Dr Zempf Leaves Strong Impression On U.S. Debut

8th-Gulfstream, $74,000, Alw (C), Opt. Clm ($75,000), 3-10, 4yo/up, 7 1/2fT, 1:27.25, fm, 2 1/2 lengths.
DR ZEMPF (GB) (g, 4, Dark Angel {Ire}–Souvenir Delondres {Fr} {GSW-Fr, $138,754}, by Siyouni {Fr}), narrowly second in the 2021 G1 Phoenix S. while under the care of Ger Lyons, won the Listed Leopardstown 2000 Guineas Trial on seasonal debut last April before adding the G3 Ballycorus S. two starts later. Last seen finishing down the field behind subsequent GI Breeders' Cup Mile third Kinross (GB) (Kingman {GB}) in the G2 City of York S. last August and making his U.S. debut as a first-time gelding and with Lasix, the 'TDN Rising Star' secured a foothold at the inside from fifth while tugging a bit against Tyler Gaffalione. Traveling strongly between rivals on the turn, Dr Zempf–off at a tantalizing 9-5–was slipped a bit of rein three abreast as the field neared the stretch, took command approaching the eighth pole and rolled home to score with consummate ease. “He broke alertly; he has great tactical speed and put me in a good spot throughout,” the winning rider commented. “He was just kind of taking me around there. When the spot opened up, I just chirped at him and he took it. Down the lane he was just checking everything out, just looking around. I had plenty of horse left.” Pacesetting Chuck Willis (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) held on for seond. Dr Zempf has a 3-year-old half-sister named Visiting Hours (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and a 2-year-old half-brother Phoenix Passion (Ire) (Too Darn Hot {GB}), that was purchased by Opulence Thoroughbreds for 125,000gns at last year's Tattersalls October Sale. Sales history: 420,000gns Ylg '20 TATOCT. Lifetime Record: GSW & G1SP-Ire, 10-4-1-1, $192,170. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-Peter M Brant; B-Stratford Place Stud (GB); T-Chad C Brown.

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‘The Best Chance I’ve Ever Taken’: Despite Conformational Challenge, Stanfield Finds His Perfect Match

Stanfield was a kind fellow with a pretty face and eyes that would focus just on you. He was a big 16.3 hands at three years old and though broke to ride, he had not been trained for racing.  Most would think he was quite the opportunity for a competitive sport horse — that is until they saw his pictures.

Stanfield was “low backed,” a kinder word for sway backed. The conformation defect wouldn't hamper him for riding, many low backed horses actually race. However, Stanfield's conformation was a slap in the face for all the potential adopters that passed him over for 10 months.

“I felt Stanfield was special from the moment his hoof touched down in our barn,” said New Vocations trainer Leandra Cooper. “His personality was grandiose and his capacity to make us laugh seemed to know no bounds. He deeply endeared himself to all of us, but we also knew that his conformation would be a deterrent to most people despite the fact that our vets clarified that it didn't cause him any discomfort or limitations.

“Stanfield did a tremendous amount of learning and maturing in the time that he was in our program, and we continued to try to showcase the broadening breadth of his skill sets. He just needed someone to take a chance on him, so he could really shine and show how much he had to offer.”

Unbeknownst to Leandra and her team, nearly 500 miles away, Sonya Ericson had been stalking the New Vocations website for months and kept finding herself drawn to Stanfield, viewing and re-viewing his pictures and videos.

Sonya came from a background deeply rooted in horses.

“My Irish mother had a riding school – until she died in a car accident when I was six,” said Ericson. “My family were all about racing, point-to-points, and steeplechasing. I worked as a vet assistant and a flight attendant to pay the bills, but horses have always been my passion.”

Being so knowledgeable, it's no surprise that Sonya was a stickler for good conformation. She thought she wanted perfection in her next horse until her life dramatically changed two years ago.

“I broke my back, was diagnosed with breast cancer and grounded as an International flight attendant by COVID-19. I reached a point of perfect fragility,” she said. “I lost confidence in my body — that had never failed me; in people that I loved, in people that I did not even know…

“I watched Stanfield's posts many times over, for months. I had concerns regarding his back…and well, he was flawed. But he seemed so kind and that expression on his face – just wide open and willing.”

After waiting ten long months for someone to choose him, Sonya stepped up and adopted Stanfield.

Stanfield and his adopter are enjoying each other's company

“It's the best chance I have ever taken,” she said. “I needed a horse to take care of me, which he does every day. Horses are intuitive and emotional and extraordinarily perceptive.

“I have no family, other than my dad. I never married or had kids; I was too scared after my childhood. The things that I have survived I have survived because of my horses and dogs. Thank God!  In all of my years with horses, I can honestly say Stanfield is one in a million; he is so ridiculously special. He lights up the moment he sees me; it fills my heart. We ride almost every day. He makes me laugh a lot and he has never taken a step wrong.”

Stanfield is doing exactly what Leandra believed he would, “truly shining and radiating in his new home!”

Dot Morgan is the founder and executive director of the New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program.

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The Pandemic And Horses In Need – What Are The Facts?

You may have seen the comments on Facebook: “Shelters are full from pandemic adoptions being returned now that everyone's gone back to work!”

Or maybe you saw someone who needed help but were told not to call their local shelter because “they're all full.”

So what's the truth?

Well … it's complicated.

But—and you may be surprised to hear this–it's mostly good news. At least for equid sector of shelter operations.

Let's start with the pandemic fact: During the pandemic the demand for horses (and other animals) skyrocketed. While prices in the private sector shot up, and supply shrank as equids of all types were purchased. Adoptions at animals shelters also went through the roof. In fact, many cleared their paddocks…at least temporarily.

The Equine Welfare Data Collective (EWDC) Fourth Report, which details intakes and outcomes among welfare organizations across the country, tracked changes in intakes and adoptions from January 2018-December 2020.

Shelter intakes and overall surrenders of equines went down sharply from January 2019 to June 2020. Like way down. Good, right? Well, this is where things get complicated and why we may feel like surrenders are now increasing drastically, as well.

Because in all honesty, they are.

But that's not necessarily a bad thing.

During the pandemic many shelters had to close their doors to owners seeking help. Local ordinances forced shelters to limit operations to strictly animal care. In areas without restrictions, shelters needed to protect their staff and limit contact with the general public. That meant shelters were not able to coordinate nearly as many intakes of equines in need.

So what happened to all of those equines and owners that needed help during the pandemic? They had to wait. Now shelters have opened their doors again and those owners are reaching out for help in what looks like a crisis level surge. While this new surge of desperate owners might seem like it can overwhelm the welfare community, in reality it hasn't yet met pre-pandemic levels.

Are you following along?

Overall intakes and adoptions both dropped, though adoptions far outpaced intakes, resulting in what felt like a mad rush to bring home a new horse. This was both good and bad. Intakes and outcomes have not yet rebounded back to pre-pandemic levels, as of the most recent data from 2021. The EWDC Fifth Report that details information for all of 2021 continues to demonstrate that welfare organizations are working hard to accommodate owners in need. The data from 2022 is currently being analyzed as you read this and will be published at the end of the year. However, it is likely to continue to tell the same story.

Let's look at some numbers, thanks to data collected by the EWDC and the United Horse Coalition (UHC):

  • There are over 900 equine welfare organizations operating in the United States.
  • Those 900 equine welfare organizations have a daily capacity of about 47,000 equines.
  • These have historically operated on any given day at about 85% capacity.
  • Which means there is room for roughly 10,000 equines in need.

When the pandemic first began there was fear within the equine industry and welfare community of a repeat of 2008.

What happened then?

There were anecdotes of horses starving in paddocks, being set free on the side of the road and owners in financial crisis. All of these were calling on overflowing rescues for help, only to be turned away. The conversations surrounding the pandemic were focused on avoiding a repeat. I think the industry as a whole managed to do it. And that should be celebrated.

The financial crisis of 2008 inspired the growth of assistance services within the equine industry and welfare community. These services include hay banks, husbandry support, veterinary support, euthanasia and disposal support, mini grant programs and more. All of this with the goal to help owners in need keep their horse when appropriate.

Flash-forward to 2020, and COVID support was found everywhere, including the horse industry. The UHC's own COVID-19 support page saw over 15,000 hits in nine months. Owners across the country felt the need to be proactive and planned for the worst, while hoping for the best.

We can't yet anticipate the future, and things like rising hay costs, diesel prices, and continuing inflation have the industry once more on alert. Rising intakes may not mean there are more horses in need. Instead, it may be that we're getting better at intervention before things get bleak. We can identify and network with horses and owners in need and offer a hand before it becomes a critical neglect case or worse.

There will always be horse owners in need and the equine welfare community is doing an extraordinary job to support them. It's important to continue to discuss equine welfare with facts and not rely on anecdotes. While anecdotes may be true, heard in isolation they propagate a half-formed narrative. They're not the whole story. We can't effectively develop programming with anecdotal evidence. It's important to zoom out and view things on a bigger — more national — level.

Furthermore, having the capacity to help means nothing if we're not willing to network and support each other.

So, how can we all improve horse welfare?

We, as an industry, need to increase owner support. If you're a business or industry association, this could be done directly through funding assistance programs, or indirectly via educating customers and association members on where they can find help. We also need to do better with elevating our fellow equine welfare communities at the national level. Owners can't reach out for help if they don't know where to ask, and welfare organizations can't supply help if they aren't able to access owners.

Supporting good welfare means meeting horses in need at the source – their owners in need.

If you know an owner in need, please direct them to the UHC Equine Resource Database. This is a free to use, searchable directory of all the known equine welfare and assistance programs available in the United States. The database can be found at www.unitedcoalition.org The UHC is always happy to partner in education and outreach initiatives to help owners understand options if they ever find themselves in need.

Lastly, this article was only made possible by the data supplied by the Equine Welfare Data Collective. The EWDC is a first-of-its-kind comprehensive industry driven data collection, analysis and reporting initiative. Formed in 2018, the EWDC collects, analyzes, and reports data on equines in need, organizations supporting them, and owners seeking help. The EWDC is a grant-funded program that relies on industry support to operate. To learn how you can support the EWDC, reach out to the United Horse Coalition at UHC@horsecouncil.org You can view all of the EWDC reports for free at www.unitedhorsecoalition.org/ewdc-reports

Emily Stearns is the Health, Welfare, and Regulatory Affairs Liaison for the American Horse Council.

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Top Japanese Sire Heart’s Cry Dies At Age 22

Heart's Cry, a global Group 1 winner and one of Japan's perennial top sires, has died at age 22, the Japan Racing Association announced Friday.

A homebred for the Shadai Farm operation, Heart's Cry was a son of Sunday Silence, the breed-shaping sire of Japan's modern Thoroughbred industry.

He won five of 19 starts during his on-track career, earning $8,054,175. In his home country, Heart's Cry earned champion older horse honors in 2005 with a victory in the Group 1 Arima Kinen Grand Prix, and a runner-up effort in the G1 Japan Cup.

A year later, Heart's Cry took his show on the road, highlighted by a victory in the G1 Dubai Sheema Classic on the Dubai World Cup card, and a third-place effort in the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes on the Royal Ascot program.

“Very sad to hear the passing of my champ,” jockey Christophe Lemaire posted on his Instagram. “It all started with him for me in Japan. Big thoughts to Teruya Yoshida and Shadai Farm staff. Legends never die.”

Heart's Cry retired to Shadai Stallion Station for the 2008 breeding season, and he has sired 44 graded/group stakes winners to date, led by Lys Gracieux, who was named Japan's Horse of the Year and Australia's champion turf female and older mare in 2019 on the strength of a campaign that featured wins in the G1 Arima Kinen and G1 Takarazuken Kinen in Japan and the vaunted G1 Cox Plate in Australia.

Other runners of note by Heart's Cry include Japanese champions Just a Way and Do Deuce, G1 Japan Cup winners Cheval Grand and Suave Richard, and G1 Japanese Oaks winner Nuovo Record.

Top U.S. runners by Heart's Cry include multiple Grade 1 winner Yoshida, who currently stands at WinStar Farm, and Nuovo Record, who won the G3 Red Carpet Handicap in 2016.

Heart's Cry was pensioned from stud duty in 2021 at age 20.

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