Curlin’s Nest Completes Double for Hot Connections in Demoiselle

Repole Stable, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Michael House's Nest (Curlin) completed a juvenile Grade II double for trainer Todd Pletcher and jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. as she out-kicked two-for-two New York-bred Venti Valentine (Firing Line) in Saturday afternoon's GII Demoiselle S. at the Big A. It was a record seventh Demoiselle victory for Pletcher, who one race earlier sent out Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) to a similarly hard-fought score in the GII Remsen S. The Lyster family's Ashview Farm and Richard Santulli's Colts Neck Stables bred both the Remsen and Demoiselle winners.

A five-length debut graduate going 8 1/2 panels at Belmont Sept. 25, Nest was a close third in the Nov. 5 Tempted, finishing a neck behind re-opposing Magic Circle (Kantharos). Nest was hung wide in midpack Saturday as Magic Circle raced clear through splits of :25.05 and :50.72. She mounted a four-wide bid approaching the quarter pole, with Venti Valenti glued to her left flank and the pacesetter struggling her leads but still up by daylight. Nest lengthened her stride and had a bit more to give late, reporting home a half-length clear of Venti Valentine in 1:55.07 (compared to 1:53.61 for the Remsen). An objection lodged by Venti Valentine's rider John Velazquez against the winner was disallowed.

“She ran a good race today, we were looking forward to the distance and she got the job done today,” said Ortiz, who rode four winners on the afternoon and survived at least two potential disqualifications after a high-profile DQ on Friday. “I knew [Magic Circle] was inside and came out. I was just surprised that they claimed foul on me, honestly. I grabbed a hold of my filly, corrected her, went to the left hand and went straight. I didn't do anything to the other horse, so I don't know why they claimed foul, but it is what it is.”

Pletcher took last year's Demoiselle with eventual GI Longines Kentucky Oaks heroine and likely champion 3-year-old Malathaat (Curlin), and won back-to-back renewals with Repole in 2012 and 2013 (Unlimited Budget and Stopchargingmaria) amidst a three-year streak. He'd go on to saddle the GI Cigar Mile H. exacta one race later on Saturday.

“There have been some tight finishes and a little drama to go along with it, but I'm thankful to be on the right side of it all,” said the Hall of Famer. “[Nest] was never able to take over and save much ground, but she got the job done. I'm obviously very happy to be on the winning end.”

As for what could be on the agenda next for Nest, who picked up 10 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points Saturday, Pletcher said, “We'll take her to Palm Beach Downs and map out a game plan with Mike [Repole] and the rest of the owners, but she'll get a freshening after this win.”

Saturday, Aqueduct
DEMOISELLE S.-GII, $250,000, Aqueduct, 12-4, 2yo, f, 1 1/8m, 1:55.07, ft.
1–NEST, 118, f, 2, by Curlin
1st Dam: Marion Ravenwood (SW, $112,598), by A.P. Indy
2nd Dam: Andujar, by Quiet American
3rd Dam: Nureyev's Best, by Nureyev
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($350,000
Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Repole Stable, Eclipse Thoroughbred
Partners & Michael House; B-Ashview Farm & Colts Neck
Stables (KY); T-Todd A Pletcher; J-Irad Ortiz Jr. $137,500.
Lifetime Record: 3-2-0-1, $205,000. *Full to Idol, GISW,
$416,964; and half to Dr Jack (Pioneerof the Nile), MSP. Click
   for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating:
   A+++ *Triple Plus*.
2–Venti Valentine, 120, f, 2, Firing Line–Glory Gold, by
Medaglia d'Oro. 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. O-NY Final Furlong
Racing Stable & Parkland Thoroughbreds; B-Final Furlong
Racing Stable & Maspeth Stable (NY); T-Jorge R Abreu.
$50,000.
3–Magic Circle, 118, f, 2, Kantharos–Magic Humor, by Distorted
Humor. 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($50,000 Ylg '20 KEEJAN;
$110,000 2yo '21 OBSAPR). O-J W Singer LLC; B-Manitou Farm
LLC (KY); T-Rudy R Rodriguez. $30,000.
Margins: NK, 3/4, 3HF. Odds: 1.75, 6.20, 5.40.
Also Ran: Nostalgic, Tap the Faith, Full Count Felicia, Miss Interpret, Golden Essence. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:
Nest becomes the 87th stakes winner (46th graded) for Hill 'n' Dale super sire Curlin. She is bred on the same cross as the aforementioned Malathaat, along with fellow two-turn GISWs Global Campaign and her full-brother Idol and this year's pricey GSW and 'TDN Rising Star' First Captain. Legendary A.P. Indy is up to 245 stakes winners (115 graded) as a broodmare sire. A.P. Indy's son Bernardini is the damsire of two of Curlin's 16 Grade I winners himself and he was out of a Quiet American mare, as is Nest's dam.

Repole co-campaigned Curlin's highest earner to date, in Pletcher-trained Eclipse champion Vino Rosso; and Eclipse and Pletcher teamed up on the career of MGISW filly Curalina (Curlin).

Nest's dam Marion Ravenwood was herself a stakes winner at the Big A and sold for $400,000 at the 2017 Keeneland September sale while in foal to Pioneerof the Nile. Idol, this year's GI Santa Anita H. winner, sold the following September as a yearling for $375,000 at Keeneland. The first foal bred by Ashview and Colts Neck became fellow useful two-turner Dr Jack, and agent Steve Young purchased Marion Ravenwood's current yearling colt by Violence for $275,000 this September. Marion Ravenwood, whose dam was GSW/MGISP, was bred to Curlin and Quality Road for 2022.

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Brown Contemplating Big Targets For Miles D In 2022

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown said Peter Brant and Robert V. LaPenta's Miles D, an impressive winner of Saturday's $150,000 Discovery at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y., could point to the $20 million Group 1 Saudi Cup in February at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

“I'm not one to send my horses to other continents to run. I like to stick to my circuits. But that race has been on my mind with the right style of horse,” Brown said. “This might be the kind of horse that fits for me trying one of those races. Although he's had a couple of hard races, he is lightly raced. If you look at his record, he hasn't had that many starts. He didn't have to do battle in the Triple Crown, and he doesn't have a ton of miles on him.”

A son of multiple champion producing stallion Curlin, Miles D collared heavy favorite Speaker's Corner in the stretch drive of the Discovery, a nine-furlong test for sophomores, registering a career-best 102 Beyer Speed Figure. The win followed a hard-fought first-level allowance score against older company on October 24 going 1 1/16 miles at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

Miles D sports a consistent ledger of 6-3-1-1, including a stakes placing in his sire's namesake race on July 30 at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., en route to a third in the Grade 1 Runhappy Travers on August 28.

Brown said Miles D is not likely to target the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup on January 29 at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., a race expected to attract reigning Breeders' Cup champions Knicks Go [Classic] and Life Is Good [Dirt Mile].

“I have to talk to the owners about it. I'm not really sure,” Brown said. “I'm not so much interested in the Pegasus against those two horses. I'll get him down there and see. There's definitely a pace scenario to consider as well. If I race in big races in the wintertime, it's horses that are lightly raced. With horses that have had long campaigns, I don't care how much money they offer me at any track. I don't really run them too much. This horse, there's a possibility that we keep on going with him.”

Brown said Miles D could be a force to be reckoned with next year in the older horse division.

“If he takes another step forward next year, runs in all the handicap races, and has success in one or more of them, he has a lot of stallion potential. Races like the Whitney or the Jockey Club are ones that would matter to me quite a bit,” Brown said.

Miles D was fourth on debut last October at Belmont in what turned out to be a key maiden race, finishing behind Speaker's Corner as well as subsequent stakes winners Caddo River and Greatest Honour.

Brown credited both his team and owners for allowing a patient approach with the horse.

“It's taken a lot of patience by our team and our two owners. They never questioned giving him a little time,” Brown said.

Named after the late influential jazz musician Miles Davis, Miles D is out of the unraced Bernardini broodmare Sound the Trumpets, whose first dam is multiple Grade 1-winning millionaire My Flag and second dam is undefeated Hall of Fame champion Personal Ensign. Miles D was acquired for $470,000 from the Denali Stud consignment at the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Brown went on to report that Klaravich Stables' Forced Ranking will not make this Saturday's Grade 2 Remsen at Aqueduct after spiking a temperature. He will still, however, saddle Jeff Drown's maiden winner Zandon, who breezed a half-mile in :49.82 Sunday over the Belmont dirt training track.

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Cordmaker Gets Seventh Career Stakes Win In Richard W. Small At Laurel

Hillwood Stable's Cordmaker, still going strong at the age of 6, overpowered several younger rivals including 3-year-old favorite Shackqueenking to register his seventh career stakes victory, a 1 ¾-length decision over Workin On a Dream in Saturday's $100,000 Richard W. Small at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

The 21st running of the 1 1/8-mile Small for 3-year-olds and up, part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series, was the last of three $100,000 stakes on the program, preceded by the City of Laurel for 3-year-olds and Safely Kept for 3-year-old fillies, each sprinting seven furlongs.

Cordmaker ($12.20) ran second in last year's Small to Harpers First Ride, who went on to win the historic Grade 3 Pimlico Special, a race where Cordmaker finished third for the second consecutive year. The winning time Saturday was 1:50.48 over a fast main track.

“It's great for the horse and the barn and [owner] Mrs. [Ellen] Charles,” winning trainer Rodney Jenkins said. “It's a nice thing all around.”

With regular rider Victor Carrasco aboard, Cordmaker settled in third as 17-1 long shot Workin On a Dream and Shackqueenking led the way, going the opening quarter-mile in :24.58 and a half in :47.59. Racing in the clear, Cordmaker closed the gap after six furlongs went in 1:11.84 and swooped to the front at the top of the stretch, running a mile in 1:37.14.

“I wanted him to stay closer. We've been taking him, not way out of it, but pretty far and that's a lot of ground to make up in a stakes race,” Jenkins said. “I told Victor, 'Keep him up in there and make them run,' and he did. Victor gave him a great ride.”

Shackqueenking finished third, with two lengths separating him from runner-up Workin On a Dream and Forewarned in fourth. They were followed by Informative, Tappin Cat, Mischief Afoot, Treasure Trove, Bustoff, and McElmore Avenue.

Cordmaker, a gelded son of two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Hall of Famer Curlin, added to his lead in the MATCH Series' 3-year-olds and up long dirt division with his 11th career victory from 33 starts, pushing his lifetime bankroll over $700,000 and bouncing back from being disqualified from second to sixth for interference in the Sept. 18 Polynesian at Laurel.

“His last race, when he had that [incident] down here, you never know how they're going to react the next time, and that made me nervous,” Jenkins said. “But he came around great.”

Formerly run as the Broad Brush, the multi-millionaire and four-time Grade 1 winner he trained, the Richard W. Small was renamed following the beloved horseman's death from cancer in 2014. Baltimore-born 'Dickie' Small served two tours of duty during the Vietnam War as a Green Beret before becoming a trainer, also campaigning Broad Brush's son, 1994 G1 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Concern. He won at least one stakes race in Maryland every year but one between 1974 and 2014 and is also known for helping launch the riding careers of female jockeys such as Andrea Seefeldt, Jerilyn Brown, Rosie Napravnik, and Forest Boyce.

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‘If The Horses Aren’t Trying To Kill Me, It’s No Fun’: Tending To Stallions Is Zurick’s Extreme Sport

Christina Zurick doesn't consider herself a risk-taker in the course of her everyday life.

She doesn't climb mountains or ski down them, she doesn't ride bulls or surf giant waves, and if a plane leaves the runway, she doesn't intend to exit it via parachute.

She's got a couple German Shepherds. That's about as dangerous as it gets.

Close your eyes and listen to Zurick discuss what she likes about her job as a stallion groom at Hill 'n' Dale Farms, though, and it might sound like any number of extreme sports athletes explaining what compels them to put their bodies on the line as a vocation.

“I like that element of danger, which sounds crazy, but if the horses aren't trying to kill me, it's no fun,” Zurick said. “A lot of the guys think it's funny and say, 'Oh, this one's a problem. Hand him off to Christina.'”

Earning that status as a Kentucky stud farm's first-call for difficult stallions is a badge of honor that many take years to earn, if they ever do, and as a 25-year-old woman whose eyes barely reach the withers of the horses she cares for, Zurick does not fit the profile of what's expected in that position.

A tired adage in the Thoroughbred sport is that horses don't know who they're sired by or what their odds are on the tote board, but they also don't know anything about the equally tired unwritten rules guiding who is “supposed” to take care of them.

Though she shares duties on several stallions on the Hill 'n' Dale roster, Zurick's two primary charges are the farm's two most proven stallions, and the ones with the highest stud fees: Hall of Famers Curlin and Ghostzapper. Taking care of each one was a unique fulfillment of a childhood dream.

In 2007, a pre-teen Zurick in Minnesota was firmly on “Team Curlin” among that season's deep class of 3-year-olds, and she made a point to learn the colt's every detail. A call in to a local sports talk radio program to extoll the virtues of the future Horse of the Year led to her becoming a regular guest on the program to discuss racing topics.

That love of the champion chestnut stayed with her through to her employment at Hill 'n' Dale, where she was initially assigned Curlin as a six-month fill-in for his usual groom, who was out with a broken foot. She was placed on him full-time when Hill 'n' Dale moved its operations to Xalapa Farm in Paris, Ky., last year.

“When it first happened, I knew it was only temporary, so I thought, 'Okay, well, at least I got to take care of him for a little bit of time,'” Zurick said. “Then, I guess I did a good enough job, because he assigned him to me permanently, and when that happened, I immediately texted my parents. I don't drink, so I told them, 'Guys, I'm having a pint of ice cream tonight in celebration.' I messaged pretty much everyone I knew. I can't believe it to this day. I love that horse so much.

“I told my parents, if I never did anything else in racing, at least I took care of him,” she continued. “That was my main goal in life, and I achieved it.”

Christina Zurick and Curlin at Hill 'n' Dale Farms.

Ghostzapper was another horse whose career Zurick knew by heart as a child, but for an entirely different reason, owing to the “Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships” video game released in 2005.

“I used to play that all the time,” she said. “They had Ghostzapper's Breeders' Cup Classic replay on there, and I could recite Tom Durkin's call word for word. If you would have told me when I was 12 years old playing that Xbox game that one day, I would take care of that horse and take care of Curlin, I probably would have fainted and never woke up.”

Considering the lofty goals she has achieved, it seems impossible to think Zurick was considering getting out of working with horses entirely in the middle of the last decade, but a particularly hard run of luck working for farms in the Midwest had left her exploring her options.

“I was at rock bottom at that point,” she said. “I had $500 to my name and no car, so my mom had to pick me up in Iowa and bring me back to Minnesota.”

Meanwhile in Kentucky, fellow Minnesotan Annette Lokkesmoe was working at Margaux Farm through the Kentucky Equine Management Internship, and she'd heard about her friend's troubles back home. It didn't take long for a course of action to be put in place.

She called me and found out what happened, and she said, 'I'm coming home for Christmas, picking you up, and you're coming back to Kentucky with me to work at Margaux,'” Zurick said. “She said,' if you talk to the farm manager, I guarantee you you'll get a job.'”

Lokkesmoe was correct in her assessment, and the two Minnesotans shared a house at Margaux Farm, where Zurick worked as a groom.

Zurick was placed in a barn with a large group of 2-year-old colts, and that time spent with the youngsters was what convinced her that she wanted to work with stallions.

After nine months at Margaux Farm, she started handed out resumes at stud farms around Kentucky, but had the door closed on her for a lack of breeding shed experience, and, bluntly, because she wasn't a guy. It doesn't take an entire hand, or even most of the hand, to count out the female stallion grooms at major Kentucky farms.

Zurick took a job with Stonestreet Farm's broodmare division with the hopes of networking her way to a stallion farm, and she was successful in May 2019 when she joined the Hill 'n' Dale team. Now having worked with both stallions and mares, Zurick said she always knew the extremes that working with a stallion can bring were what she wanted all along.

“It's very different with a stallion versus a mare,” she said. “Mares are a little bit tougher at some points, but then they'll have a really sweet side. With the stallions, you're constantly in danger. There are very few that are really chill and aren't ever going to hurt you.

“I always wanted to do the breeding shed, because I get that adrenaline rush from that,” she continued. “If it's not going to maybe kill me or hurt me, I don't want to do it.”

The list of women who are chased out of male-dominated fields in the Thoroughbred industry is frustratingly long, and Zurick had expected that kind of challenge as the only female in her new position at Hill 'n' Dale. However, she said her experience has been the exact opposite, helped greatly by the unflinching support of the farm's stallion manager Larry Walton.

“Larry lets me jump stallions in the breeding shed, and that never happens when you're a girl,” Zurick said. “It's all because Larry believes in me. Last year was the first time that I did it. He radioed down to the barn, 'Hey Christina, can you bring Mucho Macho Man?' I said, 'Are you sure I can do that?' and he said 'You've got it. What are you being a chicken for? Get him over here.' It's just so crazy to have a boss that believes in you like that, because I'd never had it before. I've learned so much from him and owe so much to him.”

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Of course, even with Walton ensuring that the working environment is as harassment-free as possible for a female stallion groom, Zurick still had to prove she belonged on the team based on her own body of work.

In handling stallions Zurick said she has two basic tenets.

“My biggest thing is I like to find a balance with stallions,” she said. “A lot of people like to manhandle them, and I don't want to have to do that if I don't have to. There's a line that they know they're not supposed to cross, and there's a line I'm not supposed to cross, and we just respect each other in that way. We respect each other's bubbles and we respect each other's boundaries, and when they cross that boundary, it's like 'okay, you need to take a step back, sir.'

“The main thing with stallions is, you can't be afraid,” she continued. “They second you are afraid, they know it and they'll exploit every angle that they can on you. You have to go every day with this thought that I might get hurt today, and it is what it is. That's why we have worker's comp.”

Zurick described the farm's star stallions Curlin and Ghostzapper as two horses with quite similar personalities, in that they both know their importance and expect those around them to know it, too. She described Curlin as “a handful,” but one with an outstanding mind. As the horse she obsessed over as a child, Curlin lived up to the hype.

“He's a cool dude,” Zurick said. “If he likes you, he's really sweet. He'll still try to bite you and he still messes with me, but it's not to the point where he's legitimately going to hurt me. He's legitimately the smartest horse I've ever worked with in my life. He's very communicative about what he wants, what he needs, when he wants it.

“We had somebody new filling water buckets one day and they forgot his bucket,” she continued. “He saw I was walking down the shedrow, went over to his water bucket, banged it against the wall, walked back to the door, nickered at me, and then when I wasn't getting the message, went back over to the water bucket and banged it again and looked at me like, 'Excuse me, my water is empty.'”

Ghostzapper, on the other hand, requires a slightly different approach.

“He's a grumpy old man,” she said. “He can be sweet, but he's very much like your typical grumpy old man. He likes to be left alone for the most part. He does like to be loved on sometimes, but it has to be on his terms.”

Though she might not consider herself a risk-taker outside of her inherently risk-laden profession, there is always a stake on the line when you bet on yourself, and Zurick had to double down in a field that was not particularly looking for someone like her. When that bet hit, it paid off in a way her younger self wouldn't have dared imagined – even if it meant a broken finger or two along the way. The house always takes its share.

For other young women watching their favorite horses on a simulcast feed in flyover country, or anywhere else on the map, Zurick said her spot next to two Hall of Famers shows that the table is open for others that want to bet on themselves to get into the stallion barn.

“For any girl that really wants to do stallions, you just have to keep going and keep trying, and eventually someone will give you a chance and you'll get lucky,” she said. “I know it's hard, and sometimes you want to give up. For every person that says no, there might be at least one that might say yes, and you have to keep going until you find it. I know it stinks, and you have to push through a lot of bullcrap to get there, but at the end of it, I promise you it's worth it. I wouldn't change a single thing of how my life has gone so far for where I ended up.”

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