British Columbia’s 2022 Yearling, Mixed Sale Now Online

The catalog for the 2022 Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (British Columbia Division) Yearling and Mixed Sale is now online, featuring 77 horses.

The auction will take place Thursday, Sept. 8 at Thunderbird Show Park in Langley, B.C., beginning at 3 p.m. Pacific. The preview parade will take place Wednesday, Sept. 7 at 3 p.m.

This year's catalog features 72 yearlings, four broodmares, and a 2-year-old. In addition to British Columbia-breds, the catalog offers yearlings foaled in Kentucky, Ontario, and Alberta.

Residents of British Columbia are eligible for a bonus of up to $1,500 for every British Columbia-bred they purchase at the sale, on the condition that the horse's papers are left at the the Hastings Racecourse racing office through the end of the 2023 racing season at the track, with exceptions made for stakes races.

British Columbian stallions represented in the catalog include Bakken, Counterforce, Finality, Lent, Mass Market, Not Bourbon, Pop Artist, Ralis, Second in Command, Storm Victory, Sungold, and Value Plus.

To view the online catalog, click here.

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Gun Runner To Cover Limited Book Of Mares On Southern Hemisphere Time

Gun Runner, the record-setting leading freshman sire of 2021, will cover a limited book of mares on Southern Hemisphere time this summer at Three Chimneys Farm, Thoroughbred Daily News reports.

The 9-year-old son of Candy Ride will stand for an advertised fee of $75,000 for Southern Hemisphere season matings. He started the traditional 2022 Northern Hemisphere breeding season at $125,000 before later being taken to a private fee.

“The decision to make the stallion available to cover Southern Hemisphere time is two-fold; firstly, there have been a lot of inquiries about him and we have some matings booked already,” Three Chimneys vice president Doug Cauthen told TDN. “Secondly, on a limited basis, we want to try to introduce him into the market because we believe he has all the potential to be a successful Southern Hemisphere (sire) as well.”

Gun Runner set the North American record for freshman sire earnings last year, racking up $4,278,640, led by Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner and eventual champion 2-year-old filly Echo Zulu.

He has come back strong in 2022, with a group of runners including Preakness Stakes winner Early Voting, Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby winner Taiba, and G1 Arkansas Derby winner Cyberknife.

Read more at Thoroughbred Daily News.

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Pennsylvania Leaderboard Presented By Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association: Jump Start, Uncle Lino Racked Up Stallion Awards In Early 2022

The race for leading sire by Pennsylvania stallion award earnings looked through the end of March like it often does at the end of the year, featuring the stalwart Jump Start with a comfortable lead.

However, the race percolating below the surface showcased a young stallion on the rise.

Uncle Lino, who joined Jump Start at Northview PA before moving to the operation's Maryland branch, is firmly in second place by 2022 incentive earnings, making his owner $39,341 through March 31.

A Grade 1-placed stakes-winning son of Uncle Mo, Uncle Lino's oldest runners are just four years old, but he has quickly amassed a solid resume with his runners in the Keystone State. Though he is still seeking his first stakes winner, he boasted seven stakes-placed runners at the time.

In Pennsylvania, stallion owners earn a 10 percent share of purse earnings earned by a runner bred and sired in the state when they finish in the top three at a Pennsylvania racetrack.

By that metric, Uncle Lino was most supported through the first three months of 2022 by Far Mo Power, a 4-year-old gelding who generated $3,528 in stallion awards.

Far Mo Power went two-for-two through the end of March, taking a pair of optional claiming races at Parx Racing.

His first start of the year on Jan. 26 was an eventful one, stumbling out of the gate, settling wide in the middle of the pack, and getting up at the wire to prevail by a head in a seven-furlong race. The gelding then followed up with a far easier trip on March 8, staying within striking distance of the leader and kicking free to win another seven-furlong sprint by 4 1/2 lengths.

Far Mo Power is owned by Joseph Sutton and trained by Louis Linder Jr. He was bred by Peter Giangiulio, out of the stakes-placed Power By Far mare J.D. Safari.

Burano, a 3-year-old filly, was a close second among Uncle Lino's stallion award earners, making the Northview operation $3,300 through the end of March.

The filly started the season with a bang, crushing a one-mile Parx maiden special weight field by 6 1/2 lengths in a near wire-to-wire effort on Jan. 3. She then finished second in a Jan. 19 allowance optional claiming race at Parx, going one mile and 70 yards.

Burano is trained by John Servis, and she runs as a homebred for S.M.D. Ltd. She is out of the winning Sir Cat mare Catsuit.

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Maryland Horse Breeders Association Board Selects 2022-2023 Officers

At the Maryland Horse Breeders Association Board of Directors' meeting held Monday, July 18, the new board elected Kent Murray as president, Christine W. Holden as vice president and Michael Horning as secretary/treasurer.

Murray, a program manager for Northrop Grumman Corporation, grew up on his family's Murmur Farm in Darlington, and continues to serve the farm as a consultant and account manager. He and his wife, Donna, own Twin Oaks Farm, a boarding facility, in Aberdeen.

Holden, general manager of Country Life and Merryland Farms, where she has worked since 2004, is serving her third term on the board after first being elected in 2018.

A retired insurance executive and current board member of the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, Horning was a presidential appointee to the MHBA board in 2018 and elected for a three-year term in 2019.

Richard F. Blue Jr, the prior MHBA president, was ineligible for reelection, due to having served six consecutive years on the MHBA board.

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