Breeders’ Cup Unveils #MyBreedersCup Initiative

The Breeders’ Cup has unveiled #MyBreedersCup, a multi-pronged digital and social program designed to bring the best of the upcoming Breeders’ Cup World Championships to fans around the world. Created in response to the recent decision to conduct the 2020 event without fans on-site due to COVID-19, the program provides fans with new opportunities to interact with the championship event remotely, from innovative digital viewing experiences to a virtual fashion contest and more.

The 37th running of the Breeders’ Cup World Championships is scheduled to take place Friday, Nov. 6 and Saturday, Nov. 7 at Keeneland. The event will be broadcast live on NBC, NBCSN, NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app, as well as on BreedersCup.com and the Official Breeders’ Cup app.

“Our fans are the heart and soul of the Breeders’ Cup, and we are thrilled to introduce new and exciting opportunities for them to engage with the upcoming World Championships from the comfort of their homes,” said Drew Fleming, President and CEO of Breeders’ Cup. “Encompassing all facets of the Breeders’ Cup experience, this new program makes it easier than ever for fans to join in the excitement of the event, whether through following their favorite horses, crafting our official cocktails or showing off the finest race day fashions. We look forward to seeing our loyal fans, as well as new fans, get into the Breeders’ Cup spirit in a whole new way, and we hope they enjoy the various activations we’ve created to enhance their at-home viewing experience.”

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Indiana Grand’s Roy Smith Named Finalist for Leadership Award in Racing

Congratulations to Roy Smith, one of three finalists in the Leadership Award in Racing category of the Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards (TIEA), presented by Godolphin. The track superintendent at Indiana Grand Racing and Casino, Smith has been “a track man [his] whole life.” He says he was born and raised at Indiana Grand, as his father was a trainer. He grew up walking hots, became a groom, ponied, became an assistant track superintendent, and did just about everything on the backside other than become a trainer, a route he knew he didn’t want to follow. After time at Suffolk Downs, he spent 31 years as Philadelphia Park’s track superintendent before coming home to Indiana Grand six years ago.

“Track superintendents are such a vital part of the overall racing scene,” said nominator Joe Carr. “As part of his lifelong passion for the industry, [Smith] has dedicated his life to the health and welfare of the horse, the rider, and the track personnel through his work. He is a global resource of racetrack management knowledge and shares that knowledge through the Track Superintendents Field Day he established over 15 years ago.”

Click for the video feature on Smith done by TIEA.

Other finalists for the Leadership Award in Racing are Carmen McShane of D/M Racing and Cindy Hutter of George Weaver Racing. The Leadership Award in Racing is presented annually to an individual who is part of Thoroughbred racing in a managerial or supervisory role and displays exceptional leadership qualities.

A total of seven award categories will be honored by TIEA for 2020. Maria Cristina Silva of New York Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (NYTHA) has already been announced as the winner of the Community Award, while the winners in the other categories will be announced live in a virtual ceremony hosted by Jill Byrne and streamed at the TDN homepage Thursday, Nov. 5, at 12:00 p.m. ET. All finalists will be spotlighted in TDN in the days leading up to the ceremony.

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Pedigree Insights for Oct. 24

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

4th-MTH, $45K, Msw, 2yo, 1mT, 2:09 p.m. ET
Proxy (Tapit) is the latest foal out of versatile Panty Raid (Include), a highest-level winner on turf and synthetic and Grade II winner on the dirt. A $2.5-million Fasig-Tipton November buy in 2008, Panty Raid’s 3-year-old daughter Micheline (Bernardini) broke her maiden in the course-and-distance Sorority S. last September. More recently, the fellow Godolphin homebred and Mike Stidham trainee took the Sept. 10 Dueling Grounds Oaks at Kentucky Downs before finishing a close second in Keeneland’s GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup S. a month later. Chad Brown-trained firster Empire of the Sun (Pioneerof the Nile), a $250,000 KEESEP buy, is out of GSW Brownie Points (Forest Wildcat). She’s a half to hard-knocking Stidham trainee and near millionaire MGSW/GISP Synchrony (Tapit) as well as GSW Chocolate Kisses (Candy Ride {Arg}). TJCIS PPs

10th-KEE, $70K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 6:03 p.m. ET
Macron (Frosted) makes his first start in the regular meet’s final race for Steve Asmussen and the Heiligbrodts. The half-brother to Grade I-winning turfer Egg Drop (Alphabet Soup) was a $210,000 KEESEP acquisition and $420,000 OBS March buyback after a sharp :10 flat breeze. Juddmonte homebred Mandaloun (Into Mischief) is out of the Irish Group 2 winner Brooch (Empire Maker). His second dam was a precocious 2-year-old stakes winner and full  to Irish Group 1 winner and middle-distance highweight Emulous (GB) (Dansili {GB}). Calumet Farm’s Kentucky Pharoah (American Pharoah) was entered and scratched from a rained-off route on Thursday (he was already entered in this spot before that one came off the grass). Calumet paid $200,000 for dam Strut the Course (Strut the Stage), Canada’s 2014 champion older mare and a dual Grade II winner on the lawn, at KEENOV ’16. This is her first foal. Americanrevolution (Constitution) was a $275,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga buy by WinStar Farm and China Horse Club. He’s out of a half-sister to MGSW Gouldings Green (Charismatic) as well as the SW/GSP dam of three-time two-turn graded stakes winner Silver Dust (Tapit). Farther down the chestnut’s page are MGISW Stop Traffic (Cure the Blues) and her MGISW son and sire Cross Traffic (Unbridled’s Song). Conditioner Rodolphe Brisset sent out debut winner Eucharist (Flatter) for WinStar here Oct. 4. TJCIS PPs

9th-SA, $55K, Msw, 2yo, 6 1/2f, 8:07 p.m. ET
Bob Baffert and the powerful conglomerate of SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Golconda Stables, Siena Farm and Robert Masterson will be represented here by rail-drawn Classier (Empire Maker). The $775,000 KEESEP buy is out of a half-sister to the dam of French and U.S. GSW/MGISP Homerique (Exchange Rate). His third dam produced Group 1 winner White Moonstone (Dynaformer). Classier prepped for this with a head-turning six-furlong gate work in 1:12.40 (XBTV Video) on Monday. North Pole (Pioneerof the Nile) cost $1,050,000 at the same September sale. The Simon Callaghan trainee was second on debut at Del Mar Aug. 16. His multiple stakes-winning dam Uptown Twirl (Twirling Candy) is a half to champion juvenile Classic Empire (Pioneerof the Nile) and was purchased for $1,075,000 at Keeneland November by North Pole’s breeder and co-owner Three Chimneys Farm days after Classic Empire took the 2016 GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile over this same strip. Union Soldier (Union Rags), a $650,000 September grad, goesturf to dirt and sprint to route off a late-closing sixth-place debut run at Del Mar Sept. 7. His GSW dam Sky Girl (Sky Mesa) is a half to champion and MGISW Abel Tasman (Quality Road), who was trained first by Callaghan and then by Baffert. TJCIS PPs

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One Horse May Stand Between Mighty Heart and the Canadian Triple Crown and It’s His Stablemate

The tale of a one-eyed horse who has come from nowhere to sweep the first two legs of the Canadian Triple Crown has been the feel-good story of the year at Woodbine, but the next chapter could end with an uncomfortable twist. Mighty Heart (Dramedy) is the even-money favorite in Saturday’s Breeders S., a role he earned after decisive victories in the Queen’s Plate and the Prince of Wales S. But there’s a rapidly improving, dangerous horse in the field named Belichick (Lemon Drop Kid) who should relish the mile-and-a-half on the turf and is the second choice at 7-2 in the morning line. Like Mighty Heart, Belichick is trained by Josie Carroll. That means that the Canadian Hall of Fame trainer will be in the unenviable position of perhaps costing herself and Mighty Heart a Triple Crown sweep.

“I think I would have really mixed emotions if that were to happen,” she said. “Putting it in human terms, it would be like you coaching two kids and one has a chance to do something extraordinary but it’s the other one that you are bringing along who steps up. You are proud of both of them but there’s going to be a bittersweet factor, of course.”

Owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods, Belichick is still a maiden after three starts, but showed dramatic improvement when second behind Mighty Heart in the Queen’s Plate when he was beaten 7 1/2 lengths. Carroll kept him out of the Prince of Wales and should have a fresh horse who has continued to get better as the races have gotten longer.

“Belichick is a strong, athletic horse.,” she said. “He is a horse I expected from his first start would be a dominant horse on this circuit. It ended up taking him longer to come around than I expected. Certainly, he’s just coming into his own.”

Neither of Carroll’s horses were considered serious Queen’s Plate contenders as late as early July. After finishing out of the money in his first two starts, both of them at the Fair Grounds, Mighty Heart broke his maiden July 11 at Woodbine. After finishing third in an allowance race, he was dismissed at 13-1 in the Queen’s Plate and was overshadowed by still another Carroll horse, Curlin’s Voyage (Curlin). A filly, she finished fifth as the 5-2 favorite as Mighty Heart ran away from his competition.

“He really enjoys running and once he figured out what it was all about he just steadily improved,” Carroll said. “I don’t think it was one thing that suddenly turned him around. He just got better.”

Seventeen days later and now the 4-5 favorite, Mighty Heart, who is a homebred owned by Lawrence Cordes, had no problem winning the second leg of the Canadian series, the mile-and-three-sixteenths dirt race at Fort Erie. That put him within one win of a Triple Crown sweep. The Canadian Triple Crown has been won seven times and not since 2003 when won by Wando (Langfuhr).

Mighty Heart became an easy horse to root for. He lost his left eye in a paddock accident when he was just 2-weeks-old, but has overcome that setback for Carroll and Cordes, a small owner/breeder. His sire, Dramedy, stood in two different states, Kentucky and Oklahoma, during four years of study duty in North America before being shipped off to Saudi Arabia. Mighty Heart is one of only 17 foals from his first crop.

Mighty Hearty grew to be so popular that Woodbine set up a special media day for the horse on the backstretch Monday and Carroll, Cordes and jockey Daisuke Fukumoto were on hand to answer questions.

“It’s wonderful when our sport gets a horse that captures the public’s imagination,” Carroll said. “It lets people see the human side of racing, that it’s more than just a sport. It is these wonderful animals and the wonderful people that are involved with them. You’ve got this horse that came into Queen’s Plate as the underdog and won it decisively. He overcame the one eye. He’s got as small owner who only owns a couple of horses but is intense about racing. I think the whole story has caught on with everybody. And the name. The name is exactly who he is.”

There is some question as to how Mighty Heart will handle the switch to the turf. He has raced on the surface once, in a Mar. 21 maiden at the Fair Grounds where he finished 11th. He bore out badly in that race, which Carroll said, was due to the fact he has just the one eye.

“He got some kickback in his face,” she said. “He has only the one eye, so I think when it hit his blind side it really startled him and he ran to the outside. Since then has had a lot of schooling in behind horses and after that race we put a one-eyed blinkers over that eye. There’s a cup we put on that covers the sensitive area and that helped turn him around a lot. I don’t think it was the surface that time. I think it was the kickback.”

While Carroll isn’t too worried about the turf, she admitted that Mighty Heart’s schedule is a concern. Just as was the case with the American Triple Crown, the Canadian races had to be rescheduled because of the pandemic and there are just six weeks between the first leg and the last.

“We are asking a horse who is very young in his career to do a great deal,” she said. “Certainly, it’s a concern. He’s acting great going into the race and his blood work is great. Everything says he is on go but you really don’t know how much those two races took out of him.”

If they did take something out of Mighty Heart that could set things up for Belichick, who has had six weeks off. Carroll will be seeking her second win in the Breeders. She won the race in 2014 with Ami’s Holiday (Harlan’s Holiday). She could get her second Saturday, but the question is, with which horse?

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