Darby Dan Releases 2021 Stallion Roster, Fees

Darby Dan Farm has set 2021 stud fees for its roster of 12 stallions that will stand the upcoming breeding season, led by Dialed In (Mineshaft), who will stand for $15,000 S&N, down from $20,000 a season ago.

The roster also features Tapiture (Tapit), Klimt (Quality Road), and GI Breeders’ Cup Classic contender Higher Power (Medaglia d’Oro), new for 2021, who will each stand for $10,000 S&N. GI Kentucky Derby winner Country House (Lookin At Lucky), also new for 2021, Flameaway (Scat Daddy), and Copper Bullet (More Than Ready) will stand for $7,500 S&N, while Tale of Ekati (Tale of the Cat) and Bee Jersey (Jersey Town) will stand for $5,000; rounding out the roster will be Sky Kingdom (Empire Maker) at $2,500, S&N, Tale of Verve (Tale of Ekati) at $2,000 S&N, and Dolphus (Lookin At Lucky) who will stand for private treaty.

Dialed In, leading freshman sire of 2016 and a perennial leading sire of his crop ever since, is represented in 2020 by GI American Pharoah S. winner Get Her Number. Tapiture’s Hopeful Growth was a four-length winner of this year’s GII Monmouth Oaks and placed in the GII Black-Eyed Susan S. He is also represented by ‘TDN Rising Star’ Premier Star, winner of the Jersey Shore S. and placed in the GII Amsterdam S. A top-five first-crop sire of 2019 by earnings and second-ranked first-crop sire by winners with 27, Tapiture leads second-crop sires by winners (68) and is second in black-type winners (five) and black-type horses (12).

Klimt, Quality Road’s fastest Grade I-winning 2-year-old, saw first-crop yearlings sell for $160,000, $120,000, $115,000, etc. this year. Klimt was a powerful winner of the GI Del Mar Futurity, where he ran seven furlongs in 1:21.80, marking the second-fastest time since 2004, behind only American Pharoah.

Higher Power, a dominant 5 1/4-length winner of the 2019 GI Pacific Classic at Del Mar, has earned more than $1.5 million heading into this year’s Breeders’ Cup and boasts graded stakes placings in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, GI Gold Cup S., GI Awesome Again S. and GII San Diego H.

New to the roster, Country House earned more than $2.1 million, and in addition to his Derby victory, finished second to eventual Classic winner War of Will in the GII Risen Star S. at Fair Grounds and was third in the GI Arkansas Derby.

Darby Dan will once again be offering various incentive programs in 2021 to provide value to breeders, including Profit Protection, Share the Upside, Black-Type Bonanza, and Goldmine 20/20 Match Program.

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Dialed In, Newcomers Country House And Higher Power, Headline Darby Dan Farm’s 2021 Stallion Roster

Darby Dan Farm has set 2021 stud fees for its roster of 12 stallions that will stand the upcoming breeding season, led by Dialed In who will stand for $15,000 S&N, down from $20,000 a season ago.

The roster also features Tapiture, Klimt, and Breeders' Cup Classic contender Higher Power, new for 2021, who will each stand for $10,000 S&N. Kentucky Derby winner Country House, also new for 2021, Flameaway, and Copper Bullet will stand for $7,500 S&N, while Tale of Ekati and Bee Jersey will stand for $5,000; rounding out the roster will be Sky Kingdom at $2,500, S&N, Tale of Verve at $2,000 S&N, and Dolphus who will stand for private treaty.

Dialed In, the leading freshman sire of 2016 and a perennial leading sire of his crop ever since, is represented in 2020 by Grade 1 winner Get Her Number, winner of the Grade 1 American Pharoah Stakes at Santa Anita. Additional stakes winners this year include Bourbon Calling, winner of the Russell Road Stakes and runner-up in the G3 Ack Ack Stakes, stakes winner and multiple graded stakes-placed Princess Cadey, and six-time stakes winner Chalon, as well as impressive 2-year-old stakes winner and Grade 1-placed Super Stock, and graded stakes-placed runners Finnick the Fierce, placed in the G1 Arkansas Derby and Answer In, placed in the G3 Southwest Stakes.

Tapiture has enjoyed another outstanding season in 2020. His Hopeful Growth was a four-length winner of this year's G2 Monmouth Oaks and placed in the G2 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes. He is also represented by TDN Rising Star Premier Star, winner of the Jersey Shore Stakes and placed in the G2 Amsterdam Stakes, and stakes winners Steph'sfullasugar, Vacherie Girl and 2-year-old stakes winner Chicks Dig Scars. A top-five first-crop sire of 2019 by earnings and No. 2 first-crop sire by winners with 27, he is a leader once again in 2020. Tapiture is the No. 1 second-crop sire by winners (68) and No. 2 by black-type winners (5) and black-type horses (12). His top earner this year is Jesus' Team, who finished a rallying third in the Preakness Stakes.

Klimt, Quality Road's fastest Grade 1-winning 2-year-old, saw first-crop yearlings sell for $160,000, $120,000, $115,000, etc. this year. One of America's best 2-year-olds of 2016, Klimt was a powerful winner of the G1 Del Mar Futurity, where he ran seven furlongs in 1:21.80, marking the second-fastest time since 2004, behind only American Pharoah.

Higher Power, a dominant 5 1/4-length winner of the 2019 G1 Pacific Classic at Del Mar, is a five-time winner of more than $1.5 million heading into this year's Breeders' Cup. Higher Power has been a gem of consistency competing strictly in top company since his Pacific Classic triumph with graded stakes placings in the Breeders' Cup Classic, G1 Hollywood Gold Cup, G1 Awesome Again Stakes, and G2 San Diego Handicap.

Also new to the roster is Kentucky Derby winner Country House. An earner of more than $2.1 million, Country House is by multiple champion and classic winner Lookin At Lucky, a son of two-time champion sire and sire of sires Smart Strike. In addition to his Derby victory, Country House finished second to eventual classic winner War of Will in the G2 Risen Star Stakes at Fair Grounds and was third in the G1 Arkansas Derby.

Darby Dan will once again be offering various incentive programs in 2021 to provide value to breeders, including Profit Protection, Share the Upside, Black-Type Bonanza, and Goldmine 20/20 Match Program.

The full 2021 roster of stallions with stands and nurses fees for Darby Dan is as follows:

Stallion Stands and Nurses Fee
Bee Jersey $5,000
Copper Bullet $7,500
Country House – NEW $7,500
Dialed In $15,000
Dolphus Private
Flameaway $7,500
Higher Power – NEW $10,000
Klimt $10,000
Sky Kingdom $2,500
Tale of Ekati $5,000
Tale of Verve $2,000
Tapiture $10,000

The post Dialed In, Newcomers Country House And Higher Power, Headline Darby Dan Farm’s 2021 Stallion Roster appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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The Week in Review: Remember the Context of 2019 Derby DQ

After a federal appeals court on Friday upheld a district court’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit that sought to reverse the disqualification of Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) from first place in the 2019 GI Kentucky Derby, co-owner Gary West told TDN that even though he disagreed with the ruling, “it is time to move on and the decision will not be appealed.”

Country House (Lookin At Lucky), of course, has been considered the winner of the 2019 Derby ever since he was elevated from second to first via the DQ process. So this latest judgment changes nothing regarding the already-official results.

The court ruling also does not mean that the Churchill Downs stewards got the call right. The three-judge panel simply affirmed that the plaintiffs had no legal basis to challenge the outcome.

What the ruling does mean is that another precedent will get entered into the law books underscoring how hard it is (and should be) to get a judge in a court of law to overturn a field-of-play ruling by an umpire, referee, or board of stewards.

And the decision by Gary and Mary West to not pursue further legal action does finally lift the miasma of litigious dread that descends whenever sports and the courts collide.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (whose members and executive director Marc Guilfoil were defendants in the lawsuit along with chief state steward Barbara Borden, state steward Brooks “Butch” Becraft, and Churchill Downs steward Tyler Picklesimer), issued a statement after the Aug. 28 judgment in which Guilfoil said the stewards’ decision to DQ Maximum Security was “an easy call to make, but a tough day to make it on.”

An “easy” call? I respectfully disagree.

Easy DQ calls in stewards’ booths don’t take 22 minutes to adjudicate. Nor do they customarily keep getting debated 16 months after the fact.

To this day you can find a balanced mix of supporters and detractors on both sides of the Derby DQ decision. It was a difficult call then and it remains difficult now even with the benefit of hindsight. Let’s not revise history to make it seem otherwise.

As the 2019 Derby gets nudged into the rear-view mirror, it’s important not to lose focus of what was happening on the macro level within our industry when the Churchill stewards decided to make the first disqualification of a winner for an in-race foul in 145 runnings of the Derby.

No sports official (or board of stewards) ever wants to be the arbiter whose judgment call alters the outcome of a big game or race. In America, there’s always been an unwritten rule that officials “let the players play” in crucial contests, even though referees, umpires, and stewards rarely admit it.

Coupled with that, the Kentucky Derby itself has always had a high bar when it comes to whether or not the stewards could or should step in to alter the running order. This dates at least back to the 1933 “Fighting Finish” in the pre-replay era, when Brokers Tip nosed Head Play after their jockeys grabbed and whipped each other in the stretch run. A foul claim by the runner-up rider was dismissed and the result stood, although both jockeys were later suspended 30 days each.

In more modern times, the 20-horse Derby has become known as an anything-goes cavalry charge into the first turn in which jockeys know they have considerable leeway to ride with more assertiveness because the stakes are so high.

But 2019 was the year when the Derby was run under shell-shocked circumstances because the sport was reeling in the wake of the 30-horse fatality crisis that shut down racing at Santa Anita Park. Tracks nationwide were under intensified scrutiny, and in the week leading up to the Derby, the sport was being called out and protested against over equine safety issues.

   It was impossible to ignore the national headlines that blared “Horse Deaths Are Haunting the Racing World Ahead of the Kentucky Derby” (Time magazine), “At the Kentucky Derby, Prayers for a Safe Race” (New York Times) and “Horse Safety at the Kentucky Derby has officials ‘On the Edge of a Razor Blade'” (Louisville Courier-Journal).

In fact, Guilfoil himself told the Courier-Journal the day before the before the 2019 Derby that, “We realize we’re under a microscope.”

So while a subconscious “Let ’em play” mindset might have previously been the unspoken norm for officiating a big race, the over-arching context of the 2019 Derby was rooted in the hyper-aware context of safety.

As the nation watched slo-mo replay after replay of the narrowly averted pile-up off the far turn in the Derby, the Churchill stewards surely, at some level, must have recognized that if they didn’t make a call that doled out punishment for the near-disaster, it wouldn’t mesh with the safety-centric image the industry had been trying to hammer home on many levels.

Did they get the call correct? That’s always going to be up for debate.

But let the record reflect that Maximum Security’s historic DQ was as much a product of the sport trying to come to grips with the enormous pressures of maintaining safety in an inherently dangerous setting as it had to do with the colt’s shifting and drifting while leading the pack off the final turn in the Derby.

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Federal Court Affirms Dismissal of Derby Lawsuit; Wests Won’t Pursue Further Action

A three-judge panel of a federal appeals court Friday upheld a district court’s decision from last November to dismiss a lawsuit by Gary and Mary West, the owners of Maximum Security (New Year’s Day), which sought to overturn the colt’s controversial disqualification from first place in the 2019 GI Kentucky Derby.

“What should have been the fastest two minutes in sports turned into over a year of litigation,” wrote Judge John K. Bush in the opinion accompanying the judgment of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. “Neither Kentucky law nor the Fourteenth Amendment allows for judicial second-guessing of the stewards’ call.

“The district court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim,” the opinion stated. “It determined that the stewards’ decision was not reviewable under Kentucky law, that the Wests had no property interest in the prize winnings, and that the challenged regulation is not unconstitutionally vague…. We agree and affirm the judgment of the district court.”

Gary West told TDN via email he won’t be pursuing further legal action.

“This is the only comment I will ever have,” West wrote. “I obviously disagree with the courts’ findings, but it is time to move on and the decision will not be appealed.”

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC), whose board members and executive director were the defendants in the lawsuit along with the three Churchill Downs stewards, issued a statement that said the organization was “pleased with the decision.”

KHRC executive director Marc Guilfoil said in the statement that the stewards’ decision to disqualify Maximum Security was “an easy call to make, but a tough day to make it on.”

In the 2019 Derby, Maximum Security led almost every step and crossed the wire first.

But there was bumping and shifting in close quarters as he led the pack off the final turn. Two jockeys filed post-race objections, but there was no posted stewards’ inquiry.

The three stewards who officiated the Derby–chief state steward Barbara Borden, state steward Brooks “Butch” Becraft, and Churchill Downs steward Tyler Picklesimer–launched a post-Derby adjudication process that played out on national TV.

After 22 agonizing minutes, Maximum Security was judged to have fouled Long Range Toddy (Take Charge Indy), and thus placed behind that rival in 17th place. Country House (Lookin At Lucky), who crossed the wire second, was elevated to first place via the DQ process.

Ten days later, the Wests sued based on allegations that “the final [revised Derby] order is not supported by substantial evidence on the whole record” and that the disqualification violated the plaintiffs’ Fourteenth Amendment rights.

The defendants’ motion to dismiss the suit was granted by a U.S. District Court judge Nov. 15, 2019. The Wests appealed, and the case was argued June 16, 2020.

The Wests put forth four arguments on appeal. First, they argued that the stewards’ decision to disqualify Maximum Security was a ‘final order of an agency’ that is subject to judicial review under Kentucky law.

Second, they argued that the stewards’ decision was not supported by substantial evidence, was arbitrary and capricious, or was otherwise deficient as a matter of law.

Third, they argued that the stewards violated the Wests’ right to procedural due process.

And finally, the Wests argued that the regulation that gives stewards the authority to disqualify a horse is void for vagueness.

“Perhaps only a racehorse itself could tell us whether it was fouled during a race,” the opinion stated. “But horses can’t speak, so the Commonwealth of Kentucky, similar to many other racing jurisdictions, has designated racing experts–the stewards, not the appointed members of the Commission or judges–to determine when a foul occurs in a horse race. It is not our place to second-guess that decision. We therefore hold that a stewards’ decision to disqualify a horse under [state regulations] is not a ‘final order’ of an agency’ under [state law] and therefore, is not subject to judicial review.”

The court next addressed the Wests’ argument that the stewards deprived them of constitutionally protected liberty and property interests. To plead a due process claim, the opinion stated, the Wests must allege “a life, liberty, or property interest requiring protection under the Due Process Clause” and a “deprivation of that interest” without adequate process.

“The Wests contend that they have a protected property interest in the winner’s share of the Derby purse, and a liberty interest in an agency following its own regulations,” the opinion stated. “Right out of the gate, the Wests fall behind. Kentucky law provides that ‘the conduct of horse racing, or the participation in any way in horse racing…is a privilege and not a personal right; and that this privilege may be granted or denied by the racing commission or its duly approved representatives acting in its behalf.'”

The opinion also noted that “a party cannot possess a property interest in the receipt of a benefit when the state’s decision to award or withhold the benefit is wholly discretionary.”

Bush wrote that the regulations “are clear that the stewards have unbridled discretion” in determining whether a racing foul occurred, and whether to disqualify a horse because of it.

“The Wests argued that [a Kentucky racing regulation] which governs the procedure after a race has been declared ‘official,’ grants them the right to the benefits of the Kentucky Derby,” the opinion stated. “Not so. That provision has no bearing here because Maximum Security was disqualified before the race results were official. Even if that regulation were to apply here, it does not grant any person the right to the benefits of winning a horse race. Rather, it dictates the procedures that the stewards must follow while they review objections and determine the propriety of any sanctions against a horse and jockey.”

The opinion continued: “Heading down the final stretch, the Wests argue that because Maximum Security was the first horse in the 145-year history of the Kentucky Derby to ever be disqualified for a foul committed during the race, the custom and practice was to declare the horse that crossed the finish line first the winner.

“[But] even though Maximum Security’s disqualification was unprecedented, the fact remains that the stewards have always had the discretion to call fouls in horse races; this just happens to be the first time that they exercised this discretion in the Kentucky Derby.

“As a condition of maintaining a Thoroughbred racing license in Kentucky, the Wests agreed to…’abide by all rulings and decisions of the stewards and the commission.’ The only mutually explicit understanding between the Wests and the Commission was that the Wests agreed to abide by the regulations, and those regulations do not give the Wests a property interest in the purse or the trophy.”

The Wests, the opinion stated, “cannot identify a property interest in the Derby winnings because Maximum Security did not win the race and they were never entitled to the winnings. The Wests have not pointed to a ‘state statute, formal contract, or contract implied from the circumstances that supports [their] claim to a protected property interest.'”

The opinion stated that the Wests’ argument that their liberty interest was violated largely mirrored their property argument. “Because the Wests do not have a liberty or property interest, their void-for-vagueness challenge fails as a matter of law.”

The post Federal Court Affirms Dismissal of Derby Lawsuit; Wests Won’t Pursue Further Action appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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