Attila’s Storm Filly Tops Ruidoso New Mexico-Bred Yearling Sale’s Thoroughbred Session

A filly from the late leading sire Attila's Storm topped the Thoroughbred session of the Ruidoso New Mexico-Bred Yearling Sale on Aug. 20, bringing $90,000

The Thoroughbred session was the opening segment of what was a two-day auction at Ruidoso Downs, largely consisting of Quarter Horse yearlings.

A total of 55 horses changed hands during the Thoroughbred session for revenues of $759,600. The average sale price finished at $13,811, and the buyback rate finished at 38 percent.

Joe Dee Brooks purchased the sale-topper, an Attila's Storm filly offered as Hip 41, for $90,000.

The bay filly is out of the winning Gone Hollywood mare Ringback, whose four foals to race are all winners, including stakes winner Hollywood Henry and stakes-placed Fill the Bill. The latter is a full-sibling to the sale-topper.

Bred in New Mexico, the filly hails from the family of English Group 2-placed Miss Demure, and Royal Shyness, who was Group 1-placed in England and a stakes winner in the U.S. She was consigned by A & A Ranch.

Attila's Storm, who died in July, accounted for the three most expensive offerings of the sale's Thoroughbred portion, all consigned by A & A Ranch,

In addition to the top horse, he also saw Hip 68, a filly named High Dollar Hush out of the stakes-winning Untold Gold mare Hush's Gold, sell to Pierre and Leslie Amestoy for $70,000. Rounding out the trio was Hip 51, a filly named Happy and Bold out of the Smoke Glacken mare Bold Jubilation who went to Brad King and Suzanne Kirby for $55,000.

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Live Racing Returns To Albuquerque Downs On Saturday

Albuquerque Downs in New Mexico will open its 27-day Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse meet on Saturday, Aug. 14. First post is set for 6:05 p.m. (MDT).

The track's nine-race opening-night program consists of nine races, six for Quarter Horses and three for Thoroughbreds. Saturday's feature race, the first running of the 440-yard, $75,000 Bank of America Albuquerque Championship Challenge, has drawn a field of nine aged Quarter Horses, headed by Stinebaugh Racing Enterprises' Perrys Double Down and Christina D. Robinson's CERs Final Try.

A 4-year-old Mr Jess Perry gelding trained by John Stinebaugh, Perrys Double Down is coming off of a one-length victory in the 400-yard, $40,000 Mr Jet Moore Stakes (G2) at Ruidoso Downs on July 25. Perrys Double Down has earned $281,840 from 14 races, and he ended his 3-year-old season with a half-length victory in the 440-yard, $393,000 Texas Classic Derby (G1) at Lone Star Park near Dallas.

CERs Final Try will be stretching out in distance off of his half-length win in the 350-yard, $25,000 John Andreini Memorial Stakes at Ruidoso Downs on May 31. Tony Sedillo trains the homebred 4-year-old son of One Dashing Eagle.

Saturday's card at Albuquerque Downs includes the 1-mile, $20,000 Downs at Albuquerque Marathon Claiming Stakes for $6,250 claimers, the first leg of the track's three-race Marathon Series for Thoroughbreds, and an 870-yard, $42,400 open-condition allowance race which drew reigning AQHA distance champion Madewell and will serve as a prep for the September 18, $60,000-estimated AQHA Albuquerque Distance Challenge (G3).

According to Don Cook, Downs' president of racing, average daily purses at the track are expected to average a track-record $300,000 per day. Business has been brisk at the track's casino since it reopened earlier this year after being closed due to COVID-19 restrictions.

“We've also noticed a big increase in our simulcast handle,” Cook said. “When the COVID lockdowns first started, horse racing was the only sport that was still going on; horse racing was receiving a lot of television coverage and appears to have generated some new fans.

“It will be interesting to see if that translates into increased attendance for our live meet,” he added. “We're encouraged by the early returns.”

If opening weekend entries are any indication, Cook has good reason to be encouraged. Saturday's opening-day program drew 95 entries, or an average of 10.6 horses per race. Sunday's nine race card, which is headed by two Thoroughbred stakes, attracted 97 starters, or an average of 10.8 horses per race.

The main portion of Albuquerque Downs' 2021 season runs through Sunday, Sept. 19. The track's stakes schedule features 23 races, 13 for Thoroughbreds and 10 for Quarter Horses. The Thoroughbred stakes schedule is topped by the 1 1/8-mile, $200,000 Downs at Albuquerque Handicap on Sept. 18. Last year's winner, Restrainedvengence, has earned $142,960 from nine starts in California this season, and he won the June 20 American Stakes (G3) at Santa Anita Park.

Albuquerque Downs' Quarter Horse stakes schedule is headed by the 440-yard, $300,000 Albuquerque Fall Championship (G1), presented by South Point Hotel and Casino, on closing day. Danjer, the winner of last year's Fall Championship, went on to earn AQHA champion aged horse honors.

Albuquerque Downs will also host the AQHA's Bank of America Challenge Championships on Saturday, Oct. 23, making the track the first in the 28-year history of the program to host the event three consecutive seasons. Next year's Challenge Championships will be held at Indiana Grand Casino and Racecourse near Indianapolis.

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Leading New Mexico Sire Attila’s Storm Dies At Age 19

Attila's Storm, a regular presence at the top of New Mexico's sire list, died on June 23 after suffering a heart attack following colic surgery at Franklin Veterinary Clinic in Ruidoso Downs, N.M., BloodHorse reports.

The 19-year-old son of Forest Wildcat last stood at Double LL Farms in Belen, N.M. after selling for $90,000 as part of the 2020 dispersal of owner R.D. Hubbard on ThoroughbredAuctions.com. He'd resided at different farms around the state since retiring to stud in 2008 as a candidate to breed both Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses.

Attila's Storm won five of 18 starts during his on-track career for earnings of $534,983. He raced primarily on the East Coast, highlighted by wins in the Grade 3 Toboggan Handicap and listed Fall Highweight Handicap. he also finished second in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes.

The horse competed in two editions of the Breeders' Cup Sprint, finishing fourth at Belmont Park in 2005 and fifth in the 2006 running at Churchill Downs.

Runners by Attila's Storm have earned more than $14.3 million on the racetrack, led by five-time stakes winners Waltzing Attila and Stormin the Jewels, along with other multiple stakes winners Hush's Storm, Thermal, and Go for a Stroll.

Bred in Kentucky by Lajos Kengye, Attila's Storm is out of the Magesterial mare Sweet Symmetry.

Read more at BloodHorse.

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‘Enough’: New Mexico Horsemen File Federal Lawsuit Against Commission

The New Mexico Horsemen's Association filed suit against the New Mexico Racing Commission in federal court late Monday, charging the regulatory body with depriving racehorse owners and trainers of their civil rights and other violations.

“The horsemen finally said, 'Hold it. How many constitutional laws can you continue to violate? How many statutes can you continue to ignore?'” said Gary Mitchell, attorney for the New Mexico Horsemen's Association (NMHA). “The horsemen said, 'Enough. We don't have any other place to go but federal court. We need this to stop.'”

The NMHA, which represents about 4,000 Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse horsemen in New Mexico, already has two lawsuits pending in state court against the New Mexico Racing Commission (NMRC).

Instead of working with horsemen to settle the dispute, the NMRC subsequently barred the NMHA from communicating with the commission, contacting any commissioners or attending the regulatory agency's public meetings. With no alternative after being deprived of any forum before the commission, the NMHA sought relief in federal court against the NMRC, as well as the individual commissioners, under Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act and the New Mexico Tort Claims Act. A highly unusual step for a state horsemen's association, the action creates the potential for individual members of the commission to be held personally liable.

Mitchell said the commission is trying to silence the largest advocacy group under its jurisdiction.

“The commissioners are deliberately attempting to do away with the horsemen's association,” Mitchell said. “We're prepared to prove, in court, that this is being done intentionally. They haven't hesitated to do everything in their power to shut out New Mexico's horsemen, and ultimately shut down the NMHA.”

The NMHA filed suit in the Second Judicial District Court in Bernalillo County in December to stop the commission's years-long practice of taking horsemen's purse money to pay the racetracks' liability insurance on jockeys and exercise riders, in clear violation of state law. The transfer of purse money to pay track operating expenses has cost horsemen to date more than $8 million.

The horsemen were back in court in May after the commissioners ordered tracks to immediately shut off the NMHA's revenue stream, derived from access to funds horsemen have earned from purses.

The funds in question are used by the NMHA to pay medical fees for its members, the NMHA's Political Action Committee and administrative costs associated with a proper accounting for all expenditures. That includes the critical role of overseeing the purse account for the horsemen and the state's five racetracks.

“We have never taken money from the purse funds to benefit our organization,” Mitchell said. “In fact, we took our own money to pay for the accounting, collection, management, dispersal and annual audits of how this money is handled. The taxpayer was not paying for us to do all of this. We were doing it for free, paying for it through contributions from our members, and the commissioners now say 'stop.'”

Mitchell also questioned the commission's motivation.

“They wish to get their hands on this money and use it how they see fit – which is basically to pay the costs of running the racetrack, thereby allowing more money to go into the casinos' pockets,” he said. “Sadly, the commission, which is supposed to be fair and equal to everybody, sees no obligation to be fair to the horsemen.

“Allowing gaming at racetracks in New Mexico was done to save racing,” Mitchell said. “The racetracks cannot have gaming unless they have racing. The law is very clear about it. The gaming compact is clear about it. The Gaming Control Act is clear about it. The Horse Racing Act is clear about it.”

The NMHA challenges the commission's contention that the horsemen's organization is taking money designated for purses, pointing out that the money in question has transitioned into owners' earnings based on race results.

“When the race is run, the purse is paid and that now becomes the winning horseman's money,” said long-time racehorse owner and NMHA President Roy Manfredi. “By their actions, the racing commission has taken away the NMHA's ability to provide financial assistance to horsemen in need. That's the same as saying you cannot donate to the March of Dimes, the NRA or any other organization, simply because your employer doesn't like the March of Dimes or the other organization. Once the money is paid to an individual who owns a horse, that money is theirs and they can do whatever they want with it. During the pandemic, the NMHA provided $100,000 in alfalfa and grain to the horsemen when we weren't able to run.”

“All we've ever asked them to do is just follow New Mexico state statute, which are laws. This commission considers them suggestions.”

The horsemen seek compensatory damages, legal fees and other relief the Court may deem appropriate.

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