Del Mar Wraps Up with Handle Increase; Prat Edges Rispoli for Jockey Title

During these unprecedented times of global pandemic and spectator-free stands, the 81st Del Mar summer meet wrapped up Monday with a gripping battle to the wire between Flavien Prat and Umberto Rispoli for leading jockey honors. They were tied at 49 races apiece going into the GI Runhappy Del Mar Futurity, with Prat winning on Dr. Schivel (Violence) and Rispoli finishing fourth on Scooby (Fast Anna). It was the penultimate race of the meet and left Prat alone atop the rider standings with 50 wins and $2,968,918 in earnings. It marked the fourth leading jockey title at Del Mar for Prat in the last five years, who won 15 black-type events during the meet.

Trainer Peter Miller was a runaway winner of the trainer title, notching 28 wins and $1,498,472 in earnings. It was his fourth leading training title of Del Mar’s summer meet. Conditioner Phil D’Amato came in second with 20 wins. Leading owner honors went to both Reddam Racing and Hronis Racing with the former having higher earnings–$452,180–and the latter having more wins with seven.

Del Mar closed out the summer meet with an 8% increase in total wagering compared to last year, in spite of having 27 racing days in 2020 compared to the 36 days of 2019. Total wagering was $466.68 million, an increase of $34.71 million compared to the $431.98 million of 2019. Average daily handle was $17.28 million, an increase of 44% from 2019 when fans were allowed. Online wagering increased by 125% in the state of California, with out-of-state wagering growing by 65%. Del Mar was a first-time host of California’s wagering for the GI Kentucky Derby with the seaside track handing $24.8 million on the day, the fourth-highest wagering day in Del Mar’s history.

In addition, Del Mar field size increased from 8.0 runners per race last year to 8.4 runners per race this year.

“Given the extraordinary circumstances, we are very pleased with our results,” said Joe Harper, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club’s CEO. “The racing product was first-rate and players around the country responded in kind. It is especially gratifying that we were able to achieve positive business results while maintaining our commitment to the health and safety of our workforce and our neighbors despite the obvious challenges.”

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Where to Watch/Listen: Queen’s Plate Week 2020

The horse racing world like all other areas of society continues to make changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and public health crisis. Most racetracks currently operating are doing so without spectators, and have instituted strict safety screening protocols for essential employees who are already on the grounds to provide daily care for horses.

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Love At First Photo: Shurrum Takes A Risk On An OTTB, Ends Up With Her ‘Black Beauty’

A lifelong horsewoman, Rebecca Shurrum couldn't resist stepping in to assist TAA-accredited Thoroughbred Athletes when the organization posted online about four pregnant Thoroughbred mares in a pen that needed urgent help.

She donated to the cause to help the mares, three of which were going to be helped by Thoroughbred Athletes, and decided to sleep on the decision to adopt one.

“I wouldn't have time to meet any of the three until pickup, so I had to make a choice from the three photos I was given,” Shurrum said. “I had convinced myself to sleep on the decision. In fact, I had originally talked myself out of adopting one of them before going to bed, but that would change once I had spent the night dreaming of foals.”

No stranger to navigating the unknown waters of horse shopping, Shurrum knew better than to make a decision off of a single photograph. But she couldn't shake the feeling that she got from one horse in particular.

“In all of my years my mom and I horse shopped across the state of California when I was a kid, we had come across a lot of charlatans,” she said. “However, all reason was brushed aside when I saw that black, thin, partially hairless, very pregnant mare. What horse crazy kid hasn't read Black Beauty?

“I had no idea what her name was, if she was going to be sound, but I just seemed to know everything was going to be OK. I try not to take a lot of risks in my personal life, but before I even met her, I just had 'the feeling.' Turns out, she was the only sound one of the three mares.”

That dark bay mare was Crank It Up Peggy, a Texas-bred daughter of Danotable. She raced for two seasons, making 16 starts in Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana, and visiting the winner's circle twice.

As the mare settled into her new home with Shurrum, she seemed grateful to receive care while Shurrum and her vet were left wondering how far along the she was.

“Being so thin, it is hard to know since pregnancy challenges normal proportions. I fed her absolutely anything she would eat for 60 days to catch her up. She was grateful, and I was impressed at her willingness to let me poke and prod her as we bonded, and the baby continued to grow,” she said.

Crank It Up Peggy began to feel so good that one day she escaped from her paddock and took a journey up the road but was safely caught and returned.

“One afternoon I received a call from the sheriff's department that a black horse was located three miles up the road at an oil rig,” Shurrum recalled. “”Peggy” had decided to open her gate and go for a jaunt. I had just bought a new SUV and not only did I have to drive it on gravel, red dirt roads, but I had to escort this giant mare I really didn't know back to the property I boarded on with said SUV.

“She politely jogged beside my SUV back to the farm. It was fairly warm, so I hosed her off, got her cooled off, and secured her back into her paddock. I left that night grateful I had found her and that she had come back without injury,” she said.

And the next day brought a welcome surprise.

“The next morning, with the sun rising, I pulled up to find a long-legged red filly. So windswept, so giant,” Shurrum recalled, adding that the filly was named Tiffany.

Shurrum never swung a leg over “Peggy” until a few months after that, and she continued to build off the basics the mare already knew. Now, almost four years later, Shurrum says “Peggy” is much livelier and is learning to use her body more under saddle, while her daughter Tiffany will be started under saddle soon. Shurrum isn't in a rush with either and is enjoying spending time with them—and her seven other horses.

“Showing isn't really in my future, but I do enjoy going to clinics and expanding my knowledge base,” she said. “I mainly ride dressage, but I would like to get jumping again, possibly event a little here and there and at schooling shows. With ('Peggy') being 18, I am careful with her, but she has never been lame in the four years I have owned her.

“My biggest goal for her and my other seven is that they are safe, know they are safe, and they know how incredibly loved they are.”

This story has been reprinted with permission from the TAA. Find this and many other OTTB success stories at the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance's website.

The post Love At First Photo: Shurrum Takes A Risk On An OTTB, Ends Up With Her ‘Black Beauty’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Arqana Yearlings: Select By Name And Nature

DEAUVILLE, France—Another tranche of prospective buyers appeared on the sales grounds at Arqana on Tuesday. As second looks, third looks and vettings are being completed, there is now just the nervous wait for vendors until 2pm local time on Wednesday when the Arqana Select Sale finally gets underway and they begin the learn their fate.

There is not one member of the bloodstock fraternity who believes that this sales season will be in any way easy. As one major breeder observed on Tuesday morning, “If we get through this year and find that the market has dropped by a third then that would actually be a relief.” 

Set against world events, just to be healthy in 2020 is a win, and there will be some breeders and pinhookers who fare well in the next six weeks and those who will not. Most people with a horse to sell are accepting of that situation, and all that remains to be seen now is which of the major buyers decide to participate in Deauville, or perhaps keep their money in pockets for later sales.

There should be plenty here in Normandy to tempt them, however. No shortage of well-related individuals can be found in what is usually known as the August Sale. One standout simply has to be the Galileo (Ire) half-brother to last year’s €1.625 million sale-topper, whose other siblings include his full-sister Magic Wand (Ire) and her fellow Group 1 winners, Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). This is Ecurie des Monceaux’s signature family, stemming from the purchase 16 years ago of the colt’s grandam Platonic (GB) (Zafonic) from Fittocks Stud for 100,000gns. As such, he needs little introduction, though there will be plenty of fanfare when the colt enters the ring on Thursday as lot 199 and, just to gild the lily, last year’s leading lady, now known as Philomene (Ire), won on debut for Andre Fabre last Thursday.

The siblings and half-siblings to Group 1 winners are plentiful in the pages of the Arqana catalogue. Lot 27 from Fairway Consignment is the Dariyan (Fr) half-sister to Danceteria (Fr) (Redoute’s Choice {Aus}), from a family which Dariyan’s sire Shamardal has worked so well with, namely as the father of Lope De Vega (Ire), who is a half-brother to this filly’s dam Bal De La Rose (Ire) (Cadeaux Genereux {GB}).

Another filly with enhanced claims this season is lot 39, Haras de Montaigu’s Dream Ahead half-sister to dual Australian Group 1 winner Addeybb (GB) (Pivotal {GB}). Then there’s the jewel that is the full-sister to dual Arc winner Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB}), who right from her first show on Sunday had all the composure of a horse who will be ready to face far busier environments than a sales ground. As lot 269, she follows 18 lots behind the Dubawi (Ire) (251) filly out of Starlet’s Sister (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), and of course the starlet in question as the half-sibling of this filly is Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}), but then she has a pretty famous brother, too, in last season’s G1 Prix du Jockey Club winner Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

The catalogue for the three-day sale also features the offspring of no fewer than 23 first-season sires, with the biggest representation among the pack coming from the former champion 3-year-old Almanzor (Fr). Bred by Haras d’Etreham where he now stands, and whence his sire Wootton Bassett (GB) recently departed for Coolmore, he naturally features strongly among his home farm’s draft, which has eight catalogued, including a half-brother to GI Breeders’ Cup Mile winner Uni (GB) (More Than Ready) (lot 274).

Watch This Family
The draft of Haras du Petit Tellier, the Normandy farm which has belonged to Patrick Chedeville’s family for five generations, boasts not just a half-sibling to a Group 1 winner but also a number of offspring from the stud’s own freshman sire, the G1 Prix du Jockey Club and G1 Irish Champion S. winner The Grey Gatsby (Ire).

Lot 286 from the Petit Tellier consignment is a half-brother to the dual Group 1 winner Watch Me (Fr) (Olympic Glory {Ire}), who was bred and raced by Chedeville’s partner Antoinette Tamagni-Bodmer, who now offers the colt by another of the stud’s residents, Elvstroem (Aus). 

“In many ways it has been a wonderful year,” reflected Tamagni-Bodmer, who in 2017 welcomed the first crop of foals at her own private farm, Haras de Saint Julien, where Watch Me, the recent winner of the G1 Prix Rothschild, now resides. 

“She had a little problem in February in her fetlock, so then COVID for her was not a problem as I knew she would not be running before July. In the Rothschild the track was really fast and she likes it a bit softer, but she’s such a fighter and she won. She wasn’t lame coming straight out of the race but afterwards when we realised there was a problem with the fetlock again we said ‘stop’ straight away. By the Friday she was back home in the paddock.”

It is Tamagni-Bodmer’s intention to keep a select clutch of well-bred black-type mares at Saint Julien, and her operation could hardly have welcomed a better newcomer than the filly who also won last year’s G1 Coronation S., giving her trainer Francis Graffard, as well as her owner-breeder, a first Royal Ascot success.

Tamagni continued, “To me she is really a champion. To have bred a filly like this and then to have her back not long after I have created a completely new stud from scratch is a dream. If you want to make a proper breeding operation you need to have black-type fillies at the stud. My plan is mainly to sell the colts and to race the filies.”

One filly who will certainly be a keeper is the current foal of Watch Me’s dam Watchful (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who is by Golden Horn (GB). The mare is now in foal to Almanzor. For her newly-retired daughter, Tamagni still has her thinking cap on regarding her first mate next season.

She said, “I have some ideas for Watch Me and, with all the concerns about Brexit, I will send her to a stallion in France rather than go to Britain or Ireland. We have good stallions in France and it is important to support them with good mares.”

She added, “In this business, which I would call a passion, you always have to go forward and always ask questions about what you could do better. Every day you have to learn and you have to ask what you can learn from someone else.”

It is clear that Tamagni-Bodmer has learned plenty from Chedeville, whom she describes as a “traditional breeder”.

She says, “He doesn’t like to see the yearlings in their boxes. We prepare the yearlings from Petit Tellier and from my stud in exactly the same way. We don’t put them on a walker, they are only walked in hand and they go out in the paddocks, which is a risk, but I think it is very good for them mentally to do this.”

It’s not only Watch Me who has provided an update for the draft since the catalogue was printed but also Sunday’s winner of the British EBF Future Stayers Novice S. At York, Lenny’s Spirit (Fr) (Intello {Ger}), who is a half-brother to another Haras de Saint Julie-bred, lot 419. The chestnut colt by The Grey Gatsby is out of the G3 Prix des Reservoirs winner Moon Valley (Fr) (Aqlaam {GB}).

“The Grey Gatsby has such a good temperament and he is really stamping his yearlings with that same mentality and plenty of bone,” Tamagni-Bodmer said. 

“He was syndicated in five days when Patrick first bought him and had around 100 mares in his first crop. He had 99 mares again this year. We have supported him with our good mares and we are looking forward to seeing how the market accepts his yearlings.”

In an uncertain year, the same can be said for all yearlings, but the breeder and consignor was quick to praise Arqana in its rescheduling of the sale not once, but twice.

She said, “I don’t think Arqana could have done more than they have. It’s very hard to say what will happen but I’m sure with fewer trainers able to travel then fewer yearlings will be sold, even though the agents are all here. The quarantine in England is not helping as a lot of trainers aren’t here, but when I look around I see beautiful yearlings and I see clients, so we just have to be hopeful.”

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