‘Dynamic’ Xigera Rolls Home To Dominant Falls City Victory

Richard Rigney's Xigera tracked pacesetter Jag Warrior early on, pounced to the lead at the top of the stretch, and drew away down the stretch to easily win Thursday's 108th running of the $400,000 Falls City (G3), the traditional Thanksgiving Day fixture for fillies and mares at Churchill Downs, by a widening 6 ½ lengths.

The victory was one of three wins on the card for Rigney Racing, which also annexed Race 12, a maiden special weight event, with Legadema ($10.46), and Race 9, an allowance optional claiming event, with Angkor ($9.24). All are trained by Phil Bauer.

Ridden by Julien Leparoux, Xigera ran 1 1/8 miles over a fast track in 1:50.75 while defeating longshots Music Street, who surged late for second, and Jag Warrior, who was another head back in third. Rigney and Bauer teamed to win last year's Fall City with the now-retired Played Hard.

“She's a special type of horse which makes our job easy,” Bauer said. “You hang a bridle on her and she knows what she needs to do. I'm so fortunate to be in the position I am with a great stable and owner. At the time we thought grass was her preferred surface as a 2-year-old, but she's proven us wrong. She has such a quick turn of foot which makes her so dynamic.”

After convincing back-to-back stakes wins in the Seneca Overnight Stakes Sept. 23 at Churchill Downs and last month's Mother Goose (G2) at Belmont at the Big A, Xigera was sent off as the odds-on 1-9 betting favorite Sunday in the field of seven.

Breaking from post six, Xigera settled in the clear in third down the backstretch as Jag Warrior dictated the terms through fractions of :24.03, :49.02, and 1:13.38. With a three-wide move on the final turn, Xigera dragged Leparoux to the front and emerged as the leader with a quarter of a mile to run. The only questions were who would run second, and how far the winning margin would be.

“We've always loved her since she was a 2-year-old,” Leparoux said. “May have made a mistake keeping her in the grass as long as we have, but she's had a great year overall. She's going to be even better next year. I think she's a very exciting horse.”

Xigera paid $2.30 for the win.

Misty Veil, Shezz Koldazice, Skratch Kat, Bellamore and Distinctlypossible completed the order of finish. Hidden Connection was scratched.

With the Falls City win, Xigera improved her overall record to six wins, one second, and one third in 10 starts. Thursday's $240,455 first prize increased her lifetime earnings to $817,056.

The La Troienne (G1), to be run next May at Churchill Downs, could be Xigera's next start after a freshening.

Xigera was bred in Kentucky by Cedar Hill LLC. She is a 3-year-old daughter of Nyquist out of the Black Tie Affair (IRE) mare Argent Affair. Farm Ridge bought her for $190,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where she was consigned by Lisa and Tim Turney.

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‘Perfect Show Horse’: One-Time Winner On Track, Watery Moon Overcomes Injury, Excels As Jumper

The story of Watery Moon is far more than an unassuming, fleeting life on the racetrack.

It was a modest career, the one fashioned by the chestnut, a lone win accompanied by a pair of thirds from nine starts with just over $50,500 earned.

Yet the chronicles of the Kentucky-bred serve as a warm, welcome reminder that there are good people, many of them, in horse racing, whose care and concern for the welfare of Thoroughbreds far outruns the pursuit of stakes glories and front-page recognition.

Just as it is for those who have been closely connected, past and present, with Watery Moon.

Bred in Kentucky by Eldon Farm Equine LLC, the son of Malibu Moon out of Sweet Nanette, by You and I, came to the Woodbine barn of trainer Mike Doyle eight years ago after six races in the U.S., which included a winning debut at Keeneland in April 2014.

After the half-dozen starts at three other racetracks, a trio of them at Delaware Park, the horse was shipped to Toronto with the hope of turning his fortunes around.

“The owner wanted to see if a change in scenery could get him back on the winning track, so to speak,” said Doyle, a veteran horseman who has over 1,160 wins to his name. “That was the initial plan.”

Watery Moon finished sixth in his first start at Woodbine, followed by a tenth and a fourth, the latter a 1 1/16-mile claiming race on June 29, 2016.

The horse that was sold on three occasions, the first time for $160,000, the next for $275,000, and the third time for $23,000, ran with a tag of $9,500 in that June start, which would ultimately be his final race.

Injury to his sesamoids (two little bones sitting at the back of the fetlock that anchor the suspensory apparatus which allows a horse's foot and fetlock to move properly) ended Watery Moon's racing career at age 5.

The question then became what the next step would be.

Doyle provided a quick answer.

He paid for the operation himself, a procedure performed by Dr. Orlaith Cleary, who was far along in her pregnancy.

“I called the owner and said, 'If it's OK with you, I'm going to pay for him surgery and then find him a good home,'” recalled Doyle. “They were agreeable to do that. I can't quite remember all the details of who chipped in, but the priority was about getting him well.”

After a successful operation, Watery Moon shipped to LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement Society's farm in Hillsburgh, Ontario, for his rehabilitation period.

Established in 1999, LongRun is one of the most respected horse retirement and adoption organizations, and the first industry-funded adoption program in Canada. Its scenic property, a 100-acre home to over 50 retired Thoroughbreds, is less than an hour's drive northwest of Woodbine.

“Mike Doyle is a hero to me for making sure this lovely horse was physically able to transition to a new career,” said Vicki Pappas, co-founder and chair of LongRun. “Dr. Cleary did such a wonderful job on his surgery. He is able to go on to do almost anything.”

After his rehabilitation at the farm was complete, Watery Moon was adopted. Soon after, the woman whose care he was now under had to relocate to the Maritimes, specifically, Nova Scotia, which meant she was unable to bring him out east with her.

Enter Rob Marling.

A farrier by trade, Marling is also a trainer and coach at All In One Equestrian, a private facility in Ontario that specializes in the training and development of young and neophyte horses. All In One competes in several disciplines, including hunter, jumpers, eventing, dressage, and in-hand conformation classes. As a horse progresses in its training, it is matched with its preferred discipline with the goal of achieving enjoyment and success in its respective field. The picturesque facility, located on 175 acres in Tottenham, is about an hour's drive northeast of Woodbine Racetrack.

When Marling found out Watery Moon needed a new home, he stepped to the fore.

“Originally, he was adopted by one of my shoeing clients through LongRun, but she had to move and wasn't able to take him with them. I was her blacksmith and offered to take him, which was last April. He had a prior injury to his leg, so the first thing we did was to have him x-rayed when he showed up at our place. He had a hairline fracture in the cannon bone of his front right leg, which they put five screws in. It healed up very nicely – he was doing that rehab at LongRun – and came through 100 per cent. The vets then cleared him to jump up to four feet.”

Marling maintained a patient hand with Watery Moon, eager to see if the horse could make the leap from racing to jumping, but willing to let it unfold at a steady pace.

The more Marling saw, the more he realized the gelding was a natural. ​

“We started riding him and bringing him along in his fitness and understanding of the jumping. This year, we took him to the Caledon Horse Park and started him in the two-foot six Hunters and as the summer continued, we went to the two-foot nine Hunters. We ended up at the three-foot Hunters, Adult Opens, with myself. We did a couple of Hunter derbies. He has learned everything so fast.”

The once headstrong horse, who, on occasion, would recklessly rocket towards the jumps, had indeed come a long way.

“He has a lot of confidence and sometimes he tries too hard,” noted Marling. “He's doing extremely well. As the summer progressed, as you turn the corner and start your jump, he started to read the question to be asked, where he assessed the height and adjusted his stride to understand the distance better. Before, he would blast towards the fence and sometimes he would run through the fence. In his mind, he was saying, 'I'm going for it.' ​ But he really started to learn and to understand what it was all about.”

So much, in fact, that he has become a podium regular.

“We started being successful in the Hunter ring, with seconds and thirds,” said Marling. “Going into this year's Royal Winter Fair, I had a student, Julia Riddle, ask if she could show the horse, and she did. Next year, she asked for the opportunity to take him out and show him and compete with him. So, he will have one of our students showing him in the Adult Amateur Owner Hunters.”

Doyle is understandably thrilled to know Watery Moon is prospering in his second career.

“It's great to see that these beautiful horses find a new life and that they are going to be taken care of. I have a longstanding relationship with LongRun and they have taken some of our horses over the years. Every horse we have, we find a way to help them.”

For Marling, who has worked with Thoroughbreds over the years through his farrier business, watching Watery Moon excel in a new arena is a source of pride and accomplishment.

Every time the pair steps into the ring together, it is a special moment for Marling.

“Racehorses have such a big heart and big passion. Patience isn't typically one of their strong points. They want you to get on and get down to business. But, transitioning from a racehorse to a show horse, he settles in so well. He's become a perfect show horse. He's easy going. I've had six-year-olds ride him in lessons. He's sweet. All in all, he wants to get down to work and try his heart out.”

When the time for jumping fences is over, Watery Moon won't be going anywhere. ​

“He's going to stay with us forever. Whether it's myself or my students showing him, he'll be well taken care of. We're going to try him in the Eventing world next year, just to see how he does. Thoroughbreds have always been my passion. They have been, in the hunter and jumper worlds, a bit of the underdog. They have a different language and structure, but they are people pleasers. They are misunderstood in the hunter and jumper worlds, but they are wonderful. He is wonderful.”

For Doyle and his crew at Barn 38 on the Woodbine backstretch, it is the perfect outcome.

More than enough for him to be, one might say, over the moon.

“It's so nice. These horses don't owe us one thing. We should be indebted to them, and they should all be cared for in the same way.”

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‘He’s Been Unreal’: Cal-Bred Star The Chosen Vron To Return In 2024

The trend of the racing's superstars, the horses that capture the public's imagination, the winners of the big stakes races like the Kentucky Derby (G1) or the Breeders' Cup, to ship-off to the breeding shed too soon is a sore spot for many fans who have followed their careers.

But there's a horse capturing the hearts of Southern California racing fans who has built his reputation on winning California-bred races and his trainer has no intention of retiring his stable star.

While The Chosen Vron has won a Grade 1, the Bing Crosby this past summer at Del Mar, he has done his best work in Cal-bred company, winning eight Cal-bred races in-a-row including this past Saturday's popular victory in the Cary Grant Stakes. The story will continue in 2024 as trainer Eric Kruljac has announced he is bringing the Vronsky gelding back next year as a 6-year-old.

The Chosen Vron's climb to fame started in 2020 when he broke his maiden in his debut at Santa Anita. He would win four of his six races in 2021, including two Grade 3's. He started an eight-race win streak at Los Alamitos in September 2022. It ended with his fifth-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) Nov. 4 at Santa Anita.

“I've put the Breeders' Cup behind me,” Kruljac said. “He was kind of covered up. He might have had a little trouble getting out. I think he was behind a couple of horses and when they took off he didn't have his customary kick. I think he was a few lengths better, a few numbers faster than some of his races, but that comes with the competition. I think possibly he felt like he was surrounded.”

Kruljac compared it to a scene from the movie “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”.

“When the railroad guy hired all the best guys in the world,” Kruljac joked. “Paul Newman says, 'Who are those guys?' That's what The Chosen Vron was saying about those East Coast horses.”

Kruljac is referring to the winner, Elite Power, and the runner-up, Gunite. Kruljac also believes maybe it was too much time between races for The Chosen Vron. He trained into the race off of the victory in the Bing Crosby at the end of July. That's three months.

“We took him back that day (in the Breeders' Cup),” Kruljac continued. “I think if I would have let him roll in there, I think he would have ended up a little better.”

Kruljac began entertaining thoughts of running The Chosen Vron back on just two weeks rest after looking at the upcoming stakes schedule.

“I looked forward two or three months and it's going to be a long time before the next Cal-bred race,” he says. “Another two months without running and we just did that. So I did something I've never done and let him run. We pulled blood and Dr. Araujo (his veterianarian) urged me to go ahead.”

The Chosen Vron returned to keep his win streak in Cal-bred races alive. He's won 14 races in his career, and Kruljac said after the Cary Grant win that it ranked right up there with the Bing Crosby.

“He's been unreal,” Kruljac noted after the race. “Coming back in two weeks. I was a little nervous, but the horse was so lively. Maybe we'll just let him roll early from now on.”

It's that energy and that effort that has Kruljac looking forward to 2024.

“Early in his career he had problems, he was slow in developing,” Kruljac recalled. “We had to give him some time, let him grow up. But since, he's been stone-cold sound. Three or four days after the Breeders' Cup he was jumping around playing and his coat was gleaming. He's always been happy training. Always been into the bit and still is. What a blessing this horse is.”

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