Sequel New York Open House Jan. 21

Sequel New York will hold its 2023 Stallion Open House Jan. 21 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the stallion barn at 167 Maple Lane, Hudson, New York 12534.

The 2023 Sequel New York roster, with fees, is: Freud (Storm Cat), private; Honest Mischief (Into Mischief), $6,500 LFSN; Keepmeinmind (Laoban), $6,500 LFSN; and Mission Impazible (Unbridled's Song), private.

Multiple mare discounts are available, as well as incentives for repeat breeders.

“We want to give our breeders a chance to be profitable,” said Sequel owner Becky Thomas. “The recent sales in Kentucky have clearly demonstrated breeding in Kentucky does not guarantee a profit. The lower stallion fees, no transportation or boarding costs, coupled with the lucrative purse structure NYRA offers and resulting awards will give our breeders the best opportunity.”

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Pegasus World Cup Hopefuls Tune Up

Bruce Lunsford's Art Collector (Bernardini) tuned up for the Jan. 28 GI Pegasus World Cup Invitational with a five-furlong drill in 1:01.60 (1/5) at Payson Park Sunday.

“He went very well this morning,” said trainer Bill Mott. “I was happy with him. He galloped out well and cooled out. It's looking like he's coming into the race well.”

Art Collector, winner of the 2021 GI Woodward S. and two-time winner of the GII Charles Town Classic, has been off since finishing fifth in the Oct. 1 GII Lukas Classic. He was originally being considered for the Dec. 3 GI Cigar Mile at Aqueduct and the Dec. 31 GIII Harlan's Holiday S. at Gulfstream, the local prep for the Pegasus.

“We were thinking of the Cigar Mile, but we lost some time with him due to a foot abscess,” Mott said. “Then we considered the Harlan's Holiday, but we felt we just needed more time.”

Jet Set Racing Stable's Super Corinto (Arg) (Super Saver) breezed a half-mile in :49.03 (4/58) at Gulfstream Park Sunday morning in preparation for a start in the Pegasus World Cup.

The work was the fifth in a series of works since the 5-year-old captured a Dec. 8 optional-claiming allowance at Gulfstream. He was a Group 1 winner in Chile before being sent to trainer Amador Sanchez, for whom he finished second behind Chilean Group 1 winner O'Connor (Chi) (Boboman) in his U.S. debut Nov. 12.

Both South American imports, who took turns beating each other in Group 1 races before heading to the U.S., are among the 12 horses invited to the Pegasus World Cup.

Ivar (Brz) (Agnes Gold {Jpn}) turned in his penultimate work for the Jan. 28 GI Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational with a five-furlong work in 1:02.00 (2/15) at the Thoroughbred Training Center Saturday.

“Ivar is ready,” said trainer Paulo Lobo. “His work [Saturday] was very good, in company nice and easy, like he likes to do. His final work will be next Saturday here, and then we're going to ship him either that Monday or Tuesday.”

Third in the 2021 GI Breeders' Cup Mile, Ivar was second in last year's GI Woodbine Mile and GI Coolmore Turf Mile before ending the year with a fourth-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Mile at Keeneland in his most recent start.

“I think his race was very good,” Lobo said of the 2022 Breeders' Cup Mile won by European standout Modern Games. “He lost to a very top horse. Javier Castellano was riding him for the first time. He rode a very good race, and since then we've pointed for the Pegasus Turf and we've never missed a day and never had a bad day. Everything that we planned is happening, no problems.”

Lobo said Justify My Love (Brz) (Agnes Gold {Jpn}), like Ivar owned by Bonne Chance Farm LLC and breeder Stud RDI LLC,  will compete in the GI Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf Invitational on the Jan. 28 undercard.

Justify My Love was a Group 2 winner and Group 1-placed in Argentina before being sent to Lobo last year. Off a nine-month layoff, she was sixth in her first two starts before capturing a Churchill Downs' turf allowance race Nov. 19 in her most recent start.

“She's a very nice filly,” Lobo said. “It took a little while for her to adjust here, but she had a very nice win at Churchill Downs. She's in top form now, physically and mentally. I think she'll run well over there. The race is very tough, but I think she's going to enjoy a mile and an eighth. She's training super, this filly. Super.”

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Services In Lexington On Jan. 18 For Virginia Kraft Payson

Services for Thoroughbred owner and breeder Virginia Kraft Payson will be held on the afternoon of Wednesday, Jan. 18, at the Newman Center in Lexington, Ky., with a reception to follow at the Thoroughbred Club of America that evening. Payson, 92, died Jan. 9 in Lexington.

A pioneer woman in sports journalism, a sports enthusiast, Thoroughbred owner and breeder and author, Payson described herself as an “outdoor adventuress.”  She worked as a journalist on the staff of Sports Illustrated for 26 years, beginning with the first issue in 1954. She was the 12th person hired, and the only woman.

“They brought me in because I had a background in the outdoors,” Payson said in an interview in 2021. The new magazine had a lot of turnover as it worked to define itself. “I certainly will say that every guy who was hired looked around and figured, 'I can knock her off first.' I just did my job and created the opportunities.”

And create she did. She experienced her beat first hand. She traveled to exotic places and tried the sports she wrote about (writing under her maiden name) including shooting, hunting and fishing. She tracked wild boar with Generalissimo Francisco Franco of Spain, hunted tiger with the Queen of Nepal and shot birds from horseback with King Hussein of Jordan.

She piloted hot-air balloons, competed in international sports fishing competitions, and as a scuba diver was inducted into the Underwater Hall of Fame. But her favorite experience, she said, was an historic run as the first woman to compete in and complete Alaska's 75-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. She finished 16th out of 22 drivers. “When I got to the finish line, it was just a sea of people. They were all shouting. They gave me the keys to the city and champagne and a big bouquet of roses,” she recalled.

All in all, her job was “a magic carpet ride,” she said.

As an author, she wrote five books on boating, training dogs, shotgun sports and tennis.

After her first marriage to Robert Dean Grimm ended in divorce, Virginia met Charles Shipman Payson, prominent industrialist, financier and sportsman. She became involved in the Thoroughbred industry after marrying Payson, a widower, in 1977. While they both had life-long involvement with riding horses, neither had any experience with race horses. On a whim while visiting Kentucky, they bought a Thoroughbred yearling at auction, launching a major interest for them both.

She and Payson founded the 300-acre Payson Stud farm in Lexington, Ky., a move that shifted the focus of her life from journalism to breeding and racing horses. The couple also owned Payson Park Thoroughbred Training Center, a 400-acre winter training facility near Stuart, Fla.

Over the years, Virginia became one of the Thoroughbred industry's most respected owners and breeders. She kept her operation small, no more than 12 mares, deciding that breeding her own race horses was more likely to yield success than buying at auction.

A year before her husband died in 1985, their 3-year-old colt, Carr de Naskra, won the prestigious Travers Stakes. Payson Stud produced 78 stakes horses, of which 30 won or placed in graded stakes and three were champions.

She considered St Jovite as her crowning achievement as a breeder. The son of Pleasant Colony, winner of the 1981 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes, St Jovite was 1992 European Horse of the Year and named champion in England, Ireland and France.

Her mare, Northern Sunset, was honored as 1995 Kentucky Broodmare of the Year. In 1997, Virginia was honored as Breeder of the Year by the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association.

Other Payson Stud successes included L'Carriere, Salem Drive, Lac Ouimet, Rutherienne and Scipion. Her mares produced Vindication, the 2002 Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner, and Farda Amiga, winner of the 2002 Kentucky Oaks. That year both Vindication and Farda Amiga were awarded Eclipse Awards as champion 2-year-old male and champion 3-year-old filly, respectively.

In 1994, Virginia married Thoroughbred horse owner Jesse M. Henley Jr. After his death, in 2008 she married David Libby Cole, real estate broker in Vail Valley, Colo.

A native of New York City, Virginia was born Feb. 19, 1930, the daughter of George John and Mary Florence Gillis Kraft. She graduated from Barnard College. In 2012, she received an honorary doctorate in Humane Letters from Siena College in Loudonville, N.Y.

Survivors include her husband, David Libby Cole, of Lexington; three daughters from her marriage to Robert Dean Grimm – Jill Aurland (John), Vernon Hills, Ill.; Tana Aurland Bostian (Jeff), East Hampton, Mass., and Tara Grimm, Paris, France. Survivors also include three grandchildren – Ashton Doyle, Haven Aurland and Robert Tres Aurland and three great grandchildren.

She was predeceased by her son Robert Dean Grimm, grandson Payson Grimm, and sister Jacqueline Wickers.

Services will be held Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2023, at The Newman Center, 320 Rose Lane, Lexington Ky 40508 Visitation 4:30 p.m. ET, Mass 5:30 p.m. and reception at the Thoroughbred Club from 7-8:30 p.m., 3555 Rice Road in Lexington.

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High-Priced Hejazi Breaks Maiden At Santa Anita

1st-Santa Anita, $68,000, Msw, 1-15, 3yo, 6 1/2f, 1:14.58, gd,1 1/4 lengths.

HEJAZI (c, 3, Bernardini–G Note, by Medaglia d'Oro), the $3,550,000 EASMAY sale-topper, finally got the monkey off his back Sunday, winning a rescheduled maiden special weight contest at Santa Anita. Bested by SW Classical Cat (Mendelssohn) after a slow start when first seen at Del Mar Aug. 20, it took a track-record setting effort by stablemate and GSW Speed Boat Beach (Bayern) to best him again Sept. 10. Third in a Bob Baffert exacta topped by Cave Rock (Arrogate) in the GI American Pharoah S., Hejazi returned to the favorite's role in an overmatched field Sunday as the 1-2 favorite. Breaking just a half-step slow from the inside gate, Mike Smith allowed his mount to move up to set the tempo with Sully (Uncle Mo) pressuring to his outside. Still in command as he swung for home, Hejazi had enough of a gap built up through the final sixteenth to safely hold off a closing Worcester and win by 1 1/4 lengths.

“We gave him some time, gave him a chance to re-boot,” said winning trainer Bob Baffert. “We wanted to get some weight back on him. We put him through a pretty ambitious (three-race sequence). Mike got him to relax a little bit. Once I saw him out there cruising… We're gonna have fun with him.”

G Note, herself a half-sister to the dams of GSW Un Ojo (Laoban) and SW & GSP Fingal's Cave (Carpe Diem), traces back to MGISW Antespend (Spend a Buck) and GI Florida Derby winner Friends Lake (A.P. Indy). She produced a 2-year-old colt by Practical Joke, a yearling colt by Improbable, and was barren to Rock Your World for 2023. Sales History: $3,550,000 2yo '22 EASMAY. Lifetime Record: GISP, 4-1-2-1, $108,200. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

O-Zedan Racing Stables, Inc.; B-Chester & Mary R. Broman (NY); T-Bob Baffert.

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