Thirty-Nine Supplemental Entries Added To Fasig-Tipton July Selected Horses Of Racing Age Sale

Fasig-Tipton has cataloged an additional 39 entries to its July Selected Horses of Racing Age Sale, which will be held on Monday, July 10 in Lexington, Ky. The sale will begin at 2 p.m.

The latest entries are catalogued as hips 598-636, which may now be viewed online.  They include:

Showgirl Lynne B (Hip 598): Three-year-old stakes winner of $217,900. Daughter of Constitution hails from the family of champion Escena. Consigned by Brookdale Sales, agent for Westlake Racing Stable LLC.

Not Normal (Hip 602): Three-year-old colt by Mendelssohn won allowance/optional claimer on June 13 at Parx by more than six lengths. Consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

Reflexivity (IRE) (Hip 616): Three-year-old daughter of Lope de Vega broke her maiden second time out by 2 ½ lengths at Belmont on May 12. Consigned by ELiTE, agent.

Nakatomi (Hip 617): Four-year-old stakes winner and multiple graded stakes placed earner of $440,276 finished third in Grade 3 Maryland Sprint Stakes last out. Consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

Astonesthrowaway (Hip 618): Two-year-old filly and registered New York-bred won her debut at Belmont on June 15th on the turf. Consigned by Paramount Sales, agent.

Devil's Bit (Hip 627): Stakes placed four-year-old daughter of Daredevil won her 2023 debut in an allowance at Woodbine on June 10 over seven furlongs on turf. Consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

These entries will also be available in the equineline sales catalogue app. Printed versions will be available on the sales grounds at sale time.

The July Selected Horses of Racing Age Sale will precede The July Sale of Selected Yearlings, to be held the following day.

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North Dakota, Half To War Front, To Enter Stud In Uruguay

North Dakota, a Grade 3-winning half-brother to top commercial sire War Front, will begin his stud career at Haras Gales in Uruguay, the South American publication Turf Diario reports.

The 7-year-old son of Medaglia d'Oro retired with four wins in 14 starts, earning $182,325 as a homebred for Joseph Allen. He was trained by Shug McGaughey.

North Dakota was a late developer, earning his first two career victories as a 4-year-old on the turf at Tampa Bay Downs. Later that season, he picked up a 1 1/8-mile allowance optional claiming win on the grass at Colonial Downs, and he finished the season with a wide-running half-length score in the Grade 3 Red Smith Stakes at Aqueduct.

North Dakota is out of the Grade 1-placed stakes-winning Rubiano mare Starry Dreamer, whose most notable offspring is War Front, a Grade 2 winner who has become the cornerstone of the Claiborne Farm stallion roster and one of North America's most proven commercial sires.

He is also a half-brother to Ecclesiastic, a Grade 2 winner who earned Uruguay's leading sire title seven times.

Other foals of note out of Starry Dreamer include Grade 2 winner and multiple stakes producer Teammate, Grade 2-placed stakes winner Riviera Cocktail, and Grade 2-placed Jay Gatsby.

North Dakota will stand as property of Haras Don Bebe and Haras Cuatro Cabezas.

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Kentucky Derby Runner-Up Two Phil’s Retired, Stud Plans Pending

Two Phil's, a multiple Grade 3 winner who finished second in this year's Kentucky Derby, has been retired from racing due to a fractured sesamoid discovered after winning the Grade 3 Ohio Derby over the weekend, Daily Racing Form reports.

Stud plans are still to be determined for the son of Hard Spun, who ends his career with five wins in 10 starts and earnings of $1,583,450. He was trained by Larry Rivelli for owners Patricia's Hope, Phillip Sagan, and Madaket Stables, and he was bred in Kentucky by Sagan.

After winning the Ohio Derby by 5 3/4 lengths on June 24 and showing no signs of trouble in the immediate aftermath, an ankle injury was discovered on the colt the following day.

He was shipped to Rivelli's barn at Hawthorne Race Course where radiographs were taken, and the fractured sesamoid was diagnosed by Dr. Larry Bramlage of Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital. Rivelli told DRF that the prognosis for a full recovery to racing at the same level as before the injury was “poor to fair,” prompting his connections to retire the horse.

A well-traveled runner, Two Phil's broke his maiden in his second career start at Colonial Downs, then he took the Shakopee Juvenile Stakes at Canterbury Park, and he later finished his juvenile season with a win in the G3 Street Sense Stakes at Churchill Downs. After finishing in the money in a pair of prep races at the Fair Grounds, he clinched his spot in the Kentucky Derby with a convincing victory in the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks at Turfway Park.

In the Kentucky Derby, Two Phil's was placed just off the pace by jockey Jareth Loveberry after breaking from an inside post, and he appeared clear in the stretch before being caught in the final strides by Mage.

Two Phil's will be shipped to Kentucky within the next week to be made available for inspection for farms interested in a stud deal.

Read more at Daily Racing Form.

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Bloodlines: Wave Theory And The Story Of Two Phil’s

After a brave and exciting effort to finish second in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby, Two Phil's (by Hard Spun) made his first appearance since the classic in the G3 Ohio Derby on June 24. After the strong chestnut colt won the race by 5 3/4 lengths in 1:49.60 for the nine furlongs, great things were predicted for the rest of his season.

Unfortunately, the colt came out of the race with an ankle problem, and his season appears to be over, perhaps his racing career. With the prospect of retirement to stud, here's a peek under the hood at the colt's pedigree.

Bred in Kentucky by Phillip Sagan, Two Phil's is by the classic-placed Hard Spun, one of the best stallion sons of the great sire Danzig. Second in the 2007 Kentucky Derby to Street Sense, Hard Spun later won the G1 King's Bishop Stakes at Saratoga and then finished second to Horse of the Year Curlin in the G1 Breeders' Cup Classic.

Retired to stud at Darley's Jonabell Farm outside Lexington, Hard Spun has been a sire success from the start, and he has sired 77 Northern Hemisphere stakes winners from 13 NH crops of racing age (including 2-year-olds of 2023). The big bay has 15 G1 winners around the world; his best in America include champion Questing (Coaching Club American Oaks and Alabama), Silver State (Metropolitan Handicap), Spun to Run (Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile), Wicked Strong (Wood Memorial), and Aloha West (Breeders' Cup Sprint). The latter four all were sent to stud in Kentucky at leading farms.

The first foals by Spun to Run (standing at Gainesway) are yearlings; the first crop by Silver State (Claiborne Farm) are foals of 2023; and Aloha West (Mill Ridge Farm) covered his first book this year.

Two Phil's is out of the multiple stakes winner Mia Torri, a daughter of the Sky Mesa stallion General Quarters. Mia Torri was in the money for nine of her 10 starts, winning the Sunshine Millions Distaff and Sugar Maple Stakes, as well as finishing second in the G3 Bed o' Roses and Charles Town Oaks.

The first foal of his dam, Two Phil's is a three-time winner at the G3 level and placed in G1, G2, and G3 stakes. This makes him the peak of racing quality in the immediate generations of this family, but that's not the whole story.

This is a family that has reached uncommon peaks of excellence in the past, and it is an interesting example of the “wave pattern” of breeding that Abram S. Hewitt wrote about in his columns and then in his book on the great breeders of the late 19th century and mid-20th century.

The great English brewer and breeder Hall Walker and the famed Italian horseman Federico Tesio both “believed in a wave theory of breeding,” Hewitt wrote, that showed both upward and downward momentum. Their policy was to find and breed to families “during the upward momentum phase.”

Both Two Phil's and Mia Torri are part of the upward momentum in this family, which includes the fact that the Ohio Derby winner's third dam is a restricted stakes winner. Earlier in the 20th century, this family had soared in prominence before sinking to disregard.

At the 1925 Saratoga select yearling sale, owner-breeder-trainer-adviser Howard Oots bought a Man o' War filly for James Cox Brady Sr. for $50,500, a record price for a yearling in America at the time. Tracing in the female line to Ornament, a full sister to the unbeaten English Triple Crown winner Ormonde, the daughter of Man o' War came to the sale when the superb racehorse was being recognized as a sire sensation. His first crop, 3-year-olds of 1925, included Belmont Stakes winner American Flag and others. Named War Feathers, the beautiful chestnut filly proved talented in her morning work but nearly useless in the afternoon.

Seemingly overwhelmed by the noise and crowds of the afternoon, the filly had not managed to win a race at 2 or 3 in 1927, when the elder Brady died of pneumonia and his stock was dispersed. Oots bought War Feathers for $20,000 and raced her at four, winning a minor race at Latonia.

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Oots retired the lovely young mare and bred a pair of winners from her, then a trio of stakes winners. Man o' War mares were just about the best producers of the era, and War Feathers was one of the very best among them. Her fifth foal was a handsome brown daughter of Man o' War's contemporary On Watch (Colin), and Oots sold her privately to James Cox Brady the younger. He named his filly War Plumage.

At two, War Plumage imitated her dam by failing to win, but she didn't lack ability. She was second and third in stakes from four starts. The striking dark filly with three white socks debuted at three in the Coaching Club American Oaks. She was the fifth choice in a field of nine and won by a length against a strong field. War Plumage then was second in the Delaware Oaks and bounced back to win the Alabama Stakes at Saratoga. With successes in the two best staying events for fillies, War Plumage was named the co-champion 3-year-old filly of 1939 with Unerring.

The following season, War Plumage won only once, defeating colts in the Washington Park Handicap. This was also one of the richer and most competitive events of the season with a purse of $25,000, and she was named champion of her division again.

This family had peaked in late 19th century and early 20th with Ormonde and with his sister Ornament's best racer, multiple classic winner Sceptre, peaked again with War Feathers and her immediate descendants, and has another classic performer of 2023 with Two Phil's.

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