Doudoudouwanadance Is Lukewarm Favorite For Friday’s Oklahoma Classics Distaff

This year's edition of the $111,000 Oklahoma Classics Distaff Handicap may be one of the toughest competitively from top to bottom as evidenced by Doudoudouwanadance being made the 3-1 lukewarm favorite on Friday, Oct. 20 at Remington Park.

Remington Park morning line maker Jerry Shottenkirk tabbed the 3-year-old daughter of Magna Graduate, out of the Macho Uno mare Ebony Uno, the favorite off her extremely sharp performances over this Oklahoma City track. She was made the slight choice over Do You Bileve (4-1), Da Prairie Girl (5-1) and Gotta See Red (6-1). The race will be run at 1 mile-70 yards on the main track.

Doudoudouwanadance's owner Terry Westemeir, of Broken Arrow, Okla., said he and trainer Scott Young went back and forth and over and over about which race to run this filly in on Classics Night, so much so that they lost her regular rider, Leandro Goncalves.

“Turf or dirt? Sprint or distance?” said Westemeir. “We both ultimately landed on the Distaff. We originally were thinking sprint for her. By the time we decided, Leandro was already committed to another horse (Gotta See Red) in the Distaff. But Lindey Wade is riding really great right now and we are excited to have him.”

Wade will be up on Doudoudouwanadance for the first time and if she runs like she did on this race night last year, he may just need to hold on. This filly won the $100,000 Oklahoma Classics Lassie for 2-year-old fillies at six furlongs by seven lengths. That was after she had broken her maiden by eight lengths the race before. She followed up these two trips to the winner's circle with another in the $75,000 Slide Show Stakes for juvenile fillies by 3-1/4 lengths – three-for-three after three starts. As she has grown older, it's been a tougher road to hoe. Doudoudouwanadance has ventured into much tougher open company in the $100,000 Trapeze Stakes in her final race of 2022 and then again in the Grade 3, $300,000 Honeybee Stakes at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark. The best she could do in those races outside of Oklahoma-bred company was an eighth-place finish and 12th, respectively.

She hasn't won a race since the first three of her career, but that doesn't deter her owner's feelings about her.

“She is doing great,” Westemeir said. “She will represent us well.”

Doudoudouwanadance has raced twice at Remington Park as a 3-year-old this meet, running fifth, beaten four lengths in open first-level allowance company on Aug. 19 at 5-1/2 furlongs. She then stretched out to seven furlongs in the $50,000 Oklahoma Stallion Stakes on Sept. 8 as the even-money favorite and disappointed in fourth, beaten 6-3/4 lengths. Now she will try older fillies and mares for only the second time. Her fourth-place allowance finish this meet was against some from the older set.

Doudoudouwanadance's record is eight starts, three wins, and one second for $139,346 in earnings. That makes her the third-leading earner in this field.

Do You Bileve, a 6-year-old mare by Mr. Nightlinger, is the second-favorite in the morning line, coming off a third-place finish at 1 mile-70 yards on the main track Sept. 29 in a first-level allowance race. She is a consistent sort owned and trained by Pat Swan of Jones, Okla., and will be making her stakes racing debut. The mare has finished in the money in 21-of-41 starts, but has not won a race since June 23, 2021. She was bred in Oklahoma by Swan and Rose Smith.

Do You Bileve's record overall is 41 starts, three wins, nine seconds and nine thirds for a bankroll of $137,208. Swan will give a leg up to jockey Harry Hernandez for this.

Gotta See Red, is hoping to return to old Classics form in the Distaff. She has competed in 10 stakes races over her past 15 starts and is a multiple stakes winner for her career. This 5-year-old mare by Pollard's Vision, out of the Kipling mare Gotagogotagogotago, has won two of her last three starts for owners Hal Browning and David Faulkner from Dallas, Texas, and trainer Kari Craddock. Among the mare's stakes wins were victories in the $100,000 Oklahoma Classics Lassie as a 2-year-old in 2020; as a 3-year-old – the $55,000 Cinema Stakes at Will Rogers Downs in Claremore, Okla.; the $50,000 Oklahoma Stallion Stakes at Remington Park, and as a 5-year-old, the $55,000 More than Even Stakes at WRD on May 9, 2023.

Gotta See Red owns a career record of 17 starts, seven wins, three thirds for $246,893 in earnings. She is the top earner in the field and owns the most career victories of any in the Distaff with seven. She was bred by her owners.

Here is the field for the Oklahoma Classics Distaff by post position and program order, with trainer, jockey and odds:

  1. Fighting Temptation: Alan Williams, Jose Medina, 15-1
  2. When Judy Calls: Miguel Silva, Freddy Manrrique, 15-1
  3. Okie Attitude: Juan Padilla, Luis Quinonez, 8-1
  4. Kachina: Kari Craddock, Floyd Wethey, Jr., 10-1
  5. Mucho Mia: Tyrone Gleason, Obed Sanchez, 12-1
  6. Gotta See Red: Kari Craddock, Leandro Goncalves, 6-1
  7. Da Prairie Girl: Roger Neff, Richard Eramia, 5-1
  8. Stormieis Blue: Sarah Davidson, Richard Bracho, 20-1
  9. Doudoudouwanadance: Scott Young, Lindey Wade, 3-1 (morning-line favorite)
  10. Do You Bileve: Pat Swan, Harry Hernandez, 4-1

The Classics Distaff Handicap will be race seven of 10 on Oklahoma Classics Night, celebrating Oklahoma-bred Thoroughbreds. The scheduled post will be 10:01pm. The first race of the night is set for 7:07pm. All times are Central.

Remington Park has provided more than $331 Million to the State of Oklahoma general education fund since the opening of the casino in 2005. Located at the junction of Interstates 35 & 44, in the heart of the Oklahoma City Adventure District, Remington Park is home to the Oklahoma Classics, the top night of racing in the state for Oklahoma-breds, on Friday, Oct. 20, 2023. Remington Park presents simulcast racing daily and non-stop casino gaming. Parking and admission are always free. Must be 18 or older to wager on horse racing or enter the casino gaming floor. Visit remingtonpark.com for more information.

The post Doudoudouwanadance Is Lukewarm Favorite For Friday’s Oklahoma Classics Distaff appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Multiple Group 1 Winner Angel Bleu To Enter Stud In France

Angel Bleu (Dark Angel x Cercle De La Vie) will become Sumbe's fifth stallion in 2024 and stand alongside Mishriff, Belbek, Golden Horde and De Treville, marking the partnership of Nurlan Bizakov and Marc Chan.

An exceptionally precocious and unusually tough dual Group 1 winner at two, Angel Bleu broke his maiden in April 2021 at Leicester before winning his next two races in a row. On the go from his debut until the end of October, he was the French champion and second highest rated juvenile in Europe in 2021.

Angel Bleu is the first horse this century to win both France's biggest 1,400-meter and 1,600-meter Group 1s for juveniles – a double achieved by breed-shapers Blushing Groom and Irish River.

An example of outstanding durability inherited from his maternal side, he ran twice in four days at two years old and won five out of his eight starts. He is Dark Angel's highest-rated Group 1-winning juvenile, rated superior to Dark Angel himself, and the only multiple Group 1 winner at two from 100 group winners descended from Acclamation.

Angel Bleu has proved he has trained on by winning the G2 Celebration mile at Goodwood in 2023 and that is why the owners have decided to supplement him for the G1 Queen Elizabeth II race at Ascot at the Champions Day.

His trainer Ralph Beckett said, “As well as being really talented, Angel Bleu is a very tough individual, whose race record shows he took his racing very well and kept coming back for more. To do it at two, three and four years old is a rare thing nowadays.”

Frankie Dettori commented, “One of the toughest and most consistent 2-year-olds I have ever ridden.”

The post Multiple Group 1 Winner Angel Bleu To Enter Stud In France appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Race Day Ready: A Guide to Fall Fashion at the Breeders’ Cup

As we gear up for the Breeders' Cup World Championships Nov. 3 and 4 at Santa Anita Park, the excitement is palpable. It's the time when horse lovers, racing aficionados and fashion enthusiasts unite for a weekend of high stakes, thrilling races. No matter the reason you’re there, one thing is for certain – you’ve got to do it in exquisite style. The challenge? Navigating the fine line between fashion and functionality.

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Top ‘Gun’ Rewards Chris Baker’s Belief in ‘Run’

On the spectrum of Thoroughbred stallions, you won't find too many either side of Gun Runner and Despot. One, charging $250,000 a dance at Three Chimneys, is the most immediately accomplished sire of recent times. The other was claimed for $350 at Waterford Park, some 50 years ago, before being set to work annually producing a handful of half-breds in rural Maryland.

“Liver chestnut son of Stevward,” says the man whose career unites this unlikely pair. “You should have seen us trying to figure out how to breed mares on our own. 'Grab her tail.' There were no helmets and vests worn, I can guarantee you that.”

Chris Baker, chief operating officer at Three Chimneys for the past decade, chuckles at the memory.

“My father, in essence, thought that no uterus should be empty,” he says. “From cows to horses, to cats, dogs, everything. Breed, breed, breed. An old Catholic thing, I guess! But that's where the whole horse thing started.”

It has been quite an odyssey since. Crucially, in a sector of the industry that often feels culpably divorced from its ostensible purpose, Baker cut his teeth on the racetrack. He started at a barn that then housed A.P. Indy, and for a time was even a trainer himself. Baker went on to adapt those experiences to the challenges of breeding, so well that 11 years as general manager for Ned Evans at Spring Hill Farm yielded over 100 stakes winners, including another Horse of the Year in Saint Liam. During a stint at WinStar, he welcomed into the world yet another that would earn those laurels; and now Gun Runner and Baker have together brought their careers to fulfilment in the service of the Torrealba family at Three Chimneys.

Baker cuts a striking figure, nowadays, silver hair flowing beneath the broad brim of his hat. But the ease of his demeanor and conversation has been fully earned: the insights kindly shared with The TDN remind us that none of these things happen overnight, nor by accident.

Baker's forefathers were themselves achieving pretty high production. Baker himself is sixth of seven children; his father was one of nine kids from McKees Rocks, Pittsburgh; and his grandfather, in turn, was one of nine, seven being boys.

All seven brothers went into the family business: a bakery, inevitably. The one who became Baker's grandfather was charged with the care of 100 carthorses that delivered bread for the Baker Brothers Bakery.

“My dad tells of going with his father in a buckboard wagon at weekends to try out replacements for horses that had been retired, or come up lame,” he recalls. “One time this horse just wouldn't go and, after driving away at him for a mile or so, they turn round to go back. And then the horse just takes off. They can't stop him. He's running through the cobblestone streets like a lunatic, all the way back into the barn, where he comes to a screeching halt, dust flying everywhere.”

The panting driver leaned down to his sons cowering in the bottom of the wagon. His words have since been humorously invoked at any appropriate juncture in Baker family history: “Boys, whatever you do, don't tell your mother.”

It is to this gentleman that Baker traces his affinity for horses-though there were also weekends and summers at the farm owned by his other grandfather, an hour or so from his boyhood home in Washington, DC. This one was an attorney (as was Baker's own father) but also raised cattle and tobacco on 600 acres.

“So really we did a lot of our growing up in the country,” Baker says. “And we were riding before we could walk. There were horses for everybody- buckskins, palominos, Tennessee walkers-just not saddles or bridles for everybody! If you were the last to the tack room, you'd be riding with a halter and rope.”

The most expensive was a Chincoteague pony bought by his father for $45. But then a neighbors' daughter went away to college and gave her hunting mare, a retired Thoroughbred, to the Bakers. Suddenly they had a new sense of what a horse could be. Soon they started claiming the odd Thoroughbred from places like Charles Town and Mountaineer, Despot among them.

“And then somebody told my father that a stallion needs to be exercised,” Baker recalls. “Which is right. But next thing I'm the one, at 10 years old, getting run off with, all over the farm.”

Sometimes he would also be told to ride a mare to a nearby farm that stood Quarter Horse stallions. ([Its owners were raising a boy of their own into the game: the future veterinarian, Steve Allday.] Baker remembers being told to stand his mare uphill, and put his shoulder into her chest so that she might keep still. One way or another, then, it was a pretty seasoned young horseman who went off to read Agriculture and Animal Science at the University of Maryland.

It was during his college years that Baker first sampled racetrack work, at Bowie, and subsequently a three-year grounding at Lane's End included stints at Churchill and Keeneland with the farm's trainer at the time, Neil Howard. Baker had been a sufficiently able high school athlete-football, track, wrestling-to have developed an interest in physiological preparation. First and foremost, however, he had grasped that anybody intending to breed racehorses should understand the requirements of those who trained them.

Baker served as Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella's assistant for several years | Benoit

“I believe my experience on the racetrack makes me a way better farm manager,” Baker acknowledges. “And that was very intentional. It was something deeply ignited in me at that age, my early 20s: how could I breed and raise an athlete without seeing that athlete in training and in competition?”

True, that apprenticeship extended far beyond his expectations. He went to Australia and England, to see how things were done there; and ended up serving four years as assistant trainer to Richard Mandella. His resume by then included a year with Neil Drysdale, on hand when a $2.9 million son of Seattle Slew broke his maiden at Santa Anita. Baker was still very junior, at that time, but A.P. Indy gave him a glimpse of the elite Thoroughbred; and Mandella would now provide a wider perspective.

“Richard was a great teacher,” he recalls. “A great taskmaster, as well! I mean, you were going to learn, or you weren't going to be around at all. So I learned a tremendous amount about hard work and horsemanship, the kind that leaves no stone unturned. But also in terms of character, and approach to life.”

Within months Phone Chatter and Kotashaan (Fr) had won at the Breeders' Cup, while the South American conveyor belt would bring the likes of Siphon (Brz) and Gentlemen (Arg).

“Those horses had to go through a lot of filters to make it here,” Baker reflects. “Some had a lot of stamina in their pedigrees and, especially in California, you had to have speed as well. But most of them had good foot, good bone, some constitution. Watching Richard adapting both South American and French horses to U.S. methods, the acclimatization process, the patience required, was a fantastic education. At the same time, of course, he's getting horses like Afternoon Deelites and Soul of the Matter. At one time we had 40 horses in the barn and eight were Grade I winners. It was just a great environment, a great lab to study in.”

Eventually Baker became so absorbed by the track that he thought he might never leave. He took out a license, trained 11 winners over a couple of years. But then he got married, soon a daughter appeared, and a nomadic and uncertain existence became impractical. He returned to Kentucky and worked on a couple of farms until sounded out by his former employers at Lane's End about their client, Edward P. Evans, who was seeking a manager for his farm in Virginia.

Inauspiciously, Evans was doing so for the fourth time in five years. But it suited Baker, as a young father, to be close to family and he backed himself to forge a relationship with this notoriously demanding employer.

“He was tough but fair,” Baker says. “And he expected results. As his brother Shel told me, 'In Ned's life, nobody avoids the penalty box.' But so long as you were doing what you were supposed to, and helping him achieve his goals, he was a great guy to work for. So I just went in and worked hard, was honest and clear with him. And, as we got to know each other, we built some trust and mutual respect.

“He was a very intelligent guy. He could take what looked like complex situations, and distill them to one simple actionable item that would drive success. He read people well, read business well. And he had a highly developed bullshit monitor!”

Evans had been only 27 when buying the farm back in 1969.

“He'd always bred to good stallions: Northern Dancer, Mr. Prospector, Halo,” Baker says. “He'd bred to The Minstrel at Windfields in Maryland and got Minstrella, a champion 2-year-old [in Europe]. But having been operating with 20, 30 mares, the whole scale changed when he sold out of Macmillan [the publishing firm]. That was when he got right up to 90 mares, and his whole intent and focus changed. So when I fell in, it was Year 31 of a 42-year experiment. All the ingredients were there-the physical plant, the bloodstock-and he just needed somebody to help orchestrate things, from an operational standpoint. So, again, it was fortunate timing on my part.”

By that stage Baker had long been absorbed by pedigrees. He was barely 10 when his father would throw him the stallion edition of Maryland Horse to help pick a $1,500 sire. But now he could mix from a much larger palette, including Pleasant Tap-Evans had inherited a third share from his father-and homebreds like Silver Ghost and Stormin Fever.

By the time Evans died, on the last day of 2010, they had raised Saint Liam [sold as a yearling] and Quality Road, whose stud career has lavishly benefited his late breeder's charitable foundation.

“I didn't know everything about managing a farm,” Baker says. “Still don't. But I knew what I didn't know, and knew people to call to fill in the gaps. Working for Mr. Evans was like getting an MBA. We'd go over the financial statements on a monthly basis, we'd go over the annual budgeting with his controller in New York. To that point, I had focused my entire career on developing my horsemanship. But he opened my eyes to the macro, business level.”

Three Chimneys owner Goncalo Torrealba | Keeneland

In the process Baker also obtained a rare, cradle-to-grave perspective on equine potential. When preparing the Spring Hill dispersal, then, Baker was still presiding over matings and foalings, still liaising with pre-trainers and trainers. The authority with which he did so plainly impressed Benjamin Leon, who bought several of the mares and invited Baker to follow them into his operation. Baker having committed to WinStar, however, Leon said: “Chris, these mares are your handiwork. They should be with you. Will you ask Mr. Troutt if I can board them at WinStar?”

So it was that Baker came to be present when Saint Liam's $3 million half-sister Quiet Giant (Giant's Causeway) delivered a Candy Ride colt on 8 March, 2013. He still has a photo of the foal standing for the first time. A few months later, Baker was hired by the new owners of Three Chimneys-but he would not be parted long from Gun Runner.

By typical horseracing happenstance (Goncalo Torrealba's sister and Leon were both clients of the same Miami hairdresser) Leon invited the Torrealbas to his suite for the 2014 Kentucky Derby. Leon hit it off with Torrealba, and was invited to stay at Three Chimneys next time he was in town. When he did so, they look Baker to see all Leon's stock-and very soon sealed a partnership in everything that had come out of Spring Hill.

“So then all those horses were here with me at Three Chimneys,” marvels Baker. “If that's not luck, I don't know what is. It's fantastic, just makes the whole thing very, very meaningful. Because of the long connections, the multiple generations of multiple families.”

This has allowed Baker an emotionally gratifying stake in the outcomes of his own long diligence. Sure, he has only ever monetized his contribution as a salary; but he has felt privileged, throughout, to participate in his employers' far-sightedness.

“For so many people in our industry, just to make ends meet, the goal is to make a profit every time they can,” he acknowledges. “I've been fortunate to benefit from a completely different mindset: to focus on results, on accomplishing things, and ultimately to make a business profitable that way instead.”

The point being that with adequate resources and patience, this approach will eventually pay off commercially, too.

“I remember sitting down with Mr. Evans one time, and we were deciding between two stallions for this mare,” Baker recalls. “And I said, 'Well Mr. Evans, Pleasant Tap suits her greatly, but it's not really a commercial mating. Commercially, you'd want this one instead.' And he replied, 'Commercial sires? Racehorse sires? Who doesn't want a racehorse?' I mean, he could afford to kind of push that aside. But it was so black and white to him: if you can breed a racehorse, you'll be doing the right thing for your mare, for the family, for the whole thing.”

Of course this all ties in with Baker's grounding on the backside. His whole career has been oriented to finding a runner.

“Plenty of people that haven't had that racetrack experience have raised a lot of good horses,” Baker stresses. “I just know that for me, it makes me significantly better, because I understand what's going to be asked of them. I understand physically, mentally, even socially, things that might set them up to succeed. At the end of the day, as producers, we can't make them faster or better than they're individually hardwired to be. But by doing or especially not doing certain things, we can stay out of the way of them reaching their full potential.”

Gun Runner | Sarah K. Andrew

Gun Runner, as such, could not be better named. He's only top “gun”, after all, because he was all “run”. To Baker, of course, the horse will always have an unusually personal resonance. Knowing him so intimately, how does he account for Gun Runner's genetic prowess?

“Well, I certainly can't attribute it to any one thing,” he replies. “I think he's an alchemy of so many things that just came together. The only extremes of Gun Runner are his athleticism and his temperament, his will to win. Mental constitution, as much as anything. If you look at him, he's not too big, not too small; and his pedigree, also, suits a broad spectrum of mares. There's a melding of so many things: the brilliance of Candy Ride, the stamina and durability of Giant's Causeway. And you can go all the way back to Gallorette [foaled in 1942]. Just read her race record, and then keep tipping up the line!”

With this fulfilment of former patrons' legacy, then, Baker's present employment has brought things full circle. He repeatedly insists that he has been fortunate, “all the way through my career, to be in the right place at the right time.” But you also make your own luck. It was only because three different people-Evans, Leon and Torrealba-all recognized the skills of this “fabulous Baker boy” that a single set of fingerprints has remained, almost the whole way through, over one of the most remarkable Thoroughbreds on the planet.

“The Torrealba family has afforded us the opportunity to work with a lot of great horses, and a lot of great people,” Baker says gratefully. “All the way through my career, accomplishment has come through people having the right goals, the right stock, doing the right work. I do think I've worked hard for everybody who's been willing to employ me, but I also think I've been very fortunate to have people that believed in me, and in the teams that we could put together. It always takes a team effort, backed up with good stock and good facilities, and Three Chimneys is certainly an extension of that. So really the only way of looking at it is probably that I've been spoiled, right?”

The post Top ‘Gun’ Rewards Chris Baker’s Belief in ‘Run’ appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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