Greatest Honour’s First Foal is a Colt

Spendthrift Farm's Greatest Honour sired his first reported foal Jan. 5 when KatieRich Farms in Midway announced that I Love Nola had delivered a colt by the well-bred son of Tapit.

“This colt has the longest legs we've ever seen on a newborn foal. He has an extraordinary hip and a beautiful head. This is the biggest foal the mare has had. We are very, very happy,” said Martha Rattner, whose Rattner Bloodstock LLC bred the foal.

Greatest Honour, hailing from a half-sister to champion Rags to Riches; Irish Highweight Man of Iron; GSW-US and G1SP-Jpn Casino Drive; GISW Jazil; and the dam of GISW Streaming (Smart Strike), covered 178 mares in his 2023 introductory season, and will stand his second at stud for a fee of $7,500 S&N.

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Belmont Stakes Winning Trainer Joe Cantey Passes at 82

Trainer Joe Cantey, who teamed up with owner John Ed Anthony to win a slew of major races, including the GI 1980 Belmont S., passed away Friday at the age of 82 in his hometown of Camden, S.C.

The news was confirmed by his ex-wife, Charlsie Cantey.

The cause of death was lung and mouth cancer.

“Everything he touched pretty much turned to gold,” Charlsie said. “When he set his mind to do something, he exceeded it by leaps and bounds.”

Cantey started out handling horses for Bert Firestone as they wintered in South Carolina. He would also go on to work for trainer Evan Jackson. He decided that he wanted to go out on his own and set his sights on coming to New York.

“Joe applied for stalls with Kenny Noe and he didn't get them,” Cantey recalled. “He got a plane and went to New York. He met with Noe and said I really want these stalls and I want to train horses in New York. Kenny was so persuaded by that he gave him some stalls. He got better owners and better horses and worked his way up going to work John Ed Anthony and Loblolly Stable and did a damn fine job there.”

With Cantey in charge, Loblolly Stable turned into a force on the New York circuit and at Oaklawn Park. Their best horse may have been Temperence Hill, who upset Genuine Risk to win the 1980 GI Belmont S. With wins that same year in the GI Travers S. and the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup, he was named 3-year-old male champion of 1980. Their other big star was Cox's Ridge, whose biggest win came in the 1978 GI Metropolitan H. They campaigned still another Grade I winner in Majesty's Prince, a star on the grass who won two runnings of the GI Rothman's International, two runnings of the Man o' War S. and two runnings of the Sword Dancer, one a Grade I race, the other a Grade II race.

“I think about him all the time and I always have,” said Eddie Maple, who was Cantey's primary rider. “He was such a big part of our lives back in the seventies and eighties. We were pretty tight. He was an all-around horseman. He picked it up from the guys who were around Camden, like Frank Whiteley. We had a good relationship and it spilled over into our personal lives. He would do anything for anybody.”

Cantey's last year of training was in 1987 while he was still in his prime. Charlsie Cantey said he decided to just walk away.

“He just said I've had enough,” she said. “When we first got married and were living in Camden, he said, 'Let's go to New York and try our hand at it and then come back to Camden. He loved this town and wanted to come back here. It's not like he got fired or anything. What I want people to know about Joe is that if he stayed in New York, I don't know how far he would have gone. He was a brilliant horse trainer. He just had had enough of New York.”

According to Equibase records, which go back only to 1976, Cantey had 444 career winners Charlsie Cantey said she believes he had his first winner in 1970 or 71.

Upon retirement he opened up his own gun club and got heavily involved in competitive sporting clay competitions and ran tournaments all over the world.

Cantey is survived by Charlsie Cantey, his wife Amy and children J.B. and Ashley. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

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Cody’s Wish Added to TCA Stallion Season Auction, Proceeds to Benefit Make-A-Wish

A season with a 2025 breed back to Cody's Wish (Curlin) has been added to the Thoroughbred Charities of America's (TCA) Live Auction and Celebration scheduled to run Sunday, Jan. 7, with the majority of the proceeds going to support the local chapter of the Make-A-Wish Foundation, announced the TCA Saturday. The offering was donated by Godolphin in memory of Cody Dorman, the 17-year-old Kentuckian whose story and special connection with his namesake was widely beloved in and outside the industry.

Any remaining proceeds will go to honoring his memory in other ways in conjunction with the wishes of his family. The Dorman family as well as representatives from the Make-A-Wish organization will be in attendance Sunday.

Also included in the live auction roster are seasons to Elite Power (with 2025 breed back), Taiba, Life is Good, and Forte.

Tickets may still be purchased and bidders or their authorized agents may bid on select seasons by attending the event in-person or may email the TCA to register to bid online or by phone.

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Hard Spun Colt ‘Rolls’ in Jerome

Gold Square's Drum Roll Please (c, 3, Hard Spun–Imply, by E Dubai), a very solid third going against the grain of the track in the GII Remsen S. at Aqueduct Dec. 2, took care of business as the 3-5 favorite while turning back in distance for Saturday's Jerome S. at the Big A.

He trailed the field of five in the early going after exiting from the fence. Given his cue by Javier Castellano on the far turn, he made a three-wide bid approaching the quarter pole and came rolling down the center of the stretch to win going away by 3 3/4 lengths. El Grande O (Take Charge Indy) was second; Khanate (Hightail) was third.

The top five finishers earned 10-5-3-2-1 qualifying points on the road to the GI Kentucky Derby.

“We've seen a lot of growth with him physically and mentally in the mornings, so we were expecting something nice from him today, and he showed it,” said Dustin Dugas, assistant to winning trainer Brad Cox. “We've always thought he would go all day, and now with that fitness and that physical development, he can.”

On a potential next start in the nine-furlong GIII Withers Feb. 3 at the Big A, Joe Hardoon, racing manager for Gold Square, said, “I think we have to look at the Withers and get him back to a mile and an eighth. I think that's more his game than this one-turn mile. We'll see how he comes out of this and bounces back and definitely look to getting him back around two turns.”

Drum Roll Please, a distant second behind subsequent GISW and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile third-place finisher Locked (Gun Runner) second out at Saratoga Sept.1, graduated over this same track and trip Oct. 6 prior to his aforementioned third over the muddy going in the Remsen.

Drum Roll Please becomes the 102nd stakes winner for Hard Spun. The winner's dam Imply, from the extended female family of Horse of the Year Holy Bull, is also represented by a 2-year-old filly by Practical Joke. She was bred to Uncle Mo for 2024.

JEROME S., $145,500, Aqueduct, 1-6, 3yo, 1m, 1:41.91, ft.
1–DRUM ROLL PLEASE, 118, c, 3, by Hard Spun
                1st Dam: Imply (MSW, $772,728), by E Dubai
                2nd Dam: Allude, by Orientate
                3rd Dam: Ed's Holy Cow, by Bet Big
($295,000 RNA Ylg '22 FTKJUL; $250,000 Ylg '22 FTKOCT).
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O-Gold Square LLC; B-Barlar, LLC (PA);
T-Brad H. Cox; J-Javier Castellano. $82,500. Lifetime Record:
GSP, 5-2-1-1, $183,630.
2–El Grande O, 120, c, 3, Take Charge Indy–Rainbow's Song, by
Unbridled's Song. O-Barry K. Schwartz; B-Stonewall Farm (NY);
T-Linda Rice. $30,000.
3–Khanate, 118, c, 3, Hightail–Mongolian Shopper, by Any
Given Saturday. ($35,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP). 1ST BLACK TYPE.
O-Calumet Farm; B-Mongolian Stable (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher.
$18,000.
Margins: 3 3/4, 7HF, 6. Odds: 0.60, 2.50, 10.90.
Also Ran: Regalo, Sweet Soddy J. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

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