La Petite Coco Set To Star At Tattersalls

Group 1 winner La Petite Coco (Ire) (Ruler Of The World {Ire}), who boasts a 50% strike-rate on the racetrack and almost £400,000 in career earnings, will be one of the star attractions of the Tattersalls December Mares Sale.

Bred by Bernd and Ute Schone in County Offaly, La Petite Coco provided Paddy Twomey with his first Group 1 winner when landing a memorable Pretty Polly S. at the Curragh in June.

She carried the colours of Barry Irwin's Team Valor for the majority of her racing career, including her five wins, and the man behind that ownership vehicle thinks that the 4-year-old appeals to a broad spectrum of prospective buyers.

Irwin said, “I think that La Petite Coco has a chance to become a really good producer. It's a loaded family. There's a lot of top-class horses over middle distance and staying distances in there. She should have plenty of international appeal, especially amongst the Japanese. They seem to have a wider scope than Europeans. The fact that they can race another year or two if they want, should appeal to them.”

La Petite Coco is sold as a filly-in-training and Twomey says there are plenty of miles left in the tank. So much so, the County Tipperary-based trainer revealed that he would be delighted if her new owners decided to keep her in training for one more season with him.

Twomey said, “La Petite Coco is being sold as a horse-in-training and is lightly-raced with 10 runs and five wins. She won the G1 Pretty Polly S. and was third in the G1 Yorkshire Oaks on ground that was probably quicker than ideal at the time. The winner [Alpinista (GB) (Frankel {GB})] is as good a filly we've seen in Europe for some time and the second [Tuesday (Ire) (Galileo {Ire})] won the Oaks and at the Breeders' Cup. It was a very good race and it was probably a trainer error on my behalf as I ran her back a bit soon at York. She's not a big work horse at home and you have to feel your way as you go along with her. That was a big mistake on my part.”

He added, “After that, Barry mooted the idea of selling her and I said I'd keep her fresh. She's one you'd love to see racing on next year if the opportunity came its way. If she is sold and her new owner asked me to take her back I'd be delighted to have her back to train. I think she's a filly who has more in her. For example, Pearls Galore (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) had the best season of her life as a 5-year-old and I don't think La Petite Coco is any different. She's by a son of Galileo who won a Derby and she's five champions on her page and is very well-bred. She has two career-paths open to her and, while one will end up being her ultimate goal, if she ends up coming back into training before she goes breeding, that will be up to her new connections.”

The world-renowned green and red silks of Team Valor have been carried by a number of top-notchers down through the years but, according to Irwin, the operation is becoming more commercial. The sale of La Petite Coco is a statement of that fact.

He explained, “We're commercial now. I've done this thing [syndicated horses] since the middle of the eighties and it's fun–everybody enjoys it. But as I've gotten older and wiser, hopefully, I think that at some point you have to start taking some money off the table.

“The market today is definitely a seller's market. It's not a buyer's market. It reminds me of the early eighties. There was one Keeneland sale where they sold more than 30 yearlings for a million dollars, the prices were outrageous. It is difficult to buy horses right now. So I think if we sell horses that still have racing life in them, we'll get a premium and then we can take that money and turn around and buy some more.”

He added, “I think she should get better with age. There's no reason why she shouldn't. Both her sire and the dam side indicate she should get better with age.

He added, “We have sold a few fillies down through the years who have produced very good horses. Blue Rose Cen (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}), who won the Prix Marcel Boussac by five [lengths] is out of a mare that Gary Barber and I raced and we sold her to Fasig-Tipton. And through the years, we've sold a lot of fillies and mares that went on to produce Grade I and Group 1 winners and champions. We have a particularly good record selling to Japanese owners. Some of the foundation stock for the Shadai Stud family hails from a couple of mares that they bought from me.”

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Winter Weather Forces Woodbine To Cancel Portion Of Sunday Card

Woodbine Entertainment canceled races 3-10 of Sunday's card of live racing due to inclement weather conditions in the Toronto area.

At mid-afternoon, Weather.com reported snow in the area that was to continue for the next several hours.

Among the races canceled was the $175,000 Kennedy Road (G2), a six-furlong main track race for 3-year-olds and up. A Woodbine press release did not address when or if the race would be rescheduled.

Live racing will resume at Woodbine on Thursday, post time 4:50 p.m. (ET).

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If HISA Goes, Honest Horsemen Will Be The Losers

The National HBPA and its affiliates got their wish Friday. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is unconstitutional. As a result, HISA is on life support and very well could be finished. Within hours of the decision being announced, the National HBPA was taking a victory lap, declaring that this was a win for horsemen across the country.

“Today's ruling shows the HISA regulations are not in the best interest of thoroughbred racing's participants and, as Judge Doughty noted, will cause harm to the participants,” National HBPA CEO Eric Hambelback said in a statement.

That's what Hamelback and anti-HISA forces have been saying all along, while never really clarifying what potential harm would be caused by HISA. They fail to acknowledge that horse racing has a serious integrity problem and the cheaters are winning. HISA is designed not to hurt horsemen, but to rid the sport of its worst actors and in the process protect the overwhelming majority of owners and trainers who play by the rules.

Have we learned nothing from the FBI investigation and the subsequent arrests of Jorge Navarro, Jason Servis and more than two dozen others?  According to the indictments, Servis and Navarro gave virtually every horse in their barns performance-enhancing drugs and did so for years. They won with 30% of their starters not because they were superior horsemen but because they, allegedly, had potent drugs at their disposal.

Servis and Navarro operated under a system where state racing commissions were in charge. They were never caught and never were going to be. It's been proven that the racing commissions do an inadequate job and are helpless to catch the bad guys. That's because with most, the primary tool at their disposal is post-race drug tests. The same tests that never come up with anything more serious than overages of therapeutic medications. With hundreds of undetectable drugs available, it's far too easy to beat the system. Yet, the National HBPA is essentially saying they are fine with the status quo.

HISA was set to replace the old system with a new one under the watch of the Horse Racing Integrity and Welfare Unit, which was going to go well beyond drug testing and have some actual teeth. The plan includes working with 5 Stones Intelligence, which played a large role in the investigation that caught Servis and Navarro.

“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,” HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus 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.”

If HISA can't find a way to reverse the decision that declared it unconstitutional, we will go back to the old way of doing things, with state racing commissions leading the way while failing to do job of adequately policing the sport.

HISA was never going to wipe out all cheating in the sport, but it represented a huge step in the right direction and was sure to make it a lot tougher to break the rules. HISA was going to look out for the same people, HBPA members, who were robbed of purse money every time Jorge Navarro won a race, cheating hundreds of owners and trainers. Who's looking out for them now?

“It is the duty of the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association to protect horsemen across the country and that is not a responsibility I take lightly,” Hamelback said after the court decision.

He's right. But that means doing everything possible to ensure there is a level playing field and that HBPA members who play by the rules are never at a competitive disadvantage. That should be priority No. 1. If the National HBPA truly wanted to “protect horsemen across the country” then it would be backing HISA, not trying to undermine it.

Why Flightline Has My Horse of the Year Vote

Turf writer Gary West sent in a blistering letter to the editor to the TDN last week in which he wrote that he would not vote for Flightline (Tapit) for Horse of the Year because he did not want to reward his owners after they had retired him after just six career starts.

He wrote: “Whenever owners yield to avarice and whenever they focus on the sales ring rather than the racetrack, the sport shrinks a little more. And horse racing will continue to shrink into insignificance if its leaders, or so-called leaders, will not sacrifice their personal interests for the sport's good. That's why I cannot and will not vote for Flightline.”

West makes a valid point and the rush to retire racing's stars is bad for the sport. That means you can be unhappy with the ownership group but not that you should penalize the horse.

Though he raced just three times during the year, Flightline's accomplishments embody what it means to be the Horse of the Year. He was brilliant and dominating and he captivated the sport like no horse has done since Secretariat. As most would have done if they were in the same position, the owners opted to cash in on the millions coming their way from a stallion career. That's a shame but it is also the reality of what horse racing has become in the modern era. And it takes nothing away from what Flightline accomplished. He will be a very deserving Horse of the Year.

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‘We Kind Of Knew She Was Much The Best’: Stonewall Star Goes Gate To Wire In Key Cents Romp At Aqueduct

Barry Schwartz's homebred Stonewall Star was rarely ever in doubt when taking down her first stakes conquest in Sunday's ninth running of the $100,000 Key Cents for New York-bred juvenile fillies going six furlongs on the main track at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Stonewall Star, a Flatter bay, went into the gate as the overwhelming 2-5 favorite in the six-horse field, arriving off a hard-fought third against males in the New York Breeders' Futurity on October 17 at Finger Lakes for trainer Horacio De Paz. But she was much the best when squared up against her own gender, keeping maiden Weekend Rags at bay in the stretch rally to win by four lengths.

Stonewall Star was alert when breaking from post 5 under Jose Ortiz and quickly took command through an opening quarter-mile in :23.17 over the fast main track with stakes-winner Small Pebbles one length back and one path to her outside down the backstretch. Stonewall Star extended her advantage approaching the turn as Weekend Rags split rivals and sat off the flank of the leader through a half-mile in :47.59.

Ortiz took a peek back approaching the quarter pole and coaxed his charge into the stretch drive. Weekend Rags, who raced with blinkers on in her second lifetime start, put up a valiant effort, but was unable to reel in Stonewall Star, who covered the journey in 1:13.48.

Weekend Rags finished a neck ahead of late-closing Security Code, who also raced with blinkers on. Completing the order of finish were Dream On Cara, Three Unions, and Small Pebbles.

Stonewall Star, who returned $2.90 for a $2 win wager, earned $55,000 in victory, bringing her lifetime bankroll past the six-figure mark to $130,808. Her record stands at 4-2-1-1 and includes a second-out maiden triumph on September 22 at Belmont at the Big A over next out winner Disruption and black type earning Silver Skillet.

“She moved forward off that race at Finger Lakes,” De Paz said. “I wanted her to get involved in the race, but she broke sharp today. I don't know if that was by mistake; maybe getting settled in the gate a little bit, but she got great position early on.”

Ortiz expressed confidence in his filly following her strong showing in the New York Breeders' Futurity.

“Going into the race, we kind of knew she was much the best. She faced the boys at Finger Lakes and she ran a great race,” Ortiz said. “We were confident today and she didn't disappoint. She got a good trip, broke very alert, and we were in control of the race every step of the way, which is what we wanted to do. She's a nice filly.”

Ortiz said Stonewall Star is likely to be prominent in future starts through the winter.

“She has sat behind horses and took dirt [in the New York Breeders' Futurity], but I think with the kind of pace [we see] in the winter, she'll be on top,” Ortiz said. “If she's got good position, she can sit off speed. That's the good thing about her – she's not a 'one way' horse; she can come from behind, and that's a relief as a rider.”

De Paz said Stonewall Star, who was reluctant to load into the starting gate, can be a little bit fiery.

“She was on her toes,” De Paz said. “Obviously, the gate crew know her, too. She was definitely not trying to be compliant, but she went in and caught a flyer and got in a good spot.”

De Paz noted he would not rule out an open-company start at some point in the future for Stonewall Star.

Bred by Schwartz's Stonewall Farm, Stonewall Star is a full sister to three-time New York-bred stakes winner La Fuerza. Both are out of the two-time winning Proud Citizen mare Jonata.

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