Tizamagician To Stand At Milky Way Farm In California

Milky Way Farm in Temecula, Calif., is proud to announce they have been selected to stand Tizamagician, a son of Tiznow out of Magic Union by Dixie Union.

Trained by Richard Mandella for Spendthrift Farm and Myracehorse, Tizamagician earned $741,851, with major accomplishments winning the Grade 3 Cougar II at Del Mar and the G3 Tokyo City Cup at Santa Anita Park.

He also thrilled his connections by finishing second in the G1 TVG Pacific Classic, the G2 Brooklyn Stakes at Belmont and the G2 San Pasqual Stakes at Santa Anita.

His stud fee will be announced soon.

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First Foal Is A Filly For Northview Stallion Station’s Galawi

The first reported foal for Galawi (IRE) was born on Jan. 10 at Northview Stallion Station, where the stallion stands.

The filly out of the young unraced Into Mischief mare My Mischief was bred by local Maryland breeders, John and Victoria Price. My Mischief will return to Galawi (IRE) again in 2023.

John Price said, “He's a very well conformed horse, with great presence and we're lucky to have him in Maryland.”

Galawi (IRE), is by the world's leading sire Dubawi (IRE) out of Galikova (FR), a millionaire Group 1-winning half-sister to the incomparable champion Goldikova (IRE), a three-time winner of the Breeders' Cup Mile and earner of $7.1 million.

Galawi (IRE) covered 31 mares his first year at Northview Stallion Station in Chesapeake City, Md. He stands this season for $2,000 live foal.

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Quartet Of Into Mischief Quarter Horse Yearlings On Offer At Heritage Place Sale

While Spendthrift Farm's cornerstone resident Into Mischief is a perennial leading sire on the racetrack and in the sales ring in the Thoroughbred realm, he will be facing a less familiar frontier later this month when four of his yearlings bred to Quarter Horse mares go through the ring at the Heritage Place Winter Mixed Sale.

Into Mischief and champion sprinter Mitole, a fellow Spendthrift resident, were offered to Quarter Horse breeders through artificial insemination in partnership with Robicheaux Ranch, Inc. in Breaux Bridge, La. Though he stands for six figures for a Thoroughbred live cover, Into Mischief was offered to Quarter Horse breeders at an advertised fee of $10,000, while Mitole was offered at $4,000.

The American Quarter Horse Association has a special registry and numbering system for Quarter Horse-Thoroughbred crosses, referring to them as “Appendix” horses. Appendix horses are eligible to compete in all AQHA competitions, including racing, but they can only be bred back to a permanent, or regular-numbered, Quarter Horse. An Appendix horse cannot be bred to a Thoroughbred or another Appendix horse and still be registered with the AQHA unless they reach a certain level of achievement in competition.

The best bred among the quartet of yearlings is arguably Hip 299, a filly out of a full-sister to multiple Grade 1 winner PYC Paint Your Wagon and sire Ivory James. Her extended family includes 1996 AQHA Racing World Champion Dashing Folly.

The slate of offerings also includes a pair of fillies out of the same mare, made possible via embryo transfer.

Hip 723 and Hip 832 are both out of the stakes winner La Reina Madre, and their third dam is multiple champion Mongoose Jet Eye.

Rounding out the group is Hip 341, Second Thought, a filly out of a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Rock You.

Other Thoroughbred stallions with Quarter Horse yearlings in the catalog include Imperial Hint and Power Jam.

To view the full online catalog, click here.

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Thoro-Graph Sues NYRA Over Disputed $333K in ADW Partnership

A business partnership between performance-figure provider Thoro-Graph, Inc., and the New York Racing Association (NYRA) that had been billed as a “win-win-win” deal for the two parties and advance-deposit wagering (ADW) customers when it first launched in 2017 has gone sour, resulting in a lawsuit filed in New York State Supreme Court.

According to the civil complaint, Thoro-Graph is suing both NYRA and its NYRA Bets ADW platform over the alleged non-payment of at least $333,000 that Thoro-Graph believes is its rightful cut for incentivizing horseplayers to become NYRA Bets customers via a free, membership-based portal called Thoro-Graph Player Services (TGPS).

Thoro-Graph claimed in its complaint that its portal grew NYRA's betting handle by $100 million over a roughly five-year span, “solely through the joint venture resulting in $3 million in revenue” for NYRA.

When the alignment between the two entities was first announced in 2017, the deal was billed as giving Thoro-Graph an ADW partner, while NYRA Bets got a valuable pipeline of new customers.

Horseplayers would benefit too, a TGPS executive explained at the time of the launch, because they would get access to “concierge-level support,” volume-based wagering rebates, on-track visitation amenities and discounts on Thoro-Graph handicapping products.

But according to the lawsuit, “Defendant NYRA failed to perform its part of the bargain [by allegedly not paying] Plaintiff its full 50% share of its Net Revenue,” wrote Karen Murphy, the attorney for Thoro-Graph, in the Dec. 19, 2022, filing.

“That breach has resulted in hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses to date and has impacted the value of Plaintiff's corporation resulting in additional lost profits to Plaintiff,” the complaint stated.

The filing stated that the dispute involves how net revenues are calculated: “Plaintiff is entitled to its full 50% share of defendant NYRA's revenue that is generated from the handle wagered on NYRA races by non-New York residents and paid to defendant NYRA. In failing to do so, defendant NYRA is in material breach of its core financial obligation to pay Plaintiff its full revenue share under the terms of the joint venture.”

The complaint contended that Thoro-Graph attempted “good faith settlement efforts” to square up the purportedly mounting non-payments, including making a written demand for the money on June 13, 2022, and a meeting with NYRA representatives to discuss the issue.

“[NYRA's] response was to intimidate Plaintiff with the threat of termination of the joint venture and not to address the failure to pay Plaintiff its full 50/50 share,” the complaint stated.

NYRA then followed through with a letter Dec. 12 giving a 180-day notice of termination of the partnership. That action, in turn, led to Thoro-Graph's lawsuit one week later seeking “compensatory damages which are no less than $500,000 [and] estimated additional damages for the remainder of the term of the existing Agreement.”

The court has set a Feb. 10 date for the defendants to file a reply. TDN asked a NYRA spokesperson if the racing association or NYRA Bets wished to comment prior to that filing, and also asked how the termination of TGPS might affect horseplayers who use the portal.

“NYRA will honor the terms of confidentiality agreed to by the parties involved and reply to the court by Feb. 10. This contractual dispute does not and will not impact NYRA customers,” Patrick McKenna, NYRA's vice president for communications, wrote in an email.

The “Termination for Convenience” letter that NYRA served Thoro-Graph is scheduled to become effective June 10.

“That notice of termination has now been issued solely because Plaintiff made it clear it would proceed with legal efforts to protect its rights under the Agreements to receive its full share of compensation,” Thoro-Graph's complaint stated.

“Plaintiff performed its obligations under [the contracted terms] by maintaining its website as 'best in class' and offering free and reduced priced Thoro-Graph data which has resulted in NYRA Bets signing up over 1,700 horseplayers. This was accomplished by Plaintiff without any marketing assistance from the NYRA Parties…” the complaint stated.

“In 2017, Plaintiff grew the handle of defendant NYRA Bets by $3.1 million,” Thoro-Graph's court filing stated. “In 2018 Plaintiff's contribution was $10.7 million; in 2019 the contribution went to $15.3 million; in 2020 the contribution was $22.7; in 2021 the contribution reached $24 million; [At the time the Dec. 19 lawsuit was filed] Plaintiff's contribution [was] on track to reach $25 million making the total added handle over $100 million.”

Drilling the alleged non-payment issue down further, the complaint stated that NYRA's deduction of an “import host fee” from the net revenue calculation is a chief bone of contention.

The complaint put it this way: “To be clear, what defendant NYRA is claiming is an “import host fee” is simply money RECEIVED by NYRA Bets solely as a result of “Qualifying Wagers” by non-New York residents on NYRA CONTENT and then passed on to and RECEIVED BY DEFENDANT NYRA AS REVENUE.”

Attorney Murphy, when reached by the TDN, said, “For now, we will let the complaint speak for itself. We will have more to say after NYRA's response.”

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