Donncha McCarthy To Join The Castlebridge Consignment

Donncha McCarthy, a graduate of both The Irish National Stud and the Godolphin Flying Start program and a familiar face at bloodstock sales in Europe and Australasia, is joining The Castlebridge Consignment as its Irish sales executive. McCarthy is just returning from the sales in Australia, where he worked for Bennett Racing.

“I worked a number of the sales for Castlebridge last year and whilst Bill Dwan knew I was keen to return to Australia for their yearling sales, it was agreed that I would come back to Castlebridge in Ireland this year to carry out a very similar role to Patrick Diamond, the Castlebridge sales executive based in Newmarket,” McCarthy said.

“I have also worked for Stuart Boman of Blandford Bloodstock in the past and he's asked me to help him again at the breeze-up sales so I will be working those sales with Stuart over the next couple of months between working for Castlebridge. I've already started to make farm visits with Bill in Ireland and recently travelled to Newmarket to see Andrew Mead and the rest of the team who are based there. It's a very exciting role and I'm looking forward to the future with Castlebridge”.

Castlebridge director Andrew Mead commented, “We are pleased to have Donncha back on board, he was of considerable help last year and it's great to have two well-known young industry figures such as Patrick Diamond and Donncha representing the company”.

Fellow Director Bill Dwan added: “We expect Donncha to visit a lot of farms and stables in Ireland in the coming months and he will also be meeting plenty of people at the races. We recognise that this industry is all about personal contacts coupled with delivering a professional service to clients, so we believe in investing in young guys such as Donncha and Patrick.”

The post Donncha McCarthy To Join The Castlebridge Consignment appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘It Was A Last Minute Decision To Bring Her Here’: Key Of Life Holds On For Gate-To-Wire Beaumont Win

Flurry Racing Stables and Hoffman Family Racing's Key of Life held off Interpolate by a diminishing neck to win the 38th running of the $400,000 Beaumont (G2) Presented by Keeneland Select for 3-year-old fillies on a windswept Sunday afternoon at Keeneland.

Trained by Brad Cox and ridden by Flavien Prat, Key of Life covered the Beard Course distance of seven furlongs, 184 feet in 1:27.32 over the fast main track. It is the second consecutive victory in the race for Cox and Prat, who teamed to win the 2022 renewal with Matareya.

Key of Life was fastest out of the gate and ran unopposed on the lead through fractions of :22.24 and :44.87 for a half mile. On the far turn, Stonewall Star and Opus Forty Two attempted to close the gap, but the filly with the momentum was Interpolate, who was launching a bid from fourth.

Key of Life maintained a clear advantage of 2½ lengths at midstretch and had just enough in the tank to hold off Interpolate at the finish.

Now 3-for-3 at Keeneland, Key of Life earned $241,800 with the victory and increased her earnings to $633,275 while improving her career record to 5-0-3 from eight starts. Key of Life is a Kentucky-bred daughter of Mo Town out of the Harlan's Holiday mare Longride to Wisdom.

Key of Life returned $2.94 for the victory. Interpolate, ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr., finished 6¼ lengths in front of Stonewall Star, the third-place finisher under Luis Saez.

It was another 3¾ lengths back to She's On the Rocks with Opus Forty Two, Shoplifter, and Fun and Feisty completing the order of finish.

Key of Life was bred by Moreau Bloodstock International Inc. Flurry Racing purchased her for $350,000 at the 2022 OBS Spring 2-year-olds in training sale, where Top Line Sales consigned her.

Beaumont Quotes

Brad Cox (trainer of winner Key of Life): “She's very fast away from (the gate) and she's obviously got a lot of speed. She likes Keeneland a lot. I like Keeneland and she likes Keeneland; she's three-for-three here. I'd like to congratulate (owners) Staton Flurry and Greg Hoffman (of Flurry Racing Stables and Hoffman Family Racing, respectively). This was a last-minute decision, so I want to commend those guys. I called them Tuesday and told them I was looking at this race. She was at Oaklawn, so it was a last-minute decision to bring her here and it worked out well. She had no graded black type, so that obviously was appealing. This (win) added a lot to her value and we're very proud of what she was able to accomplish today.”

On making a last-minute decision when the horse has to ship several hundred miles: “You've got to have a van ready – that's Number 1. Listen, at the end of the day it was a race I thought she fit with, basically handicapping who we thought may go, and obviously the public showed she was the favorite. It worked out. The last eighth of a mile (I was) sweating it out. I don't know how much farther she wants to go or if she wants to go any farther at all. I think she's probably better at three-quarters, 6½ (furlongs), but we're glad to get the victory today.”

Flavien Prat (winning rider): “She jumped pretty well and she has a ton of speed, so I was able to get myself on the lead and from there she got the job done. (Trainer) Brad (Cox) did a great job getting her ready. She really dug in (when Interpolate came to her outside in the stretch). But as soon as the other horse got close, she really dug in and gave me another gear to get us to the wire.”

Irad Ortiz Jr. (rider of runner-up Interpolate): “I broke good, sat there a couple lengths off the speed. I tried to wait as long as I could and just got beat in the end. The winner kept fighting – she was game.”

Luis Saez (rider of third-place finisher Stonewall Star): “Good trip, perfect. We were following the winner, but at the top of the stretch the winner kept going. Happy with the way she ran.”

John McKee (rider of fourth-place finisher She's On the Rocks): “Good trip. The horse was honest, just got beat by some better horses today.”

The post ‘It Was A Last Minute Decision To Bring Her Here’: Key Of Life Holds On For Gate-To-Wire Beaumont Win appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Charles Town Jockey Fined A Grand For Deep-Stretch Gaffe

Jockey Carlos Eduardo Lopez, currently third in earnings and fourth in wins at Charles Town Races this year, was fined $1,000 by the track's stewards for losing a win at the wire after his mount was clear by five lengths at the sixteenth pole and he apparently thought he could coast to victory without additional effort.

“Jockey Lopez eased his mount, Stylish Paint, coming to the wire in the ninth race on Saturday, Apr. 8, 2023, causing his horse to get beat on the wire,” stated the Apr. 14 stewards' ruling. It was unclear at deadline for this story if Lopez would be appealing the fine.

Lopez, 32, knows Stylish Paint well, having ridden the 6-year-old Paynter mare for owner/trainer Ronney Brown in nine of her last eleven races dating back over a year, a span during which he twice won aboard her by narrow margins of a nose and a head.

But he ended up on the wrong end of the photo finish in the ninth and final race Apr. 8, a $5,000 claimer over seven furlongs that attracted a $53,250 win pool and was the concluding leg of double, pick three, pick four and pick five pools.

After pressing the pacemaker into submission, the 3-1 Stylish Paint took over with a half-furlong to go. The 3-2 favorite, China Cat (Justin Phillip), was gaining under Andre Ramgeet, but was seemingly left with too much work to do to win.

Lopez chose to hand-ride Stylish Paint after making the lead, then geared her down as the line loomed. But Ramgeet continued driving with China Cat, apparently catching his rival unaware at the finish.

“Oh, it got very close! Carlos Lopez thought he had it won on Stylish Paint, and it got very tight on the wire!” announcer Paul Espinosa, Jr., exclaimed in his race call.

The Equibase chart stated that Stylish Paint “dueled for the nod nearing mid-stretch and drew briefly clear, was allowed to relax in late yards and was nipped under the wire.”

The post Charles Town Jockey Fined A Grand For Deep-Stretch Gaffe appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘He Seems Better Around One Turn’: Weyburn Likely For Westchester

Chiefswood Stables' homebred Weyburn is aiming towards a return to graded stakes action in the $175,000 Westchester (G3) going a one-turn mile on May 5 over the main track Belmont Park.

Weyburn, a 5-year-old Ontario-bred son of Pioneerof the Nile, sprung a 46-1 upset in the Gotham (G3) in 2021 at the Big A going the Westchester distance for trainer Jimmy Jerkens. He went winless the rest of his sophomore season before being transferred to trainer Brendan Walsh, capturing last year's seven-furlong Sir Shackleton at Gulfstream Park.

After making one start for trainer Rachel Halden when sixth in the King Edward (G2) over turf at Woodbine, he returned to Jerkens' barn at Palm Meadows for the winter. In his first start off a seven-month layoff, he finished second to Grade 1-winner White Abarrio in a March 4 allowance event going seven furlongs at Gulfstream before securing a repeat triumph in the Sir Shackleton last out on April 1.

“He really picked our heads up, that's for sure,” Jerkens said of the last-out stakes conquest.

Jerkens spoke of his desire to keep Weyburn going one turn this season. At two turns while under Jerkens' care in 2021, Weyburn was a close second to Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mandaloun in the Pegasus at Monmouth Park and was fourth beaten three lengths in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial.

“That's the spot we're looking at,” Jerkens said of the Westchester, which he won in 2006 with Sir Greeley. “He seems to be better around one turn. Two-turn races seem to confuse him a little bit. He ran really well against Mandaloun at Monmouth, but since then he never really got it together going two turns. He runs spotty and he just never figured it out. He ran well in the Wood, the track was just really tiring that day.”

Weyburn breezed a half-mile in :48.11 Thursday over the Belmont training track. The move was the second fastest of 62 recorded works at the distance.

“He worked well. He went a little faster than I wanted,” Jerkens said. “You usually see that when they come back from Florida. They perk up a little bit. He did it easily enough.”

Jerkens said he was impressed by Weyburn's optional-claiming effort when 4 1/2 lengths behind White Abarrio, earning the place position by a neck over Collaborate, who exited that event to earn a 95 Beyer in a Gulfstream allowance win.

“He usually runs very well fresh and he did that day,” Jerkens said. “White Abarrio is a really good horse and he caught up to him, but the pace wasn't all that fast and White Abarrio had plenty left. I love the way he hung on for second. When a horse spurts away like White Abarrio did, they kind of lose heart a little bit. But he kept going for second. It was a really good race and then he came back and won. He needed that little break after the race in Canada. You still never know how they're going to be after being stopped and started again, but he did pretty well right well right when he got to Florida from the farm.”

Weyburn is out of the A.P. Indy mare Sunday Affair, who also produced graded stakes winner Yorkton. His third dam is Grade 1 winner Maplejinsky who produced Hall of Famer Sky Beauty. He sports a record of 4-3-0 from 15 career starts and earnings of $528,994.

The post ‘He Seems Better Around One Turn’: Weyburn Likely For Westchester appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights