Spotlight Shines On Select Indiana-Breds For ITOBA Fall Sale

The best chance to get in on one of the most lucrative regional racing programs takes place Oct. 15 during the 2022 ITOBA Fall Sale, which will be held at Horseshoe Indianapolis in Shelbyville, Ind., starting at 1 pm EDT.

A preview night is available on Oct. 14 from 6-8 p.m. at the Receiving Barn (Barn 6) on the backside.

The Indiana Thoroughbred Alliance (ITA) invites potential buyers to take a look at some of the members' offerings during the sale with an online gallery. The gallery offers summaries of each offered horse, a conformation photo and any links for potential walking videos or radiographs.

Preview these select offerings and then prepare to bid from home, thanks to new online bidding through Willoughby Sales. More information on online bidding during the 2022 ITOBA Fall Sale can be found at the Willoughby Sales website.

Incentives to purchasing an Indiana-bred or Indiana-sired horse through the ITOBA Fall Sale abound. On top of taking advantage of the exclusive restricted races and stakes races available throughout the Horseshoe Indianapolis race meet, the highest money-earning 2 year old purchased through the 2022 sale will be awarded $5,000 to the owner at the end of the racing season.

Yearlings and weanlings offered via ITA members are sired by top Indiana stallions such as Turbo Compressor, Pass Rush, Unbridled Express and Charming Kitten. Grade 1 winners such as Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming, Goldencents and Astern are represented by yearlings as well.

“This year's variety of bloodlines offered in the sale should appeal to any buyer looking to get into the Indiana horse racing industry,” says Tony Wolfe, DVM, president of the ITA. “We wanted to make sure to highlight some of these horses as a way to support our mission of promoting the industry.”

For more information on the 2022 ITOBA Fall Sale, contact the Indiana Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, or view the catalog on the website. For more information on the Indiana Thoroughbred Alliance, see their website or follow on social media by searching “Indy Thoroughbred.”

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Preakness Stakes Winner Early Voting Retired To Ashford Stud

Klaravich Stables' classic winner Early Voting has been retired from racing and will stand at Coolmore America's Ashford Stud for 2023.

The son of Gun Runner, out of a Tiznow half-sister to Speightstown made each of his first three starts at Aqueduct, winning a 2-year-old maiden special weight and the Grade 3 Withers Stakes before going down by just a neck to Mo Donegal in the G2 Wood Memorial Stakes.

Despite having the required points for the Kentucky Derby he bypassed it and went straight for the Preakness Stakes on owner Seth Klarman's birthday, where he defeated Epicenter to record a Beyer Speed Figure of 105.

“Early Voting was an outstanding physical specimen as a yearling,” enthused purchaser Mike Ryan. “He had size, strength, scope, substance and tremendous quality. It is very easy to be impressed by him, he has all the credentials to become a successful stallion and I am very confident that breeders will love him.”

“Early Voting identified himself very early in his initial training as one of our top colts in his crop,” said trainer Chad Brown. “He has tremendous gate speed for a horse his size and incredible stamina to compliment it. His performance in the Preakness confirms his talent as one of the best in this talented division.”

“We're delighted to be standing classic winner Early Voting,” said Ashford's Dermot Ryan. “He's a very good-looking son of a remarkable sire in Gun Runner – with an incredible six Grade 1 winners from his first crop – and he's out of a half-sister to the sire of our own Munnings.”

A fee for Early Voting will be announced at a later date.

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Bloodlines Presented By No-No Cribbing Collar: Arc Winner Alpinista’s Deep Ties To The Aga Khan Breeding Program

From one of finest families in the stud book, Alpinista (by Frankel) has added more luster to the line on Oct. 1 with her victory in the Group 1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. That victory was her eighth in succession, with the last six being all G1s.

Alpinista is not especially large, nor especially massive, but all the parts of the lovely gray filly work in harmony, and she has improved consistently under the training of Mark Prescott.

Now a winner in 10 of her 15 lifetime starts, Alpinista is the ninth gray mare from the last 11 generations of her maternal line, stretching all the way back to Mumtaz Mahal, a gray daughter of the gray stallion The Tetrarch (Roi Herode).

A filly of extraordinary speed, Mumtaz Mahal was bred by Lady Sledmere of Sykes and was a foal of 1921. A hundred years ago, she sold for 9,100 guineas to the Aga Khan III, the grandfather of the present Aga, and became a cornerstone of the breeding program that the Aga Khan developed.

Trainer George Lambton selected Mumtaz Mahal for the Aga Khan, but as the stable trainer for Lord Derby, Lambton was unable to train the filly. Lambton loved a fast horse, however, and trained the highly talented Diadem, a well-recommended weight carrier named Phalaris, as well as 11 classic winners, including subsequent stallion stars such as Swynford and Hyperion.

Trained by Dick Dawson for the Aga Khan, Mumtaz Mahal was widely accepted as the best 2-year-old of 1923, regardless of sex, and the next season she very nearly became the owner's first classic winner. Favored at odds of 6-5 for the 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket, Mumtaz Mahal ”held a commanding lead at the Bushes, two furlongs from home, and appeared to be travelling so smoothly that nothing appeared more certain that that she would retain her advantage until the winning post was reached,” according to the report in the British Bloodstock Review for that season.

As the flying filly met the rising ground coming toward the finish, however, she faltered, was passed by Plack, and only her tremendous courage allowed her to keep second from Straitlace, who later won the Oaks.

Possessing speed in excess of stamina, Mumtaz Mahal was mated with classic sires in an effort to balance those qualities, and the results either had some semblance of the dam's speed, such as her talented son Mirza (Blenheim), or they didn't appear to have much racing talent at all.

A contributor of intense speed, Mumtaz Mahal became an integral part of the Aga Khan pedigrees, not so much for the immediate success of her own foals but for the immense and lasting significance of succeeding generations. Bred to classic sires like Gainsborough and Solario, Mumtaz Mahal did not have exceptional success with those offspring, but her daughters foaled top-class racers, including the internationally successful sires Nasrullah (out of Mumtaz Begum, by Blenheim) and Royal Charger (out of Sun Princess, by Solario).

Another of Mumtaz Mahal's daughters was Mah Mahal (Gainsborough), who produced 1936 Derby winner Mahmoud (Blenheim) and the high-class juvenile Mah Iran, a daughter of English Triple Crown winner Bahram (Blandford). Mah Iran was ranked the second-best 2-year-old filly of 1941 in England.

Mah Iran's foal of 1944 was a gray colt by the Derby winner Bois Roussel later named Migoli. At two, Migoli won the Dewhurst Stakes; at three, he won the Eclipse Stakes and Champion, was second in the Derby, third in the St. Leger; at four, the gray won the 1948 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

Sent to stud, Migoli sired a small bay colt later sold by the Aga Khan Studs and exported to the U.S., where he was named Gallant Man, winner of the 1957 Belmont Stakes and sire of champion Gallant Bloom, among others.

Migoli's full sister, Mah Behar, was born eight years later in 1952 and was the first break in the line of gray coats among the mares leading to Alpinista. A third full sibling, Star of Iran (1949, gray) became the dam of Petite Etoile (Petition), who was the best filly in Europe from 1959 at three through 1961 at five.

Only a winner herself, Mah Behar was bred to Nuccio (Traghetto), winner of the 1952 Arc de Triomphe for the Aga Khan. The result was the second non-gray in this line, the bay Nucciolina, a winning foal of 1957; she is the sixth dam of Alpinista.

Bred to the fast and talented Aga Khan stallion Zeddaan (Grey Sovereign), Nucciolina produced the gray filly Allara, a winner from four starts. And bred to the gray Prix du Jockey Club winner Crystal Palace (Caro), Allara produced Alruccaba, a winner of a race at Brighton racecourse from four starts.

One might have expected that this series of minor winners spelled the end of the line for this branch of the family, but it was only the end of its time in the Aga Khan's breeding operation.

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Alruccaba was sent to the Tattersalls December sales in 1985, where she sold for the reasonable price of 19,000 guineas to Sonia Rogers and Kirsten Rausing as a broodmare prospect.

To bring a price like that, after middling racetrack results for a time, indicates that the gray daughter of Crystal Palace must have been a pretty decent physical specimen. Certainly, she proved to be much more than decent as a producer.

In all, Alruccaba produced eight winners from 11 foals and four stakes winners: Last Second (Alzao) won the G2 Nassau Stakes; Alleluia (Caerleon) won the G3 Doncaster Cup; Arrikala (Darshaan) won the listed Curragh Cup; and Alouette (Darshaan) won the listed Oyster Stakes, was third in the G1 Moyglare Stud Stakes.

In addition to having a solid racing career, Alouette produced nine winners, including two-time Champion Stakes winner Alborada and the German highweight Albanova, the 2022 Arc winner's grand-dam. Both are by the Lyphard stallion Alzao.

Albanova has produced four stakes winners, including G3 winner Algometer (Archipenko), and Albanova's stakes-winning daughter All at Sea (Sea the Stars) produced Eldar Elbarov (Dubawi), winner of the 2022 St. Leger. Alpinista is out of Albanova's stakes-winning daughter Alwilda (Hernando).

With her pedigree and performance, Alpinista will have plenty of opportunity when she goes to stud, and the story of this fabulous family will go on.

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CTHS Ontario 2022 Mixed Sale Catalog Now Online

The catalog for the 2022 Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Ontario Division) Mixed Sale is now online, with 64 horses on offer.

The auction will take place Wednesday, Oct. 19 at the Woodbine Sales Pavilion in Toronto, Ontario, beginning at 2 p.m. Eastern.

This year's catalog features 24 broodmares, 18 yearlings, 17 weanlings, and three horses of racing age. Also on offer is a season to Ontario stallion Big Screen, with the proceeds going to LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement Society.

Weanling graduates of the CTHS Ontario mixed sale are eligible for the CTHS Sales Stakes at Woodbine, comprising four races with purses totaling $500,000.

Canadian sires with yearlings or weanlings in the catalog include Ami's Holiday, Big Screen, Danish Dynaformer, Frac Daddy, Passion for Action, Reload, Seattle Serenade, Signature Red, Society's Chairman, and Souper Speedy.

To view the online catalog, click here.

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