So You Think Tops Australia’s Most Active Sires In 2022

Australian champion So You Think covered 211 mares during the 2022 Southern Hemisphere breeding season to earn the title of that country's most active stallion, the Australian publication Breednet reports.

The 17-year-old son of High Chaparral was one of 32 Australian stallions that covered 150 or more mares last year, and one of three that bred 200 or more, according to the Australian Studbook, which released its annual report of mares bred on Thursday.

So You Think, a resident of Coolmore Australia, has covered 200 or more mares in each of the past five years.

In 2022, So You Think's runners included Australian Oaks winner Nimalee, Think It Over, winner of the Australian Group 1 Queen Elizabeth Stakes, Group 1 Sydney Cup winner Knight Errant, and Group 3 winner Rocketing By and Gentleman Roy.

Coolmore Australia also stood the second-most active stallion of the season, multiple Group 1 winner Home Affairs at 202 mares bred. The son of I Am Invincible was also the country's busiest first-year stallion.

Read more at Breednet.

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‘The Ultimate Thoroughbred’: Top Australian Sire Lonhro Pensioned From Stud Duty

Today marks the end of an era for the Australian breeding community with the decision to retire Lonhro from covering duties confirmed by Godolphin Australia for the Darley stallion, very much revered as the people's horse.

The rising 25-year-old will remain in residence at Kelvinside Stud in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales, Australia, not far from where he was born and bred at the famous Woodlands Stud, with his day-to-day team and routine to remain.

“Most importantly, Lonhro retires from the Darley roster sound, happy, healthy and will remain in residence at Kelvinside. The stallion team, led by Barley Ward-Thomas and Yev Kovalov, plus Lonhro's long-time mate Deen Griesheimer and all other handlers who have contributed within our stallion barn have done a wonderful job caring for this Australian icon for over a decade, and who will continue to do so,” Cox continued.

“It's important to us that the horse retires on his terms and to all who have supported Lonhro throughout his career, we thank you enormously.”

Where It All Started

A striking black colt born on Thursday, Dec. 10, 1998; by Octagonal and the seventh foal of Shadea, Lonhro was a phenomenon from day one.

Another author of the Lonhro story is Suzanne Philcox. Well known for naming Godolphin Australia's horses, it all began for Philcox back in 1987 naming horses for Jack and Bob Ingham's Woodlands Stud.

Talking to Racenet, Philcox revealed that if not for the intervention of the Australian Stud Book, racing's most popular horses may have been called 'Tiny'.

“Lonhro's foaling sheet described him as 'tiny but perfect',” Philcox told Clinton Payne.

“At the time I was reading a magazine called Private Eye which had stories about a businessman called Tiny Rowland and he was described as “tiny but perfect”.

“I tried to get 'Tiny' and 'Rowland' for the colt, but they weren't available.

“Tiny Rowland was the CEO of the London Rhodesia Mining Company, so I used his company's stock exchange code LONRHO and made a deliberate mistake with the spelling.”

Off and Racing

A glittering 35-start career, the winner of 11 Group 1 races, 24 at Group level and 26 overall victories, Lonhro won the cream of races in Australia.

The Caulfield Guineas, Caulfield Stakes (twice), the Mackinnon Stakes, Chipping Norton, George Ryder, Queen Elizabeth, CF Orr, Chipping Norton and George Main Stakes.

But, arguably his most stunning performance came in the 2004 Australian Cup (2,000 meters) at Flemington where he was pocketed until the final 200 meters, but still managed to get up to beat Delzao and Elvstroem.

In a period of far less prize money, Lonhro amassed a staggering $5,790,510 (Australian) and was the pin-up horse of Australian racing when he retired to Woodlands Stud in 2004, with His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum securing the bloodstock operations of Ingham Enterprises in May of 2008. Lonhro has remained a Darley stallion since.

A gifted equine athlete, Lonhro exceeded his racetrack exploits while in the breeding barn.

Leaving a Legacy

“What can you say about him that hasn't already been said?” Alastair Pulford pondered. “From the time he was born he's been the ultimate Thoroughbred.”

Darley Australia's Head of Stallions Alastair Pulford has helped plan and steer the great sire's career in the Darley breeding barn for the past 15 seasons.

“He went on to be an amazing racehorse, the Horse of the Year, who then became champion sire, leading broodmare sire and now has sons at stud who will carry on his name.

“He was one of the keys behind the purchase of the Ingham racing operation all those years ago and a lot of the success of that deal relied on him.

“He's certainly got an aura about him, even at his age he's still so fondly remembered by so many people.”

Pulford said Lonhro had done a marvellous job and would continue to be well cared for in retirement.

Lonhro sired his 1,000th individual winner recently – 3-year-old Lake Agawam for David Jolly on Saturday, March 11 – and at date of publish his progeny earnings are $147,105,222 (Australian).

He has 95 individual Stakes winners of 191 Black-Type races and has sired a string of elite Stakes winners including Impending, Kementari, Pierro, Lyre, Aristia, Lindermann, Beaded, Bounding, Benfica, Denman, Exosphere, Mental and The Conglomerate.

Lonhro was crowned champion sire and leading Australian sire of winning 3-year-olds in 2010-11, the top Australian sire of 2-year-olds in 2011-12 and the leading Australian sire of winners in 2013-14 and 2014-15.

His reputation grew and he shuttled to the United States between 2012 and '14.

Lonhro also became a sire of sires – with Impending, Pierro, Denman, Encryption and Exosphere standing at stud in Australia.

Lonhro's early influence as a broodmare sire is equally as remarkable with his daughters producing 101 Group-winning horses including the likes of So Si Bon (So You Think), Osborne Bulls (Street Cry), Barber (Exceed And Excel), Niedorp (Not A Single Doubt), Golden Mile (Astern), Trobriand (Kermadec), Serene Majesty (Fastnet Rock) to name but a few.

His exploits in the sale ring reflect that of a wonderful racetrack career with his yearlings offered at public auction netting supporters $71,939,788, his top lot a $1.4 million Inglis Easter yearling and just last year producing a $1.05 million result for a filly out of Cool Passion.

However, the opportunity to race the stock of Lonhro still remains with six yearlings cataloged for the coming Inglis Easter Yearling Sale and two remaining crops to grace the sale rings.

His retirement announcement comes at a timely moment having sired Saturday's Group 1 Rosehill Guineas winner Lindermann, a 3-year-old colt bred and raced by Debbie Kepitis' Woppitt Bloodstock.

The Ultimate Thoroughbred

And with the curtain being drawn on his breeding career, Vin Cox reflected further on stories proving that Lonhro truly is the people's horse.

“A few times a year we have people come up for their anniversaries and want to see Lonhro.

“We've even had a couple get engaged in front of Lonhro, people name their kids' middle names Lonhro.

“He is a horse who has charisma, and the effect he has had on people has been quite significant.”

On behalf of the Darley stallions' team, to all who supported Lonhro's journey – we thank you.

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Clear Creek Stud Offers Scholarship For Students Within Louisiana Horse Industry

With an eye toward the future of our industry, Clear Creek Stud in Folsom, La., will once again be making a $5,000 Scholarship Donation in the name of their clients to a college student with Louisiana based connections to the Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse breeding and racing industry.

Clear Creek Stud recognizes that for many of the people who perform the hard work of this industry day in and day out, the rewards are often not financial.

“We want to help the children who come from these families who put in the long hours and hard work that are essential to keep our industry in operation,” said Val Murrell, general manager of Clear Creek Stud. 

The scholarship recipient will be chosen by the Louisiana Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (LaHBPA) and based on their opinion and evaluation of need and merit.

Interested students should send a letter and resume to Eddie Fenasci at the LaHBPA office by end of business day, Friday, May 12, 2023. Letters can be mailed to LaHBPA attention to Eddie Fenasci 1535 Gentilly Blvd. New Orleans, La. 70119 or email to efenasci@lahbpa.org.

The recipient will be named on Saturday, June 3, 2023 at the LTBA Awards Banquet at Evangeline Downs.

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Smooth Like Strait Retired, Stud Career Possible In 2024

Smooth Like Strait, a Grade 1 winner with a penchant for running second in big spots, has been retired from racing with a possible future at stud in 2024, Daily Racing Form reports.

The 6-year-old son of Midnight Lute finished his career with seven wins in 26 starts for earnings of $1,813,863, highlighted by a victory in the Grade 1 Shoemaker Mile Stakes at Santa Anita Park. After that victory, he finished second in six of his next seven starts, including the 2021 Breeders' Cup Mile at Del Mar, the G1 Arlington Million Stakes at Churchill Downs, and his defense of the Shoemaker Mile in 2022. Michael McCarthy trained the horse.

“He had so many close seconds,” owner Michael Cannon told DRF. “He almost made $2 million and it could have been 4 or 5 (million). We were starting to call him Smooth Like Second.”

Smooth Like Strait's form had tailed off after finishing ninth in last year's Breeders' Cup Mile, prompting his retirement. His final start was a fifth-place effort in the Cotton Fitzsimmons Handicap at Turf Paradise on March 11.

Cannon said Smooth Like Strait would be sent to his farm in Nevada for the rest of the year, with a possible stud debut at a farm in Kentucky or California for the 2024 breeding season. Smooth Like Strait raced as a homebred for Cannon, and he said he would support the horse's new endeavor at stud with his own mares.

Read more at Daily Racing Form. 

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