Old Friends: Millionaire Afternoon Deelites Dies At 31

Afternoon Deelites, a six-time graded-stakes winner, was euthanized Feb. 14 at Old Friends, the Kentucky-based Thoroughbred retirement farm, due to complications from colic. He was 31.

Old Friends President and Founder, Michael Blowen, announced his passing. The dark bay stallion, who was the farm's oldest resident and was just two weeks shy of his 32nd birthday, was owned by award-winning composer, Burt Bacharach, who died just six days ago on Feb. 8.

Bred by Blue Seas Music Inc., the son of Private Terms-Intimate Girl, by Medaille d'Or, was foaled in West Virginia on Feb. 28, 1992. For his entire racing career he was owned by Bacharach, trained by Richard Mandella, and ridden by Kent Desormeaux. He ran nine of his 12 races at west coast tracks.

Afternoon Deelites opened his racing career in spectacular fashion, winning his first five races between 1994 and 1995; four of them stakes races.

He broke his maiden as a 2-year old in 1994, winning a maiden special weight race at Santa Anita on Oct. 23. Next time out, he won the Hollywood Prevue Breeders' Cup Stakes (G3) to earn his first graded-stakes win, followed by the Hollywood Futurity (G1) for his first grade 1 victory. In that race, he defeated future Kentucky Derby winner, Thunder Gulch.

In 1995, as a 3-year old, Afternoon Deelites continued his winning streak with victories in the San Vicente Breeders' Cup Stakes (G3), and the San Felipe Stakes (G2). His final win in 1995 was the Malibu Stakes (G1). Also, that year, he was second in the Santa Anita Derby (G1), and eighth in the Kentucky Derby (G1) behind Thunder Gulch.

As a 4-year old in 1996, Afternoon Deelites won one of his four races, the Commonwealth Breeders' Cup Stakes (G2) at Keeneland. In his next race, which would be his final career start, he finished second in the Metropolitan Handicap (G1) at Belmont Park on May 27.

Following that race, Afternoon Deelites was retired with seven wins, three seconds, and $1,061,193 in earnings in 12 career starts. It should be noted that in his career he ran in 11 graded-stakes races and won six.

Afternoon Deelites began his stud career in 1997 at Brereton Jones's Airdrie Stud in Midway, Ky., and stood there through 2003. He then moved to Clear Creek Stud, LLC, in Folsom, La., where he stood the rest of his career.

Afternoon Deelites' top progeny included graded-stakes winners Zappa, Three Hour Nap, and Miss Pickums. He also sired recently deceased Old Friends retiree, Popcorn Deelites, who starred in the 2003 movie, Seabiscuit, which was based on the best-selling book by Laura Hillenbrand.

Afternoon Deelites was pensioned in 2011, and was then sent to Old Friends courtesy of Val Murrell of Clear Creek Stud.

“Afternoon Deelites was a beautiful friend,” said Blowen. “I remember Kent Desormeaux standing in front of his stall a few years ago saying 'Michael, I won the Kentucky Derby on Real Quiet, Fusaichi Pegasus, and Big Brown, and this is the fastest horse I ever rode.' And he was one of the best retirees who ever called Old Friends home.

“Thanks to Burt, his ex-wife, Angie Dickinson, and his widow, Jane, for loving Afternoon Deelites as much as we did.”

The post Old Friends: Millionaire Afternoon Deelites Dies At 31 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Additional Changes To UK Flat Programme Announced By BHA FPC

Following ratification by the European Pattern Committee (EPC), there are several additional changes to the UK 2023 Flat Pattern and listed race programme, the British Horseracing Authority (BHA) Flat Pattern Committee (FPC) announced on Wednesday.

The following races have been repositioned or relocated within the existing programme to help achieve a better spread of black-type opportunities in the relevant age and distance categories in 2023:

  • Listed Abingdon S. (10f, 3yo, f, early June), previously run at Newbury, will now take place at Goodwood on Sunday, June 11 and be run as the Listed Agnes Keyser S. (10f, 3yo, f) with a prize fund of £70,000
  • Listed Tapster S. (1m 3f 218y, 4yo+) will also be run at Goodwood on Sunday, June 11, rather than in late May, and will also offer prizemoney of £70,000, to mirror that of the Agnes Keyser
  • Listed Cathedral S. (6f, 3yo+) at Salisbury will move to Saturday, May 27 (previously mid-June)
  • Listed Stonehenge S. (8f, 2yo) at Salisbury will take place on Wednesday, Aug. 16 (a race which was otherwise due to be run in early September in 2023)

 

These adjustments follow the reduction of Group 3 and listed races announced earlier this year.

BHA Director of International Racing and Racing Development, Ruth Quinn, said, “The tactical adjustments announced today will help see that races are spaced more appropriately–providing a more balanced spread and volume of opportunities for connections at optimal times in the calendar, and supporting the shorter-term objectives of enhancing the competitiveness of Pattern and listed contests in 2023.

“On behalf of the FPC, I would like to thank Goodwood and Salisbury–and other racecourses with whom we work closely through these processes–for their support and cooperation with implementing these adjustments and with the industry's ongoing efforts to refine and strengthen the British Pattern.”

Edward Arkell, Director of Racing at Goodwood, said, “Goodwood is delighted to be hosting The Weatherbys Digital Solutions Agnes Keyser S. on the same card as the William Hill Tapster S. to provide a high class Sunday in June.

“We are grateful for Weatherbys sponsorship and the support of the Flat Pattern Committee in allocating us this race as part of Goodwood's continued commitment to the top end of British racing.”

The post Additional Changes To UK Flat Programme Announced By BHA FPC appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Veteran Maryland Sire Rock Slide Dies At Age 25

Longtime Shamrock Farm stallion Rock Slide was humanely euthanized on Feb. 8 from complications of old age. He was 25.

Rock Slide entered stud at Shamrock Farm in Woodbine, Md., in 2004 as a multiple stakes winner with an illustrious pedigree. A son of champion racehorse and sire A.P. Indy, he was out of the Mr. Prospector mare Prospectors Delite, a two-time Grade 1 winner and half-sister to six stakes winners, including champion Flagbird (Nureyev), Grade 1 winner Runup the Colors (A.P. Indy) and graded winner and sire Top Account (Private Account).

Prospectors Delite produced five stakes winners from five foals, led by Rock Slide's full siblings Mineshaft, the 2003 Eclipse Award-winning Horse of the Year, and two-time Grade 1 winner and $1.2 million earner Tomisue's Delight, who would later produce Grade 1 winner Mr. Sidney.

Rock Slide raced for his breeders, William Farish, James Eklins Jr. and Temple Webber Jr., and was trained by Neil Howard throughout his 23-race career. A four-time winner at three, he captured Fair Grounds' Tenacious Handicap at four and finished second in that year's Grade 3 Turfway Park Fall Championship Stakes. The next year he scored in the Sea O Erin Breeders Cup Mile Handicap over the Arlington Park turf, defeating future Eclipse Award-winning turf horse Miesque's Approval. He added a second in Laurel's John D. Schapiro Memorial Breeders' Cup Handicap that summer and retired with a career record of 9-4-4 and earnings of $442,500.

Rock Slide stood at Shamrock Farm for a year before being relocated to the newly-opened Maryland Stallion Station in Glyndon, Md., in 2005. He returned to Shamrock in 2009 and was pensioned in 2016.

From a dozen crops, Rock Slide has 12 stakes winners and the earners of more than $11.6 million. His most successful runner was Ariana D, a Pennsylvania-bred filly out of the Black Tie Affair (Ire) mare Derby Tie who sported a career record of 9-7-9 from 33 starts and earned $707,075. Ariana D was a multiple stakes winner at Woodbine and hit the board in eight graded stakes at Keeneland, Woodbine, Arlington and Presque Isle Downs, the latter in the G2 Presque Isle Downs Masters Stakes when missing by a neck to Musical Romance, who would go on to win that year's Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint and the Eclipse Award for champion female sprinter.

Rock Slide sired three Maryland Million winners – Nicaradalic Rocks (2016 Sprint), Toboggan Slide (2009 Nursery) and Willy d'Rocket (2017 Turf Starter Handicap) – and has more than two dozen runners with earnings in the six figures. Nearly 80 percent of his foals started (222/282), and they earned an average of more than $52,000.

The post Veteran Maryland Sire Rock Slide Dies At Age 25 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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On The Brink Of Yet Another Milestone, Hall Of Famer Steve Asmussen Remains ‘In Awe’

Having surpassed Dale Baird on August 7, 2021, Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen is already the leading trainer in the history of North American Thoroughbred racing, and he enters this racing week with 9,997 career wins.

“The record was on my mind, to be the winningest,” Asmussen admitted. “That's never over. A milestone like 10,000 will feel like when Curlin became the first North American racehorse to go over $10 million (in earnings). You'll always be the first to ever hit that digit.”

At the age of 57 and with his operation going as strong as ever, it's tough to envision Asmussen's record ever being broken.

“You would find it hard to believe, but there is the outside possibility that it could happen,” Asmussen said. “As hard as it is to win the next one, I am in awe of it (reaching 10,000). Getting races to 'go' is hard enough, let alone actually winning one. A friend of mine told me that 10,000 wins calculates to a win a day for 27 straight years. A lot of credit goes to the consistency and quality of my help. Assistants like Scott Blasi and Darren Fleming.”

Asmussen was born in Gettysburg, South Dakota, but he's called Laredo, Texas home since the age of two.

“I was hoping I could do it (reach the milestone) at Sam Houston, but it's impossible to time that,” he said. “My mom (Marilyn) wants to be there for it and she follows my racing better than I do. How do you even know? There is also a chance that my son Keith could win it for us at Oaklawn. If that happened, it would be like divine intervention. If I had to predict, I think it will happen either Friday or Saturday of this week and I've got nice horses in, so it will be fun.”

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