No New Cases Of EHV-1 At Saratoga; Quarantine Of Barn 86 Continues Through Aug. 1

As announced previously, the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) and the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) placed Barn 86 at Saratoga Race Course under a precautionary quarantine on Thursday, July 15 due to a positive case of Equine Herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) in that barn.

The unnamed, unraced filly, who is trained by Jorge Abreu, was sent to Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital on Sunday, July 11, after developing a fever. She was then tested for a number of potential ailments, and a positive test for EHV-1 was returned on Thursday, July 15.

Subsequently, the New York State Veterinarian and New York State Equine Medical Director implemented a 21-day quarantine of Barn 86 retroactive to Sunday, July 11. Should there be no additional cases in Barn 86, the quarantine will be lifted on Aug. 1.

The filly began treatment immediately at Rood & Riddle under the care of Dr. Luis Castro. As her condition continued to improve, she was sent to a private farm in Saratoga County on Friday, July 16, where she is currently recovering under veterinary supervision.

The 46 horses stabled in Barn 86, which is home to stalls for Abreu and trainer Kenny McPeek, will continue to be monitored daily for fever and other signs of illness. As of Tuesday, July 20, no horses in Barn 86 have developed a fever or displayed any symptoms of the illness.

During the length of the quarantine period, horses stabled in Barn 86 will not be permitted to enter races or train among the general horse population.

Horses stabled in Barn 86 will have isolated training hours at the Oklahoma Training Track from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. following the conclusion of training for the general horse population.

Overseen by Dr. Anthony Verderosa, the director of NYRA's veterinary department, in consultation with the NYSGC, the quarantine of Barn 86 includes standard safety precautions and biosecurity measures to mitigate risk and prevent further spread of EHV-1.

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Positive EHV-1 Case Triggers Quarantine At Saratoga

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) and the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) have placed Barn 86 at Saratoga Race Course under a precautionary quarantine until further notice due to a positive case of Equine Herpesvirus-1 in that barn.

The unnamed, unraced filly, who is trained by Jorge Abreu, was sent to Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital on Sunday, July 11 after developing a fever. She was subsequently tested for a number of potential ailments, and a positive test for EHV-1 was returned on Thursday afternoon. The filly began treatment immediately, and is improving under the care of Dr. Luis Castro, DVM.

Overseen by Dr. Anthony Verderosa, the director of NYRA's veterinary department, in consultation with the NYSGC, the Barn 86 quarantine is effective immediately with standard precautions and biosecurity measures now in place.


The 46 horses stabled in Barn 86, which is home to stalls for Abreu and trainer Kenny McPeek, will be monitored daily for fever and other signs of illness.

During the initial quarantine period, these horses will not be permitted to enter races or train among the general horse population. Afebrile/asymptomatic horses stabled in Barn 86 will have isolated training hours at the Oklahoma Training Track following the close of training for the general horse population at 10 a.m.

As of Thursday evening, no additional horses in the quarantined barn have exhibited symptoms.

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Runaway Rumour Stays Undefeated With Wild Applause Win

Lawrence Goichman's New York homebred Runaway Rumour pulled an upset to stay undefeated while in the process defeating open company for the first time with a half-length win in Saturday's $100,000 Wild Applause for 3-year-old fillies. Runaway Rumour overtook five competitors from the outside in the stretch to capture the one-mile contest on the Widener turf course at Belmont Park in Elmont, Ny.

Runaway Rumour, bred in New York, saw jockey Luis Cardenas pick up the mount from Jose Lezcano, and the duo broke from the outermost post and tracked in seventh position as Bye Bye led the eight-horse field through the opening quarter-mile in :22.79, the half in :47.28, and three-quarters in 1:11.69 on the firm turf.

Out of the final turn, Runaway Rumour was in sixth position with plenty of daylight in front of her. The Flintshire filly utilized a strong turn-of-foot to pick off rivals and sustain that momentum to the wire, completing the course in 1:34.25 with 6-5 favorite Minaun in second.

The Jorge Abreu trainee was unraced as a juvenile but broke her maiden going six furlongs on May 9 on the Belmont turf. She won again when stretched out to the Wild Applause distance in her previous start on June 5 and improved to 3-for-3 after capturing her stakes debut, increasing her career earnings to $140,250.

“I was a little concerned about the jockey change because I had never rode Luis in that type of race before, but he gave me so much confidence when I was giving him instructions,” Abreu said. “He told me he was looking at the replays and I knew it going to be OK. I told him, whatever you do, do not go on the inside.

“He broke sharp and tucked her in behind horses and he kept her in the clear,” Abreu added. “She likes to run free on the outside. When I saw at the five-sixteenths pole that she was picking up momentum, I had a pretty good feeling about her.”

Off at 13-1, Runaway Rumour returned $29 on a $2 win wager. Abreu said she will now target the one-mile $150,000 Grade 3 Lake George Stakes on July 23 at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, Ny.

“Depending on how she comes out of the race, we'll look at the Lake George at Saratoga,” Abreu said. “I'd say a mile to a mile and a sixteenth is good for her. I don't want to stretch her out to a mile and an eighth or a mile and quarter. Time will tell.”

Cardenas said the pre-race instructions played out as the connections hoped.

“[Abreu] worked out the plan with me and we both agreed to just let her run her race,” Cardenas said. “She likes to be able to run horses down and that's what she did. She loves doing that and I love her, too.

“We popped out of the gate and let the speed go,” Cardenas continued. “We had a beautiful trip behind horses and when we started to move by the five-sixteenths pole, she responded really well.”

The Irish-bred Minaun, a Group 3 winner in her native country, won her North American debut on April 30 for trainer Chad Brown at Belmont and earned black type in her first stakes appearance in the country, besting stablemate Nevisian Sunrise by a half length for second.

“I gave her a turf trip,” said Minaun jockey Manny Franco. “I was inside and trying to work my way out to the clear at some point, but the winner got the jump. When the winner was coming, I was still trying to find my way out.”

Brown, who also saddled the favorite to a second-place finish in the previous race with Always Carina in the Grade 2 Mother Goose, said Minaun did not have the best trip and Nevisian Sunrise was rank at times.

“She [Minaun] had some traffic trouble,” Brown said. “My other horse ran well but she was in a fight with the jockey [Irad Ortiz, Jr.] for most of the race. It's tough for a horse to re-break again after being in a tussle for most of the race. For both horses, it just didn't work out the way I had hoped.”

Sussex Garden, Alda, Bubbles On Ice, Bye Bye, and Lovestruck completed the order of finish. Alwayz Late scratched.

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Goichman Hoping For Some ‘Devine’ Intervention

When entries were taken the previous Friday for a six-furlong Aqueduct turf maiden scheduled for Thursday, Apr. 8, you can safely assume that owner Larry Goichman wasn't necessarily brimming with confidence. After all, he was pitching his 200,000gns Tattersalls October Book 1 purchase Star Devine (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) in against two well-meant runners from the all-conquering Chad Brown barn, a Godolphin homebred trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and a second-timer from the always potent Christophe Clement shedrow.

Goichman approached the start with a can-do attitude.

“You've got to be a positive thinker,” he said. “You have to see the invisible and you've got to feel the intangible and then try to achieve the impossible.”

Going three-quarters of a mile leaves little room for error, but the 3-year-old filly's race was nearly over before it really started when she spotted her rivals several lengths at the start.

“When she kind of walked out of the gate, I'm saying, 'Are we going to be able to achieve the impossible.' Then she rounded the turn and you say, 'Wow!'”

Under a letter-perfect ride from Trevor McCarthy, the Jorge Abreu-trained Star Devine flashed home down the center of the Aqueduct turf course to score by a widening 1 1/2-length margin (video), besting Mott's Candy Jar (Candy Ride {Arg}) and Brown's late-running 11-10 chalk Dovima (Union Rags) to become a new 'TDN Rising Star.'

“We're so used to grinding it out, so when you see something that's really special, you're jaw drops,” said Goichman, the founder and president of the Stamford, Connecticut-based SGC Capital. “You can't be a pessimist. It's overcoming the difficult situations that sets apart those of us who are optimists from the pessimists. It's been fun.”

Another Tattersalls Buy For Ryan…

Star Devine was acquired from the draft of Eddie and Eimear Irwin's Marlhill House Stud and caught the eye of noted bloodstock agent Mike Ryan, whose other Tattersalls October purchases in the last few years–on behalf of Seth Klarman–include 'Rising Star' Newspaperofrecord (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) and fellow Grade I winners Digital Age (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}), to name a few.

“I am a very big fan [of Fastnet Rock], you don't see too many of them here, and certainly it's a turf family. She's out of a Galileo mare, so if there was ever a recipe for a great turf horse, that's it.”

Star Devine was bred by Rockhart Trading Ltd. and is the second foal from Stars At Night (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a full-sister to Irish MGSP Exemplar (Ire) and a half-sister to Blue Bunting (Dynaformer), winner of the G1 QIPCO 1000 Guineas, G1 Darley Irish Oaks and G1 Yorkshire Oaks en route to champion 3-year-old filly honors in England in 2011. Stars At Night was purchased by Mick Flanagan for 350,000gns in foal to Mastercraftsman (Ire) at the 2016 Tattersalls December mares sale.

“She was Mike Ryan's first choice,” he continued. “We were talking on the phone and I loved the pictures I saw of her, I loved her walk. Mike is an excellent judge of horses. I love Mike and when he gives his best judgment, 90% of the time he's right on. Just because a horse walks really well–and I loved the way she walked–doesn't mean they can run at all. Mike said, 'This is the one for you,' and I was actually lucky, because that was my last bid. She could have belonged to somebody else.”

Going Back To The Well…

Goichman is no stranger to European bloodlines and knew soon after getting into the business in 1989 that he wanted to cast his net as far and wide as possible to afford him the maximum opportunity for success.

“I realized that I didn't have the pedigrees that I really wanted, so I began to realize that there are a lot of interesting pedigrees available in Europe,” he said. “So, for about five years, I kept going back there and kept buying horses.”

The first mare he acquired from Europe was the unraced Juddmonte Farms-bred Quiet Rumour (Alleged), who Goichman imported from France in 1997. The mare's second foal for the breeder was Beebe Lake (Grand Slam), a stakes winner of better than $195,000. Goichman later bred Quiet Rumour to another son of Gone West–Elusive Quality–and the resulting foal was Elusive Rumour, whose daughter Myhartblongstodady (Scat Daddy) is a two-time stakes winner in New York-bred company and the current star of Goichman's racing operation.

The same year, Goichman struck a deal to purchase the American-bred Baydon Belle (Al Nasr {Fr}), an unplaced half-sister to Sheikh Mohammed's SW & GSP Airport (Lear Fan) from the family of champion Stravinsky (Nureyev), European SW/GSP and American GISP Moscow Ballet (Ire) (Sadler's Wells) and Group 1-winning sprinter Dowsing (Riverman). Covered by Smoke Glacken in her third trip to a U.S. breeding shed, she produced Read the Footnotes, a $320,000 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic juvenile purchase by Klaravich Stables who won the GII Remsen S. and GIII Nashua S. at two and the GII Fountain of Youth S. at three in 2004. Baydon Belle is also responsible for the stakes-winning Dean Henry (Empire Maker), whose produce includes the stakes-placed Bonita Cat (Tale of the Cat).

Goichman employed the services of John Walsh Bloodstock to buy Bubbling Heights (Fr) (Darshaan {GB}) for 22,000gns in foal to Gold Away (Ire) at the 2000 Tattersalls December Mares sale. She would go on to become the dam of Goichman's talented New York-bred turf distaffer J'ray (Distant View), a four-time winner at the graded level and close to $970,000 earner and herself the dam of two-time black-type winner General Jack (Giant's Causeway).

In 2002, Goichman bought Elhasna (Danzig), a full-sister to Dayjur and a half to MGISW Maplejinsky (Nijinsky II) (dam of champion Sky Beauty), for $92,000 from the Shadwell consignment at Keeneland January. That mare's daughter Shea d'Lady (Crafty Prospector) has gone on to produce MSW Kathryn the Wise (Uncle Mo), whose first foal is a colt by American Pharoah that was born in Kentucky Mar. 5.

Goichman explained his simplistic approach.

“Nothing good falls off an empty wagon, and if a page is not a good wagon, you're not going to be successful,” he said. “You look at the opportunity you have with those European pedigrees and there are years and years of history. We are lucky in the sense that over in Europe, it's hard to keep and race a good horse, because the purses are so lousy. In this country, a lot of people are happy to keep a good racehorse and keep a good broodmare.

He continued, “Two of my better mares came from Juddmonte reductions. [Buying out of reductions] is no longer a secret. People have great success with it. I am a devotee of Tesio and I do focus on what I am doing with my pedigrees. You buy a mare over there and end up with a horse like Read the Footnotes and Dean Henry.”

What To Do For An Encore?…

Goichman said there is most likely a stakes race in Star Devine's near future.

“We're really just in the talking stage, but we think there is an opportunity,” he said. “The [seven-furlong GIII] Soaring Softly S. [May 15 at Belmont] may be the next step. It's about a month timing-wise, it'd give her a chance to stretch her legs and go a bit further. So that's what we're thinking about right now. It's the next logical step and it's right in her back yard.”

Can Star Devine be the next feather in the cap of the eternally optimistic Larry Goichman?

“Time will tell. I hope so, I really do. I hope to be having another conversation after hoisting a trophy!”

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