‘Stormy’ Forecast Ahead in Fourstardave

The contingent behind MGISW Got Stormy (Get Stormy) has been carefully monitoring the weather this week as the 6-year-old turf specialist prepares for her third appearance in Saratoga's GI Fourstardave H. Possible scattered overnight thunderstorms leading up to Saturday's card could soften the turf more than the fan-favorite mare would prefer.

“For a horse named Got Stormy, she doesn't like much rain,” her recently inducted Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse said. “If the turf gets soft on Saturday, a mile is stretching her distance ability. We'll see what happens, but we're keeping our fingers crossed.”

Got Stormy became the first female in history to win the mile-long Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” Challenge in 2019, besting MGISW Raging Bull (Fr) (Dark Angel {Ire}), one of the expected favorites in this year's edition of the race, as well as eventual Eclipse champion Uni (GB) (More Than Ready) on the firm turf. Her win in 1:32 flat was a course-record time.

During last year's renewal of the event over a softer course, Got Stormy finished second just over a length behind wire-to-wire victor Halladay (War Front).

“Last year we weren't supposed to get rain and the morning of the race, it stormed,” Casse recalled. “There was a little give in the ground and it probably cost her the race.”

Later last year, a day after finishing fifth in the GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, Got Stormy sold for $2.75 million at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton November Sale to Spendthrift Farm. Now co-owned by My Racehorse Stable, the chestnut returned this year with a score in the GIII Honey Fox S. followed by a pair of disappointing fifth-place finishes in the GII Longines Churchill Distaff Turf Mile S. and GI Jackpot Jaipur S.

Her recent absence from the winner's circle is not a big concern for Casse, who believes the mare has blossomed since her return to the Spa last month.

“I see a lot of similarities from last year to this year,” he said. “She struggled a little bit before she got to Saratoga last year and then she ran a great race in the Fourstardave. She gets better in the summer and fall. I think a lot of it has to do with how she loves training here and she tends to blossom at Saratoga.”

He continued, “Tyler Gaffalione worked her [on Aug. 1] and he came back with a big smile and said, 'She's back.' So if Tyler is happy, I'm happy. Looking at the race, one of the things she likes is to have a target. There seems to be a fair amount of speed and it's something she hasn't gotten recently, so it should play out well.”

Raging Bull (inside) worked in company with three-time Grade I winner Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) on Aug. 8. | Sarah Andrew

Got Stormy will face a field of seven other rivals on Saturday.

Raging Bull, the 2019 second-place finisher, made his six-year-old debut at Keeneland this spring with a two-length victory in the GI Maker's Mark Mile S. The three-time Grade I winner and Chad Brown pupil enters Saturday's race following a nail-biting close second to Oleksandra (Aus) (Animal Kingdom) in the GIII Poker S.

“He's still going strong at age six and he's really doing as well as he's ever done,” said Brown, who has yet to win the prestigious Grade I turf contest. “His race at Keeneland was dynamite-one of his best ever. Last time out, he just got in some trouble and was kind of stuck inside. Hopefully he has a better trip this time.”

Fellow Chad Brown-trained, Peter Brant-owned entry Blowout (GB) (Dansili {GB}) looks to get the lead early, but will have to do so from the eight hole. The 5-year-old mare made it to the winner's circle in the GII Churchill Distaff Turf Mile S. in her only start this year.

Brown explained that the speedy Blowout is not in the race to set up Raging Bull.

“She has a little bit of a layoff to overcome, but she's very dangerous if she gets to the front and has things her way,” Brown said. “She should be setting the pace but make no mistake, she's in the race to win. If she can get around there on an easy pace, I'm fine with that. I don't want to get beat by a horse that is loose on the lead either. If someone wins loose on the lead, it's going to be her.”

Other top considerations in the field include Set Piece (GB) (Dansili {GB}), who has gone undefeated in his last three starts at Churchill Downs this year for Brad Cox and was last seen besting a 10-horse field in the GII Wise Dan S. on June 26., as well as Casa Creed (Jimmy Creed), who also enters coming off a win in the GI Jackpot Jaipur S. for trainer Bill Mott.

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Notable US-Breds in Japan: Aug. 14 & 15, 2021

In this continuing series, we take a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for this weekend running at Kokura and Sapporo Racecourses:

Saturday, August 14, 2021
9th-KOK, ¥30,720,000 ($278k), Allowance, 2yo, 1200mT
DUGAT (c, 2, Practical Joke–Untraveled, by Canadian Frontier) takes on winners in this first trip to the races. The Mar. 31 foal is the first produce for his multiple stakes-placed dam, a half-sister to SW Artesian (Siphon {Brz}) and hailing from the family of German highweight GSW/MG1SP Green Perfume (Naevus) and GSW Salty Perfume (Salt Lake). Dugat was knocked down to trainer Hideyuki Mori, noted for his work with American-bred gallopers, for $190K at OBS March after breezing an eighth of a mile in :9 4/5. Yutaka Take has been booked to ride. B-Erv Woolsey & Ralph Kinder (KY)

Sunday, August 15, 2021
1st-SAP, ¥9,680,000 ($88k), Maiden, 2yo, 1200mT
ELECTRO WORLD (f, 2, Into Mischief–Ava Pie, by Distorted Humor) faces the starter for the second time, having finished a debut sixth to 'TDN Rising Star' Command Line (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) in a newcomers' event over a mile at Tokyo June 5. A $385K graduate of last year's Keeneland September sale, the full-sister to MSW & MGSP Sound Machine and half to SW & GSP Forever Liesl (Mineshaft) shortens up in distance this time around. Ava Pie is a daughter of MGSW Lakenheath (Colonial Affair), the dam of SW & GISP The Truth or Else (Yes It's True) and GSW Decorated Soldier (Proud Citizen). B-Farm 3 Enterprses (KY)

10th-SAP, ¥20,160,000 ($183k), Allowance, 3yo/up, 1800mT
RUSSIAN SAMOVAR (f, 3, America Pharoah–Megalicious, by Songandaprayer) graduated narrowly at first asking on the dirt at Kyoto last October (video, gate 8), but was well down the field trying winners for the first time the following month and makes her first start since. A half-sister to MGSP My Sweet Stella (Eskendereya), the bay filly is out of a half-sister to MSW & MGP Abbondanza (Alphabet Soup). A $70K KEENOV weanling and $165K KEESEP yearling, Russian Samovar blossomed into a $650K OBSMAR purchase after clocking an eighth of a mile in the bullet time of :20 2/5. B-Zayat Stables LLC (KY)

 

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Trainers React to Navarro Guilty Plea

On Wednesday, disgraced trainer Jorge Navarro pled guilty to one count of distribution of adulterated and misbranded drugs with the intent to defraud and mislead, a major development in the doping scandal that has rocked the sport since indictments were announced in March of 2020. Navarro will likely spend time in prison and has been ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $25,860,514. His career is over and he may be deported to his native Panama. But was this good day or bad day for the sport?  And what needs to be done from here to clean up the game? Those were among the questions we posed to some prominent trainers who are known not just for their abilities but for their integrity. Here's what they had to say:

Mark Casse: It's a start and I hope there are others out there who can't sleep at night. I bet that Jason Servis is seeing this and is starting to change some of his ideas so far as how to go forward. Servis has been trying to get the wiretaps thrown out. He's got bigger problems right now than just the wiretaps. Navarro is a very bad guy and he is getting what he deserves. He's a big bully and he thought he could get away with anything. He made his bed. I hope he like sleeping in it.

Bill Mott: I'm not happy about it and I'm not pleased that this happened in the first place. I am sorry to see that some of these guys got themselves involved in this kind of stuff. The bottom line is to be good. I don't think you have to do what these guys were doing. I don't know where this all ends. I hope that some time the sport will become proactive enough to stay in front of this problem. This is a great sport. The fact that they are on to some of this stuff is a good thing. But they can also go overboard on therapeutic medications. The testing of the therapeutic medications has become much better and they are picking things up in picograms. I'm not comfortable or confident that the penalties are in line with the testing, for the therapeutic medications. People are worrying more about that than they should be. They should be worried a lot more about the performance-enhancing drugs like EPO that probably do make a difference and are given illegally. That's the challenge. USADA is coming in and I hope they will be more focused on finding the illegal, performance-enhancing drugs.

Shug McGaughey: I'm glad this happened because it has cleared the air. Hopefully, this will be another step toward getting this problem straightened out. The biggest creep I've ever been around or seen in my whole life is Jason Servis. I hope they start getting after him. He is a horrible, horrible guy and had has been horrible for the game. I didn't really know Navarro. I saw that video they took at Monmouth and that was terrible. But the good news is that we won't have to ever worry about him ever again.

Graham Motion: Every trainer should be appalled by what this guy was doing. I don't understand how you couldn't be. Basically, he was cheating all of us. I don't see this as a good day. I feel about as down about the sport as I ever have been. We need to clean it up more. Servis and Navarro aren't the only two guys. Where are we going? What else is coming? Is this it? These guys were beating some of us all the time and I find it hard to believe they were the only ones doing this. It's incredibly disappointing that these tracks aren't more proactive and doing something about this situation. With Navarro, it was also his behavior. He was so in your face with this. It's so upsetting to know what happened to XY Jet. We can all have horses get hurt but to actually treat a horse with something that probably ended up causing his demise is pretty shocking to me. This whole thing is pretty sad.

Ken McPeek: I am disappointed that this industry has to deal with something like this. This should get the attention of those who want to stain the game, so that makes this a good thing. Navarro claimed some horses off of me over the years, but he never really did anything significant with any of them. I had heard other trainers complain about him and what he was doing. Maybe their experience was different than mine. I don't know what tricks he was up to. I think we're headed in the right direction. The threshold levels are so low that we are practically racing drug free. Good horsemen can handle that and good horsemen have shown they can play by the rules and prosper.

Christophe Clement: What I want to know is will my owners ever get paid back for every time they were beaten by Jorge Navarro over the last four of five years? What have the racetracks done to protect my owners? It's not about me, it's about my owners. People are supposed to regulate the sport and protect them from this sort of thing happening. I'm not sure how many times Navarro beat me, but I finished behind Servis a number of times and in some big races. Unfortunately, this is nothing new. It's the culture out there. The vet is in charge. We need more horsemanship and less medication. There is a great difference between how people train around the world versus how they train in the U.S. Here, the vet is so much more powerful.

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Saying Goodbye to an Old Friend

GARDINER, NY-A 30-year-old gelding you surely never heard of who never did anything that special on the racetrack is scheduled to be put down Friday at his home, the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation farm at the Wallkill Correctional Facility in upstate New York. It happens. They all get old and, for Renaissance Bob, it is his time.

This is not pressing news. Far from it. But it will be a sad, bittersweet day for me. I saved Renaissance Bob's life, plucking him out of a kill pen on Nov. 23, 1998 at the notorious New Holland, Pennsylvania sales. I did so as part of an investigative series I did for my employer at the time, the New York Daily News, that looked at how a race horse can get caught up in the slaughter pipeline.

If not for me, Bob would have died a grisly death in a slaughterhouse more than 22 years ago. Instead, he lived out his life happily and peacefully at Wallkill and other TRF farms.

But I am not here to take a bow. I didn't necessarily enter into this as a do-gooder. I was more interested in creating a compelling story that would shed light on what, back then, was an issue the racing industry very much swept under the rug. To make the piece work, I needed to tell the life story of a horse, from cradle to near grave. I could only do that if I identified a thoroughbred and got him out of New Holland and to safety.

Standing in the kill pen, literally surrounded by dozens of horses, I didn't pick out Renaissance Bob because he had a twinkle in his eye or I was enamored by his coppery coat or his friendly nature. Rather, I had identified him as a thoroughbred and he never veered too far away from me. Had he been standing on the other side of the pen, he would have been dead a long time ago. I could only save one horse.

So, yes, I did something for what was then a seven-year-old infirm gelding who was last seen running in a $5,000 claimer at Penn National and I was pretty sure that I had a good story. But I got a lot more out of this than I ever anticipated. It turns out I wasn't so good after all at playing the role of the unsentimental journalist who wouldn't allow themselves to get personally involved in a story. Even though he was sent to the TRF, I thought of Renaissance Bob as mine. While he was living at a farm near my house in New Jersey, I would visit him often. I introduced my children, then infants, now grownups, to him. I fed him carrots.

Here's what he had done for me: allowed me to feel good about myself. That's the sort of thing we all need.

About two weeks ago, someone at the TRF reached out to me to tell me that Renaissance Bob was scheduled to be put down. He's old and has lost most of his teeth, so they don't think it would be fair to him to ask him to get through the upcoming winter. I wanted to say goodbye and on Tuesday headed up to Wallkill to see him one last time. It didn't go so well. He had become set in his ways over the years and preferred to be left alone to roam around his paddock as he pleased. I didn't get the picture or get to pet him or even get close enough to say goodbye. It's ok. He's has earned the right to be a little cranky.

Renaissance Bob, a son of Cannon Shell, was born May 26, 1991 at Highcliff Farm in Delanson, New York and was bred by Seymour Cohn. He sold for $2,700 at OBS as a weanling before being bought by owner Bob Greenhut at the 1992 Fasig-Tipton New York bred sale in Saratoga. Greenhut gave him to trainer John DeStefano and Renaissance Bob made his debut April 5, 1994 at Aqueduct in a $35,000 maiden claimer. He finished eighth that day, but, three starts later, won a maiden special weight race at Belmont for New York breds. The highlight of his career came that August when he won a New York-bred allowance at Saratoga. Covering the meet for the Daily News, I am sure I was there that day, but have no memory of ever seeing the horse run.

That didn't make him a star and what so often happens to horses like Renaissance Bob is that their form goes bad because they are dealing with physical issues. His descent was all too typical. Bob struggled for DeStefano and after he lost a $15,000 claimer by 12 1/4 lengths he was sold to owner Chris Potash and sent to Laurel. It wasn't long before he couldn't make it at Laurel.  The next stop was Finger Lakes and then Penn National, where, through the claiming box, he bounced around from trainer to trainer.

He made his last career start on Dec. 13, 1996 for trainer Richard Wasserman, but he was not yet done. Bob's joints were deteriorating and his recent form was terrible, but Wasserman was able to find a buyer. He sold the horse for $1,500 to trainer Gina Kreiser, who spent nearly two years trying to get him sound enough to race. Kreiser, who has not started a horses since 2011, decided to cut her losses, selling Bob for $340 to a “killer buyer” named Charles DeHart. Beaten up by his 52 career starts, he was not sound enough to be adopted out as a riding horse.

“A lot of people would have sent him to the killers a lot sooner than I did,” Kreiser told me at the time. “Rick Wasserman kept saying to me, 'Why don't you get rid of that horse?' A couple of people were interested in him as a riding horse, but it didn't work out. Sure, I felt bad about this, but it comes down to whether or not a horse can pay for himself and, if he can't, he has no use to a lot of people. I needed him gone.”

Renaissance Bob was bought at the New Holland auction for $500 by Arlow Kiehl. He told me that the plan was to send Renaissance Bob and the other 37 horses he purchased at New Holland to a slaughterhouse in Ontario, which would pay him $540 for a horse of Bob's weight. I offered to give Kiehl $550 to take Bob off of his hands, and the horse was mine.

So much has changed since then, and for the better.

I made a return trip to New Holland in 2019 and found only one thoroughbred in the sale, and it was an old mare who hasn't raced in a decade.

Today, Kreiser's comments seem particularly cruel, and, though brutally honest, just the sort of thing no trainer would dare admit to. And admitting that she had sent a horse to New Holland would now have gotten her banned from Penn National and virtually every other track in the country. That threat has stopped the flow of horses from the tracks to the slaughterhouses.

Nor was the industry as a whole all that eager to help out financially. A plea to donate to the TRF ran with the New York Daily News story and hundreds of readers chipped in, with most of the contributions in the $1 to $5 neighborhood. There was only one donation from someone involved with the sport. Today, racing has come together to raise millions for aftercare and there are dozens of retirement groups working feverishly to find a home and a second career for every horse that comes off the track.

Bob was sent from a TRF facility in Virginia to Wallkill in 2006. Kelsey Kober took over as the Wallkill farm manager three years ago and, along with the inmates who make up her staff, has overseen Bob's care. Bob was assigned to what she calls the “old-timers' paddock,” which includes only horses that are 25 or older.

“Bob is a little bit stubborn but when you get around him, he can be extremely friendly,” she said.  “I will miss him.”

So will I.

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