Fiery Off-Track Quarter Horse Becomes Barrel Racing Star In Two Countries

She lit the board in her career as a racehorse, and now Biscuit De Feu is lighting the board as a barrel horse in two countries.

Biscuit De Feu–whose name is “fire cookie” in French–was bred in California by Bryan and Pamela Scheer, owned during her racing career by Jeannie Baldwin and saddled by champion trainer Kenneth Roberts in Louisiana.

The strapping 2013 brown mare has an unusual racing pedigree, as she is sired by First Down French, a son of one of barrel racing's all-time leading sires, Frenchmans Guy, out of a mare sired by A Classic Dash.

Her dam is High Tide, a daughter of champion runner Ocean Runaway and the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame stallion Strawfly Special's daughter, Casual Slip Knot.

Biscuit De Feu's racing career was limited to two starts as a 2-year-old, including a solid second-place finish, when her connections decided it was time to move her into her new career.

Leanne Marie Sine of Dewinton, Alberta, was looking for something sired by First Down French, who was himself a successful barrel racing horse and sire, and she found Biscuit De Feu on Facebook and bought her.

“She caught my eye,” Sine said. “And then I really liked her bottom side, too.”

The mare, now known as “Ferrari,” moved to her new home in Alberta, and the barn of her owner, who is a professional trainer specializing in reining and barrel racing horses.

Sine's skill has paid off for the mare her owner describes as “an absolute little firecracker.”

The mare was racetrack broke when she arrived, and Leanne was prepared to be patient teaching the horse her new job.

“I took my time with her, went back to the basics and got her really broke,” Sine said. “I train reiners, too, so I put a really strong foundation on her. She's a real sensitive horse and a little bit hotter bred too, so lots of slow work and really took my time with her. I got her broke, broke, broke.”

Ferrari is a workaholic, and is saddled up on average six days a week – she doesn't like taking time off.

They travel to events in Alberta, as well as traveling to the United States to compete. Their first year they debuted in some smaller futurities and events, allowing Ferrari to learn and build confidence. In 2019, the first of her derby years, they began stepping up to bigger events, with placings and 1D wins, including a top 10 finish at the AQHA World Championship Show in Level 2 senior barrel racing.

“She's just full of herself, but a sweetheart to have around,” Sine said. “Just a personality.”

As for 2020, it's the final derby year for the mare and Sine had plans to campaign the mare, but, well, “This year … our plans have kinda got kiboshed.”

“This is her last derby year and I had some bigger stuff planned that we didn't get to do,” she said. “But hopefully (we'll get to) some bigger races and rodeos (when things start back up), we will see what she wants to do.”

This story, which is part of the Second Career Stars series, originally appeared on the American Quarter Horse News website and is republished here with permission. Second Career Stars is an ongoing series on retired racing American Quarter Horses in new careers. If you know of a horse that should be featured, write to acaudill@aqha.org. AQHA News and information is a service of the American Quarter Horse Association. For more news and information, follow @AQHARacing on Twitter, “like” Q-Racing on Facebook, and visit www.aqha.com/racing.

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Beyond The Win: Red Hierarchy Was Worth Waiting For

The road to one Ontario-bred's first win came later rather than sooner, but for the chestnut's connections it made the victory all the more memorable.

For trainer Jamie Attard, watching Red Hierarchy in the seconds before he burst from the starting gate on July 12 at Woodbine Racetrack wasn't an unfamiliar sight.

But this time the scene wasn't just in his imagination.

“In all honesty, he came in with a presence about him when he was a 2-year-old,” recalled Attard. “He was a big, big, handsome colt. I looked at him and everything about him stood out. He just had this really nice look to him. You'd take him out to gallop and he was classy from the start – all about business and a beautiful stride to him. You couldn't wait to see him race.”

At the end of the maiden optional claiming race, contested over 6 ½ furlongs on the Toronto oval's Tapeta, Red Hierarchy, under Justin Stein, was a six-length winner.

He stopped the teletimer in 1:16.14 and returned $13.70 for the win.

The victory, over a year in the making, was exactly how Attard had envisioned it.

“It was a big field the day he won. He passed the front-runner and then started opening up. I was speechless. It's such a good feeling that you knew what you had, but you trusted your gut, you stayed patient and you stuck to the plan. When he crossed the wire, I was happy for the horse. Everything that you had said all along, he just proved it. It was really rewarding that day.”

How Red Hierarchy made his way to the winner's circle on that summer afternoon is a coming-of-age tale, literally.

Bred and owned by Howard Walton's Norseman Stables, the horse that was foaled on March 25, 2017 caught the attention of Attard immediately.

Looks, with a mind to match, made Red Hierarchy a welcome addition to the trainer's barn.

“That's the thing that really puts into your head that a horse could be special,” said Attard. “You have a lot of horses that come through your barn with talent, especially 2-year-olds, but this horse, he had the mind to go with it. Whatever you asked him to do, he did it. He was just so kind and sweet right away. He had the mentality for it.”

For all that Red Hierarchy had going for him, he also had a few issues, albeit minor ones, to be dealt with.

Rushing the horse to the races wasn't an option for Attard.

“Even though we had him gelded, he was still too big for a 2-year-old. Mentally, he was there, but he had issues that all babies go through. And I thought if I push on this horse, I'm going to ruin him. It was just that realization that he's not meant to be a 2-year-old. I told Howie, even though it wasn't easy for him to hear, that the horse wasn't sore, but I think the best thing for this horse is to put him away. Right away, he said, 'If that's what you think is best, let's do that for him.' It's amazing how much he trusted me.”

That trust and Attard's game plan would eventually pay off handsomely.

But there were times, plenty of them, when it wasn't easy for him to be separated from Red Hierarchy.

“I'm taking care of my horses, and in the back of my mind, I'm thinking about him every day. I'm thinking about him being on the farm, growing up, turned out, and growing into himself. He had a lot of experience up until that point. He had three or four works for me as a 2-year-old and then we gave him the summer, fall and winter off. He was with Gayle Woods in Ocala, Florida, and as soon as he got down there, she told Howie how special this horse was. It was nice to hear the horse was continuing his maturation and progression to being a 3-year-old. He went down December last year. When she started working him – he had about four or five works before he came up to me, just easy ones – she told me he was something special.”

All of that confidence had Attard brimming and eager to welcome his young prospect back into the fold.

He counted down the days until Red Hierarchy made his way back from the Sunshine State to the Woodbine backstretch.

“I couldn't wait to get him off the van and when I did see him, that big, soft 2-year-old had turned into a nice-looking 3-year-old. All that baby fat turned into muscle. I couldn't wait to get going with him, but I realized that if we had given him all that time, you still needed to do things the right way. So, we worked him and he did everything so easily. You start bringing him to the gate, to the paddock, and he's doing everything the right way. All told, we had 13 works for him before he ran.”

The long wait was finally over on that July 12 afternoon.

“I didn't want to have the horse ready to run, I wanted to have him ready to win first time out. His last work before his race, it wasn't the time that mattered – it was the way he did it. He broke well, he settled, he finished well, and galloped out strongly. I knew the horse was ready to run.”

Red Hierarchy would go on to win his first three starts before testing open company in his three subsequent races.

At season's end, he fashioned a mark of three wins and three thirds from six outings.

“It's tough for Ontario-sired horses to step up to those ranks, but he ran with them, and didn't miss by much in those races. It's not easy for any horse to run six consistent races in a row, and to have three wins and three thirds. It's not making excuses, but 2020 was his 2-year-old season if you think about it, and he still showed he had talent.”

Attard will have to wait about four months before he's reunited with Red Hierarchy.

Now back in Florida, the soon-to-be 4-year-old will gear up for his sophomore season at the races.

At the very least, Attard can have some warm thoughts over the cold winter months.

“We're thinking there could be a nice Ontario-sired stakes race for him in 2021. He's going to have a nice winter. He's with Gayle Woods again and she called Howie the minute he got there. She was thrilled to see him. It's really exciting that we got him to the races and he made it through safe and sound. You just hope he can take that next step and be a nice 4-year-old.

“He's a full-brother to another one in my barn, Red Equinox, and I have the full-sister, Peace Sign. They've all won first time out for me now. So, keep them coming. We actually have another full-sister coming next year… she'll be a 2-year-old. The year after that, the one Howie is really excited about – he sent that mare [Majestic Red] to Mucho Macho Man, so we've got a colt coming. He told me that could be my Queen's Plate horse.”

Attard would love to deliver Walton a Plate score.

“Howie takes a lot of pride in the horses he breeds and standing his own stallion Signature Red, who's proved to be a very solid sire, is something he really enjoys seeing. A lot of his mares, he's bred them going back two or three generations and to breed them to his own stallion that he raced and now stands at stud is a labor of love for him. It's great to see the success Signature Red has had for Howie. Maybe one of these days – because of his maturity and abilities – Red Hierarchy could be a nice, older Ontario-sired sprinter for Howie. That's the exciting thing.”

So, too, is the thought of recording a special milestone with “Red.”

It's something Attard has thought about often over his training life.

“I've been in a lot of nice stakes win pictures with Howie's horses when was I assistant to my dad [Hall of Fame conditioner Sid Attard], but it would be nice to get one of my own.”

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‘Right Opportunity’: Distance Should Suit Always Shopping In Saturday’s Via Borghese

Always Shopping, a stakes winner on turf and dirt, and stablemate Cap de Creus, seeking her first career stakes victory, will line up together for the first time in Saturday's $100,000 Via Borghese at Gulfstream Park.

The 3 1/6-mile Via Borghese for fillies and mares 3 and up on the grass will be the fourth stakes try for Gainesway Stable's Cap de Creus, exiting a fifth in the 1 ½-mile Zagora Oct. 31 over a yielding course at Belmont Park.

A 4-year-old daughter of Tapit, Cap de Creus ran four times during last winter's Championship Meet, running second in a pair of allowances by a half-length combined and finishing eighth in the The Very One (G3) and fourth in the Orchid (G3).

Overall, Cap de Creus has finished third or better in 10 of 18 starts. Hall of Famer John Velazquez will ride from Post 4 in a field of nine.

“Cap de Creus has consistently run well and we're trying to get some black type by her name. She's certainly run well enough to deserve it, she just hasn't quite done it,” trainer Todd Pletcher said. “Always Shopping is coming off a couple of really good efforts and the distance should suit her. I'm happy with both of them.”

Winner of the 2019 Gazelle (G2) last April over Aqueduct's main track, Repole Stable's 4-year-old Always Shopping made her grass debut running fourth in the 1 1/8-mile Treasure Coast June 7 and won the 1 1/16-mile Monroe Sept. 7, both over the Gulfstream turf. She was beaten a head when second in the 1 ½-mile Dowager (G3) last out Oct. 18 at Keeneland.

“We always kind of had [turf] in the back of our mind; we were just kind of looking for the right opportunity,” Pletcher said. “She's a filly that wants a lot of distance and, obviously, there's more opportunities for those types on the turf.”

Irad Ortiz Jr. rides Always Shopping from Post 8.

In a loaded edition of the $100,000 Mr. Prospector (G3) featuring Grade 1 winners Firenze Fire and Mind Control and defending champion Diamond Oops, Pletcher will send out Shadwell Stable homebred Haikal.

The seven-furlong Mr. Prospector will be the first start for Haikal since running fifth in the Gulfstream Park Mile (G2) Feb. 29 for previous trainer Kiaran McLaughlin. Haikal joined Pletcher after McLaughlin retired to become jockey agent for Luis Saez, and the 4-year-old colt has been training steadily at Palm Beach Downs for his return.

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Multiple G1 Winner Pinball Wizard Chasing Breeders’ Cup Berth This Saturday In Argentina

Led by multiple Group 1-winning 5-year-old Pinball Wizard and the fast-closing 4-year-old Tetaze, winner of the Longines Gran Premio Latinoamericano (G1), a standout field of 13 runners has been entered for Saturday's 1 ½-mile Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini (G1) — South America's most prestigious race — at Hipódromo de San Isidro in Argentina. The winner will receive an automatic berth into the 2021 Longines Breeders' Cup Turf (G1) through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

The Breeders' Cup Challenge is an international series of stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race of the 2021 Breeders' Cup World Championships, which is scheduled to be held on Nov. 5-6 at Del Mar racetrack in Del Mar, California.

As a part of the benefits of the Challenge series, the Breeders' Cup will pay the entry fees for the winner of the Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini to start in the 1 ½-mile Longines Breeders' Cup Turf. Breeders' Cup also will provide a $40,000 travel allowance for all starters based outside of North America to compete in the World Championships. The Challenge winner must be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program by the pre-entry deadline of Oct. 25, 2021 to receive the rewards.

The Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini, which was first run in 1887, is the first Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race of the 2021 season.

Owned by Haras Don Teodoro and trained by Jorge Mayansky Neer, Pinball Wizard won two Group 1 races in October, among his four wins in nine starts on turf. A dark bay son of Orpen out of Pink Pony (ARG) by Pure Prize, Pinball Wizard scored a half-length victory in the 1 ½-mile Gran Premio General San Martin on Oct. 3 at Palermo and improved on that performance on Oct. 31 when he dominated the 1 ½-mile Copa de Oro – Alfredo Lalor at San Isidro, crossing the wire 5 lengths in front in 2:25.34. As he was in his last two wins, Juan Cruz Villagra has the mount on Pinball Wizard, breaking from post seven.

Due to the effects of the Coronavirus pandemic on racing in Argentina, Egalite de 9's Tetaze will be making his first start since his biggest career score in March, when he won the 1 ¼-mile Gran Premio Latinoamericano (G1) at San Isidro by 2 lengths over a heavy course. Trained by Roberto Pellegatta, Tetaze, a bay son of Equal Stripes, will try to improve on his fifth-place finish in last year's Carlos Pellegrini. He will be ridden by Gustavo Calvente from post 11.

Haras El Angel de Venecia's 6-year-old Village King, a bay son of Campanologist out of the Pleasant Tap mare Villard, has enjoyed success in both Argentina and in the United States during his 15-race career. Trained by Carly Etchechoury, Village King won three races in Argentina and finished third in the 2017 Carlos Pellegrini. He spent the following two years in the U.S. under the care of trainer Todd Pletcher, making eight starts. He won the Red Smith Stakes at Aqueduct in 2018 and finished third in the 2019 Pan American Stakes (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

After an eighth-place finish in the Man o' War at Belmont Park in May 2019, Village King was returned to Argentina and was back racing on Oct. 10 of this year, winning the 1 ½-mile Progreso (G2) at San Isidro, going wire-to-wire in an 8-length victory. In his last start, the 1 ½-mile Copa de Oro, he gained the lead into the stretch, but was no match for Pinball Wizard, finishing 5 lengths behind the winner. Village King will be ridden by Brian Enrique from post three.

Trainer Alfredo Gaitan Dassie has saddled five winners of the Carlos Pellegrini. This year he is starting six-time Group stakes winner Emotion Orpen (ARG), who took the Group 1 Dardo Rocha Internacional (G1) at 1 ½ miles by 2 ½ lengths at La Plata on Nov. 19. Owned and bred by Haras Firmamento, Emotion Orpen, who is a 5-year-old son of Orpen out of the Distorted Humor mare Unavailable, also won the 1 3/8-mile Organizacion Sudamericana de Fomento (G3) by 8 lengths at La Plata on Oct. 20. Emotion Orpen will be ridden by Francisco Fernandes Goncalves from post position nine.

Making the leap from listed company to Group 1 competition is Las Canarias's undefeated 4-year-old Rohit Joy. A bay son of Fortify out of Stormy Rose by Bernstein, Rohit Joy made his first start on Sept. 11, and reeled off four consecutive wins at Palermo as the favorite each time for trainer Juan Saldivia. His last win was a 9-length triumph in the 12-furlong Minstrel on Nov. 26. Juan Noriega has the mount, breaking from post eight.

Gaitan Dassie is also saddling the 3-year-old Cool Day, a chestnut son of John F Kennedy, who was a fast-closing second in the Jockey Club (G1) at 1 ¼ miles on Oct. 31 at San Isidro in just his third start. He will be ridden by Eduardo Ortega Pavon from post six.

 

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