ITBA National Breeding and Racing Awards Scheduled For Feb. 27

The 2021 Irish Thoroughbred Breeders' Association National Breeding & Racing Awards will be held on Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022. In person for the first time in two years due to the covid pandemic at The Heritage in County Laois, the awards will be live streamed from 10 p.m. local time and are available to view on the ITBA's website.

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Jaylan Clary, 27, Takes Over Family Operation After Father Mike Neatherlin Dies Of COVID

As Jaylan Clary embarks on her first full year as a Thoroughbred trainer, her thoughts are never far from the man who made it possible. That's her dad, Mike Neatherlin, who died from COVID on Sept. 5 at age 65.

“I wouldn't be who I am today without him,” the 27-year-old said recently.

Clary saddled her first horse as the trainer of record on Sept. 15, with El Pando winning a Remington Park maiden race. But she is no rookie. Clary helped her dad with his racehorses as well as handling the work on their farm and training facility in Brock, less than an hour from Lone Star Park. Father and daughter worked closely together, not only with Neatherlin's modest-sized racing stable but buying yearlings for resale as 2-year-olds through her Clary Bloodstock operation.

Clary has a dozen 2-year-olds to sell this year and 10 racehorses at Sam Houston, which kicked off Texas' 2022 racing season on January 6. Her Sam Houston contingent includes eight-time stakes-winner Mr Money Bags, the 2019 Texas Horse of the Year.

“We did everything together. My dad stayed at the racetrack. I have a little boy, so I stayed at home,” she said. “We have the privilege of having a track at the house for any horses that needed some time. We have paddocks, we have a training facility. We use it to break and prep to sell the babies and for the racehorses that need time. He'd be at the track and I'd take care of everything at home, and sometimes we'd switch.”

“He knew my career was going to be racehorses, so he helped me start my business. I sold his horses for him. That's also how my brother (Lane Richardson) started out, then he branched out on his own and then my dad helped me. It's something I plan to keep doing. The reason I have racehorses is because, say I don't sell a 2-year-old, we always have the option of training and running them. We'll sell them if the time comes, or we'll keep them.”

Clary won with her first starter as the trainer of record, with El Pando taking a Remington Park maiden race on Sept. 15. In his second start, El Pando won Remington's $100,000 Clever Trevor Stakes. Clary also owns the $10,000 yearling purchase.

The stable star remains Erma Cobb's 6-year-old Mr Money Bags, who is being pointed for stakes races at Sam Houston. The gelded son of Silver City was Texas Horse of the Year as a 3-year-old when he captured Sam Houston's Jim Orbit and Groovy Stakes and Lone Star Park's Texas Stallion Stymie Division Stakes. Mr Money Bags also gave Neatherlin his first victory in a derby in New Mexico's Zia Park Derby.

Last year Mr Money Bags won four of eight starts, including the Gillispie Fairground's GCFA Texas Bred Stakes on Aug. 28 in what proved Neatherlin's final starter. Mr Money Bags subsequently had two seconds at Remington Park before the gelding won the Zia Park Sprint Stakes for Clary. He earned it the hard way, finishing in a dead-heat for first but gaining sole victory after rival Competitive Idea was disqualified to second for interference.

“I'm so lucky to have a horse as tough as he is,” Clary said. “He doesn't get pushed around by any horse. In his race replay, you could see he wasn't going to let that horse win. It was a very emotional day. Every time Mrs. Cobb and I win, we cry. We cry together. Because she just lost Mr. Cobb and I lost my dad. So for both of us, we get emotional.”

Roy Cobb, of Mineral Wells, died in November of 2020. Roy Cobb and Neatherlin were partners on other notable horses, including racing and ultimately privately selling future Breeders' Cup Mile winner Kip Deville. Neatherlin also bought multiple graded-stakes winner Airoforce for $20,000 as a yearling before the partners resold him for $350,000 as a 2-year-old through Lane Richardson's consignment.

But Mr Money Bags is the gift that keeps on giving.

“Mr Money Bags has opened up more doors for our family than is explainable,” Clary said. “We have worked with Mr. and Mrs. Cobb since I was a young girl. I take a lot of pride in Mr Money Bags. He meant a lot to my dad. That was the only horse my dad had that was Horse of the Year. My dad had really nice horses, but he's always had to sell them. Mr Money Bags was something he got to train. He was the highlight of his training career, because he sold Kip Deville before he became Kip Deville. Mrs. Cobb herself means a lot to us. We've been through a lot with them, so many highs and lows and she's always been right there. She's an amazing lady. You don't get any better.”

Clary said her father forged his own way on the racetrack, early on sleeping in stalls and tack rooms and never owning his own place until he was 50.

“He came from absolutely nothing, was one of 12 kids and the only one who chose to be a racehorse trainer,” Clary said. “He had to make it his own way. Every owner he got, he worked very hard for.

“My dad always prepared me for the worst. When he went to the hospital, we had a lot of babies at the time. He just said, 'You've got to keep going.' For about three weeks, when I got everything moved in to the track, he was able to talk to me. As soon as it was time to start running the horses, he went on the ventilator. I ran three times under his name, and then he passed away. It was hard, but in a way he fully prepared me. The past few years my dad always said, 'I won't always be here.'

“It was a hard transition. But as far as the horses go, our owners are just amazing. They never wavered. I've actually accumulated some new owners and the owners I had want to send me more horses. Some owners, when things happen, they find new trainers, more veteran trainers. Nobody has. I'm so thankful to have owners who believe in our program enough to know that it's not gone with my dad. Everything he did, I'd do it just like him.”

Clary took over the stable at a time when Texas racing is launching a renaissance, thanks to the legislation passed that is boosting purses with revenue from the sales tax on horse feed and supplies.

“Passing that bill was such a great thing for Texas racing,” she said. “Texas in general thrives off of horses, whether it's cutting, rodeoing, racing. Everything has gotten better in Texas because of that legislation, and it's only going to get better on the sales side. I bought as many Texas-breds as I could, and I believe they're going to sell well because they are Texas-breds. And look how much tougher the trainers are getting here. Some bigger trainers are coming to Texas because these are good purses.”

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TBA’s Flat Stallion Parade Returns

The Thoroughbred Breeders' Association Flat Stallion Parade will return after a two-year hiatus at Tattersalls in Newmarket on Feb. 3. Free to attend, the event will feature 12 stallions embarking on their first and second seasons at stud in Great Britain and will begin at 11 a.m. prior to the start of the Tattersalls February Sale.

Hosted by racing broadcaster Gina Bryce and Tattersalls' Shirley Anderson-Jolag, the parade's dozen stallions are: A'Ali (Ire) (Society Rock {Ire}), who stands at Newsells Park Stud; Bangkok (Ire) (Australia {GB}), a resident of Chapel Stud; LM Stallions' Diplomat (Ger) (Teofilo {Ire}), Legends of War (Scat Daddy), Mr Scaramanga (GB) (Sir Percy {GB}), Roseman (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), Southern Hills (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}), and Tip Two Win (GB) (Dark Angel (Ire); new The National Stud recruit Lope Y Fernandez (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}), Whitsbury Manor Stud's Sergei Prokofiev (Scat Daddy), Ubettabelieveit (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), who resides at Mickley Stud and Newsells Park's Without Parole (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

Breeders, owners, trainers and spectators are invited to view the stallions and speak with stud representatives after the event in the Left and Right Yards and light refreshments will be served in the Left Yard. The TBA team will be available to answer any enquiries.

TBA Flat Committee Chairman Philip Newton said, “We are delighted to see the Flat Stallion Parade return this year giving breeders and bloodstock enthusiasts the chance to see the latest recruits to the stallion ranks in one convenient location at the Tattersalls February Sale. The TBA team look forward to catching up with members at the event and we welcome enquiries from anyone interested in getting involved in thoroughbred breeding and bloodstock.”

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Santa Anita Bids Adieu To Beloved Bartender Frank Panza

Santa Anita Park extends its heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of the track's all-time longest tenured bartender, Frank Panza, who passed away Wednesday evening at age 91 following a lengthy battle with cancer. A longtime resident of Laguna Niguel, Panza, who passed away at home with his sister Gloria by his side, negotiated a 65-mile daily commute to work at what he often described as a “dream job.”

Employed for some 59 years at Santa Anita and known to thousands of racegoers over the years as a tremendous mixologist and valued friend and confidant in the original Turf Club Chandelier Room and later, in the track's main Club House bar, was the very definition of top-shelf customer service, as he greeted regulars and newcomers alike with a sunny disposition and unflagging attention to detail.

Panza, who was born May 28, 1930 in Ohio, first came to work at Santa Anita in December, 1961 and he served some of the biggest names in the worlds of entertainment and sports throughout an amazing career that ended due to a COVID related shutdown on March 8, 2020.

Retired LA Times columnist Chris Erskine described Panza thusly in a story written Oct. 29, 2014: “This Panza guy's still a beautiful thing, though. Look at the hair, thick as a turf course. The smile, full of Italian Twinkle. And listen to his stories, gleaned from a half century as Santa Anita's Damon Runyon.”

In the same story, Panza, who recounted serving countless sports and entertainment icons such as Joe DiMaggio, Marilyn Monroe, Lana Turner, Ava Gardner, Howard Hughes, John Wayne, Gregory Peck, Cary Grant, Rita Hayworth, Elizabeth Taylor, Dean Martin Jackie Gleason and Walter Matheau, was asked about his experience.

“There'll never be another bar like that,” he said in reference to the Chandelier Room. “I couldn't wait to come to work. They would come in minks, dressed to the hilt. Elizabeth Montgomery used to bring me ties…I don't think there's a saloon in the world that had that kind of clientele. I was like a kid in a candy store.”

And later, Erskine asked Panza, who was himself a dues-paying SAG member and bit television and movie actor, who in all the years he worked, was his favorite customer.

“The greatest, Sinatra. He used to call me Frangi. My Italian nickname.”

Funeral services for Frank Panza will take place this coming week with a memorial to follow here at Santa Anita in February.

Rest in Peace, Frank, may you never be forgotten.

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