Dam of Going to Vegas Headlines Early Fasig November Supplements

Fasig-Tipton has catalogued seven initial supplemental entries to its 2021 November Sale, which are catalogued as hips 260-266, and include:

  • Hard to Resist (Hip 264): A stakes-winning daughter of Johannesburg, she is the dam of Going to Vegas (Goldencents), recent winner of the GI Rodeo Drive S. at Santa Anita. A leader in the California female turf division with three graded stakes win in 2021, Going to Vegas is pointing for the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf for her next start. Hard to Resist is in foal to leading California sire Grazen. She will be consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.
  • Caravel (Hip 265): Brilliant 4-year-old daughter of Mizzen Mast has captured three stakes victories this year sprinting on the turf. Among these wins was a dominant score in the GIII Caress S. at Saratoga. The gray also earned a Grade I stakes placing when facing males in the Highlander S. at Woodbine in August. A registered Pennsylvania-bred, she has five career stakes wins and current earnings of $400,169. Consigned as a racing/broodmare prospect by ELiTE, agent.

This group of supplemental entries also includes weanlings by Liam's Map, Uncle Mo, Munnings, War Front and Bolt d'Oro.

These entries may now be viewed online and will also be available in the equineline sales catalogue app. Print versions of all supplemental entries will be available on-site at Fasig-Tipton at sale time.

Fasig-Tipton will continue to accept approved November Sale supplemental entries through the Breeders' Cup. The November Sale will be held Tuesday, Nov. 9, in Lexington, Kentucky starting at 2 p.m.

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Munnings For Sale

No, not that Munnings. His namesake. The OG. Sir Alfred James Munnings.

Six of the painter's works from the estate of the late Betty Moran with an estimated value of between $2.4 to over $3.8 million will be auctioned off at Christie's auction house in New York City, Wednesday, Oct. 13, at 11 a.m.

Munnings, the most renowned English sporting artist of the 20th Century, was known for his exceptional equine art, which has brought prices of over $7 million at auction. The six pieces are lots 32-27 in the European Art sale.

They are:

Shrimp Leading Ponies Across the Ringland Hills, Norfolk, estimated to sell for between $300,000-$500,000

A Park Meeting, The Eclipse Stakes, Sandown Park ($200,000-$300,000)

Study of a Jockey in the Duke of Westminster's Colors ($15,000-$20,000)

After the Race, Cheltenham ($700,000-$1,000,000)

Who's The Lady, and Two Studies ($800,000-$1.2 million)

The Seventh Earl of Bathurst, W.F.H. of the V.H.W., with Will Boore, Huntsman ($400,000-$600,000)

View the entire catalogue of European art here, or download the Moran catalogue here.

“To have a collection of this quality and diversity is rare,” said Deborah Coy, the Senior Vice President and Head of the Department of European Art at Christie's. “It's unique in that. A lot of people will collect racing, or they'll collect hunting, or equestrian portraits. This encompasses all of that.”

Shrimp Leading Ponies Across the Ringland Hills, Norfolk, is expected to fetch up to $500,000

Elizabeth 'Betty' Ranney Moran, who raced the likes of 1985 GI Belmont S. winner Creme Fraiche and bred champion Unique Bella and Hard Spun, passed away at her home in Malvern, Pennsylvania, Jan. 23, 2020, at the age of 89.

Moran grew up on Brushwood Farm, then a dairy farm, in Willistown Township, Pennsylvania, and was said to love farm life and animals of any kind. She won her first stakes race in 1978, and achieved her biggest success seven years later when Creme Fraiche took his Classic. Almost 20 years later, she would win the GI Arlington Million with Kicken Kris.

“She was probably the most generous person I've ever met, not to just write a check, but to ring a bell for the Salvation Army in downtown Philly,” said Reiley McDonald, her equine advisor for over 30 years, at the time of her death. “She was a tough, enthusiastic, hard-driving woman and we will all miss her very much.”

The collection runs from a Norfolk landscape featuring a collection of the artist's ponies (Shrimp Leading Ponies), to a paddock scene at Sandown (A Park Meeting), to a jockey study, to a post-steeplechase scene (After the Race), to what is expected to be the star of the collection, Who's the Lady. The latter depicts Queen Elizabeth II's aunt, Princess Mary, at a hunt. Originally a smaller canvas, it is inscribed by Munnings, “This was smaller canvas with HRH Princess Mary on grey that I put aside or a larger one s shown in this Exhibition with Lord Harewood and the Bramham Moor Hounds. In 1946, I had the canvas relined and enlarged, making the figure of HRH into the central figure (Lucy Glitters) and then surrounding her with members of the Nonsuch Hunt as now seen lady.”
Munnings died in 1959, and had kept this painting himself until at least 1956.

“These pictures really do speak for themselves,” said Coy. “We sent a selection to London to be viewed, and one out to Southampton, and they're very well received, everywhere. Munnings has an appeal in both sides of the pond, which is a very important thing about this art. Many racing art collectors are just English buyers, but not so with Munnings. He has a very strong American following, as well.”

Munnings's work, of course, has often found a home with racing people like Moran. But it's the scope of his equine subjects that makes him so interesting, and lasting.

Said Coy, “I think he is one of the more interesting of the equestrian artists, because he does do a wide range of equestrian subjects. They're just beautiful. And his racing scenes are spectacular. The breadth of his subject matter is extraordinary.”

It seems a bit ironic that just this week, two of racing's most prominent art collectors, Peter Brant and John Magnier, bought into a Munnings of their own with their purchase of a piece of Jack Christopher, who heads next to the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile as one of the top choices.

But then, racing and art have always had a certain synchronicity, and it wouldn't come as a surprise to anyone if some–if not all–of these works ended up in the hands of someone every bit as revered in racing as Betty Moran.

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Munnings Colt Best of Strong Bunch in Champagne

Apparently, 'Jacks' are wild where it comes to the GI Champagne S., in the last couple years, at least.

Twelve months after Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) put on a show in the 'Win and You're In' qualifier for the GI TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile, Presented by TAA, 'TDN Rising Star' Jack Christopher (Munnings) turned in a dazzling performance of his own, racing away to a 2 3/4-length success to stamp himself as one of the favorites on Breeders' Cup Friday, Nov. 5.

Accorded 'Captain Obvious' Rising Star status after covering six furlongs in 1:09.85 to thrash a field of Travers Day maidens by 8 3/4 lengths Aug. 28, the chestnut–who bears a striking resemblance to his Ashford Stud-based stallion–was sent off as the 17-10 favorite in the Champagne. It was a field short on numbers, but high on quality that included GI Hopeful S. hero Gunite (Gun Runner), GSW, Hopeful runner-up and 'Rising Star' Wit (Practical Joke) and 10-length Saratoga maiden romper and 'Rising Star' My Prankster (Into Mischief).

In the end, Jack Christopher left them all eating his dust.

Away fairly, the $135,000 Fasig-Tipton October acquisition landed in third position early, but was angled out and around longshot Kavod (Lea) in the opening quarter-mile and assured that Gunite would not get away with cheap fractions. Just off the leader's flank through a half-mile in a solid :46.49, Jack Christopher traveled ominously well on the turn as the top two pulled well clear of the trailing quartet. The chalk claimed a hard-ridden Gunite under a hold at the five-sixteenths pole, opened an unassailable advantage and was ridden out to a comfortable victory. Commandperformance (Union Rags), runner-up in a muddy Spa maiden in his lone previous appearance Sept. 6, raced at the tail of the field with the notoriously slow-starting Wit, but made good overland progress into the stretch and was gaining late. Wit did manage to close up the fence for third while no menace to the top two. The disappointment of the race was My Prankster, who was niggled at fully five furlongs from home and never landed a blow in a distant fourth.

“We knew we had speed and Jose [Ortiz] and I agreed to not take that away from him. We just wanted to break out of there and get a good spot,” said winning trainer Chad Brown, whose previous Champagne winners include Practical Joke (2016) and Complexity (2018). “He was a horse that identified himself as early on as his first work. I was on the phone with the connections saying, 'This is potentially a really good horse. I can't believe what I just saw.' He's just been brilliant in every work. There was some buzz around him before he ran, and he lived up to it.”

The last horse to complete the Champagne/Breeders' Cup Juvenile double was Uncle Mo in 2011, though Brown's lone Juvenile winner, Good Magic (Curlin), was second to Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior) in the 2017 Champagne before causing an upset at Del Mar.

Pedigree Notes:

Jack Christopher is the 52nd stakes winner, 21st graded winner and fourth top-level winner for the very reliable and versatile Munnings, joining dual GISW I'm A Chatterbox, this year's GI Madison S. heroine Kimari and GI A. G. Vanderbilt H. victor El Deal, a Louisiana-based stallion who has already been represented by two black-type winners from his first crop to the races this year. Jack Christopher is the first graded winner of any variety out of a daughter of Half Ours (Unbridled's Song), who passed away earlier this year.

A Jan. 30 foal, Jack Christopher is out of a daughter of Blushing Ogygian, the dam of MGISW and successful dual-hemisphere stallion Street Boss (Street Cry {Ire}) and to MGSP Habiboo (Unbridled's Song), who counts GSWs Bellera (Bernardini) and Life Imitates Art (More Than Ready) among her produce. Third dam Fruhlingshochzeit was a half-sister to the likeable handicap horse Running Stag (Cozzene).

Rushin No Blushin is the dam of a yearling Mo Town filly, a $5,000 KEENOV weanling last year, was empty to Munnings this year and was most recently covered by Complexity.

Saturday, Belmont
CHAMPAGNE S.-GI, $500,000, Belmont, 10-2, 2yo, 1m, 1:37.31, ft.
1–JACK CHRISTOPHER, 122, c, 2, by Munnings
1st Dam: Rushin No Blushin, by Half Ours
2nd Dam: Blushing Ogygian, by Ogygian
3rd Dam: Fruhlingshochzeit, by Blushing Groom (Fr)
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN, 1ST GRADE I
WIN. 'TDN Rising Star' ($145,000 RNA Ylg '20 FTKSEL;
$135,000 Ylg '20 FTKOCT). O-Bakke, Jim, Isbister, Gerald,
Coolmore Stud and Brant, Peter M.; B-Castleton Lyons & Kilboy
Estate (KY); T-Chad C. Brown; J-Jose L. Ortiz. $275,000.
Lifetime Record: 2-2-0-0, $330,000. Werk Nick Rating: D+.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Commandperformance, 122, c, 2, Union Rags–Smitten, by
Tapit. ($220,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Repole Stable and St. Elias
Stable; B-Damara Farm LC (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher. $100,000.
3–Wit, 122, c, 2, Practical Joke–Numero d'Oro, by Medaglia
d'Oro. ($575,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). 'TDN Rising Star' O-Repole Stable, St. Elias
Stable and Gainesway Stable (Antony Beck); B-Rosilyn Polan
(KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher. $60,000.
Margins: 2 3/4, 7, 4. Odds: 1.70, 12.60, 2.45.
Also Ran: My Prankster, Gunite, Kavod. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Debut Winner Jack Christopher Tops Compact Field For ‘Win And You’re In’ Champagne

Impressive maiden winner Jack Christopher will put his talent to the test when he takes on a compact but quality field assembled for Saturday's Grade 1, $500,000 Champagne for 2-year-olds going a one-turn mile at Belmont Park.

The Champagne, a “Win And You're In” qualifying event for the Grade 1, $2 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile on November 5 at Del Mar, is one of two Grade 1, $500,000 events on Saturday's card along with the Woodward at nine furlongs 3-year-olds and up on the main track. The lucrative card is bolstered by the Grade 3, $200,000 Belmont Turf Sprint Invitational for 3-year-olds and up going six furlongs on the grass along with the Grade 2, $200,000 Miss Grillo, a 1 1/16-mile turf test for juvenile fillies.

Jim Bakke and Gerald Isbister's Jack Christopher graduated on debut going six furlongs on Aug. 28 at Saratoga Race Course, producing a 92 Beyer Speed Figure. The chestnut son of Munnings was hustled out of the gate by jockey Jose Ortiz, and raced a close second to the outside of pacesetter Back to Normal down the backstretch before powering away to an 8 ¾-length victory over next-out winner Hoist the Gold.

Trainer Chad Brown will seek his third Champagne victory after saddling previous winners Practical Joke [2016] and Complexity [2018], the latter of whom also arrived at the Champagne off a debut score.

“Just off one race, he's going to have to take another step forward, but he was so brilliant with his debut,” Brown said of Jack Christopher. “We've had horses have success here before doing that – Complexity comes to mind. Off just one race he ran very well in the Champagne and won.”

Brown said Jack Christopher, who drilled five furlongs in 1:00 flat on September 25 at Belmont, should have no issue with stretching out in distance.

“The way he's training I don't think he'll have any difficulty getting the mile,” Brown said. “But it looks like it's shaping up to be a really strong field of horses with experience and some other horses that broke their maiden and look good. He was certainly one of the more impressive maiden breakers at Saratoga, I would say.”

Brown said Jack Christopher had trained forwardly into his debut, which garnered plenty of well-warranted hype.

“His works were eye catching and he's a horse that has a lot of white on him,” Brown said. “He's a flashy looking and unusual kind of unique horse with his markings. Between those two things, he's easy to put on peoples' radar.”

Ortiz will return to the irons from post 3.

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen seeks his second straight Champagne win after scoring last year with Jackie's Warrior, sending out Gunite in attempt of a second Grade 1 victory for owner and breeder Winchell Thoroughbreds.

The son of leading freshman stallion Gun Runner graduated at third asking going six furlongs on June 26 at Churchill Downs ahead of a second-place finish in the Grade 2 Saratoga Special at 6 ½ furlongs on August 14.

Gunite handled a stretch-out in distance with flying colors when capturing the Grade 1 Hopeful on September 6 at Saratoga by 5 ¾ lengths. After being bumped out of the gate from post 3, jockey Ricardo Santana, Jr. angled Gunite toward the inside, making up considerable ground down the backstretch and established command approaching the far turn before drawing away to victory.

“He'll be the horse in the field with the most experience so hopefully that does him well,” said Winchell Thoroughbreds racing and bloodstock advisor David Fiske. “Typically, horses that come out of Steve's parents training center [El Primero Training Center] in Laredo tend to break well from the gate. Facing all that adversity, that's something some of the other ones haven't faced. Hopefully, he's learned something from all of it.”

A strong effort from Gunite will likely result in a next-out endeavor in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, which is run at two turns going 1 1/16 miles. Despite having not yet raced going two turns, Fiske expressed no concern in handling the distance.

“Last year, someone on the broadcast said that not having two-turn experience going into the Breeders' Cup is not a hinderance, based off a lot of the previous horses that won it,” Fiske said. “About half of them that won it only had one-turn experience. I don't think it's an impediment for him.

“All the Grade 1 races in New York hold a special place on the racing calendar and seem to be the hardest ones to win,” Fiske added.

Santana, Jr. will engineer the trip from post 5.

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Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, a six-time winner of the Champagne, will saddle a trio of aspirants in Wit [post 1, Irad Ortiz, Jr.], My Prankster [post 2, Luis Saez], and Commandperformance [post 6, Tyler Gaffalione].

Repole Stable, St. Elias Stable and Gainesway Stable's Wit endured his first defeat last out, when a troubled second as the favorite in the Grade 1 Hopeful. The dark bay or brown colt stumbled at the start and was forced out of position, but made up ground down the backstretch to pick up the runner-up spot.

Wit won his first two starts by a combined 14 lengths, capturing his debut on June 5 at Belmont Park en route to an impressive triumph in the six-furlong Grade 3 Sanford on July 17 at Saratoga.

“He's got learning experience in all three of his races,” Pletcher said. “He's gotten well-accustomed to getting some dirt in his face and dealing with some traffic. We're just hoping for a cleaner start. We tried to break well in his last race, he just grabbed himself a little bit and had to play catch up from there. The track wasn't kind to closers as well.”

Wit, a son of 2016 Champagne winner and first-crop sire Practical Joke, is out of the unraced Medaglia d'Oro mare Numero d'Oro. He was hammered down to $575,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where he was consigned by Rosilyn Polan.

Robert and Lawana Low's My Prankster steps into stakes company following a 10-length maiden score going 6 ½-furlongs on August 21 at Saratoga. The son of leading sire Into Mischief graduated at first asking, settling in third in the early stages before powering home in the stretch to an in-hand triumph under Saez, which garnered a 92 Beyer.

Three of Pletcher's six Champagne winners arrived at their respective coups off a first-out graduation with Uncle Mo [2010], Havana [2013] and Daredevil [2014] all securing Champagne wins off debut victories.

Pletcher said My Prankster touted his first-out effort with a half-mile breeze from the gate in 47 flat on August 8 on the Saratoga main track.

“He's not an overzealous work horse,” Pletcher said. “If you hadn't seen that gate work, you might not have expected the debut he had, but he's a pretty laid back colt. It's always a big stretch to go from a one start maiden to a Grade 1 stake, but we've had some success doing that.”

Repole Stable and St Elias Stable's Commandperformance is the lone maiden in the field, finishing second to Don't Wait Up going six furlongs in his September 6 debut at Saratoga. The gray or roan son of Union Rags was compromised at the break and took some kickback toward the rear of the field, but powered down the lane to finish two lengths behind the winner.

Completing the field is Kavod, a chestnut son of Lea co-owned by trainer James Chapman with Tritain Biddinger. Following a two-length maiden victory at second asking in April at Belmont, Kavod was a close second in the Tremont on June 4 over Big Sandy. He enters off two distant fifth place finishes at graded stakes level at the Spa.

Kavod, who adds blinkers, will exit post 4 under Charles Roberts.

The Champagne is slated as Race 8 on Saturday's 11-race program, which offers a first post of 1 p.m. Eastern.

Inaugurated in 1867, the Champagne has seen a handful of Kentucky Derby winners score in the race during their 2-year-old season dating back to Azra in 1891. Riva Ridge [1971], Foolish Pleasure [1974], Spectacular Bid [1978] as well as Triple Crown winners Count Fleet [1942] and Seattle Slew [1976] won the Champagne before becoming household names.

The great Secretariat won the 1972 Champagne but was disqualified for interference with Stop the Music awarded the victory. The Champagne has also been used as a steppingstone to the Breeders' Cup Juvenile with Fly So Free [1990], Timber Country [1994], War Pass [2007], Uncle Mo [2010] and Shanghai Bobby [2012] notching the Champagne-Breeders' Cup Juvenile double.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the fall meet at Belmont Park on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

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