Bet to win.
Newcastle 1.35 Queen of Impanema – win bet.
Newcastle 3.20 World Without Love – win bet.
Bet to win.
Newcastle 1.35 Queen of Impanema – win bet.
Newcastle 3.20 World Without Love – win bet.
Seven-time Group 1 winner Highland Reel (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) will transfer to Takaya Shimikawa's S T Farm on Hokkaido next season. The sire of three stakes winners, led by G2 Premio Dormello heroine Atamisque (Ire) and GIII Surfer Girl S. victress Comanche Country (Ire), the Coolmore Stud stallion is currently serving the Southern Hemisphere season at Swettenham Stud in Australia for A$16,500.
An S T Farm spokesperson told Yahoo Japan, “During his racing days, Highland Reel was a horse whose performances were outstanding, not only in Europe, but overseas. I feel that his progeny show good speed, and although they have achieved results in Europe and the United States, I feel that the Japan may be a better fit.”
Out of the G2 South Australian Oaks second and G2 Schweppes Oaks third Hveger (Aus) (Danehill), he is a full-brother to three stakes winner led by multiple group winner Idaho (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was placed in both the G1 Derby and G1 Irish Derby, as well as G1 Caulfield S. winner Cape Of Good Hope (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).
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In less than 12 weeks the Horse Racing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU), a branch of the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA), will get to work, handling all drug testing and enforcement across the country. With that in mind, the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland called on HISA Chief Executive Officer Lisa Lazarus to bring us up to speed on the latest developments regarding her organization. Lazarus was this week's Green Group Guest of the Week.
Lazarus said that seven of the racing commissions in the 14 states where racing will be held on Jan. 1 have reached an agreement with HISA and are ready to pay the assessment fee necessary to be involved with the program. In states where no agreement has been reached, HISA will have to hire its own staff to perform services like drug testing that used to fall under the racing commissions. She said she has been pleased that the tracks and racing commissions seem to grow more comfortable with HISA by the day.
“Honestly, I certainly can't sit here and say that everybody is on board now,” Lazarus said. “But I definitely feel that each day we get closer and closer to acceptance and support. And I think that's really about the tone that we set and that my staff sets in terms of wanting to help make the industry better. We're not looking to make things more difficult or more complicated. We're looking to provide this foundation of safety and integrity that everyone in racing can build their businesses around.”
She reiterated that HIWU will rely on more than drug testing to police the sport. They will work closely with 5 Stones Intelligence, which was instrumental in the arrests of Jorge Navarro, Jason Servis and more than two dozen others in 2020.
“The Horse Racing Integrity and Welfare Unit is also building their own internal capability, their own internal investigations team, which is very strong and is going to include some well-known and well-established faces,” she said. “I think probably why you ask the question, and it really resonates with me, is that you want to know if the new program is going to be very much intelligence and investigations based. It's not going to be based solely on conducting a whole lot of tests. If you look at all the top-end programs in the world, equine and otherwise, you'll see that the successful ones that really deliver integrity to their sports rely heavily on investigations. That's great. What 5 Stones has uncovered over the past couple of years has really changed this industry for the better. They truly have. They have certainly done a terrific job and we're lucky to have them as part of the sport.”
On a related subject, Lazarus said she was pleased that jockeys seemed to have adapted to HISA's rules regarding the whip.
“When (the new whip rule) was first introduced back in July, there was a learning curve to get all the jockeys on the same page and fairly so because they've been operating with different rules across multiple jurisdictions,” Lazarus said. “But now a number of months in, we're seeing a lot of very encouraging signs. First of all, if you watch the Breeders' Cup, I think it was an extraordinary display of why excessive crop use is not necessary and doesn't enhance the sport. Second of all, we're seeing a real plateau on the number of violations across the country. There had been concern and negative feedback, most of which revolved around the fact that if you were over nine strikes, you would face disqualification. We believed, or at least the Racetrack Safety Committee believed, that if you were going to actually genuinely have an impact on properties, you'd have to bring in stakeholders who had more at stake than just the jockeys. And those are only 6% of our overall number of of crop violations, which I think is quite a low number. So I think over time, we'll be able to prove that these sort of balanced crop rules are better for the sport. They don't change the sport and they haven't changed anything with the betting public.”
Elsewhere on the podcast, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, XBTV, West Point Thoroughbreds, Lane's End, Adena Springs and the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders, panelists Zoe Cadman, Randy Moss and Bill Finley reviewed the Breeders' Cup and all things Flightline (Tapit). The crew all agreed that the GI Breeders' Cup Classic was the best race of his six-race career and that he deserves to be considered one of the all-time greats in the sport's history. Flightline got a 121 Beyer in the Classic, five points lower than in his win the GI Pacific Classic. Moss, who makes speed figures for the Beyer team, explained why his number fell off a bit. The domination of the European-based horses brought out some interesting insights from the trio and had Finley declaring that he will never again pick against any horse Charlie Appleby sends over to run in North America. The group also looked at the few Eclipse Award races that are not complete no-brainers and all agreed that Modern Games (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), War Like Goddess (English Channel), Epicenter (Not This Time) and Elite Power (Curlin) should be named champion in their respective divisions.
Click here for the audio-only version.
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by Matt Koch
Editor's Note: In honor of Veterans Day and the 247th birthday of the United States Marine Corps (USMC), celebrated Nov. 11 and Nov. 10, respectively, we are honored to share this story from USMC Captain Matt Koch of Shawhan Place, a second-generation Marine following his father, longtime Claiborne Farm manager Robert “Gus” Koch. Matt, who will be honored next month as the 2022 Ted Bates Farm Manager of the Year by the Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers' Club (KTFMC), is also the state representative of the 72nd district (Bourbon, Nicholas, and Fleming Counties).
Even Marines need a hero. Mine is David Pope. David is quiet, he goes to church every Sunday, and he works for a Thoroughbred farm in Bourbon County. His wife Kym works at the local extension office, and to put it simply, they are just good people. Good people who have done something extraordinary. David stepped up and donated a kidney to a man in another state whom he had never met. I don't think I can tell this story without first starting with my father's journey.
My father received his final orders last year after a long, hard fight with kidney cancer. USMC Sergeant Gus Koch proudly served in Vietnam from 1966-67. Thirty years later, he was diagnosed with kidney cancer and that started the fight that continued for the next 25 years. Whether it was the Agent Orange or the drinking water at Camp Lejeune, we don't know for sure. Dad had a kidney removed, faced multiple rounds of chemo, had brain tumors and stomach tumors. We moved up countless family weddings and anniversary celebrations because doctors told us Dad wouldn't make it six more months. The Marine in him wouldn't stop. He saw all 10 of his children graduate college, get married, and start families.
It wasn't long after Dad passed away that I learned the story of one of my Marines from Afghanistan. Corporal Chris Kilpatrick and I worked in the S-2 (intelligence) shop together. On Oct. 31, 2019, Chris had been diagnosed with Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD). He was in end-stage renal failure and in urgent need of a transplant.
PKD is normally an inherited disease, but in this case, it was due to the toxic exposures to the burn pits which we were exposed to in Iraq and Afghanistan. There is no cure, and the only option is a kidney transplant.
Chris's story hit me pretty hard. I started the donation process. Many others also started the process and were weeded out. In January, 2022 I shared the post about Chris on Facebook. I didn't say anything about Dad or the back story. Unbeknownst to me, a friend of my father, David Pope, saw the post and felt the call to action. Just a month prior, while attending Christmas Eve mass with his family in Ohio, David had heard a sermon about giving of yourself. He prayed for an opportunity that he may have that chance. The Popes didn't realize that something would come along so soon. When David and Kym saw the Facebook post they thought maybe they should give it a try, with the thought that there was no way he would match. He started the process and passed stage 1. He continued the journey and passed again.
David ended up being such a good match that the doctors said it was almost like they were brothers. He traveled several times from Kentucky to Florida for a man he never met and to make a major life decision. He was going to give Chris a kidney.
When David called to tell me he was going to be the donor, I shed a few tears. You see, he had been friends with my father. They shared common bonds of being in the horse industry and served in the Knights of Columbus together at the Church of the Annunciation in Paris. He didn't know that Dad's cancer was service related.
Far too often veterans believe we live on an island. We can rest easy knowing that good men and women like David Pope have our backs. David, we salute you for having our backs when times were bad. Gunny Brossette, our Intel Shop Staff NCO (Noncommissioned Officer), said it best: “David, although you were never in uniform, you saved the life of one of our Marines and that, sir, makes you one of us for life.”
David and Chris are both recovering and doing well.
Happy Birthday, Marines!
Semper Fi, David.
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