. 29-Dec. 31 on a Wednesday-Saturday schedule with Sundays “optional.”

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Bay Bridge Continues West Blagdon’s Long Run of Success

It is a source of regret that the selection of British racing colours has been homogenised to the extent that it comes down to artlessly underwhelming choices such as light blue or dark blue. Eighteen standard colours are allowed in a variety of patterns, but gone, sadly, are the days when an aspiring owner could opt for 'Straw' (The Duke of Devonshire), or 'Apricot' (Lord Howard de Walden).

James Wigan inherited his distinctive set from his grandfather, the owner/breeder Charles Gordon, who most certainly would have approved of seeing his silks, described as 'cherry, cornflower blue sash and cap', rippling to victory on British Champions Day on the back of Richard Kingscote riding Bay Bridge (GB) (New Bay {GB}).

The four-year-old colt, trained by Sir Michael Stoute, may have spoiled the swansong of Baaeed (GB), but for his breeder it was an immensely happy chapter in a story which didn't start off as well as Wigan might have hoped. 

“He was entered for the foal sale and the stud manager called me a couple of days before when I was already in Newmarket,” recalls Wigan, whose habit it is to sell his the stock from his Dorset-based West Blagdon Stud as foals, and who routinely has an enviable draft at Tattersalls in December.

“He was ready to come up and he'd got a knock and was slightly lame. We decided that it was pointless putting him on the box.”

There was of course an option to sell the colt from the first crop of Ballylinch Stud's New Bay as a yearling the following year but, in what has transpired to be an inspired decision, he was retained. It is rare to see a colt race in Wigan's name, though he enjoyed notable success in the late 1970s with his well-named homebred Final Straw (GB), by Thatch out of Last Call (GB), who won the G2 Champagne S. along with three Group 3 victories and runner-up finishes in the G1 Sussex S. and G1 Prix Jacques le Marois.

Wigan says of Bay Bridge, “We sell a yearling every now and again, but I liked him very much as a yearling and thought, 'Right. Well, having got this far, maybe somebody's trying to tell us something. Maybe we should just stick with him'. And luckily we did.”

With two placed runs as a back-end two-year-old, Bay Bridge wasn't an early star among New Bay's debutants, but he has made up for that at three and four, when it really matters. Unbeaten and quietly progressive in four starts in 2021, he rounded off that season a year ago almost to the day with victory in the Listed Seymour S. at Newmarket, but it wasn't until this May that his presence was properly felt on the main stage.

An explosive seasonal debut in the G3 Brigadier Gerard S. set the scene for his immediate elevation to the top level, with Bay Bridge's ensuing three runs this year including a runner-up finish to State Of Rest (Ire) in the Prince of Wales's S. before bowing out with a triumph over Adayar (Ire) and Baaeed in the Champion S. For his four-year-old season his ownership became a partnership between Wigan and Ballylinch Stud, where he will eventually stand alongside his sire but, with just ten starts to his name to date, Wigan indicates that there is a “strong possibility” that Bay Bridge will be back next season in an attempt to enhance that record.

“Ballylinch has done extremely well with their stallions,” he says. “And they're very nice people to deal with, I've found, having had a lot of experience with them over the years.”

Wigan has justifiable claims to being New Bay's biggest cheerleader as he is also the co-owner, with Lucy and Ollie Sangster, of Saffron Beach (Ire), one of the stallion's two other Group 1 winners who lives just across Newmarket's Bury Road from Bay Bridge and who also remained in his possession rather fortuitously, after missing the yearling sales. 

He says, “I took a share in New Bay when he went to stud, so I was keen on him then. It was actually Liam Norris who selected Saffron, and he must get most of the credit, because he was looking for foals to pinhook for Ben [Sangster]. I happened to meet Liam and I asked if he had seen many New Bay foals because I was interested in them. I asked if he could look at this particular filly and he already had and said 'I like her very much and she's on my list for Ben.' So I said, 'Well, maybe Ben and I should speak'.”

The pinhook 'gone wrong' has turned into a racing adventure which has gone spectacularly right, with Jane Chapple-Hyam guiding Saffron Beach to a Group 3 win as a juvenile, followed by a runner-up finish in the 1,000 Guineas and victory in the G1 Sun Chariot at three, and further success in the G2 Duke of Cambridge S. at Royal Ascot and G1 Prix de Rothschild this year.

Wigan adds of her sire, “I liked New Bay very much as an individual. He's a beautifully-made horse. He's not too big, I think he's just on 16 hands. He's got lots of quality, he's got substance, I like [his sire] Dubawi, and it's a very nice Juddmonte family. It's the female line of Oasis Dream, so he had a lot going for him, as well as being a good racehorse.”

Bay Bridge's dam Hayyona (GB) (Multiplex {GB}), a descendant of the Aga Khan's Prix de Diane winner Shemaka (Ire), is back in foal to New Bay, so there is much to look forward to at West Blagdon Stud next spring, but first thoughts turn to the impending December Sales at Tattersalls. Saffron Beach, who was ruled out of a Breeders' Cup finale just a few days ago, is nevertheless likely to take a leading role in the inaugural Sceptre Session of the Mares' Sale, and before that the West Blagdon team will be kept busy with a draft of eight foals, including a trio by New Bay.

“It's early days, the foals haven't been in prep for very long, but I think there's a nice draft and we're looking forward to it,” says Wigan. 

One of the New Bays [lot 1010] is a grand-daughter of Dank (GB) (Dansili {GB}), another to have carried the cherry-and-cornflower-blue silks with honour, notably in the Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf nine years ago. Meanwhile, another member of the draft [lot 1007], a colt by Saxon Warrior (Jpn), hails from the same family as New Bay being a great grandson of Juddmonte's Poule d'Essai des Pouliches victrix Zenda (GB), who found further fame as the dam of Kingman (GB).

Wigan nominates another son of Dubawi as a stallion he will be following with interest. “I rather like Ghaiyyath's progeny, from what I've seen. I've only used him once. I will certainly be going back to him.”

With 14 on offer at Tattersalls, he will have a chance to peruse further the stock of Ghaiyyath (Ire), and Wigan also pinpoints a young sire with roots stretching back to West Blagdon when he says, “If I think of the first-crop sires, obviously Havana Grey (GB) has done very well, but that's very obvious. Tasleet (GB) interests me, probably because he's from our old family, so I follow him with some interest. He hasn't had an awful lot of mares but he's done pretty well. He's probably my sleeper amongst the young stallions.”

The old family in question is that of Pelting (GB) (Vilmorin {GB}), Tasleet's sixth dam and a broodmare of some note for Wigan's late mother, Dawn, who was bequeathed West Blagdon Stud by her father in 1959 and ran it with her husband Dare, a renowned racing journalist. 

“My mother was given three mares,” says Wigan, whose wife Anita is also a successful breeder in her own right. “She did it very much as a hobby and only ever had a few mares here, never more than four or five, but did extremely well. She preferred to sell foals at Tattersalls, which I continue to do, but I have increased the size of the stud by adding new boxes and we bought some more land. It's run in conjunction with an arable farm; a neighbour has a farm share arrangement with us.”

Among the many notable descendants of Pelting, which include Group 1 winners Rebelline (Ire), Moon Ballad (Ire) and Central Park (Ire), was Bassenthwaite (GB) (Habitat {GB}), who was bred by Wigan's parents and who raced successfully for Stravros Niarchos, winning the G1 Middle Park S. and later standing at stud in New Zealand. Though neither Bay Bridge nor Saffron Beach are travelling to this year's Breeders' Cup, there will still be plenty of interest at West Blagdon with Pelting represented by her sixth-generation descendant Nashwa (GB) (Frankel {GB}), who is currently favourite for Saturday's Filly & Mare Turf.

Wigan wears many hats in the bloodstock industry. As well as being a successful breeder, consignor and agent, he has managed the operations of other notable owner/breeders, including Lady Rothschild and George Strawbridge, while a recent addition to his duties includes advising and buying for Peter McCausland, who has restored the historic Erdhenheim Farm in Pennsylvania and is establishing his own breeding programme on the stud which can boast Derby winner Iroquois and inaugural Kentucky Derby winner Aristides as former residents. 

“They've got some lovely mares, and Peter McCausland, who owns it, is new to the business and very enthusiastic, and he's beginning to race. So he's very much doing what I enjoy most,” says Wigan of the owner/breeder who has been represented by his first juvenile runners under the Erdenheim Farm banner this year. “He's certainly been using the best sires. The mares have got the pedigrees, so we just hope that they can produce the goods.”

Reflecting on his work for his fellow breeders and clients of his London Thoroughbred Services, Wigan adds, “It's enormously satisfying because you're basically doing what you love. You think of the horses not as your own, but you get just as much pleasure from them. They've been able to buy into some nice families, they are very nice people to work with, and one can share their enjoyment and occasional successes.”

There can be nothing more satisfying, however, than having produced a colt of the highest calibre to continue the decades of work at the stud put firmly on the British map of bloodstock breeding first by Wigan's grandfather and later his mother. It's the cherry on top, with a splash of cornflower blue. 

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