Arqana February Catalogue Features Group Winner Air De Valse

G2 Prix du Petite Couvert heroine and G1 Prix de l'Abbaye-placed Air De Valse (Fr) (Mesnil des Aigles {Fr}) (lot 51) is one of 356 lots in Arqana's February Sale catalogue which was released on Friday.

Slated for 11 a.m. local time on Feb. 14-15, the sale features horses-in-training on the Flat and over jumps, maidens, broodmares, stores, 2-year-olds, and yearlings. There are also five wild card slots available, three for horses-in-training and two for the breeding stock portion.

Joining Air De Valse, is winning debut hurdler Marvin Flight (Fr) (Spider Flight {Fr}) (lot 14), who is from the family of Group 1 winners Golden Flight (Fr) (Saint Cyrien {Fr}) and Sunny Flight (Fr) (Saint Cyrien {Fr}). A select nine-lot dispersal of Ecurie Zingaro is also part of the catalogue, with Prince Gibraltar (Fr) 3-year-old filly Princess City (Fr) consigned as lot 103. She is a half-sister to group winner Peace Garden (Fr) (Kapgarde {Fr}).

There are also seven unraced pre-training 3-year-olds offered by Haras du Chene under court order and sold without reserve. Among them is lot 66, a full-sister to G3 Albany S. heroine and G1 Cheveley Park S. second Different League (Fr) (Dabirsim {Fr}); a Lope De Vega (Ire) half-brother to GI Haskell S. victor Coil (Point Given) and GI Hollywood Derby winner Chiropractor (Kitten's Joy) (lot 72); and lot 78, a Cracksman (GB) half-sister to Group 2 winner Baby Rider (Fr) (Gleneagles {Ire}) from the family of Group 1 scorers Wings Of Eagles (Fr) (Pour Moi {Ire}) and Belle Et Celebre (Fr) (Peintre Celebre).

The breeding portion of the sale includes 82 fillies out-of-training and 115 broodmares, with Wertheimer & Frere offering lot 137, Parole (Fr) (Daiwa Major {Jpn}), who is a half-sister to group winner and dual French Classic-placed Legend War/Dicton (GB) (Lawman {Fr}); Zerziyna (Fr) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) (lot 249), a half-sister to listed winner Zeyrek (Fr) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and a granddaughter to Arc victress Zarkava (Ire) (Zamindar) from the Aga Khan Studs; Bea Remembered (GB) (Doyen {Ire}) (lot 121), the dam of multiple group winner and Group 1-placed Stormy Antarctic (Stormy Atlantic) in foal to Wooded (Ire); and a half-sister to Classic winner Coeursamba (Fr) (The Wow Signal {Ire}), Twelveoclock (Fr) (Sinndar {Ire}) (lot 141) in foal to Zarak (Fr) presented by Haras de l'Aumonerie.

The sale is rounded out by 52 yearlings and 17 2-year-olds under both codes, including lot 116, a son of Zarak and listed winner Hell's Queen (Fr) (Gentlewave {Ire}) from Haras de Sainte Marie aux Anglais; and a son of Ten Sovereigns (Ire) (lot 136) who is out of a half-sister to listed winner Earl Of Leitrim (Ire) (Johannesburg) from the family of Group 1 winner Divine Proportions (Kingmambo) and Whipper (Miesque's Son) offered by Haras de Saint Isidro.

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Study: Foals Need Three Weeks To Recover From Stress Of Weaning 

Weaning – when a foal is separated from its mother – can be a stressful time for young horses. Not only is the colt or filly forced to become independent, he or she must also shift from drinking a mare's milk to other food sources, all while enduring a change in location, management, and social structure.

In commercial equine operations, weaning is often done when the horse reaches a certain age or during a specific time of year. 

A research team led by Drs. Kristin Delank and Sven Reese sought to determine how long it takes for foals to recover from the stress of the weaning process. The scientists tracked metabolite levels from cortisol (a stress hormone) in feces, as well as behavioral changes, and determined that foals need a minimum of three weeks to acclimate to their new situation.. 

The researchers created a study using 10 foals housed at the Baden-Wuerttemberg stud farm in Germany. All the foals in the study were raised as a group with other mares and foals in open housing and on pasture until they were weaned. There were nine Arabians and one warmblood; four fillies and six colts. 

The foals were divided into three groups to be weaned based on their age and development. On the day they were weaned, a vet sedated the foals, which were then moved about 11 miles away from their dams. The new facility continued with the same feeding and turnout schedule the foals had while at their dam's side. 

The first group was mixed with fillies and colts; the next two groups were divided by gender. All foals were observed between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. from one day before to three weeks after weaning. The observer documented every behavior each foal showed every five minutes. 

The scientists discovered that each foal had a hormonal stress response to weaning, determined by the cortisol metabolites found in their fecal samples. Additionally, the foals were significantly less active after weaning, spending a lot of time resting and lying down; the foals also vocalized more the day immediately following weaning. 

The scientists found that foal's cortisol metabolite values had not returned to normal three weeks post-weaning, indicating that they need at least three weeks to get used to their new situation. 

The research team notes that it is impossible to wean foals without inducing stress, but that the process should focus on long-term foal welfare.  

Read more at HorseTalk

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Coltimus Prime to Maryland’s Shamrock Farm

Canadian Classic winner Coltimus Prime (Milwaukee Brew–Certainly Special, by Distorted Humor), who has a small crop of Canadian-bred yearlings on the ground from his time at Beau Valley Stable in Alberta, will stand at Shamrock Farm in Maryland for the upcoming breeding season. His fee will be $1,500, with “special arrangements offered to qualifying mares,” per Jim Steele, Shamrock's farm manager.

Coltimus Prime won the 2014 Prince of Wales S. and was continuing to win or place in black-type events in the US. and Panama through the 2018 season. He was named champion imported older horse and champion stayer in Panama in 2017. The 12-year-old hails from the family of 1992 Canadian Broodmare of the Year Ballade, his fifth dam.

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‘I Hurt The Sport I Love’: Surick Sentenced To Five Years And Two Months In Federal Prison

Prominent harness racing trainer and Thoroughbred owner Nick Surick was sentenced Jan. 19 to five years and two months in prison for his involvement in what the Justice Department says is the biggest horse-doping investigation in its history.

The sentencing took place in U.S. District Court in New York, where prison sentences have been meted out to 18 other defendants in the case. Prosecutors have charged 31 individuals since March 2020.

Surick, 34, of Jackson, N.J., wore a suit and tie to court and showed no reaction as the punishment was handed down by Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil. It was one of the harshest sentences to come out of the FBI probe. Probation officials recommended a sentence of six years.

Surick agreed to plead guilty to three felonies as part of a cooperation deal with prosecutors. He began cooperating shortly after his arrest nearly three years ago with most of the other defendants. He told Vyskocil it was tough to provide incriminating information about close friends and business associates but said it was the right thing to do.

He said he was sorry for the crimes he committed. “I hurt the sport I love,” he said.

He apologized to “hardworking” trainers, “the horses themselves,” and regulators.

“I owe an apology to the public,” he added. “They were gambling on a product that was not true.”

Surick added, “I was caught up in this crazy competition to be the best. I lost my way.”

Even though Surick ratted out others in the racing industry, federal prosecutors declined to provide him with a so-called 5K1 letter recommending leniency.

“The Government has concluded that the defendant has not provided substantial assistance in any investigation or prosecution,” prosecutor Sarah Mortazavi wrote in court papers last week ahead of the sentencing.

“This decision was precipitated by the defendant's inaccurate recounting of a pivotal event involving the doping of a particular horse, Northern Virgin, which was included in a superseding charging instrument on the basis of Surick's description,” she said.

Mortazavi said Surick told prosecutors that co-defendant Dr. Rebecca Linke, a veterinarian, had personally injected Northern Virgin with the banned substance Epogen in December 2018 when in fact Surick had injected the horse himself. Linke received a deferred prosecution agreement from the prosecution.

In court Mortazavi said that Surick's incorrect version of what happened so compromised his credibility that prosecutors were unable to use the information he provided to charge anyone else.

Still, she said prosecutors did not believe Surick lied and that it did not warrant ripping up the cooperation agreement. She said Surick still deserved credit for attempting to cooperate at an early point in the case.

In court Surick said to Vyskocil that he had no reason to lie. He blamed a faulty memory for what happened.

“It's an honest mistake that destroyed the 5K,” he said.

Surick choked up as he asked the judge to sentence him to home confinement.

“I just want to keep going straight,” he said. “I am hoping and praying you give me the chance.”

“This case is somewhat unique, and for the court a difficult case,” Vyskocil said. But she said it was necessary to sentence Surick to prison for what his crimes.

“By plying horses with PEDs you endangered horses, other horses, jockeys, and drivers,” Vysckocil said. She said he cheated regulators and the betting public.

“You impugned the integrity of the sport,” the judge told Surick.

She said Surick was different from other defendants because he had been charged with obstruction for impeding New Jersey Racing Commission investigators from testing Northern Virgin after he had been doped with Epogen.

Surick and prosecutors memorialized the cooperation agreement in October 2020 when Surick appeared before Vyskocil and pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to misbrand and adulterate drugs and one count of obstruction. The maximum penalty for those three charges is 30 years in prison.

One of the conspiracy counts related to the doping of horses trained by Jorge Navarro, who is serving a five-year sentence in the case.

The other conspiracy count related to Surick's doping of his own horses.

Surick was the one prosecutors say was captured on a wiretap claiming to have made horses that Navarro “killed…disappear.”

“You know how many f—— horses he (Navarro) f—— killed and broke down that I made disappear,” Surick was quoted as saying to co-defendant trainer Michael Tannuzzo in February 2019. “… You know how much trouble he could get in…if they found out …The six horses that we killed.”

Mortazavi wrote that during the proffer sessions with prosecutors, Surick minimized his conversation with Tannuzzo.

Surick attorney Timothy Donohue of West Orange, N.J., said about the conversation that it concerned how “broken-down horses” were disposed of by selling them to purchasers in Pennsylvania.

In 2017 Surick trained the 1,000th winner of his career at Freehold Raceway, according to reports. Two years later, he won 367 races in 2019, ranking second in wins among North American harness trainers.

As a Thoroughbred owner, from 2014 to 2019, Surick raced horses in 25 races at Gulfstream Park and Monmouth Park. He won seven of those races. He sent most of the horses he owned to Navarro and Tannuzzo.

Prosecutors say the defendants avoided detection by racing regulators because the PEDs they used were not detectable in post-race testing.

Last month prominent trainer Jason Servis pleaded guilty to a felony crime and a misdemeanor crime. He admitted to shipping two banned substances.

Prosecutors had accused Servis of doping virtually all the horses in his stable, including champion Maximum Security, who was disqualified from first in the 2019 Kentucky Derby (G1) for interference. Servis is scheduled to be sentenced May 18 and faces four years in prison.

The Thoroughbred industry's leading publications are working together to cover this key trial.

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