Hall Hopes Racing Success Carries Into Sales Ring

Jason Hall, owner, breeder and bloodstock agent, was represented by his first graded stakes win as an owner when Zero Tolerance (Mizzen Mast) captured the GIII Las Cienegas S. at Santa Anita Sunday. The Idaho native will look for that success to continue in the sales ring when he offers three short yearlings through the Small Batch Sales consignment Wednesday at the Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale.

Hall, who co-bred Zero Tolerance and co-owns the 4-year-old filly with Custom Truck Accessories, Joe Kelly and Michael Riordan, wasn't able to watch the Las Cienegas in person.

“I actually didn't make it [to Santa Anita] because I needed to head to Keeneland,” Hall said Monday. “And I'm just a tiny bit superstitious and it seems like she runs really well when we're not there. So I figured it was a win-win for me to get on a plane and head to Lexington.”

Hall continued, “I have had a handful of other graded stakes wins as a breeder, but as an owner this was a first. It was incredible. I was with my wife, Silvia, and she's a big part of the program. So for her and me to be able to share that together, it was really, really nice. It was something I'll never forget.”

Zero Tolerance is out of Torreadora (El Prado {Ire}), a mare Hall purchased for $8,200 at the 2017 Keeneland January sale. The Sam-Son Farm-bred mare was not in foal at the sale and that may have helped the agent land a bargain.

“The market is really biased against open mares and I am willing to take an open mare if they look the part,” Hall explained. “This mare could really run, I watched quite a few of her videos going into the sale. She had really nice mechanics. And of course she is from that heralded Sam-Son family of No Class and Smart Strike and Dance Smartly. And she's by one of the all-time greats in El Prado.”

Hall sold Torreadora privately after her son El Tormenta (Stormy Atlantic) won the 2019 GII Connaught Cup S. The gelding went on to win the GI Woodbine Mile and was named Canada's champion turf male.

Hall still has a piece of the family. He purchased the mare's now 2-year-old filly Domerelle (Munnings) for $75,000 at the 2020 Keeneland November sale.

“We sold the mare right after El Tormenta won the Grade II and of course he went on to win the Woodbine Mile,” Hall said. “The guy who bought her from me put the Munnings filly in Keeneland November and I just mentioned her to a client friend of mine in Orlando. We joined forces and got her bought. She was bought strictly to race.”

Hall has earned a reputation as an agent who buys promising mares on a budget.

“I came from the Joe Estes school where performance trumps pedigree,” Hall said, referring to the former Blood-Horse editor. “That's not to say I don't want as much pedigree as I can afford, but I would much prefer my bloodstock dollars go toward a mare with a race record than say an unraced or unplaced mare with a fancy pedigree. I just really lean in that direction.”

Hall admitted that competition for those types of mares has increased in recent years.

“They used to be very easy to come by back 10 or 15 years ago,” he said. “You could find a mare who had some performance that didn't really show up on a catalogue page, but I think people are starting to wise up and purchase mares with more performance, so it has made it a little more difficult in recent years.”

Hall owns around 30 mares, mostly in partnerships, and has about 20 horses in training.

“Generally, we sell whenever we can,” Hall said. “This is my livelihood, so whenever I can take some money off the table, I will. But that being said, the market has become so finicky in recent years that it's really hard to get what you think some horses are worth. So with those horses, we go on to the races.”

He continued, “Zero Tolerance is a really good example of that. Somebody in Kentucky offered me $100,000 for her as a yearling. I thought she was worth more and they wanted me to ship the horse back there just so they could look at her and the deal fell through obviously.”

Hall will be represented as co-breeder of three yearlings Wednesday at Keeneland. Leading off the trio is a colt by Munnings out of stakes-placed Heavens Stairway (Decarchy) (hip 575).

“We've got a Munnings colt out of a really talented stakes mare,” Hall said of the yearling. “This is her second foal. He is a big, strong, strapping horse. I think everyone is going to be drawn to him. And of course, they don't get any hotter than Munnings.”

Hip 643 is by the late Malibu Moon out of Meet and Greet (Tribal Rule), who is a half-sister to graded winner Bourbon Resolution (New Year's Day) and from the family of graded winners Salute the Sarge and Chelokee.

“We have a Malibu Moon out of an impeccable female family,” Hall said. “At one point, 50% of everything in the family had graded stakes credentials. Malibu Moon is a little bit of a twilight sire. Now that he has passed, the commercial market isn't paying quite as much attention to him, but the quality is still there.”

Hall's final offering Wednesday is hip 659, a filly from the first crop of multiple graded stakes winner Flameaway (Scat Daddy). She is out of Mizzen Donald (Mizzen Mast), a half-sister to multiple graded winner Bright Thought (Hat Trick {Jpn}).

“I am playing the second-year sire angle with our Flameaway filly out of a Mizzen Mast mare,” Hall said. “She is a big, stretchy thing with some nice substance. She looks like she'll be very versatile.”

While heading to Keeneland as a seller, Hall is always on the lookout for something to buy.

“I am always looking,” he said. “I don't have to buy a horse at this sale, but if the right mare with the right racing credentials falls in my lap, we will certainly swing. I also have a few buddies who are interested in a short yearling that we would put in training in the fall and let it tell us what it is capable of. If there is money to be made with him in the sale, fine, if not we go to the races.”

Hall has been a racing fan since his childhood in Idaho.

“From an early age, my dad raced at the little bush tracks in Idaho,” he recalled. “One day my grandfather brought me some copies of the old Thoroughbred Record when it was still in newspaper form. I was hooked from that point on. I've never stopped.”

In addition to Zero Tolerance's graded stakes success, Hall also enjoyed stakes success as a co-owner with Boise (Temple City), a $27,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase who won the Gold Rush S. at Golden Gate in December.

“I do a little of everything,” Hall said. “Like all of us, we have our strengths and weaknesses. For me, I think my strength is finding value in mares and planning matings. I bought some really good yearlings that we race. Pinhooking weanlings to yearlings really isn't my thing. I would say I gravitate more to the breeding end of the game.”

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Zero Tolerance Outlasts Fast-Closing Tapwater In Las Cienegas

Zero Tolerance stalked favored Hear My Prayer to the top of the lane en route to a hard fought head victory over late-closing Tapwater in Sunday's Grade 3, $100,000 Las Cienegas Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., thus providing trainer Ruben Alvarado with his first career stakes win. Ridden by Flavien Prat, Zero Tolerance, a 4-year-old grey daughter of Mizzen Mast, got about 6 ½ furlongs down the hillside turf course in 1:13.26.

Drawn on the far outside, Zero Tolerance fell into a perfect trip as speedy Hear My Prayer went to the lead, maintaining a one-length advantage past the half mile pole, but the winner gained the advantage at the dirt crossing at the top of the stretch and was all out to hold off the runner-up.

“Unbelievable, I don't have the words to say,” said Alvarado, a longtime assistant to Peter Miller, who has taken a hiatus from training, handing over his stable to Alvarado.  “I remember I had this moment when Roy H won the Breeders' Cup (Sprint, in 2017 and 2018).  That was a moment I would never forget…

“That's her (Zero Tolerance), I knew she could run.  She's a horse that can come off the pace or be on the lead. … She loves six and a half, so I knew she was going to run huge for me. She was a little fresh, so that was what we expected from her.”

A winner of a five-furlong turf allowance at Del Mar on Nov. 20, Zero Tolerance was off as the second choice at 2-1 in a field of seven older fillies and mares and paid $6.00, $3.80 and $2.60.

Owned by Custom Truck Accessories, Jason Hall, Joe Kelly and Michael Riordan, Zero Tolerance, who is out of the El Prado mare Torreadora was a winner of Santa Anita's ungraded Unzip Me Stakes two starts back on Oct. 3 and she is now a two-time stakes winner with four wins from six overall starts.  With the winner's share of $60,000, she increased her earnings to $215,000.

“She was traveling super relaxed and it does help to have a target, I think it helped her to relax,” said Prat, who although he didn't ride her in her most recent start, has now won three of his four engagements with her. “She can be a little on her toes sometimes, but she was relaxing well today and when it was time to make a move, she responded well.”

Ridden by Joe Bravo, Tapwater was unhurried from her rail post position, running next to last after the first quarter mile. In her first try down the hillside, the 6-year-old mare, who was shortening up out of a series of two turn races, rallied impressively while trying to drift in and just missed. Off at 10-1 Tapwater paid $10.00 and $5.00 while finishing 1 ½ lengths better than a tiring Hear My Prayer.

The 8-5 favorite with Juan Hernandez, Hear My Prayer paid $2.40 to show.

With the win, Prat notched his third on the day and he went to get his fourth victory of the afternoon in the next race, making 21 for the meet, four better than runner-up John Velazquez. The Las Cienegas also marked Prat's meet-leading sixth stakes win as well.

Fractions on the race were 21.99, 44.16 and 1:06.92.

Racing resumes with a special four-day holiday week on Friday, with first post time for an eight-race card at 12:30 p.m.

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Zero Tolerance Will Head Down The Hill In Sunday’s Las Cienegas

A stakes winner over the course, Zero Tolerance heads a field of eight older fillies and mares going 6 ½ furlongs down Santa Anita's hillside turf in this Sunday's Grade 3, $100,000 Las Cienegas Stakes.

Vladimir Cerin's Hear My Prayer and Bob Baffert's Ginja, a pair of distaffers in good recent form, also rate big chances in what will be their initial tries down Santa Anita's unique hillside layout. Throw in Baffert's classy comebacker Beautiful Gift and John Sadler's newcomer, Gold for Kitten, as well as his veteran stakes winner Constantia, and the Las Cienegas has the look of a wide open affair.

A Kentucky-bred 4-year-old filly by Mizzen Mast, Zero Tolerance stalked the pace and rallied impressively to take the ungraded Unzip Me Stakes over the course three starts back on Oct. 3 and was subsequently a close fourth going one mile on turf in the G3 Autumn Miss Stakes on Oct. 30.

Ridden for the first time by Umberto Rispoli, she sped to a 1 ¼ length win at 3-5 in a second condition allowance on Nov. 20 at Del Mar. Originally trained by Peter Miller, she'll be saddled by Ruben Alvarado on Sunday as she seeks her first graded win and her fourth overall from six starts. Owned by Custom Truck Accessories, Jason Hall, Joe Kelly and Michael Riordan, Zero Tolerance will be reunited with Flavien Prat, who was aboard for the Unzip Me win as well as a maiden score four starts back on Aug. 20.

Owned by Holly and David Wilson, Hear My Prayer has been idle since rallying for a solid third place finish, beaten three quarters of a length in the five furlong turf Senator Ken Maddy Stakes at Del Mar on Nov. 5. Originally based at Gulfstream Park, Hear My Prayer made her first start for Cerin two starts back in five furlong turf classified allowance Aug. 26, a race in which she pressed the pace and prevailed by a half length.

A two-time ungraded stakes winner sprinting on turf at Gulfstream, Hear My Prayer enters the Las Cienegas as a fresh commodity with a solid resume and will be ridden for the third consecutive time by Juan Hernandez. A 5-year-old Florida-bred mare by the Yes It's True stallion The Big Beast, Hear My Prayer is 11-5-0-3 overall with earnings of $218,975.

Idle since well beaten as the 2-1 favorite in the G2 Black Eyed Susan May 14 at Pimlico, Baoma Corporation's Beautiful Gift, who was a close second in the G2 Santa Anita Oaks April 3 and a game head winner of the G3 Santa Ysabel three starts back on March 7, should be attentive to the pace coming off the bench in what will be her first try on grass.

Although ridden by John Velazquez in her last three starts, Beautiful Gift will be handled for the first time by Drayden Van Dyke on Sunday. Favored in three out of her five starts, Beautiful Gift has the class to rate a major contender.

Perhaps the biggest question mark in the field due to the fact she'll be trying turf for the first time, Ginja nonetheless is in solid form and with Mike Smith riding her back, well-spotted. In a gutty effort, she was pressed every step of the way when second, beaten a neck by her stablemate Velvet Slippers in a one mile first condition allowance Nov. 19 at Del Mar.

Owned by Jill Baffert, Ginja is a 4-year-old filly by Quality Road, out of the Forestry mare Sequoia Queen. With an overall mark of 9-1-5-1, she'll be looking for her first graded stakes win.

Idle since a close third in an ungraded stakes going a mile and one sixteenth on synthetic at Woodbine Oct. 31, Gold for Kitten, who was claimed five starts back for $50,000 at Churchill Downs May 6, has never been worse than third in six starts—winning four, and she'll get the first time services of a red hot John Velazquez. A 4-year-old filly by Kitten's Joy, she's owned by DARRS Inc.

With her last win coming five starts back in the ungraded Mizdirection Stakes going six furlongs on turf here April 17, Sadler will also be well represented by Constantia, who takes a significant drop in class off a sixth place finish going one mile on grass in the G2 Goldikova Stakes at Del Mar Nov. 6. A 5-year-old mare by Munnings, Constantia was bred in Kentucky by her owner, Keith Abrahams. Although second going 6 ½ furlongs in the G2 Monrovia Stakes four starts back on June 5, Constantia, who has four wins from 16 starts, will be making her first start down the hillside turf course.

THE GRADE 3 LAS CIENEGAS WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 7 of 9 Approximate post time 3:30 p.m. PT

  1. Tapwater—Joe Bravo—120
  2. Hear My Prayer—Juan Hernandez–120
  3. Constantia—Umberto Rispoli—122
  4. Quiet Secretary—Tyler Baze—120
  5. Beautiful Gift—Drayden Van Dyke—122
  6. Ginja—Mike Smith—120
  7. Zero Tolerance—Flavien Prat—122
  8. Gold for Kitten—John Velazquez–120

First post time for a nine-race card on Sunday is at 12:30 p.m., admission gates will open at 10:30 a.m.

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Spanish Loveaffair Meets Madone in Autumn Miss

It an East versus West match-up in the GIII Autumn Miss S. at Santa Anita Saturday when Spanish Loveaffair (Karakontie {Jpn}) meets Madone (Vancouver {Aus}). Runner-up in the GIII Regret S. at Churchill May 29, Spanish Loveaffair faded to eighth in the July 10 GI Belmont Oaks Invitational S. and was fourth in Saratoga's GII Lake Placid S. over a yielding course Aug. 21. She enters off a win in the Pebbles S. at Belmont Sept. 19.

Winner of the GIII Senorita S. earlier this year, Madone captured the GII San Clemente S. July 24. The dark bay rallied for fifth in the GI Del Mar Oaks Aug. 21 and filled the same spot in the Jockey Club Oaks Invitational S. at Belmont Sept. 18.

Peter Miller saddles a filly on the rise in Zero Tolerance (Mizzen Mast). Rallying from well back to miss by just a nose on debut at Del Mar Aug. 1, the gray graduated on dirt next out there Aug. 20 and captured the grassy Unzip Me S. at Santa Anita Oct. 3.

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