Tacher, a True Jack of All Trades

There is not much Marc Tacher hasn't tried his hand at in the horse racing industry. The Puerto Rico native breeds, owns and buys horses; owns part of a racetrack; and pinhooks. He hopes to enjoy more success with the latter Wednesday as he sends three of his potential pinhooks through the ring at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale.

Growing up in Puerto Rice, Tacher was bit by the racing bug at a young age and made his first investment in the game early in his adult years.

“I got into horse racing early. As a kid, I used to go to the track with my father,” said Tacher, who owns insurance companies around the U.S., but mainly in Miami. “When I was in my twenties I bought a piece of a horse and that is how I got started over 32 years ago.”

Tacher now has 85 horses in training in both Puerto Rico and the United States; operates a breeding program predominantly in his home country; and owns part of his local racetrack, Hipódromo Camarero.

“I kept on buying horses and, through the years, I was pretty successful at that,” said Tacher. “I raced mostly in Puerto Rico. The opportunity came to buy the racetrack in 2004, but it took like three years to get it done.”

Of all the things he does, Tacher enjoys racing the most.

“I have the biggest stable in Puerto Rico,” he said. “I have been leading owner there for the past five years. In the U.S., I am in second-place in victories in the nation and was third last year.”

Tacher continued, “I won the Puerto Rican Triple Crown, which was a nice experience to have. Not many people get to experience that, so that was a good feeling.”

Tacher has also done well with pinhooking. His biggest success in that venture, however, did not come at auction.

“My biggest score didn't go through the ring, but I sold a Distorted Humor colt for $1.5-million that I bought for $60,000,” Tacher said. “I mostly buy to pinhook, but through the months leading up to the juvenile sales, I can change my position or if the horse doesn't bring what I think he is worth, I keep him to race. I don't buy to race, to be honest, I buy to pinhook. Most of what I race are RNAs and I also buy at the 2-year-old sales.”

Three of Tacher's yearling purchases are set to sell Wednesday with de Meric Sales, who he has been using for the past three years. The first to go through the ring will be Hip 81, a filly from the first crop of Practical Joke. The $130,000 KEESEP purchase is out of a half-sister to MGSW Takeover Target (Harlan's Holiday) and SW Ladies' Privilege (Harlan's Holiday).

“She is a nice filly and very forward,” said Tristan de Meric. “These Practical Jokes are really training well and she is one we have liked all year. She is a balanced and good-looking filly.”

Tacher secured Hip 92, a son of last year's leading freshman sire Nyquist, for $155,000 at Keeneland September. The chestnut colt hails from the family of MGISW Diversify (Bellamy Road).

“He is a really nice colt with a lot of leg,” de Meric said. “He has been training very well and is horse we think could do really well at the sale.”

Rounding out the Tacher trio is a colt from the first crop of the late champion Arrogate (Hip 122). The $200,000 FTKOCT acquisition is out of MSW Hero's Amor (Street Hero), who is a full-sister to SW & MGSP Threefiveindia.

“He is a bit immature, but he is very quick and sharp,” Tacher said. “He is not as big as the Nyquist colt, but he is fast and looks like he should do well. He is a very refined colt.”

The Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale will be held Wednesday at Gulfstream Park starting at 2 p.m. and the breeze show is Monday at 9 a.m.

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Letters to the Editor: Carl McEntee

Good Morning,

It's not often that I feel compelled to write, but in this case the sensitivity and poise by which Chris McGrath addressed the passing of Sheihk Hamdan was truly skillful. The world of horse racing, and for that matter, breeding, has been dealt a huge blow with the passing of both Sheikh Hamdan and Prince Khalid.

As Chris so poignantly mentioned, we have taken for granted the impact both men had on our industry on a global scale, and the thought of a world in which racing will no longer enjoy the support of both is tenuous at best. Of course, I am now situated in America and have been for the past 20 years. My brother Phillip, however, trains in Newmarket and has done so since my father's passing in 1998. British racing has been the bastion of our industry since its inception. It is there I fell in love with the sport.

However, as discussed by many over the past several years, the program in the UK is somewhat a house of cards. Since the arrival of Sheikh Mohammed, Sheikh Hamdan and Prince Khalid Abdullah, the sport has been supported by foreign investment for the past 40 years. Foreign investment that cared solely for the success of the horses and did not require the financial support from purse money, which, as we all are well aware in the UK, is awful at best, and ludicrous at worst. The continuation of the “Sport Of Kings” could not be more accurate or unnerving.

The denial of a tote monopoly in the late 70's almost certainly is to blame, with the bookmakers continually reaping the rewards of the second largest gambling market in the UK, and up until now, showing little concern for reinvestment in the form of purse money. How? Why?

Indeed both fair and valid questions and one that must be addressed immediately as “The House of Cards” has been dealt a cold and relentless wind over the last 12 months. It would be foolish to believe that racing will remain unaffected by the loss of two of its biggest supporters. For the average or small trainer, with owners that are already feeling the pressure from the affects of Covid on their primary businesses, yards are shrinking and an exodus of trainers has already begun. How can one expect an owner to pay training fees when the ROI is non existent, when they are not truly independently wealthy.

Even though I have long since emigrated, my heart still remains within European racing. I watch intently every day and am sadden by the fact that in most cases the winner's purse is less than 1500 pounds. That doesn't even cover a month's worth of training fees, let alone a year.

“The wise man built his house upon the rocks”….. The sport I love has its foundation on the sand in more ways than one. The tide is coming in and the foundation is under severe pressure, and without action from the governing body soon will be swept away.

It is my hope that this situation resolves, but to continue with the same reckless abandon and expecting that the status quo will remain the same is truly unwise.

Carl McEntee

Ballysax Bloodstock

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Sunday Insights: Tapit-Havre de Grace Filly Debuts at Gulfstream

6th-GP, $55K, Msw, 3yo, f, 7f, 2:37 p.m. ET
PERFECT GRACE (Tapit), a 3-year-old daughter of 2011 Horse of the Year and champion older mare Havre de Grace (Saint Liam), kicks off her career for trainer Ralph Nicks. The Whisper Hill Farm homebred, given a 6-1 chance on the morning line, is drawn widest of all in post seven with Emisael Jaramillo aboard. Mandy Pope's operation went to $10 million to acquire Havre de Grace at the 2012 FTKNOV sale. TJCIS PPs

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Mar. 27 Insights

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

CASSE UNVEILS WELL-BRED WAR FRONT ON FL DERBY UNDERCARD
1st-GP, $55K, Msw, 3yo, 1mT, 11:30p.m.
The blue-blooded WAR BOMBER (IRE) (War Front) makes his career bow in this spot for trainer Mark Casse. The colt is a full-brother to Group 1 winner and Irish highweight Lancaster Bomber, who was twice second at the Breeders' Cup; and a half-brother to French, Irish and German highweight Excelebration (Ire) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}); MGSW Mull of Killough (Ire) (Mull of Kintyre); MSW Shivalik Showers (Ind) (Dancing Forever); and to the dam of MSP Fauci (Malibu Moon). TJCIS PPs

PRICEY PHAROAH FILLY MAKES CAREER BOW
7th-GP, $55K, Msw, 3yo, f, 1 1/16mT, 2:27p.m.
Spendthrift Farm went to $675,000 at Keeneland September to acquire AMERICAN HEIRESS (GB) (American Pharoah)–after which MyRacehorse joined as partner–and she debuts here for Todd Pletcher. Out of MGSW Keertana (Johar), she is a half-sister to GSW Ticonderoga (Tapit). Her dam is a half to GSW & GISP Diversy Harbor (Curlin) and MGSW & GISP Snow Top Mountain (Najran). TJCIS PPs

FULL-SIBLING TO VASILIKA DEBUTS IN NOLA
8th-FG, $55K, Msw, 3yo, 5 1/2fT, 5:23p.m.
SAMYAZA (Skipshot) heads to the post for the first time in NOLA Saturday and he has some big shoes to fill. The chestnut is a full-brother to two-time Grade I winner and earner of over $1.8-million Vasilika, who went from claimer to eight-time graded winner and close runner-up in the Breeders' Cup. She summoned $1.5-million from Japan's Katsumi Yoshida at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton November Sale. Steve Asmussen unveils another firster with a talented relative in Americaredwhiteblue (American Pharoah). He is out of a GSP half-sister to MGISW Curalina (Curlin). TJCIS PPs

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