Malathaat and Flightline Celebrated in Older Female/Male Dirt Eclipse Categories

Malathaat and Flightline finished their careers in style at the Breeders' Cup that led to their crowning as the most-talented older female and male in North America.

MALATHAAT
A star every step of the way, Malathaat hails from Barbara Banke's stellar Stonestreet program out of a second-generation Grade I winner by a two-time Horse of the Year turned elite sire. In a feat for the ages, Stonestreet bred all three finalists in this division, while Godolphin did the same in the male turf division. Malathaat brought seven figures as a yearling, was an undefeated 'TDN Rising Star' and graded stakes winner at two, and a GI Kentucky Oaks-winning Eclipse champion as a sophomore. What could possibly put icing on the cake except a repeat championship at four?

Malathaat delivered although it may have seemed like a longshot for the first half of the year. She opened her 4-year-old campaign with a hard-fought win as the 1-5 choice in Keeneland's GIII Baird Doubledogdare S. after hanging on her wrong lead, then dropped back-to-back decisions in New York against fellow Stonestreet-bred, Curlin-sired, and Eclipse older female contender Clairiere in the GI Ogden Phipps S. and the GII Shuvee S. Her connections didn't panic, however, and Malathaat rewarded them with peak performances in three consecutive Grade Is to close out the year. Saratoga's Personal Ensign must have been a relief to her team as she returned to top form, but Keeneland's Spinster was a coronation as she ran away from the field by a lopsided five lengths. Only one jewel to complete her crown remained with a showdown looming in the Breeders' Cup Distaff against the top mares in the country. It doesn't get more thrilling, either: seven Grade I winners, a pulsating blanket finish, and a photo that showed Malathaat's nose made it first across the wire. It was a fitting finale that helped lock up this second Eclipse for the elegant bay.

Malathaat was retired to Shadwell soon after the Distaff and will be bred to four-time leading sire Into Mischief.

Early Impressions…
“So much has been written about her, what is left to say? She is stunning. She has been a Grade A physical from birth. Barbara is a commercial breeder and will offer a good mix of colts and fillies for sale each year.” –John Moynihan, Stonestreet's bloodstock advisor

–Jill Williams

FLIGHTLINE
We may never see another one quite like him again.

Crowned as Longines World's Best Racehorse in London last week, Flightline, to absolutely no one's surprise, wins the older male category.

The unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' ran to his unworldly reputation and then some by concluding his six-for-six career with a spectacular 8 1/4-length victory in the $6-million GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland. Hailing from a prolific Phipps family, a 2.5% fractional interest in Flightline sold for $4.6 million prior to the start of Keeneland's November Sale just two days later.

Campaigned in partnership by the all-star line-up of Hronis Racing, Siena Farm, breeder Summer Wind Equine, West Point Thoroughbreds and Woodford Racing, the $1-million Fasig Tipton Saratoga yearling's brilliant, albeit abbreviated 2022 campaign, also featured a jaw-dropping victory following a troubled trip in his seasonal debut in Belmont's GI Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan H. June 11 and a record-setting 19 1/4-length romp while making his two-turn bow in the GI TVG Pacific Classic S. at Del Mar Sept. 3. The latter earned him a career-high 126 Beyer Speed Figure and a negative 8 1/2 from Thoro-Graph, the fastest number the latter has ever given.

Flightline also made three starts at three, headed by a double-digit romp in the GI Runhappy Malibu S. at Santa Anita.

“This is one of the greatest horses of all time,” trainer John Sadler said.

Flightline, a winner of all six of his career starts by a combined margin of 71 lengths, will now begin his career at stud at Lane's End Farm in Kentucky. He will command a stud fee of $200,000.

Early Impressions…
“We all thought we had a special talent before he even ran.”
co-owner West Point's Terry Finley

“The fact that I bred him almost doesn't come into my mind. I don't take credit for any of that because I think a horse like this is a gift.” -breeder Jane Lyon

“The first day that I sat on him, I thought, 'Wow, what an amazing animal.' Just the way he moves is so different from other horses. And I've been at this for quite a while now, so I draw from experience of being on some good horses in the past. And he was just something that I had never experienced.” —Juan Leyva, exercise rider and assistant trainer to John Sadler

“When he first came in, he was such an impressive-looking horse. He was already 16 hands. When we started the breaking process, it crossed my mind that maybe he had already been started because he was so quiet. Everything he did was easy. He came like a ready-made horse. There was no learning curve with him because he already knew it all somehow.”
Mayberry Farm's April Mayberry

“Lane's End handles a lot of the sales for Jane Lyon out at Summer Wind. We went out shortly after some of her yearlings turned a year old, in February or March of their yearling year, and they were showing us a chestnut Tapit colt out of American Pharoah's dam who turned out to be Triple Tap. And there was a chestnut [Triple Tap] and a bay [Flightline], and I kept looking at the bay, and they said you need to look at the chestnut, because the bay is the one she's thinking about keeping. We went back a few times through the spring, and the bay one was the one I always liked.”
–bloodstock agent David Ingordo

–Steve Sherack

The post Malathaat and Flightline Celebrated in Older Female/Male Dirt Eclipse Categories appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘A Lot Of Substance’: First Foals Are Born By Darley’s Essential Quality

The first reported foals sired by dual Eclipse champion and classic winner Essential Quality arrived in Kentucky on Jan. 21 and Jan. 25, at Castleton Lyons and Taylor Made Farm, respectively.

The colt is out of the mare Double Jackpot, dam of Grade 3 winner/Grade 1-placed Stays in Vegas, who hails from the family of such Phipps Stable standouts as Heavenly Prize, Dancing Spree, Instilled Regard, etc.

Castleton Lyons general manager, Pat Hayes, said, “He's a big, strong leggy colt with very good bone. A lot of substance about him. Overall, he's very good looking and we're very happy to have him.”

Taylor Made welcomed a filly out of Grade 1 Belmont Oaks Invitational winner Concrete Rose, a $1.95 million Keeneland November purchase in 2020. A winner in six of seven starts, Concrete Rose won three additional graded races, including the G2 Jessamine Stakes at Keeneland.

Alex Kerstetter with Taylor Made Sales commented, “She is elegant with plenty of leg. Sired by a champion and out of Grade 1 winner Concrete Rose, we are very excited to raise her for Larry Best and OXO Equine.”

Tapit's leading money-earner in North America, Essential Quality won the Breeders' Cup Juvenile and G1 Breeders' Futurity in an unbeaten 2-year-old season and took the Belmont and G1 Travers at three. He's the first Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner ever to capture the Belmont Stakes and only the seventh colt in the 51-year history of the Eclipse Awards to be named champion at both two and three.

Essential Quality covered 22 graded stakes winners and 36 graded stakes producers in an excellent first book in 2022.

The post ‘A Lot Of Substance’: First Foals Are Born By Darley’s Essential Quality appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Video Poker

There are many out there among you, myself included, that at times simply want to sit down at the computer and play a thoughtless game that has a little kick to it to make my day a little more exciting. These are great days for simple slot machines. If you really want to get fancy you can go from a three reel machine into the five reel machines, or more, and maybe make things a little more exciting.

But for many there is only one answer to a slot machine fix and that is Video Poker. Now you may be wondering what Video Poker has to do with slot machines, but the truth is that the two are very similar. They both have the same type of gaming interface and both are fairly easy to play. But the Video Poker aficionado can certainly tell you that the two are very far from the same.

Video Poker is for the Poker enthusiast that doesn’t really want to get involved in a full blown Poker game but also wants elements of the excitement that goes along with a great Poker game. Let me clarify. In a full on Poker game, be it at a live dealer online casino where there is a real person there dealing the cards, along with real players, or at a computer generated online Poker game there is the expectation that you will have to interact with someone at some point of the game. Most of the time that is a good thing, unless you are just anti-social (which isn’t bad either).

Video Poker takes away all of these elements, yet provides the player with the exact same game. In fact, in many ways it is much better than a traditional Poker game because it can be played much faster. There is absolutely no wait time while the new hand is dealt. A player has to really be on their toes if they are trying to play quickly because it can be overwhelming if someone isn’t paying attention.

For example, the online Poker world is one of convenience in and of itself. You never have to wait in line to play, or wait for a dealer to sit down to begin playing. Or even worse, wait for some inexperienced player to figure out what they are doing. Even in a live dealer online casino a player is at the whim of the online dealer and all of the real players that join. Video Poker is at the whim of the player playing the game anytime, anywhere, and any place.

There are those that will always love their slot machines, but if the urge strikes Video Poker, even just a little, is a great distraction-and you might never go back.

Turf Paradise Renovates Main Track; Consultant Steve Wood Calls Surface ‘As Perfect As We Can Get It’

After an especially wet winter forced Turf Paradise to cancel numerous races, the Phoenix, Ariz.-racetrack opted to renovate its racing surface.

The renovation was overseen by Turf Paradise Track Consultant Steve Wood. One of the most renowned racetrack experts in the country, Wood is a former track superintendent for Oak Tree, Del Mar, and Santa Anita race meets.

In order to give the racing surface a fresh start, 19,000 tons of existing dirt and sand was removed from the main track. Crews also lowered the drain inside the rail by eight inches to ensure proper drainage.

Crews then added 1,200 tons of quality sand and 450 yards of organics. Wood used the highest-grade sand (#10 Mesh) available with the smallest grain diameter. The track was surveyed with a sonar grader and rechecked with a handheld laser. While the materials are new and high quality, Wood said the overall composition should be familiar enough to the horses accustomed to racing at Turf Paradise.

Wood notes that the surface was surveyed within a third of an inch, “And is as perfect as we can get it.” Crews also surveyed both chutes and added sand to them as well.

The training track was rebuilt with the materials removed from the main track and that track has been surveyed as well. The sand was also repurposed to improve the bridle paths on the backside.

Turf Paradise General Manager Vince Francia said: “Maintaining the best and safest racing surface for our horses and jockeys is the priority.”

So as to prevent any major disruptions to the racing schedule, the track renovations were completed in three and a half days. And to ensure continued track quality, grade markers have been posted every eighth of a mile.

The post Turf Paradise Renovates Main Track; Consultant Steve Wood Calls Surface ‘As Perfect As We Can Get It’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights