Darley Sets 2022 Stud Fees For Essential Quality, Maxfield

Champion two-year-old and Grade 1 Belmont Stakes winner Essential Quality will stand the 2022 season at a fee of $75,000 while G1 Breeders' Futurity winner Maxfield's fee will be set at $40,000.

Following a third in his final career start, the G1 Breeders' Cup Classic, Darley Sales Manager Darren Fox said of the Belmont and Travers Stakes winner, “His body of work is just tremendous: an Eclipse Champion at two, a Classic winner at three, a son of Tapit with a fantastic female family. He's already generated quite a lot of interest and we couldn't be more excited about him retiring to Jonabell Farm.”

Maxfield, a son of Darley stallion Street Sense, will make his final appearance on the track in the G1 Clark at Churchill Downs on November 26th, and will then head to Jonabell to begin his next career.

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Monomoy Girl Arrives at Spendthrift Farm, To Visit Into Mischief Next Year

Two-time Breeders' Cup Champion Monomoy Girl (Tapizar–Drumette, by Henny Hughes) arrived at Spendthrift Farm on Monday, shortly after noon, from Churchill Downs, and the farm announced “unofficially” that she will be bred to perennial leading sire Into Mischief in 2022.

The six-year-old mare was retired from racing last week after she was discovered to have sustained an injury during training.

Spendthrift General Manager Ned Toffey was on site for the arrival and spoke on their decision to send her to Into Mischief.

“It's not a tremendous amount of pedigree research there, it's just one of those breed the best to the best-type things,” he said. “She's certainly among the very best and we feel that Into Mischief is too.”

Monomoy Girl took in her surroundings with ease after stepping off the van in Lexington and then strode into the quarantine barn, where she will reside for the next 30 days.

“Having been retired because of a fairly minor injury, we'll go very slowly with the acclimation process here to her becoming a broodmare,” Toffey said. “[She is in] our regular quarantine barn where Beholder was when she first came to Spendthrift. We'll set up a pen that will let her get outside, eat some grass, get some sun on her back and get used to her surroundings. We'll do some hand walking and continue to take things slow with her. After she's acclimated, probably about 30 days, we'll find her a buddy who will likely be another filly just off the track. They'll eventually work their way into our group of barren and maiden mares here.”

Purchased by Liz Crow for $100,000 at the Keeneland September Sale and originally campaigned by the ownership group of Michael Dubb, Sol Kumin's Monomoy Stables, Stuart Grant's The Elkstone Group and Bethlehem Stables, the Brad Cox trainee was sent through the ring at last year's Fasig-Tipton Night of Stars Sale after taking two editions of the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff in 2018 and 2020. She sold for $9.5 million to Spendthrift Farm there, and MyRacehorse Stable and Madaket Stables soon joined in the partnership. This year, she captured the GIII Bayakoa S. and finished second to MGISW Letruska (Super Saver) in the GI Apple Blossom H.

Toffey said the crew at Spendthrift is thrilled to have Monomoy Girl join the likes of another champion in Beholder at Spendthrift.

“It's really exciting to have these kinds of horses here, to have her join Beholder, and eventually Got Stormy (Get Stormy) will be chiming in here pretty soon herself. It's the kind of broodmare band we'd like to have as a really, really top-notch group of mares and hopefully we'll be able to keep daughters out of these two great mares for years to come.”

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Sprint Champion Whitmore Retired

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY-Some 15 hours after he suffered a career-ending injury, Whitmore (Pleasantly Perfect) was being Whitmore Sunday morning. Acting like he was quite ready to run in another Grade I at Saratoga Race Course, the 8-year-old was positioned in the front of this stall, alert, active and on the prowl for a carrot or a piece of candy.

During the gallop-out past the wire of the GI Forego S. Saturday afternoon, jockey Joel Rosario noticed something didn't feel right and pulled the champion up. As a precaution, he was vanned off, taken back to trainer Ron Moquett's barn and examined. The X-rays showed a minor injury, an apical fracture in his lower left foreleg. Moquett promptly decided that the Forego, the 43rd race of Whitmore's distinguished career, would be his last.

“He would easily come back and run,” said Laura Moquett, who trains the stable with her husband and is Whitmore's exercise rider. “The vet that took the pictures last night was basically like, 'He'll come back and run like a 100%.' But Ron immediately said, 'No, he won't. We're not doing this.'”

About 100 yards away from where Essential Quality was being saddled for his victory in the 152nd GI Runhappy Travers S., the Moquetts were in the midst of the bittersweet period. Their life-changing horse, a fan favorite who won the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint and an Eclipse Award last year and earned over $4.4 million, was finished with competition. But he was safe.

Ron Moquett checked on his ornery gelding before dawn Sunday and headed back to Kentucky and then on to Arkansas, as planned. Laura Moquett was at the barn, handling interviews and welcoming people who wanted to stop by, see Whitmore and thank him for the memories. She said her husband was dealing with the injury and retirement.

“He's sad, but he's really also relieved and happy that he's fine. That's the key,” she said. “We love racing, but we love horses before we love racing. As long as they're fine, we don't get too worried about whether they run again or not. That's the key to racing right? It's a very short window.”

Laura Moquett said she was distracted by the incident in the stretch of the Forego when Firenze Fire savaged eventual winner Yaupon and took her eyes off Whitmore. As she began running down the track to where Whitmore was being tended to in the first turn, she realized he was not in serious trouble.

“I saw him walk like two steps,” she said. “When they were trying to hose him off he was kind of walking in a circle. As soon as I saw him take the two steps, I was like, 'We're good. He's injured, but it's nothing catastrophic.”

Her long-distance analysis was correct. The X-rays showed the fracture at the top of the sesamoid.

“It's just like a little piece, where his suspensory attaches,” she said. “They may not even choose to take it out. It's not in the ankle. It's the two bones on the backside. It's where the suspensory is attached, so when they stand they've got structure. It's connecting his foot to his back of his leg.”

The X-rays were sent to Dr. Larry Bramlage at Rood and Riddle in Lexington for review and to determine whether surgery is needed.

Regardless, Laura Moquett said that when Whitmore's recovery is complete she will enter him in the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) to be retrained. She expects he will learn to be a jumper in the show ring. She said she was not sad Sunday morning, “because I'm going to have him. Now it's just the next career, right? He's going to have a little layoff and then he's going to start his new job. So that's just a different structure.”

While Whitmore will stay with the Moquetts, his disposition may preclude him from working in the stable.

“He kicks a lot, so I don't think he'll be a pony,” Laura Moquett said. “He's not a biter, but he is nasty with his hind end. I don't know if he'll be able to do pony work. We'll see. I would love to have him on the track every morning. It would be so fun. If he goes on to be a jumper, I'm basically the only one that'll be around him instead of having all the guys keep tabs on him and stuff. They'd like to keep him around, so it would be cool to have him be a pony.”

Ron Moquett purchased the unraced 2-year-old named Pleasant Mel in a private sale for $37,000 and renamed him Whitmore after one of his high school teammates. Whitmore did run in the 2016 GI Kentucky Derby, but came out of the race with an injury. Since his return to racing several months later, he has been a sprinter.

Whitmore won 15 times and finished in the money 33 times. His victory in last year's Breeders' Cup Sprint at 18-1 carried him to the Eclipse Award.

Laura Moquett said that when her husband announced Whitmore's retirement Saturday night on social media, the reaction was immediate and intense with fans wishing him well.

“That's so cool,” she said. “They love him because he's just a hard-knocking guy that tries hard every time. He hurt himself and finished fifth and a Grade I, his last one. That's kind of incredible.”

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‘Nothing Left To Prove’: Champion Sprinter Whitmore Retired

Fan favorite and 2020 sprint champion Whitmore pulled up after the Grade 1 Forego and was vanned off as a precaution after jockey Joel Rosario noted that the 8-year-old gelding felt off during his gallop out. Later Saturday, trainer Ron Moquett released a statement that Whitmore had been retired from racing.

“Joel said, 'He didn't feel right pulling up, boss' after the race. He felt something different,” Moquett told the Paulick Report Sunday.

Out of an abundance of caution, Whitmore was put on the on-track equine ambulance and returned to Moquett's barn at Saratoga Race Course, where he was examined by a track veterinarian. An x-ray showed “a shadow of something in the left foreleg,” so Whitmore will be sent to Dr. Larry Bramlage at Rood and Riddle for further examination once the gelding has been cleared to ship to Kentucky. After that, he will be turned out at Rebecca Maker's farm while Moquett and co-owners Robert La Penta and Head of Plains Racing decide what's next. Whitmore's long-term prognosis is good, but Moquett believes that given his long list of accomplishments, retirement is the best route for the fan favorite.

“He's acting fine. We're just being overly cautious,” Moquett said about his star gelding. “Now is when we retire. He owes us nothing. He has nothing to prove. He's been to the mountaintop. What does he have left to do?”

Moquett's candor about Whitmore's status and his steps are indicative of the trainer's philosophy about racing in general and racing his horses specifically.

“One of the things we need to do in this sport is be transparent,” he said. “I felt I owed it to people to say this is what we're dealing with, this is what we're doing with him.”

That transparency will continue as Moquett pledges to update fans on Whitmore's next career after the announcement on Saturday.

“We're just tickled to death that we have a village. I get a lot of comments where a guy will tell me that his wife is not a racing fan, but she loves Whitmore,” the trainer reflected. “When someone respects a horse so much, that's what it's all about.”

By multiple Grade 1 winner Pleasantly Perfect, out of the Scat Daddy mare Melody's Spirit, Whitmore's resume includes three wins in the Grade 3 Count Fleet at Oaklawn Park, the Grade 1 Forego at Saratoga in 2018, and the Grade 2 Phoenix Stakes at Keeneland Race Course in 2017. In a career that has spanned 43 starts with 15 wins, what does Moquett see as the ultimate Whitmore performance?

“His win in last year's Breeders'Cup Sprint for sure,” he said. “But his last win in the Count Fleet [in 2020] tied the record as the winningest stakes horse at Oaklawn Park. That one stands out as well.”

Moquett hinted in a statement released late Saturday that Whitmore may move on to a second career, which could see him contest the Thoroughbred Makeover, depending on his medical prognosis.

 

“I hope that he teaches people that the Kentucky Derby is not the end-all, be-all, that everything he [Whitmore] accomplished came after that. Every animal is different. We focus on the individual's potential and acclimate what we do to get the most out of our horses.”

“The main thing is that Whitmore tried every time. He was as gutsy as hell.”

 

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