Mike Cline to Retire as Lane’s End Farm Manager

Mike Cline, “the only farm manager Lane’s End has ever known,” according to a press release from the farm announcing the news, is retiring after a 40-year career at the storied nursery. “It would be hard to overstate Mike’s importance to Lane’s End and everything that has happened here since the farm’s inception,” said Will Farish, “I hired Mike back in 1979 and he has overseen everything from the broodmares, to stallions, to sales, to barn construction, to pasture maintenance.”

Many successful people in the industry came up under Cline’s tutelage, including Callan Strouss, the farm manager at Lane’s End’s Oak Tree division; Chris Baker at Three Chimneys; Eddie Kane at Calumet; Charles Campbell at Indian Creek Farm; Cooper Sawyer at Mt. Brilliant; and Donna Vowles at Kiltinan Castle Stud, among others.

“Will Farish provided me with the opportunity of a lifetime and it has truly been an honor to work for him and with him over these many years,” said Cline. “Will’s vision for Lane’s End was incredible and it has been a privilege to help him implement that vision. I have had the opportunity to meet presidents, the Queen and many fascinating people, not to mention manage some of the greatest Thoroughbreds in history: A.P. Indy, Smart Strike, Kingmambo, Zenyatta, Miesque, All Along, Weekend Surprise and so many others.”

The farm said that a new farm manager will not be hired; rather, Todd Claunch will continue in his role and take on additional responsibilities at the farm, while Cline will continue to consult.

“I plan on continuing to stay involved with the farm and its many clients in more of an advisory role,” said Cline. “Lane’s End’s continued success will always be important to me.”

Chris McGrath profiled Cline for the TDN in 2018, and Cline talked about the many opportunities and experiences his role at Lane’s End had provided him, such as the time he flew on Air Force One to deliver a puppy to President George Bush. “For some bumpkin like me, to do that kind of stuff? Working for the Farish family has been an unbelievable experience,” Cline told McGrath.”I just think how lucky I was to run into this one guy who’s enabled me to do this for all this time. I don’t think either of us had an idea where it was going to go, back then. But I just felt I was around the right sort of person. And he and his family have been basically responsible for everything good that’s ever happened to me.”

Cline and Farish at Keeneland in 2003 | Lee Thomas photo

Cline arrived at Lane’s End in 1979, when it was a 140-acre cattle farm. “There was a beautiful old house, beautiful rolling land,” Cline recalled in 2018. “(Mr. Farish) lived in Houston, he came to Kentucky all the time but never really had a home here. And that was the cool part about it; so many people have farms that aren’t really homes–but this place started out as a home. So we fixed up the house, and immediately started working on plans to build the broodmare barns.” Cline was in his 20s at the time.

Cline attended the University of Kentucky on a football scholarship, and got a job for trainer Mack MIller when he left school. “Mack was a hay, oats and water guy, so the formative years I had in the horse business were with someone who was straight, honest and loved his horses,” Cline told McGrath in 2018. He went on to work on the starting gate at NYRA, and then as assistant to Bob Dunham. It was through a subsequent job managing the old Big Sink Farm when he met Farish.

His gratitude for the opportunity has always been palpable, as McGrath discovered when he sat down with him two years ago.

“There’s lots of ways to get judged and I’m happy with being judged the way I will be,” he said at the time. “I just really am grateful for the opportunity I got. There aren’t many of those kind of jobs any more. For me to stay as long as I have is pretty unheard of, in this day and age. Especially when you’re doing something that’s your passion. I love what I do. Mostly because where I get to do it, and who I get to do it with.”

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Honor A. P. To Lane’s End Upon Retirement

Honor A. P. (Honor Code-Hollywood Story, by Wild Rush) will be retired to Lane’s End Farm upon the conclusion of his racing career, the farm announced today. The three-year-old is from the first crop by his sire, who also stands at Lane’s End, and is his highest earner.

Honor A. P. has finished first or second in each of his four starts, winning the GI Santa Anita Derby in his last outing June 6, and establishing himself as a favorite for the Sept. 5 Kentucky Derby.

“He’s a horse that we have had an eye on since David Ingordo bought him as a yearling for Lee and Susan Searing’s CRK Stable,” said Bill Farish. “He was a standout at Saratoga and at $850,000 ended up being the highest-priced yearling in Honor Code’s first crop. April Mayberry was quietly touting him while he was being broken and John Shirreffs has been high on him since he arrived at Santa Anita. We are very excited to secure another prospect from the A.P. Indy line. As is the case with most of our stallions having a strong syndicate behind them is very important to their success. We are emboldened by the quality of the syndicate that has come together to support him. His looks, pedigree and his growing resume as a top racehorse gives him a great chance to be a successful sire.”

Honor A. P. debuted August 17, 2019 at Del Mar, racing greenly to be second. He won his next start at Santa Anita in October as the 2-5 favorite, drawing away to win by 5 1/4 lengths. Before he could race in 2020, he suffered a stone bruise in February which briefly sidelined him, and he was second in his comeback and 2020 debut to Authentic in the GII San Felipe March 7. He subsequently defeated the previously unbeaten Authentic next out in the G1 Santa Anita Derby, while posting a 102 Beyer, the highest of any three-year old colt currently on the Derby trail.

His trainer, John Shirreffs, said, “I think we started seeing something in Honor A.P. when he started to gallop, and he started to lengthen his stride. If you ever see him, he just floats over the ground. He’s only just begun to show his potential.”

“We named Honor A.P. in homage to his grandsire, the breed-shaping A.P. Indy,” said Lee Searing. “It has always been my goal to race a horse of this caliber and to stand him at Lane’s End. I plan to keep an interest in Honor A. P. and help make him a top stallion.”

Honor A. P. Is out of the multiple Grade I stakes winner Hollywood Story, who earned $1,171,105 in her career. He is a half-sibling to three black-type or graded black-type winners. Hollywood Story has produced yearling and weanling fillies by Curlin and Tapit, respectively, in the past two breeding seasons.

His sire, Honor Code, was one of 36 foals from the last crop of A. P. Indy and is currently the third-leading second-crop sire in the country. His dam’s sire Wild Rush, like Honor Code a previous winner of the GI Met Mile, hails from the Icecapade line, was eventually exported to Japan, and has produced 28 stakes winners out of his daughters. Honor A. P. will have one more start before the Kentucky Derby September 5th.

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‘Incredible Handicapping Challenges’: TVG To Broadcast Entire Royal Ascot Meet

TVG, America's horse racing network, will bring the pinnacle of international racing into the homes of fans across the country from Tuesday, June 16th through Saturday, June 20th as the network broadcasts the entire meet from Royal Ascot.

The coverage, presented by Lane's End Farm, will feature expert analysis and insight from TVG's Scott Hazelton who will be covering the races remotely from Los Angeles, California. First post time on Tuesday, June 16th through Friday, June 19th is 8:15 a.m. ET and first post on Saturday, June 20th is 7:40 a.m.

“I was at Royal Ascot the last four years and it provides incredible handicapping challenges and wonderful payoffs in big fields,” said Hazelton. “It is the best week of the year for racing given the international interest and the pride there is. I imagine the international pools will be enormous given the sharp focus of wagering and not being on site for racing fans.”

The highlights of the prestigious meet include four Breeders' Cup Challenge Races – the Queen Anne Stakes, the Prince of Wales's Stakes, the Norfolk Stakes and the Diamond Jubilee Stakes. The winners of these races will earn automatic berths into the TVG Mile, the Turf, the Juvenile Turf Sprint and the Turf Sprint, respectively.

The races at Royal Ascot will feature international stars as well as some familiar names and faces to American audiences. Trainer Graham Motion will send the 2019 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (GI) champion Sharing to compete in Saturday's Coronation Stakes (GI), a seven-furlong contest for three-year-old fillies.

TVG will be offering a Money Back Special promotion on select races from Royal Ascot throughout the week.

The post ‘Incredible Handicapping Challenges’: TVG To Broadcast Entire Royal Ascot Meet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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