Gun Runner to $125,000 at Three Chimneys

Leading first-crop sire Gun Runner will see a substantial fee raise for the 2022 breeding season, when his live-foal-stands-and-nurses fee will get a hike to $125,000. He stood for $50,000 in 2021.

Gun Runner is the sire of five individual stakes winners, including undefeated multiple Grade I winner Echo Zulu, winner of the Spinaway S. and the Frizette S. He is also the sire of GI Hopeful winner Gunite, as well as Grade II winners Pappacap and Wicked Halo. On the first-crop sire list, he leads by earnings, black type winners, graded stakes winners and horses, and Grade I winners and horses.

He is also the leading sire of 2yos, and his yearlings have sold at auction for up to $975,000.

The 2017 Horse of the Year, Gun Runner started his career at $70,000 in 2020, but was trimmed to $50,000 in 2021 as part of an overall reduction of fees at Three Chimneys due to COVID-19.

Palace Malice sees a reduction from $20,000 to $12,500.

The complete roster with fees at Three Chimneys for 2022 follows. All fees are live foal, stands and nurses.

Gun Runner, $125,000

Volatile, $15,000

Palace Malice, $12,500

Sky Mesa, $12,500

Sharp Azteca, $5,000

Will Take Charge, $5,000

Funtastic, $5,000

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Authentic, Improbable, Monomoy Girl to Fight Out Horse Of The Year

Authentic (Into Mischief), winner of the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic; ‘TDN Rising Star’ Improbable (City Zip), a dual Grade I winner and runner-up in the Classic; and Monomoy Girl (Tapizar), who capped a four-for-four season with a second victory in the GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Distaff, are the finalists for 2020 Horse of the Year as Eclipse Award finalists were announced Saturday on TVG.

Authentic is one of three individual Eclipse finalists in four separate categories for the all-conquering Into Mischief, whose daughter Gamine was nominated for both 3-year-old filly and champion female sprinter in a campaign that saw her post wide-margin victories in the GI Longines Acorn S. and GI Test S. against her peers and a defeat of fellow dual-category finalist Serengeti Empress (Alternation) in the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint. Into Mischief’s third finalist is Dayoutoutoftheoffice, who defeated Vequist (Nyquist) in the GI Frizette S. in October before the latter turned the tables on Breeders’ Cup Friday at Keeneland. Nyquist is the lone freshman sire of 2020 to be represented by a finalist.

Improbable, who is also a favorite for champion dirt male, was a convincing winner of the GI Gold Cup at Santa Anita, the GI Whitney S. and GI Awesome Again S. before falling 2 1/4 lengths shy in the Classic. Monomoy Girl missed the entirety of the 2019 season with a series of setbacks, but proved the queen of the mountain in the dirt female division, completing her undefeated campaign with a smooth win in the Distaff over Valiance (Tapit). She later sold to Spendthrift Farm for $9.5 million at the Fasig-Tipton Night of the Stars and remains in training for a 6-year-old season in 2020.

Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg}) was also named a finalist in two divisions (dirt male and sprinter), while recent Lane’s End Farm import Daredevil is the only other stallion to have multiple finalists, with GI Preakness S. heroine Swiss Skydiver and GI Kentucky Oaks upsetter Shedaresthedevil each in the running for champion 3-year-old filly.

The other Eclipse Award finalists, which include no fewer than six ‘TDN Rising Stars’ are as follows:

2YO Male

Essential Quality (Tapit), ‘TDN Rising Star

Fire At Will (Declaration of War)

Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music)

 

2YO Female

Aunt Pearl (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}), ‘TDN Rising Star

Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief)

Vequist (Nyquist)

 

3YO Male

Authentic (Into Mischief)

Nadal (Blame), ‘TDN Rising Star

Tiz The Law (Constitution)

 

3YO Female

Gamine (Into Mischief), ‘TDN Rising Star

Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil)

Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil)

 

Older Dirt Male

Improbable (City Zip), ‘TDN Rising Star

Maximum Security (New Year’s Day)

Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg})

 

Dirt Female

Midnight Bisou (Midnight Lute)

Monomoy Girl (Tapizar)

Serengeti Empress (Alternation)

 

Male Sprinter

Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg})

Volatile (Violence)

Whitmore (Pleasantly Perfect)

 

Female Sprinter

Gamine (Into Mischief), ‘TDN Rising Star

Glass Slippers (GB) (Dream Ahead)

Serengeti Empress (Alternation)

 

Turf Male

Channel Maker (English Channel)

Order of Australia (Ire) (Australia {GB})

Zulu Alpha (Street Cry {Ire})

 

Turf Female

Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB})

Rushing Fall (More Than Ready), ‘TDN Rising Star

Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal)

 

Steeplechase

Moscato (GB) (Hernando {Fr})

Rashaan (Ire) (Manduro {Ger})

Snap Decision (Hard Spun)

 

Horse of the Year

Authentic (Into Mischief)

Improbable (City Zip)

Monomoy Girl (Tapizar)

 

Owner

Godolphin

Klaravich Stables

Spendthrift/MyRacehorse/Madaket/Starlight

 

Breeder

Peter Blum Thoroughbreds

Calumet Farm

WinStar Farm LLC

 

Jockey

Irad Ortiz, Jr.

Joel Rosario

John Velazquez

 

Apprentice

Luis Cardenas

Yarmarie Correa

Alexander Crispin

 

Trainer

Steve Asmussen

Bob Baffert

Brad Cox

 

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Top Videos of the Year

It was a record-breaking year for video production at the TDN, and for video views, with over 3.8 million TDN videos and advertisers’ commercials shown on our platforms. We took a look to see what you were watching the most. Here are our top 10 videos of the year, as watched on the TDN’s YouTube Channel and the TDN site combined. Click on the red links below to watch.

  1. Zenyatta and Her Candy Ride Filly at Lane’s End. 108,960 views. She may be the fan-favorite of all time.
  2. Meet the First Foal from Songbird, By Arrogate. 91,160 views. Even though this video was published in March of 2019, it had legs, racking up over 90,000 views in 2020.
  3. The Incomparable, Invincible, Unbeatable Cigar. 56,962 views. This 20-minute video wasn’t published until October 16 under the TDN Look banner, but still racked up an impressive amount of views…even if it was a little depressing when Tom Durkin told us that what he had really said was “unconquerable” and not “incomparable.” Whoops.
  4. A.P. Indy Turns 30. 51,968 views. Here’s another video with legs: published in March, 2019, it racked up over 50,000 views in 2020 alone.
  5. Authentic Retired to Spendthrift. 49,163 views. The retirement and arrival of the sure-to-be Horse of the Year at Spendthrift was seen almost 50,000 times.
  6. The Late Arrogate’s First Yearlings go to Market. 44,189 views. Between the video on his Songbird foal and this one featuring his first yearlings, Arrogate was a popular, if sadly tragic, topic for viewers in 2020.
  7. Taylor Made Stallions on the Rise, 41,217 views. Katie Ritz talks to Frank and Ben Taylor about first-crop sire Not This Time, Midnight Storm and Taylor Made’s new arrival, Instagrand.
  8. An Unexpected Storybook Ending for Midnight Bisou. 36, 963 views. Owner Jeff Bloom reminisces on the incredible career of Midnight Bisou as she prepares to sell at the Fasig-Tipton November sale.
  9. Songbird Celebrates Her Second Mother’s Day. 33,296 views. This addition gives Songbird has two of the top 10 videos of the year. People clearly love checking in with the top mares.
  10. Volatile Settling in at Three Chimneys, 26,182 views. New stallion visits are always popular, and Volatile sat just off the pace of Authentic as this year’s leader.
  11. Tour Newmarket With John Berry, 23,052 views. Early on in the pandemic, we tried to help people feel as if they were getting out of their homes with video tours. John Berry was kind enough to take us on a multi-part tour of Newmarket and the series drew tens of thousands of views.

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Volatile Settling in at Three Chimneys

Two years ago, dual Eclipse Champion Gun Runner (Candy Ride {Arg}) joined the Three Chimneys’ stallion program after collecting six Grade I wins for the farm and partner Winchell Thoroughbreds. This year another Three Chimneys-owned racehorse in Volatile, a son of Violence campaigned by Three Chimneys and Phoenix Thoroughbred III, has been added to the roster for 2021 and will stand for an initial fee of $17,500.

Before even stepping on a racetrack, the imposing gray was one to watch.

His stakes-winning dam Melody Lady (Unbridled’s Song) was out of the dual Grade I winner Lady Tak (Mutakdim) and when he was a yearling, his full sister Buy Sell Hold became the first winner for their sire and then two week’s later, Violence’s first stakes winner in the Kentucky Juvenile S.

The young colt caught buyers’ attention a few months later at the Keeneland September Sale, including no less of a judge than Kerri Radcliffe.

The agent was on the lookout for a racehorse for the Three Chimneys-Phoenix Thoroughbred partnership, and the son of Violence checked all the right boxes.

“He was a really good-looking horse with plenty of scope and length,” Three Chimneys’ Tom Hamm recalled. “One of his great attributes that the team really liked was the way he moved. He was very impressive and athletic-looking. He had a lot of power and leverage behind.”

The partnership went to $850,000 to purchase the youngster, making him the highest-priced yearling by Violence to date.

A case of mild tendonitis kept Volatile from the starting gate as a juvenile, but trainer Steve Asmussen knew he was just biding his time with the colt.

“Once Steve got his hands on him he realized that he was really fast, so he just wanted to be patient and take his time,” Hamm said.

Volatile made his debut in the summer of his sophomore season at Ellis Park, defeating maiden rivals at six furlongs. He came up 1 1/4-lengths short in his next start, but bounced back with a three-length win last November at Churchill Downs going six furlongs.

“Even with a bit of a troubled trip, he ran some impressive numbers and an impressive time,” Hamm said of the 1:09:10 finish. “That was kind of the beginning of his breakout.”

Volatile made easy work of his 4-year-old debut the next spring at Oaklawn Park, winning by an eye-catching 7 ½ lengths.

Stepping up to stakes company in his next start, he showed the same brilliance in winning the Aristides S. The 8 length-victor stopped the clock at 1:07.57- just .02 seconds short of the track record.

“Volatile’s win in the Aristides was a very visually-impressive race,” Hamm said. “His 112 Beyer was the highest in 2020 for any horse at any distance on any surface. If you watched the race, it was one of the most impressive things because he was actually geared down on the stretch. I think he proved in that race that he was a very special horse.”

Sent off as the favorite next out in the GI Alfred G. Vanderbilt H., Volatile broke first under Ricardo Santana Jr. and never looked back as he defeated a field of all Grade I winners and ran a :22.94 final quarter.

“Winning the Vanderbilt just verified what we already believed–that he could compete at the Grade I level,” Hamm said. “His performance in that race, coupled with the performance in the Aristides solidified him as one of the most talented horses out there in 2020.”

The four-year-old was set for his next start in the GII Vosburgh S. when, days before the race, he was injured with a hairline fracture to his right front cannon bone.

“Volatile was training excellent leading up to the Vosburgh,” Hamm said. “We were going to use that race as a prep for the Breeders’ Cup, and then unfortunately he came up with an injury. He had already done enough at that point, and we thought it was time to bring him to the farm and get him ready for his stallion career.”

Hamm said that while Volatile excelled as a sprinter, he believes the colt would have been dangerous stretching out as well.

“Volatile was obviously very fast and a good sprinter, but honestly, he’s built like a miler. He’s got a lot of stretch and length to him. Actually Steve thought he could be a good one-turn mile horse, but when the Aristides was right in front of us and he was running so well, there was really no reason to change at that point and unfortunately we didn’t get the chance down the road, but we think he could have been a good miler as well.”

“He’s been overwhelmingly popular with the breeders,” Hamm continued. “We think he’s got that wow factor and that he’s going to do really well.”

When asked what it means to be able to retire a horse to stud that raced in the Three Chimneys silks, Hamm responded, “You know, it means a lot to Three Chimneys and to the Torrealba family. It’s one of our main goals not only to be able to compete at the highest level in racing, but to be able to develop our own stallions on the racetrack. It’s a great tribute to our entire team and the hard work that everybody here puts in. It’s something we’re very proud of and it’s one of our main goals at Three Chimneys.”

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