Well-Stocked for Keeneland September, There is Nothing Random about Cove Springs’ Success

Richard and Connie Snyder moved their commercial breeding operation from New Mexico to Kentucky nine years ago with the aim of competing at the highest levels of the game. The Snyders' Cove Springs Farm seems to have that goal well in its grasp after a memorable August which saw the operation represented by its first Grade I winner when Randomized (Nyquist) captured the GI Alabama S. and by a high-water mark in the sales ring when a colt by Not This Time brought $725,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale. Cove Springs will hope the momentum carries into the new month with offerings from Book 1 straight through Book 6 of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, including a half-sister to Randomized who sells in Book 3.

Asked how the couple first got involved in racing, Richard Snyder paused before admitting, “Oh my goodness. That's too long ago. I can't remember that far back.”

Straddling breeding in New Mexico and Kentucky, the Snyders decided to commit to the bluegrass nearly a decade ago.

“We've had horses for a long time,” Snyder said. “We were breeding some horses in Kentucky and we decided, if we were to be successful and where we wanted to be, we needed to be here in Kentucky.”

The Snyders hung the Cove Springs sign outside their new farm on Paynes Mill Road in Versailles in August of 2014. One of their first big investments for the new farm was French Passport (Elusive Quality), who they purchased in foal to American Pharoah for $200,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

“She was the first big-money mare that we bought,” Snyder said. “If you are going to live here and compete with these guys, you've got to play the game. You've got to compete.”

The unraced French Passport is a half-sister to graded winners Smooth Air (Smooth Jazz) and Overdriven (Tale of the Cat), as well as to the dam of multiple Grade I winner Got Stormy (Get Stormy).

“We were very familiar with the family,” Snyder said of the mare's appeal. “It's a deep family. At one time we had a stallion that is back in that family. So we just kept up with the family and knew it well and when she showed up in foal to American Pharoah, we knew this was where we were going to start.”

After RNA'ing for $225,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, the mare's American Pharoah colt sold for $550,000 at the 2021 OBS March sale. French Passport's second foal bred by Cove Springs was Randomized, who was purchased by Klaravich Stable for $420,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September sale. Klaravich came back to purchase the mare's yearling colt by Justify for $410,000 last September.

Randomized, a maiden winner at Aqueduct in March, was well-beaten in the GI Acorn S. in June, but rebounded with a win in the Wilton S. at Saratoga in July. She glided home a front-running four-length winner of the Alabama Aug. 19.

What was it like to watch the farm's first Grade I winner come down the stretch in front at Saratoga?

Snyder laughed. “It was unbelievable,” he said.

Snyder admitted he was impressed with French Passport's Nyquist filly right from the start.

“Did we know she was going to be a Grade I filly? Of course not,” he said. “But she always had a tremendous air about her and a great, great walk. She always wanted to do more than we would let her. This mare's babies are all like that.”

Through the Hidden Brook consignment, Cove Springs will offer a half-sister by Frosted to the Alabama S. winner as hip 1711 during Sunday's sixth session of the two-week auction.

“I love her,” Snyder said of the yearling. “She is beautiful and has the same aura about her. She knows she is who she is. And she's a great-moving filly. She's maybe not be as big as Randomized, but she's a beautiful filly.”

Cove Springs's September contingent is led off by a Book 1 filly by Justify (hip 133), who sells during Monday's first session of the auction with Four Star Sales. The yearling is the first foal out of Gaels Win (Daaher), a half-sister to graded winner T.D. Vance (Rahy) and to graded-placed Bergerac (Rahy) and Philippe (Mineshaft). Her third dam is Grade I winner Fantastic Find (Mr. Prospector), who produced multiple Grade I winner Finder's Fee, the granddam of Flightline.

“She is drop-dead gorgeous,” Snyder said of the bay filly. “She's a big, scopey, great-moving filly. And it's an outstanding family. I think buyers will appreciate this pedigree. It's loaded with both turf and dirt runners. So I think she will appeal to a wide range of people. We are expecting big things for her.”

The Snyders purchased Gaels Win, who is currently in foal to Tapit, for $375,000 at the 2020 Keeneland November sale.

“She was in foal to Into Mischief when we bought her,” Snyder said. “Unfortunately, she aborted that foal, so this is her first filly.”

Cove Springs has about 20 broodmares of its own and is home to some 10 to 15 outside mares.

The plan is to sell their foals as yearlings, Snyder said, adding, “That's Plan A. It doesn't always work out. Consequently our sales are pretty good, but our racing stable is not always on top. But we do have some nice horses in training at the moment.”

The operation enjoyed success in the sales ring in Saratoga when its colt by Not This Time out of Speightstastic (Speightstown) (hip 171) sold for $725,000 to Repole Stable and Spendthrift Farm.

“Realistically, we thought he would sure bring $500,000 to $600,000, so he brought more than we expected of course,” Snyder said. “But he was a beautiful horse. And I think he has a huge future in front of him.”

The couple will stay busy straight through to Book 6 of the Keeneland September sale when they will offer a colt by Good Samaritan out of Lightning Dove (Uncle Mo) as (hip 3752) with the Legacy Bloodstock consignment.

“We have some other really nice horses in the sale, all the way from Book 1 to Book 6,” Snyder said. “We have a great horse in Book 6. We are pretty proud of him.”

Connie and Richard Snyder are reaping the rewards of some 35 years of working together towards a common goal.

“Connie and I work hard at it,” Snyder said. “This is what we do and this is what it takes to get there. If hard work and want-to is the key, we should move forward.”

The Keeneland September sale begins with a pair of Book 1 sessions Monday and Tuesday beginning at 1 p.m. Book 2 sessions Wednesday and Thursday begin at 11 a.m. Following a dark day Friday, the auction continues through Sept. 23 with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

The post Well-Stocked for Keeneland September, There is Nothing Random about Cove Springs’ Success appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Woodbine Cancels Monday Card Due To Extreme Heat Forecast

Due to the extreme heat forecasted for the Toronto area Monday, Woodbine has made the decision in consultation with the Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association of Ontario and the commissioned veterinarian to cancel the day's live racing.

“The safety of the horses and all racing participants is always our top priority. Woodbine's race office will endeavor to make up for the lost races over the next few race cards,” Woodbine said in a statement.

Live racing is scheduled to return on Thursday, Sept. 7. Post time 4:50 p.m. (ET).

The post Woodbine Cancels Monday Card Due To Extreme Heat Forecast appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

BWI Turf Cup Anchors Six Stakes At Pimlico Sept. 16

Big Everest, a three-time stakes winner beaten as the favorite in his last start; graded stakes-winning turf sprinter Cazadero, and Highestdistinction, who upset Big Everest in their last meeting, top a list of 20 horses nominated to the $200,000 Baltimore-Washington International Turf Cup (G3) Saturday, Sept. 16 at Pimlico Race Course.

The one-mile BWI Turf Cup for 3-year-olds and up is the headliner on a program featuring six stakes, three each scheduled for turf and dirt, worth $650,000 in purses on the penultimate weekend of Pimlico's boutique nine-day fall meet.

Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, Steven Rocco, and William Branch's Big Everest, bred in England and trained by Christophe Clement, was fourth by three lengths after setting the pace in the 1 1/16-mile Oceanport Aug. 13 at Monmouth Park. It was the second straight loss for the 5-year-old gelding following a four-race win streak that included stakes victories in the 2022 Artie Schiller and 2023 Danger's Hour and Cliff Hanger. The Artie Schiller and Danger's Hour both came at one mile, a distance where Big Everest has four wins from seven tries.

Willow Lane Stable Inc.'s Highestdistinction captured his stakes debut in the Oceanport with a come-from-behind 1 ½-length triumph at odds of 10-1, his second straight win for trainer Lindsay Schultz, who also nominated Shortleaf Stables Inc.'s Whelen Springs, a 9-1 upset winner of the Philip H. Iselin (G3) Aug. 19 at Monmouth yet to race on grass.

Cazadero, owned and trained by David Jacobson, has made his last seven starts sprinting on the turf, his lone win coming in the six-furlong Nearctic (G2) last fall at Woodbine. Most recently he was fifth by two lengths after breaking a step slow in a 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance Aug. 23 at Saratoga.

D Hatman Thoroughbreds and Kingdom Bloodstock Inc.'s Determined Kingdom is another multiple turf stakes winner, holding on for a front-running neck triumph in the 5½-furlong Meadow Stable Sept. 2 at Colonial Downs. John Bowers Jr.'s homebred He'spuregold is a stakes winner on both turf and dirt that most recently ran third in the Oceanport, beaten three lengths.

Also prominent among BWI Turf Cup nominees are grass stakes winners Alogon and King Vega; Tappin Cat, a multiple dirt stakes winner that was fifth in the 1 1/16-mile Find Aug. 19 at Laurel Park in his second grass start; Duke of Hazzard, a winner first off the claim for trainer Rick Dutrow Jr. in a Saratoga allowance Aug. 19; Doctor Davis, who beat Grade 3-winning stablemate Eons in a June 17 allowance at Laurel; and Doppleganger, upset winner of the seven-furlong Carter (G1) April 8 at Aqueduct that has never raced on grass.

Other Sept. 16 stakes scheduled for the turf are the $100,000 All Along for fillies and mares 3 and up going 1 1/8 miles and $75,000 Ben's Cat for Maryland-bred/sired horses 3 and older sprinting 5 ½ furlongs.

The All Along drew 25 nominees including the top three finishers from the July 15 Big Dreyfus at Laurel – 2022 Valley View (G3) winner Sparkle Blue, Italian Group 3 winner Atomic Blonde and Community Adjusted; multiple stakes winners Bipartisanship and Coconut Cake; Irish Group 3 winner Speirling Beag, beaten a neck when second in the Aug. 13 Searching at Laurel; Gold Digging Broad, promoted winner of the 1 1/16-mile All Brandy Aug. 19 at Laurel; and Milagrosa Surena, a Group 1 winner on turf in her native Argentina.

Grade 3 winner Jaxon Traveler, third by 1 ¼ lengths in last year's race, just his third on grass; Matta, third by a length to Carotari in last fall's Laurel Dash; Prince Pere, third or better in 12 of 24 career turf starts; 2022 Maryland Million Turf Sprint winner Spun Glass; and Witty, a multiple dirt stakes winner that has run second in three consecutive stakes sprinting on the grass, are among 20 nominees to the Ben's Cat.

Jaxon Traveler's lone graded stakes win came in the 2022 Maryland Sprint (G3) at Pimlico, where he has three wins and two seconds in five starts. He is also one of 20 nominees to the $100,000 Lite the Fuse for 3-year-olds and up sprinting six furlongs on the main track, a race where he ran second as the favorite last fall behind subsequent Dubai Golden Shaheen (G1) winner Sibelius.

Cazadero; 2022 Gallant Bob (G2) winner Scaramouche; multiple stakes winner Coastal Mission, riding a five-race win streak; fellow 10-time winner Colonel Bowman; 2020 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) runner-up Cowan; Doppelganger and Grade 3-winning stablemate Wondrwherecraigis; 2022 Maryland Million Nursery winner Johnyz From Albany; and stakes winners Hello Hot Rod, Little Roo Roo, No Cents, Recruiter, Stage Left and Threes Over Deuces are also nominated.

The $100,000 Weather Vane for 3-year-old fillies sprinting six furlongs attracted 21 nominations led by Alva Starr, winner of the Sept. 2 Prioress (G2) at Saratoga; multiple stakes-placed Awesome Pic; 2022 Our Dear Peggy winner Blind Spot; stakes winner Late Frost, most recently third in the seven-furlong Charles Town Oaks (G3) Aug. 25; stakes winner Opus Forty Two, second in the July 1 Delaware Handicap (G2); stakes winners Santa Fe Gold and Tappin Jose; Talk to the Judge, front-running head winner at odds of 9-1 in the seven-furlong Miss Disco July 29 at Laurel; and Yesternight, runner-up in the Aug. 22 Cathryn Sophia to Delaware Handicap winner Foggy Night.

Completing the stakes action is the $75,000 Shine Again going six furlongs for fillies and mares 3 and up which have never won an open sweepstakes. Among the 21 nominees are Arizona-bred stakes winner Alberta Sun; Bourbon Wildcat, runner-up in the Jan. 21 Geisha at Laurel; Intrepid Daydream, third in the one-mile Caesar's Wish July 15 at Laurel; Late Frost; Mama G's Wish, a winner of two straight as well as the Delaware-certified Lewes last summer at Delaware Park; Moody Woman, third in the Feb. 18 Barbara Fritchie (G3); nine-time winner Self Isolation; Six the Hard Way, third in the April 15 Weber City Miss; and Talk to the Judge.

Pimlico's fall meet is scheduled to open Sept. 8 and run Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through Sept. 24.

The post BWI Turf Cup Anchors Six Stakes At Pimlico Sept. 16 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Tattersalls Somerville Looking to Continue Upward Curve 

NEWMARKET, UK–The third European yearling sale within eight days gets underway as Tattersalls pulls the curtain up on its yearling season with its increasingly popular Somerville Sale. 

It will be a frenetic day at Park Paddocks on Tuesday with more than 300 horses to go through the ring, but the sale is riding high on the back of some decent results, with Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}), the star of the inaugural edition in 2021, adding the G1 King's Stand S. to his previous Royal Ascot success in the G2 Coventry S. for Archie Watson and Victorious Racing.

In recent weeks, last year's graduates Indian Run (Ire) (Sioux Nation) and Relief Rally (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) landed the G3 Acomb S. and G2 Lowther S. at York, while Anisette (GB) (Awtaad {Ire}) won the GI Del Mar Oaks. 

It took a total of 206,000gns to buy these four horses, a figure that was barely two-thirds of the average price of a yearling at Tattersalls October Book 1 last year, so it is easy to see why this auction, which has taken a strong lead from the Doncaster playbook of precocity and speed, is catching on. The emphasis on youth also extends to the marketing for this sale, with its snappy video featuring the younger members of the Tattersalls team.

https://twitter.com/Tattersalls1766/status/1698353656494448861?s=20

One of those, auctioneer Matt Hall, was looking particularly dapper in a jaunty Panama as he inspected the yearlings he will be selling on Tuesday, but he played down his leading role in the sale. “It's been very busy over the last few days, with plenty of footfall, so let's hope that transfers to the ring,” was all he could be drawn on as he conferred with Jenny Norris. 

There's been a good name game taking place in the Norris Bloodstock draft for the filly by Harry Angel (Ire) out of Meghan Sparkle (Ire) [Lot 213]. Netflix (GB) has been suggested, along with the less flattering Ginge N Whinge (GB), which would work better if she was a chestnut. Either way, the neat bay is a smart and racy-looking filly, quite typical of the kind on offer here this week.

On Monday morning, as British politics limped back into action after the summer recess, Angela Rayner was named Shadow Levelling Up Minister in a Labour reshuffle. I've no idea what that actually means, but there is a good deal of levelling up underway at Tattersalls on 'Catholic Hill' which will presumably be ready for its unveiling at the October Sale. In the meantime, it's a little discombobulating trying to find some consignors away from their usual spot, but plenty were enjoying the shade of the trees in the Highflyer paddocks on a roasting hot September day.

There are unconfirmed rumours that the July Sale ice-cream man could make a return to Park Paddocks on Tuesday, and even bigger rumours about the money being offered by various stallion farms from around the world for Havana Grey (GB). The rising star of Whitsbury Manor Stud claimed his Group 1 in the Flying Five on Irish Champions Weekend five years ago, and since then both he and his offspring have continued to fly. From £8,000 to £18,500 his fee has already climbed, and TDN's Brian Sheerin selflessly stayed up into the wee small hours the other night in Doncaster specifically to listen to the gossip on where his price will be pitched next year. 

It is unclear whether or not Brian fell asleep in the bar of the Earl of Doncaster, but we still don't know the magic number. We just hope that Havana Grey stays in England. Sixteen of his yearlings are in the Somerville Sale, including two from his breeder Mickley Stud, who sold Havana Grey as a foal at Tattersalls back in 2015.

From an opening average of 21,345gns and median of 16,250gns for the first Somerville Sale as the world started to right itself after the Covid pandemic, those figures climbed significantly to 30,377gns and 26,000gns last year. It would be folly to expect such extravagant percentage gains this time around, but the sale has taken root. And there have been enough people in action during the inspection days of Sunday and Monday for plenty of consignors to be feeling quietly confident as they tucked into their burgers at the pre-sale barbecue on Monday night. 

Selling begins at 9.30am, and a 12-hour session is likely, but it makes sense to have kept this relative newcomer to the sales scene to its one-day boutique format. 

The post Tattersalls Somerville Looking to Continue Upward Curve  appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights