Jack Milton Moves To Grays Farm In California For 2023

Jack Milton, a Grade-1 winning son of War Front, is relocating for the 2023 breeding season to Grays Farm in Cottonwood, Calif., and will stand for a fee of $5,000.

On the track for owner Gary Barber and trainer Todd Pletcher, Jack Milton won graded stakes at ages three, four and five. He won five of 19 starts with career earnings of $853,828.

His biggest win was the Grade 1 Maker's 46 Mile at on the turf at Keeneland. He also won the G3 Poker Stakes at Belmont Park and the G3 Transylvania Stakes at Keeneland.

With four crops of racing age and progeny earnings of more than $4.7 million, Jack Milton has sired Grade 3 winner Second of July, multiple stakes winner Toby's Heart (his biggest earner at $673,370) and Jack Duggan, a recent stakes winner in Australia.

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Eight Rings To Stand At Tommy Town Thoroughbreds In California

Eight Rings, a Grade 1 winner at two, will stand the 2023 breeding season at Tommy Town Thoroughbreds in Santa Ynez, Calif., for a fee of $7,500, it was announced by Adrian Gonzalez's Checkmate Thoroughbreds, which manages the owning partnership.

Trained by Bob Baffert, the son of Empire Maker won the Grade 1 American Pharaoh Stakes at Santa Anita by six lengths from Grade 1 winner American Theorem, Breeders Cup Juvenile winner Storm The Court, and G1 Del Mar Futurity winner Nucky.

On debut as a 2-year-old at Del Mar, Eight Rings' brilliant performance earned him a TDN Rising Star dominating the 5 1/2-furlong maiden race by 6 1/4 lengths clear over future G1 Santa Anita Handicap winner Express Train and Shooters Shoot (second in the G2 Triple Bend Stakes).

Eight Rings was bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm and sold for $520,000 at the 2018 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Eight Rings is out of G3 Whimsical Stakes winner and G2 Masters Stakes-placed Purely Hot by Pure Prize. Bred on the same Empire Maker/Storm Cat cross as Eclipse champion and Triple Crown winner American Pharaoh and Eclipse champion Classic Empire.

Adrian Gonzalez of Checkmate Thoroughbreds said, “Eight Rings is a sensational stallion prospect for California breeders. He was an exceptionally precocious Grade 1-winning 2-year-old on the dirt at Santa Anita. He's beautifully bred and even more impressive physically. He's robust and powerful and exudes class. It is a rare opportunity to launch a stallion with this genetic makeup that is a Grade 1 winner at two in California. I am thrilled to present him.”

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Bloodlines: Flightline At Lane’s End, And The Family Shoes He’ll Aim To Fill

The catlike power and bounding glory of Flightline graced our racetracks for the last time on Nov. 5, and one of the marks of highest merit for the bay son of Tapit (by Pulpit) is that he translated the exceptional speed and overpowering dominance he had shown while racing in California to tracks in New York (for the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap) and Kentucky (for his career finale in the G1 Breeders' Cup Classic).

Now being carefully unwound from the bustle and daily routine of life on the racetrack, Flightline is being prepared step by step for his second career as a stallion at Lane's End Farm outside Versailles, Ky. On the racetrack, a show of particular interest in fillies can earn a colt a sharp correction. This is so because a horse's purpose on the racetrack is racing, and focus is important. Very important.

Back at the farm, it sometimes takes a moment for a smart colt to realize that a particular interest in fillies will no longer result in a correction. Instead, fillies are the focus of this new life that only a very few colts can attain.

Flightline has made the initial steps of transition to the quiet life of a breeding farm under the guidance of the stallion staff at Lane's End. Fresh from the accolades he earned after a rousing race in the Breeders' Cup Classic against his divisional challenger, Life is Good (Into Mischief), Flightline would be one of the most popular horses in the country. Tens of thousands would like to see him; many fewer would like to acquire a season and breed a foal from his first crop. Okay, actually nearly everyone would like a season. The reality is that only a very few have the cash ($200,000 for a live foal) and a mare of the quality to possibly reach that pinnacle.

So, one of the highlights of the latter days of the Keeneland November sale was the opportunity to venture out to Lane's End and see Flightline being shown to some of his fans and admirers on the grounds trod for decades by champion racehorse and sire A.P. Indy.

A thick-bodied son of Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew (Bold Reasoning) and the Secretariat mare Weekend Surprise, A.P. Indy was a leader in every segment of his life. A beautiful young horse, he was the top-selling lot at the 1990 Keeneland July sale of selected yearlings. On the racetrack under the patient training of Neil Drysdale, the colt became a Grade 1 winner at two, then progressed to win the Belmont Stakes at three, ended his racing career with victory in the Breeders' Cup Classic, and was named Horse of the Year in 1992.

Thirty years late, there is no question who will be Horse of the Year for 2022. That question was answered emphatically and properly (on the racetrack) when the two best horses in training – Life is Good and Flightline – squared off over the 10 furlongs of the Breeders' Cup Classic.

On Monday afternoon, watching Flightline walk the manicured pathways that A.P. Indy, Kingmambo, and others built, there was no doubt that, on racing ability and athletic prowess, here was a young horse who merited inclusion among these champions of sporting history.

Across the quad from the primary showing path where our new champion strode and stood and pricked his handsome ears, a statue of A.P. Indy on a pedestal surveys the domain the great horse ruled.

The son and grandson of Triple Crown winners became the most dominant influence on the American classics of the past 20 years, and Flightline is a son of A.P. Indy's most famous and important grandson, Tapit.

Whereas A.P. Indy himself was a Goliath, thick-bodied and immensely powerful, Pulpit and his great son Tapit are just a step closer to the norm, nice-sized horses but not immense.

In contrast, Flightline is out of a stakes-winning daughter of the big, brawny, and powerful Indian Charlie (In Excess), and Flightline is cast in a distinctively different model to Indian Charlie and his best son, champion Uncle Mo.

Flightline himself is a lean and elegant racer of considerable individuality. In phenotype, Flightline is definitely more of a greyhound than a mastiff, and the influence of the great Mr. Prospector is evident in the elegant and efficient construction of the horse. Mr. Prospector was no carbon copy of his sire Raise a Native, either, but took a different type, and Flightline is inbred to Mr. P 4x5x5. That might be a point worth considering.

Judicious consideration is always a good ingredient in well-planned matings, but if the brilliant bay champion to be is able to pass on a reasonable portion of the qualities he showed on the racetrack, his future will be bright, and the sport will be all the richer.

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Kingman Colt The First To Break 500k Mark At Goffs, As Juddmonte Goes to 530k

A son of Kingman (GB) (lot 606) and out of Princess De Lune (Ire) (Shamardal) from Roundhill Stud brought €530,000 from Juddmonte Farms at the Goffs November Foal Sale on Wednesday. The dam is a half-sister to Group 1 winner Zabeel Prince (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), a full to the multiple group winner and multiple Group 1-placed Puissance De Lune (Ire) (Shamardal) and to G2 Middleton S. heroine Queen Power (Ire) (Shamardal).

 

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