A Successful Hootenanny at Ward Ranch

Wesley Ward is busy gearing up for the upcoming race meet at Keeneland, but in recent years the seven-time leading trainer at the historic track keeps himself further occupied in the springtime with his side gig as a stallion owner and manager.

GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Hootenanny resides at Ward Ranch just across from the Keeneland grounds. The son of Quality Road was Ward's first Breeders' Cup winner in 2014. When the bay needed a new home in 2019, his former trainer didn't hesitate to take him in. Ward initially planned to breed only his own mares to the stallion, but now that Hootenanny's first crop is succeeding on the racetrack, Ward has a new goal in mind.

In his first year at stud, which he spent at Buck Pond Farm before relocating to Ward Ranch, Hootenanny produced 16 named foals. Now that his first crop of horses are 3-year-olds, eight progeny have seen the starting gate and six are winners including one stakes winner. It's a stat that has Ward believing there is more to come for his stallion.

“With the first couple of crops, I wanted to try to limit him to where I could control the raising and breeding and training,” Ward explained. “Now I'm looking to get him out there to some outside breeders and see what he can do. He's a nice horse and he's certainly well-accomplished as a racehorse in his own right. Hopefully in these first few years, he'll be able to show what he can do.”

Bred by Barronstown and out of a half-sister to GISW Cat Moves (Tale of the Cat), Hootenanny was a $75,000 yearling purchase in 2013. He won on debut by over four lengths the following spring at Keeneland for partners Ward, Ken Donworth and Ben McElroy. After placing in a stake at Pimlico, he was purchased by the Coolmore partnership and pointed toward the Royal Ascot meet, where he claimed the Windsor Castle S. In his next start, he ran a close second in the G1 Darley Prix Morny.

“We were just narrowly beaten,” Ward recalled. “Frankie Dettori beat me. After the race Frankie said, 'If I had been on your horse, I would have won.' So we brought Hootenanny back and trained him up to the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita. Frankie told me that he would win if I put him on the horse, and he did. Hootenanny won my first Breeders' Cup for me. He was a very intelligent horse and with the speed he had, running a mile on the grass was no problem at all.”

After the win in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf–a victory that earned Hootenanny a finalist spot for champion 2-year-old male– the colt returned to the races for three more seasons. He was an allowance winner at Keeneland as a sophomore, placed in a stake at Woodbine at four and ran second in the GII King Edward S. at five. He retired with five wins to his credit and earned $876,698.

Hootenanny gave Ward his first Breeders' Cup win in 2014 | Horsephotos

While Ward acknowledged that Hootenanny was not what commercial breeders were looking for upon his retirement, he added that the sire has rewarded those who did breed to him in his first season.

“He does have a sway back so for breeding purposes, it was something the commercial breeders didn't really like,” Ward admitted. “But so far with all of his progeny, he hasn't put that trait into his babies and they're all nice runners. They all have great minds like him, they're all kind of docile horses and they're all fast.”

Hootenanny's leading performer to date is Hicksy, a colt trained by Kevin Attard that won second time out by six lengths last October, earning an 80 Beyer Speed Figure, and then claimed the Display S. at Woodbine. His other winners include My Nanny's a Hoot, a filly that broke her maiden early this year and has since claimed an allowance at Fair Grounds, as well as Strange Arrange, a Ward trainee that broke his maiden by six lengths at Turfway Park in March.

Only two of Hootenanny's winners to date are trained by Ward, as the stallion stood at Buck Pond for his first season, but this year's crop of 2-year-olds will represent Ward's broodmare band as well as his own breaking and training process that is highly-regarded for its tremendous success with young maidens.

“He's got some very quick ones that will be coming in probably by late spring, so I'm looking forward to those,” the trainer reported.

Ward knows it's a longshot to believe that his pride and joy, Hootenanny, will ever be recognized on a commercial level, especially because for now, he is relying solely on his own broodmare band to get numbers to the stallion, but he does hope that other breeders looking to race stone cold runners will take note of the sire's early success.

“Being my first Breeders' Cup winner, he's very special,” Ward said. “That's why I wanted to make sure he had a good home and was able to have a few mares to breed. He's been coming through on everything since we first acquired him, from being a racehorse to now as a stallion. He hasn't thrown any champions, but from the limited opportunities that he has had, he has thrown winners. Right now he's kind of a home-based stallion, but hopefully he'll have some interest to where he'll go to a commercial farm.”

And even if that dream doesn't come to fruition, Hootenanny will always have a home at Ward Ranch.

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America’s Day at the Races will Feature Saturday’s Arkansas Derby

An addition to “America's Day at the Races” will feature a chance to see D. Wayne Lukas's filly, Secret Oath (Arrogate), take on the boys and possibly secure a GI Kentucky Derby berth in live coverage of Saturday's GI Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park. Saturday's broadcast, which will feature live racing from both Oaklawn and Aqueduct Racetrack, begins on FOX Sports 2 at 1:30 p.m. ET before moving to Fox Sports 1 at 4:00 p.m. ET. Coverage will continue until 8:30 p.m. ET with post time for the Arkansas Derby scheduled for 7:35 p.m. ET.

Laffit Pincay III will host from Oaklawn with Hall of Famer Gary Stevens and Maggie Wolfendale. Greg Wolf will host from Aqueduct with Andy Serling, Richard Migliore, Anthony Stabile, and Rick Schosberg. Four stakes are slated for Saturday's Oaklawn card, including the GIII Fantasy S., a qualifying race for the GI Kentucky Oaks, and Aqueduct will feature a nine-race card, including the Excelsior S. for older horses.

America's Day at the Races is produced by the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) in partnership with FOX Sports.

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Dance Brightly Dead in Chile

Dance Brightly (Mr. Prospector–Dance Smartly, by Danzig) died at the age of 27 in Chile, Turf Diario reported.

The Sam-Son Farm homebred raced for trainer Mark Frostad and ran out a maiden special weight winner at Woodbine in October 1997. The Ontario-bred then ran second in the Listed Coronation Futurity later in his juvenile season, but was ultimately retired due to an injury suffered in a workout in 1998.

A son of Canadian Horse of the Year and Canadian Triple Crown heroine Dance Smartly started his stud career at Hill 'n' Dale Farm in Kentucky in 1999 and shuttled to Haras La Quebrada in Argentina. He later moved permanently to Chile at Haras Carioca beginning in the autumn of 2004. At stud, the bay sired 26 black-type winners, 11 of them graded/group winners. His quintet of top-level winners are led by Mea Domina, who took the GI Gamely H. and the South American Group 1 winners Sabor a Triunfo (Chi), Montignac (Chi), Mama Delia (Arg), and Esta Bailando (Chi). A total of 17 black-type winners have been produced from his daughters, with Irish Glory (Chi) (Irish Brother {Arg}) the only one at group level.

Dance Brightly is a full-brother to Canadian Champion 3-Year-Old Filly Dancethruthedawn (Mr. Prospector), who also took Saratoga's GI Go for Wand H., as well as dual Canadian Classic hero Scatter The Gold (Mr. Prospector), and the graded-placed Dance to Destiny (Mr. Prospector). A half-brother, Dance With Ravens (A.P. Indy), won the GII Grey Breeders' Cup S., and another half-sibling, the Thunder Gulch mare Dancethruthestorm, is the granddam of GI Northern Dancer Turf S. hero Say The Word (More Than Ready), who was also named the Canadian Champion Turf Male in 2020.

The second dam is the influential blue hen Classy 'N Smart (Smarten), who was also a Canadian champion. In addition to Dance Smartly, she foaled Grade II winner Strike Smartly (Mr. Prospector) and the GI Philip H. Iselin H. hero Smart Strike (Mr. Prospector), who became a top sire; as well as Grade I winner Full of Wonder (Mr. Prospector).

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Cornett Brothers Back in a Big Way

HALLANDALE BEACH, FL–While C2 Racing Stable is in its infancy, its founders, brothers Clint and Mark Cornett are not new on the racing scene. In fact, Mark Cornett has worked as a racing manager and bloodstock agent for over 25 years and even put together the partnerships that owned champions Blind Luck and Dubai Majesty. He and Clint campaigned horses a decade ago under a different banner.

The Cornett brothers returned to the game just last year under their new moniker with the goal of running in the GI Kentucky Derby. That dream could come true if their colt White Abarrio (Race Day) runs well Saturday in the GI Curlin Florida Derby at Gulfstream.

“We have actually been in racing a while,” said Texas-based Clint Cornett, who was in Hallandale Beach to attend his colt's big race, as well as Wednesday's Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale. “We used to run under Turf Express in the early 2000s. In 2021, we decided to get back in the game and started C2 Racing Stable. We had been out of it since 2010.”

He continued, “I called Mark in the middle of 2021 and said let's get back in. I had a personal goal to run on the First Saturday in May and I told Mark to find us a horse. Little did I know, the second one we purchased is potentially going to be the horse.”

The Cornett brothers grew up in Texas and traveled to Louisiana to attend the races in their youth.

“Out of high school in the late eighties, we would head to Louisiana Downs from Dallas to watch the races,” Clint Cornett said. “It peaked our interest in becoming owners and we are pretty passionate about it.”

Their current stable is comprised of about 10 horses, most based at Gulfstream with Saffie Joseph, Jr. However, they do have a few at Oaklawn with Chris Hartman.

“Most of them are private purchases,” Clint Cornett said of their string. “We claim a few here and there and bought a filly [Wednesday] at the Gulfstream auction.”

That filly was Hip 83, a $250,000 daughter of the late Laoban. Consigned by Randy Bradshaw, she breezed in :10 1/5.

“Mark identified her and we were lucky enough to get her,” Clint Cornett said. “She will go to a training facility in Ocala until about August and then come back to the track.”

White Abarrio was one of the Cornett brothers' private purchases after he opened his account with a 6 3/4-length score at Gulfstream in his Sept. 24 debut, earning an 81 Beyer Speed Figure.

“Mark was at the track and saw him break his maiden at Gulfstream,” Clint Cornett said. “He called me and said, 'I just saw this horse run and I think we need to pull the trigger on him.' We talked to the owners and we were able to put together a private purchase. Luckily they were willing to sell.”

Part of the original ownership group, La Milagrosa, stayed in for a small piece and the colt was transferred to Joseph. He wired a one-mile optional claimer at Gulfstream in his first start for C2 Racing Stable Oct. 29 and finished third next out in the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. at Churchill Downs Nov. 27.

“He won his first start for us at Gulfstream, then we shipped him up to Churchill to run in the Jockey Club because we wanted to get him a run over that track,” Clint Cornett said. “That was his first time going two turns as well. He did not have the cleanest of trips. He got in some trouble, but we were pleased with the effort. It showed us everything we needed to know going forward.”

White Abarrio called it a season after that effort and made his sophomore debut back in Hallandale Beach in the GIII Holy Bull S. Feb. 5. Dispatched at 6-1, the gray pressed the pace early and drew off to win by 4 1/2 lengths over next-out GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. victor Simplification (Not This Time), who also runs back here (video).

“He ran very well in the Holy Bull,” Clint Cornett said. “You have to have some racing luck and he got a clean trip. Prior to that race, he missed two works because he got ill, so we did not know how he was going to perform. He came out of that race well, but we decided to give him a few weeks off since he had been a little sick prior to the Holy Bull. We wanted to give his body time to recover. That is one reason we skipped the Fountain of Youth, but he has been training well into the Florida Derby.”

The businessman added, “He had a slight fever about a week and a half ago for a day or two, but that broke. He did a quick little blowout on Tuesday [3f in :34 4/5]  for the race on Saturday.

Cornett said he is raring to go ahead of Saturday's big race and feels good about White Abarrio's chances.

“We feel pretty confident,” he said. “We feel he is a versatile horse with good tactile speed. We have Tyler [Gaffalione] aboard him and have all the confidence in Tyler that he will put him in a great position to be successful.”

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