Juvenile: Maiden Keepmeinmind Deserves A Shot After Runner-Up Finish In Breeders’ Futurity

Later Friday morning at Keeneland, Southern Equine Stables' Keepmeinmind, runner-up in the Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1), and stablemate Dreamer's Disease, an easy allowance winner on Oct. 3, drilled 5 furlongs in company in preparation for possible starts in the $2 million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) Presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance on Nov. 6.

With trainer Robertino Diodoro watching trackside, Keepmeinmind with David Cohen aboard broke off 3 lengths behind Dreamer's Disease and Adam Beschizza. At the wire, the difference was a length with Keepmeinmind credited with a :58.20 clocking and Dreamer's Disease in :58.60. The duo galloped out 6 furlongs in 1:11.40.

Diodoro believes Keepmeinmind deserves a shot at the Breeders' Cup even though the son of Laoban is a maiden after two starts. His resume going into the Breeders' Cup is similar to Good Magic, who won the 2017 Juvenile and earned the Eclipse Award as champion 2-year-old male.

“In the Breeders' Futurity, he got in some traffic on the turn but then David (Cohen) tipped him to the outside and he came on again,” Diodoro said about Keepmeinmind. “I may have different thoughts if he had had the perfect trip, but there are two factors here: one, the trouble he had in the last race, and two, the way he has been training.”

Today's work came on the heels of a :49.20 half-mile on Oct. 17. Keepmeinmind is scheduled to have his final pre-Breeders' Cup work Oct. 30.

Diodoro said if Dreamer's Disease, another Southern Equine homebred by Laoban, does not get in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile field, he would pass on running the colt in the $100,000 Nyquist at 6½ furlongs here on the Nov. 6 Breeders' Cup undercard and likely wait for a race at Churchill Downs that month.

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Fasig-Tipton Releases First Group of November Supplemental Entries

Fasig-Tipton has released the first group of supplemental entries to its 2020 November Sale, which are catalogued as hips 265- 279. Highlights include:

  • Fancier (Hip 267): Dam of Get Her Number (Dialed In), recent winner of the GI American Pharoah S. at Santa Anita Sept. 26. Get Her Number will make his next anticipated start in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile. Consigned by Vinery Sales, agent.
  • Synchrony (Hip 268): A stakes performer on both dirt and turf, the son of three-time leading sire Tapit is a six-time graded stakes winner of $956,652. From a prolific Pin Oak family, he is a half-brother to two stakes winners, including GSW Chocolate Kisses (Candy Ride {Arg}). Consigned as a stallion prospect by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.
  • Indelible (Hip 269): Daughter of Tiznow is a half-sister to Essential Quality (Tapit), recent winner of GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity. who is the early second favorite for the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile. Indelible is out of a graded stakes-placed half-sister to champion Folklore (Tiznow), who is in turn the granddam of undefeated Japanese Champion Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). Indelible’s weanling filly, by Bernardini, will sell after her as Hip 270. Both are consigned by Lane’s End, agent.
  • She’s a Truckin (Hip 271): Daughter of Lemon Drop Kid is a half-sister to graded stakes winner Sheza Smoke Show (Wilko), who is turn the dam of undefeated MGISW 2-year-old filly Princess Noor (Not This Time), expected to be one of the favorites for the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. Consigned as a broodmare prospect by Pope McLean (Crestwood Farm), agent.
  • Miss Besilu (Hip 273): Regally bred 9-year-old daughter of Medaglia d’Oro is a half-sister to Horse of the Year Saint Liam (Saint Ballado), as well as to Grade II winner Quiet Giant (Giant’s Causeway), who is in turn the dam of another Horse of the Year in Gun Runner (Candy Ride {Arg}). She is offered in foal to leading sire Into Mischief and her weanling colt, also by Into Mischief, will be offered before her as Hip 272. Both are consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.
  • Anabaa’s Creation (Ire) (Hip 277): A stakes winner and Grade I-placed on two continents, the daughter of Anabaa is also a half-sister to the dam of recent G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe winner Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), as well as Eclipse Champion Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}). Offered in foal to Breeders’ Cup Champion Mendelssohn, she is consigned by Lane’s End, agent.
  • Inthemidstofbiz (Hip 279): Four-year-old filly by Fed Biz has won three consecutive races, including a three-length victory in the GII Thoroughbred Club of America S. Oct. 3 at Keeneland, which punched her ticket to the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint. Consigned as racing/broodmare prospect by Buckland Sales (Zach Madden), agent.

These and the rest of the supplemental entries may now be viewed online and will also be available in the equineline sales catalogue app. Print versions of all supplemental entries will be available on-site at Fasig-Tipton at sale time. Fasig-Tipton will continue to accept approved November Sale supplemental entries through the Breeders’ Cup.

The November Sale will be held Sunday, Nov. 8, in Lexington, Kentucky. The sale will begin at 2 pm.

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Kirk Robison Talks ‘Horse of a Lifetime’ Jackie’s Warrior On Writers’ Room

Having been involved in horse racing for decades, Kirk Robison knows how much luck plays a part in finding success. He admits as much. But perseverance also pays, and Robison has finally seen the fruits of his labor pay off at the highest level of the game, as his undefeated Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music) is set to head into the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile as a heavy favorite, with a chance to solidify a divisional championship to boot.

Wednesday morning, Robison joined the TDN Writers’ Room presented by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss his emerging superstar, the breaking news of his deal with Spendthrift for the colt’s breeding rights and what it means to have a potential Breeders’ Cup or GI Kentucky Derby winner after all these years supporting the game he loves.

Already with runaway victories in the GII Saratoga Special S. and GI Runhappy Hopeful S., Jackie’s Warrior added a devastatingly easy 5 1/2-length victory in the GI Champagne S. Saturday at Belmont.

“I read that they’ve run the Champagne since 1867, and I appreciate the fact there’s a lot of horses that were in there that are in the history books,” Robison said. To win that race is just incredible. First Landing and Dehere were the only 2-year-olds in the last 60 years that swept the Saratoga Special, Hopeful and Champagne. And now our colt did it. So putting it in that perspective, I appreciate every one of these races.”

The score earned a 100 Beyer, giving the bay clearly the two top figures of all 2-year-olds this year, and stamped him as a clear Juvy favorite. Robison said that while he’s taking nothing for granted, he likes Jackie’s Warrior’s chances to run his record to five-for-five.

“He hasn’t gone two turns yet. He hasn’t run at Keeneland. That other colt [GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity hero Essential Quality] already won a two-turn race there at the distance, so that’s a huge advantage for him, but our numbers, if he can carry that speed around two turns, our colt’s going to be very, very hard to beat,” he said. “The numbers don’t lie. And I watched the replays of the Hopeful and Champagne a number of times–he’s just a blur out there. I never dreamed I’d have a Breeders’ Cup Juvenile favorite, now we’ve got to go out and do it. But I’m extremely confident.”

News broke Wednesday morning that Robison made a deal with Spendthrift Farm to stand Jackie’s Warrior at the top-flight stallion outfit after closing out his racing career.

“They wanted to buy a part of the horse early on, after he won the Special. And I said, I’m going to wait until maybe he wins the Hopeful,” he recalled. “I wanted to control his racing career, and I got that. They agreed to that. So Steve Asmussen and I are going to manage the horse until he’s retired. I get all the purse money during his racing career. I’ve got some bonus structure in there from Spendthrift. At the end of his racing career, he goes to them and they manage the stud career.”

Asked how early he knew his colt was a runner, Robison reflected on a conversation he had with a different Asmussen as the horse was being broken at the family’s Laredo, Texas training center.

“I talk to Keith once in a while about how they’re doing,” he said. “He doesn’t get too ahead of the curve on who’s running well because he doesn’t do much with them as far as asking for speed. But I told him early on, like February or March, ‘I want to win the Hopeful someday with a 2-year-old.’ He actually said, ‘This might be your colt.'”

While Robison can’t help but dream about winning the Derby, he’s realistic about his colt’s potential distance limitations. Sire Maclean’s Music is more of a sprint influence, and his dam never won beyond 6 1/2 furlongs, so while Robison would love to win the Derby, he’s only interested in running with a top chance.

“You can’t not think about it, but I think I’m pretty good about measuring and managing my expectations,” he said. “His mother was a pure stone cold sprinter. So to even get a mile or a mile and a sixteenth could be the upper limits of where this horse goes. If we could be lucky enough to win a Breeders’ Cup Juvenile or Breeders’ Cup Sprint later on, it’d be satisfying. I only want to go to the Derby with a horse that can run one, two, three. I don’t want to be 20-1 and run up the track.”

Robison reflected on when he and Asmussen bought Jackie’s Warrior for the bargain price of $95,000 at Keeneland September, and spoke about how that elusive force of luck shined on him with a horse who’s done everything right since the hammer dropped.

“Steve called him an old soul,” Robison said. “He’s like a 6-year-old gelding. He takes everything in. He’s easy on himself. He looks around the paddock like, ‘OK, got to go to work.’ He’s a very smart horse. Takes care of himself and doesn’t get too worked up and use up all of his energy. So he’s the horse of a lifetime for a guy like me. Other people may have multiple Grade I winners, I don’t. And he may be the last one I ever have. How much can you say about luck in this business? A lot of people were not willing to pay 100,000 for this horse. So they stopped at 95 and Steve got him. If this horse had gone to 150 or 200, we might not even own the horse. So I’m extremely grateful for what we have. When you get one, you have to say, ‘Thank my lucky stars, I got one.'”

Elsewhere on the show, in the West Point Thoroughbreds news segment, the writers paid tribute to the great Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}), who was retired from racing this week after an illustrious career. Plus they broke down the Ken McPeek vs. Matt Muzikar beef that stemmed from last week’s podcast and celebrated the Grade I success of the show’s unofficial mascot, Harvey’s Lil Goil (American Pharoah). Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version.

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Patience The Essence as Quality Comes Through

None of us, after 2020, will ever again take even our simplest indulgences for granted. How much more culpable, then, was any complacency the industry may have permitted itself, over the years, in the patronage of the greatest investor in its history?

His absence from the September Sale, a year after once again heading the buyers’ table at $16 million, sharpened a sense of the incalculable collective debt owed to Sheikh Mohammed. His team did resurface, to much relief locally, for Book 1 of the October Sale at Tattersalls last week. But however he chooses to exercise his prerogatives in future, the one consolation–both for the Sheikh himself, and those horsemen he has so long rewarded for their skills–is that he has long been assured of a lasting imprint on the modern breed.

His legacy will continue to evolve, even if he never spends another cent at Keeneland. As he has always understood, breeding is all about the long game. Sure enough, for the second year running, a few days ago his Godolphin stable won the GI Claiborne Futurity S. with a homebred colt whose emergence represented a slow-burning yield on two similarly expensive grand-dams, respectively recruited to the broodmare band 15 and 20 years ago.

The misfortunes since of Maxfield (Street Sense) will certainly ensure that the Sheikh resists any complacency of his own about the future of TDN Rising Star Essential Quality (Tapit), who won with comparable authority, if in rather different style.

It is heartening to hear that Maxfield is now back in light training, his absence from the revamped Classic schedule having seemed all the more grievous after Ny Traffic (Cross Traffic)–the hard-knocking animal he beat on his single sophomore appearance, in the GIII Matt Winn S. in May–went on to run none other than Authentic (Into Mischief) to a nose on his next start in the GI TVG.com Haskell S.

Maxfield’s dramatic last-to-first move at Keeneland this time last year certainly promised a proportionate dividend on the $3.1 million required from John Ferguson to buy Caress (Storm Cat) at the Keeneland November Sale in 2000 (consigned by the peerless John Williams, on behalf of his faithful patrons at Harbor View Farm).

The aristocratic genes that warranted that outlay on Caress–soon to be enhanced by her weanling of that year, who would become Sky Mesa (Pulpit)–made little show in her daughter Velvety (Bernardini), who won on debut in England before entering a rapid decline. But it remains early days for Velvety, as a broodmare, and Maxfield could yet prove as gifted as any in his crop.

Five years after signing the docket for Caress, Ferguson gave virtually the same sum for another young Storm Cat mare at Fasig-Tipton November. Unlike Caress, who won 13 of 29 starts including three graded stakes, the $3-million, 7-year-old Contrive was unraced and had changed hands a year previously for just $140,000. The big difference, in the meantime, was her first foal Folklore (Tiznow), who had just sealed the juvenile fillies’ championship with a second Grade I success at the Breeders’ Cup.

Though unable to produce another Folklore for her new owners, Contrive did at least muster two fillies that managed a Grade III podium apiece. One of these, Delightful Quality (Elusive Quality), started out with three duds when herself sent to the paddocks: foals by Bernardini and Tiznow that never made the track, and a son of Tapit who may as well not have bothered, 10th of 11 on his only start as a sophomore at Gulfstream earlier this year. But that gelding’s full brother is none other than Essential Quality, who is now stoking up the embers for Contrive much as Maxfield did for Caress.

Like Maxfield, Essential Quality won a Churchill maiden in September on debut; but whereas Brendan Walsh started Maxfield at a mile, Brad Cox launched Essential Quality over just six furlongs on the postponed “Derby” undercard. The colt’s alacrity was anticipated at the betting windows, and he duly won by four lengths. Stretching out at Keeneland, Essential Quality held a handy position comfortably before betraying palpable inexperience when sent into the lead in the stretch; nonetheless using a fairly extravagant reach with real energy in drawing away by 3 1/4 lengths.

Cox, who supervised the campaign of champion juvenile filly British Idiom (Flashback) last year, saluted Essential Quality as the best young colt he has trained to date; while a proven aptitude on the track will obviously make the GI TVG Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, a real “home game.” He has every right, moreover, to continue flourishing on the Classic trail next spring.

For the quality of Contrive’s family is evident in the $825,000 she cost Robert and Beverly Lewis as a yearling at the Keeneland July Sale of 1999. Her dam Jeano (Fappiano), a dual graded stakes winner, was out of GI Delaware H. winner Basie (In Reality) from the line tracing to fabled La Troienne via Striking (War Admiral), 1961 Broodmare of the Year and full sister to wartime champion and Hall of Famer Busher.

Mineshaft, Private Account and Woodman are among the many distinguished animals who share ancestry through Striking; while the Basie branch gave us Smarty Jones. The granddams of Smarty Jones and Contrive, in fact, were half-sisters. As such, it seems a safe bet that the then-recent example of Smarty Jones, as a son of Elusive Quality, inspired the selection of that stallion for a couple of trysts with Contrive–one of which produced the dam of Essential Quality.

But what most obviously holds the pedigree of Essential Quality together are the sires of his third and fourth dams, Jeano and Basie. Because both Fappiano and In Reality are also inlaid behind Tapit’s dam Tap Your Heels: she is by Fappiano’s son Unbridled; and the granddams of both Tap Your Heels and Unbridled are by In Reality.

Two or three other genetic “knots” are worth untying. One is that Striking and Busher between them foaled two of the four grandparents of Seattle Slew’s dam My Charmer; and Seattle Slew, of course, perches along Essential Quality’s top line as Tapit’s great-grandsire.

Another is that Secretariat, as a titan among broodmare sires, unites three of the four stallions in Essential Quality’s third generation: Weekend Surprise’s son A.P. Indy, as Tapit’s grandsire; Terlingua’s son Storm Cat, as sire of Contrive; and Secrettame’s son Gone West, as sire of Elusive Quality. (Gone West, of course, is by Fappiano’s sire Mr Prospector; who gets an additional foothold as the sire of Preach, dam of Tapit’s sire Pulpit).

There are quite a few rabbit holes to explore here, then, albeit suggesting no more of a magic formula than usual. As already noted, this very good family has missed its mark as often as not since Contrive’s acquisition. As it happens, its only recent distinction prior to the emergence of Essential Quality is the work of Folklore’s daughter Rhodochrosite (Unbridled’s Song), who was bred by the Bob and Beverly Lewis Trust and sold as a yearling to Japanese interests. Though unable to win herself, her third foal is the top-class Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), winner of two Classics in Japan this year.

More peripherally, Contrive’s unraced half-sister by Kris S. has also strengthened the page: initially as dam of GII Demoiselle S. winner Tizahit (like Folklore, by Tiznow) and now through Tizahit’s daughter Come Dancing (Malibu Moon), who recently supplemented her Grade I success at the Spa last year in the GII Honorable Miss H.

Tapit himself, of course, sets too familiar a gold standard to require much in the way of a revisit. Gainesway’s three-time champion sire looks booked to complete a decade in the top five of the general sires’ list, and registered this 26th Grade I scorer just a day before his 27th, Valiance in the Juddmonte Spinster S.

There are some strong echoes between the pair, the damsire of Valiance being Fappiano’s grandson Empire Maker, who in turn brings In Reality doubly into play: we’ve already noted that Empire Maker’s sire Unbridled owes his grand-dam to In Reality, while his famous dam Toussaud (El Gran Senor) is out of In Reality’s daughter Image Of Reality. As sire also of Tap Your Heels, Unbridled gets a 3×3 mirror in Valiance. (Seattle Slew also recurs top and bottom, 4×4: all quite reminiscent of Tapit’s son Tapwrit, whose third dam is by Seattle Slew; and whose damsire Successful Appeal is a grandson of In Reality).

A lot of these strands are also entwined in Tacitus, whose damsire First Defence is not only a grandson of Unbridled but out of Honest Lady, Toussaud’s daughter by Seattle Slew. His odds-on failure in the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup on Saturday sealed his status as one of the more exasperating animals around, and it would be characteristic if he were now to outrun contrasting odds at the Breeders’ Cup–by no means an outlandish scenario, perhaps with a reversion to the kind of stalking tactics that worked well when he last flattered to deceive in the GII Suburban S.

While Tacitus quailed before the prospect of giving his sire three Grade Is in eight days, Tapit did at least celebrate a fourth elite success as a broodmare sire on Saturday when Harvey’s Lil Goil (American Pharoah) won the GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (presented by Dixiana) at Keeneland. He must share the credit here, obviously, not least as the unraced daughter who produced this filly is a half-sister to I’ll Have Another, whose Derby success could not prevent the sale of his sire Flower Alley to South Africa. Given that their dam Arch’s Girl Edith (Arch) is also responsible for dual graded stakes scorer Golden Award (Medaglia d’Oro), she has certainly contributed to the excellent record of her own sire in this sphere. (Arch is most notably broodmare sire of Uncle Mo).

One favorite who did match his billing in the expected style over the weekend was Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Magic), whose background we’ve considered before. But while the GI Champagne S. winner obviously has momentum, heading to the Breeders’ Cup, his stylish cutting edge–if it is not to be blunted–will certainly have to be whetted further against the gray, Classic-grained granite of Essential Quality.

In either event, sparks should fly. And, whisper it, we may yet be able to start thinking about Sheikh Mohammed finally getting the reward he has always craved, for his lavish investment in American bloodstock, with a Kentucky Derby winner in the Godolphin blue.

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