Hall Of Famer Nafzger Steps Out Of Retirement To Run Horse For Widow Of Longtime Client

Hall of Fame trainer Carl Nafzger is scheduled to send out Jim Tafel LLC's Sensible Jim for his career debut Saturday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., marking the 79-year-old Eclipse Award winner's first starter since October 2019.

While Nafzger is for all intents and purposes retired, he will maintain his longtime association with the late Jim Tafel and his family in Race 7, a seven-furlong maiden special weight race for 3-year-olds in which Sensible Jim will break from the No. 12 post position under Corey Lanerie.

“We'll see what he can do. I'm looking forward to the race, but like with all of my horses, I like to take it slow for their first race,” said Nafzger, a 2008 inductee into the National Museum Racing's Hall of Fame.

Nafzger trained Tafel's homebred Street Sense for a victory in the 2007 Kentucky Derby (G1), as well as a triumph in the 2006 Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) that clinched the Eclipse Award as champion 2-year-old. He also trained Banshee Breeze, the 1998 Eclipse Award-winning 3-year-old filly, on a long list of stakes winners for the Tafel-Nafzger connection.

Nafzger has trained four generations on Sensible Jim's maternal side, including Banshee Winds, the dam of Banshee Breeze whom Tafel purchased from Mill Ridge Farm, with whom he enjoyed a close association. Following Tafel's passing in 2014, his wife, Ida Mae, and family sold all but one of their Thoroughbreds – Makin' Sense, a daughter of Street Sense whose third dam was Banshee Winds.

“They dispersed everything. They asked me how much she would bring, and I said, 'She should just keep her and breed her.' That's what she did. It gives her one mare,” Nafzger said. “We talk all the time. This gives her a connection to Mill Ridge Farm. She's enjoyed it. She has only one mare. She's not in the horse business, but it's a connection that is still sort of alive.”

“We think she can be a good broodmare. She's been throwing good babies,” he added. “She kept Mrs. Tafel in the game and she's having fun.”

Sensible Jim, a gelded son of Hard Spun, has had a solid series of 10 workouts at Palm Meadows since December in preparation for his debut.

Nafzger, a former rodeo bull rider who is also in the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame, also won the Kentucky Derby in 1990 with Frances Genter's Unbridled, the 1990 Florida Derby (G1) winner who also captured the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) that year.

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Miss Chapin Delivers Oscar Performance Colt At Mill Ridge Farm As Part Of National Museum Of Racing’s Foal Patrol Season 4

Miss Chapin, a 20-year-old mare owned by Mrs. Jerry Amerman, delivered a colt by stallion Oscar Performance at 2:23 a.m. on Feb. 26 at Mill Ridge Farm as part of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame's Foal Patrol Season 4.

This is the first foal of the season delivered on Foal Patrol. Both the mare and foal are healthy and doing well.

Miss Chapin, a daughter of Royal Academy, delivered her Oscar Performance colt eight days after her expected foaling date of Feb. 18. There are four mares participating in Foal Patrol Season 4, as well as the stallion Tapit at Gainesway Farm. The next mare scheduled to deliver is Miss Always Ready at Three Chimneys Farm in Versailles, Ky. Both Janae (Safari North, Versailles, Ky.) and To the Moon Alice (Old Tavern Farm, Saratoga Springs, N.Y.) are scheduled to deliver in April.

Foal Patrol is a one-of-a-kind interactive web project. Season 4 features a collection of live cameras where people can view real-time streams of several mares and their foals and the stallion Tapit. The live camera feeds will be available according to each horse's daily schedule, set by the farm. For more information, please visit www.foalpatrol.com.

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Holiday Reflections On The Year That Was

While 2020 has been a year of hardships for everyone in our industry, many people have said the sport has come together in ways it never has before. As we enter into the holiday season, we spoke with several people who helped make this year a little better. We asked them to reflect on the things that have been particularly difficult to deal with this year; what they have learned because of these struggles and what they hope our industry will take away from this year as we look to 2021.

PRICE BELL, General Manager of Mill Ridge Farm

   “I think the balance has been difficult. You go into anything and you’re used to performing at a certain level, whether that’s being a parent, a husband or a professional. This year you couldn’t. So you find ways to compromise and be patient with yourself and with others.

In the beginning, it was really frustrating. I felt like I was a below-average parent, a below-average husband and a below-average professional. So you end up having to work together to find a balance between it all, which in that process, I guess, is humbling, but you become a lot richer. I think I’ve tried to be more patient and more appreciative of what we have. To just take a second to slow down and really appreciate all that we have and how blessed we are to have it.

If we take a step back to 2019 or 2018 or even before the pandemic, it often has felt like we’re a sinking ship. We can’t get everyone together. But I feel like the tenor has changed a little bit.

I think in general we have been very appreciative of being able to have racing. It was really sad when we couldn’t go to Saratoga, but we were still captured by Tiz the Law (Constitution). We were still blown away by Authentic (Into Mischief) and his rise. Just to be able to have those racing memories kept us going and was a wonderful component of 2020.

I think, also, that I feel more of a community. Obviously we’re competitors, but it feels like more of a community than as cut-throat as it may have been in the past. We’ll see, long may it last. But I do think we’re all in this together. I think that attitude has bubbled up more to the surface than maybe it had previously. Maybe we all feel a sense of responsibility to continue to share and continue to promote. I think we have a greater appreciation for the sport we’re able to play and the animals we’re able to associate with.  

 

BOYD BROWNING, President and CEO of Fasig-Tipton

I think we all have to keep in mind the love and passion that people have for the horse and for racing. At the end of the day, when we’re trying to make decisions, both in the short term and long term, we’ve got to do what’s right for the horse and what’s right for racing. We’ve got to have a little broader perspective.

We all tend to get caught up in our own organizations and our own marketplaces. I think we learned this year that there is a significant interrelationship amongst both companies and markets. If we’ve learned anything, it’s that the mutual cooperation of trying to grow our business and take advantage of opportunities should be heightened.

At the end of the day, the bigger-picture message for all of us should be that we saw the real love that people have for the horse. We had an opportunity to reach some new participants and we got to take advantage of that and promote our sport and our industry–for the emotional thrill of winning a race, for the excitement of being around a good horse, and for the love of the horse and the opportunity to be involved in this majestic sport.

It was a very trying year for virtually everybody, for basically the entire world, and we did see the strength and unity of our industry. I think that we should all look forward to 2021 and beyond with great hope and great enthusiasm, but also recognize that we’ve got to do better. And if we do, then the industry can continue to grow and it can be an even better world that we live in as members of the Thoroughbred community.

 

AIDAN BUTLER, COO of The Stronach Group

It’s really sad that we lost a bit of a legend, trainer Bob Hess, Sr., and that just kind of brings it home. People are getting sick and people are talking about being asymptomatic, but when you lose one of your own, it doesn’t get any worse than that. It really, really brings it home. Hopefully this makes us all a little stronger by all the pulling together we’ve had to do not just in 2020, but in 2019.

One thing, I think, that has become apparent to me is how interconnected we are with the horsemen. If we are doing well, hopefully they’re doing better. If they are doing bad, we certainly are doing bad. But I think that is something I will carry with me for as long as I’ve got a job in the industry. If you understand how delicate the ecosystem is and how important the horsemen are, you have a better shot of doing okay.

I think that this industry needs to understand to always put themselves in the position of the other people in the industry. If you change your role, who does it affect? I think all the way from the track side to the horse with the trainers, the jockeys, the grooms, the backside, everybody’s affected by the littlest moves. We just need to be thoughtful. In this industry, everything we do impacts more than ourselves.

In the past, there’s been a lot of battling with sort of every man and woman for themselves. But I don’t think that’s the future of the game. We’ve got to pull together and be a little more mindful of the stuff we do. Everything I’m going to try and do in my little part of the world with what responsibilities I have, is to make our tracks be as good as they can possibly be and hopefully people appreciate that. What is it? From little acorns, great oaks are made.

 

KAREN CHAVEZ, General Manager of the New York Racing Track Chaplaincy

   I think the most difficult part of the year was seeing the people in need. It really affected us to see the families suffering. It seemed like the end of the world, you know?

Our mission is to serve the backstretch community, but how can we say no when we see a mom with a stroller who lives across the street from the track and she asks if we can help her?  So we kind of expanded our mission a bit and included our neighbors in the community and around the track.

At the end of the day, we are now feeling a sense of accomplishment. We feel like we’re being rewarded every day when we hear stories of people who are feeling better or who are getting what they need and now they have peace. That’s the best payback we can get to hear the news that everybody’s doing so much better because of what we’re doing here at the track.      

I’m so grateful of the awareness that’s been raised through this season. Through social media, people are spreading the word of what’s happening here and it’s great what we’re seeing.

I’m happy to report that all of the horse racing industry has really united during this time. There is better communication than ever before with everything that is being done far as the way we’re serving the backstretch community, the workers and their families.

I think it’s important that we don’t forget the things we go through that make us stronger, make us wiser, and that we utilize every opportunity not for our personal gain, but to be able to gain resources that will help other people. I am a firm believer that when we invest in the community, more blessings will come and more resources will come. So then we can continue to serve as much as we can with what we have, knowing that people will hear of what we’re doing and more people would want to help.

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NMRHOF Foal Patrol Season Four to Debut

The fourth season of the National Musem of Racing and Hall of Fame’s popular live webcam series Foal Patrol will debut online Dec. 29 at www.foalpatrol.com. The season will feature mares at Mill Ridge Farm, Safari North at Pauls Mill and Three Chimneys in Kentucky and Old Tavern Farm in New York. Season four will also feature leading sire Tapit at Gainesway Farm.

The featured mares for season four include:

 

  • Janae (Closing Argument), in foal to Malibu Moon and due in April; residing at Safari North;

 

  • Miss Always Ready (More Than Ready), a full-sister to GII Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf winner More Than Real and carrying a full-sibling to GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf hero Structor (Palace Malice); residing at Three Chimneys, due to foal in April;

 

  • Miss Chapin (Royal Academy), the dam of GISW Coffee Clicque (Medaglia d’Oro) and in foal to Oscar Performance (Kitten’s Joy), campaigned–like Coffee Clicque–by John and Jerry Amerman; residing at Mill Ridge and due mid-March;

 

  • To the Moon Alice (Malibu Moon), a half-sister to GSW Unchained Melody (Smart Strike) in foal to Uncle Mo and due to foal in late April at Old Tavern Farm in Saratoga.

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