Texas 2-Year-Old Sale Proving Upward Trend In Texas Racing, Breeding

For evidence that HB 2463 is fulfilling its mission to boost the horse racing industry in the Lone Star State, the Texas Legislature need only look to the Texas Thoroughbred Association's 2-Year-Olds in Training sale at Lone Star Park on April 5.

Starting in 2020, through HB 2463, a portion of the sales tax on horse feed, tack and other equine products has been channeled into beefing up race purses for which owners compete and providing funds for other equine incentives and events. More money has meant more and better horses for the auction.

The 186 2-year-olds in the 2023 catalog are up from 144 in last year's catalog and the 122 in 2021, with the sale's Covid-forced cancelation in 2020. These 2-year-olds are the first to be born since HB 2463's passage. The sale's breeze show — during which most of the horses will have timed workouts for generally an eighth-mile — will be Monday, April 3 at Lone Star Park. The sale and breeze show are open to the public.

Landon Jordan said he attended his first horse sale at the TTA 2-year-old sale two years ago. While he bought a couple of fillies last year at Ocala, the 2022 TTA 2-year-old sale was Jordan's coming out party for launching his Mansfield Racing Stable.

He bought four horses, including sales-topper Free Drop Maddy for $200,000 and the top-priced colt Release McCraken for $125,000. All four are winners, three have won at least twice. Kentucky-bred Release McCraken made it three straight victories by taking the $100,000 Texas Thoroughbred Association Derby at Sam Houston Race Park last Saturday. Louisiana-bred El Deal Me Aces ($78,000 purchase) won a Fair Grounds allowance race, while Cajun Crazy, a Louisiana-bred son of 2017 Preakness winner Cloud Computing, is a Fair Grounds maiden winner bought for $65,000.

“We're excited about what we did over there,” Jordan said, speaking of horses he bought at last August's Texas Summer Yearling Sale, “We have a lot that we're really happy with. Obviously we'll be back at the 2-year-old sale. That was a heck of a sale for us…. I think if you're starting out, it's a lot easier to go regional, buy at a sale like the TTA because you're going to be running in Texas, in Louisiana, Oklahoma, maybe Arkansas. If you do buy a Kentucky-bred, you have the safeguard of being able to run them in these TTA sales races. You're kind of protecting yourself.”

From buying his first horses a year ago, Jordan now has 14 horses, half being 2-year-olds.

“It's been a great sale for everyone, consignors and buyers alike,” said Jordan's trainer, Bret Calhoun. “I think there's a horse for everybody, for every price range. The Texas-breds have been at a premium because obviously the foal crop has been less and the purse structure has come up. It's supply and demand – not enough of them to go around, and you'll pay a premium for a good one.

“You have other benefits for horses in that sale. You have the Sale Futurity that's been very popular, the Texas Stallion Stakes. There's a tremendous amount of Louisiana-breds, and there's a big market for those as well there. A lot of people shopping that sale race in Texas and Louisiana, so some of the Louisiana people have brought their better horses over, and they've sold extremely well. Then you filter in some 'open' horses, too, some Kentucky-breds who have fared very well. You can get some value out of that sale.”

Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, North America's first trainer to top 10,000 victories, agreed.

“It's a sale that has made a nice little resurgence, a direct result, I believe, of the supplement to the Texas purses that the state has provided,” he said. “Some very solid racehorses came out of it last year, and it's a book of better pedigrees this year.”

While Asmussen will be at the sale to buy, his family will be there to sell.

Just under 20 percent of the horses in the catalog are being sold by Asmussen Horse Center for its clients, with a sales-leading 36 horses in the original catalog. That's about twice the number the Laredo operation had last year. It reflects progeny of Texas stalwarts such as Too Much Bling and also noteworthy Kentucky sires such as Uncle Mo, Frosted, Munnings and the late Bernardini, as well as the promising young stud City of Light. But even more important to Keith Asmussen, patriarch of the first family of thoroughbred racing and Steve's father, is the youngsters' conformation.

“We're going to have some nice horses with fast works,” he said. “We're not one to go to extremes, but we like to show their ability.”

Asmussen said he's seeing more of his clients opting to foal their mares in Texas to get Accredited Texas-breds. More also want to sell at the TTA auctions, and he sees future sales just getting better as those Texas foals reach racing age. Forty-four of the 316 registered Texas-bred foals of 2021 are in the 2023 sales catalog, not counting any that might be supplemental entries.

“Naturally, more money, more everything – and especially better-bred horses will come from this,” Keith Asmussen said.

The productive stallions Tapiture (a multiple graded-stakes winner standing in Kentucky), Grade 1 winner El Deal (Louisiana) and Grade 1-sire Custom for Carlos (Louisiana) lead the catalog with six entrants apiece. Other prominent racehorses and proven sires represented by their progeny include 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify, Bolt d'Oro, Classic Empire, Good Magic, Kantharos, Malibu Moon, Midshipman and Practical Joke. First-crop stallions are well-represented through champions Vino Rosso and Mitole, along with Grade 1 winners Catholic Boy and Yoshida. Also with progeny in the catalog: five-time Grade 2 winner Catalina Cruiser, major winners Copper Bullet and Maximus Mischief (a son of internationally prominent sire Into Mischief).

As always, Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma stallions are represented in the catalog, including leading Texas stallion Bradester. In his second season at stud in Texas at Forks of the Paluxy, the Grade 1-winning Mr Speaker, already the sire of two Grade 1 winners, has the accredited Texas-bred filly She Speaks in the sale as Hip No. 103, consigned by Asmussen Horse Center.

Mark Collinsworth, who with wife Lori bought and stands Mr Speaker, will be at the sale as both a buyer and seller. He expects to purchase several fillies that they ultimately can breed to Mr Speaker. He's also a minority partner in CJ Thoroughbreds' pinhooking venture that will be selling a handful of horses bought last summer as yearlings.

“These sales are great,” Collinsworth said. “There's so much enthusiasm now, just with the house bill they passed a few years ago that redirected $25 million to the Texas horse industry.… There's just a lot of positive indications for this sale, and there are some very nice-looking horses in there. The Texas Thoroughbred Association has done a great job. All the owners and breeders have stepped up.”

Last year, 88 horses sold at the auction for a total of $3,050,700, compared with 89 horses selling for $2.91 million in 2021, then a record for the sale under TTA leadership. The 2022 average price was $34,667 and the median $28,000, compared with $32,671 and $20,000 in 2021.

Accredited Texas-breds proved a hot commodity. Overall, the 31 Texas-bred 2-year-olds that sold at auction last year, most but not necessarily all at the TTA sale, averaged $47,506. That was up a whopping 60 percent over the then-record $29,674 for the 23 Texas-bred 2-year-olds sold at auction in 2021.

“This is the largest catalog we've had in a while,” said Al Pike, whose family's Opelousas, La.-based Pike Racing was last year's leading consignor by total sales at $664,000. “There seems to be a good market there for the right horses. I think we're bringing a really good group that will be well-received. We've got some really good Texas-breds for the first time in a while. We've got some good Louisiana-breds. We try to have something for everybody.”

The 2023 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale catalog can be downloaded at www.TTASales.com

The post Texas 2-Year-Old Sale Proving Upward Trend In Texas Racing, Breeding appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘He’s Just Bombproof’: View From the Stoute Stable as Desert Crown Nears Return

In the modern era, only Aidan O'Brien has trained more Derby winners than Sir Michael Stoute. The latter became almost instantly synonymous with the great race, and indeed woven into Derby folklore, when he first won it back in 1981. Few will need reminding that that was with Shergar (Ire), the horse whose infamy threatens to overshadow his brilliance, especially as the years wear on and the number of people who were there to witness Shergar's superiority first hand decreases.

Forty-one years later, and with the not insignificant names of Shahrastani, Kris Kin, North Light (Ire), and Workforce (GB) creating stepping stones to bridge that gap, Stoute was back at Epsom with Desert Crown (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}). The colt's rise to the Classic roll of honour had been swift: November maiden victory as a juvenile, straight to the G2 Dante S. six months later, thence to the Derby itself. Few trainers would be so assured in their assessment of the nascent ability of a young colt to have taken such a bold path, but then few have the legion of experience accrued by Stoute in his half century with a training licence. 

Fifty not out: the cricket-mad trainer would probably approve of that statistic, and Desert Crown became his sixth Derby winner 50 years and 37 days after Stoute had saddled his first ever winner (at Newmarket). But his remarkable innings is not defined solely by success at Epsom, where he has also sent out the Oaks winners Fair Salinia (GB) and Unite (Ire), as well as five winners of the Coronation Cup, including the brilliant Singspiel (Ire), a forerunner of the globetrotting superstars that are more commonplace these days.

While later-maturing, classy middle-distance horses have long been a hallmark of the Stoute stable, so has the longevity of the key personnel involved at his Freemason Lodge yard. Stoute's two most recent assistant trainers, Owen Burrows and James Horton, are now training in their own right, and into the latter's shoes has stepped James Savage, but not before a lengthy stint which has incorporated almost every role therein.

“I was apprenticed to Mark Tompkins and Jeremy Noseda and I just could tell I wasn't a very good jockey,” says Savage, who joined Stoute in 1999 and whose no-nonsense modesty is typified in this one statement. “I just thought, if I'm not going to be a jockey, then I want to go somewhere that I can build a career and work through the ranks.

“I was a stable lad here for many years, a work rider, then second head lad, learning from some really good experienced people. And then the travelling job came up and I went to so many places all over the world. When my daughter was two, the head lad option came up at [Stoute's former second yard] Beech Hurst. Then when James Horton moved on to train for John Dance the assistant trainer's job became available.”

He adds, “The boss likes to promote from within, I think as much to reward loyalty, and there was no change to anything when I became assistant because I've been here for so long, and if I don't know how the yard runs now, then I've been walking around with my eyes shut. So it was natural progression really.”

Going from a maiden to the Dante to the Derby is a very hard thing to do, but we were never concerned because he had the mentality to deal with it

Loyalty is a word which Savage returns to regularly when speaking about the man known as “the boss”. It can be equally applied to Desert Crown's owner Saeed Suhail, a longstanding patron of the stable, but with good reason. Desert Crown was Suhail's second Derby winner after Kris Kin. He also owned King's Best, one of five 2,000 Guineas winners trained by Stoute, the top sprinter Dream Of Dreams (Ire), and dual Group 1 winner Poet's Word (Ire) among a significant list of Pattern winners. All connected with the Stoute stable are now hoping that the luck can hold for Suhail as the bid to return Desert Crown to the races increases in tempo. So how is he?

“Our head girl, Sarah Denniff, who manages Desert Crown really well, commented the other day about how he's developed through his back and strengthened up,” says Savage. “He's really developing behind the saddle where he was just a little weak last year. Going from a maiden to the Dante to the Derby is a very hard thing to do, but we were never concerned because he had the mentality to deal with it.”

He continues, “He's just bombproof. You go to the Derby and the first thing you think of is, 'How's the horse going to handle it?' We've been to a few now and some of them have taken it really well and some of them have just looked a bit edgy. You just knew he was going to go there and be professional.”

A minor foot injury in July meant that the Derby was the last we saw of Desert Crown, but he is back cantering in Newmarket after recuperating nearby at Sheikh Mohammed's Dalham Hall Stud.

“He was extremely well managed up at Dalham Hall during his rehab,” notes Savage. “It was as beneficial for his mind as it was for him physically. It's a long time to be just on a horse-walker or hand-led in a yard where horses are being trained and everything's happening, buzzing along. There, he had turnout, hand-walking and just a change of scenery really.

“Because of the time he had off, the build-up to his work has been in a slower manner than for a horse that's just had six weeks downtime from a season. It's been long and slow, but we're at half-speed work now, and he's in good condition.

“You can't make too many plans. You have to take it race by race, but the boss likes to start a horse like that at Sandown. The Gordon Richards will come too soon, but the Brigadier Gerard is an option and would tell us where we are after his first race.”

Stoute does indeed like Sandown as a starting point, and it was in that Group 3 contest last year that many of us first woke up to the abundant talent of Bay Bridge (GB) (New Bay {GB}), who later in the year gilded the season for his trainer when beating Adayar (Ire) and Baaeed (GB) in the G1 QIPCO Champion S. Now five, he, too, remains in training for his breeder James Wigan and Ballylinch Stud.

“Everything is a hundred per cent, so we've just got to mind him,” Savage reports. “We went into the Champion Stakes quietly thinking we could beat Baaeed. We knew that Bay Bridge could be ridden positively and take the race to him early to really try and draw it out of him. Baaeed was the best turf horse in the world last year, and rightly so, but we were confident that day that we had Bay Bridge absolutely spot on.”

He adds, “We could probably look at something like the Gordon Richards at Sandown on April 28 to get him going. Unfortunately he would have a seven-pound penalty, so the boss is just thinking carefully.”

The stable is also home to Bay Bridge's three-year old half-sister by Territories (Ire), named Stormy Sea (GB), with a juvenile colt, Lucky Hour (GB) (Time Test {GB}), on the way in. Their dam Hayonna (GB) (Multiplex {GB}) foaled a full-brother to Bay Bridge on February 5.

Nostrum is a huge horse and he surprised us how he was handling his work early on

Desert Crown and Bay Bridge will naturally be at the forefront of the stable's older-horse division, along with Cheveley Park Stud's five-year-old mare Potapova (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who Savage says is “training really well.” Among the Classic generation, Juddmonte's Nostrum (GB) (Kingman {GB}), must come in for strong consideration following his win in the G3 Somerville Tattersall S. and subsequent third, 16 days later, in the G1 Dewhurst behind another exciting Juddmonte colt, Chaldean (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

“He's a huge horse and he surprised us how he was handling his work early on,” says Savage of Nostrum. “He found it all very easy so we pressed on a bit more and he was fairly impressive first time out at Sandown. Like the two horses we were just talking about, he's got this bombproof mentality; nothing stresses him.

“We wanted to go to Doncaster, which would have given us a longer gap to the Dewhurst, but we just weren't completely happy with his scope so we were forced to go to Newmarket, which left the gap between the two races quite short. We were very happy with the run in the Dewhurst and I think it'll work out to be a very good race because I think the winner's very smart. But we've got a nice, clean run now and we'll see where we go. He's training well.”

While Nostrum, who made his debut in July, was an earlier sort than Desert Crown, Savage says that Stoute remains resolute in not wishing to test his youngsters before they are ready, despite the increasing clamour in racing generally for early success.

“That's not something that we feel any pressure to do,” he says. “Generally the horses we get sent by our owners are horses that are not precocious anyway. You get the odd one, and we do try if they've got a precocious pedigree to get them there, but we certainly don't ask them to run before they can walk as such. 

James Savage and Infinite Cosmos

“Our two-year olds are now just starting to do a little bit more work, say two [canters] on Warren Hill at the weekend, and some of them might just have to back off and some of them might go forward, but they'll tell you.”

In the case of Desert Crown, Ryan Moore had as much of a say in regard to his debut as the horse himself.

“Ryan rode him work and there was one turf meeting left at Nottingham, and I remember saying we could get him out at Kempton,” Savage recalls. “Ryan said, 'Run this horse on the turf.' I remember thinking it would be fairly soft but we ran him, he went to the front and he was running green, so Richard [Kingscote] just had to keep him straight and concentrating, but he went again on that ground.”

With Moore, Kingscote, and jockey-turned-bloodstock agent Ted Durcan all riding work regularly for Stoute, he does not lack good feedback.

“They're such a valuable part of the team,” Savage says. “We try and get the boys on everything in the spring, and Ryan will come in every day when he's available, Ted's here most days, and we try and switch all their rides so we get a bit of feedback on more or less everything in the yard before we step up the fast work. But their opinions are very valuable, especially with the two-year olds when you're trying to get somewhere, to back off or go forward, maybe run here, not there.”

While Savage's time with Stoute has spanned four of the six Derby winners, he has also looked after two Derby place-getters, Tartan Bearer (Ire) and Golan (Ire). Both were homebreds for the much-missed Ballymacoll Stud. Golan also won the 2,000 Guineas and returned at four to land the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S.

“When you think of Ballymacoll, it makes you realise how many owner-breeders unfortunately aren't with us any more. Even smaller breeders like John Greetham, such great horses they gave us over the years,” he says.

Another owner-breeder who will be sorely missing from Stoute's list is Sir Eveleyn de Rothschild, who died last November at the age of 91. His Southcourt Stud bloodlines, which have been seen to great effect for Freemason Lodge through such top-class horses as Crystal Ocean (GB) and Notnowcato (GB), live on at the stable through two fillies, Crystal Caprice (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) and Infinite Cosmos (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), who were held back from last year's partial dispersal by Sir Evelyn's sons.

The three-year-old Infinite Cosmos has raced just once, when beaten a short-head at Doncaster last October, but she is clearly one who is putting a spring in Savage's step each morning. “I'm very excited about her,” he says, giving away rather more than the boss might be inclined to do. “I think she could be quite special and make up into a stakes horse.”

Having had Golan in his care at the start of his tenure as a stable lad, Savage is enjoying the prospect of Nostrum's season ahead in his far more senior position.

“It's very exciting having a Guineas horse in the yard,” he says. “And obviously getting Desert Crown and Bay Bridge back on the track and making plans for them is also very exciting. It's nice on a Tuesday looking at the early-closing entries and picking out Group 1s in France and Ireland and so on.”

And along with those equine legends over two decades and counting, what has it been like working for a trainer who can certainly be put in the legendary bracket?

Savage thinks carefully about his reply. It is clearly not that he is agonising over saying what might be seen as 'the right thing', rather that he wants to be sure that he is doing Stoute justice from his almost unique view of the stable's inner workings.

“Words are used quite loosely, but he's a bit of a genius really when it comes to training racehorses, isn't he? A horse might go around the round gallop once as a two-year-old and he can see something that will probably come to fruition in 12 months' time. He visualises the development and where a horse could end up,” he says.

“I always thought it would be a good job as a jockey to ride for him, as good a job as it is for me to be his assistant because he doesn't tie you down to things. You do what you think he wants you to do and you're always rewarded with back-up and loyalty. He's an incredibly easy person to work for, and I would think the jockeys would probably say the same thing, too.”

Savage adds, “He has his way of letting horses do things naturally; mature naturally. Hence his success for all these years. He's very patient, with horses and people. He's still as hungry as ever and I think getting so many nice two-year-olds this year from owners that have been longstanding and loyal is very positive.”

 

 

The post ‘He’s Just Bombproof’: View From the Stoute Stable as Desert Crown Nears Return appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Three New Contenders Crack Latest Triple Crown Top Ten Poll

Each week, members of the national media vote on the nation's top contenders on the Triple Crown trail in the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) Top Thoroughbred Poll. Week 6 of the 2023 Top 3-Year-Old Thoroughbred Poll conducted by the NTRA covers racing performances through March 28, 2023. The 3-year-old poll represents horses competing up to and through the Triple Crown. Rankings are based on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-1 voting system. First place votes are in parentheses.

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