Half To Clairiere, La Crete Re-Rallies To Win Silverbulletday

The half-sister to Clairiere out of top racemare Cavorting, Stonestreet homebred La Crete proved her mettle on the track this Saturday afternoon. The 3-year-old daughter of Medaglia d'Oro set the pace in the $150,000 Silverbulletday Stakes at the Fair Grounds, but was passed in the stretch by Fannie and Freddie (3-1). Jockey Joel Rosario refused to give up aboard La Crete, driving her to the finish until she re-rallied in the shadow of the wire to score a one-length victory. The even-money favorite, La Crete completed a mile and 70 yards over the fast main track in 1:43.93 for trainer Steve Asmussen.

It was the third win on the card for Rosario and Asmussen. La Crete earned 10 points on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks with her victory.

La Crete was not the quickest out of the gate, but she picked up the pace heading into the clubhouse turn and took command before the first quarter mile. Rosario kept her pace measured through fractions of 24.50 and 48.79 seconds, leading Fannie and Freddie by two lengths up the backstretch.

Fannie and Freddie ranged up alongside La Crete around the far turn, and the two raced head-and-head at the top of the stretch. The pair drifted out to the center of the track as they battled toward the wire, and Fannie and Freddie got her neck in front nearing the eighth pole.

Rosario switched his stick from left-to-right for one reminder, then went right back to his left hand to encourage the royally-bred La Crete to dig in. La Crete responded willingly and burst away from her rival in the final strides, crossing the wire a length in front of Fannie and Freddie. It was several lengths back to Bernabreezy in third, and Candy Raid rounded out the superfecta.

Bred in Kentucky by her owner, La Crete is out of the three time Grade 1-winning Bernardini mare Cavorting, who earned over $2 million on the track for Stonestreet. La Crete's half-sister, Clairiere (Curlin) earned over $1.2 million with the G1 Cotillion her biggest score.

La Crete won on debut at Churchill Downs in November, and remains undefeated after her Silverbulletday victory. Her two-for-two record has compiled earnings of $159,460.

The post Half To Clairiere, La Crete Re-Rallies To Win Silverbulletday appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Saturday’s Racing Insights: Well-Bred Medaglia d’Oro Colt Debuts at Gulfstream

11th-GP, $60K, Msw, 3yo, 1mT, 5:14 p.m. ET

Juddmonte, Winchell Thoroughbreds and Bridlewood Farm's PRINCIPE D'ORO (Medaglia d'Oro), a $650,000 KEESEP yearling and half-brother to 'TDN Rising Star' and GIII Allaire DuPont Distaff Match Series S. heroine Spice Is Nice (Curlin), draws the fence in this grassy debut run for Todd Pletcher. The 7-2 morning-line favorite was bred by B. Flay Thoroughbreds.

Pletcher also campaigned the dark bay's dam, the Bobby Flay colorbearer and 'TDN Rising Star' Dame Dorothy (Bernardini) to a win in the 2015 GI Humana Distaff S. Dame Dorothy RNA'd for $3.1 million at the 2019 KEENOV sale. Her Uncle Mo colt sold for $1.6 million to Robert and Lawana Low, the second most expensive lot, at last summer's Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale.

Principe d'Oro is bred similarly to Medaglia d'Oro's GISWs Plum Pretty, Bolt d'Oro and Dickinson, who were produced by daughters of A.P. Indy.

TJCIS PPs

The post Saturday’s Racing Insights: Well-Bred Medaglia d’Oro Colt Debuts at Gulfstream appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Mating Plans: Stonehaven Steadings

With the 2022 breeding season right around the corner, we will feature a series of breeders' mating plans over the coming weeks. Today we have Aidan and Leah O'Meara of Stonehaven Steadings.

VENETIAN SONATA (m, 13, Bernardini–Moonlight Sonata, by Carson City), to be bred to Curlin

Bernardini's talents as a broodmare sire have been impressive but his strike rate with Curlin has been hugely impressive with nearly 20% stakes winners to date. That coupled with another stellar year at the track for Curlin made this mating an easy decision. Venetian is not a very big mare but she thankfully will throw to the sire in the size department. She has a very classy physique that she consistently passes on and compliments some of the more robust/powerfully built stallions such as Curlin.

TRUE FEELINGS (m, 13, Latent Heat–Grand Charmer, by Lord Avie), to be bred to Quality Road

True Feelings had a nice touch with Justify in September but had an equally impressive foal by Quality Road this spring and that tipped the balance in Quality Road's favor for next year again. Quality Road is primed for the peak of his career here the next five years with the best-bred crops to date about to hit the track and another outstanding year in the sales ring.

THISSMYTIME (m, 5, Carpe Diem–Seraphic Too, by Southern Halo), to be bred to Quality Road

Thissmytime is a new addition to the broodmare band for us this year. She's a track record setter and Grade II placed. We like to give our younger mares every opportunity to succeed and like to breed them to at least four proven sires to give them a good foundation to build off of. When you breed to these better sires they obviously cost a bit more with the stud fees and you're not always guaranteed success at the sales with that particular offspring. You're not just getting the potential sales success in three years' time from that particular mating, but also hopefully establishing your mare's career as a stakes producer, and that long-term investment in the proven sires can come back to you in spectacular fashion, as it did for us this past year with True feelings and Venetian Sonata. Thissmytime is a medium-sized filly and should benefit from Quality Road's elegant and leggy physique.

BECKLES ROAD (m, 13, Smart Strike–Padmore, by French Deputy), to be bred to Into Mischief

A lot of the time, a particular mating takes a lot of thought and back and forth, but sometimes a previous mating produces such an impressive foal that going back to the same sire is a no-brainer and that's the case this year with Beckles Road. Her yearling Into Mischief filly is one of the best-looking, best-moving and classiest Into Mischief fillies we've come across. The potent combination of both sire lines have produced some of Into Mischief's best runners including Authenthic, Goldencents, Life Is Good, Covfefe and Mia Mischief.

SWEET SAMI D (m, 6, First Samurai–Treaty of Kadesh, by Victory Gallop)/FIGURE OF SPEECH (m, 5, Into Mischief–Starlight Lady, by Elusive Quality), to be bred to Gun Runner

Gun Runner has made the most impressive start of any young sire since Uncle Mo a few years back and looks to have the potential to develop into one of the elite sires of the next decade. He has shown an affinity for the Storm Cat sire line similar to his sire Candy Ride, and both of our fillies hail from similar lines. Sweet Sami D is from the Giant's Causeway line, similar to [GI Hopeful S. winner] Gunite and Figure of Speech is from Harlan, similar to [GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner] Echo Zulu. We like to breed a quicker type filly to the Classic distance sires and both of these fall into that category. Gun Runner is a nice sized horse himself, but we're always cautious about a sire's own sire and what they have produced physically themselves over the years, so we tend to breed a bigger, leggier type of mare to sires on this line, as the sire line can tend to throw individuals who are medium sized in general. Both mares are 16.2 hands and should suit Gun Runner well physically.

BERNIN MIDNIGHT (m, 7, Midnight Lute–Venetian Sonata, by Bernardini), to be bred to Medaglia d'Oro

If a young mare of ours who has been bred to more modest mid-range sires starting out can show us that she can produce the right type of individual with her first couple of foals, then we are not afraid to step up and give her even more opportunity going forward. Bernin Midnight falls into this category; she had a very nice Malibu Moon filly sell this past September [for $225,000 at Keeneland] and has a beautiful Street Sense filly for this year. She also had a nice pedigree update with her half-sister Moonlight d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro) winning the GIII Las Virgenes S. this year.

The family success with Medaglia and her physical match-up with him got her a bump up to the big leagues. Medaglia's stud fee dropping to $100,000 might be the value of the sire ranks this year. While he has lacked the Grade I winners the last couple of years, he still has plenty of graded winners and is still strong commercially.

STUNNING SKY (m, 5, Declaration of War–Sky Walk, by Unbridled's Song), to be bred to Medaglia d'Oro

Stunning Sky is another new addition to the broodmare band. She was a Grade III winner at Keeneland on the turf (in the 2019 Pin Oak Valley View S.). Wasted Tears (Najran), [dam of presumptive champion juvenile Corniche (Quality Road)], showed us this year that a turf filly is not restricted to producing only turf runners herself, and Medaglia himself is a very talented dual-purpose sire. If this mating doesn't produce a dirt runner, Medaglia's stellar record on turf will give every opportunity to produce a runner on the mare's preferred surface.

MIZ KELLA (m, 10, Harlan's Holiday–Steelin', by Orientate)/LIBERTY LADY (m, 8, Bernardini–Steelin', by Orientate) to be bred to Street Sense

These two mares are young sisters to Shanghai Bobby (Harlan's Holiday). Miz Kella can tend to throw foals who are medium sized and maybe lacking a little bit of commercial leg. In spite of that, her foals have sold well, with a $425,000 daughter by Uncle Mo this past September, and they can also run, with her second foal already being the multiple stakes winner Canoodling (Pioneerof the Nile), who just missed out on Grade I black type in the La Brea S. Her yearling filly by Street Sense is physically the nicest she's produced so far and that made the next year's mating decision very straightforward. Street Sense, similar to Curlin, has a very impressive strike rate with Bernardini mares and that made him an easy selection for Liberty Lady. He can be a tricky horse to match a mare to physically and from our experience tends to do better with a smaller, more refined mare similar to Liberty Lady. She had a very nice colt by him for the sales last year that had to be scratched with an X-ray issue, but showed she could produce the right type physically with him and gets another opportunity next year.

EARLYBIRD ROAD (m, 18, Cherokee Run–Kiss N Make Up, by Private Terms), to be bred to Essential Quality

Earlybird Road is a good case study for not giving up on a mare too quickly if her first foals don't look the part. She's also a good example of the importance of diversifying breeding lines in the early years of a mare's career to give her every opportunity to succeed. Her first two foals bred on the Storm Cat line were very disappointing and could easily convince someone to move her on, but she was a stakes winner and well built and we decided to give her a few more tries on different lines, notably Mr. Prospector and A.P. Indy. She is now a multiple stakes producer and her last four foals are the most physically impressive she's had. We like to breed our mid-range proven mares to young incoming sires and Essential Quality is hands down the most exciting and physically impressive sire of the incoming class this year. She had already produced stakes winner and Grade III-placed Strongconstitution on that line and is a beautiful match physically.

Let us know who you're breeding your mares to in 2022, and why. We will print a selection of your responses in TDN over the coming weeks. Please send details to: garyking@thetdn.com.

The post Mating Plans: Stonehaven Steadings appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

A New Puncher for Violence

The new year could scarcely have opened in more familiar fashion, with Bob Baffert not only winning the GIII Sham S. for an eighth time but replicating what had meanwhile become a bitterly poignant 1-2 in the race last year.

Hopefully the names of Newgrange (Violence) and Rockefeller (Medaglia d'Oro) will not end 2022 quite so explosively freighted as those of Life Is Good (Into Mischief) and Medina Spirit (Protonico), whose respective transfer and tragedy have meanwhile become so expressive of the travails not only of their trainer, but of our entire industry.

But the levels subsequently achieved by both those colts certainly reiterated the caliber of animal Baffert reserves for this race, which was 12 months earlier chosen to launch a Horse of the Year campaign for Authentic (Into Mischief). Newgrange is duly guaranteed much attention in his quest to become the third consecutive GI Kentucky Derby winner (pending resolution of Medina Spirit's status) to graduate from the Sham.

We won't add, here, to the oceans of ink that will continue to flow on the ineligibility of Newgrange, as a resident of a barn banned by Churchill Downs, for the 10 Derby starting points that are supposed to be bestowed on the Sham winner. Instead let's just take a step back and consider what Newgrange's pedigree tells us about his potential; and what his emergence might do for the profile of his sire.

Violence has had an interesting stud career already, not least with his best horses to this point sharing what might seem an unexpected vocation as sprinters–albeit we should know, by this stage, not to make assumptions about the way his own sire, the beautiful Medaglia d'Oro, has channeled the legacy of an avowed turf influence in El Prado (Ire).

Though confined to just four starts, Violence was able to show a versatility of his own in terms of surface. Having started out on dirt in New York, winning on debut at Saratoga and then following up in the GII Nashua S., he shipped out to Hollywood Park to win the GI Futurity S. on synthetics.

Violence as a 2-year-old winning the Nashua | Jessica Hansen

Collared only by the subsequent Derby winner in the GII Fountain of Youth S., he unfortunately emerged out of that first defeat with a sesamoid fracture. Retired to Hill 'n' Dale at $15,000, Violence soon proved the star of the intake. Though he missed the 2017 freshman title by a few cents–the fortunes of champion Overanalyze, long since exported, stand in cautionary contrast–he was top by winners, and was rewarded by no fewer than 214 mares at a new fee of $25,000 the following spring. His maturing stock promptly elevated him to No. 1 second-crop sire across all indices, with eight stakes winners and 19 stakes performers. His third crop of yearlings borrowed that buzz, at an average $133,600, and his fee was hiked anew to $40,000.

But Violence then suffered a little stage fright. In 2019, he mustered just two stakes winners, and his yearling average sagged to $44,649. With his fee restored to $25,000 for 2020, Violence then steadied the ship with a spectacular, game-saving cluster of Grade I wins by colts from three different crops. The sophomore No Parole gave him a breakout success in the Woody Stephens S.; lightly raced 4-year-old Volatile added the Alfred G. Vanderbilt S.; and, though that colt was soon derailed, juvenile Dr. Schivel kept the conveyor turning in the Del Mar Futurity.

Dr. Schivel proved a crucial ally in 2021, too, ensuring that Violence's solitary graded success of the year came at the highest level in the Bing Crosby S., while only missing the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint by a nose. In the meantime, moreover, Violence had retrieved all his commercial energy. His 2020 yearlings rallied to $72,128, obviously in a challenging market; while his latest crop was right up to $116,352, crowned by a $950,000 colt sold to Repole Stables and St. Elias at the September Sale. (Auspiciously, his previous knockout score at auction, at $850,000, had turned out to be Volatile.)

Dr. Schivel (outside) in this year's Bing Crosby | Benoit

That represents superb consolidation by a horse emerging from a tricky crossroads, and reflects twin factors: one, obviously, is the vogue generated by those three Grade I winners; the other is that his 2021 yearlings graduate from that single season at $40,000, when he covered 171 mares presumably deemed worthy of a raised fee.

The overall momentum of Violence is reflected in the way his book, having slipped to 86 after his tepid racetrack campaign in 2019, rallied last spring to 159. So while he does have a small bump in the road ahead, in terms of his likely juvenile footprint for 2023, the overall “pipeline” is looking pretty good: his sophomores for this year represent his biggest book; and his incoming juveniles, his best.

The big question raised by Newgrange is whether Violence can now add a two-turn, Classic dimension to his most accomplished stock. As we've noted, Medaglia d'Oro has long proved an influence for diversity–in terms of discipline as well as surface, with Astern (Aus), Vancouver (Aus) and Warrior's Reward among his leading sprinters. Besides his sire line, another factor could be the duplication of his sixth dam, Greentree matriarch Sunday Evening, behind his granddam, whose sire is out of one of her daughters. Besides recurring in the pedigree of several fast horses, notably Irish champion sprinter Bluebird (Storm Bird), Sunday Evening is also an ancestress of other luminous turf runners in Indian Skimmer (Storm Bird) and Henrythenavigator (Kingmambo).

Storm Bird, responsible for both Bluebird and Indian Skimmer in this family, obviously gave us a huge “crossover” influence in Storm Cat. And it was Storm Cat's serial matings with Hall of Famer Sky Beauty (Blushing Groom {Fr}) that gave us the second dam of Violence. Sky Beauty's Grade I-winning dam Maplejinsky, in turn, was by the venerable turf/stamina influence Nijinsky, while also being a half-sister to the flying Dayjur (Danzig). (Literally flying, in terms of his unforgettable transition to dirt at the Breeders' Cup.) Their dam Gold Beauty, a champion sprinter by Mr. Prospector, whose son Gone West is sire of Violence's dam–admittedly one of the weaker links in this regal maternal line, with a solitary success in a nine-furlong dirt maiden at four.

Bottom line is that there are strands here that would certainly make it feasible for Violence to stretch out his stock: his own sire has obviously given us some real monsters round two turns, unsurprisingly as a grandson of Sadler's Wells; while Maplejinsky also features behind some pretty sturdy operators (third dam of Point of Entry {Dynaformer}, for example). But the propensity of Violence to throw very fast horses, to this point, is equally coherent on both sides of his pedigree. So while he does have a Grade I winner over 10 furlongs in Argentina, it appears instructive that one of his first stars, Talk Veuve To Me, ended up reverting to sprints despite some pretty stout influences in her family.

Hill 'n' Dale's Violence | Sarah Andrew

Of course, a reputation for speed does Violence no commercial harm at all. But what are the prospects of Newgrange, who won his maiden at six and was not pressured at a mile, stretching out on the Derby trail?

Well, it will certainly help if he keeps getting the same obliging treatment accorded to so many Baffert speed horses. Newgrange was only the latest to be so indulged, setting leisurely fractions in the Sham and duly retaining ample gas to assert in the stretch.

One thing we can say for sure is that he was well found as a yearling, for $125,000 by SF/Starlight/Madaket (subsequently joined on the racecard by several other powerful interests) as deep as Hip 2474 in the Brookdale Sales consignment at the September Sale. He was co-bred with Jack Mandato by Black Rock Stables, who had raced Violence and evidently retain a stake in his stud career despite meanwhile dispersing much other stock.

Newgrange is out of the unraced Empire Maker mare Bella Chianti, herself co-bred with Stone Farm from Mandato's extremely useful and tough racemare Bella Chiarra (Phone Trick), winner of nine of 29 starts (chiefly around 8/9f) including the GII Rampart H. at Gulfstream.

All five of Bella Chianti's foals to have raced have won, albeit only Newgrange at a smart level. More auspicious, perhaps, is the fact that her full-sister, though herself a modest performer, is the dam of the tragic Amalfi Sunrise (Constitution), lost to laminitis after winning her only two starts a couple of years ago, including the GII Sorrento S. by six lengths. We'll never know how far Amalfi Sunrise might have stretched out, but she did look extremely brisk on what we saw. That makes it hard to be adamant that her dam's sister will be putting much of their sire's Belmont-winning stamina into the Newgrange equation. (Be that as it may, Empire Maker certainly has an increasing legacy as a broodmare sire, newly enhanced in 2021 by Silver State {Hard Spun}, Mandaloun {Into Mischief} and Rock Your World {Candy Ride (Arg)}.)

Medaglia d'Oro | Darley

Newgrange's third dam is a stakes-sprinting daughter of the obscure Maryland sire Count Brook out of a modest mare by an unraced son of Nearco (Ity) imported from Britain, River War (GB). Nonetheless she produced a couple of other accomplished performers besides Bella Chiarra: a dual graded stakes winner on turf, David Copperfield (Halo), plus the hardy Young At Heart, twice beaten only narrowly in Grade II dirt sprints–despite being by Ferdinand.

You have to go back quite a long way to find where this trio might have dredged any genetic class: to the 1922 foal Primrose, in fact, as a Jerome H.-winning half-sister to a Travers winner. And, even as one who likes to unpick the deeper mesh of pedigrees, I'm not going to suggest that Newgrange must owe an awful lot to his eighth dam!

The real nugget on Newgrange's page is plainly his granddam Bella Chiarra–and her sire Phone Trick, obviously a very quick horse himself, owes his principal broodmare laurels to two horses, Zensational and Dawn Approach (Ire), who were unusually dashing for sons of Unbridled's Song and New Approach (Ire), respectively.

The onus remains on Violence, then, to show that his glossy physical stamp relays not just speed but speed that can be carried at the highest level. Clearly Newgrange couldn't be in better hands, for those purposes. As such, he looks like an important horse in his sire's developing career.

With that pedigree behind him, and that robust physique out front, Violence is not just positioning himself as an affordable alternative to his sire. Arguably the three premier achievers by Medaglia d'Oro are two females, Rachel Alexandra and Songbird, and a gelding, Golden Sixty (Aus). While he's still reliably coming up with class horses, and Rockefeller may yet become another, Medaglia d'Oro has now turned 23 and his principal male heir has yet to be definitively anointed. Violence does face fresh competition, from the likes of Bolt d'Oro and Higher Power, but Newgrange could be the herald of a decisive new phase in his candidature.

The post A New Puncher for Violence appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights