Beat Ray At Del Mar: Can BCBC Champion Become The New Beach Boss?

Marshall Gramm, fresh off his lucrative victory in the Breeders' Cup Betting Challenge, has been to more than 70 racetracks but has yet to visit Del Mar. Gramm is an economics professor at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., teaching a course, among others, called the Economics of Racetrack Wagering Markets. He's a managing partner of the successful Ten Strike racing stable and a regular on the leaderboard of handicapping tournaments around the country.

But Gramm has an admitted East Coast bias who thinks his home track, Oaklawn Park in Arkansas, has the perfect blend of dirt and turf races (100% dirt).

He'll have to work around those biases as the special guest in this week's final installment of the Beat Ray Beach Boss competition at Del Mar, where Gramm, host/handicapper Michelle Yu and Paulick Report publisher Ray Paulick handicap two turf races on Saturday's blockbuster card: the Grade 2 Seabiscuit Handicap and Grade 1 Hollywood Derby. (Believe it or not, Gramm and Paulick land on the same longshot pick in the Seabiscuit. which is probably not a good omen for Gramm, considering Paulick's recent picks!)

Beat Ray Everyday is an online contest offered every racing day of the Del Mar meet. It's free to play and you can sign up here. Bet a mythical $100 each day on the selected contest race in win, place or show bets on any horse or horses.  At the end of the meet, the player with the highest bankroll from those wagers becomes the “Beach Boss” and wins two VIP tickets to the 2021 Breeders' Cup at Del Mar. Other prizes are available to top finishers in the competition.

Watch this week's Beach Boss below.

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American-Bred Lemon Pop Takes Derby Prep at Tokyo

The first of four races on the Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby, the 1600-meter Cattleya S. (allowance), took place Saturday on the eve of the G1 Japan Cup at Toyko Racecourse, with US-bred Lemon Pop (Lemon Drop Kid) running his record to two wins from as many starts with a convincing victory.

The 7-5 second choice, a debut winner in a 1300-meter newcomers’ event at Tokyo Nov. 7, broke without incident and was ridden positively from gate one by Keita Tosaki to sit in the wake of pacesetting Takeru Pegasus (Jpn) (Dunkirk), favored at 4-5 off a nine-length maiden victory over Saturday’s track and distance Nov. 7. Sitting the pocket into the long Tokyo straight, Lemon Pop rolled away from the fence to come after the front-runner and wore that one down to take it by a cozy 1 1/2 lengths (see below). It was a gap of 10 lengths back to Plus Ultra (Jpn) (Discreet Cat) in third.

Lemon Pop races for Godolphin and was purchased on behalf of Sheikh Mohammed’s operation by Harry Sweeney’s Paca Paca Farm for $70,000 at the 2019 Keeneland September sale out of Padraig Campion’s Blandford Stud consignment. The chestnut was bred by Olly Tait, who served as chief operating officer of Darley for 15 years prior to his departure in 2014, and his wife Amber.

Lemon Pop was produced by Unreachable (Giant’s Causeway), an unraced daughter of five-time GSW Harpia (Danzig), a full-sister to the legendary Danehill, MGSW Shibboleth and GSW Eagle Eyed. Another full-sister to Harpia–Family–bred European GSW, Hong Kong SW and UAE Group 3-placed Dundonnell (First Defence).

The Cattleya Sho offered Derby points on a 10-4-2-1 scale. The second leg of the series is the Zen-Nippon Nisai Yushun (1600m) at Kawasaki Dec. 16, followed by the Listed Hyacinth S. back at Tokyo in February and the Fukuryu S. (allowance) at Nakayama.

WATCH: Lemon Pop (1) wins the Cattleya S. (allowance) at Tokyo

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From The Experts: Jacqueline Norris

On the back of the eagerly anticipated stallion fee announcements in Europe, Gary King spoke with a number of leading industry figures about value. Today we hear from Jacqueline Norris of Jockey Hall Stud.

GK: Who have you identified as a first-year stallion at an appealing opening fee?

JN: I think Earthlight (Ire) looks to be well priced at €20,000, as a dual Group 1-winning son of the great Shamardal. I am really looking forward to seeing him and am hoping to send him a nice mare. I think Shamardal is a huge loss, and it is lovely to see how well his sons are doing at Stud. As breeders we all flock to the shiny new first-season sires, but Earthlight was a proper Group 1 racehorse.

GK: Best value proven stallion, and why?

JN: Holy Roman Emperor (Ire) was a seriously good racehorse and I think is value at €12,500. He is a really nice horse to start off a young mare with; he is proven in the sales ring and produces every year on the track. Also, a nice safe horse to use if you wish to sell a mare in foal.

I also wish to mention a younger stallion Sea the Moon in this category. I saw him at Lanwades for the first time last year, and he has to be one of the most beautiful stallions at stud in my opinion; what acceleration as a racehorse. He is getting excellent results and is of course by the great Sea the Stars.

GK: Who would you consider to be an under the radar stallion?

JN: I think Elzaam (Aus) is very interesting; his percentage of runners to winners is very good and they are obviously sound racehorses. I think he is good value and now that he has a Group 1 winner he will get a better quality book of mares.

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Mahony Hails Market Resilience As Foal Sale Concludes

NEWMARKET, UK—”Not for the first time this year we can reflect on a market which has displayed extraordinary and commendable resilience,” said Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony in his closing address for the December Foal Sale. Those sentiments have been repeated often around Park Paddocks this week, just as they were back in October when the trade for yearlings was frankly remarkable given the events of 2020.

As the curtain fell on the fourth and final day of foals, again the most noteworthy figure was the clearance rate of 79%, which rose from 72% last year, through it must be remembered that this year’s catalogue was nearly 200 foals lighter.

The overall turnover from the 628 foals to have sold since Wednesday was 26,255,100gns, a downturn of 11% on last year when 35 more horses were sold. The median of 20,000gns was a 9% drop while the average, at 41,807gns, was down by just 6%. The final day saw 97 weanlings change hands at an average of 13,548gns.

During the final session, it was the Coolmore freshman Sioux Nation who claimed the spotlight from his stud-mate Saxon Warrior (JPN), who had made quite a splash with members of his first crop earlier in the week. For the young son of Scat Daddy however, it was lot 1075, a colt from Barton Stud, who was one of the early leaders at 88,000gns and remained there throughout the shortened session.

Rebecca Matthews won’t be regretting her 1,500-guinea purchase of the colt’s dam, the once-raced Autumn Snow (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), from the Godolphin draft of the 2018 February Sale. The sister to G2 July S runner-up Figure Of Speech (Ire) has subsequently produced a filly by Highland Reel (Ire), followed by her son by Sioux Nation, who was bred by The Brigadier Partnership, led by Matthews.

Barton Stud manager Tom Blain said, “He was the stand-out foal today, we deliberately came today to sell on the Saturday to stand out and it is a fantastic result. This was an investment by the breeders to get a bloodstock business going so this is really a great start.”

One of Sioux Nation’s more established companions on the Coolmore roster, the dual Derby winner Australia (GB), has also enjoyed a good week, with 11 foals sold for an average just shy of 50,000gns, and his colt from the family of Rekindling (GB) ((High Chaparral {Ire}) was the pick of pinhhookers Matthew Houldsworth and Aughamore Stud, who went to 62,000gns for lot 1097.

Offered by his breeder Stringston Farm, the colt is out of Bitooh (GB), a Diktat (GB) half-sister to MelbourneCup winner Rekindling, both of whom were sold by the Pocock family as foals at Tattersalls. Having previously been owned by Godolphin, Bitooh was bought back by the Pococks after Rekindling’s Cup victory.

“The family does very well with Australia and he is a lovely horse to deal with,” said Stringston’s Nick Pocock, who added that Bitooh is likely to return to the stallion next year. 

The mare’s half-brother Sydney Opera House (GB) is, as his name implies, a son of Australia and was runner-up in the G1 Criterium de Saint-Cloud. Meanwhile, Rekindling, now six, returns to Tattersalls next week to be sold as a stallion prospect as lot 1504.

Lanwades Stud’s Sea The Moon (Ger) is another middle-distance stallion to find favour in the foal market this week, with 13 sold for an average of 46,692gns, from his 2019 stud fee of £15,000. 

Byerley Stud’s February-foaled filly out of the Galileo (Ire) mare Garabelle (Ire) was the selection of John Cullinan of Horse Park Stud at 60,000gns. Lot 1045 is a half-sister to the listed-placed Bella Vita (GB) (Aussie Rules) and was bred by Shoreham Stud.

“He should only continue improving,” said Cullinan. “We have had a couple by Sea The Moon and we liked them; they are straightforward horses. The stallion is one of the current upwardly-mobile sires.”

He added, “The mare has also had a black-type runner and is a Galileo mare; it is hard to get stock out of good Galileo mares at my level.”

Assessing the market for the first of this year’s foal sales in Europe, Edmond Mahony said, “We felt that the relative strength of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sales would provide a solid platform for the December Foals and this has been borne out by another 2020 sale at Park Paddocks which has held up remarkably well under the current circumstances, and particularly considering the continued widespread travel restrictions.

“Despite having the smallest Tattersalls December Foal catalogue since 2001, with 191 fewer foals catalogued than last year, the sale has achieved turnover just over 10% below last year’s lofty returns and single-digit declines in average and median. Not for the first time this year we can reflect on a market which has displayed extraordinary and commendable resilience, most graphically illustrated by a clearance rate which compares favourably not only with 2019, but also with the majority of recent renewals of Europe’s premier foal sale.”

He continued, “Trade has been competitive throughout the week, starting with sustained demand for the yearlings and flowing consistently through four days of the cream of the British and Irish foal crop. As ever, the sale has been dominated by pinhookers and we applaud them for their huge contribution, but even more so in this strangest of years. The sale has been conducted under the strictest of health protocols and the compliance and awareness of all the rules and regulations has been admirable, as has the acceptance that we have not been able to provide the full Tattersalls sales experience in the current environment.

“Nevertheless, we have sold 64 foals for 100,000 gns or more this week, including Airlie Stud’s outstanding sale-topping Dubawi colt, whose 700,000-guinea price tag is the second highest for a colt foal at this fixture. In addition to the individual highlights, we have had widespread participation, some of it online, from buyers from throughout Europe, Japan, North America and the Gulf region, all of which gives encouragement as we turn our attention to the annual showcase of Europe’s finest breeding stock at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale.”

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