Veteran Trainer David Vance Retires After 58-Year Career

Veteran trainer David Vance, one of the fixtures on the Kentucky and Arkansas racing circuits, has announced his retirement following a remarkable 58-year career.

“It's been a great run but I've decided it's time to retire,” Vance said. “Horse racing is in my blood and it's all I've known my entire life. I've told myself I'd train as long as I physically could and now is the time to retire. I'm proud our family will remain involved in training horses with my son, Tommy, and daughter, Trisha, who are third-generation trainers.”

Vance was most known as the conditioner of 2000 champion 2-year-old filly Caressing. Owned by Vance's longtime client Carl Pollard, Caressing won the 2000 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) en route to her season-ending championship honor. Some of Vance's other top runners include Pollard's Grade 1 winner My Trusty Cat and accomplished Kiss Moon and Kiss the Devil.

“Dad has accomplished a lot of things as a trainer but I most admire his courage, hard work and determination for achieving those accolades,” Tommy said. “Throughout his career he's never had more than 40 horses in his care at one time and won thousands of races doing so.”

Vance will close his career with 3,193 documented wins, according to Equibase, which ranks 32nd all-time in North America. Vance is ranked 11th in all-time wins at Churchill Downs with 380.

Vance, who will turn 83 in August, is a lifelong horseman who began training on his own in 1965. As a teenager, Vance was a jockey and one of the leading riders in the 1950s at the now defunct Thunderbird Downs in Las Vegas. Along with his brief career in the saddle, Vance was the assistant to his father, Richard, until he started his own stable.

It didn't take long for Vance to find success as a trainer when he won his first of four Churchill Downs leading trainer titles in the 1967 Spring Meet. His other three titles came in the 1980-'81 Spring Meets and the 1994 Fall Meet. Vance has also won multiple training titles at Garden State Park, Keystone Park and Oaklawn Park.

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Mutasaabeq Standing In Argentina For 2023 Southern Hemisphere Breeding Season

Grade 2 winner Mutasaabeq will stand the 2023 Southern Hemisphere breeding season at Haras La Pasion in Argentina, the South American publication Turf Diario reports.

The 5-year-old son of Into Mischief stood his first Northern Hemisphere season at Pleasant Acres Stallions in Florida, and he'll be managed in Argentina by Haras La Nora.

Racing for Shadwell Stables, Mutasaabeq won three of six starts for earnings of $259,670, highlighted by victories in the Grade 2 Bourbon Stakes at Keeneland and the listed Mucho Macho Man Stakes at Gulfstream Park. He also finished third in the G1 Hopeful Stakes.

Bred in Kentucky by BlackRidge Stables, Mutasaabeq is out of the winning Scat Daddy mare Downside Scenario. His extended family includes Brazilian champions Juno and Love 'n' Happiness, Grade 1 winner White Abarrio, Grade 2 winner Pee Wee Reese, and Grade/Group 3 winners Cool Cowboy and Sam Who.

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Catalog For 102nd Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale Now Available

Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 235 selected yearlings for the 102nd Saratoga Sale, to be held on Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 7 and 8, in Saratoga Springs, New York.  Sessions will begin each evening at 6:30 pm in the Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion.

“This year's Saratoga catalog is exceptional,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning.  “Our numbers have increased by 10 percent over last year, and the quality of sire power, pedigrees, and physicals are at the top of this year's yearling crop.”

The Saratoga Sale is once again the top ranked major North American yearling sale by percentage of Grade 1 winners and graded stakes winners according to statistics recently released by The BloodHorse MarketWatch.

Recent sales graduates are led by 2022 Horse of the Year Flightline, who capped his brilliant, undefeated career with an emphatic victory in last year's Breeders' Cup Classic. National Treasure, a graduate of the 2021 Saratoga Sale, became the sale's latest classic winner in claiming this year's Preakness Stakes. Other prominent recent graduates include Blazing Sevens, winner of last year's Grade 1 Champagne Stakes and second in this year's Preakness Stakes; and Exaulted, undefeated on turf and winner of the G1 Shoemaker Mile Stakes.

Songbird, an inductee into this year's National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, is also a Saratoga Sale graduate.

“No yearling sale in the country offers a higher concentration of quality, and the success of our graduates validates that,” said Browning.  “Saratoga has produced many of the best horses we have seen in our lifetimes.”

The catalog may now be viewed online, and will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app.  Print catalogs are now available from all Fasig-Tipton offices.

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Dietary Supplements For Horses: Do You Need Them, And How Can You Tell If They’re Safe?

As the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU) moves through its first months of drug testing Thoroughbreds nationwide, some owners and trainers are thinking harder about the supplements they give their horses. In one case, two California trainers were provisionally suspended after their horses had positive tests for diisopropylamine. Owner Jeff Plotkin, who has horses with suspended trainer Reed Saldana, told the Paulick Report last week that Saldana suspects the positive may originate from an equine dietary supplement.

Here at the Paulick Report, we've done extensive original and aggregated reporting on equine dietary supplements through the years, looking at both their regulation as well as their efficacy. Below is a round-up of some of our most relevant articles.

Click Here To Cheat? Online Peddlers Of Racehorse Snake Oil Go Largely Unchecked In 2016, well before the 2020 federal indictments, we zeroed in on websites marketing injectable products to trainers that they called “supplements.” HorsePreRace often promoted its products in ways that suggested they were either analogues of existing prescription medications or performance enhancers — and as indicated by indictments from the Southern District of New York four years later, those products and their marketing didn't adhere to Food and Drug Administration regulation.

One reason HorsePreRace and others like them will sometimes call a product a “supplement” is because the FDA does not oversee the safety, efficacy, or production of dietary supplements, but the agency does have a number of complex approvals required for animal drugs.

One of the warning signs for consumers about the HorsePreRace products should have been the lack of ingredients list available on the company's website or on product packaging. Court documents released in 2021 gave us a behind-the-scenes look at the formulas actually used to create those “supplements.” In some cases, the ingredients seemed pretty harmless, but experts told us that other elements raised serious safety or purity concerns. Read that analysis here.

Be Skeptical Of Equine Supplement Claims In 2019, we pointed you toward reporting from The Horse magazine which gave consumers a guide for reading the label on an equine dietary supplement. Among the recommendations: Don't be afraid to contact the manufacturer if you have a question about an ingredient, and take a look at peer-reviewed research on the primary ingredients to see if they've been shown to do what they claim.

Too Much Of A Good Thing: When Extra Nutrients Become Harmful To Horses Many owners feel they are depriving their horses if they aren't feeding them a bunch of supplements. “If a little is good, a lot is better” is often the philosophy, with the reasoning being a horse will simply release extra nutrients in waste with no harm done. Experts say this is a common misconception and one that can be detrimental to the horse's health and the owner's pocketbook. What owners fail to realize is that even if a nutrient isn't toxic in large quantities, a horse's body still has to work harder to process nutrients that are fed in excess of its needs. Besides dietary inefficiency, piling on too many supplements could increase the risk of accidentally overloading a horse on one nutrient which could cause health problems or toxicity.

Ramey: Is That Hoof Supplement Actually Helping Your Horse? Dr. David Ramey considers the most common ingredients in dietary supplements aimed at improving hoof health, and reviews the existing research on some of them. While he believes that a balanced diet can have a positive impact on hoof issues, he points out that many horses getting fed the proper amount of a commercially-produced feed are unlikely to be deficient in many of the most important minerals and proteins.

Efficacy Of Oral Joint Supplements: Which Ingredients Actually 'Work'? Last year, we noted reporting from The Horse which broke down the most common ingredients in oral joint supplements to see what the existing research says about the efficacy of chondroitin sulfate, glucosamine, turmeric and more.

None of this is to say that all supplements are equally as problematic as the products peddled by HorsePreRace, or that all supplements are ineffective for all horses in all situations. Horsemen should consult with their veterinarian and/or nutritionist to determine if a given product is right for their horse. But HIWU has made clear that possession of substances that violate FDA regulation may constitute a rule violation, and also “positive test results stemming from the presence of a Prohibited Substance in a supplement, whether or not it was properly labeled, will be prosecuted by HIWU as ADMC Program violations.” The organization encourages horsemen to ask questions about the legality of a given product. Questions can be directed to Dr. Mary Scollay, HIWU chief of science at mscollay@hiwu.org.

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