Galiway Share Tops Final Arqana Online Sale For 2023

A share in Haras de Colleville stallion Galiway (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) was purchased by the Broadhurst Agency's Laurent Benoit for €160,000 to be the top-priced offering during Arqana's final online sale of the year Tuesday, Dec. 19.

The rising 13-year-old is the sire of 14 black-type winners, eight at group level, including G1 Champion S. and G1 Prix Jean Luc Lagardere hero Sealiway (Fr) and Sunway (Fr), victorious in the G1 Criterium International. Galiway is also the sire of Vauban (Fr), a Group 3 winner on the flat and a jumps horse of considerable talent.

A share in Sealiway, whose first foals are due next season, was knocked down to France Turf International for €56,000, while a breeding right in Cracksman (GB) (Frankel {GB}), sire of G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Ace Impact (Ire), was sold to Ladyswood Stud for €50,000.

Following over 200 bids, seven of the eight breeding rights and stallion shares were sold for a total of €383,000 (outside of the sealed bid).

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Aqueduct: Under 20’s Challenge Will Run Two Divisions During Winter/Spring Meets

The Under 20's Challenge will return for the upcoming winter and spring meets at Aqueduct Racetrack with two divisions: Division A for trainers with 11-20 stalls and Division B for trainers with 1-10 stalls.

The program, launched in 2018 and open to local trainers with 20 or fewer horses nationwide, will begin with the opening of the Aqueduct winter meet on Monday, January 1 and continuing through the conclusion of the Aqueduct spring meet.

The top-six trainers in Division A will share a prize pool of $60,000 with the winner receiving $16,000. The top-five trainers in Division B will share a prize pool of $50,000 with the winner also receiving $16,000. Stall allotments for the 2024 Aqueduct winter/spring meets will be used to determine eligible trainers.

Trainers earn points based on their horses' performances in overnight races at Aqueduct from January 1 through the end of the Big A spring meet. Stakes races will not count for the purpose of this contest. Points will be tallied and records verified on May 30, and awards will be granted thereafter.

To retain eligibility in Division A, there can be no more than 20 horses on a trainer's roster at any given time, although a trainer's stable may grow above 20 horses through claiming activity. A trainer may replace a claimed horse who was on their roster with another claimed horse. After a horse is claimed, it will be added to the trainer's roster only at the trainer's request.

To retain eligibility in Division B, there can be no more than 10 horses on a trainer's roster at any given time, although a trainer's stable may grow above 10 horses through claiming activity. A trainer may replace a claimed horse who was on their roster with another claimed horse. After a horse is claimed, it will be added to the trainer's roster only at the trainer's request.

A horse that ends up on the stewards' list for poor performance will not earn the trainer points for that race. Horses that are running for 50 percent or less of the claiming price from their most recent start will only be eligible to earn 50 percent of the typical points for that race.

In addition, horses can only earn contest points for two races within a given 30-day time period. A horse may enter in additional races during that time frame but will not earn contest points for those additional races.

Contest point structure:

Dirt Races – All non-stakes races

1st Place – 6 points

2nd Place – 5 points

3rd Place – 4 points

4th Place – 3 points

5th Place – 2 points

Turf Races – All non-stakes races

1st Place – 5 points

2nd Place – 4 points

3rd Place – 3 points

4th Place – 2 points

5th Place – 1 point

Trainer Bonuses:

Division A (stalls 11-20) – Prize Pool: $60,000

1st Place – $16,000

2nd Place – $12,000

3rd Place – $10,000

4th Place – $9,000

5th Place – $7,000

6th Place – $6,000

Division B (stalls 1-10)– Prize Pool: $50,000

1st Place – $16,000

2nd Place – $12,000

3rd Place – $10,000

4th Place – $7,000

5th Place – $5,000

Deadlines:

  • December 28 – All contest applications must be in no later than 3:30 p.m.
  • December 31 – List of eligible contest trainers posted
  • January 1 – Contest begins
  • March 30 – No additional horses may be added to earn contest points (unless replacing a claimed or injured horse as per contest rules)
  • June 1 – Awards scheduled to be paid out

Past winners of the Under 20s Challenge:

  • 2023 Aqueduct winter/spring meet Division A – Oscar Barrera, III
  • 2023 Aqueduct winter/spring meet Division B – Pat Quick
  • 2021-22 Aqueduct winter/spring meet – Oscar Barrera, III
  • 2021 Belmont spring/summer – Mertkan Kantarmaci
  • 2020-21 Aqueduct winter – Mertkan Kantarmaci
  • 2019-20 Aqueduct winter – Eddie Barker/Mertkan Kantarmaci (tie)
  • 2019 Belmont spring/summer – Mertkan Kantarmaci
  • 2018-19 Aqueduct winter – Mertkan Kantarmaci
  • 2018 Belmont spring/summer – Eddie Barker

For more information, please visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/horsemen.

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Steeplechase Horse Of The Year Andi’amu Retired To Kentucky Horse Park Hall Of Champions

Ballybristol Farm, LLC announced Tuesday that Andi'amu, the National Steeplechase Association Timber Horse of the Year for 2019 and 2022, will retire to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Kentucky. The 13-year-old Thoroughbred will be the first steeplechase horse to reside at the park's Hall of Champions barn.

“As a two-time National Steeplechase Association Timber Horse of the Year, Andi'amu, was a dominant force until his recent retirement. His addition to the Hall of Champions celebrates his success in his sport and recognizes the importance of steeplechase in the history of the Kentucky Horse Park,” said President Lee Carter. “We are grateful to Ballybristol Farm and Tom Collins for sharing Andi'amu with the park and our guests.”

Andi'amu was sired by Walk in the Park (IRE) and foaled in France in 2010. He began his flat racing career in France in 2012 and switched to jump racing in the United Kingdom in 2013. In 2015, he was purchased by Ballybristol Farm LLC and began his U.S. career participating in hurdle races which are generally 2 to 2 ½ miles long and the fences are 51 inches high. In 2017 and 2018, he switched to Timber Races where the distances are generally 3 to 4 miles long and fences are higher and may be constructed of timber, masonry or other materials.

In the U.S., Andi'amu was trained by Leslie Young in Pennsylvania from 2015 to 2023 when he moved to Neil Norris in Middleburg, Virginia. He raced at Steeplechase venues along the east coast from New York to Virginia and in Tennessee. He also ran in hurdle races at the predominately flat tracks of Monmouth and Saratoga.

In his racing career, Andi'amu earned $544,400. This is a remarkable amount of prize money considering shorter race seasons and the lower purses for steeplechase races, especially timber races. In 49 starts, Andi'amu had 15 firsts, 12 seconds, 5 thirds and won 10 stakes races. In 2022 he was named Virginia Steeplechase Association Steeplechase Horse of the Year.

Andi'amu will reside at the Hall of Champions with Thoroughbreds Accelerate and Roy H; Standardbred Pacers Western Dreamer and Won The West; and Standardbred Trotters Mr. Muscleman and Marion Marauder.

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Well-Traveled My Destiny Gets To Make Final Start At Home In Saturday’s Sugar Swirl

After crisscrossing the country with stops in Kentucky, California, Oklahoma and Ohio, Sam Wilensky's multiple stakes winner My Destiny is back home for what is expected to be her last race in Saturday's $125,000 Sugar Swirl (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

The 41st running of the six-furlong Sugar Swirl for fillies and mares 3 and up is among four $125,000 stakes on an 11-race Christmas weekend program, joined by the seven-furlong Mr. Prospector (G3) for 3-year-olds and up, Tropical Park Derby for 3-year-olds and Tropical Park Oaks for 3-year-old fillies, both scheduled for 1 1/16 miles on the grass.

First race post time is 12:10 p.m.

Trained by Wilensky's father, Herman, 6-year-old My Destiny will begin her new career as a broodmare in 2024, already booked to 2022 champion male sprinter Elite Power. She is enjoying her best season to date with four wins, two in stakes, from eight starts including a career-best performance to capture the six-furlong Flashy Lady Handicap by 5 ¼ lengths Sept. 24 at Remington Park.

The Sugar Swirl will be My Destiny's 27th start and 11th at Gulfstream, but just her first since capturing a 6 ½-furlong optional claimer March 24 by three lengths as the favorite under Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano.

“It feels like she never gets to race here,” Sam Wilensky said. “Unfortunately, there's only so many stakes that are offered and she's gone through all her conditions so it's just kind of rare to have an opportunity at home, but this works out perfectly.

“This will probably be her last race and then she's going to retire to be a broodmare,” he added. “There's a small chance of one more race depending on how this race goes. If she hits the board first, second or third in the Grade 3, that'll kind of complete the resume.”

Wilensky claimed My Destiny for $12,500 out of a Nov. 5, 2021 win at Gulfstream, and since then has registered seven wins, two seconds and two thirds from 16 Thoroughbred starts, as well as a 1,000-yard mixed breed race last August at Los Alamitos.

“You could never expect a [$12,500], non-winners of three life filly to do what she's done,” he said. “She's just a pleasure, not only because of what she's done for us but her attitude and the way she carries herself. She's by far my favorite horse we've ever had, so it's going to be more than bittersweet to not see her here in the morning. But if you can get off the track safely and go have babies that hopefully we can train one day, we can't ask for more.”

My Destiny enters the Sugar Swirl having run second as the favorite in the six-furlong Mahoning Valley Distaff Nov. 20, beaten a half-length after setting the pace. Her other stakes win came in the five-furlong Orleans Jan. 6 at Delta Downs.

“She's a filly who brings it every time,” Wilensky said. “That was not her best performance up in Ohio but I think that was more about the surface. Those fillies went 1:12 that day; My Destiny goes 1:09 and change or 1:10 flat. Mahoning is a different type of racetrack. She's happy to be home and going over this surface again. She's doing phenomenal, so I couldn't be happier about that.”

Edwin Gonzalez, a five-time winner on My Destiny up for each of her last two starts, gets the return call from Post 2 in a field of eight.

“It'll be interesting to see who comes down and how they do on our home field for once,” Wilensky said. “We're excited. Hopefully she can go out on the right note and it can be an end to a great career by her.”

Two-time defending Championship Meet leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. wheels Ed Seltzer's 7-year-old homebred mare Bluefield back just two weeks off a determined neck victory in the seven-furlong FTBOA City of Ocala Florida Sire Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs.

It was the eighth career victory and first in a stakes for Bluefield, who also captured the 6 ½-furlong Musical Romance overnight handicap May 28 over Gulfstream's main track.

“She went up to Tampa and it was nice to get a stakes win on her resume at this age. She came to us late but she just keeps getting better and better,” Joseph said. “She's never run back this quick, but she's in good order so I think she should run well. Hopefully she has a good week leading up to it.”

Bluefield joined Joseph's string last year after registering five wins and two thirds in her first 12 races, all but one coming in the Mid-Atlantic region. She went nine months between starts and has gone 3-3-1 in eight tries since, the only time worse than third coming when fourth behind stablemate Three Witches in the Oct. 7 Princess Rooney (G3). She was also second behind Grade 3-winning millionaire Yuugiri in the July 7 Saylorville at Prairie Meadows.

“She came to us with some good form and then she got some time off and that really helped her,” Joseph said. “She's been very consistent ever since she came back.”

Edgard Zayas will be aboard from the rail.

Joseph will also send out 4-year-old Intrepid Daydream, a recent private purchase by Miller Racing that has put together four consecutive wins including the six-furlong Shine Again and Politely and seven-furlong Maryland Million Distaff, all at Laurel Park. She arrived at Gulfstream Monday.

“It all came about very late. The owner was looking for fillies to buy and he was able to close the deal [Dec. 15],” Joseph said. “She's been running well up there against restricted company so hopefully she can come down here and run the same way.”

Tyler Gaffalione has the assignment from Post 4.

Also entered are Magna Massa, a last-out winner over older horses in a six-furlong allowance Nov. 9 at Horseshoe Indiana; Olivia Darling, runner-up in the six-furlong Skipat May 20 at Pimlico on the Preakness (G1) undercard; Headland, a 10-time winner of nearly $700,000 in purses from 43 lifetieme starts; Spirit Wind, winner of the Musical Romance and second in the Princess Rooney, then a Grade 2, last spring and summer at Gulfstream; and Napa Candy.

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