Australian Star Black Caviar Booked To Written Tycoon For 2020 Breeding Season

Black Caviar, a three-time Australian Horse of the Year and one of the greatest turf sprinters to ever set foot on the course, will visit prominent Australian sire Written Tycoon for the 2020 Southern Hemisphere breeding season, bloodstock agent Suman Hedge announced Thursday on social media.

It will be the first paring between the two, with Black Caviar having previously produced foals from stallions including Exceed and Excel, Sebring, More Than Ready, Snitzel, and I Am Invincible.

Written Tycoon is an 18-year-old son of Iglesia who stands at Arrowfield Stud for an advertised fee of AUS$77,000 (US$55,674). He joins the Arrowfield roster this year after previously residing at Woodside Park Stud.

On the track, Written Tycoon did his best work at age two, winning the Group 2 Slipper Trial Stakes. His 3-year-old campaign included runner-up efforts in the G3 San Domenico Stakes and the listed Satellite Stakes. In total Written Tycoon won two of 11 starts for AUS$289,325 ($209,189).

Though he started as a relatively unheralded stallion, Written Tycoon has steadily climbed to the upper echelon of Australia's sire ranks, spearheaded by 2016 Golden Slipper winner Capitalist. Written Tycoon was Australia's leading freshman sire of the 2010-11 racing season, and he was the leading 2-year-old sire in 2015-16.

Other runners of note by Written Tycoon include Group 1 winners Tycoon Tara, Music Magnate, Despatch, Booker, and La Luna Rossa.

Black Caviar, a 13-year-old mare by Bel Esprit, was named Australia's Horse of the Year and champion sprinter each year from 2011 to 2013.

Undefeated in all 25 of her career starts, Black Caviar was a three-time winner of the Group 1 Lightning Stakes, and she was twice a winner of four other Group 1 races in her home country. However, her most famous effort arguably stemmed from her voyage to England for the G1 Diamond Jubilee Stakes during the Royal Ascot meeting, where she preserved her undefeated streak after a nail-biting finish.

Black Caviar's career so engulfed the imaginations of racing fans in Australia and around the world that she became the second horse in history to be named to Australia's Hall of Fame while still actively racing in 2013.

Black Caviar is still seeking her first breakout star as a broodmare, but her influence will soon spread as her first foals retire to the breeding shed, including her son Prince of Caviar, a Sebring horse who stands at Riverbank Farm in Australia.

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Founder Of Our Mims Retirement Haven Dies

Jeanne Mirabito, founder and president of Our Mims Retirement Haven in Paris, KY, died of cancer on August 5, reports Blood-Horse.

Mirabito founded the farm in 2007 in honor of Our Mims, a Calumet-bred multiple graded stakes winner. Mirabito first saw the filly on television in 1977 in her home state of New York and became enamored with the horse. Years later, when Mirabito moved to Kentucky, she came across Our Mims living on the same farm on which she was renting a house.

The mare was turned out with cattle and had limited human interaction; Mirabito said the mare had had minimal veterinary and farrier care. Still in love with the horse, Mirabito adopted the mare and rehabilitated her. Mirabito began Our Mims Retirement Haven in honor of her champion mare, offering mares a place to retire and live out their days once their broodmare careers ended. Our Mims died from colic at 29 and was buried in Calumet's cemetery.

Details of a celebration of Mirabito's life are forthcoming.

Read more about Our Mims here.

Read more at Blood-Horse.

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Arkansas Group Seeks To Pair At-Risk Youth With Thoroughbred Industry Jobs

As horse racing continues, alongside much of the country, to ponder the challenges of diversity and inclusion in its fan base and workforce, one man is hoping he can contribute part of the answer.

Michael Davis' idea is still in the early stages and has come together at a rough time for embarking on new non-profits, but he is determined to press forward anyway. Davis is the president and chief executive officer of the Oliver Lewis Inner City Thoroughbred Jockey Club, which he hopes will connect inner city youth in North Little Rock, Ark., to the Thoroughbred industry. The goal is to provide a diversion for at-risk youth while providing the racing industry a new source for future employees and leaders.

“My mom had moved from the South when I was two years old from to a big city – Milwaukee,” Davis recalled. “She didn't like it there — there was a lot going on with riots and things like that, so the three youngest kids she sent back to her mom's house in Mississippi, where her oldest brother had four horses. I learned the rural life, that you could have a horse in your yard.

“They had a calming effect. Just looking into the animal's eyes, I fell in love with the horses. I learned to ride and ended up buying my uncle three more horses when I got older and got a good job. I had older brothers and sisters so I never was going to get into trouble, but I wanted to be out there with the horses. It can really change a kid's life when they see there's something beautiful they can care for.”

Davis went on to work in network radio, his career eventually bringing him to the North Little Rock area. Davis found himself volunteering at a church project alongside R. Scott Gallimore, a retired jockey who has since become a pastor at Piney Grove United Methodist Church. The echo back to his own exposure to racehorses, combined with his new surroundings, made him wonder if there was a way to give kids the same experience he had on those trips to Mississippi.

Davis with his wife Rochelle

Davis said the areas around North Little Rock he hopes to serve is largely a poor, marginalized area which has suffered particularly from the economic impact of COVID-19. Crime is a common outlet for teenagers, and he's hoping that a well-timed distraction can provide an alternative.

“I thought if we could turn their lives around before they could get into the criminal justice system, that would be better,” he said. “It's kind of a free-for-all once that happens.”

One day, he hopes to bring groups of interested children of 12 to 16 years old to tour Oaklawn Park and area horse farms and meet people in the industry with the hope they could connect with jobs. He envisions bringing off-track Thoroughbreds to schools and church groups to get kids interested in learning more. Career counseling and internships will be a big part of the program for interested students.

Initial funding went toward getting the organization properly registered and recognized as a 501c3 nonprofit, so now the group is focusing on fundraising for programs and marketing. So far, Davis has had positive feedback from local McDonald's and Wal-Mart stores, as well as Centennial Bank, all of which indicated interest in sponsoring the club. Then, COVID-19 hit, and they told him to wait for a new fiscal year to begin before they could commit.

Long before Tom VanMeter's comments sparked a racing industry-specific conversation about racial disparities in the sport, Davis had hoped his group could serve as a connector for the predominantly African American community and the Thoroughbred business, which in recent years has become increasingly white and Hispanic. Davis himself was surprised to discover what a rich history black horsemen have in racing's early days, at its highest levels.

“I knew about the black jockeys in history but as I began reading more, it was more than I ever knew,” he said. “These kids don't even know they have a history in Thoroughbred racing. If you look now, you wouldn't know that. Most people don't associate African Americans with the sport, but there was a time when it would have been a lot like the NBA is today – they were dominant in terms of trainers, working in the barns, and as jockeys in the late 19th century. We want to let them know they can get into it, there are jobs and internships there.”

That change in the sport's racial makeup is important. Many of the kids Davis speaks to about horse racing see the sport as a place they may not be welcome, because they don't see many modern stars and leaders who look like them.

“It's just human nature. People gravitate toward and excel at things they do most – baseball, basketball, football. Other sports – NASCAR, hockey are paying more attention to [diversity], and trying to bring the sport to certain audiences they haven't in the past. Arthur Ashe, in his time, tennis was a sport that had little representation [for minorities] but when kids saw he could win the U.S. Open and the French Open, just like with Serena and Venus Williams, it changes everything. You have a role model and can say, 'Hey — I can do that.'”

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Triple Crown News Minute Presented By Kentucky Equine Research: Who’ll Fight ‘The Law’?

While Saturday's $1-million Runhappy Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., offers qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby (100-40-20-10 to the top four finishers), this Grade 1, mile and a quarter fixture is anything but a “prep.”

Barclay Tagg has made no secret of his desire to win this “Mid-Summer Derby,” and Tiz the Law has not missed a beat for him since winning the G1 Belmont Stakes on June 20 – the opening leg of the Triple Crown in this upside-down year of the coronavirus pandemic.

But to win the Travers, the Constitution colt will have to earn it. Three-time Travers-winning trainer Bob Baffert has shipped unbeaten  Uncle Chuck in from California, and the Uncle Mo colt has drawn comparisons to Arrogate, the 2016 Travers winner for Baffert who set a track record of 1:59.36 winning by 13 1/2 lengths.

Country Grammer and Caracaro, the 1-2 finishers in the G3 Peter Pan at Saratoga on July 16, could also make things difficult for Tiz the Law.

In this edition of the Triple Crown News Minute, Ray Paulick and news editor Chelsea Hackbarth go through the field of eight 3-year-olds to determine whether any of them are capable of fighting 'The Law' and upsetting Tagg's even-money morning line favorite.

Watch the latest Triple Crown News Minute below:

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