Proud Emma Sells For $1 Million During Third Session Of Keeneland November Sale

Grade 3 winner Proud Emma, a 6-year-old daughter of Include in foal to Charlatan, sold to Jane Lyon's Summer Wind Equine for $1 million during Wednesday's third session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

Proud Emma was the first million-dollar horse on Day 3 of the November Sale since 2017, and she increased the number of seven-figure purchases at this year's auction to 13.

On Wednesday, 214 horses sold for $40,754,000, an increase of 6.87 percent over the corresponding session of the 2021 sale when 242 horses grossed $38,134,000. The average of $190,439 rose 20.85 percent from last year's $157,579. The median of $160.000 was up 14.29 percent over $140,000.

Keeneland cumulatively has sold 547 horses for $142,807,000, which climbed 12.77 percent from the corresponding period of 2021 when the gross was $126,634,000 for 586 horses. The average of $261,073 is 20.81 percent above $216,099 from 2021, and the median increased 9.38 percent from $160,000 to $175,000.

“The sale has been very healthy,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said, “reflecting the vibrancy of the market. We're coming off an exciting Breeders' Cup, and there's a deep bench of stallions that are retiring this year. A lot of breeders are looking to improve their broodmare bands and freshen their portfolio, both on a domestic and international basis.

“There's a lot of enthusiasm,” Lacy continued. “Buyers are willing to keep going on the horses they feel have the quality they want. It's the tide that rises a lot of boats. We are in a very competitive environment right now. There is diversity in the market and in the buying pool that is really encouraging. Today the top 15 horses sold to 14 different interests. It's very broad-based and we're not dependent on one entity. The second horse through the ring today brought $700,000 and the horse six hips from the end brought $725,000, so there is depth all the way through.”

“We saw lots of domestic interest at the top of the market yesterday and today,” Keeneland Director of Sales Operations Cormac Breathnach said. “When you look at the foal market, the median price today was $150,000 and last year it was about $110,000. You can see people are getting really competitive on the foals. Authentic is a really exciting first-crop stallion, but there's also Improbable, Volatile, Tiz the Law – several exciting horses that are beginning to get recognized. As strong as today was, there is every reason to believe the momentum will continue into Book 3 and beyond.”

Consigned by Bedouin Bloodstock, agent, Proud Emma is out of Debutante Dreamer, by Proud Citizen, and from the family of Grade 1 winner America Alive.

“We saw an awfully pretty mare that we think Flightline would like,” Lyon said. “We decided we would give him a little present for his performances lately. We were trying to find mares that we thought both physically and pedigree-wise would fit him. I hope he realizes what a job he's got ahead of him. We were happy that she was in foal, and we are anxious to see her Charlatan. He (Charlatan) is a young horse, so we hope he'll be successful as well.”

“She is a big, beautiful mare by Include. She is an awesome physical,” Conor Doyle of Bedouin Bloodstock said. “The price surprised us a little. We thought she would bring more than half a million. (Covering sire Charlatan) played a huge role (in the price). We're glad she was bought by Summer Wind and is going to be part of that broodmare band.”

Anderson Farms/Stonereath Stud paid $725,000 for the 3-year-old Distorted Humor filly Whimsical Dance consigned by Sam-Son Farm. A half-sister to Grade 2 winners Say the Word and Rideforthecause, she is from the family of Racing Hall of Famer Dance Smartly, Canadian champion Dancethruthedawn and Grade 1 winners Smart Strike and Moreno.

“I've admired the Sam-Son operation my entire life growing up in Canada,” buyer Dave Anderson said. “I've strived to be even remotely close as good a breeder as they've been. This is a filly from their absolute best family. I took one look at her, and Distorted Humor over Giant's Causeway … it's just something I just really wanted to have in my program. I'm really thrilled to have her. She'll be a long-term mare in our program. My father died 12 years ago yesterday and he and Mr. Samuel (of Sam-Son Farm) were great friends and did a lot of business together over the years, so it really is an emotional purchase for me.”

Zoikes (FR), a 4-year-old daughter of Dubawi in foal to Medaglia d'Oro, sold for $700,000 to Jim Ryan of Ireland. She is out of French stakes winner and Group 1-placed Glorious Sight, by Singspiel, and a half-sister to Group 2 winner Glycon. Zoikes was consigned by Indian Creek, agent.

“She was very well-received,” Indian Creek's Sarah Sutherland said. “It's a great cover (Medaglia d'Oro) for her: the Medaglia cross with Dubawi. She was sold for Bob Edwards and e Five Racing. They bought her as a yearling at (the 2019 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale) and campaigned her here.”

Woodford Thoroughbreds paid $675,000 for stakes winner Message, a 6-year-old daughter of Warrior's Reward in foal to Charlatan. Consigned by Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent, she is out of the Carson City mare Song'n Dance and from the family of multiple Grade 1 winner Win.

“We're all the time looking to upgrade, and that was a lot of money for her,” said Lincoln Collins, agent for Woodford Thoroughbreds. “She is an absolutely beautiful mare. Pedigree-wise, we can breed her to pretty much anything we like. Warrior's Reward is beginning to show life as a broodmare sire. Charlatan was a very good racehorse, and he will probably be one of the most popular first-season sires next year. You know how the market is: It values youth over experience. All those things together pushed us to the limit. I've bid a lot of money on a lot of horses and hadn't gotten anything until today.”

Lake Garda, a 4-year-old half-sister to Grade 1 winners Hoppertunity and Executiveprivilege who is in foal to Uncle Mo, sold to HR Bloodstock for $600,000. Consigned by ELiTE, agent, she is out of Refugee, by Unaccounted For, and from the family of Racing Hall of Famer Davona Dale

“Just a beautiful mare, obviously regally bred,” buyer Hunter Rankin said. “Really excited for the owner. She's going to go to Flightline. We thought it was a fair price. We thought she would do well in the market. It looked like she had a lot of action out there. She had all the pieces and parts, and then she's in foal to a great stallion. We just really liked the mare and wanted to make sure we got her.”

Determined Stud and Gage Hill spent $575,000 on Finding Fame, a 5-year-old winning daughter of Empire Maker bred to Constitution for her first foal. A full sister to stakes winner Mei Ling, Finding Fame is out of the Seeking the Gold mare Lochinvar's Gold and from the family of Grade 1 winners La Gueriere and Al Mamoon. She was consigned by Gainesway, agent.

“Shug McGaughey trained the mare, and she had a lot of talent,” Terry Finley of Gage Hill said, adding Finding Fame could be bred to Flightline. “She's a lovely, big pretty mare. We knew there were several significant players interested in her.”

AAA Thoroughbreds went to $550,000 to acquire the session's top-priced weanling, a colt by Gun Runner from the family of Grade 1 winner Critical Eye and Grade 2 winner Takeover Target. Consigned by Indian Creek, agent, he is out of Twiga, by Union Rags.

“I thought he was the best horse in the sale. I just love him,” buyer Dean DeRenzo said. “We bought our first Gun Runner, which was (multiple Grade 1 winner) Taiba (as a yearling in 2020). We're really excited. We'll send him home, let him grow up, see how things go, and we'll go from there.”

ELiTE was the session's leading consignor with sales of $4,655,000 for 16 horses.

St. George Stables led buyers by spending $1.72 million on six horses.

The November Sale continues Thursday at 10 a.m. ET and runs through Wednesday, Nov. 16, with all sessions beginning at 10 a.m.

On Thursday, Nov. 17, Keeneland will present the November Horses of Racing Age Sale. The auction starts at noon.

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The History Of Roulette

Roulette is a very common game of gambling that can be found in every casino, whether online or land based. The variety of betting opportunities and play in roulette has helped to make it one of the most popular and abundant forms of gaming available to players of chance.

Roulette is played by having gamblers bet their money on the odds of a ball in a large wheel landing in a pocket. There are 37 or 38 pockets, depending on the version of roulette the gambler is playing. Pockets are numbered 1 to 36 (with one zero or double zeroes constituting the final pockets) and are alternately colored red or black. Players who make a winning bet receive odds of 35 to win, and also recover their original bet. Bets can be placed in a variety of ways, on individual numbers, colors, or combinations, ranges, odds, or evens.

Blaise Pascal invented the first roulette wheel. Pascal was a mathematician, and the invention has been attributed to his fascination with perpetual motion devices. Originally, the roulette wheel did not include the number 0, but it was added by the Blanc brothers (Louis and Francois) in 1842 in order to increase the house odds. Roulette spread quickly throughout Europe and North America. In the United States, American Roulette was invented when the double zero was added to the wheel, sometimes substituted with the American Eagle. Roulette was among the first casino games, as it was Blanc himself who established the first casino in the famous Monte Carlo resort area. Roulette is also invariably tied in to the portrayal of gambling as evil, as the addition of all the numbers on the roulette wheel (1 to 36) the number is that of the Beast of Revelation story, 666.

Keep in mind while you are gambling that it was a mathematician who invented the roulette wheel, and that he knew that in order to gain a profit the house would have to take the majority of the money. Another, perhaps more famous, mathematician is known to have decried the game of roulette; Albert Einstein has been quoted as saying “You cannot beat a roulette table unless you steal money from it.”

Despite detractors, many gamblers continue to hope that they odds will favor them when it comes to the wheel. Many try variations on the Martingale Betting Strategy, wherein a losing bet is doubled in the next round in order that the original amount is recouped while the original bet is still gained. This strategy can potentially lead to a disastrous financial loss.

Regardless of the chances an individual has at winning in roulette, there are always at least a few payouts and the game has so many variations that it can be a fun experience. As in any game of chance, the key to roulette is knowing when to draw the line and get up from the table.

‘Whatever Happens, This Isn’t The End Of The Story’: 28-Year-Old Jesse Cruz Enters Haskell Runner Benevengo In Claiming Crown Jewel

Benevengo is a prime example of how young horses can change.

Because of that, trainer Jesse Cruz has his first Claiming Crown horse with the 3-year-old colt — known as Benny around the barn — going in Saturday's 1 1/8-mile Jewel at Churchill Downs. The race, for horses which have raced in a $35,000 claiming race or cheaper in 2021-2022 — offers a $175,000 purse plus another $25,000 for Kentucky-breds.

The 28-year-old Cruz claimed Benevengo in his debut, a $25,000 maiden-claiming race at Tampa Bay Downs on Feb. 12. Cruz said he was at the starting gate with another horse one morning when Benevengo also worked out of the gate. The young trainer liked what he saw but didn't think Benevengo would show up in a claiming race. When he did, he and owner T.K. Kuegler were ready and dropped the claim. Benevengo proved Cruz right by winning by 9 1/2 lengths.

“He won very impressively,” Cruz said. “But when you watched him run you were like, 'OK, he's still extremely green.' He broke slow, circled the field, turning for home he went to open up. The rider hit him right-handed, so he started lugging in. He hit him left-handed, and he started lugging out. And still went 6 1/2 (furlongs) in 1:17 that day.

“So we knew, 'Oh, this horse has a lot of talent, but he obviously needs to focus on paying a little bit of attention.' He just gotten better with every day, every month, every race. He's just started to develop into a pretty nice horse. He's still pretty green. He's not very aggressive galloping. That's just not him. He's not extremely aggressive unless you put something next to him. It was good we got to ship in a little early here, because there's a lot to look at here. So for him to get to go around the racetrack and see some things was really good for him.

“Whatever happens Saturday, this isn't the end of the story. I think as a 4-year-old, he's going to be a lot more mature and a lot better horse for it.”

Benevengo also won his first start for Cruz, who then put him in Monmouth Park's Long Branch Stakes, resulting in a fourth in his first start around two turns. After an allowance win against older horses, Cruz jumped into the really deep waters of Monmouth's signature $1 million, Grade 1 Haskell Invitational. At 56-1 odds, Benevengo set the pace before finishing fifth behind top 3-year-olds Cyberknife, Taiba and Jack Christopher.

“We took a swing at running him in the Haskell,” Cruz said. “We were super proud with how he ran there. He finished fifth, but he set all the fractions through the first three-quarters of the race. He ran well.”

Benevengo's last start, back in against older horses, resulted in a 7 1/2-length victory in Pimlico's $100,000 Polynesian Stakes.

“He probably ran a little bit better than even we expected,” Cruz said. “We figured this would be our Breeders' Cup, the Claiming Crown at the end of the year. He's taken to the track well, done everything great, hasn't missed any meals. We're pretty excited about him.

“Other than the Haskell, this is the biggest race I've ever run in. We look to come in at a lot lower odds than the Haskell. I think Benny has developed into a better horse since the Haskell. Our main concern with him is he's only a 3-year-old and is lightly raced. The Claiming Crown is full of a bunch older, class horses that when they run their best they run really well. It's a true test for him. But we thought it would be a great race to end his year.”

Cruz has trained since he was 23. He was born into the sport, with his mom, Daisy Tobin, a longtime assistant trainer at Charles Town to legendary West Virginia trainer James Casey. His father, Alejandro Cruz, was a jockey and his stepdad, Lewis Craig Jr., is a trainer.

“I grew up on the backside,” Jesse Cruz said. “When I was a little kid, I really didn't like horses a lot. It wasn't so much that I didn't like horses, I just would rather have been playing football than being at the barn. But my mom, for most of my early life, was a single parent. She was an assistant in a barn of 30 horses so we were at the barn an awful lot. My mom is one of the best horsewomen in the world and kind of taught me everything I know.”

Cruz went to work for well-regarded trainer Ollie Figgins III. “I went everywhere with Ollie, galloped horses all over the country,” he said. “I was kind of young and cocky, went out on my own when I was 23 and here we are today.”

The Claiming Crown, he said, “is a day to put the horses that build the backbone of racing in the limelight. On an every-day card, most of the races are claiming horses. The Claiming Crown is a really big end of the year thing for those horses, really getting them to shine and get a little more national recognition.”

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Claiming Crown: Digital A True Jewel For Kentucky HBPA President Rick Hiles

Longtime Kentucky HBPA president Rick Hiles knows how big a deal it is for racing's rank-and-file horsemen to participate in the Claiming Crown, the series of big-money starter-allowance races for horses that are or have been claimers.

Hiles is one of those “every-day” horsemen — his words. While he once had a barn full of horses, today he trains five horses at Churchill Downs. One of them, Digital, will compete in Saturday's Claiming Crown Jewel, the 1 1/8-mile race that carries a base purse of $175,000, with another $25,000 available for Kentucky-breds through the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF).

After a 10-year run at Florida's Gulfstream Park, the eight-race Claiming Crown comes to Churchill Downs for the first time and to Kentucky for only the second time. It was held at Ellis Park in 2007.

“The Claiming Crown gives the every-day working horse — and trainers and owners — a chance to get recognized,” Hiles said. “Everybody can't have a Kentucky Derby horse, you know. It's a real honor to have one of those horses running there. These are the blue-collar working-class horses that make the industry go. They get out here and knock it out. They're not like those elite stakes horses that run five or six times.”

The Claiming Crown was created by the National Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Association and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders to provide a Breeders' Cup-style event that celebrates horseracing's warriors.

Hiles has never had a horse in the Breeders' Cup, racing's world championships that was held last week at Keeneland, but this is his second in the Claiming Crown. His first was the mare Sugar Cube, who finished second in the 2017 Glass Slipper. Ten of Sugar Cube's 17 wins (out of 63 career starts) were for Hiles, who said people often asked when she'd be running again.

“These horses give the fans something to cheer about,” he said. “People get attached to them and follow them.”

“This is big for me,” said Hiles, who estimates the most horses he's ever trained at one time was the 28 he had at Ellis Park one summer years ago. “I haven't had any 'major' horses through the years, even though I have had some good horses that made good money and won some graded stakes.”

When Hiles puts the saddle on Digital Saturday, that itself is a victory. He has battled esophageal cancer the past two years, undergoing major surgery and recently finished his last chemo treatment. Where he once was given mere months to live, Hiles says he's now basically cancer-free, though a recurrence remains a threat.

“I was supposed to be dead by October of last year,” he said. “Then they said I'd make it to May of this year. Now they're saying 'we don't know.'”

Hiles believes continuing to train horses throughout assisted his recovery, saying, “My doctor said, 'You're the toughest old man we've ever dealt with. We can't believe you're still going like you do. You get up every day and work.' I said, 'I'm just not going to let it get me down.'

“… I couldn't even saddle my own horses for a long time,” he continued. “I couldn't lift a bucket. But I work with a weight every day (to strengthen his arm). I'm really blessed. I've had a lot of people around the country praying for me, and I believe in that.”

Hiles is proud that the 2022 Claiming Crown will be held under the Twin Spires, with Churchill Downs and the Kentucky HBPA the hosts. The Claiming Crown purses also received a significant increase from 2021.

“I'm really enthused about having the Claiming Crown here,” Hiles said. “I really want it to be a banner event and received well across the country. Hopefully we can bring it back again…. With the historical horse racing machines, we've got a pretty good purse account. We were able to boost the purses up and then add KTDF money to them, too. It's made it very attractive. And we're centrally located. It's easy to get here from Pennsylvania and New York, West Virginia, Minnesota, Iowa or Arkansas and the cost (of shipping) should be less than to Miami.”

Hiles said he wasn't thinking of the Claiming Crown when he claimed Digital for $32,000 in June. He wasn't the only one with that idea, as multiple horsemen were in for the horse, with Hiles winning the “shake.”

“It was a horse that had never run for a 'tag,' and we were looking for a horse of that caliber,” he said. “I'm thinking there were five or six people in for him, but we got lucky and got him.”

While Digital had success with both sprints and two-turn races, Hiles said, “We found out early that this horse doesn't want to be rushed. He wants you just to sit on him and make a run. We started him out long. We've run him three times, and he's run exceptionally well. He's getting better all the time.”

Digital won his first start for Hiles and owner R. Townsend Sparks, jumping up in class to a second-level allowance race in which he was competing for the $62,500 claiming option. He finished third in a similar race (while in for an $80,000 claiming price) around a one-turn mile, then was second by a head at the same level but running the Jewel's distance of 1 1/8 miles.

“He's well-paid for himself, and he's just a super nice horse to be around,” said Hiles, who will have Corey Lanerie back aboard Digital. “He's coming into this race really, really good. I know it's going to be a tough spot. But I think he'll give a good accounting of himself.”

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