Durezza Denies Classic-Winning Pair In Japanese St. Leger

Fourth pick Durezza conquered the 3,000-meter (about 1 7/8-mile) distance of the $3,298,000 Kikuka Sho (G1) (Japanese St. Leger) Sunday to score his first graded and fifth consecutive win while vanquishing the victors of the first two legs of the Japan's Triple Crown in a stunning 3 1/2-length triumph at Kyoto Racecourse.

Durezza, who started from the farthest post position in the field of 17 in the final leg of the classic series, rushed to the front to take the lead while Pax Ottomanica sat on his tail a length behind in second. After covering the first 1,000 meters in 1:00.4, the son of Duramente was steadied to third from the front in the backstretch, briefly giving up the lead to Pax Ottomanica and Libyan Glass.

As the field started making their bids after the third corner in the second lap, Durezza was second to enter the lane, kicked into gear catching Libyan Glass before the 200-meter pole to take command once again, and stretched with the fastest closing speed to clear the wire by a comfortable margin.

Durezza covered the distance in 3:03.1 on good to firm turf.

“He made a flying start and was keen to go, so I decided to let him take the lead. He responded well between the third and last corner, which made me confident that he was going to close strongly,” winning ridder Christophe Lemaire said of Durezza. “When he accelerated in the stretch, I knew we were going to win. To see him beat such a strong field today over the 3,000-meter distance means we can look forward to him doing well among Grade 1 company over 2,000 and 2,400 meters also.”

Lemaire enjoyed a third victory in the Kikuka Sho following wins in 2016 and 2018  with Satono Diamond and Fierement, respectively.

Sent off the second choice, Tastiera, Tokyo Yushun (G1) (Japanese Derby) winner, was settled around ninth and traveled wide in the backstretch before turning home alongside the favorite Sol Oriens. Tastiera showed a good turn of foot down the center of the lane with the second fastest late kick but failed to threaten the winner in a runner-up effort.

Race favorite Sol Oriens was unhurried traveling wide in fifth to sixth from the rear, made headway at the third corner and made a wide sweeping bid into the straight. The Satsuki Sho (G1) (Japanese 2000 Guineas) winner picked off his tired opponents and dug in fiercely for third in the final strides, finishing 1 1/2 lengths behind Tastiera.

Durezza is trained by Tomohito Ozeki for owner Carrot Farm Co. Ltd. He was bred by Northern Racing from the Australian-bred More Than Ready mare More Than Sacred.

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Madness Yet Another First-Out Winner for Maximus Mischief

2nd-Gulfstream, $42,000, Msw, 10-22, 2yo, f, 5f (AWT), :57.61, ft, 2 lengths.
MADNESS (f, 2, Maximus Mischief–Mine Own, by Mineshaft) became the crop-leading 22nd winner for her first-crop sire (by Into Mischief) with an 57-10 upset at first asking. Last away and outsprinted through the early exchanges, the $15,000 KEENOV weanling turned $75,000 OBSOCT yearling–equipped with cheek pieces and a shadow roll for the debut–was angled down to the inside by Samy Camacho and commenced a steady advance three furlongs out. Swung out wide for the drive, the bay quickly rounded up odds-on On the Dot (Summer Front) at the furlong grounds and finished up strongly to score by two lengths. From the family of Capote and Exceller, Madness is the last listed produce for her dam. Sales history: $15,000 Wlg '21 KEENOV; $75,000 Ylg '22 OBSOCT. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $24,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.
O-D J Stable LLC; B-Richard E Wilson (KY); T-Joseph F Orseno.

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Last Stop for Yearlings: Fasig-Tipton October Sale Starts Monday

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton October Yearlings Sale, which has produced back-to-back record-setting renewals, returns Monday morning with the first of 1,605 catalogued yearlings scheduled to go through the ring at Newtown Paddocks at 10 a.m.

As shoppers made the rounds at the sales grounds on a brisk fall morning the Bluegrass Sunday, consignors were expecting to see some familiar trends during the upcoming four-session auction.

“It's going to be interesting to see where the level of quality is here,” said Legacy Bloodstock's Tommy Eastham. “I think [the market] is going to be really good for the horses that are perceived to be above that level and I think it's going to be more of the same for the horses that they perceive to be below that. I think it's going to be tougher on those horses.”

Despite the expected polarization of the market, consignors were pleased with the activity they were seeing around the sales barns.

“It's very refreshing to come into the parking lot early in the day and have it full up from all the way back here in the tents to the front fields,” said Stuart Morris. “I think the traffic, to me, seems to be on par. I'm not going to say it's extra, but it's definitely not weak. All of the faces that you usually see are here.”

For the second year in a row, the October sale set highwater marks for gross, average and median in 2022 with total of 1,100 yearling selling for $55,426,500, an average of $50,388 and a median of $25,000.

“Over the last couple of years, this has become a really strong sale,” said Hanzly Albina of Blake-Albina Thoroughbred Services. “It used to definitely be a lower-end horse and now there are 1600 horses here. I think there are people who are pointing horses here who need a little more time and they are more comfortable waiting to sell their horses here because they know there will be money here for them, versus having to put horses in sales they feel they aren't ready for.”

Albina said his 23-horse consignment at the October sale included yearlings who had RNA'd at previous sales, as well as horses pointed specifically to the last yearling sale of the year.

“We have horses in here that have big pedigrees that we wanted to give more time to and we were comfortable waiting until October,” he explained.

The consignment includes a colt by Curlin (hip 691) out of Kateri (Indian Charlie) and a filly by Tapit out of My Bellamy (Bellamy Road) (hip 948) who were both catalogued for the Keeneland September Yearling sale, while a colt by Into Mischief out of Indy Punch (Pulling Punches) (hip 651) will be making his first sales appearance.

“She was offered at Keeneland in Book, but I think she got overlooked,” Albina said of the Tapit filly. “The Curlin was offered in September and I think he needed more time, too, but the Into Mischief we waited on him to mature a little more.”

Eastham said the October sale is a natural place to sell yearlings.

“It's a nice sale to prep a horse for,” he said. “They naturally mature into it. You don't have to push them as much. They keep them outside longer and put a little less pressure on them.

I think you see some of these upper-end buyers that were really active in earlier sales start holding some cash for this sale. Because a lot of good horses come out of this sale.”

Morris agreed the October's impressive list of graduates has attracted buyers' attention, but he also thinks the auction is helped by its position as the final yearlings sale of the season.

“I think a lot of buyers come here because it's the last stop,” Morris said. “So as sellers, we are a little more cautious–what might be considered realistic–and buyers are a little aggressive because they have to fill orders. I think that helps this sale just because of the calendar time that it's the last stop of the year. There are 1,600 head here and a bunch of stakes horses come out of this sale every year, so if you have a big budget of $500,000 or $600,000, you can find horses here for that money. If you've got $50,000 or $10,000 or $5,000, you can find horses. So I think that creates a big buyer base.”

Eastham observed that buyers have been particularly hard on vet issues at the earlier yearling auctions this fall, but he is hopeful the last auction of the season might have them reevaluating that position.

“At Keeneland [the buyers] were strict on vetting,” he said. “A chip that would normally cost you 20% was costing you 70%. Hopefully they will be a little more forgiving on some small, minor vetting issues because we are getting to the end of the year and we can get those horses sold.”

The October sale will be held Monday through Thursday with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

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DeVaux Eyes Top-Level La Brea For Raven Run Winner Vahva

Trainer Cherie DeVaux had little time to rest of her laurels Sunday as she sent out a multitude of horses for works the morning after Vahva provided her with her first Keeneland stakes victory, a gritty, half-length win over Alva Starr in the seven-furlong Lexus Raven Run (G2) Saturday.

“She's good this morning,” DeVaux said of Vahva. “Right now the goal is the La Brea (G1).”

The La Brea is a $300,000 test going seven furlongs Dec. 26 at Santa Anita.

A daughter of Gun Runner who has won or placed in five of her six starts this year, Vahva captured the seven-furlong Charles Town Oaks (G3) Aug. 25 in her start prior to the Raven Run. Her career line stands as 4-2-2 from 10 starts and purse earnings of $873,810 for a large partnership that includes Belladonna Racing LLC and West Point Thoroughbreds.

Meanwhile, trainer Brett Brinkman said Alva Starr would be headed to Fair Grounds next weekend after the close of the 17-day Fall Meet at the Lexington track.

“I was not disappointed with her effort yesterday,” Brinkman said of Alva Starr, who battled Vahva the length of the stretch in her first race beyond six furlongs. “We will go to New Orleans with her and then get her cranked up at Oaklawn Park.”

Brinkman said he would have no qualms about trying Alva Starr seven furlongs again and one such race that could fit the bill next spring is the Madison (G1) at Keeneland.

“We'd like to make this (coming to Keeneland) part of our regular routine,” Brinkman said.

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