Real Rider Cup Makes Successful Lexington Debut

LEXINGTON, KY–With a rainy, cloudy afternoon turning into a perfect sunny and 72-degree evening, the racing industry was out in full force to support retired Thoroughbreds in the Real Rider Cup. Typically held in the fall at Fair Hill, it was the first time the event was being held in Lexington at New Vocations' Mereworth Farm and the rail was packed with familiar faces, such as Christian Black, Mike McMahon and Aidan and Leah O'Meara, to support this great cause initiated by Anita Motion.

Thirty-one riders completed a 2'6″ jumper course Saturday evening, all sporting the racing silks of a sponsor stable and all riding off-track Thoroughbreds. Some of the human standouts were jockeys Rosie Napravnik and Aaron Gryder and the equine celebrities included Cozmic One (Bernardini), first foal out of Zenyatta, and GSW Stickstatelydude (First Dude).

The riders were split into nine teams and, in addition to their stable sponsorships, were tasked with garnering monetary donations, all of which went to aftercare organizations, such as New Vocations and the Retired Racehorse Project.

After 31 exciting rounds in the ring with Terence Collier on the mic, New Vocations' Anna Ford announced that over $89,000 had been raised so far and they were still counting.

In the individual results, first place went to Jesslyn Woodall, who rode Lead Player (Posse), while sporting the WinStar silks. Second went to Keira Nygaard, wearing the Thord-Bred silks aboard Judge Johnny (Empire Maker) and third was awarded to Tara Coombs, donning the silks of September Farm on the unraced Baptizo (Magical Eight).

The top team of the evening was team Blood-Horse, comprised of Woodall, trainer John Ennis on Sound Prospect (Eastern Echo) and Lauren Gash aboard Collaborator (Any Given Saturday). Second went to the Breeding and Bloodstock team, comprised of Sergio de Sousa and Cozmic One, Jocelyn Brooks on Perpetual Optimism (First Defence) and Nygaard. The third-place team was Off-Track Sporthorse, led by Napravnik on Banana Thief (Kitten's Joy), Emily Crow and Emily Swirsky, who both rode Old Ironsides (Rubiano), Anne Czerwonka on Subtle Hope (Dialed In) and Kelsey Buckberry on Docktarri (Preachinatthebar).

The Real Rider Cup returns to its traditional home at Fair Hill Sept. 16.

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Tickets Now on Sale for 2022 Breeders’ Cup

Tickets for the 2022 Breeders' Cup, to be held for the third time at Keeneland Race Course Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4 and 5, 2022, are now on sale at BreedersCup.com/Tickets.

“With the 39th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships now less than six months away, we're excited to see fans begin making their plans to join us for another incredible two days of racing,” said Breeders' Cup President and CEO Drew Fleming. “We know fans are eager to celebrate racing and watch the best horses in the world compete at Keeneland, and we are working with our partners at both the racetrack and in the Lexington community to ensure that this year's running is the best one yet.”

A reflection of its commitment to a 'curated and intimate' fan experience and to ensure safety and comfort, attendance for the event will be capped at 45,000. Available single-day ticket prices range from $75 to $504 on Friday, and $125 to $689 on Saturday. Two-day packages available for purchase range from $200 to $1,568. All tickets will be sold in advance of the event, as no tickets will be sold on event days at the racetrack.

To further elevate the experience for all fans and participants, Breeders' Cup and Keeneland will invest more than $10.5 million to expand seating areas and enhance hospitality offerings. This investment will add 165,000 square feet of luxury chalets that will provide 7,500 premium dining seats and 1,800 temporary box seats, including Trackside Luxury Chalets, The Silks Lawn Chalet, The Saddling Paddock Chalet and Temporary Loge Box Seats.

Parking on-site at Keeneland is limited and only available to attendees with official pre-paid parking credentials. There will be no day-of-event parking available for purchase. Breeders' Cup will offer public shuttle service to and from Keeneland at one dedicated off-site Park-and-Ride location on Friday and Saturday. More information is available at BreedersCup.com/Transportation.

The Breeders' Cup will be televised live by NBC Sports Group.

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Upstart Share Sells for $450K at Keeneland April

Offered as the final hip at Friday's Keeneland April Horses of Racing Age Sale in Lexington, a share (2.5% fractional interest) in Airdrie Stud's Upstart (Flatter–Party Silks, by Touch Gold) was hammered down for $450,000 to Mike Freeny, who operates Dunquin Farm in nearby Paris, Kentucky, with his wife Pat.

A Grade II winner and placed no fewer than six times in Grade I company at distances between eight and nine furlongs, Upstart has been represented by three winners at the graded level, with two representatives from his second crop set to feature prominently at Churchill Downs next weekend. Jeff Drown's Zandon presented the stallion with his first Grade I winner when running out an extremely impressive winner of the Toyota Blue Grass S. Apr. 9 and continues to train forwardly towards next Saturday's GI Kentucky Derby. The sire's 3-year-old daughter Kathleen O. is undefeated from four starts to date, including a latest success in the GII Gulfstream Park Oaks Apr. 2, and is expected to vie for favoritism in the May 6 GI Longines Kentucky Oaks.

“I did expect to pay that for it, but that was my limit,” Freeny said. “He's got some good horses on the Derby trail and on the Oaks trail. He's a good producer and his horses are running and we're sure pleased to have a share.”

Airdrie's Bret Jones said the decision was made to offer the share in an effort to strike while the iron's hot.

“We thought the share had a chance to sell very, very well,” he said. “The timing is right. The stallion sure seems right. When you have a public auction, people get competitive and I've just met our partner, Mr. Freeny, for the first time and I couldn't be happier about it. We're very happy to have him come on board. We've got a lot to root for this coming weekend and I like our chances with Upstart having another big weekend a week from now.”

The Upstart share was the second-priciest offering at the sale. The Taylor Made-sales consigned hip 23, recent Carousel S. winner Acting Out (Blame), fetched $600,000 from Will and Sarah Farish. A full report will appear in Sunday's TDN.

Additional reporting by Sue Finley

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Stony Point Bloodstock Brings New Investors to Racing

A group of 15 businesspeople from across the U.S. visited Lexington's horse country this past weekend to get their first taste of all the racing industry has to offer. The enthusiastic group represented Stony Point Bloodstock, which was launched last year by Chilly Bleak Farm's Jim Fitzgerald, Bill Baxter, a veterinarian from Grand Rapids, Michigan, and his son Matt Baxter, founder of a human resource technology startup called Wedge. The trio started the partnership with the goal of setting up a for-profit pinhooking group that would also create an experience for its partners by introducing them to the sport of horseracing.

Stony Point Bloodstock purchased six colts at last year's breeding stock sales that are now developing at Fitzgerald's Chilly Bleak Farm in Virginia. While this year's group of 20 partners await their yearlings' return to the auction ring, many embraced the fun of their investment by taking a trip to Kentucky to visit the sires of their pinhooks and learn more about the Thoroughbred industry. Their excursion included a day of racing at Keeneland and visits to WinStar Farm and Spendthrift Farm.

“The farms here are incredible,” said Ryan Millsap, an investor from Georgia. “Getting out and being connected to nature in this way with the horses is really refreshing. We had a great day at the track yesterday. Everyone really enjoyed the interactions with the horses, the jockeys and the owners.”

“It has been a whirlwind over the last 24 hours of learning so much,” added Nate Heyboer, a fellow investor from Michigan. “I had no idea all the things that the sport had to offer and how much of a community racing really is. It's been a lot of fun. There are so many different terminologies and there is so much education that goes into knowing the sport. It's a lot more than just a horse running around the track.”

During their visit to Spendthrift Farm, the partnership dropped in on an early-morning breeding session, saw the sires of three of their yearlings, inspected a Spendthrift yearling slated for the sales this year and had the privilege of visiting champion Beholder and her newborn Curlin colt.

Their steady stream of questions varied in topic, but all reflected the inner workings of business-oriented minds: How did Into Mischief's stud fee get to be so high? What is the career path of a stallion handler? How do you know this yearling is going to do well at the sale? And jokingly (maybe), how much would it cost for us to buy Beholder's foal?

“It's absolutely enjoyable for me to see people's first reaction to the Bluegrass and the inner workings of the industry,” Baxter said. “I think overall this partnership has been well-received in general, but this weekend has sort of piqued their enthusiasm a bit.”

Stony Point Bloodstock's current roster includes yearlings by Spendthrift first-crop stallions Vino Rosso, Omaha Beach, and Mitole, as well as red hot sires Constitution and Not This Time.

Baxter said that a bi-weekly newsletter is sent to the partners to keep them updated on the sextet.

“Jim will do conformation updates and we have had some exciting updates with some of the sires of our colts,” he said. “There are two Not This Times running in the Kentucky Derby and we have one colt by Not This Time. I think it's fun for the investors to know their sires are hot and it gets them connected to the rest of the industry.”

Fitzgerald explained that one or two of the yearlings may be sent to the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Selected Yearlings Sale, but most will likely end up at the Keeneland September Sale.

“The plan is to try to grow it from there,” he said. “Obviously we'd like to have a little success first, but these people are very enthusiastic. Hopefully we can grow the whole thing from there and maybe eventually evolve into having a couple racehorses and maybe a couple broodmares.”

The investors all seemed to have joined the partnership for different reasons. For Heyboer, it was an opportunity to try out a unique type of investment.

“People usually say that if you're going to invest in something, you should know everything about it before you invest, but this is the complete opposite,” he noted. “Most people would say that an investment like this is a little crazy. Maybe it is, but this is one of the greatest investments I've ever made not just because of the financial possibilities, but just the sheer coolness of it. It's something different. It's not just a piece of paper that says we own something. We feel like we're a part of what's going on here in Lexington.”

For Millsap, investing offered him a chance to reconnect with nature.

“It's easy for people that live in urban environments to get really disconnected from rural life,” he said. “I think we miss out on a lot when we don't have the connection that we had to horses for thousands of years as humans. I think there's a spiritual element to interacting with horses that people who are around horses all the time know and love and feel invigorated by, but for those of us that don't get to do that all the time, I think this is a great mini-substitute.”

Millsap was confident that the trip to Lexington and the up-close experiences he had on the farms sealed his desire to stay involved in racing.

“I think you have to get the hands-on experience to really find the delight in it,” he said. “Certainly we're investing in order to make money. The returns can be really good if you know what you're doing, and these guys know what they're doing, but when you couple that with the ability to get out here and have interactions in a way that you otherwise wouldn't have had, I think that's what makes it all worth it.”

He continued, “In order to do any of this stuff well with animals, you have to love the process. I love the horses in their natural element in the fields even more than I love the racing, but the racing is the essential piece because at the end of the day, it drives the capital. All these things have to be driven by capital and that doesn't mean there's not enjoyment, love or passion. It means something has to make money in order to be sustainable, and the racing industry is exactly the same way.”

Heyboer also confirmed that after the partnership's pinhooks sell this fall, he will be back for more next year with several new partners behind him who are eager to join in the fun.

“I don't know how I would ever be able to get out now,” he said with a laugh. “This is just so much fun. Even if the first year doesn't turn out great, we're definitely going to be back for year two and three. I've got a lot of people who are watching how this goes and I think we are going to have a lot more people for year two and three.”

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