Jackie’s Warrior, Cyberknife Available For Inspection at Spendthrift

Eclipse Award-winning sprinter Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) and two-time Grade I winner Cyberknife (Gun Runner) are available for inspection at Spendthrift Farm Nov. 9-15 from 1:30-3 p.m. daily. Though Jackie's Warrior made his final career start when third in last weekend's GI Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint, Gold Square's Cyberknife–the unlucky runner-up in the GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile–will return to the barn of trainer Brad Cox Nov. 15.

“Jackie's Warrior has settled in nicely at the farm and is such an impressive specimen, especially for a horse coming off a pretty hard campaign,” said Ned Toffey, Spendthrift general manager. “It's special to be able to add another great champion to our stallion ranks and we're excited to be able to show him off to breeders. Cyberknife ran great to finish a head behind older horse Cody's Wish in the Dirt Mile, and he came to the farm looking well and with good energy. He is set to run again before retiring, however, it was important for us to be able to show him to breeders over the course of the next week.”

Jackie's Warrior will stand for an introductory fee of $50,000 S & N and retires as the first champion sprinter in 34 years to have won as many as five Grade I races. He became the only horses in the history of racing at Saratoga to post top-level success in three straight seasons when winning this year's GI A. G. Vanderbilt H. in dominating fashion.

Cyberknife, winner of this year's GI Arkansas Derby and GI Haskell S., will command a fee of $30,000 upon his retirement.

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Open Letter to the Industry: Entering the Final Turn

by Tom Rooney

The Thoroughbred breeding and racing world is descending on central Kentucky this week. The excitement is palpable, Lexington is abuzz, and anticipation is building each day as we get closer to this weekend's Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland. And while this event will begin the wind down to the 2022 racing calendar, I am reflecting on my first year as President and CEO of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA). While I've been a Thoroughbred enthusiast my entire life, this is the first year where I've lived, ate, and breathed Thoroughbred breeding and racing like the so many other stakeholders, customers, and fans. The year has been filled with great racing, record sales, incredible enthusiasm, and strong handle and on-track attendance. These and other metrics make me more excited than ever to see what the future holds for the Thoroughbred industry.

This year was a strong one for racing. Coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic where many of the biggest races were run without fans or in limited numbers, this year's Kentucky Derby welcomed nearly 150,000 people to Churchill Downs on Derby Day alone and delivered an almost unfathomable fairytale ending. Attendance and handle figures at racing's premier meets were as strong as they've ever been. Prize money is also up significantly, more than 10% higher than where we were at this point last year. Like in all aspects of life after COVID, people were ready to get back to the racetrack, or at least they were ready to get back to enjoying their favorite horse betting app.

We have also had a tremendous year in the sales ring, with records set at many sales. The OBS Spring Sale, annually the highest grossing of all 2-year-old in training sales, surpassed last year's sales record by almost $20 million. The Saratoga Select Yearling sale produced 10 seven-figure yearlings and topped its gross sales record from 2018 by more than $4 million. The Keeneland September Yearling Sale, the leading source of champions and stakes winners around the world, saw the highest gross sales in Keeneland auction history. With two sales immediately following the Breeders' Cup and based on these trends, there is every reason for optimism that sales will finish the year strong.

This year also saw a dramatic increase in sports betting, as 36 states and the District of Columbia have legalized sports wagering in some capacity in the four years since the U.S. Supreme Court's decision. The widespread acceptance and legalization of sports betting across the country is hugely exciting for horse racing. We have an opportunity to introduce our product to a whole new universe of people and a whole new generation of gamblers. With the anticipated addition of pari-mutuel wagering on horse racing to sports betting platforms with millions of account holders, I'm very bullish about the bright future we have on sports betting platforms.

And last, and most importantly, more emphasis has been put on the health, safety, and welfare, and, yes, aftercare of Thoroughbreds in 2022 than ever before. As we as an industry continue to move through the creation of greater national uniformity, we are improving America's first sport for generations to come.

In January, we'll all come together to celebrate the success of the 2022 racing year, in Palm Beach, at the 52nd Annual Eclipse Awards being held at the Breakers. Many of the horses racing at the Breeders' Cup this weekend will be contenders for the awards, and their success will determine many of this year's champions. I am excited to welcome the entire industry so we can together celebrate the best of the best. While no good thing comes without its challenges, the Thoroughbred industry is thriving, and the future is bright.

Tom Rooney is the President and CEO of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) and a former U.S. Congressman representing the people of Florida from 2009-2019.

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Eurton, Wolfendale, Hazelton To Host Eclipse Awards

Well-known television personalities Britney Eurton, Maggie Wolfendale and Scott Hazelton will co-host the 52nd annual Eclipse Awards to be held Thursday, Jan. 26, 2023, at The Breakers Palm Beach, officials from the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), Daily Racing Form (DRF) and National Turf Writers and Broadcasters (NTWAB) announced Monday.

Eurton, a fixture on FanDuel TV and NBC Sports and the daughter of California trainer Peter Eurton, returns to the Eclipse Awards in 2023, having co-hosted each of the last three years. Hazelton, whose late father Richard trained some 4,700 winners in a 60-year career, got his start with HRTV before moving over to TVG and is one of the network's go-to reporters for international racing, having covered several runnings of the Dubai World Cup and Royal Ascot. Also the paddock analyst for racing at Keeneland, Hazelton serves as an announcer for the company's auctions. Wolfendale has served as paddock host and analyst for the New York Racing Association for the past dozen years and is a mainstay on the NYRA-produced 'America's Day at the Races' and 'Saratoga Live.' Wolfendale also serves as an exercise rider to her husband, trainer Tom Morley, and has retired and retrained several of his former runners.

A VIP pre-sale of tickets will begin Monday, Nov. 7, and general ticket sales start a week later. To stay up to date on the Eclipse Awards and for additional information, click here.

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Gutierrez Retains Full Confidence In Letruska

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – By trainer Fausto Gutierrez's calculation, a clunker every once in a while surely does not tarnish champion Letruska (Super Saver)'s glittering string of accomplishments.

When last seen in competition, the 6-year-old mare was running last as the 3-5 favorite in the GI Ogden Phipps S. June 11 at Belmont Park. As usual, she set the pace, but on that afternoon could not finish and was passed by the four others in the field. Gutierrez said that Letruska wasn't herself that afternoon, possibly a nervous reaction to shipping from Kentucky.

“She had a bad race at New York, on Belmont Day,” he said. “But I think this is part of the game.”

Letruska returned to Saratoga this week to see if she can win the GI Personal Ensign S. for the second consecutive year. Two horses have won the race twice: Politely in 1967-68 and Beautiful Pleasure in 1999-2000. She handled the Personal Ensign challenge in 2021, edging Bonny South (Munnings) by a half-length. It was the fourth of five straight graded-stakes victories that carried her to the Eclipse Award for the older female dirt division. Gutierrez said she looks good to him for the nine-furlong race.

“She has come in in very good form and I think she's ready to show it,” he said. “I'm very happy how she's trained and [she] is ready to go.”

Letruska's championship season of six wins and a second in eight starts with earnings of $1.9 million ended with a distant 10th in the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff. That day at Del Mar, she hooked up in a speed duel with Private Mission (Into Mischief)  through brutally fast fractions of 21.84, 44.97 and 1:09.70. The Japanese mare Marche Lorraine (Jpn) (Orfevre {Jpn}) was the lucky beneficiary and held off Dunbar Road (Quality Road) by a nose at 49-1. Private Mission was the only horse Letruska beat that day.

“With that that kind of rhythm or pace for the race, of course, it would help if she's in the middle,” Gutierrez said, noting that horses that go that fast early in a 1 1/8-mile race aren't typically in contention at the end.

“When you are a trainer, you see how it started and you are just waiting for the fractions,” he said. “When you see :21, :22 you know that the race is finished for you.”

Letruska started the 2022 season on Feb. 26 at Gulfstream Park and led from gate to wire in the GIII Royal Delta S. by three lengths. She followed that success with a 1 1/4-length win over Clairiere (Curlin) in the GI Apple Blossom H. Apr. 22 at Oaklawn Park. The Phipps, which she won handily in 2021, was her next start.

“We need to remember to she has been five years in a row running. We have two, three, four, five and now six,” Gutierrez said. “Before the Belmont race, she had one of the most spectacular races that she's had, the second Apple Blossom she won in a row. Big numbers with I think the second- or third-fastest time in the history for the Apple Blossom. And after we had a bad race.”

Gutierrez said that he and his crew noticed that she didn't seem herself in the days leading up to the Phipps.

“She's a very temperamental horse. She's very special,” he said. “And when we arrived to Belmont, she was a little bit [depressed]. It's complicated sometimes to scratch a horse like her. It's not an excuse, but when you live with a horse five years in a row you know when it's not the same horse you know. Something like this happens. I repeat, it is not an excuse. The fractions for that race, the quality for the horses to run in these is the high level and she's a horse who wins and has lost races. That day we had a bad start. Like when you are a pitcher in baseball and one day in the second inning you go out. But you won 19 games before.”

Gutierrez smiled as he used the baseball analogy. He was referring to Letruska's career record of 19 wins in 26 starts.

Since the Phipps, Letruska has worked seven times at Churchill Downs. Four of the breezes were the fastest of the day at the distance. In Friday, she breezed a half-mile in :48, the third- fastest of 107 works that morning.

Gutierrez said that Letruska traveled well from Kentucky and that jockey Gabriel Lagunes, who has ridden her in training this week, told him she is a different horse from the one he was up in June at Belmont Park. Gutierrez said the St. George Stable homebred is ready for the Personal Ensign, which he acknowledged is another stiff assignment.

“She hasn't had an easy race in the last two years,” Gutierrez said. “She just runs [in graded stakes] and races where she is the focus. We run with the most high-quality horses: Clairiere, Malathaat (Curlin), Search Results (Flatter). Any one that wants to run in that group is a tough horse.”

Gutierrez said that he likes Letruska's chances in the $600,000 Personal Ensign. She drew the rail in the field of five.

“I do I have the feeling and the perception that we can see again the same Letruska,” he said. “She has a lot of people who follow her and like her form, that she fights every single race.”

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