Steeplechase: Noah And The Ark Will Tote High Weight In Wednesday’s European-Flavored Smithwick

The 2023 Saratoga steeplechase season begins with a bang on Wednesday with the Grade 1, $150,000 A.P. Smithwick Memorial handicap at 2 1/16 miles, a race that's drawn a competitive field of nine as well as an international array of visiting riders.

Leading the list of contenders for the Smithwick, one of two Grade 1s at Saratoga, is Keystone Thoroughbreds' Noah And The Ark, longshot winner of the G1 Lonesome Glory at Aqueduct last September, who proved his defeat of the mighty Snap Decision while getting a big break in the weights was no fluke. In his following start at level weights, Noah And The Ark kicked in late and got up for second to eventual Eclipse Award winner Hewick in the American Grand National at Far Hills, the most significant hurdle race in the U.S.

Though he contended before fading to fifth in the longer 3-mile Iroquois in Nashville in May, Noah And The Ark is the starting top weight (158 pounds) in the Smithwick, giving away six to 18 pounds to his rivals. Regular rider Harrison Beswick has the mount for trainer Todd McKenna.

Trainers Keri Brion and Hall of Famer Jack Fisher each saddle two challengers in Upland Partners' Freddy Flintshire and Atlantic Friends Racing's Historic Heart (Brion) and Sonny Via's Welshman and Riverdee Stable's Gordon's Jet (Fisher).

In two career Spa starts, Freddy Flintshire, who gets the services of 2022 leading rider Parker Hendriks, has an allowance victory and close second in the Michael G. Walsh novice stakes. He was the runaway winner of the Queen's Cup novice stakes this spring, and has both tactical speed and the ability to come from off the pace. Historic Heart, a tough competitor in the novice ranks, was fourth in last year's Smithwick, and will be ridden by UK-based veteran Danny Mullins, the nephew of legendary Irish conditioner Willie Mullins.

Mullins is no stranger to American steeplechasing, having reached the summit when piloting Mr. Hot Stuff to victory in the Grand National at Far Hills in 2017. Mullins is a veteran of 40 NSA starts over seven years. In his most recent ride, at the Iroquois Races in May, he won a handicap aboard Jimmy P. Historic Heart went to the sidelines for a year following the Smithwick, and tuned up for his hurdle return in a maiden special weights turf race on the flat at 1 3/8 miles at Delaware Park earlier this month. Both carry 148 pounds.

Fisher's duo also pack quite a punch, and seem to be in fine form. Five-year-old Welshman, who was acquired off the flat from trainer Barclay Tagg two years ago, boasts three wins in his past four starts, including the AFLAC Supreme novice stakes at Callaway Gardens last fall and, more recently, the Grade 2 David Semmes Memorial at the Virginia Gold Cup Races in May. In the Semmes, at 2 1/8 miles, he was a convincing two-length winner over Gordon's Jet, who ran gallantly in his stakes debut following a 120 Ratings Handicap victory at Tryon. Previous to that, he was a four-time winner in Europe. Tom Garner rides Gordon's Jet (144 pounds); Graham Watters gets the call on Welshman (152 pounds).

A 10-time winner of $364,000, Sharon Sheppard's Recidean, trained by leading conditioner Leslie Young, was a two-time stakes victor last year, taking the David Semmes Memorial, then closed out his campaign with an emphatic tally in the Appleton hurdle stakes at Far Hills. He began this season with a gutsy second to Snap Decision, but was subsequently non competitive in the Iroquois. Redicean gets a new rider in veteran Robbie Dunne, an Irishman who came stateside recently and rode two races at the summer season opener at Colonial Downs. Prior to that, Dunne made one appearance on the NSA circuit, guiding Macnicholson to a second-place finish behind Moscato in the 2017 Michael G. Walsh novice stakes at Saratoga. Dunne's biggest win came in the 2015 Scottish Grand National on 25-1 shot Wayward Prince. Redicean has been assigned 146 pounds.

Upland Flats Racing's West Newton, trained by Ricky Hendriks, was bred by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, and has five victories since coming over from England in 2019. The son of Kitten's Joy has captured his last two starts, including his first stakes, the Van Clief Memorial, at Foxfield in April, though the Smithwick represents a huge step up in class. West Newton carries 144 pounds and Irish jockey Stephen Mulqueen. Mulqueen, who began his NSA career in the spring, has four wins in 17 outings riding for trainer Arch Kingsley.

Irv Naylor's Belfast Banter (144 pounds), an accomplished hurdler in Europe, is still looking for his first U.S. win. In six NSA starts (all in Grade 1 and 2 competition), the eight-year-old Irish-bred's best finish was a second to Redicean in the Semmes. He has two thirds in 2023, in the Temple Gwathmey and Semmes Memorial. Cyril Murphy is the trainer and Barry Foley rides.

A wild card in the race is Patrick Merrigan's Salvino, trained by Patrick Neville and ridden by Gavin Sheehan. Salvino makes the trip from the UK, where he registered one win, in a novice weight-for-age hurdle, and six seconds in 13 career starts. The seven-year-old Irish-bred hasn't hit the board this year, and this will be his first stakes try. Sheehan is a national hunt jockey and has competed in some of the country's most storied events, including the Grand National at Aintree and the Cheltenham Festival. The Irishman rode in four jump races at Saratoga in 2016; his last NSA mount was at Colonial Downs in 2019, where he finished second, beaten a nose.

Post time for all Saratoga steeplechase races is 1:10 p.m. on Wednesdays. NYRA races are broadcast live on Fox2 TV, with replays available on NYRA website, https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/replays.

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‘Real Throwback’ Trainer Richard Mandella Named 2023 Honor Guest By Thoroughbred Club Of America

Richard Mandella has been selected by the Board of Directors of the Thoroughbred Club of America as the 2023 Honor Guest, Club President Charlie Boden announced Monday.

“The Thoroughbred Club of America is delighted to name Richard Mandella as its 2023 Honor Guest,” said Boden. “Richard is a shining example of what past generations traditionally thought of when they considered what a great trainer is – a real 'throwback' who has never had more than 40 horses in his barn. He is steadfast in his care of the animal with a long view of what that animal could accomplish if given the time to flourish. His care for the horses in his barn is matched by his support of the people who he employs to take such good care of them. He is a consummate professional in every aspect of his trade evidenced by his exemplary integrity record and his body of work as is shown by the great horses he has had his hands on.

“His unheralded service to the industry by his continued support of entities devoted to the welfare of the horse is also exemplary. A Hall of Fame inductee in 2001 and the trainer of nine Breeders' Cup winners to date, his acceptance of our honor fills a frame on our wall which will make every member of The Thoroughbred Club of America proud.”

Mandella will be honored by the Club at its 92nd Testimonial Dinner, which will be held at Keeneland on Friday, Nov. 17, 2023.

Richard Mandella's journey to the Thoroughbred racing Hall of Fame began in Beaumont, Calif., a rural outpost to the east of Los Angeles where his father, Gene Mandella, was the go-to farrier for a number of local farms. Gene's son, born Nov. 5, 1950, was naturally drawn to the equine world, juggling high school and hard work at the Three Rings Ranch of George and Connie Ring just long enough to discover he could make some kind of career out of his emerging talent with temperamental Thoroughbreds.

Early on, Mandella found a kindred spirit in V.J. “Lefty” Nickerson, a New York-based trainer who hired the young Californian as an assistant. When Nickerson returned to the East in the spring of 1973, he left Mandella in charge of a few horses at Santa Anita. Mandella responded by saddling Elmendorf Farm's classy Big Spruce to win the prestigious San Luis Rey Stakes by 10 lengths, leaving turf champion Cougar II in his wake.

By the end of 1974, Mandella was training privately for breeder Roger Braugh. Two years later, at the urging of Dr. Buck Wynne, Jr., Mandella went public. In 1977, he broke through with graded stakes victories by the California-breds Bad n' Big and Now Pending. By 1981 his stable earnings topped the million-dollar mark. The momentum was undeniable.

Even in a training colony that included Charlie Whittingham, Bobby Frankel, Wayne Lukas, and Ron McAnally, Mandella was making his presence felt. Owners such as Maxwell Gluck, Marty Wygod, John C. Mabee, R.D. Hubbard, Jonabell Farm, and Herman Sarkowsky were early Mandella adopters, later to be joined by Gerald J. Ford, Claiborne Farm, Alain and Pierre Wertheimer, Rick Porter, Ramona Bass, Burt Bacharach, and B. Wayne Hughes. Such owners brought with them future major winners and champions including Kotashaan, Beholder, Phone Chatter, Gentlemen, Halfbridled, Pleasantly Perfect, and Omaha Beach.

The first trainer on the Thoroughbred Club's list of Honor Guests is James “Sunny Jim” Fitzsimmons, cited in 1955 for his work with the likes of Gallant Fox, Omaha, and Nashua, as well as living up to his nickname. Mandella is the 10th trainer so honored, along with Whittingham, Lukas, Preston Burch, Horatio Luro, Woody Stephens, Alec Head, MacKenzie Miller, and Shug McGaughey, who was the Honor Guest in 2013.

Unique in the record of Mandella is sending out both dead heat winners of a Grade 1 Stakes, which he accomplished with Beautiful Melody and Reluctant Guest in the 1990 Beverly Hills Handicap. Other extraordinary accomplishments by Mandella include winning four Breeders' Cup races on a single program and guiding one horse (Beholder) through four championship seasons.

The trainer attained Hall of Fame status in 2001, some noting with surprise that he made it to the hallowed walls in Saratoga Springs without winning a Kentucky Derby, a Preakness, or a Belmont Stakes. Mandella already had answered by taking a sweeping array of major stakes from coast to coast, including such historic prizes as the Metropolitan Handicap, Haskell Invitational, Early Times Turf Classic, Donn Handicap, Ballerina Stakes, Oaklawn Handicap, and the Pimlico Special, while back home in California he was winning an amazing six straight million-dollar races annually based in the state – two versions each of the Santa Anita Handicap, Hollywood Gold Cup, and Pacific Classic – between 1996 and 1998. Inspired by his induction, Mandella has gone on to win a Dubai World Cup and add to his current total of nine Breeders' Cup victories.

Mandella also brings to his role as 2023's Honor Guest a reputation as a passionate advocate for the sport that has given him so much. His time as the long-serving chairman of the Necropsy Committee of the California Horse Racing Board has led to enlightening discoveries in equine injuries. He is a director of the Oak Tree Racing Association, which operated a charitable meeting in California for four decades. He is a steady supporter of organizations like CARMA, which funds Thoroughbred retirement and retraining, and the Gregson Foundation, a leading source of college scholarships for the children of backstretch workers.

Mandella and his wife, Randi, have passed on their commitment to racing to the next generation. Their son, Gary Mandella, is his father's chief assistant and a stakes-winning trainer in his own right, while their daughter, Andrea Birkman, previously served as director of development and donor relations for New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program and currently owns a home furnishings boutique in Lexington, Ky.

“I can't express how proud I am to receive this honor,” Mandella said. “I would like to thank the owners who have allowed me to train their horses and the great people that I've had working for me through all the years. I especially want to thank my family for allowing me to devote the time to do something I truly love.

“As for the horses,” Mandella added, “it's no real secret. The faster the better. And I've found the better they are, the more they're able to understand my training.”

The Thoroughbred Club Testimonial Dinner was inaugurated in 1932, the year the Club was founded, to recognize distinguished contributions of leadership as well as success in the Thoroughbred industry. The first recipient was Col. E. R. Bradley, and other winners include William Woodward Sr., three generations of the Hancock family of Claiborne Farm, plus Ted Bassett, Alice Chandler, Chris McCarron, and The Honorable Brereton C. Jones. To learn more about The Thoroughbred Club of America visit us online at www.thethoroughbredclub.com.

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American Horse Council Releases Congressional Scorecard for the First Half of 2023

Having support in Washington, D.C., is vital for any industry, but especially the horse industry. Wouldn't it be easy if you had a simple way to see if your Congressional representative is one of those that supported your lifelong passion?

Enter the American Horse Council's Congressional Scorecard.

“It's imperative that horse owners and those active within the industry are familiar with their political representatives—locally and in Congress,” says Julie Broadway, president of the AHC. “We hope that by providing a tool such as the Congressional Scorecard it makes it easier for our members to know who they can look into supporting when election time rolls around.”

The American Horse Council (AHC) regularly identifies legislation that supports the U.S. equine industry. Bills are evaluated that draw consensus among the AHC's diverse membership in issue areas such as federal resources for equine-assisted services, animal welfare issues arising under the Horse Protection Act, labor flexibility, tax reform, public trails access, USDA resources to promote equine programs and others that may emerge as the legislative process moves forward. In addition to the legislation, points are awarded to members of the U.S. Congress who support AHC through their membership in the Congressional Horse Caucus, participate at AHC events and whether they are accessible and responsive to AHC members and staff.

While reviewing the legislative record for the 118th Congress, which has reached the midpoint of its first session, the AHC analyzed pro-industry bills, which is also referred to as “priority legislation,” and identified the bills' congressional champions. From this board list of “champions,” the AHC then assigned points based on a lawmaker's degree of support for priority bills, among other factors. The point system then makes a smaller pool of “industry champions” emerge to inform members of the horse industry which incumbents should be recognized and acknowledged for their support.

The following are the top ranking five members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives:

SENATE  HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
1. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-West Virginia) 1. Rep. Don Bacon (R-Nebraska-2)
2. Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kansas) 2. Rep. Andy Barr (R-Kentucky-6)
3. Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) 3. Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-California-19)
4. Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi) 4. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pennsylvania-9)
5. Sen. John Brasso (R-Wyoming) 5. Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minnesota-2)

Those interested in viewing the Congressional Scorecard can visit the AHC website and look under “Election Center” (https://horsecouncil.org/election-center/congressional-scorecard/).

Because the AHC is bipartisan, party affiliation is not a factor in the scorecard.

“The scorecard reflects those that support bills that help the equine industry, no matter what party they represent,” says Broadway.

Some of the bills from the first half of the 118th Congress include:

  • H.R. 1582 – Personal Health Investment Today Act of 2023 (PHIT Act of 2023)
    Sponsor: Rep. Mike Kelly (R-PA-16)
  • H.R. 3090 – Prevent All Soring Tactics Act of 2023 (PAST Act of 2023)
    Sponsor: Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA-1)
  • H.R. 1839 – Combating Illicit Xylazine Act
    Sponsor: Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-CA-19)
  • H.R. 2927 – Racehorse Tax Parity Act
    Sponsor: Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY-6)
  • H.R. 2296 – Racehorse Cost Recovery Act of 2023
    Sponsor: Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY-6)
  • H.R. 1250 – Family Farm and Small Business Exemption Act
    Sponsor: Rep. Tracey Mann (R-KS-1)
  • H.R. 237 – Recognizing the Importance of Stepped-Up Basis under Section 1014 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 in preserving family-owned farms and small businesses
    Sponsor: Rep. Tracey Man (R-KS-1)
  • S. 1108 – Death Tax Repeal Act of 2023
    Sponsor: Sen. John Thune (R-SD)
  • S. 786 – Personal Health Investment Today Act of 2023 (PHIT Act of 2023)
    Sponsor: Sen. John Thune (R-SD)
  • S. 993 – Combating Illicit Xylazine Act
    Sponsor: Sen. Catherine Cortez Mastro (D-NV)
  • S. America's Outdoor Recreation Act of 2023 (serves as an omnibus for related bills, additional co-sponsors will be added)
    Sponsor: Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)

For more information, or to see the top ten, visit the AHC website: https://horsecouncil.org/election-center/congressional-scorecard/ 

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Study: Botulism Can Be Used To Successfully Treat Stringhalt, Laminitis

“Botulism” is actually a catch-all phrase for nine serological types of botulinum neurotoxins. Botulinum neurotoxins are proteins synthesized and secreted by neurotoxigenic strains of Clostridial bacteria. Horses are particularly susceptible to the neurotoxins, compared to other species; they are often exposed to them through contaminated food or through infected soil that enters a wound.

The toxin can cause muscle paralysis, beginning in the horse's legs and eventually paralyzing the respiratory muscles and causing death.

Dr. Lauretta Turin, with the University of Milan, and fellow researchers have found that carefully managed botulinum neurotoxins can be used to treat several syndromes that involve the nervous and muscular systems in horses. Botulinum toxins are able to reach specific cell types while not affecting others, meaning they cause little to no side effects. 

One such condition that has been treated with botulinum neurotoxin is stringhalt, a spastic condition that involves hyperflexion of the hock. This condition can be caused by several things, one of which is linked to overactive upper motor neurons. 

The scientists injected the affected muscles with Botulinum neurotoxin type A (Botox), and the spastic movements diminished in as little as two days, with no toxicity or side effects. The research team says more studies are needed to fine-tune the neurotoxin dosage so that complete removal of the spasticity takes place. 

Botulinum neurotoxin type A was also used to treat horses with laminitis. When injected into the muscle's belly, the neurotoxin paralyzed the deep digital flexor muscle. The toxin diminished the shearing forces and improved the outcome of affected horses. Intramuscular injection of Botox also assisted horses experiencing lameness from laminitis. 

Botox also shows promise as a pain-reliever as well as a blocking agent when injected into the middle joint of the horse's knee. The injection can alleviate lameness in horses with acute synovitis. 

Botulinum neurotoxin Type B has shown potential for the alleviation of navicular bone pain, though total soundness was not achieved. The research team recommends that higher concentrations or multiple injections be investigated for the ideal painkilling effect.

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Type B has also proven helpful in pregnant mares, reducing anal sphincter tone and aiding in healing and repair of perineal lacerations during foaling by relaxing the anus after local injection. The study team notes that maximal efficacy took place in the first 15 days and was completely gone in six months. 

These positive results warrant additional research, the team said, with careful attention paid to timing, location and dosing of the toxin. 

Read more at HorseTalk

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