Breeders’ Cup to Collab with Chef Curtis Stone

Chef Curtis Stone will curate exclusive menus for premium dining areas at the 2023 Breeders' Cup World Championships, to be held Nov. 3-4 at Santa Anita. The Michelin-starred chef's menus will be presented to approximately 9,000 attendees in the Silks Dining Room, Frontrunner Restaurant, Chandelier Room, Sportsbook Bar Seating, Trophy Lounge, Trackside Dining, Directors' Room, Luxury Suites, 100 to 1 Club Suite, Eddie Logan Suite, and Stretch Run Suites.

“Our collaboration with Chef Stone is a testament to the Breeders' Cup's commitment to providing top-tier food, hospitality, and entertainment offerings for our guests,” said Drew Fleming, President and CEO of Breeders' Cup Limited. “Chef Stone is incredibly talented, and we're thrilled to again give racing fans a world-class culinary experience as they enjoy the unparalleled excitement of Thoroughbred racing's championship weekend.”

Stone is a restauranteur who is also a New York Times bestselling author of several cookbooks and has appeared on a number of cooking television programs.

The post Breeders’ Cup to Collab with Chef Curtis Stone appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Oak Grove Leads The Way At Tattersalls Cheltenham

One of eight six-figure lots on the day, Oak Grove (Ire) (Soldier Of Fortune {Ire}) (lot 13) took pride of place when selling for £250,000 to Fergal O'Brien Racing during the Tattersalls Cheltenham April Sale on Thursday evening.

O'Brien was buying the relative of Grade 1 winner Voler La Vedette (Ire) (King's Theatre {Ire}) for Chris and Deborah Giles, who already have a half-share in another O'Brien runner, Crambo (GB) (Saddler Maker {Ire}).

“We have no plans as yet,” reported O'Brien of the Rob James Racing-consigned 4-year-old who captured an Oldcastle point-to-point earlier this month. “He needs bit of time and from here will probably go to Jason Maguire's for some R and R through the summer.

“Sally [Randell] and I watched his video and thought he won a very competitive point-to-point–he was the one we came for and we loved him when we saw him.

“We are very grateful for the opportunity to come and buy a horse such as this. He is the most expensive horse we have bought in the ring–usually we buy four for this sort of money!”

The gelding Grand Albert (Ire) (Jet Away {GB}) (lot 27) and the mare Florencethemachine (Ire) (Malinas {Ger}) shared the next most expensive tag at £120,000 apiece. The former was consigned by Virginia Considine and caught the eye of Anthony Bromley of Highflyer Bloodstock. Tom Malone secured the latter from Treehouse Stables. The pair have each won a point-to-point, with the 5-year-old mare taking a Monksgrange affair on debut at the end of March.

The one-day sale concluded with 49 sold of 59 offered (83%) for a gross of £2,969,000. The average was £60,592 (-10%) and the median was £50,000 (-7%).

Matt Prior, Head of Sales at Tattersalls, said, “The Tattersalls Cheltenham April Sale has enjoyed a fabulous spring season on the racecourse through the exploits of Apple Way (Fr) (Diamond Green {Fr}), purchased for just £35,000 at the Cheltenham April Sale last year, winner of last week's G1 Sefton Novices' Hurdle for trainer Lucinda Russell.

“This year has also seen Tattersalls Cheltenham graduates Envoi Allen (Fr) (Muhtathir {GB}), Gerri Colombe (Fr) (Saddler Maker {Ire}), Shishkin (Ire) (Sholokhov {Ire}), Stay Away Fay (Ire) (Shantou), Tahmuras (Fr) (Falco), and Inthepocket (GB) (Blue Bresil {Fr}) all add new Grade 1 wins to their resumes, proving that the Tattersalls Cheltenham sales really are the prime source of top level NH horses in training and point-to-pointers.

“Today's broad buying bench reflected the strong demand for the 'Tattersalls Cheltenham horse' with 49 lots sold at a healthy 83% clearance rate, eight fetching £100,000 and over, a top price of £250,000 and a turnover just shy of £3 million.”

The post Oak Grove Leads The Way At Tattersalls Cheltenham appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Equibase Analysis: Maker Has Pair Of Aces For Elkhorn

This Saturday's Grade 2, $350,000 Elkhorn Stakes at Keeneland brings together a field of 10 horses which for the most part specialize in turf “marathons” of a mile and one-half or thereabouts. Leading the field in terms of making a career at these distances on grass is Channel Maker, who has banked more than $3.7 million while winning nine times in a fantastic 50 race career. That being said, Channel Maker hasn't won since July of 2022.

Horses with more recent success in similar races are Value Engineering and Red Knight, both trained by Mike Maker. Value Engineering won the Grade 2 Mac Diarmida Stakes when last seen in March, while Red Knight captured the G3 William L. McKnight Stakes near the end of January. Highest Honors finished fourth in the Mac Diarmida and although he won the Curlin Stakes early in his career (in 2019) he has never won a graded stakes. Rising Empire got close to a win at this level when leading from the start and coming up a half-length short of victory last month in the G2 Muniz Memorial Classic Stakes, in which Another Mystery was fourth.

Verstappen finished second in the Kentucky Cup Classic Stakes on all-weather last month and hopes to transfer that form to the grass. Tiz the Bomb is winless in six races going back a year since a victory in the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks on all-weather in March, 2022. Shawdyshawdyshawdy earned his last win in October, on dirt, and has never been competitive in three stakes tries to date. Howe Street enters the race off a win in an allowance race and may be in too deep to be competitive.

Top Contenders:

Trainer Mike Maker has become well-known the past few years for winning these kinds of long turf races, and he brings two horses into this year's Elkhorn Stakes which can add to his success. We'll start with Value Engineering, who had only run one mile and three-eighths or more one time in 15 starts before he joined the Maker barn this past December via a private sale to current owner Michael Hui. In his first start for Maker last December, Value Engineering won the one mile and five-eighths H. Allen Jerkens Handicap easily in a field of nine. That race was scheduled to be run on turf but was run on the all-weather track at Gulfstream Park, but the horse got his chance to run on turf one month later in the William L. McKnight Stakes, where he made a visually impressive mid-race rally from seventh to lead in the middle of the race, only to be run down late by his stablemate Red Knight, settling for second in the end by a length. A different outcome awaited Value Engineering last month in the Mac Diarmida Stakes, which he won fairly easily in a field of 12. Both of his recent efforts earned very strong, and very consistent 112 ™ Equibase® Speed Figures and a repeat of either gives this 7-year-old a big shot at winning his second straight graded stakes.

Red Knight has a similar story to Value Engineering as he had raced 27 times, winning eight of those races, before joining the Maker barn last July. He immediately won the Colonial Cup Stakes at the same mile and one-half distance of the Elkhorn, earning a 108 ™ Figure in the process. In his next start, last September in the $1 million Kentucky Turf Cup Stakes, Red Knight proved resilient when battling head and head for the last eighth of a mile to win by a nose in the end, bettering his effort to a then career-best 112 figure. After a much better-than-looked effort in the Sycamore Stakes at Keeneland when eighth but beaten just over one length for the win, Red Knight found the competition in the Breeders' Cup Turf much too tough and checked in 11th. Given nearly three months off, Red Knight returned to top form with a new best 113 figure when winning the William L. McKnight Stakes, beating stablemate Value Engineering by a length. Having now won three of five since joining the Maker barn and with a win at Keeneland in the similar Sycamore Stakes back in 2020, Red Knight is just as probable to win as his stablemate Value Engineering and that's why trainer Mike Maker appears to have a pair of aces coming into the race.

Honorable mention goes to another pair of horses possibly just a cut below the top two. Another Mystery finished second in last year's Elkhorn with a 112 figure competitive with the top pair and he nearly won the similar John B. Connally Stakes in January when leading late and settling for second by three-quarters of a length. Similarly, Verstappen has run three very competitive races in a row, winning two and finishing second in the other. That runner-up effort earned him a career-best 109 figure when a couple of lengths shy of winning the Kentucky Cup Classic Stakes last month. As a horse who has only raced 11 times and a 4-year-old with improving to do, Verstappen may be competitive in this situation.

The rest of the field, with their best representative ™ Equibase® Speed Figures, is Channel Maker (112), Howe Street (91). Highest Honors (111), Rising Empire (102), Shawdyshawdyshawdy (111) and Tiz the Bomb (110).

Win Contenders:
Value Engineering
Red Knight

For consideration on exacta tickets for second and third place:
Another Mystery
Verstappen
Highest Honors

Elkhorn Stakes – Grade 2
Race 8 at Keeneland
Saturday, April 22 – Post Time 4:44 PM E.T.
One Mile and One Half on Turf
Four Year Olds and Upward
Purse: $350,000

The post Equibase Analysis: Maker Has Pair Of Aces For Elkhorn appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Two Additional Strangles Cases Confirmed In Kentucky; One Barn Quarantined At Keeneland

The Kentucky Department of Agriculture is continuing to monitor an outbreak of strangles which began with a 3-year-old Thoroughbred filly at the Thoroughbred Training Center in Fayette County, Ky., according to an update posted to the Equine Disease Communication Center's website on Thursday afternoon.

On April 15, the index case presented with a swollen lymph node without signs of an elevated temperature. On April 18, laboratory results confirmed the organism responsible for causing strangles; the filly was unvaccinated against the disease.

Thursday's update indicates that an epidemiologic investigation has revealed the potential for the outbreak to reach two other facilities, Keeneland Race Course and a private training facility in Fayette County. The full update from the Kentucky Department of Agriculture is as follows:

“The epidemiologic investigation continues, and after extensive testing of horses identified as having potential opportunity of exposure, we are in position to provide updated information and the current status of racing in Kentucky. We have one trainer that has/had horses in training on three separate premises.
Premises 1: All horses (19 under care of 2 trainers) in the affected barn at The Thoroughbred Center, were sampled and PCR testing identified one additional positive horse that was stabled next to the index case. Both positive horses have been removed from The Thoroughbred Center and remain isolated at a separate facility. Ten (10) horses under the care of the second trainer were all found negative. Horses in this affected barn will remain under quarantine and are being monitored daily for any signs of illness. The horses are bright, alert, responsive and remain healthy. The group of horses will be resampled next week.
Premises 2: 
The same trainer had nineteen (19) horses stabled in a barn at Keeneland Race Course. These horses were each examined yesterday morning and samples collected. Following the samples being collected, the horses were moved offsite to a private isolation where they remain under quarantine and daily monitoring. PCR testing on this group of horses identified one asymptomatic horse as having a low level of S.equi DNA. Testing of the horses under the care of the other two trainers were reported to be PCR negative. These horses do remain under quarantine, are being monitored daily and will be resampled next week. All horses continue to be bright, alert, responsive and remain healthy.
Premises 3: The same trainer has eight (8) horses in a single barn on a private training facility in Fayette County. An additional trainer has nineteen (19) horses stabled in this barn. These twenty-seven (27) horses were examined yesterday at the time of sampling. Nasal pharyngeal washes were collected from each horse late yesterday and submitted for PCR testing. Results from this testing will be reported later today.
As described above, we have tested multiple horses under the care of several trainers at each of the above premises and have found no evidence of the disease-causing organism beyond those horses under the care of the single trainer. The extensive monitoring continues and with the cooperation of our trainers, attending veterinarians, and horsemen we remain confident in receiving horses from The Thoroughbred Center (TTC) to enter and race at Keeneland. Horses originating from TTC are being examined by their veterinarian the morning of shipping and are accompanied with a Certificate of Veterinary Inspection stating the animals present no evidence of illness.”

The upper respiratory disease commonly referred to as strangles is caused by Streptococcus equi subsp equi. Strangles is spread from horse to horse through direct contact. Horses can also contract the disease by coming into contact with contaminated surfaces. The disease is highly infectious.

For more information go to: https://www.equinediseasecc.org/strangles.

The post Two Additional Strangles Cases Confirmed In Kentucky; One Barn Quarantined At Keeneland appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights