Slew’s Tiz Whiz Earns Second Straight Horse Of The Meeting Title At Emerald Downs

Slew's Tiz Whiz and Alex Cruz both shined bright at Emerald Downs in 2023, both earning multiple awards and titles as the track wrapped up its 28th season of live racing Sunday.

Slew's Tiz Whiz was voted 2023 Horse of the Meeting, becoming the 18th Washington-bred to win the award and joining Stryker Phd (2014-15) and Noosa Beach (2010-11) as the only repeat winners of the season's top award. In addition, the 5-year-old Slew's Tiznow gelding took honors as Top Washington-bred, Top Older Horse, led the meet in earnings, $83,000, and tied Clovisconnection, Appeal Factor, Aloha Breeze, and Blazingbellablu for most stakes wins with two apiece.

Conditioned by Tom Wenzel, owned by Slew's Crew Racing, and ridden by Jose Zunino, Slew's Tiz Whiz won stakes short and long, winning the 6 ½ furlong Governor's and 1 1/16-mile Muckleshoot Tribal Classic, while adding a second in the six-furlong Budweiser and a third to Five Star General in the Longacres Mile to his impressive resume.

Alex Cruz accomplished Emerald Downs history, becoming the first jockey to win four straight titles at the Auburn track—riding 69 winners in 52 days while finishing 14 clear of runner-up Luis Negron. In fact, the 29-year-old native of Puerto Rico became the first rider in state history with four consecutive titles at the same track, eclipsing Rocco Bowen (Emerald Downs 2016-18), Gary Boulanger (Longacres 1989-91), Gary Baze (Longacres 1973-75), and Robert Howg (Yakima Meadows (1975-77).

Cruz was also first in earnings, $1,016,128, and the only jockey to win five races on a card (Aug. 6) and was voted the Lindy Award for sportsmanship and accomplishment by his fellow riders.

In the trainers' ranks, Justin Evans enjoyed a tremendous first season, capturing the title with 49 wins and finishing 18 clear of Blaine Wright and 19 ahead of defending titlist Jorge Rosales. Evans also finished first in earnings ($558,850), was the meet's leading owner (21 wins), and became the first trainer to sweep titles at Turf Paradise and Emerald Downs in the same year.

Clovisconnection turned in dazzling efforts in the Auburn Stakes (6F/1:07.59) and Irish Day Stakes (6 ½ F/1:14.73) and took honors as the meet's Top 3-Year-Old Colt or Gelding and Top Sprinter for trainer Blaine Wright and owner/breeder William Hedrick.

In addition to Slew's Tiz Whiz, Wenzel conditioned a pair of champions for owner George Todaro. Aloha Breeze rattled off three brilliant sprint victories including daylight scores in the Seattle Stakes and Kent Stakes and was voted Top 3-Year-Old Filly. Miner League closed out his juvenile season with two straight wins for Wenzel, Todaro, and jockey Carlos Montalvo, rolling from off the pace to prevail in the Gottstein Futurity on closing day.

Blazingbellablu was a study in consistency, posting a 2-2-0 record in four starts, including wins in the Hastings Stakes and Washington Cup Filly & Mare Stakes, and is the Top Older Filly or Mare for trainer Charles Essex and Petra Lewin.

Oak Crest Farm homebred Appeal Factor dazzled in two starts for trainer David Martinez—sweeping the Angie C Stakes and WTBOA Lassies Stakes—and was unanimously voted Top 2-Year-Old Filly.

Dirt Road Red, the meet's only five-time winner, was voted Top Claimer, and the $150,000 Longacres Mile won by Five Star General was Race of the Meeting.

Harbor the Gold, for the 11th time in 13 years, was Leading Sire and is No. 1 all-time with 493 wins at Emerald Downs.

The post Slew’s Tiz Whiz Earns Second Straight Horse Of The Meeting Title At Emerald Downs appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Owners Of Big Evs Reinvest In 190k Lope De Vega Filly At Tatts Ireland

Less than a week on from that scintillating display in the G2 Flying Childers S. at Doncaster, the connections of Big Evs (Ire) (Blue Point {Ire}) were reinvesting at the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale on a Lope De Vega (Ire) filly for €190,000. 

Fitting that it was a Blue Point half-sister, the Jessica Harrington-trained Bluedrum (Ire), who provided the page with a timely update when running out an ultra-impressive winner of a maiden at Naas last week. 

She looks destined for black-type races and Conor Quirke, who purchased the Lope De Vega filly from The Castlebridge Consignment to be trained by Mick Appleby, has similar aspirations for his acquisition. 

He said, “She was a standout for me and ultimately the half-sister got her over the line. This filly is lovely and was well-placed here–the breeders are good at their job. Today was not her cup final, she is going to keep improving, which I appreciate. She is a lovely filly and hard to fault. We like the sire, too, and it all made sense.”

The day one top lot is out of Drumfad Bay (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}), herself a dual winner who finished second in a Group 3 and won a Listed contest.

Quirke added, “She has residual value and is a half to a good Blue Point filly and she will be a broodmare in time. She will go to Mick Appleby. I have bought for RP for the last five years or so. We have danced all the big dances this year with Big Evs and we want to get back to it again next year.”

It was breeze-up consignor Mickey Cleere who found Big Evs initially. He paid 50,000gns for the colt at the Tattersalls October Book 2 Sale before selling him through Quirke to his current connections who are enjoying the thrill of a lifetime. 

Providing an update on the Breeders' Cup bound speedster, Quirke concluded, “He bounced out as usual and I have booked my flights to America. Mick is great fun, the owners are good people and it has been a great journey so long may it continue.”

  • Mickey Cleere raised a few eyebrows by revealing in these pages over the weekend that he had not started buying for the upcoming breeze-up season despite the fact that there has been a number of major sales prior to Fairyhouse. Well, Cleere, who found Ballymount Boy (Ire) (Camacho {GB}) here last year, didn't waste any time on getting in on the action. The first lot into the ring. Bang. An Arizona (Ire) colt consigned by Alice Fitzgerald goes the way of MC Thoroughbreds. Cleere may have his own approach to the sales but few can argue that it is not an effective one. He went on to land an Ardad (Ire) filly later in the day for €38,000.
  • It didn't take long for the day to produce a good pinhook. Lot 20 into the ring, a Teofilo (Ire) colt consigned by Castletown Quarry, was snapped up by Hubie de Burgh for €70,000. Not a bad result for connections who bought the colt out of the unraced Dubawi (Ire) mare Amazing Grace (Ire) for just 21,000gns at the Tattersalls December Foal Sale. 
  • The first horse to rock into six figures was lot 12, a Ten Sovereigns (Ire) filly from Glenvale Stud, snapped up by Anthony Bromley of Highflyer Bloodstock for €100,000. A half-sister to Lakota Seven (Ire) (Sioux Nation), a smart colt for Joseph O'Brien, the Ten Sovereigns filly was bought on behalf of Polly Pott's owner Andrew Megson to be trained by Ed Dunlop. Speaking alongside Dunlop's brother Harry, Bromley commented, “She has been bought for Andrew Megson, who is perhaps known more for his jumping string. Harry is helping the Megsons and this filly is going to his brother Ed Dunlop, who has a few for the couple to run on the Flat for some fun.”
  • It was yet another productive yearling sale for Bromley but he kept everyone guessing as to who he signed the €100,000 Mehmas colt on behalf of. Bred by Yeomanstown Stud, lot 141 was bought by Rochestown Lodge Stud for €40,000 at the Goffs November Foal Sale before selling to Bromley on behalf of “an Irish breeze-up client”. Bromely said, “It is punchy, but I love the sire and this colt has a little more scope than some by Mehmas. He is very athletic. I believe this horse is a racehorse and so does my client. Let's hope he is a weapon!”
  • The only Wootton Bassett (GB) to go under the hammer on the day was always going to capture the imagination and it was BBA Ireland's Mick Donohoe who bought the Norelands-drafted filly on behalf of a Middle Eastern client. Donohoe went to €82,000 to secure the filly, out of a winning Dalakhani (Ire) mare, who has also produced a winner. The top agent said, “She has been bought for a Middle Eastern-based client, who has been a lucky client of mine. She will stay in Ireland to be broken and will go on to be trained in Ireland, England or France. It is very busy here, there are lots of buyers and Tattersalls and Irish Thoroughbred Marketing have worked hard to get buyers here across all levels. There should be a good clearance rate today.”
  • The clearance rate stood at 86%, down 5% on last year, but the aggregate, average and median was on the up for what was admittedly a bigger book [13 extra yearlings compared to in 2022]. The aggregate was up 3% to €6,729,500, the median up 13% to €30,000 and the average up 5% to €32,827.

Kameko Colt Heading To Norway At 115k

The progeny of Kameko have been in high demand at the yearling sales so far this year and a colt by the Tweenhills sire piqued interests at Fairyhouse when selling to Edgar Byrne for €115,000.

Byrne, who has had a lot of success buying horses to go abroad, notably 3,000gns horses-in-training purchase Kitty Marion (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}), who went on to win a group 3 in Germany, was acting on behalf of Norway-based trainer Niels Petersen.

The trainer commented, “For Scandinavia, you tend to look for a well-balanced horse as our tracks are a little sharper and we don't have any straight courses. We have dirt and turf tracks and he might be one that could suit either surface. He fits what we are after.”

Petersen added, “I have bought a lot here before, but not for some time. We chatted about coming here to see what we could find. We think this bracket suits our requirements–our prize-money is good and it is easier to win than in Ireland!”

The trainer may be a familiar face at Fairyhouse but for the JC Organisation, for whom the colt will race for, this represented the first time shopping this sale. Byrne hopes it won't be the last. 

The agent said, “They are a big client of Niels and he has trained a Derby winner for the syndicate. This horse was our top pick for JC, we have other clients to buy for, but he suited this order. We did have to push to buy him, but you do for the right horse and for the good ones.”

The result represented a standout pinhook for Clenagh Castle Stud. Bought for just 11,000gns at the Tattersalls December Sale, the Kameko colt brought home nearly six figures in profit before costs, and the outfit's Adrian Costello said that sourcing one by the stallion was high up on his agenda for pinhooking. How right he was. 

Costello said, “He was a gorgeous foal and has done well all the way through and this year Zoulu Chief (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}) has come out and done well. I loved the idea of Kameko last year but it was hard to buy one!” 

Poste Delivers With Three Yearlings For New Breeze-Up Project

Charlie Poste, the popular ex National Hunt jockey, made his first trip to this sale count by teaming up with top bloodstock agent Tom Biggs to secure three colts for a new breeze-up venture. 

Retired from the saddle four years now, Poste has done well trading point-to-point horses in Britain, but the international appeal of the bloodstock market on the Flat convinced him to gather up a syndicate of 10 people to branch out into the breeze-up game. 

Poste signed for a Calyx (GB) filly for €30,000, a Kodiac (GB) filly for €36,000 and a Churchill (Ire) colt for €25,000 on the opening day of the sale under the banner of Blandford Bloodstock and his own Station Yard. 

He said, “This is a new venture for us and Tom Biggs of Blandford Bloodstock has been a huge help. We've put together a syndicate of 10 people and the plan is to buy five yearlings to breeze for next year. We went to Doncaster and to the Somerville and underbid plenty so it has been a bit of a frustrating start. But today has been great. We were guided by Tom to come here and we're delighted to have bought three.”

Poste went on to explain that the fact much more credence is paid to point-to-point form in Ireland compared to Britain, where he is based, was another deciding factor in getting involved in training horses for the breeze-ups.

He said, “The breeze-ups is something we have been interested in and building towards for a while now. We started off with all of our own money and didn't have a big backer or anything like that. We needed to create a bit of cash flow with the National Hunt side of the business and, thankfully, there is a bit of that there now. 

“We were just trying to look into something where there is a bit more of a global market because there is always going to be somewhat of a ceiling in selling British point-to-pointers rather than Irish point-to-pointers. There is no such bias in the breeze-ups if you turn up and do a good time and look the part so that was another reason for getting involved in this side of things. We have our own ideas about how we do things and are looking forward to seeing how things develop in year one.”

Meet The Italian Buyer Who Spent Almost 200k On Day One

I'll be the first to put my hand up and admit that I knew next to nothing about Razza Latina, who popped up for five yearlings to the tune of almost €200,000 on the day.

That propelled Razza Latina, which is the bloodstock arm of Italian trainer Cristiana Brivio's business, the fourth busiest buyer on the day.

Brivio trains alongside her husband Endo Botti in Tuscany and her colours are said to be quite recognisable in her home country. She has developed a strong list of clients back home and described herself as happy with the quality that she was able to secure at Tattersalls Ireland. 

“I am a trainer with my husband but I buy as an agent as well,” she explained. “We train together and they run in my colours. The trade has been very strong here but I think the quality of the horses has also improved in recent years. Yes, it is a strong market, but there is value here.”

Brivio has reason to be happy about shopping in Ireland. It was her €23,000 Goffs Autumn yearling purchase Goldenas (Ire) (Golden Horn {GB}), picked up from Blackberry Road Stud, who landed this year's Italian Derby in Rome.

Brivio said, “I have been very lucky in Ireland. I bought the Italian Derby winner Goldenas here and Ireland has been very good for me. I have always been very lucky here and have bought many winners. I am thankful to my clients for giving me the opportunity to come back. I will be at Goffs next week as well and we just try to buy a nice horse, nothing in particular–a nice racey horse.”

Buy of the day

It was Edmond Ryan of Weir View Stud who supplied Native American (Ire) (Sioux Nation), winner of the €300,000 Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction, at this sale last year. And who's to say the top consignor hasn't unearthed another gem in lot 114, a Make Believe (GB) colt knocked down to Luke Lillingston for €70,000. 

Bought for just 13,000gns by Ryan at the Tattersalls December Foal Sale, the Make Believe clearly turned into a belter of a yearling and wasn't missed at Fairyhouse, with many of the top buyers turning up for him in the ring. 

Out of a High Chaparral (Ire) mare who won three times and has produced two winners, including the first and only winner for Waldgeist (GB) in Britain to date, the Make Believe is a colt to look forward to in the second half of next year and beyond. He is off to Andrew Balding, who was standing alongside Lillingston when the hammer fell.

The post Owners Of Big Evs Reinvest In 190k Lope De Vega Filly At Tatts Ireland appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Stable Recovery Looking For Room to Grow in Horse Country

It's an achievement in itself to take something from idea to unqualified success in three years, putting aside the fact that the idea in question is changing hundreds of lives, reuniting families and restoring purpose to people. But Frank Taylor's Stable Recovery–a path back to life for recovering addicts–has done just that.

Stable Recovery, which Taylor started with the group's current Director of Addiction Recovery Christian Countzler, is at once halfway house and vocational rehab, providing a 12-step program, meaningful employment, and a new workforce source for the Thoroughbred industry.

But with a waiting list longer than he can count, Frank Taylor can't help but wonder, `what if it could be even more?'

Right now, Stable Recovery and its partner, the Taylor Made School of Horsemanship, can rehabilitate 32 people at a time in a 90-day program where men live in one of two houses, do daily therapy and AA, and work at a horse farm. The program was profiled in Chris McGrath's They've Taught Me to be Human Again in the TDN in August. One home for 20 men is in the city of Lexington; another, on Taylor Made's property. The program is financed from fundraisers and private donations, around 50% of which have come from the Taylor family; Frank and his brothers Mark, Duncan and Ben. The ticket is about $600,000 per year.

And while Taylor used to imagine the program spreading to other parts of the country, he said he now realizes the opportunities and growth potential in Lexington before moving on to other cities, due to the sheer number of horse farms and the efficiency of having the program in one place.

A few years ago, Taylor, himself a recovering alcoholic, visited the DV8 Kitchen in Lexington, which operates a restaurant providing employment to men and women in the early stages of substance abuse recovery. Taylor said he was inspired by the atmosphere, quality of food and the obvious satisfaction of the employees.

He was inspired to start the Taylor Made School of Horsemanship in the same model, but didn't act on it, he said, until his son came to him and told him he was an alcoholic.

“It shocked me,” said Taylor of his son's news. “I'm an alcoholic, too, and I drank way too much, but I was functioning. I didn't lose my wife or my family or our business, but I was definitely drinking too much. I had said I would quit drinking a thousand times, and then never did. But when that happened, I actually said I'm quitting and I just quit.”

They say that the best way to stay sober is to help other people stay sober, and Taylor decided he'd do that through TMSH. But it's a big leap of faith to invite a house full of addicts onto your farm, and into your business and your lives.

“There was naturally a lot of concern,” said Taylor. “You're bringing in people with criminal backgrounds, people with addiction. What if a horse gets hurt? What if a person gets hurt? What if somebody ODs? All of these things were big concerns.”

Taylor acknowledged all of those issues to his brothers, but countered with another set of what-ifs.

“I said, `What if we save somebody's life or reunite somebody's family or save somebody's son?' He asked them to let him try a three-month pilot program. He said if something went wrong, they'd just drop the whole idea.

“Three years later,” he says, “nothing has gone wrong. We're three years down the road and now they're more comfortable with it. I think the industry knows about it now. And every day somebody's coming up and telling me, `Hey, I've got a son, I've got a brother, I've got this person and that person that needs help,' and we're able to actually help them.”

Rock bottom isn't just an expression, he said. The reality is that addicts need to reach a point of absolute zero to get the most out of the program.

“The more broken they are, the better,” said Taylor. “In AA they talk about the gift of desperation, where they get so down, so out, a lot of people homeless, or in jail. You get so much pain in your life that you're willing to do something else. The way you qualify to get in the program is to have a real desire to do anything we tell you to do to get sober.”

But of course, the need is greater than the capacity, which has led Taylor to dream. In a perfect world, he said he could see one new center opening per year on a different Kentucky Thoroughbred farm.

The days are rigidly structured, leaving little time for idol thought. They're up at 5 a.m., at a morning meditation and reading by 6 a.m., and are off to work at Taylor Made or another employment by 6:50, where they will work until 4 p.m. They maintain that schedule for five days a week.

Partners in the project now include Rood & Riddle and Spy Coast Farm, with Darley and WinStar ready to come on board. In terms of his employment goals for the men, Taylor has high aspirations.

People outside of the industry are starting to hire the graduates. “We've sent several people to Clark Equipment, and they pay very well,” he said. “We're not just trying to turn these guys into a bunch of grooms. There might be some of them where that's where they need to be, but there are a lot of these people who are highly talented who could do a lot of things. And we want to see them be upwardly mobile, not just stopping at a groom spot or a barn foreman spot. One of the things I'm very proud of is that in three years, we have developed three Taylor Made managers.”

the Stable Recovery team at Taylor Made | Stable Recovery

The program, he said, has changed their lives. “They all have their own houses, they have their own truck, they have insurance, they're making good wages, and they're a key, vital part of our operation. And having them in our management staff, they're empathetic, they understand these people's situation and they're better at mentoring them.”

Stable Recovery has hired a grant writer to look for funding, and is holding the John Hall Golf Scramble fundraising event on October 9, but needs to step up the funding if it's going to expand its reach. Taylor says he's hopeful the Thoroughbred industry will realize the benefits of helping. Those benefits include not only helping those in need and developing a much-needed new work force, but perhaps also a bit of positive PR at a time when the industry desperately needs it.

For a sport reeling from a year in which it has stumbled from tragedy to tragedy, it seems as if supporting and embracing an inspiring program with Thoroughbred racehorses an integral part of the solution would be a positive for which we're desperate right now.

Despite recent events, said Taylor, “There are a lot of good things going on, and this is one of them. We're helping a lot of people. And the thing about Stable Recovery is that we've got the secret sauce. When you throw the horse in the equation of somebody working the 12 steps, it's like a whole different level. I can see it every day. These guys spend an hour with a horse and it's like you couldn't have hired the best therapist in the world to work with them and do any better.”

To sign up for or sponsor an item in the John Hall Memorial Golf Scramble, click here. To make a donation to Stable Recovery, click here. To learn more, visit www.stablerecovery.net

The post Stable Recovery Looking For Room to Grow in Horse Country appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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