Second Chances: ‘Mor’ to Come from Munnings Filly at the Spa

In this continuing series, TDN's Senior Racing Editor Steve Sherack catches up with the connections of promising maidens to keep on your radar.

Lamorna (f, 2, Munnings–Freudie Anne, by Freud) kicked off her career for Hall of Famer Bill Mott with a better-than-it-looked fourth-place finish sprinting over the Saratoga grass July 20.

Last of 10 after getting squeezed at the start, the 7-1 chance was immediately under a ride from jockey Luis Saez and caboosed the field through an opening quarter in a sharp :22.02. She began to catch the eye with a flashy, sweeping move on the far turn and was hung out seven wide as they straightened for home.

The blaze-faced chestnut continued to rally down the stretch, and, despite racing a bit greenly from there with multiple lead changes, finished only 1 1/4 lengths adrift of the very promising Kentucky Downs Juvenile Fillies S.-bound Kodiac Wintergreen (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}).

Campaigned in partnership by Arnmore Thoroughbreds and West Paces Racing, Lamorna earned a strong 70 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

“I was so proud of her,” Arnmore Thoroughbreds's Megan Jones said. “She ran a 14 1/4 Ragozin, which is a huge 2-year-old filly number on the grass. I didn't think she had it easy, either. They came in on her at the start and the winner came out on her at the top of the lane.”

Jones, a former vice president of Team Valor International, continued, “As a baby, when they make that big move on the turn and catch up, you expect that they might flatten out and get tired, but she just kept dropping her head down and trying. I would look to see her back here at Saratoga. She came out of the race super, really good energy. And mentally, she figured out what it was all about.”

Bred in Kentucky by Fergus Galvin, Marc Detampel, Jayne Johnson and Adrian Wallace, Lamorna went through the ring twice at Keeneland, bringing $155,000 from Stoneriggs Farm as a KEENOV weanling and $320,000 from Arnmore Thoroughbreds as a KEESEP yearling.

The versatile New York-bred Freudie Anne, a half-sister to MSW Frostie Anne (Frost Giant), won eight of her 25 career starts, including the New York Stallion Series S. over the Saratoga grass and East View S. on dirt at Aqueduct.

The Munnings over Freud cross is responsible for GSW & GISP Catalina Red. Lamorna is also bred similarly to MGSW and two-time GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint runner-up Om (Munnings), who was produced by a Tabasco Cat mare. Leading young Ashford Stud stallion Munnings is the sire of 26 graded winners.

“I think she's gonna be a pretty versatile filly,” Jones said. “Her mother won short and long, turf and dirt. We were just getting her started there. She's just a real pleasure.”

Jones's fledgling partnership has approximately 10 horses in training, including the 4-year-old homebred filly Poppy Flower (Lea), winner of the GIII Intercontinental S. earlier this summer at Belmont Park.

“I buy fillies as yearlings to race and to add to the broodmare band,” Jones said. “It's hard to win first out, but at the end of the day, as long as you come out of that first race feeling like you have a good individual that we can keep with us for years to come, that's what's really important to us. I am really grateful to my partners because I loved her so much (at Keeneland September) last year.”

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Deauville: Rothschild Heads August Festival Opener

Deauville's month-long racing fest is back upon us on Sunday, with the G1 Prix Rothschild the key event on a talent-packed card. British and Irish interests always excel at this meeting, so the first port of call must be the reinvented miler Rogue Millennium (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) who was able to transfer the scintillating speed she had shown over middle distances of late to this trip in Royal Ascot's G2 Duke of Cambridge S. The pride and joy of Tom Clover's stable may have found an ideal opportunity to garner one of these precious contests with the big cats playing elsewhere.

“She travels so well and it is hard to have a horse to take her far enough through her races,” Clover said. “We won over a mile, so it makes sense to stay at a mile. Obviously it was a fantastic day at Ascot and one we will always remember, but let's hope we can continue on the path we've been going on. She seems well and has been since Ascot and hopefully we have some luck.”

Also from England is Wathnan Racing's G1 Coronation S. and G1 Falmouth S. runner-up Remarquee (GB) (Kingman {GB}), who has the edge over the Jessie Harrington challenger Sounds Of Heaven (GB) (Kingman {GB}) on the Coronation form, while France's best chance of keeping this at home could rest with the Wertheimers' TDN Rising Star Kelina (Ire) (Frankel {GB}). She beat the subsequent shock G1 Prix Jean Prat heroine Sauterne (Fr) (Kingman {GB}) in Chantilly's G2 Prix de Sandringham last time and is only going one way at present.

Richard Brown, racing adviser to Wathnan, said of Remarquee, “We are conscious it is her third run in a fairly short space of time, but we are going to give her a break next, win, lose or draw. She has come out of Newmarket in great form. She's still quite green and still learning her job. She came up against Nashwa at her best last time and that is a hard task for any filly.”

An Elite Cabourg…
In the fixture's G3 Prix de Cabourg, Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum's Listed National S.-winning sensation Elite Status (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}) goes up to six furlongs for the first time having been found out for sharpness in Royal Ascot's G2 Norfolk S. Bad news for him is he has White Birch Farm's TDN Rising Star Havana Cigar (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}) lying in wait having entered the leading juvenile conversation when dynamic at Chantilly at the start of the month. Then there is the Fabre unknown in Prince Faisal's Saint-Cloud scorer Sajir (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}), who follows in the steps of the likes of Zamindar, Xaar (GB) and Earthlight (Ire) (Shamardal). François Boutin still holds the record of nine wins in this important staging post, but one more for Fabre and it will be shared.

Sunday's Support…
Also at Deauville, the seven-furlong G3 Prix Six Perfections Sky Sports Racing for 2-year-old fillies features Gousserie Racing and Jean-Etienne Dubois's Classic Flower (GB) (Calyx {GB}), who will give further evidence in the ongoing investigation into the true merit of TDN Rising Star Ramatuelle (Justify) who thrashed her in the G2 Prix Robert Papin. Fabre saddles a granddaughter of Goldikova (Ire) (Anabaa) for Juddmonte here in the Chantilly winner Cavalletti (GB) (Kingman {GB}), while Ecurie des Charmes' impressive Compiegne debut winner Minoushka (GB) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) could be another big name for the Lerners. Munich's G1 Grosser Dallmayr-Preis sees Liberty Racing's G1 Deutsches Derby hero Fantastic Moon (Ger) (Sea The Moon {Ger}) take on Godolphin's GI Saratoga Derby winner Nations Pride (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) who is back in Europe after his third from a horror draw in the Mar. 25 G1 Dubai Turf.

 

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Summer Breezes: Pricey Arrogate Filly Gets Going at Del Mar

Some of the most highly anticipated races during the summer racing season are the 'baby' races during the boutique meetings at both Saratoga and Del Mar and at Ellis Park, which attract its fair share of high-priced offspring from a variety of top national outfits.

Summer Breezes highlights debuting 2-year-olds at those meetings that have been sourced at the breeze-up sales earlier in the year, with links to their under-tack previews. To follow are the horses entered for Sunday at Saratoga and Del Mar. Qualifying horses entered for the cards cancelled at Ellis Park July 28 and 29 will appear in editions of July 31 and August 1, respectively:

Sunday, July 30, 2023
Saratoga 1, $136k, 2yo, 1 1/16mT, 1:10 p.m. ET
Horse (Sire), Sale, Price ($), Breeze
Life's An Audible (Audible), OBSMAR, 200,000, :10.1
Consignor: Britton Peak, agent
Buyer: West Bloodstock, agent for Repole Stable Inc

Del Mar 8, $82k, 2yo, f, 5 1/2f, 8:39 p.m. ET
Acoustic Melody (Arrogate), OBSAPR, 250,000, :10.2
Consignor: White Lilac (Katie Miranda), agent
Buyer: Mike Ryan, agent for Peter Redekop BC Ltd
Barbara T (Army Mule), OBSMAR, 120,000, :10.1
Consignor: RiceHorse Stable (Brandon & Ali Rice), agent
Buyer: Michael P Warnick & Joseph Hinkhouse
Gate to Paradise (Arrogate), OBSMAR, 950,000, :20.4
Consignor: Tom McCrocklin, agent
Buyer: Parks Investment
Into Yellowstone (Maxiumus Mischief), OBSAPR, 75,000, :10.1
Consignor: Top Line Sales LLC, agent
Buyer: Peter Miller, agent
Just Be You (Justify), OBSMAR, 110,000, :21.4
Consignor: Eddie Woods, agent
Buyer: Christina R Jelm for Hollendorfer LLC
Nothing Like You (Malibu Moon)-AE,  OBSAPR, 190,000, :10
Consignor: Wildheart Thoroughbreds LLC, agent
Buyer: John Rogitz
We'll Do It Live (The Factor), OBSMAR, 100,000, :10
Consignor: GOP Racing Stable Corp, agent
Buyer: TMSA, agent for Mark Stanton

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Del Mar Summer: Fast Start Puts Seaside Spotlight On Powell

As a kid growing up in the Midwest, I'd entertain myself during the long winter months memorizing pitching and batting statistics for Major League Baseball players.

Trainer Leonard Powell had a similar hobby during his childhood in France. Except, instead of baseball players, Powell and his brother memorized pedigrees of important horses, or commit to memory every runner – including sire and dam – and where they finished in major races like the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe at Longchamp.

Decades later, those mental exercises are paying off for Powell, who is quietly and steadily ascending the trainer rankings on the Southern California circuit. In 2022, the 46-year-old won five graded stakes with four different runners and his 32 victories overall and $2,131,523 in earnings represented his best year to date.

Powell got off to a quick start at the Del Mar summer meet, winning three races from seven starters opening weekend. Anisette, a Great Britain-bred 3-year-old filly by Awtaad, was the stable star, winning the Grade 2 San Clemente Stakes impressively, drawing away from her 13 rivals by 2 ½ lengths under jockey Umberto Rispoli. Owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Anisette is unbeaten in her two U.S. stars this year after winning one of three in England as a 2-year-old. She will be pointed to the Del Mar Oaks on Aug. 19, a race that gave Powell his first Grade 1 victory in 2018 with French-bred Fatale Bere.

Like Fatale Bere and Anisette, many of Powell's best runners are European imports whose bloodlines trace back to those he memorized in the late 1980s and '90s.

Anisette and jockey Umberto Rispoli winning the San Clemente

“It's helped me quite a bit when I get horses from Europe,” Powell said. “When I look at prospects I know some of the first or second dams and always look at their traits – horses that did well on firm ground or had speed.”

This fascination with pedigrees and the traits of horses was passed on to Powell by his late father, David Powell, a U.S. citizen who was a man of the world by virtue of his own pedigree. David Powell's mother was a Jewish woman who fled Nazi Germany before World War II. His father was a U.S. citizen who worked at the U.S. Consulate in Argentina. David Powell was born in Buenos Aires as an American because of his father's citizenship.

The Powells eventually moved to the United States, but the marriage didn't last and David Powell went with his mother when she returned to her native Germany. There he began taking horse riding instructions from a native of France who would become his step-father. At the stables he met a young Frenchman whose father was a diplomat in Berlin; his name was Andre Fabre, who would go on to a legendary career training Thoroughbreds in France.

But it wasn't Fabre who influenced David Powell to move to France and embark on a career in Thoroughbred racing and breeding. After Powell moved with his family back to the U.S. he met another Frenchman, the famed Daily Racing Form cartoonist Pierre Bellocq, better known throughout the racing world as PEB, who convinced David Powell  – then a student at Columbia University in New York – to move to France to learn more about the industry.

David Powell wore many hats: racing journalist, breeder, owner, racing manager, and trainer. He attended bloodstock sales around the world and took meticulous notes on every horse he saw go through the ring. Those notes on conformation and personality traits went onto index cards that became part of a voluminous library of pedigree and racing information at the Powell home in Normandy.

It was on the family's farm that young Leonard and his siblings learned the value of hard work. “We were raised with expectations,” Powell said. “When you're raised on a farm, it's very important to be there when needed.”

After high school, David Powell encouraged his son to hold off on college and instead set him up working for trainer Richard Mandella in California. It was a move that's had a long-lasting influence on Powell's career.

“I was 18 when I worked for Mandella, so I was very much a blank page,” he said. “He has a strong work ethic and is very rigorous. He really pays attention to details.”

Powell maintains a relatively small stable (usually 25-30 horses), which allows him to be hands on with his horses.

“During morning training it's important to stay very focused, because that's when you catch the small details that make a difference,” he said.

Following his 18 months with Mandella, he returned to France and served a compulsory term with the French army.

“And then I did a bit of university to make my mom happy,” he said with a laugh.

Following school, Powell took on another apprenticeship, this time working for John Hawkes in Australia, where he said trainers really push their horses hard to get them fit, but then give them time off periodically. “They treat the horses a bit like elastic bands,” he said. “You pull and give, pull and give, so it doesn't break.”

Late in 2003, Powell set up shop in Southern California with a handful of horses. He went over a year before recording his first win in March 2005, but patience has been the trainer's strong suit. Powell recorded his first graded stakes win in 2008, but his breakthrough came with the California-bred gelding Soi Phet, which he claimed for $16,000 at Hollywood Park in May 2013.

Soi Phet and trainer Leonard Powell

Soi Phet ran off four consecutive victories for his new connections, then ran third behind Mucho Macho Man while making his stakes debut in the Grade 1 Awesome Again Stakes. The popular gelding never could secure a graded stakes victory, but he'd win another 10 races for Powell from 2013 to 2019, retiring at age 11 with just over $1 million in earnings.

“Soi Phet was the horse that put me at a higher level,” Powell said. “It gave confidence to owners that we could do a good job with good horses. He won stakes on dirt, turf, and synthetic.”

How did Soi Phet remain sound and competitive in stakes competition for so long?

“We gave him breaks every year, about six weeks off at a farm,” Powell said. “We didn't wait for an injury or for something to go wrong.”

Powell said it's not always easy to convince owners that horses may need time off when they're going in good form, but that it's the right thing to do for the long-term benefit of the horse.

Married with three daughters, Powell said the days are long during the Del Mar meet, but the family takes advantage of the seaside location, spending time on the beach when time allows.

“I like getting on boogie boards and riding the waves with my daughters,” he said. “The races don't start until two o'clock, so you really get a chance to enjoy family time.”

When it comes time to celebrate victories like last weekend's San Clemente, it's usually a quiet family dinner at home with a “nice bottle of wine,” Powell said.

“Racing days end late in Del Mar,” he added. “By the time the horse is cooled out in can be 8:30 at night, and the alarm still goes on at 3:45 the next morning.”

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