Texas 2-Year-Old Sale Set for Apr. 5

The Texas 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale will be held Apr. 5 next year at Lone Star Park, while the auction's breeze show will be held Apr. 3.

“We've already had a lot of interest in our 2023 sale season,” Texas Thoroughbred Association Sales Director Foster Bridewell said. “Our 2-year-old sale has certainly gotten stronger in terms of quality in the past few years and those horses have been performing well at tracks around the midwest and south.”

Free Drop Maddy (Free Drop Billy), who topped this year's sale after a final bid of $200,000, broke her maiden in the $150,000 Texas Thoroughbred Association Futurity and, most recently, captured the Donovan L. Ferguson Memorial S. at the Fair Grounds for Mansfield Racing and Bret Calhoun.

“Our graduates are proof of the quality our consignors have offered each year,” Bridewell said. “We're excited to get to work on putting together another solid edition in April.”

The entry deadline for the Texas 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale is Jan. 16 and consignment forms are now available at www.ttasales.com.

The post Texas 2-Year-Old Sale Set for Apr. 5 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Group 1 Winner Keiai Nautique To Stand At Karwin Farm

Group 1 winner Keiai Nautique (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}–Keiai Gerbera {Jpn}, by Smarty Jones) will stand at Gregory Vayre's Karwin Farm in France next year, Jour de Galop reported on Thursday. Raced by Kazuhiro Kameda, the 6-year-old claimed the G1 NHK Mile Cup in 2018. The deal was brokered by Emmanuel de Seroux and a fee will be announced later.

A winner on debut as a juvenile, the bay was also second in the G2 New Zealand Trophy in 2018 and third in the G2 Fuji S. in 2020. Transferred to the Matthew Smith barn Down Under for his final four starts, he ran fourth three times in group company, including in his career finale, the 2021 G1 Mackinnon S. His record stands at 28-3-2-2, with earnings of $2,115,438.

Bred by Queens Ranch, Ltd., Keiai Nautique is a full-brother to G1 Cantala S., G1 Makybe Diva S. and G1 Toorak H. hero Fierce Impact (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). Their dam, G3 Procyon S. and G3 Capella S. victress Keiai Gerbera counts GIII El Encino S. winner Edge (Damascus) as her second dam. At stud, Edge left Boundary (Danzig), a dual Grade III winner and subsequently the sire of dual American Classic hero Big Brown.

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Extra Distance Should Benefit Brazilian-Bred Novo Sol In Woodbine’s Valedictory

The Grade 3, $150,000 Valedictory Stakes, set for 1 ½ miles on the Tapeta this Sunday at Woodbine, has attracted 12 starters, including Novo Sol (BRZ).

The marathon test, for 3-year-olds and up, will mark the 19th career start for the 5-year-old son of Agnes Gold (JPN), who was a narrowly beaten runner-up in last year's G1 Grande Prêmio São Paulo.

Trained by Saffie Joseph, Jr. for Daniel Alonso, Novo Sol (BRZ) recently added Woodbine to his racetrack passport. After competing in Brazil, the bay has raced at Gulfstream, Pimlico, Belmont and Presque Isle prior to coming to the Toronto oval.

In his latest start, the G2 Autumn on Nov. 6, Novo Sol (BRZ), under Patrick Husbands, rallied to finish third in the 1 1/16-mile Tapeta event.

“I thought he was in a good spot, and he finished up well,” said Joseph. “He couldn't quicken as much as the Mark Casse horse (Who's the Star, also entered to run in the Valedictory), who was much the best, but overall, I thought it was a decent run. Patrick (jockey, Husbands) said that he ran well and ran his race. He's a horse that doesn't really have a quick acceleration, so I believe that a mile and a half will help him a bit better.”

After a win and a third in his first two starts of 2022, both at Gulfstream, Novo Sol (BRZ), bred by Stud Eternamente Rio, finished seventh and eighth, respectively, in the G2 Dinner Party and G2 Belmont Gold Cup.

The bay rebounded with a two-length triumph in a mile and 70-yard race over the Gulfstream synthetic on July 16 and followed it up with a third in the Presque Isle Downs Mile on Sept. 19.

“He likes the Tapeta. He's two-for-two at Gulfstream on the surface and that's why we took him to Presque Isle, to keep him on the Tapeta. He was third going a mile and a half on the grass, but this will be his first time going that distance on the Tapeta. So, we think it's a distance he likes and a surface he likes.”

Novo Sol (BRZ) worked 4 furlongs in :48-flat on the Woodbine main track on November 20 and followed it up with a :48.60 breeze one week later.

“He's a very easy-going horse and a smart horse. On the track, in his gallops, he might get a bit overkeen, but as far as around the barn, he's very quiet.”

First post for Sunday is 1:20 p.m. Fans can watch and wager on all the action through HPIbet.com and the Dark Horse Bets app.

GRADE 3 VALEDICTORY STAKES

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER

1 – English Conqueror – Daisuke Fukumoto – Darwin Banach

2 – Seventyseven Stone – Ademar Santos – Paul Lepiane

3 – Novo Sol (BRZ) – Patrick Husbands – Saffie Joseph, Jr.

4 – Angelou – Luis Contreras – Kevin Attard

5 – Elusive Knight – Gary Boulanger – Michael Doyle

6 – British Royalty – Justin Stein – Barbara Minshall

7 – Wentru – Rafael Hernandez – Martin Drexler

8 – Ya Beauty (GB) – Jeffrey Alderson – Nigel Burke

9 – Collective Force – Eswan Flores – Rachel Halden

10 – Megayacht – Kazushi Kimura – Christophe Clement

11 – Prideofdistinction – Sahin Civaci – Martin Drexler

12 – Who's the Star – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Mark Casse

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Collaborative Care Saves 20-Year-Old Horse From Chronic Colic Condition

Oskie, a 20-year-old Arabian gelding, had numerous mild colic episodes over the past two years. Thankfully, his owner is a veterinarian, and she knew how to treat the increasingly chronic condition in Oskie. But when she treated him a dozen times in one month, it was time to have his condition more thoroughly examined by the equine specialists at the UC Davis veterinary hospital.

She suspected Oskie may have enteroliths, which are rock-like formations that form in the intestinal tract and cause blockage. Consisting of sand and other undigestible items that collect in the colon, enteroliths range in size from little pebbles to bowling balls if allowed to grow long enough.

At UC Davis' Large Animal Clinic, Oskie underwent a series of examinations with several departments, which began with a thorough work-up by faculty member Dr. Julie Dechant and resident Dr. Stefanie Arndt of the Equine Emergency Surgery Service.

Radiology specialists with the Diagnostic Imaging Service detected no enteroliths or sand in his system on x-rays, so he was referred for an abdominal ultrasound with the Large Animal Ultrasound Service. There, Dr. Betsy Vaughan observed a long segment of severely distended and fluid-filled small intestine that had poor motility. This appearance was highly suggestive of a small intestinal obstruction, though the cause of the obstruction could not be seen, so Dr. Vaughan recommended surgery to find the cause.

Surgeons performed an exploratory celiotomy, an opening of the abdominal cavity, and found a mass growth blocking Oskie's small intestine and removed a four-foot section of the intestinal tract. The appearance of the mass was consistent with cancer, but there was no visual evidence of it spreading to the adjacent intestine or lymph nodes.

A biopsy of the mass by the Anatomic Pathology Service confirmed it to be a jejunal adenocarcinoma, a rarely found cancer in horses. With large margins surrounding the tumor removed and no metastasis observed in his system, Oskie appeared free of the cancer following surgery.

Oskie was weak following surgery, but sling assistance allowed for a smooth recovery. He was hospitalized in the Equine Intensive Care Unit for 10 days while being treated with intravenous fluid therapy, antibiotics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and nutritional support.

Horses that undergo colic and other abdominal surgeries have long recoveries. For the first 30 days, Oskie was confined to stall rest with only two short hand walks per day. For the second month, he was allowed access to a small run along with his hand walks. The third month of Oskie's recovery gave him access to a large pasture by himself and continued hand walks.

At Oskie's three-month recheck appointment, a follow-up ultrasound showed his small intestine was back to normal compared to its dilated appearance previously. Now ten months post surgery, his owner reports that he has made a full recovery.

Oskie in the Nevada Day Parade after surgery.

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