Saturday’s Insights: $500K Into Mischief Juvenile Kicks Off Career in Spa Opener

1st-SAR, $72K, Msw, 2yo, 5 1/2f, 1:10 p.m. ET

MO MISCHIEF (Into Mischief), purchased by Myracehorse.com and Spendthrift Farm for $500,000 after breezing a quarter in :21 at OBS March, makes his debut for Todd Pletcher. The 9-5 morning-line favorite is out of the multiple stakes-placed Montbrook mare Montessa G.

“He’s a horse that we really liked when we bought him,” said Spendthrift Farms’ General Manager Ned Toffey. “Saratoga is the best of the bests, it’s where people love to unveil their 2-year-olds and you better have your big boy pants on when you go to the starting gate at Saratoga.”

Fellow firster Momos (Distorted Humor), a $180,000 OBS March graduate (:21), was produced by a half-sister to GISWs Daddys Lil Darling (Scat Daddy) and Mongolian Saturday (Any Given Saturday). He is trained by Christophe Clement.

Repo Rocks (Tapiture), just a $70,000 KEESEP yearling, displays a flashy worktab for Hall of Famer Bill Mott for this debut run.

TJCIS PPs

The post Saturday’s Insights: $500K Into Mischief Juvenile Kicks Off Career in Spa Opener appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Catalog Available For R.D. Hubbard Online Thoroughbred Dispersal

The catalog for the dispersal of the late R.D. Hubbard's Thoroughbred assets is available now, offering 54 horses on ThoroughbredAuctions.com.

Bidding opens for the auction on Tuesday, July 21, and it closes the following Tuesday, July 28. All horses will be offered without reserve.

The catalog features weanlings, yearlings, 2-year-olds in training, horses of racing age, broodmares, and a stallion.

Among the offerings is Attila's Storm, a perennial leading sire in New Mexico who stands at A&A Ranch. The 18-year-old son of Forest Wildcat is a Grade 3 winner whose progeny earnings total in excess of $13.3 million. Attila's Storm was New Mexico's leading sire by earnings each year from 2016 to 2019.

Attila's Storm also accounts for several of the weanlings, yearlings, and horses in training – all New Mexico-bred – and he is the covering sire on many of the pregnant broodmares set to be on offer. Other sires represented among the younger offerings are Proceed, Marking, and Delhomme. First-year stallion Sporting Chance is also present in the draft of mares in foal.

Hubbard, who died in April at age 84, was the longtime owner of Ruidoso Downs until its sale in 2017, and he was the CEO of Hollywood Park in California during the 1990s. He was a successful owner and breeder in both the Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse realms, owning national-level competitors among both breeds.

To view the online catalog, click here.

The post Catalog Available For R.D. Hubbard Online Thoroughbred Dispersal appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Saratoga Regulars Bring the Spa to their Backyard

“And they’re off at Saratoga!”

Five words that hundreds, if not thousands, of people live to hear every July as the ceremonial phrase marks the beginning of another historic Saratoga Race Meet.

While most normal attendees were unable hear those Tom Durkin-inspired words in person this year, some did their best to make the most of the situation.

The enthusiasm from Mark Struffolino might be the example racing fans can look to emulate. Born and raised in upstate New York, the Rotterdam resident grew up spending summers at the Spa, and has attended opening day with the same group of friends for nearly 30 years.

Struffolino knew that his friends would be devastated when they couldn’t spend their summer weekends in Saratoga’s famed backyard as they have for decades, so he brought the tradition right to their hometown.

Over the past two months, the Saratoga fanatic has been busy building his own picnic area in his backyard. The project was finished on the eve of opening day, and is now complete with a TV kiosk, a red-and-white striped quarter pole and of course, a picnic table.

“This all started because of the pandemic,” Struffolino said. “My buddies were all down in the dumps, so I knew we had to do something. I took it upon myself to do something special for everyone and not waste an entire summer.”

The project was initially planned as a surprise for his friends, but Struffolino soon realized he would need some extra hands.

“When I got the idea, I put it all on paper and bought the material,” Struffolino said. “I started to build it, but then realized I was going to need more help. So I told my friends, and they all thought I was crazy.”

The most difficult part of the project was the kiosk umbrella. While the Saratoga version is comprised of steel, Struffolino and his team used framing lumber and plywood. Struffolino said the end result was a near-400 pound canopy.

“I had concrete brought in, I had to have a building permit and it was just a whole to-do,” he said with a laugh.

The finishing touch was the quarter pole, which was completed just this week.

“I saw one online and I was like no way, we have to have that,” Struffolino said. “Tuesday we finished putting in new fencing, so we wrapped up right in time for opening day.”

Quarter pole completed on the eve of opening day | Mark Struffolino

While his friends may have been doubters at first, they soon got in on the fun, even taking off work to ensure that the project was finished before the start of the race meet.

“We all agreed we needed to do more, we needed more,” Struffolino said. “We were so close to the deadline and when it went crazy on social media, we had to get it finished. The news has been here twice and Anthony Stabile wants to do a fundraiser here on a dark day. The guys are so excited.”

The group is not only a band of die-hard fans, they’ve also been involved in various partnerships over the years.

“I was in the first partnership with Parting Glass Racing with Tom Gallo years ago,” Struffolino recalled. “We’ve had a couple of our own horses and they’ve been trained by Carlos Martin.”

No matter if they have a horse running or not, the friends can typically be found at the Spa on any given race day, and are usually up before the crack of dawn to participate in the traditional run for the picnic tables.

“We’re usually at the track at 5:30 in the morning,” Stuffolino said. “And as soon as they open the gates we run in and start with mimosas and breakfast. It’s a big to-do.”

But Struffolino said the early mornings are more than worth it in order to fully experience the magic of Saratoga, a sentiment shared with most Spa-goers.

“You can’t beat the atmosphere,” he said. “It’s so upbeat, everybody is having a good time. I don’t think you’ll see a sad face in that place. It’s magical, everything about it. From opening day to Labor Day. You can go there on a Wednesday and hang out with 15,000 people who are all in a great mood. Where can you do that anywhere else?”

 

The finished project at dusk | Mark Struffolino

This year the friends were still able to have a great opening day, and certainly one that they will remember for many years to come. Struffolino reported that of course there were still mimosas in the morning, although this year they commenced at eight in the morning instead of six.

“Nobody works on opening day because it’s Christmas Day,” he said. “It’s nothing from the gambling standpoint for us, it’s the people we’ve met. Between ownership and friends of friends, we’ve met a lot of great people. So we’re going to do the same thing we normally do because it’s something to look forward to now. It’s difficult enough with the pandemic. The whole world has changed. So this was a way to gain some normalcy without it being one hundred percent normal.”

 

The post Saratoga Regulars Bring the Spa to their Backyard appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights