Godolphin and TCA Launch Mobile App for Industry Workers

Godolphin and Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) have launched a mobile application for backstretch and farm workers. The app, called Cómo, connects Thoroughbred industry employees to the vital services they need through a network of chaplains and Thoroughbred industry organizations.

Designed by The Jockey Club Information Systems, sponsored by Godolphin, and managed by TCA, Cómo offers the ability for chaplains and industry organizations to be content creators or “contributors” on the app. Contributors can upload information about their services and resources offered, or can provide recommendations for service providers in their local areas. Service provider categories include healthcare, dental services, immigration assistance, religious services, mental health counseling, ESL classes, and much more. There are currently 22 categories in which contributors can provide a resource for industry workers.

“Cómo is the result of extensive industry research, including a survey of farm and backstretch workers, which began when Godolphin took a hard look at the needs of our industry’s workers,” said Katie LaMonica, Godolphin USA’s Charities Manager. “What we found is that our industry provides vital resources and services through various organizations, but what was crucially missing was the workers’ knowledge of and ability to connect to those resources. Cómo exists to bridge that gap, and in doing so be a tool for those critical service providers in our industry. Godolphin is fortunate to have a partner in TCA, who has been diligently developing the app with us and will continue to successfully manage Cómo going forward. Given the depth of the research and the time it has therefore taken to develop this app, we are excited to finally release it to the industry.”

Erin Crady executive director of TCA added, “Cómo is a tool that can connect chaplains and industry nonprofits with the industry personnel they serve. Among Cómo’s many features, it allows for the transfer of important information quickly. Whether it be weather alerts, notification of a health fair, or, as we saw this year, notice of track closures, Cómo provides a way for our industry’s employees to both seek and receive information they may need.”

The post Godolphin and TCA Launch Mobile App for Industry Workers appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Letter To The Editor: Yearling Sale Profitability

After reading John Boyce’s excellent article in the TDN (Nov. 12), I have the following observation.

Unlike John, my statistical training goes back to the days of the slide rule. Yet precious little arithmetical skill is required to understand the lesson he has parsed on the state of the bloodstock industry in his article on the 2020 yearling sales.

Taking up pen, paper, and employing some old long division skills, it is clear, when one approaches the subject from a slightly different angle, that his conclusion that the present situation “will surely hasten a fundamental review of the supply and demand of commercial young stock” is reaffirmed.

The Racing Post’s excellent ‘Sires Averages and Medians’ table of Nov. 2 captures results from all the major yearling sales of 2021 to date. In this table 109 stallions have 10 or more yearlings sold against their name. Yet, of that number, only 15 stallions returned a median price in excess of the 2018 advertised stallion fee plus a conservative (at least for my farm) £20,000 cost of production.

The average loss at the median across all stallions showing negative returns is £15,000, ranging from £57,000 in the case of the worst-performing stallion (by this measure) to around £1,000 in the best case among the negative group.

Some of the individual stallion numbers are especially informative as the season for choosing 2021 covers gets underway and stallion fees are reset. Interested parties will be able to do their own sums!

Of course, not all of a stallion’s crop sells at a yearling sale—some are retained, some sold as foals and,in addition, discounts on published fees are often obtained. So the complete picture is a tad more complicated.

Clearly though, returns overall do not come close to justifying the cost of service and production across the canvas as a whole and this lack of demonstrable ‘commerciality’ must be of real concern, as much from a fiscal perspective, as from the personal sense of striving for the satisfaction of success in one’s endeavours. Arguably, unless the days of the ‘Corinithian’ attitude to Thoroughbred animal husbandry can be consigned to the pages of history, we will be responsible for the commercial decline of a fine industry employing many people and enjoyed by equally as many.

While the diagnosis is rather easily found, the trick will be to come up with the cure in an environment where the funding model of the racing business is broken.

The statistical evidence does clearly show, however, the extent to which the breeding business is increasingly, for many, like balancing on a water biscuit in a torrent!

Colin Bryce
Laundry Cottage Stud
Hertfordshire

The post Letter To The Editor: Yearling Sale Profitability appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Miss Amulet Enhances Sicilian Dream

The final day of the Tattersalls December Mare Sale is usually a low-key affair. Take last year for example. That Thursday, 78 mares were sold for just shy of 280,000gns, a sum that wouldn’t come close to buying even one of the headline acts during the sale’s blockbuster Tuesday session. But Tattersalls prides itself on catering for all levels of the market and plenty of smaller breeders stay through to the end of the sale in the hope of finding a bargain.

That was indeed the case for Domenico Zammitti, a regular visitor to Newmarket from his native Sicily, who sat in the ring that Thursday morning and decided he liked the look of lot 2279, a scopey grey mare by Oasis Dream (GB) offered by Ringfort Stud. The fact that she had won four races herself and was already the dam of two winners makes it scarcely believable that she was sold for just 1,200gns, but it is an example of just how tough the market can be at the lower end. The then 10-year-old mare Shena’s Dream was carrying a foal by Haatef and was subsequently exported to Sicily to Zammitti’s residence, where she duly foaled a filly the following April.

Just over two months later, the pedigree of both mother and daughter received a boost when the mare’s 2-year-old filly Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}) broke her maiden on her third start at Cork in July. One update led to another, when Miss Amulet beat the evens-favourite Frenetic (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the listed Marwell S.at Naas in August, and so it went on. Just over a fortnight later she romped home on the Knavesmire to give Ringfort Stud a memorable York Ebor meeting when Miss Amulet’s G2 Lowther S. win followed the G2 Gimcrack S. victory of Minzaal (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), providing plenty of reflected glory for her breeder in consolation for her having been sold as a foal for just €1,000.

Miss Amulet’s subsequent exploits for trainer Ken Condon, with Group/Grade 1 placings in the Cheveley Park S. and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf, have not just enhanced her own profile, but that of her dam and her half-sister, who will be making a reappearance at Tattersalls this December. For Shena’s Dream, her daughter’s success means an instant upgrade in catalogue placing from Thursday to Tuesday, when she will be offered as lot 1602. She should know her way around Park Paddocks by now, as she will be stabled back in the Wall Boxes, just one row down from where she was last year but this time being sold by Luca and Sara Cumani’s Fittocks Stud, who will also offer her Haatef filly as lot 817 on the Friday of the December Foal Sale.

“We were contacted by Franca Vittadini, who is the Italian representative for Tattersalls, to ask if we would sell the mare and foal for Mr Zammitti and they arrived with us in early October,” said Sara Cumani.

“The owner’s normal modus operandi is to buy inexpensive mares at Tattersalls, take them back to Sicily and then race the foals they produce at Siracusa.”

Luca Cumani added, “Nico Zammitti was a top-class tennis player and he’s very excited about this. He follows all the racing and updates on the internet. He has about six acres and basically he keeps the horses in his back garden.”

The sales fortunes of Shena’s Dream’s offspring have already been lifted by the success of Miss Amulet. In September, Ringfort Stud sold her El Kabeir filly at the Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale for £45,000, the fourth-top price of the one-day sale.

“The yearling has joined Michael Bell in Newmarket, which is great news,” said Sara Cumani. “Shena’s Dream herself is a very straightforward and attractive mare and is a great walker. We are very pleased to be bringing her and her foal to the sale on behalf of Mr Zammitti.”

Shena’s Dream, who wasn’t covered this year, is one of two Oasis Dream mares bred by Pat O’Kelly’s Kilcarn Stud to have produced a group winner this season. The Jim Bolger-bred Melbourne Cup winner Twilight Payment is out of the Kilcarn graduate Dream On Buddy (Ire), who also makes an appearance on one of the pages of the December Mare Sale as her daughter Bandiuc Eile (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}) is being sold through Bolger’s grand-daughter Clare Manning of Boherguy Stud.

Fittocks Stud is also selling a homebred daughter of Oasis Dream (lot 1548), the 3-year-old Blue Dawn (GB), who is out of a half-sister to G3 Nell Gwyn S. winner Fantasia (GB) (Sadler’s Wells), and the Cumanis will offer just two foals at Tattersalls, both during Friday’s session.

The second to take to the ring will be lot 944, one of three Dubawi weanlings in the sale and a half-brother to Australian Group 1 winner Best Of Days (GB) (Azamour {Ire}), who also won the G2 Royal Lodge S. in Britain.

Out of the German listed winner Baisse (GB) (High Chaparral {Ire}), the colt is being sold on behalf of his breeder Gerhard Schoeningh, the owner of Germany’s Hoppegarten racecourse. His full-sister was offered as a weanling at Tattersalls two years ago and was the second-top lot of the sale when sold to Godolphin through Stroud Coleman Bloodstock for 725,000gns.

The post Miss Amulet Enhances Sicilian Dream appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Gulfstream Park West Turf Stakes Rescheduled

Continuing wet weather conditions in South Florida have led Gulfstream Park West officials to postpone four Florida-bred turf stakes scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 14 to Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 21 and 22.

The $60,000 Millions Turf Preview for 3-year-olds and up at 1 1/16 miles and the $60,000 Juvenile Fillies Turf at one mile have both been moved to the Nov. 21 program.

Females three and up will go 7 1/2 furlongs in the $60,000 Filly & Mare Turf Preview, and 2-year-olds will travel one mile in the $60,000 Juvenile Turf Nov. 22.

Five of Saturday’s nine-race card are $60,000 state-bred stakes, all scheduled for the main track–the Millions Classic Preview for 3-year-olds and up at one mile (Race 3); Juvenile Fillies Sprint (Race 4) and Juvenile Sprint (Race 7), each at 6 1/2 furlongs; six-furlong Millions Sprint (Race 5) and seven-furlong Millions Distaff (Race 8).

The post Gulfstream Park West Turf Stakes Rescheduled appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights