Wanamaker’s Catalogs 34 Offerings For December Sale

Wanamaker's has cataloged 34 hips for their December Sale. The sale is comprised of well-bred broodmares, mares-in-foal, active horses of racing age, yearlings, and weanlings from all over the country.

Highlights of the sale include a five-horse offering from Housatonic Bloodstock, each of which being well-bred Maryland-bred weanlings by prominent stallions. In addition, there is two-horse offering from Rancho Temescal including broodmare prospect Smiling Annie, a half-sister to 2017 Breeders' Cup Mile third-place finisher, Blackjackcat.

More detailed information on the 34 offerings can be found at wanamakers.com. Prospective buyers may browse the website to view pedigrees, pictures, and videos of each hip offered. In-person inspections may be scheduled by contacting sellers with the information provided in the catalog.

For the first time, live bidding will open as the catalog is released on Dec. 1. The sale will open at 8 a.m. ET on Dec. 1, and the first listing will close at 5 p.m. ET on Dec. 10. Subsequent listings will end in three-minute increments. Detailed information on the buying process can be found at wanamakers.com/buy.

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Having Revived Her Career, Sutherland Has Momentum at Gulfstream

Around this time last year, Chantal Sutherland was riding in Kentucky, struggling to get mounts and to win races and she was miserable. She won just 11 races in 2020, the worst year of her career. Worse yet, she didn't have a lot of answers.

“I was just not in a good place,” she said. “I was really struggling there. I couldn't believe how no one would give me a shot. I thought, 'what is my next move, what is going to happen?' I prayed about it. I thought 'is it time to do something else?'”

The one thing she did know is that she had to move on and try some place else. A year later and after a move to Gulfstream, Sutherland, 45, is in the midst of a remarkable comeback. With 29 wins, she finished second in the Gulfstream standings at the recently concluded meet and will head into Friday's opener of the Championship Meet confident that she can hold her own against a colony that will include many of the sport's top riders.

Her 75 wins on the year are the most she has had since 2010 . She has 15% winners on the year, her best percentage since 2002.

“I can't even tell you how grateful and happy I am for this opportunity,” she said. “That's why I am taking every single minute to be my best, do my best and be there for the people who support me. I am just so grateful.”

After she won 152 races with earnings of $8,778,038 in 2010, Sutherland struggled to maintain those numbers. She won 32 races in 2014 before briefly retiring to focus on starting a family.

“I got married and I wanted to try to have a baby,” she said. “I'm not married anymore and I don't have a baby, so that's how that went.”

She came back in 2016, but had a hard time establishing any momentum. The decision to try Kentucky only made things worse.

“I felt that in Kentucky they were not giving me a fair shot,” she said. “I'm not exactly sure why, but I think that it is still an 'old boy's club' there.”

After sitting out the first few months of 2020, she began riding at Gulfstream in April and detected early on that things would be different. Soon, she was riding three, four horses a day, something she might not have done in Kentucky in a week's time.

“I'm more comfortable and happy here,” she said. “You have a lot of Latin American trainers, Jamaican trainers, Bajans, Americans. It is a melting pot here so there's not as much discrimination against a minority who is a woman. Everyone seems to be more open here and I have an amazing agent in Jay Rushing.”

Part of Sutherland's problem has always been that she didn't seem that focused on her riding career. An aspiring model, she had a four-page spread in Vogue magazine and, in 2004, appeared in a TV commercial for Esquire watches. As well, she was chosen one of People magazine's “100 Most Beautiful People.” She was one of the jockeys featured on the reality TV show Jockeys on Animal Planet and appeared in five episodes of the HBO series “Luck.”

That's all part of her past. She is not in a relationship and has no outside projects.

“I'm able to be really focused on myself for once in my life,” she said. “I'm not in any kind of relationship. I can focus on myself, the horses and the trainers I ride for and being completely motivated to be the best. Whoever supports me and makes me part of their team, I will give 150% so that I win for my team. The hard work is paying off. This is my passion. I love horse racing. It is everything to me and it makes me happy. It's a great time in my life. I get to focus on myself only and my career. I wish I would have done that when I was younger.”

For Sutherland, it's about to get a lot tougher as there's an influx of top jockeys that come to Gulfstream for the Championship Meet. She looks forward to the challenge.

“I've ridden against the best in world already,” she said. “I'm looking forward to seeing how we all measure up. I'm looking forward to riding against terrific world-class riders. It will be different. They have the same determination, competitive drive and work ethic that I have. It's going to be fun and it's going to be a challenge.”

It begins again Friday and she is named on six horses. She's looking forward to it.

“I fit here,” she said. “I feel happy here.”

The post Having Revived Her Career, Sutherland Has Momentum at Gulfstream appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Bloodlines: What A Difference A Year Has Made For Runhappy

The dark bay colt Smile Happy (by Runhappy) remained unbeaten in two starts with his victory in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs and pushed his lifetime earnings to $284,810. This son of champion sprinter Runhappy (Super Saver) tops a lustrous year for the Claiborne Farm stallion, who now stands third among second-crop sires.

Not only an Eclipse Award winner, Runhappy was a handsomely pedigreed son of a classic winner with a classic pedigree. In addition, Runhappy's sire, Super Saver (Maria's Mon), won the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at two before going on to classic success the following May.

Yet 11 months ago at the end of 2020, Runhappy was toiling in 15th place on the freshmen sires list, with nine winners, but no stakes winners. Not a one! There's no need to describe how rapidly breeders left what they perceived was a sinking ship, even though the horse's stud fee was slashed to account for the lack of immediate stakes horses.

What a difference a year makes!

In 2021, with another month of racing left, Runhappy is in third place on the national list for second-crop sires, with progeny earnings of $4.1 million. That's 10 times the earnings from the first season results.

And how can something like that happen, you might ask?

Part of it's luck. If only a few of the nicer prospects have a bump in the road, get sick, or get into the hands of someone who wants them to do something they aren't equipped to do, the results are usually nil.

Part of it's planning. With the first-crop racers by Runhappy, there were some extremely attractive bonuses for winning races at key racetracks, and who knows how many horses went cockeyed from trainers and owners pointing their young stock for those spots.

Part of it's pedigree and aptitude. Although he was champion sprinter and winner of the Breeders' Cup Sprint in record time, Runhappy is the son of a Kentucky Derby winner out of a mare by a classic-type son of Unbridled in Broken Vow.

Now the second crop is doing the job in spades, with 15 winners and four stakes winners so far, and overall, the stallion has a half-dozen stakes winners and 10 total stakes horses, all this year. In achieving 10 times the progeny earnings, black type is where most of the added earning power comes from.

One other point of importance is that Runhappy's 3-year-olds and juveniles both have had much better seasons in 2021. And if the second crop of current juveniles finds as much improvement over the next 12 months as the first has made, what will 2022 bring for this young stallion?

Doubtless, one of the things it will bring is more good mares, especially since Runhappy's stud fee is $12,500 for next year, half of the figure he stood for his first four seasons at stud.

One of the mares sent to the horse in his second season was a daughter of the highly accomplished racehorse Pleasant Tap (Pleasant Colony). Pleasant Smile is the dam of Smile Happy, and he is the mare's fourth winner and second stakes horse.

A half-sister to stakes winner Miracle Mets (Metfield), Pleasant Smile is out of a mare by Relaunch, and the next dam is by the top sire Graustark (Ribot).

That third dam is Bunch of Smiles, a full sister to Cherished Moment, who ran second in the 1984 Ashland Stakes, and they are out of Pumpkin Patch, a foal of 1966 who was a daughter of the legendary Bold Ruler, probably the best of all the great stallions ever to stand at Claiborne Farm.

Pumpkin Patch is a daughter of the important broodmare Bravura (Niccolo Dell'arca), and Bravura and her early foals were bred by John Galbreath of Darby Dan Farm. The mare's second foal was Candalita (Olympia), who won the 1964 Spinaway and Matron and was nearly the best filly in the country that season.

The very best juvenile filly of 1964 was champion Queen Empress (Bold Ruler), and as must have seemed obvious at the time, Bravura, dam of a top juvenile filly, was sent to Bold Ruler, the sire of both juvenile champions in 1964, for the breeding seasons of 1965 and 1966. The racetrack results were dreadful. Pumpkin Patch did not race; the 1967 foal, a filly named Lizanne Dear, only managed to place at two.

After the mare produced Candalita, Galbreath's son Daniel acquired Bravura and bred the Bold Ruler disappointments, but then the younger Galbreath bred the mare to Hail to Reason (Turn-to) and got Hail the Pirates, who won the Gallinule and Desmond Stakes abroad, then won the Widener, Seminole, and Queen's County Handicaps here in the States.

Sired by a high-class racehorse and half-brother to Nearco, Bravura was out of a half-sister to American leading sire Alibhai (Hyperion). This was a pedigree of international significance, and it has continued to play a role at the top level.

In fact, the 2003 Kentucky Derby winner Funny Cide and runner-up Empire Maker (Unbridled) both have Bravura as their fifth dam. The line comes to Funny Cide through the Graustark mare Cherished Moment (mentioned above), and Empire Maker descends through Bravura's first foal, the Swaps mare Ortalan. She produced Walker's (Jaipur), winner of the Sanford Stakes at 2 and a sire in California, and is the granddam of multiple stakes winner Image of Reality (In Reality), who is the dam of Toussaud (El Gran Senor), the 2002 Broodmare of the Year and producer of four G1 winners.

With Smile Happy, this family is back in the limelight again.

The post Bloodlines: What A Difference A Year Has Made For Runhappy appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Dynamic Sky, Medallist Move To Bar None Ranches In Alberta

Stallions Dynamic Sky and Medallist have been purchased by Stolz Thoroughbreds, and will relocate to Bar None Ranches in Dewinton, Alberta for the 2022 breeding season.

A graded stakes winning son of Sky Mesa, Dynamic Sky earned over $1 million on the track and found early success on dirt.

At two, he was second in the Grade 1 Dixiana Breeders' Futurity and at three, he won the Pasco Stakes and was second in the G3 Sam F. Davis Stakes. Dynamic Sky won the Plate Trial Stakes and placed third in the Queen's Plate on Woodbine's all-weather track.

At four, Dynamic Sky had a championship season with a win in the G3 Red Smith Handicap, a placing in the G1 Northern Dancer Turf Stakes and a showing in the G1 Pattison Canadian International Stakes. The Sovereign Award earner excelled on all-weather, turf and dirt tracks before retirement from racing.

Dynamic Sky is a son of the leading Pulpit stallion, Sky Mesa, out of the Distorted Humor stakes winning mare, Murani. The first-crop of Dynamic Sky's 2-year-olds raced in 2020 and include the stakes winner Jilli Marie, who continued her success at three with earnings to date of $137,427. The Dynamic Sky daughter, My Girl Sky, broke her maiden in her first start out this season.

At three, the multiple graded stakes runner Medallist won the G3 Withers Stakes and set a track record in the Dwyer G2 stakes. At four, Medallist equaled a track record with his win in the G3 Deputy Minister Handicap and placed in the G1 $350,000 Carter Handicap. The son of classic winner Touch Gold retired from racing with a record of 12-5-2-1 and earnings of $421,375.

Medallist is a half-brother to G2 winner Air Commander and G2 placed Formidable, out of the G1 placed Santaria, a daughter of champion sprinter Star de Naskra. Medallist entered stud in 2006 and has total progeny earnings to date of over $12 million including 23 stakes winners and average earnings per starter of over $75,000. Medallist has sired the multiple graded stakes-placed runner Iboyee ($701,822) and the multiple stakes winner Winning the Medal ($461,516).

Medallist and Dynamic Sky will stand the 2022 season at Bar None Ranches Ltd., and are being offered for limited books to approved mares only. Dynamic Sky will stand for $3,000 LFSN and Medallist for $3,500 LFSN.

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