Joy Valley, Dam Of Champion Riboletta, Dies At Age 31

Taylor Made Farm announced Oct. 30 that Joy Valley (BRZ) has died from infirmities of old age. She was 31 years old.

By Ghadeer (FR) out of multiple Brazillian-Grade 1 winner Belle Valley (BRZ), Joy Valley was owned by Aaron and Marie Jones and resided at Taylor Made Farm.

Joy Valley was the dam of four stakes winners, including Riboletta (BRZ). Named 2000 Eclipse champion older mare, Riboletta was a Group 1 winner in her native Brazil before coming to the U.S. Once she was stateside, she captured an additional five Grade 1 victories, including the Beldame, Santa Margarita, Milady Breeders' Cup Handicap, Vanity, Clement L. Hirsch, and Ruffian Handicap She retired with over $1.5 million in earnings.

Joy Valley was also the dam of Super Power (BRZ) a multiple Grade 1 winner, Horse of the Year, and twice named Champion colt at ages two and three in Brazil.

Additionally, she produced stakes winners Forest Attack and Tamara Princess (BRZ).

“She was an incredible mare,” said Frank Taylor. “We were privileged to have her here for so many years at Taylor Made Farm for Aaron and Marie Jones. She produced an Eclipse champion in Riboletta and was just a great mare. Everything you could hope for.”

Joy Valley will be buried at Taylor Made Farm in Nicholasville, Ky.

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New York Breeding Fund Adopts Mare Residency Rule Changes

In a public meeting subject to the Open Meetings Law, the Board of Directors of the New York State Thoroughbred Breeding and Development Fund on Oct. 29, 2020 adopted new rules concerning the residency requirements for dams of New York-bred foals, including certain mares that were purchased at public auction on or after Nov. 1, 2019.

It is anticipated that these new rules will become final upon publication in the State Register of New York on or about Nov. 18, 2020, and shall have retroactive effect with regard to eligible mares purchased at public auction sales occurring on or after November 1, 2019.

The new rules establish definitions for resident mares and non-resident mares and set forth program eligibility requirements for their foals. Under the new rules, a resident mare would be a mare that is continuously in residence in New York State from date of conception in New York State or within 120 days after her last cover in the year of conception occurring outside of New York State and that remains in the state until foaling the following year, with no breed-back required. Mares that maintain their New York State resident status can be covered each season by a stallion located anywhere in the world.

A non-resident mare would be a mare that does not qualify as a resident mare. However, under the new rules, a non-resident mare that is purchased in foal through public auction will be deemed to be a resident mare for all purposes if all of the following conditions are satisfied: (1) the mare is purchased for at least $50,000 in the public auction, (2) the mare is present in New York State within 15 days after the sale is concluded, (3) the foal from public auction mare is foaled in New York State and (4) the mare thereafter is continuously in residence in New York State from within 120 days after her last cover in the year of conception of another foal and remains in residency until foaling.

Breeding Fund chairman John Poklemba noted, “These changes will bring the New York Thoroughbred Breeding Program more in line with other states by removing perceived barriers to mares locating here. Also, by allowing high-priced mares to establish residency by moving to New York after they are purchased at auction, we expect to see even more quality New York-breds following in the hoofprints of Grade 1 winners such as Tiz the Law and Simply Ravishing.”

Breeding Fund executive director Tracy Egan said, “The Board can review the threshold price annually at its summer meeting and adjust it up or down as needed to recruit quality mares.”

There is an incentive to purchase New York-sired New York-breds pegged to these rule changes. One year after adoption, the Fund and NYRA will begin providing up to $650,000 per year in purse bonuses to owners. The bonus will be $5,000 every time a New York-sired New York-bred wins at the maiden special weight or allowance level at NYRA's tracks.

While the measure adopted by the Breeding Fund's board states that it starts in November of 2019, in practice the new rules would become effective starting with the mixed sales in November 2020 and the foal and breeding seasons of 2021.

For a complete description of these newly adopted rules, click here.

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Sam-Son To Disperse of Racing and Breeding Stock

Sam-Son Farm, whose Thoroughbred racing and breeding operation dates back to 1972 and is considered a pillar of the sport in Canada, will be dispersing its stock over the next 18 months, primarily through public auctions handled by Keeneland and Fasig-Tipton.

The liquidation of racing and breeding stock was announced via press release Oct. 28. Sam-Son executives did not cite a specific reason beyond saying in a prepared statement that:

“After serious consideration and discussion, the owners have unanimously decided to initiate an orderly dispersal and to step back from active participation in the racing and breeding world.”

The fate of Sam-Son’s two equine properties–a 200-acre breeding and foaling farm in Milton, Ontario and 160-acre training facility in Ocala, Florida–were not addressed in the press release. Nor was the status of the operation’s employees.

A voicemail message left for Sam-Son’s Ontario farm manager, Dave Whitford, did not yield a return phone call prior to deadline for this story.

Sam-Son Farm has bred and raced 12 horses who made it into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame. The stable’s iconic red-and-gold silks were carried by five Queen’s Plate S. winners, two Breeders’ Cup winners, and 14 Grade I winners overall. The operation has garnered 84 Sovereign Awards and won four Eclipse Awards, including a pair of 2019 Sovereign Awards for Owner and Breeder of the Year.

Both Ernie Samuel, who founded Sam-Son and ran it until his death in 2000, and his daughter, Tammy Samuel-Balaz, who led the farm until her own passing in in 2008, are enshrined in the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame as “Thoroughbred Builders.”

Today Sam-Son is the property of president Rick Balaz (the late Tammy’s husband), plus Ernie’s children, chief executive Mark Samuel and co-owner Kim Samuel.

Sam Son’s press release is billing the liquidation as a “rare opportunity for buyers to acquire world-class racing talent and breeding stock from one of the true breed-to-race operations in the business.”

The dispersal will begin at the upcoming Fasig-Tipton November Sale with two racing/broodmare prospects and two in-foal mares. Sam-Son will present its remaining (currently 21) in-foal mares at the Keeneland January Horses of all Ages Sale.

The Samuel/Balaz families commented jointly as follows: “We are enormously proud of the quality and longevity of Sam-Son Farm and have enjoyed nurturing and celebrating every stage of the equine cycle from breeding, to raising, to racing, to retirement and often, returning to the breeding shed. Our horses have given generations of our family such fulfillment and excitement over the years and we felt that the time had come, after five decades, to now share that legacy with the world. It was a bittersweet decision but one that we are committed to pursuing with integrity, transparency and respect. Our horses and our amazing, dedicated employees deserve no less.”

The great-grandson of a steel-and-aluminum magnate, Ernie Samuel started Sam-Son in the 1960s, initially as a hunter/jumper stable that quickly competed at the Olympics level, with one of its horses a member of the Canadian Equestrian Team that won gold at the 1968 Games.

With Thoroughbreds already in the barn as sport horses, Sam-Son transitioned to racing shortly thereafter, claiming a filly named Takaring at Fort Erie who would go on to be Sam-Son’s first stakes winner.

In 1975, Samuel purchased two yearlings, No Class and Loudrangle, at the Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society sale. Over the next four decades, those two fillies became the foundation of the Sam-Son broodmare band. According to the farm’s website, more than half of the mares currently in Sam-Son’s band are descendants of No Class.

Sam-Son bred and raced champion Dance Smartly, the first Canadian-owned and bred horse to win a Breeders’ Cup race (the GI Distaff), and who, in her undefeated 3-year-old season of 1991, became just the second filly in history to win the Canadian Triple Crown.

Other Sam-Son champions include GI Breeders’ Cup Turf winner Chief Bearhart, Eclipse Award winner Sky Classic; Dancethruthedawn, Quiet Resolve, Rainbows for Life, Ruling Angel, Silken Cat, Soaring Free, Wilderness Song, and many more. Sam-Son also bred and raced Grade 1 winner and influential sire-of-sires Smart Strike, a half-brother to Dance Smartly.

At Fasig-Tipton November, the Sam-Son consignment consists of 2019 Canadian champion 3-year-old filly Desert Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) (Hip 187); recent Grade II winner Rideforthecause (Candy Ride {Arg}); stakes winner and track record holder Desert Isle (Bernardini) in foal to American Pharoah (Hip 264), and GI Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf winner Shared Account (Pleasantly Perfect) (Hip 207), who is in foal with a full-sibling to fellow Breeders’ Cup winner Sharing (Speightstown).

Boyd Browning, Fasig-Tipton’s president and chief executive officer, said, “Sam-Son Farm has been an iconic name in Thoroughbred racing and breeding for nearly half a century. This program has produced numerous Grade I winners, champions and Hall-of-Fame racehorses. Sam-Son horses have had a profound influence in top pedigrees around the world and will continue to do so for many generations. Although saddened to see them dispersing their Thoroughbred holdings, we are honored to assist them in this process.”

At Keeneland January, the projected consignment includes Grade I producers Danceforthecause (Giant’s Causeway) and Song of the Lark (Seeking the Gold), as well as stakes winners Checkered Past (Smart Strike), Dance Again (Awesome Again), Deceptive Vision (A.P. Indy), Mythical Mission (Giant’s Causeway), Smartyfly (Smart Strike) and Southern Ring (Speightstown). Covering sires include American Pharoah, Candy Ride (Arg), Into Mischief, Kitten’s Joy, Speightstown. and Street Sense.

Shannon Arvin, Keeneland’s president-elect, said, “Keeneland and Sam-Son Farm have enjoyed a long, successful relationship. Over the years, a number of Sam-Son horses have raced here, and the farm received the prestigious Keeneland Tray during the 2005 Spring Meet to recognize its graded stakes success-a milestone that only 20 owners have reached in track history. We are privileged that Sam-Son has entrusted Keeneland to offer this distinguished group of mares at the January Sale.”

Sam-Son has been a seller at public auctions only peripherally through the years. It sent a consignment of five to the 2009 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga select yearling auction, but for the most part has limited its offerings during the past decade to small consignments at all-ages sales to cull broodmares that no longer fit the program.

That changed last September at Keeneland, when Sam-Son offered six yearlings, selling two fillies by Curlin and Empire Maker for a total of $380,000.

In a Feb. 27, 2020, pre-pandemic article published in Canadian Thoroughbred that profiled Sam-Son as a “Top 25 Influencer” in Canadian racing, Balaz, the farm’s president, was asked what needs to change about the industry in the next five to 10 years.

“To speak from our perspective, one of the biggest challenges is that the game is becoming unaffordable for the average horse owner,” Balaz replied. “It’s very difficult from a financial perspective. I don’t know how you overcome that based on the world we live in. You have to be in it for the love of it-which is a great thing-but it used to be easier for a smaller guy to be involved. Now that’s becoming much more difficult. I don’t know how that gets reversed and we get back to the point where more people can be involved in the game.”

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Tatts Ireland November Flat Foal and Breeding Stock Catalogue Online

The one-day Tattersalls Ireland November Flat Foal & Breeding Stock Sale catalogue is now online. Slated to begin at 11 a.m. on Nov. 13, the sale features 181 lots, split between 24 racing or broodmare prospects, 48 weanlings and with a new yearling section of 109 lots. A total of 66 of those yearlings, previously part of the September Yearling Sale, are eligible for the €300,000 Tattersalls Ireland Super Action S. in 2021. A few notable graduates include G1 Matron S. heroine Champers Elysees (Ire) (Elzaam {GB}), G2 Norfolk S. & G1SP The Lir Jet (Ire) (Prince of Lir {Ire}) and G3 Molecomb S. victor Steel Bull (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}).

Some notable yearlings are: a Gutaifan (Ire) colt (lot 936) who is a half-brother to GSP Flashcard (Fast Company {Ire}) from Coole House Farm; SW and G1 Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud third Miss You Too (GB) (Montjeu {Ire})’s The Gurkha (Ire) half-sister as lot 937 consigned by Railstown Stud; Al Eile Stud’s No Nay Never half-sister (lot 975) to GSP Annie Fior (Ire) (Finsceal Fior {Ire}); and a daughter of Kodiac (GB) (lot 986) who is a half-sister to SW and G1SP Tupi (Ire) (Tamayuz {GB}) from the draft of Rathbarry Stud.

These Tattersalls Ireland sales will take place at Fairyhouse as scheduled: the November National Hunt Sale, Cheltenham November Sale and the Flat Foal & Breeding Stock Sale.

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