‘TDN Rising Star’ Happy Saver Stays Perfect in Federico Tesio

TDN Rising Star‘ Happy Saver (Super Saver) ran his record to a perfect three-for-three with a workmanlike success in Monday’s Federico Tesio S. at Laurel.

The 1-5 chalk was off well enough and took up an outside stalking role as Monday Morning Qb (Imagining) called the plays up front. Put to an all-out drive by Trevor McCarthy, the Wertheimer homebred took a few strides to hit his top gear, but he reeled in the pacesetter a furlong down and edged clear.

An impressive debut winner on the Belmont S. undercard June 20, the chestnut did his best work late en route to a four-length allowance victory going nine panels at Saratoga July 26. The Tesio winner is guaranteed a spot in the gate for the GI Preakness S. at Pimlico Oct. 3 if connections so choose.

Happy Saver, whose dam cost $600,000 as a Keeneland September yearling in 2008, counts blue-hen Weekend Surprise as his great-granddam, whose legendary produce include Horse of the Year A.P. Indy, GI Preakness S. winner Summer Squall, MGSP Honor Grades and the dam of GI Breeders’ Cup Mile hero Court Vision, sire of champion Storm The Court. Happy Week is the dam of a yearling Candy Ride (Arg) filly and a foal full-sister to Happy Saver named Happy Charger. She was most recently bred to Sky Mesa.

Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

 FEDERICO TESIO S., $100,000, Laurel, 9-7, 3yo, 1 1/8m, 1:49.15, ft.
1–HAPPY SAVER, 120, c, 3, by Super Saver
1st Dam: Happy Week (MSP, $228,674), by Distorted Humor
2nd Dam: Lassie’s Legacy, by Deputy Minister
3rd Dam: Weekend Surprise, by Secretariat
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O/B-Wertheimer Et Frere (KY); T-Todd
A Pletcher; J-Trevor McCarthy. $60,000. Lifetime Record:
3-3-0-0, $135,900.
2–Monday Morning Qb, 120, c, 3, Imagining–How My Heart
Works, by Not For Love. ($25,000 Ylg ’18 EASOCT). O-Cash is
King LLC & LC Racing LLC; B-Bowman & Higgins Stable & Cary
Frommer (MD); T-Robert E Reid Jr. $20,000.
3–Big City Bob, 124, c, 3, Shanghai Bobby–Southern Accents, by
Birdstone. ($72,000 RNA Ylg ’18 KEESEP; $140,000 2yo ’19
OBSAPR). O-Colts Neck Stables LLC; B-Buck Pond Farm Inc (KY);
T-Jorge Duarte Jr. $10,000.
Margins: 1HF, 9, 1HF. Odds: 0.20, 4.70, 28.60.
Also Ran: Mexican Wonder Boy, Amen Corner, Letmeno. Scratched: Plot the Dots.

The post ‘TDN Rising Star’ Happy Saver Stays Perfect in Federico Tesio appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

On Aftercare: Second Stride Proves There’s No Limit to the Talents of OTTBS

Kim Smith grew up in Prospect, KY and has ridden horses her whole life. Her already wide network in the Thoroughbred industry grew considerably while she was managing the stable at the Kentucky Derby Museum and exercising the resident Thoroughbred on the track at Churchill Downs.

Smith founded Second Stride, Inc. in 2005 with the goal of helping horses and people in racing by building on those relationships. The Crestwood, KY nonprofit usually maintains 15-20 horses at a time and is located at Moserwood Farm, a full-service boarding and training facility. Smith works hard at making retirement to Second Stride easy for trainers and owners. They even have an agency form so that owners need not do the transfer paperwork themselves. There is no mandatory monetary donation if a horse is accepted and Second Stride takes horses on short notice.

“I’ve been there on the owning and training side,” said Smith. “So, I know that the time it takes donate a horse matters. It’s not because racing people are insensitive or indifferent to the horse, it’s just a factor of the business and how important stalls and timing of the meet goes.”

“Our goal is to help as many horses as possible and so we make it easy to do the right thing,” said Smith. “We don’t require a donation with a horse, but most owners and trainers will offer one. My goal is to build a relationship so that if I take a horse with a tendon that will need a lot of work, I will also be offered the horse that is perfectly sound and ready-to-go.”

Smith accepts stallions and gelds them, broodmares and horses that may need time and extensive rehabilitation before they can be ridden or re-trained. Second Stride excels in getting horses placed with show horse trainers and adopters quickly and efficiently. Smith accomplishes this in no small part because of the many exercise riders and other racetrack connections who work or volunteer for Second Stride. Since 2005, over 1000 Thoroughbreds have been adopted through the program.

“Our riders are gallop riders or the people who go around and break Thoroughbreds for the farms,” said Smith. “So, we are able to get the horses retrained and ready to move on pretty quickly.”

On the adoption side, the Second Stride application is long but potential adopters are appointed an adoption coordinator who knows, and has probably ridden all of the available horses.

“Making the right match requires someone who really knows the horses and can sometimes convince people to try a horse that may not fit the original profile of what they are looking for,” said Smith. “Our return rate is extremely low and I credit the personal care we put into making the match. Many of the adopted horses that are returned, are well-trained and donated back for us to adopt out again for another fee.”

“We hit our stride in 2012 and on average, we adopt out about 100 horses per year,” said Smith. “This year, however we are already at 96 through August so, it is going to be a banner year.”

She continued, “We see time and time again the versatility of the Thoroughbred. We put Western tack on them, ride them through water, take them to cows and see how they adapt to all situations and disciplines. We have placed them in all over the country in every discipline.”

“One of my favorites is a horse named Capote Cat, by Storm Cat out of a Capote mare,” said Smith. “We tried him in every normal discipline–English and Western, but as soon as things got repetitive, he got naughty. So, we tried a mounted search and rescue in North Carolina and he thrived there. He loves that job.”

Amy Lent, of Ramblen Farm in Versailles, KY adopted Delightfully (Redding Colliery) from Second Stride. Due to an injury, the mare was never a show riding prospect. But, under Lent’s expertise, she has excelled in driving and competed in the 2018 Thoroughbred Makeover.

Second Stride sends an average of three to six horses a year to the Thoroughbred Makeover and always asks the previous owner to make a donation to cover the entry fee. If they cannot, Second Stride will pay the fee.

“The Thoroughbred Makeover has done an amazing job in its mission to increase the marketability of Thoroughbreds as show horses and as riding horses in general,” said Smith. “I love the sense of camaraderie and cooperation at the competition and how the year of intensive training gives the horses such a solid base.”

“So much is going in the right direction for Thoroughbred aftercare, including the advances of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, but funding and a lack of sound horses in aftercare charities are still an issue,” said Smith. “I wish that more owners and trainers would donate their horses to non-profits, rather than sell them privately. Sound horses that can be adopted for a substantial fee help organizations balance the cost of horses that need long-term care or more rehabilitation before they are rideable.”

For more information about Second Stride, Inc., go to https://secondstride.org/.

The post On Aftercare: Second Stride Proves There’s No Limit to the Talents of OTTBS appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘I Tend To Be A Sandbagger’: Miller Exceeds Low Expectations With Del Mar Summer Meet Title

If there was a trophy for the summer training title at Del Mar, Peter Miller's name could have been etched upon it well before the seaside track's meet drew to a close on Monday.  In fact, hyper engravers could have done so a week or two ago.

Miller, a resident of nearby Encinitas, entered the closing day program with 27 wins from 110 starters, an eight-win advantage over Phil D'Amato. Bob Baffert has saddled 14 winners and Doug O'Neill 13.

It's the fourth summer title at Del Mar, which matches the number of fall Bing Crosby Meeting championships he has accomplished since that session was inaugurated in 2014.

“I'm thrilled and feel blessed to have such a great team to work with and this is a reflection of them all as well,” Miller said Monday morning. “From the hot walkers to the assistant trainers, they all give a 100 percent effort every day. And I have owners that allow me to run their horses where I think they should be and where they have a chance to win.”

When asked before the meeting to assess his title chances, Miller was not wildly enthusiastic. “I've got half as many horses as (Richard) Baltas, (Bob) Baffert or Doug (O'Neill) and for me to win everything has to go close to perfect,” Miller said on the eve of the July 10 opener.

In retrospect, Miller said the projection may have been conservative.

“I tend to be a sandbagger,” Miller said with a laugh. “I set my expectations a little low and hope to exceed them. It's really a numbers game and if you can win a good enough percentage things (like titles) happen for you.”

The 25 percent win rate, from the second-highest number of starters at the meeting going into the last day, was sufficient to win the title by a comfortable margin.

“In my mind, 20 percent is a good win percentage,” Miller said. “Anything over that exceeds my expectations. Our horses ran well throughout the meeting. We didn't really have any bad slumps and that makes a big difference.

“I'd just like to thank the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club for putting on a pretty darn good show under the circumstances.”

The post ‘I Tend To Be A Sandbagger’: Miller Exceeds Low Expectations With Del Mar Summer Meet Title appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Pyledriver Stands Ground for St Leger

MGSW Pyledriver (GB) (Harbour Watch {Ire}) is vying for favourtism in the G1 Pertemps St Leger S. at Doncaster, as he is one of 15 horses to stand their ground in the final British Classic of the season on Saturday. A listed winner at two, Pyledriver was second in the June 3 G3 Classic Trial S. over the Kempton all-weather to open his 3-year-old account and captured the G2 King Edward VII S. at Royal Ascot by two lengths on June 16. The July 5 G1 Investec Derby did not go as planned with an unplaced run after denied a clear passage, but the colt bounced back with a 3 1/2-length win in the G2 Great Voltigeur S. at York on Aug. 19.

Said Muir, “He’s in great order and has done all the work he needs to do. As long as he stays like this for the rest of the week, I couldn’t be taking him there in better shape. I’ve always been a glass-half-full kind of person–my glass is always overflowing, to be fair.

“I think he will stay and I think we’ve got a great chance, but it is a horse race. I thought we had a great chance in the Derby, and it all went wrong, but you shake yourself down and go again…if this horse could go and win on Saturday it would be fantastic for the whole team and everyone around it.”

“The owners have turned down some big offers,” he continued. “If the offers had been accepted I don’t think he would have stayed in this country– places like Australia and Hong Kong wanted him really badly. If one person had owned him, you couldn’t have said no to the kind of offers we got–it was life-changing money–but there’s three of them, and they wanted to keep him.”

His charge’s plans, both for this year and next year are already taking shape.  However, a crack at the 2020 G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe is not in the cards.

“He’ll go for the Champion S. at Ascot [on Oct. 17] after Saturday, as long as the horse is fine. That will be his last run of the year, because we’re not going abroad–it’s too difficult with the COVID.

“Next year is mapped out already in my mind. You could start off at Newmarket in the G2 Jockey Club S., then you’d go G1 Coronation Cup S. at Epsom, G2 Hardwicke S. at Royal Ascot, the King George [VI and Queen Elizabeth S.]–and at the back-end of the season, if we’re out of this COVID, we could go for the Arc.”

Aidan O’Brien could saddle as many as four horses in the Leger-G1 Irish Derby hero Santiago (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}), Irish Derby third Dawn Patrol (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), G1SP Mythical (Fr) (Camelot {GB}) and Tiger Moth (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was second in the Irish Derby. Shadwell’s Group 3 winner Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) from Owen Burrows is also entered, as is Aug. 29 G3 March S. victor Subjectivist (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) for Mark Johnston and stakes winner English King (Fr) (Camelot {GB}) from the Ed Walker yard. The latter could instead contest the Sept. 13 G1 Grand Prix de Paris.

“He’s in great form and is all set to run somewhere this weekend,” said Walker. “We’ll have a look at both races during the week, see what the ground is looking like and decide where we go. We’ll make a decision much closer to the time.”

The post Pyledriver Stands Ground for St Leger appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights