Keswick Stables’ Peggy Augustus Passes Away

Peggy Augustus, a successful owner and breeder who bred Eclipse Award winners Stellar Wind (Curlin) and Johnny D. (Stage Door Johnny), passed away Sunday at her home on her Old Keswick Farm in Charlottesville, VA. She was 90.

Her death was confirmed by one of her former trainers, Bill Hirsch Jr.

“She was a great lady, just one of the best,” Hirsch said. “The thing I remember most about her was that, unlike most owners, she knew how to win and she knew how to lose. A lot of them don't know how to lose. She never skimped on anything. Whatever her horses needed, no matter the cost or the effort it took to get something to me, she got it done. Her number one priority was always her horses. She was just a fabulous lady.”

Hirsch said that Augustus was suffering from breathing problems, which were worsening, and that she told friends and family that “it is time for me to go.”

Augustus, a member of the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame, was born in Cleveland Ohio before moving to Virginia in 1950. Before getting involved in racing, she was an active owner, trainer and rider who competed against men and professionals and won major championships throughout the United States and Canada, including the National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden, the Devon Horse Show, the Royal Winter Fair, the Pennsylvania National and Virginia's top four horse shows Hot Springs, Keswick, Deep Run, and Warrenton. She is also a member of the Virginia Horse Show Hall of Fame and the National Horse Show Hall of Fame, and was a named a Living Legend of the National Horse Show in 1996. In 1997, she was elected into the National Show Hunter Hall of Fame.

In 2008, she told the website virginialiving.com, that she had been interested in racing since she was 10 years old and started compiling statistics on horses running at the Chicago tracks. Before she was old enough to attend a day at the track, her mother, Elizabeth, would sneak her into the races.

“You had to be 21 to get into the racetracks back then,” she told the website. “If I picked less than four winners, it was a bad day.”

As a teenager she was heavily involved in showing and briefly lost interest in racing. In 1952, the Augustus family bought Old Keswick Farm in Virginia, where Elizabeth was involved in raising Thoroughbreds. When her father died in 1963, Peggy moved to Old Keswick and carried on the breeding business with her mother under the name Keswick Stables.

According to Virginia Living,  Augustus bred 48 stakes winners.

One of her first stars as a breeder was Johnny D., who was owned by Dana Bray. A foal of 1974, his biggest wins came in the 1977 GI Washington D.C. International and the 1977 Turf Classic International S. He was named champion turf male of 1977. Her next big horse as a breeder was Husband (Diesis), who she also campaigned. After racing in France, his biggest win came in the 1993 GI Rothman's International S. at Woodbine. After his racing career was over, Husband wound up in South America. Augustus would buy him back from his new owner and let him live out his final years at Keswick.

For Augustus, Stellar Wind, who she bred along with Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings, was somewhat of a last hurrah. Sold for just $40,000 at the 2013 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale, the mare went on to win six Grade I races and was named champion 3-year-old filly in 2015. Stellar Wind was the last offspring of the last mare bred by Keswick Stables.

“It's a surprising thrill, being at the end of the line of Keswick Stables,” Augustus told theracingbiz.com in 2015. “Nice to go out with a bang, [but] even if she doesn't win the Kentucky Oaks, she's done enough now.

Stellar Wind finished fourth in the GI Kentucky Oaks as the 3-1 favorite.

Augustus also enjoyed great success at the sales. In 1984, she sold a yearling colt by Roberto at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga to Hugh de Burgh, who was representing Maktoum bin Rashid al Maktoum, for $4 million. It was the second highest price for a horse sold at that sale. According to her profile on the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame website, Augustus also sold a filly at Saratoga for $2.1 million and she is the only person in the history of the Saratoga sales to have bred and sold five yearlings that went on to win more than a million dollars.

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Powerhouse: Elite Power Flexes in True North

ELMONT, NY – Juddmonte's streaking champion sprinter Elite Power (Curlin) kicked off the graded stakes portion of Saturday's absolutely stacked GI Belmont S. program with a sensational performance in the GII True North S.

Off as the 3-4 favorite, last year's GI Breeders' Cup Sprint hero looked to be at a major disadvantage from the go in the 6 1/2-furlong affair, chasing in an outside fourth as the field of six crawled through fractions of :23.25 and :46.12. The blaze-faced chestnut, nonetheless, ranged up while three wide approaching the quarter pole, inhaled the top two as they straightened and was only shown the whip in deep stretch by Irad Ortiz, Jr. to win by a geared-down 1 3/4 lengths over last-out GIII Jacques Cartier S. winner Anarchist (Distorted Humor). 'TDN Rising Star' Strobe (Into Mischief), second in the GIII Count Fleet Sprint H. at Oaklawn, could do no better than a well-beaten third as the 2-1 second choice after sitting a dream trip in second.

“He got the job done,” said winning Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, who won this same race three times back in the 1990s with Diablo (1991), Lion Cavern (1993) and Richter Scale (1998). “I noticed the fractions, :23 and change, weren't overly quick, but he's still got a pretty good punch to him. He really is exceptional. He's gotten very good.”

Mott added that Elite Power may target Saratoga's GI Alfred G. Vanderbilt H. July 29.

Elite Power has now won seven straight, including his first try in stakes company in the GII Vosburgh S. Oct. 8, on racing's biggest stage at the aforementioned Championships in Lexington Nov. 5 and the G3 Riyadh Dirt Sprint on the Saudi Cup undercard most recently Feb. 25. The distant runner-up in the latter Gunite (Gun Runner) has since followed with a third-place finish in the G1 Dubai Golden Shaheen S. and an authoritative win in Churchill's Aristides S. last weekend, good for a gaudy 108 Beyer Speed Figure.

“He's such a nice and exciting horse,” Ortiz Jr. said of Elite Power. “He's won his last seven starts. He was great last year. You can see his performances and campaign last year was great. I'm hoping he's the same or better than he was last year, so far it looks great. He hasn't made any mistakes out there.”

Pedigree Notes:

Elite Power, a $900,000 KEESEP yearling, is one of 53 graded winners, 20 at the Grade I level, for the mighty Curlin.

Broodmare sire Vindication, the unbeaten winner of the 2002 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Arlington, is responsible for 12 graded winners, six at the top level.

Elite Power is bred on the same Curlin/Vindication cross as GI Preakness S. winner Exaggerator. Elite Power's dam Broadway's Alibi, a MGSW & GI Kentucky Oaks runner-up and Robsham homebred, brought $2.15 million from Alpha Delta Stables while in foal to Smart Strike at the 2013 KEENOV sale. Broadway's Alibi is also represented by a Curlin colt of 2021. She was bred to City of Light for 2023.

Elite Power's fourth dam is champion 2-year-old filly and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies heroine Eliza (Mt. Livermore). This is also the family of GISW and young sire Dialed In (Mineshaft).

“The oddity of this guy is that dirt sprinting isn't anything we've ever really geared our program for,” Juddmonte's Garrett O'Rourke said. “Obviously, we purchased this guy and it's really nice that for the first time we're winning races that we hadn't before. These are races that we'd never even competed in before. This is very satisfying.”

Saturday, Belmont Park
TRUE NORTH S.-GII, $250,000, Belmont, 6-10, 4yo/up, 6 1/2f, 1:15.65, ft.
1–ELITE POWER, 124, h, 5, by Curlin
                1st Dam: Broadway's Alibi (MGSW & GISP, $521,500), by Vindication
                2nd Dam: Broadway Gold, by Seeking the Gold
                3rd Dam: Miss Doolittle, by Storm Cat
($900,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-Juddmonte; B-Alpha Delta
Stables, LLC (KY); T-William I. Mott; J-Irad Ortiz, Jr. $137,500.
Lifetime Record: Ch. Male Sprinter, GISW-USA, GSW-Sau,
10-7-0-1, $2,443,211. Werk Nick Rating: A+++. *Triple Plus*
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Anarchist, 120, c, 4, Distorted Humor–Vicarious Won, by
Elusive Quality. ($75,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Ilium Stables, LLC;
B-Centaur Farms, Inc. (KY); T-Doug F. O'Neill. $50,000.
3–Strobe, 118, c, 4, Into Mischief–Flashing, by A.P. Indy.
'TDN Rising Star'. O/B-Godolphin (KY); T-Brad H. Cox. $30,000.
Margins: 1 3/4, 3 3/4, 2HF. Odds: 0.75, 12.30, 2.10.
Also Ran: Today's Flavor, Fearless, Synthesis.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Champion Kalanisi Dies at 27

Champion Kalanisi (Ire) (Doyoun {Ire}–Kalamba {Ire}, by Green Dancer) passed away earlier this week at the Flood family's Boardsmill Stud, the stud announced on Friday. He was 27.

Bred by His Highness the Aga Khan's Studs in Ireland and trained by first Luca Cumani and then Sir Michael Stoute, he was crowned the 2000 American Champion Grass Horse after a season which saw him take the G2 Queen Anne S., run second in the G1 Eclipse S. and G1 International S. both to Giant's Causeway (Storm Cat), before returning to the winner's circle in the G1 Champion S. and GI Breeders' Cup Turf. Placed twice more at the highest level in 2001, he retired after 11 starts and was never unplaced with $2,148,836 in career earnings.

William and John Flood of Boardsmill said on Thursday, “We are sad to announce the passing of our stalwart sire Kalanisi, who died suddenly in his paddock this week. He had been enjoying his well-earned retirement in his paddock here for the past few years. Kalanisi was a real favourite with everyone in the yard and with visitors too. He was a huge attraction with both racing fans and breeders during the ITM Stallion Trail every year. He has a final crop of 25 three year olds and he has 3 representatives of this crop on offer at both the Goffs Arkle Sale and also at the Tattersalls Derby Sale.”

First a resident of the Aga Khan's Giltown Stud in Ireland before moving to Boardsmill in 2008 after being purchased by the Flood family, Kalanisi sired five stakes winners on the Flat, but his runners excelled under National Hunt rules. Some of his best are Kalashnikov (Ire), Fayonagh (Ire) and Barters Hill (Ire). His dozen stakes winners as a Flat broodmare sire include Roxoterra (Brz) (Gol Tricolor {Brz}), a Group 1 winner in Brazil, and G1 Prix Jean Romanet heroine Aristia (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}). Pensioned in 2020, his youngest foals are 4-year-olds.

His dam's first foal, the homebred is a half-brother to Group 2 winner and dual Group 1-placed Kalaman (Ire) (Desert Prince {Ire}) and is from the extended family of Southern Hemisphere Group 1 winners Rockdale (NZ) (Danroad {Aus}) and Fanatic (NZ) (Shocking {Aus}).

 

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Forte Made 3-1 Favorite In KDFW Pool Five

Eclipse Award winner Forte (Violence), impressive 4 1/2-length winner of the GII Fountain of Youth S. in his 3-year-old debut Mar. 4, closed as the 3-1 favorite ($8.76 will pay) in the fifth pool of the Kentucky Derby Future Wager, with Saturday's GIII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby hero and 'TDN Rising Star' Tapit Trice (Tapit) the distance second choice at 8-1 ($18.32).

The 'All Other 3-Year-Olds', encompassing any horse not listed among the individual betting interests, closed as the 10-1 ($22.08) third pick, while others to close at 30-1 or lower included GII San Felipe S. hero Practical Move (Practical Joke, 12-1, $27.04); Instant Coffee (Bolt d'Oro, 19-1, $40.04); Red Route One (Gun Runner, 24-1, $50.46); Reincarnate (Good Magic, 24-1, $51.18); GIII Withers S. winner Hit Show (Candy Ride {Arg}, 28-1, $59.22); Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}, 30-1, $62.92); and GII Rebel S. upsetter Confidence Game (Candy Ride {Arg}, 30-1, $63.98).

In the lone Kentucky Oaks Future Wager, which was conducted concurrently with the KDFW, GIII Honeybee S. winner Wet Paint (Blame) closed as the 4-1 ($10.66) favorite over champion filly Wonder Wheel (Into Mischief), who was 6-1 ($15.70). Hoosier Philly (Into Mischief) was the 7-1 ($16.92) third choice.

Betting on all future wagers over the three-day period was $479,559. Total handle for the March 10-12 KDFW pool–the fifth of six wagering pools in advance of the 1 1/4-mile GI Kentucky Derby–was $341,638 ($250,906 in the win pool and $90,732 in exactas). Betting on the Oaks Future Wager totaled $70,209 ($53,340 in the win pool and $70,209 in exactas). The Oaks/Derby Future Double, which requires fans to correctly select the winners of both the $1.25-million GI Longines Kentucky Oaks May 5 and the next day's Kentucky Derby, handled $67,712.

The year's sixth and final Kentucky Derby Future Wager pool is set for Thursday, Mar. 30 through Saturday, Apr. 1. Different from the first five pools of the KDFW, the sixth and final pool will close prior to the first Road to the Kentucky Derby Championship Series race on Apr. 1.

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