American Runners Ready for Return to Riyadh

A year ago, a brigade of American runners dominated results in the inaugural running of the $20-million Saudi Cup, taking four of the top five placings in the world's richest race. Another top-level group of U.S.-based horses are set to return to Riyadh for the second running of the 1 1/8-miles race Feb. 20. Leading the group is Charlatan (Speightstown), who returned from a layoff to record a scintillating victory in the Dec. 26 GI Malibu S. last month. The newly turned 4-year-old worked six furlongs in 1:12.60 (1/5) at Santa Anita Wednesday and shortly afterward trainer Bob Baffert declared the colt “better than he's ever been.”

“I think the Saudi Cup is perfect timing for him,” Baffert told reporters during a conference call Wednesday afternoon. “It's a one-turn 1 1/8 miles and I think coming off the seven-eighths race, especially the way he did it, I think it is a perfect kind of distance. We know he ships well and he has a great mind on him. He's a good gate horse. It's very challenging to go to Saudi or Dubai. You need a really great mind and he has a really great mind. So I think that race fits the bill perfectly for him.”

Charlatan will be making just his fifth start next month at King Abdulaziz Racetrack, but his lack of experience doesn't concern Baffert.

“I think his talent makes up for his inexperience,” Baffert, who finished fourth with Mucho Gusto (Mucho Macho Man) in last year's race, said. “I think he has enough experience where he doesn't know what it's like to lose. I think that's a good trait.”

Charlatan will be piloted in the desert by Mike Smith, who rode the colt for the first time in the Malibu. Smith finished second aboard Midnight Bisou (Midnight Lute) in last year's Saudi Cup, but received a nine-day ban and was issued a $210,000 fan–60% of his share of the purse–for violating the country's whip rules.

Of the Hall of Fame jockey's return to Riyadh, Baffert quipped, “He's fine. I think he just needs to count a little bit better.”

Knicks Go (Paynter), winner of last year's GI Big Ass Fans Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile, earned a trip to Riyadh with his front-running victory in the Jan. 23 GI Pegasus World Cup Invitational S. and could prove Charlatan's toughest competition.

“They are sort of the same type of horse,” Baffert said of a potential match-up between the two front-runners. “Knicks Go, he likes two turns, he likes that better because he can get away from his competition. Speed horses like that are so dangerous going two turns, but going a one-turn 1 1/8 miles, it's a different story.”

The Juddmonte Farms homebred Tacitus (Tapit), fifth in last year's Saudi Cup, makes a return trip to Riyadh to fly the colors of the late Prince Khalid Abdullah, who passed away just two weeks ago.

“Any time we lead a horse over there in Juddmonte's silks it is very special,” Riley Mott, assistant to his father, trainer Bill Mott, said during the teleconference Wednesday. “Every trainer in the world desires to train for such an operation. Last year when we brought Tacitus, he had a nice little following locally due to the fact that he was a Juddmonte horse. He had a lot of fans there on race day. And just to be there in Prince Khalid Abdullah's home country was very special. To bring Tacitus back this year is something we are very much looking forward to and a big reason why we kept him in training this year.”

Tacitus has made a name for himself more for the races he almost wins than the ones he actually wins. The regally bred gray was third in the GI Kentucky Derby, as well as the 2019 and 2020 renewals of the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup S. He was runner-up in the GI Belmont S. and GI Runhappy Travers S. in 2019 and again in the GI Woodward H. last year.

“He's been a little frustrating,” Mott admitted. “He always flirts with winning a top Grade I. He has placed in a lot of prestigious races here in the U.S. and is just on the cusp of breaking through in one of those big ones. He's by a champion stallion out of a champion mare that Prince Khalid Abdullah bred himself, so for him to break through and win one of these big Grade Is would mean the world for him in his next career as a stallion. We think he is capable of it. No matter what race we run him in, whether it be a Group III or Group I, he is always liable to hit the board. So we are hoping he is good on the day.”

Also representing the Mott barn in Riyadh next month will be multiple Grade I winner Channel Maker (English Channel), who is expected to go postward in the $1-million Middle Distance Turf Cup. Now seven, the chestnut gelding set the pace before settling for third in the GI Breeders' Cup Turf at Keeneland last October.

“He's a horse we are very much looking forward to bringing over,” Mott said of Channel Maker. “We are confident in how he is doing and training. We will see how he stacks up against the competition, but he's been a really fun horse to have in the barn.”

Both Tacitus and Channel Maker could go on to engagements on the Dubai World Cup card in March if they exit their races in Saudi Arabia in fine fashion.

Despite the ongoing global pandemic, officials from the Jockey Club of Saudi Arabia said it was all systems go for the Feb. 19 and 20 festival of races.

“We are going to get through this the same way as other big events before us,” said Tom Ryan, director of strategy and international racing for the Jockey Club said. “Whether that's Hong Kong in December, Bahrain in November or the Breeders' Cup, there is a template there internationally for us to follow. This will be the Saudi Arabian version of that.”

Of attendance on race day, Ryan added, “In terms of attendance on course, it will be greatly scaled back compared to last year's very positive and well-attended event–participants, a small number of ministers in an outdoor setting, very prudently arranged. That will be about it, I think.”

While Baffert was on hand for the Saudi Cup's inaugural running, the trainer said he would be staying home this time around.

“I'm going to send [assistant] Jimmy [Barnes],” Baffert said. “One of us has to stay back. If for some reason they don't let us back in, I have to be here to keep the ship going.”

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‘Continuity Is The Key’: Juddmonte Group Chief Executive Says Operation Will Go On After Death Of Founder Prince Khalid

“Juddmonte will continue.”

Those refreshing words came from Douglas Erskine Crum, chief executive of the Juddmonte Group, during a television interview on Saturday with ITV Racing in the UK.

“Continuity is the key for any breeding and racing operation,” Erskine Crum said,  four days after the death of Saudi Prince Khalid Abdullah, who developed Juddmonte into an international breeding and racing powerhouse, with farms in England, Ireland and Kentucky.

“No change,” Erskine Crum added. “The family has been for some time and still is very committed to keeping Juddmonte as it is … focusing on the broodmare band, focusing on the home-bred operation.”

Erskine Crum said one of the last things Prince Khalid was involved with was planning the 2021 matings for a broodmare band of about 200. Many will go to Juddmonte's own world-class stallions, including Frankel and Kingman, he added.

“And those horses will be born next year and will race as 3-year-olds in 2025,” he said, “so if we have a champion in 2025 you will be able to say the Prince was actually involved directly in the decision making.”

Erskine Crum added that, several years ago, Prince Khalid made adjustments to the business, cutting back on the number of broodmares he retained.

“Those changes are necessary to keep the business running and also necessary to make sure that essential continuity of the broodmare is enhanced.”

Over the last 40 years, some of the world's best Thoroughbreds have carried the green, pink and white Juddmonte silks, from Dancing Brave to Frankel to Enable. Juddmonte has won five Eclipse Awards as North America's outstanding breeder and four times was voted outstanding owner. Juddmonte Farms has been champion owner on multiple occasions in France and the United Kingdom. Juddmonte is also all-time leading Breeders' Cup owner by money won in championship races.

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MGSW Headman to Stand in France

Juddmonte homebred Headman (GB) (Kingman {GB}-Deliberate {GB}, by King’s Best) will stand at Figerro Breeding Farm in France for €2,800 this term. The news was reported by the Racing Post on Sunday. A winner of four of his nine starts including the G2 Prix Eugene Adam and G2 Prix Guillaume d’Ornano for Prince Khalid Abdullah and trainer Roger Charlton, the bay earned $430,789.

The sixth foal out of the winning Deliberate, Headman is a half-brother to Grade II winner Projected (GB) (Showcasing {GB}) and G3 Prix Chloe runner-up Delivery (GB) (Rail Link {GB}). This is the extended family of Eclipse Champion Grass Horse Flintshire (GB) (Dansili {GB}), as well as the Juddmonte wunderkind and dual Arc heroine Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) among many others.

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Queen Of Racing: Behind-The-Scenes Enable Film Sales To Benefit Injured Jockeys Fund

Juddmonte is pleased to announce the release of a film celebrating the unparalleled racing career of Enable, produced in collaboration with Equine Productions.

With an immeasurable will to win, and a race record that is unrivalled, no other horse in European racing history has ever achieved what Enable did. The film is the story of the monumental racing career of Prince Khalid Abdullah's champion filly, spanning the five years from her arrival onto a racetrack in 2016 to her retirement at Banstead Manor Stud.

An intimate interview between trainer John Gosden and jockey Frankie Dettori reveals a behind-the-scenes account of what went into her achievements and gives insight into the pressures that came with attempting the seemingly impossible third win in Europe's richest and most prestigious race, the Gr.1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

The film relives Enable's successes, difficulties and celebrations both on the track and off, showing how she managed to conquer and transcend the racing world to become a global superstar and earn the title, the “Queen of Racing.”

The DVD is now available for pre-order on Amazon priced at £14.99 (US$18.16), at https://amzn.to/3n0FJKb.

Juddmonte will make a contribution to the Injured Jockeys Fund from the proceeds of sales.

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