Record-Setting Catalog Released For 2023 Texas 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale

The 2023 Texas 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale features the most horses cataloged for a 2-year-old sale in Texas Thoroughbred Association Sales history.

A total of 186 horses are featured in the catalog ahead of the April 5 sale at Lone Star Park, making it the largest 2-year-old sale since TTA Sales took over management of the spring sale.

The book features national stallions including Bernardini, Bolt d'Oro, City of Light, Classic Empire, Good Magic, Justify, Kantharos, Malibu Moon, Midshipman, Munnings, and Practical Joke. First crop stallions are well represented through Catalina Cruiser, Catholic Boy, Copper BulletMaximus Mischief, Mitole, Vino Roso, and Yoshida. As always, Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma stallions are represented in the catalog including leading Texas stallion Bradester and Louisiana's El Deal, among others.

“This is an impressive catalog for our 2023 2-year-old sale,” TTA Sales Director Foster Bridewell said. “It's deep, it's full of pedigree and stallion power, and we're proud to offer the depth and quality come April that hasn't been seen around here in a decade.”

“The commitment of our consignors, breeders, and owners to bring such quality athletes and pedigrees to our sale is unmatched,” Bridewell said. “We are looking forward to the breeze show and sale in April and we are so appreciative to those behind the horses cataloged for the continued support and belief in our sales.”

The sale is April 5 at Lone Star Park's Sales Pavilion. The breeze show is April 3 at Lone Star Park.

Paper catalogs will be in the mail soon. The interactive catalog is available now at www.ttasales.com. A full downloadable catalog is available at www.ttasales.com. Supplements to the catalog are expected and will be posted at www.ttasales.com.

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Di Paola Gives A Royal Welcome To New Stallion Serve The King In Ontario

Serve the King (GB) is feeling right at home in surroundings that are, rather appropriately, fit for a king.

A Grade 2 winner and Grade 1-placed star during his racing days, Serve the King (GB) has settled into his new home on the 78-acre farm in Schomberg, Ontario, owned by the Di Paola family, in a custom-built home once inhabited by the legendary Northern Dancer.

“When we acquired him, I realized we would have to call around to other farms to see where we could stand him,” said Santino Di Paola, of the 7-year-old who will stand for $4,000. “We had a few that said they would, but the cost was pretty high, so I thought we might as well spend our own money and build our own spot for him. My cousin Vince and a couple of his guys came up and worked long days and into the night to build this thing. We used all the old Windfields' stalls, which we bought at the dispersal sale in 2010, and cleaned them all up and put them in the barn.”

Di Paola, who trains a string of nearly 20 horses at Woodbine, stumbled upon Serve the King (GB) ahead of the Keeneland November Horses of Racing Age Sale this past fall.

The more he researched the horse, the more serious he became at bidding on the bay.

He certainly liked what he saw.

Consigned by Norris Bloodstock, Serve the King (GB) was purchased by White Birch Stable for $361,616 at the 2017 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale. His sire, Kingman (GB), is the sire of 54 stakes winners and 34 Group winners, and the second-fastest stallion to 50 Northern Hemisphere-bred stakes winners (in 1703 days) behind only Frankel. He stands for 125,000 GBP. Serve the King (GB)'s dam is Fallen in Love (GB) a Group 2-placed daughter of Galileo.

Trained by Chad Brown for owner Peter Brant, Serve the King (GB) was bred by Normandie Stud Ltd. His racing passport includes engagements at Aqueduct, Belmont Park, Laurel Park, Monmouth Park, Saratoga, Tampa Bay Downs.

In 2021, Serve the King (GB) took the John's Call Stakes at Saratoga and was second next time out in the Grade 1 Turf Classic Invitational at Belmont. He capped off his career in style when he won the Grade 2 the Red Smith Stakes at Aqueduct.

Serve the King (GB) retired with five wins in 11 races and $406,180 in purse earnings (US).

Di Paola was hooked.

“I was flipping through the catalog, and he was a supplement. It was the last day of the sale, and I was watching the bidding. The mare's side was even stronger than his sire's side, and the sire is extremely impressive. Driving home, I was thinking, 'I've got to get this horse.' But I thought he would go for a lot of money. I got home and logged on to my computer. My dad came in and asked, 'What are you doing?' I told him I wanted to get a horse for myself, possibly thinking that I could run him. Everything came back clean, his x-rays, all of that, so everything seemed good. He comes from a very reputable sales company, so I trusted them. I kept on bidding and my dad was wondering what was going on. When I showed him, he looked at me and said, 'Okay, I want in.'

“We ended up getting him, at least that's what I hoped. Keeneland called 10 minutes after the sale and my immediate thought was that we bought the wrong horse. I kept looking at the number to see if it lined up and it was the right one. I really didn't think we bought the right horse. But they called and congratulated me and then it kind of all hit me.”

If Di Paola had any reservations about the purchase, those fears were quickly allayed in the following days.

His cell phone was kept busy, with calls coming in from North America and beyond.

“Two days after we bought him, I had calls from the U.S., Ireland and other places wanting to buy him and stand him themselves,” said Di Paola, who owns a 60 percent share in the horse (his parents own the other 40 percent). “I told them he wasn't for sale, but they still asked what I wanted for him. But he wasn't for sale.”

When the trailer pulled into the Di Paola property, Serve the King (GB) arrived to a regal welcome.

It was a moment that left his new owner momentarily without words.

“I was really speechless. It took about five minutes to get him off the trailer because it was so dark out, but when he walked off that trailer, it was amazing. He is stunning. His size and you can see in his face, that shape where you can tell he's a stud, but he's got everything right going on. It almost makes me giddy. He looks like a taller version of [multiple Grade and Group 1 winner] Modern Games.”

Di Paola isn't the only one impressed by the aura Serve the King (GB) projects.

Visitors to the farm quickly take notice of the eye-catching horse.

“People who have come to see him have been blown away. He is a gentleman. He has a great demeanor about him, just pure class. I've had people try to buy shares in him, but I'm not interested in that. Maybe down the line, but not now.”

Di Paola, who began training in 2017, has now added another horse racing role to his expansive repertoire.

A former groom and hotwalker, the 28-year-old's body of work also includes owner and two Sovereign Award wins, one for photography, the other for video.

An already busy racing life is about to get even more demanding.

“I think I'm all-in. I guess the only thing left on the resume was to be a stallion owner, so here we are. I really want to support the Ontario industry and I truly believe our Canadian horses can compete anywhere and they've proven that. Seeing him and how he fits here in Ontario, I thought this could be a really good move.”

One that Di Paola, who had a career-best 2022 campaign, believes could deliver a winner in Canada's most famous horse race.

Given the stallion's name, such a victory would be, he offered, most fitting.

“People are trying to breed for distance, perhaps for a King's Plate, and this is a horse that fits that very well. Honestly, with it now being the King's Plate, maybe that's an omen. I think he could produce a King's Plate winner. It just feels like it's meant to be. I initially thought that even if no one wants to breed to him we can breed 10 of our own mares and if we get a stakes winner or two, we'd be more than happy. He's already getting top mares that are booked to him. The response has been pretty amazing from everywhere. We're thrilled to have him here.”

In a home tailor-made for racing royalty.

“It's kind of cool to look at the legacy of E.P. Taylor and Windfields, how they were a leader, not just in Canada, but all over, and realize this horse is now living in their stalls.”

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Bloodlines Presented By Mill Ridge Farm: Candy Man Rocket’s Comeback Keeps It Sweet For Sire Candy Ride

The highweighted miler in his homeland of Argentina and unbeaten in three starts, including the Grade 1 Pacific Classic, in the U.S., Candy Ride (by Ride the Trails) has proven himself a source of speed that carries at least a mile, as well as a fountain of quality and racing enthusiasm.

With more than 100 stakes winners to his credit so far, Candy Ride had another pair in the winner's circle on Feb. 25, with the promising and progressive Confidence Man in the G2 Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark., and the lightly raced 5-year-old Candy Man Rocket in the listed Gulfstream Park Sprint.

A G3 winner of the Sam F. Davis Stakes as a 3-year-old, Candy Man Rocket was a prospect for whom great things were expected and high hopes were held. As a 2-year-old in training, the good-sized bright bay worked a quarter-mile in :21, striding out as well as any horse on the grounds at the OBS April sale. He was fluent and strong in action, with a stride length of more than 26.5 feet and a massive BreezeFig of 73.

He had all the bells and whistles.

Selling out of the Seven K's Training and Sales consignment of Scott Kintz and family, Candy Man Rocket was popular with buyers and their inspectors, and he sold for $250,000, with Donato Lanni purchasing the colt for Frank Fletcher.

Kintz said, “Donato loved this colt, had seen him early at the farm, and was there to buy him. That sale got amazingly strong as it went on, and Donato came by the last day of the auction and told me that Candy Man Rocket would have brought 500 or 600 thousand that last session.”

Bred in Kentucky by R.S. Evans, Candy Man Rocket was raised just outside Lexington on the Leestown Road property of Wayne and Cathy Sweezey's Timber Town Stables.

Sent to the sales as a weanling and a yearling, Candy Man Rocket was bought back each time, then went into training with Kintz in Florida and sold to Frank Fletcher Racing for $250,000 at the 2020 OBS April sale of juveniles in training.

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“I'd had some horses for Mr. Evans,” Kintz recalled, “and after the colt had RNA'd at the September sale, he called me up and said he was going to send the colt to me. The colt had some x-ray issues as a yearling, and I asked Mr. Evans what he wanted me to do with him. He said, 'Train him,' and that colt never missed a day, never had an issue with anything. By the time he came to the sales as a 2-year-old, he'd outgrown the radiographic changes that had shown up earlier, and he was a top-notch horse.

“When Candy Man Rocket was training, he did everything right all the time; he went too fast the first time we let him run, and I wasn't too happy about it. But the jock said he didn't push him, that the colt just took off. He was that fast.”

The elegant colt made his debut at Churchill Downs in November and must have learned something, despite finishing well up the track. Returned to racing in January at Gulfstream, Candy Man Rocket won by 9 ¼ lengths, then picked up the Sam Davis in his next start. Immediately considered a classic prospect, the colt went off the rails in his next pair of starts, missed nearly his entire 4-year-old season.

Clearly, the talented horse has posed some challenges for trainer Bill Mott, but the conditioner has proven equal to them, and Candy Man Rocket has too. The horse has won his two starts since his long layoff, most recently the Gulfstream Park Sprint, and Mott indicated that he would give the horse a break of several weeks before his next race.

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First Mare Checks In Foal For Breeders’ Cup Sprint Winner Aloha West

The 2021 Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Aloha West has his first mare reported to be in foal to Carrie and Craig Brogden's, Machmer Hall mare 2015 Bashful, by Orb/Chief Secretary.

“We love having teammates like Carrie and Craig Brogden supporting Aloha West, and thankful for quality shareholders and breeders who believe in him,” said Price Bell, Mill Ridge syndicate and general manager.

Aloha West was initially owned by Gary West and trained by Bob Baffert, and his early training suggested he might be 'one of his best 2-year-olds'. He was injured prior to his first start and when he resumed training his 3-year-old season, Wayne Catalano was his trainer. With his first start in February of his 4-year-old year a winning one, and his subsequent purchase by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Aloha West went on to make eight more starts in 2021, including a win in the Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint over Champion Jackie's Warrior.

A son of Hard Spun, Aloha West is out of Island Bound, a daughter of Speightstown who won the six-furlong Grade 3 Winning Colors Stakes at Churchill Downs. Aloha West himself very much resembles this side of his family with the speed of Speightstown and his physical quality and presence. Also, the granddam is a daughter of A.P. Indy, and this provides a wonderful pedigree blend of Danzig through Hard Spun, Gone West through Speightstown, and A.P. Indy. These are three of the most influential sire lines today.

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