Woodford Reserve Releases 2023 Kentucky Derby Bottle Celebrating 50th Anniversary Of Secretariat

Woodford Reserve®, the Presenting Sponsor of the Kentucky Derby®, is honoring “The Greatest Two Minutes in Sports” with the release of its 2023 commemorative Derby bottle.

This year's special release celebrates the 50th anniversary of one of the most iconic moments in sports history – Secretariat winning the 1973 Derby.

The bottle features the artwork of Kentucky native Jaime Corum, known for her stunning horse portraits. Her painting captures Secretariat in the Winner's Circle at Churchill Downs, with the famed Garland of Roses draped over the colt's withers.

The bottle retails for $55 and is available for purchase globally. A special presale on ReserveBar begins March 1.

Secretariat is considered one of the greatest thoroughbreds of all time. A Triple Crown winner, he still holds the record for the fastest race time at the Kentucky Derby, Preakness, and Belmont.

“This is our most collectible Derby bottle yet, as Secretariat is perhaps the most revered and most loved racehorse in history,” Woodford Reserve Master Distiller Elizabeth McCall said. “Even 50 years after his stunning achievement, Secretariat's Triple Crown run is still considered one of the most iconic achievements in sports.”

Corum spent her formative years riding horses, painting and drawing them in her free time, and continued to focus on her equine subject after receiving her Masters of Fine Arts from The University of Kentucky. Each equine artwork begins with the foundation of her understanding of equine shape and movement and enhances that with the intangible quality of the horse's character.

“I hope that my painting for this year's Woodford Reserve Derby bottle, “Still The Greatest,” allows us to remember that moment of dreamlike perfection when Secretariat won the 1973 Kentucky Derby,” Corum said. “ I have been honored to paint Secretariat many times over the years, but this one is truly special to me, as it celebrates his 50th anniversary and is paired with Woodford Reserve.  Who could imagine a more perfect pairing of two things that will never go out of style?”

Woodford Reserve's Derby bottle has been an annual collector's item anticipated by bourbon and racing fans since 1999.

The post Woodford Reserve Releases 2023 Kentucky Derby Bottle Celebrating 50th Anniversary Of Secretariat appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Mar. 2 Insights: Full-Brother to Wicked Halo Debuts at Fair Grounds

8th-FG, $50k, Msw, 3yo, 6f, 5:45 p.m. ET

WICKED AGAIN (Gun Runner), a full-brother to MGSW and last term's GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint third-place finisher Wicked Halo, kicks off his career for Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen. The Winchell Thoroughbreds homebred, drawn on the inside in post two and favored on the morning line at 5-2, fired back-to-back, five-furlong bullets for this, including a 1:00 2/5 (1/8) drill Feb. 21. Wicked Again's dam Just Wicked (Tapit) won the 2015 GII Adirondack S. at Saratoga.

The field of 10 also includes debuting pricey yearling purchases: $550,000 FTSAUG purchase Gun Collector (Gun Runner) and $525,000 FTSAUG graduate Squire Creek (Uncle Mo). TJCIS PPs

The post Mar. 2 Insights: Full-Brother to Wicked Halo Debuts at Fair Grounds appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Honey Fox ‘Good Starting Point’ For Chad Brown-Trained Faith In Humanity, Speak Of The Devil

The waiting game is over for trainer Chad Brown when it comes to a pair of his long absent female turf runners.

Klaravich Stables Inc.'s Faith in Humanity, a 4-year-old filly, and Peter Brant's Speak of the Devil, a 6-year-old mare, will come back to the races Saturday when they represent Brown in the $150,000 Honey Fox (G3) for fillies and mares, aged 4-and-up.

A field of 11 is entered for the mile journey on the turf. The Honey Fox is one of nine stakes (eight graded) on Saturday's 14-race card headlined by the $400,000 Fountain of Youth (G2). Post time for the first race is 11 a.m

Faith in Humanity, who will be ridden by Joel Rosario for the first time, hasn't been seen since winning the $150,000 Pebbles (G3) at Aqueduct on Sept. 18. Speak of the Devil, who gets Gulfstream's leading rider Irad Ortiz Jr. for the first time, has been away even longer. Her last race was the $500,000 Just a Game (G1) at Belmont on June 11, and she finished fourth as the even-money favorite.

Brown said Speak of the Devil needed surgery after the Just a Game and that put her on the equine disabled list. Faith in Humanity, Brown said, had a minor issue after the Pebbles – it did not require surgery – and needed some time.

“I am cautiously optimistic that both these fillies will have good seasons,” Brown said. “Just want to keep them healthy. They are a pair of nice stakes fillies.”

Brown has won the Honey Fox twice, the latest coming a year ago with In Italian. He also won it in 2019 with Precieuse, who was making her first start in eight months. Both of those Honey Fox champions were owned by Brant.

To get horses back to the races off injuries, Brown said he uses patience – plenty of that – as well as letting the horses give him some clues. It's an exercise he was taught long ago by his mentor, the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel.

“I train a lot by feel,” he said. “I am constantly observing my horses. I keep moving them up to different levels of workloads and I observe how they execute it and how they recover from it. When I feel they are getting close to a race, I pick my head up and start picking out a target for them. In other words, I just kind of let the horse tell me.”

Both of Brown's horses are French-breds. Faith in Humanity has two wins and a second in three career starts – all at a mile on the grass – while Speak of the Devil's first 14 races were in France before Brant purchased her and sent her to Brown's barn.

She won her first U.S. start – the $500,000 Churchill Distaff Turf Mile (G2) at Churchill Downs by 23/4 lengths and then saw her season end after the Just a Game.

“She is back and looks fabulous,” Brown said. “This is a good starting point for her, for both of them.”

Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott is one of nine trainers bringing horses to the Honey Fox to challenge Brown. He has Gainesway Stables' White Frost, who notched an optional claiming allowance win by 21/4 lengths in her 2023 debut. She is 2-for-2 at Gulfstream as she also won the $100,000 Sweetest Chant (G3) in January of 2021.

The 5-year-old Candy Ride mare will be ridden by Junior Alvarado.

“The timing of the Honey Fox is fine for us,” Mott said. “She usually stays in position and puts herself sort of in the race and makes a nice run. I think she is cut out to be a nice filly.”

Dewberry Thoroughbreds LLC's Princess Theorem, a 5-year-old daughter of Nyquist, has hit the board in six of her 11 turf starts for trainer Brendan Walsh and gets the services of jockey Tyler Gaffalione.

“It was a big effort last time in the allowance (win) and, the time before that, the (1 1/16-mile) distance might have been a little bit out of reach for her,” Walsh said. “But she ran well both times at Gulfstream, so we'll take a shot. When she's right, she can be pretty good.”

Trevor Harris' Sweet Enough will try to rebound from an eighth-place finish in the Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G3) for trainer Roger Attfield and will be ridden by Emma-Jayne Wilson.

Also entered in the Honey Fox are Victory Racing Partners' Kahiko for trainer J. Kent Sweezey and jockey Paco Lopez; Hibiscus Stables LLC and Dig That Mine LLC's Miss Delicious, who is trained by Steve Klesaris and will be ridden by Javier Castellano; Roger Keith Long's Miss Yearwood, trained by Ian Wilkes and the jockey is Luca Panici; L.T.B Inc and Hillerich Racing Inc's Touch of Class, who is trained by David Fawkes and will be ridden by Julien Leparoux; Susan and Jim Hill's Fast as Flight, who is trained by Brian Lynch and will be ridden by Jose Ortiz and J and J Stables LLC and Nicholas Vaccarezza's Sweet Dani Girl, trained by Carlo Vaccarezza and will be ridden by Luis Saez.

The post Honey Fox ‘Good Starting Point’ For Chad Brown-Trained Faith In Humanity, Speak Of The Devil appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Arias, Decauwer, Goodman, And Shurman Voted Into NTRA National Horseplayers Championship’s Hall Of Fame

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) announced Wednesday that Jose Arias, Dennis Decauwer, Jim Goodman, and Bill Shurman have been voted by their peers for induction into the NTRA National Horseplayers Championship's Hall of Fame. The four esteemed handicappers represent the ninth class of NHC Hall of Fame inductees and will be recognized during the NHC Champions Dinner on Sunday, March 12, 2023 at the conclusion of the NTRA National Horseplayers Championship (NHC) at the Horseshoe Las Vegas.

More on the 2023 NHC Hall of Fame Class:

Jose Arias, of Bell Gardens, CA, is one of the most accomplished horseplayers in the history of the NHC. Arias captured the 2014 NHC after a remarkable stretch that saw him record the highest two-day total in NHC history. As of 2021, Arias had two top 10 finishes at the NHC and came within a whisker of becoming the first two-time Champion of the event before settling for second-place. He is a highly skilled horse player with more than one million dollars in career earnings.

Dennis Decauwer, of Rancho Cucamonga, CA, is an 18-time qualifier to the NHC and has made innumerable contributions to the NHC and tournament play in general. Decauwer is a long-time Vice Chairman of the NHC Players Committee and is actively involved in the NHC Mentoring Program. He has advised several Southern California tournament directors on ways to improve or vary tournament structures. He has cashed three times at the NHC, including in 2009 when he finished in second place and earned $150,000.

Although a highly-skilled horseplayer and five-time qualifier to the NHC in his own right, Jim Goodman, of Lexington, KY, is the first member of the NHC Hall of Fame elected by his fellow horseplayers primarily due to his role in hosting successful contests at his beloved Keeneland Race Course where he has worked since 2005. As Director of Wagering Development, Goodman has built contests like the Keeneland Spring Challenge, the Grade One Gamble and the BCBC/NHC Challenge into must stops on the contest tour schedule, all the while introducing horseplayers from throughout North America to one of the world's most iconic racetracks.

William (Bill) Shurman, of Danville, CA, is arguably one of the most consistent handicapping contest players in the history of the NHC. He started participating in NHC qualifiers in 2003 and as of 2023 had earned a berth in the national championship in Las Vegas for an astonishing 20 consecutive years. A tournament mainstay from his native New York to Kentucky to his adopted home state of California, Shurman has won major tournaments at Keeneland and Del Mar while also cashing at Aqueduct, Saratoga, Santa Anita, among others. He is the brother of NHC Hall of Famer Paul Shurman.

More on the NHC Hall of Fame:

Arias, Decauwer, Goodman, and Shurman join 19 past Hall of Fame inductees: Ray Arsenault (2021), Stanley Bavlish (2022), Michael Beychok (2022), Roger Cettina (2020), Steve Crist (2016), J. Randy Gallo (2022), Richard Goodall (2020), Sally Goodall (2021), David Gutfreund (2022), Chris Larmey (2018), Paul Matties Jr. (2022), Mike Mayo (2015), Ron Rippey (2015), Paul Shurman (2017), Trey Stiles (2019), Bryan Wagner (2019), Judy Wagner (2016), Steve Wolfson Sr. (2017), and Steve Wolfson Jr. (2018).

To sign up for the NHC Tour, go to www.ntra.com/membership.

The post Arias, Decauwer, Goodman, And Shurman Voted Into NTRA National Horseplayers Championship’s Hall Of Fame appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights