Saratoga Abandons Remainder of Card Due to Weather

With the field for the Aug. 4 GII National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame S. at Saratoga Race Course circling in the paddock for several minutes due to lightning, New York Racing Association (NYRA) officials decided to cancel the remainder of Friday's card due to inclement weather. Races 8-11, including the Hall of Fame S., were called off at approximately 5:15 p.m. ET.

The race prior, the GIII Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Oaks Invitational S. won by Elusive Princess (Martinborough {Jpn}), did run as expected, although it was contested in pouring rain.

Saturday's racing, which includes the GI Whitney S. and two other Grade I events, is expected to be conducted as usual. The Hall of Fame S. has been rescheduled for Friday, Aug. 11 with entries to be drawn on Sunday, Aug. 6.

The post Saratoga Abandons Remainder of Card Due to Weather appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Elusive Princess Dominates the Saratoga Oaks in American Debut

Nobody was going to rain on Elusive Princess (Fr) (Martinborough {Jpn}–Elusive Action {Fr}, by Elusive City)'s parade as she emerged from the bog that was Saratoga's lawn Friday to score her first stakes win in the GIII Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Oaks Invitational S. With pouring rain that led to an abandoned post parade and eventually cancelled the rest of the card, the field for the Saratoga Oaks went straight from the paddock to the gate.

Selenaia (Ire) (Sea The Moon {Ger}) controlled the pace through :23.55 and :48.57 early fractions while Elusive Princess parked under cover on the rail several lengths in arrears. The rain continued to fall as Elusive Princess, American Sonja (GB) (Tasleet {GB}), and Papilio (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) all launched their bids on the turn just as Selenaia threw in the towel. The latter two raced in tandem while extremely wide with Elusive Princess angling out even wider, at least a dozen paths out from the rail. The winner blew right by the wide duo, prompting Flavien Prat to ease up and the filly's ears to prick several strides before the wire. They finished 3 1/4 lengths to the good.

“I thought I was in a good position,” said Prat. “She actually jumped better than I thought and she was traveling well. Really handy and when I had a chance I thought not taking any risk then the two horses in front of me came really shifting out, but I ended up fine. I was actually on the good ground so I was okay with it. I was going to go outside, but I ended up being a lot wider than I thought.”

Winner of three in a row in France to close out 2022 and open 2023, including two over the boys, Elusive Princess placed in both the G1 Prix Saint-Alary and G3 Prix Cleopatre this spring. She finished well but missed the board in her final French start–the June 18 G1 Prix de Diane Longines at Chantilly.

Hubert Guy of Bloodstock Management Services was instrumental in bringing Elusive Princess stateside.

“I thought she was a filly that would fit really well here in this country,” said Guy. “Jean-Phillipe [Dubois] trains her, owns her, bred her, and really did not want to part with her. After she was second in [the Prix Cleopatre] where she got into a lot of trouble–she got blocked on the rail and should have won easy–he decided to sell off. So, I contacted Alex [Solis] and Jason [Litt] and LNJ Foxwoods–Larry, Nanci, Jaime–and we agreed on a deal that he would train the horse to the French Oaks and maybe no later, but when she finished fifth in the French Oaks, [it was] an amazing fifth because she was way too far back. She should have been closer. We wouldn't have won, but we would have been second or third.

“From there, we decided to run in this race with the LNJ Foxwoods team and to have Mr. Dubois train her because he did a really good job training her. It's the first time he's running in America.

“This looked like a good spot to get started in this country. She's going to stay here now and she will be trained by Arnaud Delacour and running for LNJ Foxwoods and Mr. Dubois is keeping his half.

“We thought it was a good spot to start–beautiful venue here, Saratoga is magic. It worked out really good. She's very good on the soft. She's very good on the firm. She's a special filly.”

 

Pedigree Notes:

Haras de la Baie stands the Japanese-bred Martinborough (Jpn), a multiple Group winner in Japan who notched his first graded winner with Elusive Princess's Saratoga Oaks win. The Deep Impact (Jpn) sire has just four small crops of racing age, all in France. He got his first black-type winner earlier this year at Cagnes-sur-Mer, bringing his total count of stakes winners to two. Elusive Princess is also the 28th stakes winner out of a daughter of Elusive City, who died in 2019 at age 19 at Haras d'Etreham in France after suffering a heart attack.

Elusive Princess is the first foal of her unraced dam, who also has a yearling full-sister to the Saratoga Oaks winner. Elusive Princess's fourth dam, Irish highweight Diamond Seal (Ire) (Persian Bold {Ire}), produced three Group winners and a Group-placed daughter who produced three more.

Friday, Saratoga
FASIG-TIPTON SARATOGA OAKS INVITATIONAL S.-GIII, $400,000, Saratoga, 8-4, 3yo, f, 1 3/16mT, 1:57.08, sf.
1–ELUSIVE PRINCESS (FR), 121, f, 3, by Martinborough (Jpn)
             1st Dam: Elusive Action (Fr), by Elusive City
             2nd Dam: Diamond Flawless (Fr), by Cape Cross (Ire)
             3rd Dam: Dee Flawless (Fr), by Linamix (Fr)
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. O-LNJ Foxwoods, Ecurie Victoria Dreams, NK Racing and Anthony V. Munafo; B/T-Jean-Philippe Dubois (FR); J-Flavien Prat. $220,000. Lifetime Record: GISP-Fr, 8-4-2-0, $378,379. Werk Nick Rating: A+++. *Triple Plus* Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–American Sonja (GB), 121, f, 3, Tasleet (GB)–Gumhrear (Ire), by Kodiac (GB). (22,000gns Wlg '20 TATFOA; £30,000 Ylg '21 TATIRY; 95,000gns 2yo '22 TATBRE). O-Mark Dobbin; B-Whatcote Farm Stud (GB); T-Joseph Patrick O'Brien. $80,000.
3–Papilio (Ire), 121, f, 3, Starspangledbanner (Aus)–Glafyra (Fr), by High Chaparral (Ire). (€60,000 Ylg '21 ARAUG). O-D. J. Stable LLC, Medallion Racing, Barry Fowler and Parkland Thoroughbreds; B-SCEA Marmion & Mr A. Jathiere (Ire); T-Mark E. Casse. $48,000.
Margins: 3 1/4, HF, 6 3/4. Odds: 1.35, 9.50, 3.95.
Also Ran: Caroline Street, Strikingly Spun, Xigera, Allamericanbeauty, Selenaia (Ire), Solo Album, Honor D Lady. Scratched: Aspen Grove (Ire).
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

The post Elusive Princess Dominates the Saratoga Oaks in American Debut appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Airdrie Stud’s Pride on Display at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale

For over a half century, Airdrie Stud has grown into one of the most recognizable names in the breeding industry. Well known for producing future stakes horses, developing stallions or selling livestock, the Midway, Kentucky operation has become part of the very fabric of racing. And while the nursery, founded in 1972 by Governor Brereton Jones and his wife Elizabeth, has been a fixture at the yearling sales for much of its history, its return to the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale offers a departure from its sale's program in recent times.

Hailing from one of its most prolific families, Airdrie is represented by a single yearling in next week's sale, a colt by Triple Crown winner American Pharoah out of Indian Pride (Proud Citizen). Offered as Hip 79 on Monday, the Feb. 6 foal is the first foal out of TDN Rising Star Indian Pride, a daughter of Airdrie's accomplished mare Ms. Cornstalk (Indian Charlie).

“If you bring a horse to Saratoga, they better be special and I think this horse fits the bill,” Airdrie Vice President Bret Jones affirmed.

Further explaining the colt's allure, he said, “He has a lot of Indian Charlie in him. Indian Pride was all Indian Charlie–a big, strapping, powerful type that Indian Charlie would so often throw. And a lot of his brilliance as well. This colt has such a great mind, like you would hope you'd get from American Pharoah, who was such an intelligent horse. It's that combination of brilliance and thankfully, the class as well.”

While American Pharoah's racetrack accomplishments have become the stuff of legend, the colt's dam Indian Pride was hardly a secret in her own career debut for trainer Chad Brown in the summer of 2019. Sent off the 3-5 favorite negotiating six furlongs at Saratoga, she blew the doors of her competition with an eye-catching eight-length score in 1:09.45. (video) Subsequently third in Keeneland's GII Raven Run S. later that October, the Airdrie homebred rebounded to take a 6 1/2-panel Belmont allowance in her 4-year-old bow in June. In what would be her final career start, the bay triumphed in Saratoga's Shine Again S.

“A big reason that we brought this colt here is that Indian Pride ran in New York,” explained Jones.

He continued, “The best way to explain it is she's just different. I honestly think she is as good as any of the fillies we were lucky enough to win the Kentucky Oaks with [Airdrie had three winners–Proud Spell, Believe You Can and Lovely Maria].”

And according to Jones, Indian Pride's talent was plainly obvious very early on in her career.

“The first time we breezed her with Wayne Mackey, she went :24 and galloped out in :36 just as easy as you can ever see a horse do it,” he recalled. “Generally, our 2-year-olds are going in :26 or :27 the first quarter. So that was kind of our 'a ha' moment.”

“She got very sick before what was supposed to be her first start, to the point where we almost lost her. She had pneumonia. We weren't sure she could even get back to the races if she did pull through. It was a long path. She finally did start, the following year at Saratoga. We never had a horse produce a debut like she did. It looked like she was just breezing.”

Despite the high hopes of being able to catch up on lost time with the uber-talented filly, the wheel of fate would once again take another turn.

“We really thought we'd win the Ballerina with her as a 4-year-old,” Jones admitted. “She won the Ballerina prep, [the Shine Again], in 1:21 3/5. Heading to the Ballerina, we thought we had a big shot to win it but, unfortunately, she got sick again. It was never musculoskeletal–it was just lousy luck.”

Weighing in on who the filly would go to in her first season following her retirement from the track, the Airdrie team decided to send her to a stallion that was up to the quality that they felt she possessed while never fully able to demonstrate on the track.

“We felt she such was such a brilliant filly that we bred her to what we thought was about as brilliant a horse as we had ever seen–American Pharoah,” he said.

This story, however, really begins well before Indian Pride ever set foot on the racetrack with Ms. Cornstalk, who was also bred by Airdrie. After RNA'ing for $35,000 at Keeneland in January, she was subsequently withdrawn from the September sale and ultimately retired to the breeding shed at two.

Her inability to find a buyer in the ring, however, proved to be a stroke of very good fortune for the Airdrie team.

Her first foal, Biofuel (Stormin Fever), earned the juvenile filly championship in Canada in 2009 before following up with another divisional title and Horse of the Year honors at three.

“Ms. Cornstalk was just so special,” Jones said. “We bred her as a 2-year-old because she never made it to the races. Her first foal was Biofuel, which gave us her first champion when she was only five.”

He said, “She was unbelievably good to us. We didn't necessarily breed her to stallions that went on to great success. We ended up keeping Biofuel because she was by Stormin Fever and we didn't think she would bring what we thought she could at the sales.”

Two years later, Ms. Cornstalk would foal Tu Endie Wei (Johar), Canada's 2-year-old Champion Filly in 2011. Both Biofuel and Tu Endie Wei were campaigned by Brereton Jones and trained by Woodbine-based Reade Baker.

“The only other horse that I can remember that had as impressive a career debut as Indian Pride was Tu Endi Wei, who debuted in a stakes race [Woodbine's 2011 My Dear S.],” Jones recalled. “She made a Zenyatta-like move from the back where she came down the middle of the track and won going away. She was just so impressive early on that she probably had the championship sewn up then.”

Sadly, Ms. Cornstalk died shortly after foaling a colt by Airdrie stallion Upstart earlier this season. Tu Endie Wei died in 2013.

“That was a very tough loss for all of us,” said Jones of the recent loss of Ms. Cornstalk. “We still have Biofuel and several of her daughters that are all being bred to very nice stallions. So, I think this family can go on rewarding us.”

In stark contrast to the caliber of sires that Ms. Cornstalk had visited early in her career, Airdrie has gone completely the opposite route with what it considers to be her most brilliant offspring. In addition to American Pharoah, Indian Pride produced a colt by Constitution this season and was bred back to Into Michief.

Constitution is ascendant and Into Mischief is as good a stallion as there is in the world,” he said.

“With American Pharoah, we thought breeding the most brilliantly talented filly we've had to the most brilliantly talented sire we've seen, made sense,” he said. “That might be overly simplistic. It probably is, but I can promise you that the colt is just might be a little bit different himself.”

He added, “I really think he's a wow horse. He's the type of horse that when you see him, you'll think about him the rest of the day. He's just that type of physical. He's got this big, gorgeous, strapping Indian Charlie body. He's been a total class act since the day he was born. If you combine that physical and that charisma, he's just the type that stays on your mind.”

Looking forward to a return to the Saratoga sale, Jones is optimistic that the colt will be well received at a venue that can be unforgiving for a lesser animal but also explosive for the right one.

“We haven't had a horse up there in a very long time,” he said. “But I think this colt will be worth the wait.”–@CBossTDN

The post Airdrie Stud’s Pride on Display at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Saturday Insights: Coast-To-Coast Maiden Action Kicks Off Whitney Saturday

2nd-SAR, $136K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 1:07 p.m.

The action kicks off with a heavily-loaded maiden race on the Whitney undercard Saturday. A quartet of colts, all first-time starters, take to the dirt led by the inside draw BE YOU (Curlin), the first of a pair of starters for Todd Pletcher. Out of the graded-stakes winning mare Jacaranda, herself a $2,000,000 purchase by this colt's breeder Alpha Delta, Be You already has a stakes-placed full-sister in American West, a $925,000 Keeneland yearling herself. Jacaranda is out of the Distorted Humor mare Baffled, making her a half-sister to MGISW and leading sire Constitituion (Tapit) as well as GSW Boynton (More Than Ready). Further back in the family you'll find GISW Emcee (Unbridled's Song) and G1SP Surfer (Distorted Humor).

Pletcher's second starter, Locked (Gun Runner), brought $425,000 as a yearling at Keeneland last year. He is out of a half to MGSW Always a Princess (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}) and MGISW Gabby's Golden Girl (Medaglia d'Oro).

Splitting the pair is Claude McGaughy runner Pentathlon (Speightstown), a Phipps Stable homebred who hails from the family of MGISW My Flag, the dam of champion 2-year-old filly Storm Flag Flying (Storm Cat).

Last of the quarter and the widest drawn of the four, Creek (Ghostzapper) will look to get trainer Bill Mott's day off to a winning start. The colt is out of a half to GSW/GISP Great Island (Scat Daddy) and to the dam of GSW Surprisingly (Mastery). Third dam Matlacha Pass also produced MGISW and sire Point of Entry (Dynaformer) and MGISW Pine Island (Arch). TJCIS PPS

1st-DMR, $82K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 5:00 p.m.

On the West Coast, Dagger Ranch (Curlin) will look to be the latest winner out of dual Eclipse champion Indian Blessing. The Bob Baffert trainee is already a half-brother to GISP Ten Blessings (Smart Strike) and draws the outside gate under Hall of Fame jockey Victor Espinoza.

Breaking from gate three is another son of Curlin for Bob Baffert in Mission Beach, a $400,000 Keeneland September yearling who is out of a full-sister to GISW Taris, the dam of GSW King Fury (Curlin). He put up a best-of-53 work at five furlongs July 24, going from the gate in :58 4/5. TJCIS PPS

1st-SAR, $136K, Msw, 2yo, 1 1/16mT, 12:35 p.m.

Opening the Saturday card at the Spa, Agate Road (Quality Road), bred by China Horse Club, was a $650,000 pick up by the prolific connections of Repole Stable and St Elias Stable for trainer Todd Pletcher. Out of GI Frizette S. winner Yellow Agate, already the dam of a pair of winners, the colt traces back to GSW/MG1SP Without Connexion (Ire) (Rainbow Quest). TJCIS PPS

11th-SAR, $149.5K, Alw, 3yo/up, 7f, 6:16 p.m.

Carded right after the Whitney, this race features the return of not one but two 'TDN Rising Stars' both racing for Claude McGaughey. Drawn further to the inside is Signator (Tapit), a $1.7m OBS April pick up last seen breaking his maiden at Belmont's Aqueduct meeting last Oct. Racing with Lasix for the first time, the grey hails from the family of champion 3-year-old filly Heavenly Prize (Seeking the Gold).

Lined up to his outside, Capture the Flag (Quality Road) earned his 'Star' tag at first asking with a three-length maiden win at this meet just over a year ago but hasn't raced since. This colt, a half to GSW Personal Best (Tapit), is out of a full-sister to Hong Kong's champion stayer Lines of Battle. His third dam also produced MGSW and late leading sire Dynaformer (Roberto). TJCIS PPS

3rd-MTH, $55K, Msw, 2yo, f, 1mT, 1:36 p.m.

Drawn furthest outside, Spendalot (More Than Ready) lived up to her name with a $650,000 purchase price as a yearling at Keeneland last Fall. She is a full-sister to Chad Brown's Consumer Spending who took last month's GIII Matchmaker S. over this same track.

And all the way to the rail is Madame Mischief (Into Mischief), a $550,000 OBS March grad who checked in second while sprinting five furlongs on the grass July 2. Her dam is a half-sister to MGISW and sire Divisidero (Kitten's Joy). TJCIS PPS

The post Saturday Insights: Coast-To-Coast Maiden Action Kicks Off Whitney Saturday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights