Swarm Of Bees Kills Grade 2 Winner Air Support In India

Air Support, a multiple Grade 2 winner, was one of two stallions killed by a swarm of bees last week at Kunigal Stud Farm, The Times of India reports.

According to The Times of India, the two stallions, which also included Irish-born Group 3 winner Sanus Per Aquam, became panicked by the sound of swarming bees overhead on the afternoon of Jan. 5, and their movement made them a target for the swarm. By the time farm security saw what was going on, Zeyn Mirza of farm management group United Racing and Bloodstock Breeders Limited said the stallions had already collapsed.

“The security called the vets who arrived in about 10 minutes, but since thousands of bees had attacked them, both had too much toxins in their bodies and couldn't survive,” Mirza told The Times of India. “One of them died at 10 p.m. and the other died Friday Morning.”

Air Support, a 15-year-old son of Smart Strike retired to Kunigal Stud Farm for the 2014 breeding season, and he had become a rousing success in India, highlighted by 2020 Indian Horse of the Year and Indian Derby winner War Hammer. In total, he has sired five group stakes winners in India, including a trio of Group 1 winners.

Racing as a homebred for Stuart Janney III and trained by Shug McGaughey, Air Support won five of 21 starts and earned $937,619.

Air Support won the Grade 3 With Anticipation Stakes as a 2-year-old, and he competed in the 2010 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf at Churchill Downs. His most successful season came at age three, where he tallied victories in the G2 Virginia Derby and G3 Transylvania Stakes. At four, he won the G2 Bowling Green Stakes.

Sanus Per Aquam, a 10-year-old son of Teofilo, won the G3 Somerville Tattersall Stakes in England during his on-track career, and he has sired a trio of Group 3 winners in India.

Kunigal Stud Farm is India's oldest stud farm in India, with its roots tracing back to owner Tipu Sultan, who bred horses for his calvary to fight the British in the 1790s. The farm became home to the first Thoroughbred imported into the country with the arrival of Pero Gomez in 1886.

Indian businessman Vijay Mallya leased the farm in 1992 to be managed by his United Racing and Bloodstock Breeders Limited. Mallya has been active in importing U.S. and European runners to stand in India, including graded stakes winners Brave Act and Tejano, and the farm is a perennial leader within its region and the country as a whole.

Read more at The Times of India.

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Bloodlines Presented By Virginia Thoroughbred Association: The 1959 Classic Stars Have A Role In 2023, Perhaps

The Grade 3 Sham Stakes on Jan. 8 told us several things, most prominently that Bob Baffert's talented cadre of classic prospects includes some of the most expensive purchases in the crop and that they are very well chosen and prepared.

Three of the Baffert brigade filled the first three places in the Sham and cost $775,000 (Reincarnate [Good Magic] at the Keeneland September yearling sale of 2021), $850,000 (Newgate [Into Mischief] at the same sale), and $500,000 (National Treasure [Quality Road] the 2021 Saratoga select yearling sale).

The results of the Sham are also one more brick in the road toward proving that the sires in the 2022 freshman crop are among the best in the breed.

Such an accomplishment is not only difficult to achieve, but it is challenging to quantify, as well.

By one measure, we are seeing the racers by these new sires, such as former juvenile champion Good Magic (Curlin), win important races against the stock by other top-end sires like multiple leading sire Into Mischief and sire of champions Quality Road.

By another measure, the number of stakes winners by more than one or two of these young stallions is mounting up. At this point, Good Magic has the lead by number of stakes winners (seven). Until the Sham, he had been in a three-way tie for first in that regard with the two other sires atop the freshman sires list: first-place Bolt d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro) and third-place Justify (Scat Daddy) with six each.

Fourth-place Army Mule (Friesan Fire) and fifth-place Girvin (Tale of Ekati) have five stakes winners each. The top 10 is rounded out with Sharp Azteca (Freud), Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy), Oscar Performance (Kitten's Joy), Mo Town (Uncle Mo), and City of Light (Quality Road). Each of those have two or three stakes winners, and the top 10 freshmen account for 41 stakes winners, so far.

All other freshmen sires account for 18 more stakes winners, but it is becoming clearer by the day that the top 10 this year is a pack of salty dogs.

Among the stakes winner by Good Magic, for instance, are four other graded stakes winners, including the colts Blazing Sevens (G1 Champagne Stakes), Dubyuhnell (G2 Remsen Stakes), and Curly Jack (G3 Iroquois Stakes). Reincarnate makes five graded stakes winners for Good Magic, and he will be standing for a 2023 fee of $50,000 live foal at Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa in Bourbon County, northeast of Lexington.

Bred in Kentucky by Woods Edge Farm LLC, Reincarnate is the fourth foal out of the Scat Daddy mare Allanah, who won the Cincinnati Trophy during her racing career. This is a family of good racers and producers and traces back to an interesting fourth dam, Corner Table. Although she was unplaced in six starts, the chestnut mare was remarkable for a couple of other reasons. A foal of 1969, she was one of the earlier horses bred by John Gaines, and she possessed one of the typical Gaines pedigrees. He loved a big, active pedigree that was highly commercial.

Corner Table was by 1959 Horse of the Year Sword Dancer (Sunglow), who had sired 1966 champion 3-year-old filly Lady Pitt in his second crop and 1967 champion 3-year-colt and Horse of the Year Damascus in his third.

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A winner in 15 of his 39 starts for owner Brookmeade Stable, Sword Dancer peaked at three and ran a very good second in the Kentucky Derby to winner Tomy Lee (Tudor Minstrel) and was second in the 1959 Preakness to Royal Orbit (Royal Charger). Trainer Elliott Burch then sent the small chestnut to challenge his elders in the Metropolitan Handicap, and Sword Dancer won the race.

Burch wheeled his colt back in the Belmont, and Sword Dancer won the 12-furlong test of the champion, with Royal Orbit third, and continued his 3-year-old season with victories in the Travers, Woodward Stakes, and Jockey Club Gold Cup. High class and a hardy campaign earned Sword Dancer the 1959 Horse of the Year title. At four, Sword Dancer won the Suburban and a second Woodward, as well as the title as champion older horse, but 1960 was the first year of mighty Kelso's reign as Horse of the Year.

Sent to stud in 1961, Sword Dancer stood at Darby Dan Farm and sired Lady Pitt in his second crop, foals of 1963. She and Damascus were leagues better than the 13 other stakes winners sired by Sword Dancer, but their fame and ability was such that Sword Dancer enjoyed a significant, if temporary, vogue in the mid- to late 1960s, and John Gaines sent the dam of 1959 Preakness Stakes winner Royal Orbit to his competitor, Sword Dancer, and the mare's 1969 foal was Corner Table.

Nothing as good as either of those 1959 classic winners has come out of this branch of the family since, but Reincarnate is doing his part to correct that situation.

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Half-Sister To Grade 1 Winner Fun To Dream Supplemented To California Winter Mixed Sale

Six horses have been supplemented to the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association's Winter Mixed Sale, including a half-sister to recent California-bred Grade 1 winner Fun to Dream. The supplements are now online at 2023 index to supplemental entries.

Acclaim the Queen is by Acclamation, out of the Maria's Mon mare Lutess. Acclaim the Queen earned $68,884 on the track and sells in foal to Finnegans Wake. Her half-sister, Fun to Dream, won the Grade 1 La Brea Stakes Dec. 26. Stakes winner Heck Yeah is a full sibling to Acclaim the Queen, who is consigned by Checkmate Thoroughbreds.

Checkmate Thoroughbreds also consigned the supplemental entries Luckfromabove, an Irish-bred mare in foal to Halladay and the producer of two winners by Straight Fire; and D's Lovely Sophia, a Big Bad Leroybrown mare with winnings of $168,143 that sells as a racing or broodmare prospect.

Easterbrook Livestock Management is the consignor of three supplements. They are: Ultimate Assay, an unraced 4-year-old colt by Point of Entry; Hard But Smart, a 3-year-old filly by Hard Spun; and Call Spike, an unraced 4-year-old Cal-bred gelding by Curlin to Mischief.

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Ancient Peace Sells For $650,000 To Top Tuesday’s Trade At Keeneland January Sale

Ancient Peace, a Sam-Son Farm-bred 3-year-old filly by War Front who was impressive when she scored her first victory in December on the turf at Santa Anita by 4 1/4 lengths, was purchased by Boardshorts Stables for $650,000 to headline a robust day of selling during Tuesday's second session of the Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale.

For the day, Keeneland sold 251 horses for $19,865,000, up 5.33 percent from last year's gross of $18,859,500 for 263 horses. The average of $79,143 rose 10.37 percent from $71,709 in 2022, while the median of $40,000 remained unchanged.

Through two sessions this year, Keeneland has sold 475 horses for $36,126,900, just off the $36,848,700 reported for 511 horses sold in 2022. The average of $76,057 increased 5.47 percent from last year's $72,111, while the median of $40,000 remained unchanged.

“The session started strong and held pace,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said. “We've got to be very encouraged with the consistency within the market. Quality was selling well. There was hunger for the good stock and it was very competitive on the buying front – with frustrated buyers in certain cases – but people were happy with what they were getting for most of the stock. There was good energy around the place, and I think it bodes well as we power into 2023 and the breeding season ahead.

“There is great diversity in the domestic buying pool,” Lacy added. “The top 15 horses were bought by 14 different entities. The short yearlings were very strong, and there was strong demand for them. Young mares off the track and proven mares were extremely appealing, and people were paying a premium for them. Quality is in strong demand. People aren't willing to spend a lot of money on something they don't feel has strong marketable value. I think it is going to be healthy all the way through the sale. If you have a nice individual, it will be found.”

Keeneland Director of Sales Operations Cormac Breathnach agreed.

“The whole day had good energy and good trade,” he said. “It is always nice to finish with a couple of highlights like we did. It gives energy going into the next day.”

Ancient Peace, who was supplemented to the January Sale, is out of Grade 2 winner Deceptive Vision, by A.P. Indy, and from the family of Canadian Horse of the Year Quiet Resolve; additional Canadian champions Eye of the Sphynx, Eye of the Leopard and Desert Ride; and Grade 2 winner Cleopatra's Strike. She was consigned by Indian Creek, agent.

“We are happy that she was supplemented to the sale,” Hunter Rankin, who signed the ticket, said. “We are building a stable and think she is a really good foundation horse. Even if she never wins another race, she has a great catalog page.”

“The timing worked out with her win,” Indian Creek's Sarah Sutherland said. “She came in looking fantastic, and the pedigree speaks for itself. She showed great and was well received.”

“The supplements allow us to keep the catalog fresh and add a few select offerings with current updates,” Breathnach said. “They keep the people here through the session and bring additional people when you add this caliber of horse. It serves the whole sale well. We are proud of the whole catalog, but the supplements add a little bit of sizzle. You get a lot of attention with the horse in the brick-and-mortar auction ring.”

Boardshorts was the session's leading buyer, spending $1.1 million for two horses. It also spent $450,000 on Empire Hope, a 4-year-old winning daughter of Empire Maker who is a half-sister to multiple Grade 1 winner Sassy Image. Empire Hope also was consigned by Indian Creek, agent.

England's Rose, a 7-year-old stakes-winning daughter of English Channel who was second in the Matriarch (G1) at Del Mar in December, sold to James Schenck, agent, for $600,000. Consigned by Lane's End, agent, she is out of stakes-placed Gingham and Lace, by Kris S., and from the family of Grade 2 winner Leggs Galore and Grade 3 winner and sire Conveyance.

“My brother (the late) David Banks was a trainer here in town,” new owner Gigi Lazenby said, “and I have an oil company in Eastern Kentucky. For the last couple of years, I've decided to step it up a little bit with help from Walker Hancock (of Claiborne Farm) and James Schenck, who has been a friend and a friend of my brother for years. This is all sort of for him (David Banks). We'd like to have four or five mares. We're really interested in selling (the offspring). I'm happy with this mare, and we've got a lot of stallions to talk about. I'm just glad I'm in a position at this time to invest back into this community. I love it.”

West Bloodstock, agent for Repole Stable, paid $550,000 for Grade 3 winner In Good Spirits, a 6-year-old daughter of Ghostzapper consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent for Bal Mar Equine. Out of the winning Arch mare Mon Arch Lass, she is from the family of stakes winners Sir Five Star, Overpass and Amazing Star.

“She was a very fast mare and by a stallion that is really making his name as a broodmare sire,” Jacob West said. “She always ran in great company and held her own. She has been purchased for (stallion) Life Is Good. Mike (Repole) is a shareholder and wanted to make sure he supported him with a top-quality mare.”

“A beautiful mare,” Mark Taylor said about In Good Spirits. “(Trainer) Al Stall Jr. did a great job developing her. She had a great career. She was a high-class race mare, and Ghostzapper is the broodmare sire of four Grade 1 winners. There was a lot to sell there. She is what everybody is looking for. She's fresh off the track and ready to breed. She's got the pedigree, and she's got the race record. I knew she would sell well.”

Joining the aforementioned Empire Hope to bring $450,000 was Palio Flag, a 6-year-old winning daughter of Curlin in foal to Maclean's Music, who sold to Gage Hill Stable. From a family that includes Racing Hall of Famer Personal Ensign and Grade 1 winners Miner's Mark, Traditionally and My Flag, Palio Flag is out of Grade 2-placed winner Private Ensign, by A.P. Indy, and is a half-sister to stakes winner Great Sister Diane. She was consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent for STH.

“I've watched her run, and I always thought she had ability,” David Ingordo, who signed the ticket, said. “She is from a great family that goes back to the Phipps family breeding. (Covering sire) Maclean's Music is an emerging sire, and we all know he can get good runners.”

Selling 28 horses for $3,063,000, Taylor Made Sales Agency was the session's leading consignor.

Two horses brought $425,000 apiece.

Mike Akers, agent, paid the amount for Orinoco River, a 4-year-old, stakes-placed winning daughter of War Front in foal to Wootton Bassett. Out of Coin Broker (IRE), by Montjeu (IRE), she is a half-sister to Grade 3 winner and Grade 1-placed Donna Veloce and from the family of Grade 1 winners Cash Run and Forestry. Orinoco River was consigned by Paramount Sales, agent.

Akers said Orinoco River was purchased for a client in Europe.

“She will go back over there,” Akers said. “She is very typical of a War Front: correct, well-balanced.  I'm bullish on Wootton Bassett. I've been watching his yearlings over there, mainly produced out of French mares. Now that he's at Coolmore (Stud in Ireland) with that stallion base behind him, there's definitely going to be an uptick with his offspring in the sales ring and at the track. He's a good-sized stallion with a lot of bone, and they should complement each other quite well.”

Mallory, agent for Determined Stud, paid $425,000 for Dream Passage, a 9-year-old, winning stakes-placed mare by Stormy Atlantic in foal to Gun Runner. Out of Raffie's Dream, by Raffie's Majesty, she is a full sister to Grade 3 winner Stormy's Majesty. Dream Passage was consigned by Mulholland Springs, agent.

“I had pegged her somewhere in that price range,” consignor John Henry Mulholland said. “She's just such a beautiful and classy mare and has a lovely Constitution yearling filly. She's in foal to the best young sire in the world, probably. She stood out here and sold really well. I'm pleased.”

A colt by Uncle Mo became the session's most expensive yearling when he sold for $340,000 to Castleton Way. Consigned by Lane's End, agent, he is out of the winning Candy Ride (ARG) mare Canteen and from the family of Grade 3 winner English Affair.

“This is for my pinhook partnership, Castleton Way,” buyer Marshall Taylor said. “He had a great walk; he's a beautiful physical. He's a late May foal, and I thought he'd keep improving and keep getting better. He just looked like a horse with a lot of upside. In this market, you've got to be aggressive. Today was really strong.”

A yearling colt by Uncle Mo who is out of the Yankee Victor mare Victory Party, a half-sister to champion Beholder and Grade 1 winners and sires Mendelssohn and Into Mischief, sold to Jackpot Farm/Corinne and Bill Heiligbrodt for $335,000. He was consigned by Eaton Sales, agent.

“(Jackpot and the Heiligbrodts) are among the partners on (2022 Grade 1-placed stakes-winning Uncle Mo colt) Gulfport, so let's see if we can find another Gulfport,” said Bobby Powell, who signed the ticket. “There are options on table for what we do with him: Whether he's a resale later in the year or for the racing stable. We'll let the horse grow up, and time tell us what to do. He was the right type for us. I looked at him at the barn, and I liked his size, I liked his attitude and his presence. When this horse walked out of the barn, it was like 'Wow'.”

“He is a very tidy version of Uncle Mo, and we weren't surprised at all at that price,” Eaton's Reiley McDonald said. “You buy yearlings like that (later in the year) for $500,000 to $600,000. We thought he was really nice right now so we put him in the January Sale, where he could stand out.”

The January Sale resumes Wednesday with the third of four sessions that run through Thursday. All sessions begin at 10 a.m. ET.

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