‘Who Doesn’t Like Rooting For An Underdog?’: Malter Targets Royal Ascot Return In New Video Series

Great British Racing International (GBRI) and Ascot Racecourse have today released the first in a video series titled An American Dream: The Return to Royal Ascot, which will document the journey that U.S.-based syndicate operator Harlan Malter will take as he tries to turn an ambitious dream of returning to Royal Ascot with a horse sired by his 2018 Group 1 King's Stand Stakes runner-turned-stallion, Bucchero, into a reality.

In the first feature, Malter reflects on the personal reasons that underpin his lofty ambitions for Bucchero, as well as his experience of watching the horse carry the Ironhorse Racing silks to place fifth at the Royal Meeting in 2018, within five lengths of a trio of champion sprinters in Battaash, Blue Point, and Mabs Cross.

Malter goes on to explain his plans for purchasing an offspring of Bucchero that can be trained in the U.K., as well as one day producing a homebred out of Improvise, a filly purchased from the dispersal of Queen Elizabeth II's horses at Tattersalls last November who is now racing for Ironhorse Racing in America.

Since this first episode was filmed, Malter has also been successful in securing a 2-year-old by Bucchero that he plans to aim at the Royal Palm Juvenile Stakes at Gulfstream Park on May 13, the winner of which will earn an automatic entry into one of Royal Ascot's six 2-year-old races in addition to a $25,000 equine travel stipend, thanks to a new initiative between Ascot Racecourse and 1/ST Racing. The colt, purchased for $70,000 at the OBS March Sale, will go into training with by Joe Orseno, who brought Imprimis to Royal Ascot in 2019.

Speaking about the project on Tuesday, Malter said:

“During my last two visits to Royal Ascot, I had chatted with Tom Peacock of the Racing Post about getting a Bucchero baby back to run in the U.K. and to try to get back to Royal Ascot.

“Our first tangible step was to head over to Tattersalls this winter to try to acquire a quality European mare to eventually breed to Bucchero. After finding that in Improvise, I was thrilled when GBRI reached out to help me and follow along in this dream.

“The next step in the process was to find a ready-to-race 2-year-old Bucchero this year who hopefully we found in the colt we purchased last week.

“The last step will be to head over to Royal Ascot in June and firm up our plans with a U.K. trainer and together look for a yearling prospect in the fall to send right over to Newmarket to begin preparation for a 2-year-old campaign in the U.K.

“Isn't this what it's all about? Who doesn't like rooting for an underdog? In a game that is often dominated by a small group at the top, horse racing is one of the few sports that lets anyone take a shot at glory. I've yet to put a challenge to Bucchero and him not exceed my expectations, so why not this? Trophies are great, but they end up dusty on the shelf. The process, the challenge and the people we surround ourselves within this sport is why all of us wouldn't think of living a day without these amazing horses in our lives.”

Minty Farquhar, General Manager of GBRI, comments:

“What Harlan is trying to achieve is admirable, and GBRI is perfectly placed to be providing the advice and guidance required to bring his dream to life.

“We very much hope we will be welcoming Harlan along with a group of Ironhorse Racing partners to Royal Ascot in June, and in time as owners of a horse in training in Britain.

“Whatever the outcome at each stage of the journey, we anticipate that the journey in and of itself will provide a fascinating story, and we are looking forward to telling that story in partnership with Ascot Racecourse.”

Nick Smith, Director of Racing and Public Affairs at Ascot Racecourse, adds:

“Harlan's enthusiasm for Royal Ascot is matched only by his passion for Bucchero and so this project is an exciting next step.

“We're delighted he is looking at the new Gulfstream qualifiers and look forward to seeing the progeny of Bucchero at Ascot soon.”

Future instalments in An American Dream: The Return to Royal Ascot will be released on both GBRI's and Ascot Racecourse's social media platforms.

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Guineas Breeze-Up And Horses-In-Training Catalogue Released By Tattersalls

The catalogue for the 2023 Tattersalls Guineas Breeze-Up and Horses-in-Training Sale is now online. Breezes will take place at Newmarket's Rowley Mile Racecourse at 9 a.m. on Wednesday, May 3. The horses-in-training portion of the sale, featuring 154 lots, will begin at 9:30 a.m. on May 4. There are 201 lots for the breeze-up sale, which begins at 2 p.m. later that same day.

Past graduates of the Guineas Breeze-Up Sale include crack sprinter and multiple Group 1 winner The Platinum Queen (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}), G2 Beresford S. hero Crypto Force (GB) (Time Test {GB}), and Grade/Group 1 winners Shantisara (Ire) (Coulsty {Ire}) and Trueshan (Fr) (Planteur {Ire}).

At least 47 stallions with juveniles catalogued have sired Classic or Grade/Group 1 winners including Acclamation (GB), Australia (GB), Camelot (GB), Cotai Glory (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), Exceed And Excel (Aus), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Kodiac (GB), Mehmas (Ire), New Bay (GB), No Nay Never, Oasis Dream (GB), Saxon Warrior (Jpn), Sea The Moon (Ger), Showcasing (GB), Starspangledbanner (Aus), Teofilo (Ire), Zoffany (Ire), and Zoustar (Aus) among others. There are also 19 first-season sires with offspring slated for sale, among them Advertise (GB), Blue Point (Ire), Calyx (GB), Eqtidaar (Ire), Inns Of Court (Ire), Invincible Army (Ire), Masar (Ire), Phoenix of Spain (Ire), Soldier's Call (GB), Study of Man (Ire), Ten Sovereigns (Ire), Too Darn Hot (GB) and Magna Grecia (Ire), who has already produced an impressive debut winner, and American sire Catholic Boy.

The Horses-in-Training Sale features last out winners Naaser (Ire) (New Bay {GB}) (lot 152) from The Castlebridge Consignment, and Jamie Railton will consign Maasai Mara (GB) (Roaring Lion) (lot 100). The 100-rated Kiwano (Fr) (Dabirsim {Fr}) (lot 114) will go through the ring for David Simcock; while the Michael Appleby-trained Zealot (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) (lot 99), is also set to sell off of a mark of 109. Juddmonte, too, offers a draft, with seven horses going under the hammer, among them lot 128, a Galileo (Ire) colt named Caustic (GB).Two lots of note from Vicarage Farm are a Sea The Stars (Ire) filly (lot 154) out of a Nathaniel (Ire) half-sister to G2 Lancashire Oaks winner Pongee (GB) (Barathea {Ire}), as well as the granddam of top producer Prudenzia (Ire) (Dansili {GB}). Also from their draft is lot 124, a 2-year-old colt by New Bay (GB) out of G2 Queen Mary S.-placed Hairy Rocket (GB) (Pivotal {GB}).

Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony said, “The Tattersalls Guineas Breeze Up enjoyed an exceptional year on the racecourse in 2022, led by historic G1 Prix de l'Abbaye winner The Platinum Queen, one of seven group and listed performers bought at last year's sale. Classic prospect Crypto Force, multiple Group 1-winning stayer Trueshan, US Grade I winner Shantisara and Scandinavian Champion Hard One To Please also illustrate the quality and diversity that buyers have come to expect from the sale. This year's catalogue features a strong selection of quality 2-year-olds that we are confident will appeal to domestic and international buyers in all sectors of the market, alongside the largest horses in training section in the sale's history.”

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‘He’s Everything Clive Cox Said He’d Be’: Caturra Takes To The Ropes

The winds of change have blown through Overbury Stud in the last year. Gone is the stalwart of the British National Hunt ranks, Kaya Tara (GB), who died in retirement in December at the age of 28. Last summer the Gloucestershire farm had welcomed the horse that many will hope could be his replacement, Golden Horn (GB), bought from Anthony Oppenheimer by Jayne McGivern as his burgeoning National Hunt statistics caught many an eye. Then, at the other end of the spectrum, in came Caturra (Ire) last autumn, the first son of Mehmas (Ire) to stand in Britain and, judging by early demand, a welcome addition to the more commercial end of the stallion ranks in the UK.

“The response has been tremendous,” says Overbury Stud's Simon Sweeting, who may well be giving serious consideration to installing a revolving door on the covering barn. “He has got some super mares. His owner, Saeed bin Mohammed Al Qassimi, has really got behind him and he's bought some lovely mares, especially for him. And obviously he is determined that he succeeds, like we all are. But we've got some tremendous support from people that I would consider to be really good breeders. Nick Bradley is sending at least six mares, Fiona Denniff is supporting him, Whatton Manor Stud, Richard Kent, Paul Shanahan has a share in him. Byerley Stud and Houghton Bloodstock are also sending a lot. Good, sensible breeders who produce winners have got behind him, so hopefully that's going to give him a chance.”

The saying goes that if something ain't broke, don't fix it, and for the team at Overbury, it was well worth taking a chance on Caturra so soon after the early success of Ardad (Ire), who was Britain's leading first-season sire in 2021, and whose stand-out son, the treble Group 1 winner Perfect Power (Ire), has recently joined Darley's team of stallions at Dalham Hall Stud. 

It is easy to join the dots: Ardad, Caturra, and Perfect Power were all bred by Tally-Ho Stud, where Ardad's sire Kodiac (GB) has stood with distinction for years, and which is also home to Mehmas. Furthermore, both Ardad and Caturra won the G2 Flying Childers S. Ironically, this was also the race that was seemingly at the mercy of Cotai Glory (GB) when he jinked and unseated George Baker. Seven years later, Cotai Glory, who also stands at Tally-Ho Stud, edged out Ardad to be the leading freshman sire of Europe.

“It's extraordinary how Tally-Ho keep producing horses like this, but they do. And we're very lucky to be the beneficiaries further down the line,” admits Sweeting. 

This week scientists at University College Dublin and PlusVital have published research which has identified genes associated with stress in the racehorse, and it serves as a timely reminder as to the importance of that magical ingredient in a horse's make-up which is every bit as important as ability: temperament. This is a trait which has often been spoken about in regard to Mehmas himself, who was famously so laidback as an early juvenile in his days with breeze-up pinhooker Roger Marley that he barely paid the son of Acclamation (GB) any attention–until he started galloping.

Caturra hails from the second crop of Mehmas and, according to his former trainer Clive Cox, and now to Sweeting, he appears to have adopted a similar no-nonsense approach to life. 

“He's absolutely brilliant. He really is just a very straightforward horse,” Sweeting says. “He enjoys the routine. He's very relaxed about the way that we do things with him, seeing a lot of the other horses like mares and foals in the same yard as him, and the other stallions. He's quite happy and relaxed out in the paddock, and he's taken to the covering tremendously. He's everything, in fact, that Clive Cox said he would be. He does what you want, as he did when he was in training.”

He continues, “He's getting more than his fair share of mares in foal. It's obviously the slower part of the season, so he is not under pressure. But he's getting them in foal with great regularity. So we are really pleased with the early results. He's very virile, and he's got a great libido.”

Sweeting adds, “Temperament is obviously such an important thing because, I keep saying it to people: if the trainers like them, then you've got half a chance. But if the trainers don't like them, if they haven't got a good attitude, they can very quickly turn against them and then you are sunk before you even start.”

Caturra is out of the Sleeping Indian (GB) mare Shoshoni Wind (GB), a decent handicapper over five and six furlongs, with three wins to her name and a runner-up finish in the Listed Empress S. at Newmarket. Though he has predominantly speed influences close up in his pedigree, the four-year-old's third dam, Pat Or Else (GB) (Alzao), is a half-sister to the St Leger and Gold Cup winner Classic Cliche (Ire) (Salse) and to Yorkshire Oaks and Prix Vermeille victrix My Emma (GB) (Marju {Ire}). With around 115 mares currently booked to him, Caturra clearly will be given a good chance to try to emulate the start made by his own sire in Ireland, and by his fellow Overbury resident, Ardad, whose popularity continues with 145 mares booked in to date. 

“We did wonder when we started him how Caturra would impact on Ardad or vice versa,” Sweeting says. “But actually they're in two different brackets. One is proven and one is not. And they are two very different things for breeders to pick out and reasons for them to use either one. 

“Caturra at the moment is a good level below [Ardad] in price, although a very similar type of horse at the start. But Ardad, he just feels very established now, and particularly having another stakes winner at the weekend, he just feels like he's done it and people can rely on him. You know you're going to get a good-looking horse, you know you've got the potential of a racehorse, and you know that people are going to like them at the sales. Whereas Caturra, you're paying a lot less money, but of course he has to prove himself, so they are in two different places in the market.”

While the two young sprint stallions are clearly going to be kept busy this covering season, busier still will be the Derby and Arc winner Golden Horn. He is listed as having covered 152 mares in his final year at Darley, and his book will be just as full this time around, with the Cheltenham Festival winner Concertista (Fr) (Nathaniel {Ire}) among a line-up of smart jumping mares to be paying him a visit.

“He is going to be busier than all of the others,” Sweeting notes. “We're lucky. We've got a great covering team. We've got a good system and it works pretty well. It is a busy time of year but I am certainly not going to complain about that. When you've got three or four horseboxes there, three times a day, it's a good sign.”

The post ‘He’s Everything Clive Cox Said He’d Be’: Caturra Takes To The Ropes appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Kentucky HBPA’s Hiles: ‘We Don’t Apologize For Speaking Out About HISA’s Flaws’

Rick Hiles, the longtime president of the Kentucky HBPA and the First Vice President of the National HBPA, issued the following statement after a commentary 'The National HBPA's Shameful Hypocrisy,' penned by Anthony Manganaro, CEO of Siena Farm LLC in Paris, Ky., was published Tuesday. Manganaro's commentary is available here.

Anthony Manganaro should get his facts straight before running his mouth.

His attack on the National HBPA and its affiliates is as inaccurate as it is unfair and shows a lack of understanding of the industry.

Let's get something straight about the National HBPA's cost of litigating the Horseracing Integrity & Safety Act: The Liberty Justice Center so believes that HISA is unconstitutional that the non-profit is handling the case pro bono, and if Mr. Manganaro ever read on the subject, he would have known that fact.

The HBPA is fighting the right fight and we have every expectation of winning. But even should we lose in the courts, the efforts of the National HBPA, many individual affiliates including Kentucky, four state racing commissions, the United States Trotting Association, several states' attorneys general and others who have joined in the suits already have forced the HISA Authority corporation to make substantial improvements. In getting a so-called legislative “fix,” HISA and the Federal Trade Commission tacitly acknowledged the original enabling legislation was legally-challenged.

This all could have been avoided had the largest thoroughbred horsemen's association and the Association of Racing Commissioners International been invited to the table to create a true path forward to improving horse racing. Instead, the powerful and well-financed minority backing HISA opted for class warfare.

Unlike the HISA corporation, the National HBPA and its affiliates have boards elected by their members. The HBPA is proud that our members participate in all levels of racing, not just the 1 percent at the top end. Any action taken by the HBPA is at the directive of the duly elected HBPA board.

Every day we hear from horsemen, too afraid to speak out themselves, thanking us for putting the spotlight on flawed legislation that led to a flawed organization. We believe a sign of our widespread support is the 1,500 participants from every racing jurisdiction who signed an open letter by trainers Wesley Ward and Larry Rivelli advocating for meaningful change and that HISA was fatally flawed.

We believe HISA's Horsemen's Advisory Group, which includes National HBPA President Doug Daniels DVM, was only formed in response to the HBPA pointing out the lack of knowledgeable people in creating rules and policy.

The National HBPA was calling for uniformity of regulations and drug and medication policy long before The Jockey Club began its push for federal legislation. We also were calling for uniform testing and more resources for racing surface safety years before Santa Anita's rash of breakdowns. We have always called for cheaters to be handed stiff penalties. However, this being America, we also believe everyone is entitled to due process.

No one benefits from change just for change's sake while ignoring science.

We don't apologize for insisting any federal legislation governing horse racing be lawful. We don't apologize for doing our due diligence so that rules-offenders are properly punished and don't get off because they were sanctioned under an unconstitutional law.

We don't apologize for demanding HISA actually be transparent, instead of simply tossing around the word. For instance, the people paying the freight – which most likely will fall on horse owners — have every right to know the salaries of HISA staff and consultants. But HISA refuses to make them public, hiding behind being a private organization.

We don't apologize for pointing out when new rules rubber-stamped by the FTC are not in horses' best interest.

We don't apologize for questioning a largely duplicative bureaucracy whose burdensome price tag will threaten the financial viability of some small and medium-sized tracks and force trainers and owners out of business.

We don't apologize for wanting to know who tabbed the nominating committee that in turn tabbed the HISA board, whose terms match that of Supreme Court Justices – meaning for life.

And we sure don't apologize for speaking out and standing up to bullies such as Manganaro.

Manganaro is the same guy who tried to restructure the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association. He's the same guy who tried to destroy the Kentucky HBPA and the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, calling for a new organization that would have only billionaires on the board.

Manganaro is correct about one thing: the Interstate Horse Racing Act of 1978 indeed requires the consent of horsemen before tracks can export the betting signal on the horsemen's property – their horses – to other states. That's how it should be, and Congress agreed.

Manganaro seems to think we should stay quiet like good little boys and girls at the kiddie table instead of standing up for what's right. By speaking out, we have forced HISA to get better, though fatal flaws remain. We will continue to do so, and HISA will pay attention because they know the National HBPA, its affiliates and a few dozen Senators and Congressmen are watching them like hawks.

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