Pontiff, Half-Brother To Pulpit, Moves To Daehling Ranch In California

Pontiff, a winning son of multiple leading sire Giant's Causeway and half-brother to major sire Pulpit, has relocated from Washington to stand at Daehling Ranch in Northern California for the 2022 breeding season. His fee is $2,500, live foal guarantee.

Bred in Kentucky by Claiborne Farm and sold for $310,000 as a Keeneland yearling in 2011, Pontiff was rated highly enough by original trainer Dale Romans and former owner Donegal Racing to contest Gulfstream Park's $1-million Grade 1 Florida Derby in his third lifetime start as a 3-year-old maiden in 2013, in a race that was won by subsequent Kentucky Derby winner Orb. Following an unplaced finish in that early test, he went on to record victories on dirt in Oklahoma and on turf in Minnesota and Texas, excelling at two-turn distances as an older horse.

Pontiff retired from racing in 2017 with three wins and 17 placings from 35 career starts, and total earnings of $126,481.

He initiated his stallion career in Washington in 2018, and recently stood at Warlock Stables in Spokane. He has 24 registered foals: 14 juveniles and 10 yearlings, with one placed runner.

Produced by the breed-shaping matriarch Preach, a Grade 1-winning daughter of Mr. Prospector, Pontiff is a half-brother to the successful, late sire Pulpit, whose sons at stud include multiple leading sire Tapit. Among the other notable stallions in his family, which features more than 30 black-type horses under his first two dams, are Fed Biz, Johannesburg and Tale of the Cat.

“We are excited to move Pontiff to California, in order to take advantage of the state's lucrative breeding and racing program,” said Warlock Stables owner Tim Floyd, who manages the 11-year-old stallion for a partnership that now includes Daehling Ranch owners Justin and Julia (Daehling) Oldfield and California Chrome's former co-owner Perry Martin. “The Washington breeding industry has shrunk significantly over the past 20 years, so his opportunities here as a young, well-bred stallion are extremely limited.”

“With his extraordinary pedigree, we believe Pontiff deserves a chance to court a better and more abundant broodmare colony in California,” Floyd added. “He is a handsome, charismatic stallion whose early foals really look the part, and whose best-bred foals are in his upcoming crops.”

Pontiff arrived at Daehling Ranch on August 16. He will be featured in a Northern California Stallion Tour on October 2.

The post Pontiff, Half-Brother To Pulpit, Moves To Daehling Ranch In California appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Brothers: Don’t Let ‘Perfect’ Get In The Way Of ‘Good’ National Leadership By HISA

In a piece published on the Paulick Report Aug. 16, I talked about what's right and what's wrong with horse racing. Today's Part 2 of that commentary is a little uglier.

In the midst of reading Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, I was struck by a simple fact: homo sapiens rose to the top of the food chain because of our unique ability to cooperate in numbers greater than a hundred. There is no other mammal that can maintain a colony, herd or otherwise cohesive group once their numbers exceed a hundred or so members.

Yes, the ability to communicate helped. But lots of species have a language of their own, some that we understand to some extent, others that we know nothing about.

Fire helped. A lot. As did the advent of farming. But our rise to the top of the food chain some 50,000 years ago occurred because of our unique ability to cooperate in large numbers. Quoted from Sapiens:

“Ants and bees can also work together in huge numbers, but they do so in a very rigid manner and only with close relatives. Wolves and chimpanzees cooperate far more flexibly than ants, but they can do so only with small numbers of other individuals that they know intimately. Sapiens can cooperate in extremely flexible ways with countless numbers of strangers. That's why Sapiens rule the world, whereas ants eat our leftovers and chimps are locked up in zoos and research laboratories.” 

Until you get to the unique sapiens in American horse racing.

Everyone has a stake in this, and, to our credit, each and every individual has tried to get others to see things their way. We've even formed several organizations over the years that were intended to bring everyone to the table in the spirit of cooperation. Sadly, it seems that each new entity that is formed spurs the formation of another special interest group to protect their agendas and assets.

Disparate groups: can we learn from benchmarks?

We have national organizations such as the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), the Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Racing and Protective Bureau (TRPB). And then a national owners' and breeders' group (TOBA), along with regional owners' and breeders' groups in every racing jurisdiction (CTBA, KTOBA, NYTB, etc.). We have a national horsemen's organization (HBPA) and then, of course, a regional HBPA in each jurisdiction. In 2019 we saw the formation of the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition, comprised of the Breeders' Cup, Keeneland, Churchill Downs, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, New York Racing Association and the Stronach Group. I could go on.

All of these organizations have been formed with the intention of making horse racing better, getting people to the table, and/or protecting their own interests. To be sure, they have all achieved some minor or major successes. But we have not been willing to set our differences of opinions aside and agree upon a uniform set of rules and codes of conduct.

The Olympics and the International Olympic Committee

I've long been a fan of the recently-concluded Olympic Games as they embody all that I love about sports. If the Olympics — an international competition, currently comprised of more than 200 countries and numerous sports — has managed to achieve a consistent level of success through cooperation, how is it possible that we cannot do the same? We are only one country, one sport. Thirty-eight different jurisdictions. Thirty-eight different sets of rules.

The modern Olympic Games began in 1896 after the formation of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1894, and today, the IOC remains the governing body of the Olympics. In terms of growth, the 1896 Olympics consisted of 14 participating nations whose athletes competed in 9 different sports. Today, more than 200 nations compete in 35 different sports, and there is one set of rules for each discipline.

From country to country, these various disciplines were often played with at least slightly different rules and nuances. Yet, 200 nations have shown us that not only is it possible to agree on the rules of these 35 different sports, it's also possible to agree on how they should be adjudicated.

Example: drug use.

Therapeutic drug use has been a point of contention in both horse racing and the Olympics. The IOC handled it by allowing the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) to create therapeutic drug use exemptions that are fairly straightforward. The three criteria that must be met to grant a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) are:

  • the athlete would experience significant impairment to their health if the medication was withheld;
  • the prohibited substance would not increase the athlete's performance other than from restoring their health to normality;
  • the athlete could not use a permitted alternative
[Story Continues Below]

If we had kept it that simple when it came to the use of furosemide (commonly referred to by its trade name, Lasix) this would not have turned into such a contentious issue in U.S. racing. Three simple questions/criteria. Not really that complicated.

That's sort of how it started with furosemide. In nearly every racing jurisdiction in which it was initially permitted a trainer had to prove that the horse had bled via an endoscopic exam and a subsequent veterinary report or state veterinary observation that the horse had bled substantially enough to require furosemide. And then, somewhere along the way, the floodgates opened. By the time the Horseracing Safety and Integrity Act was passed, something like 90% of the horses competing in United States horse racing were competing on Lasix.

The arguments for and against are, quite frankly, pointless. Yes, some horses need it. Yes, the use of Lasix was wildly out of control. No, we could not agree in numbers in excess of a hundred about how this needed to be handled.

And that is really the point: can we finally agree to agree/disagree in numbers over 100? We are at a watershed moment in horse racing where we have to decide if we will cooperate. Organized horse racing has existed since the beginning of recorded history. Unsanctioned horse racing first sprang up in the United States in 1665 and in 1868, when the American Stud Book was first published, it became much more organized. Between 1665 and 1868 horse racing grew through cooperation, not division. The Breeders' Cup, the brainchild of the late, great John Gaines, was birthed into fruition through cooperation and has grown by the same means.

The Roman Empire reigned for 500 years and no one alive during that time could have predicted its collapse at its peak. Horse racing has been taking a steady downward slide from its apogee for at least the past 20 years. In 2000, $14,321,000 was wagered on horse racing in the United States. After a steady decline over the past 20 years, that number fell to $10,930,000 in 2020. Adjusting for inflation this is a 50% reduction in handle in 20 years. An unsustainable hemorrhage.

Getting back to the Olympic Games, without cooperation and the leadership of the International Olympic Committee and their agreed-upon set of standards, the Olympic Games would never have survived. They faced many challenges along the way, including two world wars, the Cold War boycotts, doping scandals, a terrorist attack in 1972 and the COVID-19 pandemic postponing the 2020 games. But they have managed to cooperate and, at the end of the day, rise above the mayhem.

Horse racing cannot survive without leadership and cohesiveness either. The Horseracing Safety and Integrity Authority may not be the perfect answer but right now is not the time to let the unrealistic ideal of “perfect” get in the way of good. If we, the sport of horse racing and all of its participants, cannot cooperate we will fall the way of the wolves and the chimpanzees. Individually, we will survive. But our sport will not.

Donna Barton Brothers is a retired jockey, award-winning sports analyst, author, and chief operating officer for Starlight and StarLadies Racing. She serves on the executive board of the TAA and TIF, and is on the advisory boards of Boys & Girls Haven and the University of Kentucky Research Department's Jockey and Equestrian Initiative. 

The post Brothers: Don’t Let ‘Perfect’ Get In The Way Of ‘Good’ National Leadership By HISA appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale Catalog Now Online

The catalog for the 2021 Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Alberta Division) Thoroughbred Sale is now online, featuring 56 horses on offer.

The auction will take place Friday, Sept. 17 at Westerner Park in Red Deer, Alberta, beginning at 3 p.m. Mountain.

This year's catalog features 48 yearlings, five juveniles, two broodmares, and one weanling. The bulk of the horses on offer were foaled in Alberta, with others born in British Columbia, Ontario, and Saskatchewan, as well as Kentucky

Graduates of the CTHS Alberta sale are eligible for a series of sales stakes at Century Mile Racetrack, from ages two to four.

Stallions whose first crops of yearlings are represented in the catalog include Destin, Firespike, Mor Spirit, Mr. O'Prado, and Mr. Recio.

To view the online catalog, click here.

The post CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale Catalog Now Online appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Praise, Dam Of Flatter, Congrats, Dies At Age 27

Praise, one Claiborne Farm's top broodmares of the past three decade, has died due to the infirmities of old age, the farm announced Tuesday. She was 27.

The daughter of Mr. Prospector was a homebred for longtime partners Claiborne Farm and Adele Dilschneider. She was trained by Frank Brothers during her seven career starts, which was highlighted by a maiden win in Saratoga and an allowance score at Churchill Downs.

Praise joined the partnership's broodmare band at age four, and her success was immediate. Her first foal was Flatter, a son of A.P. Indy who finished third in the Grade 2 Washington Park Handicap at Arlington Park before retiring to stud at Claiborne Farm in 2004 and becoming one of Kentucky's most reliable sires.

The mare went back to A.P. Indy for her second mating, which produced Congrats. The colt picked up wins in the Grade 2 San Pasqual Handicap and listed Alysheba Stakes, with additional Grade 1 placings in the Santa Anita Handicap and Hollywood Gold Cup. He began his stud career in Florida during the 2007 breeding season, and he now stands at WinStar Farm in Kentucky.

Praise saw her greatest success with her first two foals, but her proceeding offspring was led by Commend, a Grade 3-placed War Front colt. In total, Praise produced eight winners from 11 starts.

Congrats and Flatter will be the greatest extender of Praise's presence in pedigrees, but the mare has also had successful daughters in the breeding shed.

Amen Again, a winning daughter of Awesome Again, is the dam of Grade 3 winner Sprawl. Hip Hip, a placed Monarchos mare, had the stakes-placed Support.

The post Praise, Dam Of Flatter, Congrats, Dies At Age 27 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights