California Chrome Full Sibling Enters Stud in California

Faversham (Lucky Pulpit–Love the Chase, by  Not For Love), a two-time winner and full-brother to two-time Horse of the Year California Chrome, has been retired from racing to stand at Daehling Ranch in Northern California. His 2021 fee is $2,000, live foal guarantee. Lifetime breeding rights are available for $4,500.

The 5-year-old was campaigned by his co-breeders, Perry and Denise Martin of Martin Racing, who also co-bred and raced California Chrome.

After standing his first three seasons in Kentucky, with two additional Southern Hemisphere stints in Chile, California Chrome was purchased privately in late 2019 by Japan-based connections, and stood at Arrow Stud in that country this year.

“Faversham overcame several obstacles, including a torn tendon, to win races in California and Kentucky for us,” Perry Martin said. “He always tried his best and managed to carve his own identity from the immense shadow cast by his big brother, who was the rarest of all Thoroughbreds–the horse of a lifetime.”

“We are thrilled to bring him home to California, where the legendary story of California Chrome started, and to offer his proven bloodlines at an affordable price for breeders on a budget.”

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Mill Ridge Farm Sets 2021 Stud Fee for Oscar Performance

Mill Ridge Farm has set the 2021 stud fee for world record turf miler Oscar Performance (Kitten’s Joy) at $15,000, LFSN. Bred and raced by Jerry and John Amerman, he won the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf, captured Grade I stakes at 2, 3, and 4, and broke a 20-year track record at Belmont Park at a mile in 1:31.23, all with no Lasix.

“We celebrate his third year, for we have seen so many of his foals and they are genuine quality,” said Headley Bell. “He has every opportunity to buck the trend and have more mares in his third year than he had in his first two of 118 and 116. At a stud fee of $15,000 live foal, he is value, for you have these quality foals in the pipeline.”

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Stay Thirsty Colt Tops Fasig-Tipton California Sale

by Dan Ross and Jessica Martini

CYPRESS, CA – With numbers predictably down against a backdrop of pandemic and economic uncertainties, a total of 166 yearlings grossed $3,735,700 during the Fasig-Tipton California Fall Yearlings Sale held Monday at Los Alamitos Race Course. The average of $22,504 was down 15.9% from last year’s inaugural Fasig California Yearling sale and the median dropped 30.0% to $10,000.

“Statistically it was in line with what we’ve seen at the Kentucky sales and the Ocala sales,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said at the close of business Monday evening. “I thought, all in all, the storm was weathered better for this sale than I would have anticipated coming in.”

The buy-back rate improved from 46.3% a year ago to 35.2% Monday.

“I think we’ve seen across the country, sellers have adjusted their expectations and are being more realistic in setting their reserves,” Browning said.

The 2019 auction had been held in Pomona, but restrictions on crowd sizes in Los Angeles county forced the sales company to call an audible and move to Los Alamitos less than a month ago.

“We were limited in our ability to promote the sale because we didn’t have a home for it until three weeks beforehand,” Browning said. “We had been holding the catalogue to be printed until we could find a date and a location.”

Browning continued, “I have to thank [Los Alamitos owner] Doc [Ed] Allred and his team and staff here at Los Alamitos because without their cooperation and effort and willingness to pitch in and help out the Thoroughbred industry, this sale would not have taken place today. It took a commitment to try to support the industry and it wouldn’t have happened if they hadn’t stepped up to the plate and said, ‘We will work with you and we’ll do everything we possibly can to make the sale happen.'”

A colt by Stay Thirsty brought the auction’s highest price when selling for $200,000 to Naseer Fasihuddin. Fasihuddin purchased two of the auction’s three six-figure lots. A year ago, six yearlings reached that threshold with a top price of $150,000.

“At least we were able to provide a marketplace for the breeders to give them an outlet for their horses,” Browning said. “That is so crucial because at the end of the day, they have to stay in business to provide the product  from a racing and sales perspective.”

Fasihuddin Quenches Thirst at Fasig-Tipton

Naseer Fasihuddin and his wife Zahra Madiha attended Monday’s Fasig-Tipton California Fall Yearlings Sale with just one stallion on their radar and the San Diego-based couple came away with a pair of yearlings by Stay Thirsty. Fasihuddin made the first six-figure purchase of the auction Monday when going to $110,000 to acquire a colt (hip 51) by the 2011 GI Travers S. winner.

“We were looking for a Stay Thirsty,” Fasihuddin confirmed after signing the ticket on hip 51, a son of graded winner Lost Bus (Bring the Heat). “It’s a nice pedigree and he looked really good.”

Asked if he was done shopping after that purchase, Fasihuddin said, “I am still looking for one.”

It didn’t take long for Fasihuddin to add a second Stay Thirsty yearling to his stable as he went to a sale-topping $200,000 to acquire hip 79. The dark bay is out of multiple stakes winner My Fiona (Ghostzapper).

“We came here specifically for these two horses,” Fasihuddin said. “I am happy to get them.”

Both yearlings were bred by Terry Lovingier and were consigned by his Lovacres Ranch. Stay Thirsty stands at Lovacres in Warner Springs for $10,000.

In addition to the two newly acquired yearlings, Fasihuddin and Madiha’s broodmare Smiling Tigress was bred to Stay Thirsty this past spring and is carrying her first foal. A $20,000 purchase at the 2016 Barretts October Yearling sale, the mare was stakes placed and earned over $175,000 on the racetrack for the couple.

Later in the auction, Fasihuddin purchased a filly by Stay Thirsty (hip 244) for $20,000, a filly by Mohaymen (hip 217) for $70,000 and a filly by Shaman Ghost (hip 196) for $20,000.

Fasihuddin said a trainer had not yet been picked out for the yearlings.

More Nyquist for Eclipse Thoroughbreds

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners has already capitalized on Nyquist’s fast start at stud and the operation added a California-bred yearling filly by the GI Kentucky Derby winner to its roster Monday at Los Alamitos. Eclipse’s Aron Wellman signed the ticket at $135,000 to acquire hip 75 from Tom Bachman’s Fairview consignment.

“She is by a stallion who is off to an incredible start,” Wellman said of the filly. “Nyquist was obviously based in California, so I was very familiar with him and his record speaks for itself.”

Eclipse and Gary Barber campaign Gretzky the Great (Nyquist), who is now Breeders’ Cup-bound after winning the GI Summer S. at Woodbine last month. Eclipse enjoyed more success with the Darley stallion when Thinking, campaigned in partnership with Farfellow Farm, graduated at Keeneland Saturday.

Hip 75 is out of Moon River Gal (Malibu Moon), a daughter of multiple Grade I placed High Heeled Hope (Salt Lake) and a half-sister to graded winners Lady T N T (Justin Phillip) and Sweet Hope (Lemon Drop Kid). The yearling was bred by Bachman, who purchased Moon River Gal with the filly in utero for $270,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November sale.

“This filly, to me, was a standout here at the sale,” Wellman said. “To my eye, physically she was a woman amongst girls. She is by a hot freshman sire and she has some female pedigree to bolster the quality. You add on the fact that she is Cal-bred and it’s the complete package. She was certainly the first round draft pick.”

Of plans for the yearling Wellman said, “We are going to ship her out of state to Florida to get her broken, but she’ll make her way back to California to take advantage of the Cal-bred incentives.”

Not This Time Filly for Nichols

Trainer Gary Mandella purchased a filly by hot freshman sire Not This Time for $95,000 early in Monday’s Fasig-Tipton California sale. Mandella signed the ticket on hip 64 on behalf of longtime owner Tom Nichols. The yearling is out of Masterful Lass (Mizzen Mast) and is a half-sister to stakes-placed Avanti Bello (Include). Bred by Lou Neve, the chestnut filly was consigned by Adrian Gonzalez’s Checkmate Thoroughbreds.

“I just thought she was very athletic looking,” Mandella said. “We think she has a chance to be the right kind of horse. It’s not so much about her pedigree or her page, I just thought she looked the part and walked the part. She was the kind of athlete I like to take a shot with.”

Mandella said he expected the yearling will be seen on the racetrack next year.

“We will give her a month off to get over the stress and then go right back on,” he said. “Not This Time is certainly not going to hold you back in trying to get a 2-year-old to the races given what he is doing. I’m not going to rush her–because I never do–but I’m not opposed to her making the races at some point in her 2-year-old year. We will treat her like the good filly we think she is. I think she was worth every penny.”

Based in Omaha, Nebraska, Nichols campaigned 2003 GIII Hawthorne H. winner Keys to the Heart (Wild Again).

“[Nichols] has been with me for a few years,” Mandella said. “We have had some nice horses and some good luck. Hopefully she’ll be just a little bit better.”

Hanson All in Caps

Trainer Ryan Hanson, who purchased recent maiden special weight winner Teton Valley (Tapiture) for $26,000 from the Barton Thoroughbreds consignment at last year’s Fasig-Tipton California Yearlings Sale, went back to that family’s consignment Monday to acquire a colt by Dads Caps (hip 142) for $50,000. Hanson purchased the yearling on behalf of new client Linda Cannon.

“She’s from the Quarter Horse world,” Hanson said of Cannon. “They are joining us in the Thoroughbred world. He’s a very well-balanced colt and we hope he’s good.”

Hip 142 is out of Seeking the Ghost (Ghostzapper), a half-sister to multiple Grade I winner Pomeroy (Boundary). Richard Barton purchased the mare in foal to Jimmy Creed for $2,500 at the 2016 Keeneland November sale. That in utero filly sold for $130,000 at the 2019 OBS April sale. Seeking the Ghost produced an Upstart colt this year.

Dads Caps, winner of the 2014 and 2015 GI Carter H., stands at Barton Thoroughbreds for $2,500. His first foals are 2-year-olds this year, but the crop includes just three juveniles. He has 27 yearlings. In addition to hip 142, Barton Thoroughbreds sold another colt (hip 162) by the 10-year-old stallion for $50,000 to Sausalito Partners and a third colt (hip 203) for $40,000 to Maher Lutfallah.

While Dads Caps has yet to have his first winner, Hanson is no stranger to getting young stallions their first victories. The trainer sent out Weston, the first winner for freshman Hit It A Bomb, to win the GII Best Pal S. in August.

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Radical Change, Status Quo, or Middle Ground for New York Whip Rules?

New York has lagged other racing states in addressing changes to whip use designed to be more humane to Thoroughbreds. But not being an early adopter of controversial new rules can sometimes be an advantage, because regulators are able to assess what is and isn’t working in other jurisdictions before making potentially radical modifications to long-standing practices.

That was the tone of discussion during the Oct. 19 teleconference meeting of the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC), which conducted what amounted to a 2 1/4-hour opinion-gathering dialogue on whether or not the state should adopt new whipping rules. No new regulations were proposed and no official vote on the matter was taken Monday.

Balancing perception versus reality was a chief topic though, as it has been in nearly every other jurisdiction where more stringent whipping rules have been implemented this year.

The NYSGC heard from stakeholders who want the status quo preserved, those who want the whip barred outright, and those who would be comfortable with a middle-ground compromise that preserves safety and competitiveness while eliminating the brutal imagery that is increasingly viewed as socially unacceptable and a hindrance to growing the sport’s fan base.

The discussion unfolded against the backdrop of changes that have either already been implemented or are in the process of being codified into rules in various jurisdictions. At the strictest end of the spectrum, New Jersey is banning whip use altogether, except in emergency safety situations. California, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware and Ontario are in the midst of introducing new rules based on strike limits, and several of those models further incorporate the manner (underhanded or overhanded) in which a jockey can whip.

Detailed explanations were very much in order, because several NYSGC members said outright that they didn’t have a firm grasp of the state’s current whip-use policies. In particular, the concept of giving the horse a chance to respond after a certain amount of strikes needed to be clarified at the request of commissioners.

A panel of New York’s commission stewards–Braulio Baeza Jr., who is assigned to the New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks, Erinn Higgins of Finger Lakes, and Carmine Donofrio, a state steward emeritus, kicked off the discussion by outlining the current state standards on whipping.

Right now, New York stewards have broad powers to use discretion in issuing whip violations for imprudent or harmful whip usage. There are rules regulating a more cushioned construction of riding crops, but the “five strikes before giving a horse a chance to respond” standard is just a policy that the stewards adhere to and not an official rule. In order to gain licensure, a jockey must read and sign an acknowledgment that clearly spells out these parameters.

Baeza estimated that NYRA stewards impose about 10 penalties annually for whipping infractions, while Higgins said so far this year the Finger Lakes stewards have issued four.

“Most of the perception issues that we are dealing with now are in the stretch,” Baeza said. “And I don’t know how else to put it: We don’t have a problem. [Why are we] trying to fix something that’s not broken right now?”

Donofrio agreed, and added that if New York allowed riders to only carry whips for emergency safety use, it would be problematic for stewards to adjudicate violations.

“What if the jock says, ‘I thought my horse was going to prop, I had to hit him?'” Donofrio asked. “Are you going to call him a liar?”

The Jockeys’ Guild, represented by a trio of Hall-of-Fame riders–Mike Smith, John Velazquez, and Javier Castellano–spoke supportively of keeping the status quo in New York. The bulk of their comments focused on being able to maintain safety on horseback.

“People say, ‘Use the reins,'” Smith said. “Well let me tell you something: Try pulling on a horse that weighs 1,200 pounds. And if it ain’t working, all you have next is the riding crop. That’s all we have. If you take that away, trust me—the game becomes twice as dangerous. If not more.

“I’m in a state right now, in California where I’m riding, [and] they have rules that are extremely strict,” Smith continued. “They’ve changed our style of the way you’re supposed to use your crop and it’s not working here. We’re having a lot of trouble with it. The system’s set up to fail. You’re having riders being suspended [and] fined for literally, absolutely nothing, and it’s ruining our sport out here. Listening to the stewards there in [New York] speak, is the best that I’ve heard since this thing’s been going on. You guys have got it right.”

Smith said that the more humane versions of cushioned whips have made a huge positive difference in recent years, and he added that he’s fine with rules that mandate giving a horse a chance to respond before further striking. But trying to administer only underhanded strikes and trying to keep count of the total number of hits a jockey has delivered during the entirety of a race is too difficult, he said.

Yet retired Hall-of-Fame jockey Chris McCarron argued that Smith is only partly right in his assessment.

“I could not agree more with Mike that the current riding crops are much kinder to utilize,” McCarron said. “However, I disagree with Mike on one point [where he explained] it can be difficult or impossible to strike the horse backhanded or underhanded, especially on the left side. I think we’re talking about world-class athletes here, and any change that may happen, I think these guys have the capabilities of adjusting to change.”

James Gagliano, The Jockey Club’s president and chief operating officer, said that while he respects the opinions of the men and women on horseback, it’s his organization’s duty to take a broader view on whipping that encompasses public perceptions as they relate to the longer-term health of the industry.

“In today’s world, things are changing,” Gagliano said. “To me and to The Jockey Club, we see a future where hitting an animal with a stick won’t be acceptable, and certainly not for urging [horses to run faster]. We recognize that these are difficult things to change. It’s going to take awhile.”

Matt Iuliano, the executive vice president and executive director of The Jockey Club, said his organization has amassed years of customer survey data to back up that point.

“We certainly didn’t enter into this decision lightly, to eliminate the use of the whip for encouragement,” Iuliano said. “It was a long and painful process that was developed over several years when attempts to regulate the use of the whip had done very, very little to change public perception on its use.

“I realize it’s a difficult pill to swallow because crops have been in racing for decades, if not centuries,” Iuliano continued. “But that perception of striking has changed. In the public’s eye, it’s something that has been a deterrent to them for greater participation of younger, new fans that may not have been to racing in the past. They see that as a significant barrier. And when we see it, that tells us it’s something that needs to be addressed.

“It’s a very, very difficult issue,” Iuliano summed up. “The representatives from the Jockeys’ Guild, they’re very informed. They have practical experience on the matter. But I think the time has come where we have to look at some of these other inputs that come into this decision, and begin to apply weight to those inputs.”

NYRA vice president of racing operations Martin Panza advocated for a middle ground approach that balances safety needs while addressing perception problems. He backed up his position by saying NYRA has been seeing increased criticism of whip use via social media feedback, and he said NYRA has been working with the Guild since January on trying to craft uniform policies that would apply nationwide.

“I think we all agree they need to use the whip. [Horses] are herd animals. They will not go up the rail through a hole on their own,” Panza said. “The jockey needs to be able to use the whip. We disagree with New Jersey with taking the whip away completely.

“[New York’s stakeholders] have an advantage, because currently, you’ve got Woodbine and California with rules in place that only allow a horse to be hit underhanded,” Panza explained. “And so we have the ability as a group to watch that for the next six months and see if, in fact, that is the right way to go.”

Panza said the nation’s top racing jurisdictions have an opportunity to set uniform policies that will have a trickle-down effect on smaller tracks within the nation’s racing hierarchy. Even though some state racing commissions have already adopted differing whip rules, he said it’s never too late to go back and tweak them for the sake of practical improvement.

Will Alempijevic, the executive director of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, said that New York’s stewards and jockeys are collectively doing a “great job” and that “there does not seem to be an issue from our constituents.” But, he added, the racing community should be mindful that “looking internally all the time is not necessarily the best path going forward, and we do need to look outward and grow the fan base.”

The NYSGC gave few clues at the end of the meeting as to when, how, or if it would be crafting new rules, although commissioner Peter Moschetti indicated that a complete whipping ban wasn’t likely. He also said that the commission needs to make sure that “bad behavior” doesn’t become “a business decision” for jockeys who decide that the benefits of breaking the whip rules to win a big race outweigh the penalties for doing so.

Panza underscored near the end of the meeting that, “The train’s left the station. California is at six strikes and it’s underhand. Kentucky [is mandating] six strikes, albeit overhand. Whether we like it in New York or not, we’re probably going to have to do something, or publicly we’re going to get attacked.”

In response to that point, NYSGC chairman Barry Sample asked rhetorically, “I’ve been hearing most of the day that in New York, we’re doing a good job. And now I’m hearing that if we continue to do the job that we’re doing, we’re going to get attacked?”

Panza answered by way of example: “I think when you run a Triple Crown and you can hit a horse six times in the [GI] Kentucky Derby, and six times in the [GI] Preakness [S.], and [then] you come to New York [for the GI Belmont S.] and you can hit him 30 times, I’m pretty sure NBC is going to bring that up.”

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