Adolphson Named Fasig-Tipton Middle East Representative

Michael Adolphson has been named Fasig-Tipton's Middle East Representative, the sales company announced Tuesday.

Based in Dubai, Adolphson is currently the lead English broadcaster and producer for the Dubai Racing Channel and contract publicist for The Saudi Cup, Breeders' Cup, and Belmont Stakes Racing Festival. He has previously held marketing and publicity positions in Dubai with the Zabeel Equestrian Office and the Dubai Racing Club. He led the Publicity Team for four consecutive Dubai World Cups.

In the United States, he worked as communications coordinator at Fair Grounds Race Course and Slots, stakes coordinator at Arlington Park, and held positions in the office of U.S. Congressman Jared Polis, WPP's Penn, Schoen & Berland, and at Santa Anita.

“We are pleased to welcome Michael to Fasig-Tipton as we work to expand our reach and brand awareness in the Middle East,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “He has a tremendous resume, both in the Middle East and in the United States which makes him well suited to promote our sales in the Gulf region.”

Adolphson added, “Fasig-Tipton has a long history of prominent international graduates, with a particularly strong record in the Middle East. I look forward to expanding the company's footprint in the region to further build on that success.”

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Reigning Quarter Horse World Champ Danjer Concludes 6-Year-Old Season With 10th Grade 1 Victory

Danjer concluded his 6-year-old campaign with a three-quarter length victory in Saturday's Grade 1, $309,000 Championship at Sunland Park.

Owned by Downtime Enterprises LLC, Billy G. Smith, and trainer Dean Frey and aided by a reported 15-mph tail wind, Danjer covered 440 yards in :20.620 while recording a 120 speed index. James Flores rode the gelded son of champion Fdd Dynasty.

Danjer was bred in Oklahoma by Frey, and he was just three weeks removed from his second-place finish, 1 1/4 lengths behind winner Empressum, in Quarter Horse racing's richest and most prestigious race for older runners, the 440-yard, $750,000 Champion of Champions (G1) at Los Alamitos. The gelding has won 20 of 33 races — including 16 of 23 at the classic quarter-mile distance — and the $157,000 winner's share of the purse from his 15th career stakes victory bumped his lifetime earnings to $2,244,068.

Danjer's 10 career Grade 1 wins include this year's 440-yard, $300,000 Albuquerque Fall Championship (G1) at Albuquerque Downs, 440-yard, $250,000 Debbie Schauf Remington Park Championship (G1) at Remington Park, and 440-yard, $270,000 Bank of America Challenge Championship (G1) at Horseshoe Indianapolis.

KJ Desparado finished second while banking the $70,000 runner-up share of the purse. The gelding's career bankroll totals $2,776,103, placing him second, just $5,262 behind Ochoa ($2,781,365) on the sport's all-time leading earners list.

Flash Bak ran third and was followed by Instygator, Hesa Party Wagon, and Political Thinker.

AQHA News and information is a service of the American Quarter Horse Association. For more news and information, follow @AQHA Racing on Twitter, “like” Q-Racing on Facebook, and visit www.aqha.com/racing.

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Army Mule’s Recruiter Remains Unbeaten with Parx Stakes Score

Recruiter kept his unbeaten record in tact and earned a second stakes win with his 2 3/4-length victory in the slop in the Parx Juvenile S. Tuesday in Pennsylvania. The 6-5 favorite broke sharply only to have a trio of challengers rush up on his inside to contest the early fractions, putting the favorite in a tracking position while parked out four wide down the backstretch. He moved up to engage Winning Time approaching the stretch and those two unbeaten colts went toe to toe before Recruiter put that foe away with a furlong to run and drew away to the wire. Gritty pacesetter Ninetyprcentmaddie battled back to regain the runner-up spot over Winning Time in the dying strides.

Recruiter, who is now unbeaten in four career starts, captured his debut at Monmouth Park in August before adding a Laurel optional claimer Oct. 2. He was most recently a 2 3/4-length victor of the Nov. 12 James F. Lewis III S. at Laurel.

Lady Halite has a 2-year-old filly by Maximus Mischief–a $28,000 purchase at last year's Keeneland September sale–and a colt by Complexity. She was bred back to Instagrand last year.

Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

PARX JUVENILE S., $75,000, Parx Racing, 1-3, 3yo, 7f, 1:26.75, sy.
1–RECRUITER, 124, c, 3, by Army Mule
                1st Dam: Lady Halite, by Medaglia d'Oro
                2nd Dam: Ada's Dream, by Touch Gold
                3rd Dam: Perfect Six, by Saratoga Six
($60,000 Ylg '21 OBSWIN; $102,000 RNA Ylg '21 FTKJUL;
$125,000 2yo '22 OBSOPN). O-Lynch Racing LLC & Nick Sanna
Stables LLC; B-Beth Bayer (FL); T-Cathal A. Lynch; J-Mychel J.
Sanchez. $43,200. Lifetime Record: 4-4-0-0, $170,100.
2–Ninetyprcentmaddie, 124, c, 3, Weigelia–Amblin Easy, by
Private Interview. O/B-LC Racing LLC (PA); T-Robert E. Reid, Jr.
$14,400.
3–Winning Time, 124, c, 3, Winchill–Merry's Pegasus, by
Fusaichi Pegasus. O/B-Pewter Stable (PA); T-Kathleen A.
Demasi. $7,200.
Margins: 2 3/4, 1, 2 1/4. Odds: 1.30, 2.00, 3.10.
Also Ran: Daydreaming Boy, John Dutton, El de Chimi, V Mart, Hot Love.

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New Research Shows Most Stifle, Sesamoid Findings On Sale Horses Do Not Impact Racing Performance

After a multi-year, multi-organizational research effort, the Thoroughbred industry finally has data on the long-term impacts of two types of common radiographic findings.

With the advent of digital radiography and the radiograph repository at public auction, a horse's commercial value has become closely linked to the cleanliness of those radiographs. For years, consignors and buyers alike have wondered if certain common abnormalities on radiographs actually have any significant impact on a horse's long-term soundness or racing ability.

Thanks to a large-scale research project launched in 2016 by Colorado State University's Dr. Frances Peat, we have a few answers.

At the recent annual convention of the American Association of Equine Practitioners, researchers presented the results of two studies from the research – one looking at stifle lesions, the other looking at sesamoid bone findings.

Subchondral lucencies in stifles

Respected Colorado State University equine orthopedic researcher Dr. Wayne McIlwraith presented the results of a study of subchondral lucencies in the medial femoral condyle – a bone in the stifle. This finding has been a concern for people purchasing yearlings to race or to pinhook, as no one really knew whether a low-grade finding in a yearling would turn into something more problematic down the road.

McIlwraith and the research team looked at radiographs in the repository for 2,508 yearlings at the 2016 Keeneland September auction and 436 2-year-olds across all major North American 2-year-old sales the following year, matching together radiographs for horses who appeared at both yearling and 2-year-old sales. A group of four veterinarians who were not working to evaluate radiographs for clients at those auctions were asked to review the images and rate them Grade 0 through 3 for the presence of subchondral lucencies. Multiple vets were asked to analyze each image, and researchers ran statistical analyses to determine how frequently they agreed with each other. The analyzing vets agreed with each other nearly all the time when rating an image Grade 0 or Grade 3; Grades 1 and 2 produced a little more conflict, but the statistical rating for observer agreement was still considered moderate.

The vast majority of horses in both age categories were Grade 0 for lucencies in the medial femoral condyle. Of those who had some lucency (9.6 percent of yearlings and 11.2 percent of 2-year-olds), Grade 1 was the most common, followed by Grades 2 and 3 respectively.

Interestingly, McIlwraith pointed out that Grades 2 and 3 lesions were much more common in the right stifle than the left for horses who had them, though the reason for that remains unclear.

Most horses who had Grade 1 lucencies as yearlings saw them either stay the same (45 percent) as 2-year-olds or improve to become rated as Grade 0s by their next auction appearance (36 percent). There were smaller numbers of yearlings with Grade 2 and 3 lesions who also went to sale at two, but they saw a similar pattern – of 10 Grade 2 yearlings, six remained at a Grade 2, two improved to Grade 1 and two worsened to Grade 3. Of the yearlings with Grade 3 lucencies, only three went to sale the next year and two of those improved to Grade 2s.

Researchers found there was no significant difference in racing performance for horses with any subchondral lucencies in the medial femoral condyle; 85 percent of study yearlings started at least once by the end of their 4-year-old year. The probability of a horse with a Grade 3 lesion starting in a race was lower (77.6 percent) than the probability for a horse with any other grade (84.3 to 91.3 percent) but the difference was not statistically significant in mathematic analysis. Racing performance was assessed based on number of starts, age at first start, total earnings, earnings per start, listed or stakes appearances, and Class Performance I ndex.

The numbers came from yearlings who represented 10.9 percent of the 2015 foal crop and 36 percent of the yearlings sold in North America in 2016. The study of 2-year-old radiographs covered 19.7 percent of 2-year-olds sold at auction that year.

McIlwraith said that if anything, the results are probably an underrepresentation of reality for this type of radiograph issue.

“It's likely we underestimated the prevalence of severe lesions in the entire Thoroughbred crop born in 2015,” said McIlwraith. “This is because of two scenarios that I think all of you are probably familiar [with] — the onset of clinical lameness either between birth and yearling age or during sales preparation at yearling or 2-year-old age is going to be a reason to take the yearling out of the sale or take the 2-year-old out of the sale.

“Also, findings on screening radiographs that could potentially inhibit sale value often cause the consignor to withdraw their yearling or 2-year-old from the sale. Hopefully our results that I'm providing here will provide a reduction in such decision.”

Sesamoids

Dr. Chris Kawcak, also of Colorado State University, presented the results of a look at sesamoid bone findings.

There are a few findings in the sesamoid bones that have given buyers and sellers pause through the years. Unlike the lucencies in the stifle, which had been studied very sparingly prior to this research, there were a few studies out there on differed sesamoid bone findings. The trouble was they all had slightly conflicting results about what had a real impact on racing performance. They were also using slightly different grading scales for those issues.

There are a few commonly-identified issues with sesamoids on pre-sale radiographs – abnormalities of vascular channels, lucencies, abaxial bone formation, or abaxial margin concavity.

The research team used the same sets of radiographs from the same horses at the same sales, and applied the same statistical measures of inter-observer agreement and same parameters of racing performance.

To start with, this research group consulted with scientists who had previously studied sesamoid lucencies and vascular channels to create a standard grading system, with Grade 0 being normal and Grade 3 representing three or more vascular channels that were greater than two millimeters wide.

Using those standards, researchers found that most horses had Grade 0 sesamoids, while Grade 1 was the next most common finding; 14.4 percent of yearlings studied had Grade 1 vascular channels in the sesamoids, while 9.7 percent of sales 2-year-olds had Grade 1 vascular channels in their sesamoids. Few (less than 3 percent) of either group had any abaxial bone findings.

In yearlings who subsequently went on to 2-year-old sales, 72 percent of Grade 1 vascular channels had disappeared by the time they became 2-year-olds. The few horses who demonstrated abaxial concavity also saw it disappear in the vast majority of cases.

Only horses with Grade 3 lesions saw any significant impact on performance, with Grade 3 yearlings showing a significant reduction in the mean number of starts they made on the track, and a higher age at first start for yearlings who had Grade 3 vascular channels in hindlimbs. Signs of abaxial new bone in forelimbs also had a significant reduction in a yearling's likelihood of making it to the races later in life.

Other parameters – like comparing horses with less severe vascular channel gradings with horses with Grade 0 radiographs – saw no significant differences in likelihood of starting, age at first start

For Kawcak, the only puzzle is why the impact of Grade 3 vascular channels seems to linger so long.

“The question in my mind is why do the Grade 3s still have reduced race starts even though the lesions have improved?” he said. “I think that's where our ultrasound data will be of great importance.”

Kawcak said he is hopeful the rating system created for the purposes of the study could be used in the field to help vets and clients communicate about sesamoid findings in a standardized way that will better express a horse's actual performance limitations or lack thereof.

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