Dalos To Receive Award of Merit

Prominent owner/breeder Ivan Dalos will be presented with the E. P. Taylor Award of Merit during the 47th Sovereign Awards ceremony to be held Thursday, Apr. 14 in Vaughan, Ontario.

The owner of the Ontario-based Tall Oaks Farm, Dalos has been involved with Thoroughbreds for 45 years and has bred the likes of Victory Gallop and Channel Maker, winning more than a dozen Sovereign Awards, including as outstanding breeder. He has raced the likes of homebreds Ami's Flatter, Ami's Mesa and Amis Gizmo to a variety of stakes successes both north and south of the border.

The Jockey Club of Canada will also present Denzil Fonseca was the award for outstanding groom, sponsored by OLG. Currently employed by trainer Michael Doyle, Fonseca is marking his 40th year on the Woodbine backstretch this year. Among the horses he has cared for are Queen's Plate winner Holy Helena and Tiz Imaginary.

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Early Oaks Nominations Due Saturday

Early nominations for the May 6 GI Longines Kentucky Oaks are due by Saturday. Early nominations to the Kentucky Oaks cost $200. Fillies that are not nominated during the early phase may nominate from Feb. 20-April 16 with a $1,500 payment. A supplementary nomination of $25,000 may be made at the time of entry.

Last year, 105 fillies were nominated during the early phase to the Oaks with five late nominations.

In recent years, nominations to the $1-million GI Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic ran concurrently with the Oaks. This year, nominations to the Turf Classic will close Apr. 16.

For more information about nominations to the Longines Kentucky Oaks, visit www.churchilldowns.com/horsemen.

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Wanamakers February Catalogue Online

The catalogue for the upcoming Wanamaker's February Sale, which features 32 hips, was released Wednesday. The catalogue includes nine no-guarantee stallion seasons for 2022, as well as eight broodmares from Ron Lombardi's Mr Amore Stable and two Maryland-bred juveniles from Anchor & Hope Farm.

The on-line auction will be open for nine days, with live bidding opening at 8 a.m. ET Feb. 16 and the first listing closing Feb. 24 at 5 p.m. Subsequent listings will end in three-minute increments.

To view the entire catalogue, visit www.wanamakers.com.

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Bill Filed in Ky to Sidestep Stallion Cap

In an attempt to get around a controversial rule by The Jockey Club (TJC) that mandates that stallions born from 2020 onward will only be allowed to cover up to 140 mares, the Speaker of Kentucky's House of Representatives on Feb. 14 co-filed a bill that would prohibit “a registrar of Thoroughbreds” from restricting “the number of mares that can be bred to a stallion or otherwise refuse to register any foal based upon the number of mares bred to the stallion.”

In addition, the measure would empower the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission to “select and utilize an entity to serve as the registrar,” meaning that the state's selection might not necessarily end up being the 128-year-old, industry-standard TJC.

Yet if the chosen registrar does end up being TJC and that organization does not “submit to the jurisdiction of Kentucky” and “comply with the laws of this chapter,” the bill's summary states that Kentucky will amend state statutes to instead “allow the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund registrar to stamp a Thoroughbred's certificate with the registrar's seal.”

House Speaker David Osborne (R-Prospect) and Rep. Matthew Koch (R-Paris) are the co-sponsors of House Bill 496 (summary and details here).

When reached late Tuesday afternoon in his New York office, TJC's president and CEO, Jim Gagliano, said his organization would have no comment at this time.

The controversy over the so-called “stallion cap” dates to May 7, 2020, when TJC put into effect a new rule–known as 14C–that mandated for stallions born in 2020 and later, the maximum number of mares covered will be 140. TJC indicated it simply would not register any foals that were not the product of matings with the first 140 mares to which that stallion was bred in a given year.

At that time, TJC cited the significant, decades-long decline in the North American foal crop and concerns “with the narrowing of the diversity of the Thoroughbred gene pool,” in implementing the new policy, which was met with a hazy mixture of consternation and support within America's bloodstock community.

In 2020, the year the rule went into effect, 42 stallions bred over 140 mares.

On Feb. 23, 2021, Spendthrift, Ashford, and Three Chimneys Farm sued in federal court to keep the rule from going forward and to collect alleged damages. The complaint called 14C a “blatant abuse of power” that acts as an “anti-competitive restraint” and threatened to disrupt the free-market nature of the breeding business.

On Mar. 29, TJC disagreed, calling the plaintiffs' allegations “scattershot” and “meritless.” TJC moved to dismiss the lawsuit, but the judge has yet to rule on that motion.

Reached just before deadline for this story, Spendthrift declined to comment on the proposed legislation.

If enacted as written, the bill aspires to become reality within about six months.

The bill states that, “On or before Sept. 1, 2022, the racing commission shall promulgate administrative regulations in accordance with [state statues] to implement this section.”

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