Trainer Mullins Suspended, Fined for Clenbuterol Positive in Del Mar Winner

Trainer Jeff Mullins has been suspended 30 days and fined $1,500 as the result of a “settlement agreement and mutual release” with the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) to adjudicate a clenbuterol positive triggered by one of his winning trainees at Del Mar last summer.

The conditions of the agreement call for Mullins to serve 15 days of the suspension, with the remaining 15 days conditionally stayed.

The stewards' ruling, dated Jan. 7, stated that Mullins is “placed on probation for ONE YEAR from the date of this ruling and may not have any violation of CHRB Rules and Regulations…regarding Class I, II or III drug substances. The term of suspension shall be from Jan. 9, 2023, through Jan. 23, 2023. If JEFF MULLINS violates a condition of the probation, FIFTEEN DAYS of stayed suspension shall be imposed following a notice and hearing.”

The positive for clenbuterol (a bronchodilator), which under CHRB rules is a Class 3, Penalty Category B violation, occurred in the gelding Inch (Violence), who won a $50,000/NW3L starter-allowance grass sprint Aug. 25.

Daily Racing Form's Steve Andersen reported that during the suspension, Mullins's son, Jeff Jr., will be the official trainer.

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Champion Malathaat To Visit Into Mischief For First Mating In 2023

Malathaat, the champion 3-year-old filly of 2021 and likely champion older female of 2022, will be bred to Spendthrift Farm's perennial leading sire Into Mischief for her initial mating in 2023.

Spendthrift's Mark Toothaker confirmed the mating plans to FanDuel TV/TVG on Monday afternoon.

“You get some cool things that come across your desk from time to time – Malathaat coming to Into Mischief this year is a pretty cool deal,” Toothaker said. “He's come a long way on the mares he used to get and the mares he's getting today.”

Malathaat, a 5-year-old Curlin mare, retired following a thrilling blanket finish in the Breeders' Cup Distaff on Nov. 5 at Keeneland, capping off a season that also featured victories in the Grade 1 Personal Ensign Stakes and G1 Spinster Stakes, after kicking off the year with a score in the G3 Doubledogdare Stakes. She was recently named an Eclipse Award finalist for champion older female, and she is likely to take that honor home on Jan. 26.

Campaigning for Shadwell Stable with trainer Todd Pletcher, Malathaat retired with 10 wins in 14 starts for earnings of $3,790,825.

She went unbeaten as a juvenile, including victories in the listed Tempted Stakes and the G2 Demoiselle Stakes. Malathaat then continued her undefeated march toward the 2021 Kentucky Oaks with a victory in the G1 Ashland Stakes at Keeneland before emerging victorious after a prolonged stretch duel with Search Results in the Oaks. Her championship campaign continued with a win in the G1 Alabama Stakes and a third in that year's Breeders' Cup Distaff at Del Mar.

Bred in Kentucky by Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings, Malathaat is out of the Grade 1-winning A.P. Indy mare Dreaming of Julia. She was a $1.05-million purchase at the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Into Mischief stands at Spendthrift Farm for an advertised fee of $250,000 – North America's highest public fee.

The 18-year-old son of Harlan's Holiday recently completed his fourth consecutive season as leading general sire by earnings, posting a North American record $28,104,353. It was the third straight year in which Into Mischief's year-end progeny earnings set a new record for the continent.

He was also North America's leading sire by starters (473), winners (235), stakes winners (27), and graded stakes winners (17).

In the commercial arena, Into Mischief was North America's leading sire of 2-year-olds in training in 2022, along with being the top covering sire of broodmares.

Into Mischief's runners were led by multiple Grade 1 winner Life Is Good, who is an Eclipse finalist for champion older male on the strength of Grade 1 victories in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes, Whitney Stakes, and Woodward Stakes. He will also have the likely Eclipse champion 2-year-old female in Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner Wonder Wheel.

Into Mischief is responsible for three Eclipse Award winners, and six Breeders' Cup winners, both led by 2020 Horse of the Year Authentic, who won that year's Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic. A year later, Mandaloun gave Into Mischief his second Kentucky Derby winner following the disqualification of Medina Spirit.

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Late Bid to Keep Bears in Chicago Despite Looming Arlington Sale

The developer advising Chicago's mayor is proposing a $2.2-billion renovation proposal that includes a glass stadium dome to keep the city's National Football League team, the Bears, at its longtime downtown location, Soldier Field.

The website Front Office Sports published details Jan. 8. The news is of peripheral interest to horse racing enthusiasts, because the Bears have otherwise entered into a purchase agreement to instead build a $5-billion stadium on the site of the former Arlington International Racecourse.

Although the specifics of the proposal are new, city officials have been on record for well over a year saying that they would like to work out a plan to keep the Bears within Chicago and not see the team move to the suburb of Arlington Heights.

The topic has percolated in recent months because the Bears disclosed in September that public funding would be necessary to build the new stadium. Team officials had not previously acknowledged that taxpayers might be on the hook for the $5-billion stadium build, which is separate from the land transaction.

The $197-million sale of the 326-acre Arlington property has been in a due-diligence process since September 2021, which is when Arlington last hosted Thoroughbred racing. The deadline for closing on the deal is March 2023, although the gaming corporation that is selling Arlington, Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), could always extend the deadline by negotiating further with the Bears.

In an open letter published on the football team's website, the Bears stated, “We remain under contract to purchase the property, but there are conditions that must be met in order to be in a position to close. If we do close on the property, it does not guarantee we will develop it. While under contract with the seller of Arlington Park, we will not be discussing or exploring any other alternative stadium sites or opportunities, including renovations of Soldier Field.”

During the summer and fall of 2022, CDI auctioned off the contents of Arlington, selling everything from office and kitchen items to the racetrack's marker poles, finish lines, starting gates, signage and artwork.

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Airdrie Stud’s Complexity Seeks Strong Start With Debut Yearlings At Keeneland January

There's a youth movement taking place inside the Airdrie Stud stallion barn.

Of the 12 stallions advertised on its 2023 roster, six of them enter the year having never sent a runner to the post.

When the auction spotlight shines on the yearling offerings, Grade 1 winner Complexity will be the rookie getting the call from the Airdrie roster, starting with his debut yearlings at this week's Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale.

Complexity, a 7-year-old son of Maclean's Music, has eight yearlings cataloged over the course of the four-day Keeneland January sale, following a fall 2022 auction season where he saw 27 weanlings sell for an average of $58,519.

Jocelyn Brooks joined the Airdrie staff as director of sales in July 2021, and in her time with the farm, she said the consumer reaction to Complexity has been exceedingly positive.

“This was the first horse where I've been in the parking lot at Keeneland, and people would stop me and say, 'These Complexities…' and I'd say 'I know,'” Brooks said. “Even early in the foaling season as the foals were coming out, we were thrilled, and we added mares on [to his 2022 book], so we went up to 26 of our own mares. [Airdrie Stud general manager Ben Henley] had said back then, anyone that sees these is going to wish they had a mare in foal to him come November.”

Complexity was one of the more active members of his sire class during his debut breeding season, covering 158 mares in 2021.

The Grade 2-placed Forestry mare Ever Elusive was part of that initial book of mares, sent to Airdrie Stud by breeder Mulholland Springs, and the same operation will consign the ensuing filly late during Tuesday's session of the Keeneland January sale.

“I thought he would add some of that 'square' look; that short-coupled short back, big rear end that she could use,” said John Henry Mulholland. “The dam is a Forestry mare, so she has a lot of length and stretch about her, so I thought we could get a typier looking foal; that whole Distorted Humor, Maclean's Music kind of look.

“We've had five or six on the farm, and I haven't had one that I would knock very much,” Mulholland continued. “They've all had good quality to them, some stretch, good body on them, correct. This one's fairly typical of what we've had. From what I've seen, the horse has a shot.”

That level of consistency in Complexity's foals was something Brooks said she has noticed upon inspection of the stallion's early foals, as well.

“When we looked at all of our foals, right before the holiday, you'd look at a few of the Complexities in a row with these big shoulders and big hind ends, then you switch to a different sire, they just have a different look,” she said. “They're balanced like him, which is nice to see. You want a horse that looks fast and sound at the same time, which is what they're doing. I wrote 'good bone' on a lot of my notes.”

Brooks said she expected the power that Complexity has passed on to his foals to be an appealing feature for potential 2-year-old pinhook buyers when they enter the formal yearling season this summer and fall.

Complexity certainly has the kind of race record that would project early dividends. He won on debut at Saratoga Race Course by 4 1/4 lengths over the likes of Harvey Wallbanger and King for a Day, then he led at every point of call to take the Grade 1 Champagne Stakes by three lengths over future Grade 1 winners Code of Honor and Casa Creed.

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Plenty of promising juveniles peak at two, then flame out or disappear once the rest of their crop closes the maturity gap, but Complexity remained a prominent runner from seven furlongs to a mile during his 4-year-old season, winning the G2 Kelso Handicap and running second in the G1 Forego Stakes. He retired with five wins in 10 starts for earnings of $616,350.

While the quickness in both development and one-turn performance can make for an appealing prospect for a breeze show next spring, Brooks said Complexity also offers the pedigree to make his runners appealing to end-users.

A product of the Stonestreet Farm breeding program, Complexity is out of the unraced Yes It's True mare Goldfield, herself a Stonestreet-bred, whose runners of note also include Grade 3 winner and Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies runner-up Valadorna and stakes-placed King of Glory.

Complexity is part of a growing population of North American stallions by the fast-rising Maclean's Music, another Stonestreet product. Maclean's Music is standing for $50,000 in 2023, and his Eclipse Award-winning son Jackie's Warrior will enter stud at Spendthrift Farm for the same fee.

Brooks said Complexity's advertised fee of $12,500 offers breeders a more accessible option to utilize the sire line with a stallion that displayed a similar level of precociousness and speed.

“I see him in all of these babies,” Brooks said about the first crop of Complexity youngsters. “They've all got his great shoulder, they've got a great hind end, and enough leg. They look fast, and of course, he was very fast. I can't wait to see them as yearlings, and I think they're going to do very well.”

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