Breeders’ Futurity Winner Locked Bears Early Fruits For Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Walmac Farm Partnership

An ongoing journey that saw its latest stop in the Keeneland winner's circle following Locked's victory in the Grade 1 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity started when Aron Wellman needed a seat on a plane.

Bloodstock agent Bob Feld had arranged a charter jet for members of the Thoroughbred industry to fly from Lexington, Ky., to San Diego, Calif. Passengers included Gary Broad, owner of Walmac Farm. There was an empty seat, and Wellman, president and founder of Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, filled it.

They might not have known it when the plane took off, but the two had several hours to chart their path forward.

“Bob asked if it was alright if Aron flew back with us, and I said 'sure.'” Broad said. “We were flying back, and I was talking to him about how his statistics were, and I was impressed. Then we had dinner, and we formed a partnership.”

Broad admitted that he didn't know Wellman that well prior to the flight. They were both based in Southern California, and as high-level Thoroughbred owners, they were familiar with each other's resumes, but they just hadn't had a lot of face time. They quickly discovered they had some common goals that they could potentially achieve together.

Broad purchased Walmac Farm in 2018 with the intention of basing his breeding operation there and standing stallions. Eclipse has had success buying colts at auction that retire to the breeding shed, including Grade 1 Belmont Stakes winner Tapwrit, Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Aloha West, Grade 1 winner Danza, and Grade 2 winner Independence Hall.

The new partners formed a budget and went shopping at the 2022 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. They purchased a trio of colts, the third of which was a Gun Runner colt out of the winning Malibu Moon mare Luna Rosa secured from the Eaton Sales consignment for $425,000. The colt was bred in Kentucky by Rosa Colasanti. Grade 1 winner Gabby's Golden Gal and Grade 2 winner Always a Princess are in the colt's extended family.

The colt, later named Locked, impressed Wellman on the end of the shank, but it was his temperament that ultimately won him over.

“It always starts with the individual from a physical perspective for me,” Wellman said. “He was a really well put together horse with an incredible hind leg, very athletic walk, and while I tend to find fillies to be an easier read personality-wise, Locked struck me as a very intelligent individual that was very easy on himself. For such a powerful colt with a lot of agility on the shank, he also allowed me to believe that he had a really good mind, and thankfully that read has proven to be true so far.”

The Eclipse operation has never shied away from adding industry partners to its fold. Tapwrit was campaigned in partnership with Robert LaPenta, Bridlewood Farm, Gainesway, and Whisper Hill Farm, and a posse that deep in numbers and bankrolls is not uncommon for the stable's horses.

As a partnership itself, each horse that Eclipse buys into at auction requires fundraising to get investments from its members. Wellman said taking on a new industry partner like Walmac Farm is typically met with enthusiasm from the Eclipse investors, given the operation's history and methodology for picking teammates.

“I think our partners enjoy the ability to align with major players in the game that aren't necessarily under the Eclipse umbrella, but are proud to partner with us and put their name next to ours in the program,” Wellman said. “And, I think they have enough trust in our program to know we're always going to forge relationships with class individuals to share ideals and philosophies as we do, which is the horse always comes first. After that, everything will fall into place. There's a lot of trust in our partner base that when we do align with outside individuals, it's with good reason, and it's because they're like-minded individuals that we're proud to be associated with and will only enhance our brand's image.”

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Locked was sent to Ocala Stud in Florida to go through his early training before being sent to the barn of trainer Todd Pletcher.

After a troubled third on debut in early August at Saratoga Race Course, Locked came back later in the meet to win a one-mile maiden special weight by 7 1/4 lengths.

Locked left the gate from the outside post position as the post-time favorite in the Breeders' Futurity, where he was wide through both turns, but he had enough in the tank to outkick The Wine Steward to win by a half-length. He secured a “Win and You're In” berth to the Breeders' Cup Juvenile on Nov. 3 at Santa Anita Park with his win at Keeneland, along with 10 Kentucky Derby qualifying points.

It wasn't the easiest trip, and he had to dig deep to get the job done, but Wellman said the way that Locked won the Breeders' Futurity was exactly what he and his team saw in him as a yearling.

“He's very easy on himself, and he's wise beyond his years,” Wellman said. “He really doesn't do any more at this point in his career than he's asked to do, which is so beneficial for a horse with his natural talent and ability. He's so push-button mentally that when he's asked the question, he is smart enough to know what he's being asked to do, tries to do it, and then also has the physical ability to execute on that question being asked of him. He's really got all the tools, and that's what we picked up on at the sale.”

When a partnership that includes a stallion operation goes to the auction to buy colts and one of them by a hot sire like Gun Runner wins a high-profile Grade 1 race, it's not hard to put two and two together on what the roadmap might look like for Locked when he retires to stud.

Walmac Farm will debut Pappacap, a Grade 2-winning son of Gun Runner, during the upcoming breeding season. Even so, there are plenty of farms that stands multiple sons of the same sire, and a horse like Locked seems like a hard opportunity for the fledgling stallion operation to pass up.

However, while Broad has the right of first refusal to stand Locked at Walmac Farm, he said the partnership is willing to hear overtures from other stallion farms that might make financial sense to create some liquidity.

“Of course, if the money's good enough, we're not going to turn it down,” Broad said. “You have to cash out sometimes to get some of your money back, and I hope we have that choice at some point, but you never know.”

Both Broad and Wellman said they'd received calls from multiple stud farms testing the water on just how committed Locked was to standing at Walmac Farm in the days following the Grade 1 win. As it is for any aspect of the Thoroughbred business, money talks.

“We're very flexible as far as that's concerned, and everyone should know that it's free game, and we'll make the most prudent and responsible decision for the partnership as a whole between Walmac and Eclipse, and the partners that are under the Eclipse umbrella,” Wellman said.

While both operations are no strangers to graded stakes success, Broad was still pleased with his good fortune in his new partnership, acknowledging that getting a Grade 1 horse is hard to do on the hundredth try, much less the first try.

There is still plenty to be decided in Locked's future, both on the racetrack and beyond, but an abundance of choices is a good problem to have.

“I've been in it since the '80s,” Broad said. “It was tough then, it's tough now. There's hardships and there's joy. It just depends on what day it is.”

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‘I Am Simply Not Ready To Retire Completely’: Frankie Dettori Plans Return To Santa Anita

Legendary jockey Frankie Dettori has confirmed plans to temporarily relocate to America and continue riding on the international circuit.

Dettori said: “I am simply not ready to retire completely. I'm still enjoy riding and want to carry on for a while on the international circuit.

“I have had the most amazing career (based in the UK), and head to British Champions Day (Oct. 21) with some brilliant rides. This will mark my final day riding in Britain, after which I will head to America for the Breeders' Cup and then Melbourne for the Carnival.

“The current plan is to return to ride at Santa Anita in the States at the end of the year. How long I continue race riding overseas and where my American journey takes me, no one can predict but I welcome the challenge in this new chapter.”

Dettori attended a Flying Frankie pop-up along London's South Bank on Thursday to greet the public and encourage fans to try his iconic Flying Dismount, his signature celebration that has made crowds roar for over 30 years. The Flying Frankie pop-up, staged by Great British Racing and QIPCO British Champions Series, also gave the public a chance to celebrate Dettori's illustrious career and say thank you to horseracing's stellar talent.

Dettori, 52, has given sports fans across the world memories that will last a lifetime and has been racing's most famous personality for more than three decades. A dazzling talent, he burst onto the British racing scene in 1985 as a 15-year-old, going on to be crowned Champion Jockey three times and has won almost every major prize in the global horseracing calendar including each of the five British Classics multiple times. In 2016 he reached 3,000 winners aboard Predilection at Newmarket's July racecourse and has since gone on to win a further 365* British races, putting him firmly in the top five of the allcomers list of British based flat jockeys. One of his most celebrated achievements was riding all seven winners of British Festival of Racing Day at Ascot Racecourse on Sept. 28, 1996.

The Italian born jockey has experienced the most remarkable farewell season to end his inspiring career in British racing. Most recently, Dettori achieved a phenomenal 500 winners at Newmarket Racecourse, his home track, winning the Grade 1 Sun Chariot Stakes aboard Inspiral for John and Thady Gosden.

Rod Street, Chief Executive of Great British Racing and QIPCO British Champions Series said: “Frankie has been gift to British racing. He has transcended our sport in a way that few people have and has performed at an elite level for over 30 years. To be at the top of your game as a sportsperson, spanning four decades, is a remarkable feat and few athletes have that longevity.

“Frankie has always brought stardust to the track and his ability to help racing reach new audiences is immeasurable. We are incredibly grateful to him for everything he has done for our sport over the years.”

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Australia: I Wish I Win The $20-Million Everest

The Everest, with an astounding purse of AU$20 million that makes it the world's richest race on turf, will have a first-ever Spanish broadcast to complement FanDuel TV's telecast from Sydney's Royal Randwick Racecourse this Friday night.

DRF En Espanol TV will show Races 5 through 9, with coverage anchored by Roberto Rodriguez. Jamie Salvador will co-host, with David Merida providing the race calls. FanDuel TV's Andrew “Dubbs” Anderson will join Sky Racing World's Jason Witham trackside, where last year's 46,000-strong crowd for The Everest was Randwick's biggest in half a century. A sunny, 83-degree forecast should entice another huge turnout, after the public's appetite was whetted by the presentation of the post position draw aboard a $15 million superyacht on Sydney Harbour. The Everest is the seventh on a sensational 10-race (nine-stakes) card that also features the inaugural $5 million King Charles III Stakes.

First post this Friday is 6:30 p.m. Pacific / 9:30 p.m. Eastern.

The Everest distance of six furlongs is reflective of Australia's strength in the realm of global turf sprinters. One of this year's leading chances, I Wish I Win, reunites the trainer-jockey combination which found global fame with the incomparable Black Caviar, whose 25-for-25 career record included a Royal Ascot triumph in the G1 Diamond Jubilee Stakes (at six furlongs). The three-time Australian Horse of the Year was the world's co-highest-ranked racehorse of 2013, and ended her career with a victory at Randwick in the G1 TJ Smith Stakes.

Exactly one decade later, trainer Peter Moody gave jockey Luke Nolen a leg-up on I Wish I Win in the TJ Smith – and win they did. The 5-year-old gelding (4-1) will now attempt a calendar sweep of Sydney's two biggest sprint races, which would emulate the 2021 feat of recently retired Nature Strip (like Black Caviar, a Royal Ascot winner and multiple Horse of the Year). I Wish I Win would also clinch the big-money double of Australia's two richest races, having won the $10 million Golden Eagle last year. The 2023 Golden Eagle, a new concept restricted to 4-year-olds, will be run in early November at the conclusion of The Everest Carnival.

Indeed, this year's The Everest feels like a “changing of the guard,” such was the career longevity of Nature Strip and some of his regular combatants. Only three horses return from last year's edition: runner-up Private Eye (6-1), third-placegetter Mazu (60-1) and sixth-placed Overpass (9-1). Private Eye forms half of a strong pairing for trainer Joe Pride, whose streaking Think About It (4-1) seeks a ninth straight win from 12 career starts.

Pride was the trainer of Eduardo, a longtime great rival of Nature Strip who finished third in The Everest of 2021. Nature Strip's trainer, Chris Waller, also has a pair of runners: Shinzo (15-1), winner of the world's richest juvenile race, the Golden Slipper; and the mare Espiona (16-1), who has attracted the services of Hugh Bowman from his new Hong Kong base – thus reconvening Winx's trainer-jockey combination.

Godolphin, which has fallen just short of the summit with three minor placings in The Everest, also brings a one-two punch: Golden Slipper runner-up Cylinder (8-1 and, like Shinzo, a 3-year-old colt whose stud value would skyrocket with a win on Friday night); and the mare In Secret (14-1), who has attracted another Australian rider based in Hong Kong: last season's champion jockey, Zac Purton.

The King Charles III Stakes (Race 9) will showcase a spectacular field of 16, including nine individual Group 1 winners (one more than The Everest's field of 12). For all its depth and quality, the race strictly goes through 6-5 favorite Mr Brightside, by virtue of his superlative 10-for-14 record at the distance: any race at a mile makes Mr Brightside smile. The field includes a pair of highly credentialed international shippers: Light Infantry Man (10-1) makes his second visit Down Under, having finished sixth of 20 in the aforementioned 2022 Golden Eagle won by I Wish I Win; while the Joseph O'Brien-trained Buckaroo (20-1) shares the name of North America's leading sire of 1985, an honor earned through the deeds of Kentucky Derby-winning Horse of the Year, Spend a Buck.

The Randwick card will be broadcast live on FanDuel TV and for the first time ever in Spanish language on DRF En Espanol this Friday night (First Post: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT). All races will be live-streamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, FanDuel and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to live-streaming, past performances, and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com.

About Michael Wrona

A native of Brisbane, Australia, Michael Wrona has called races in six countries. Michael's vast U.S. experience includes; race calling at Los Alamitos, Hollywood Park, Arlington and Santa Anita, calling the 2000 Preakness on a national radio network and the 2016 Breeders' Cup on the International simulcast network. Michael also performed a race call voiceover for a Seinfeld episode called The Subway.

 

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