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TUESDAY, 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Arqana=s Deauville sales ring | Zuzanna Lupa
IN TDN AMERICA TODAYPEDIGREE INSIGHTS: ARCH’S FINAL CROP Andrew Caulfield investigates the racetrack success of the final
crop of the late Arch. Click or tap here to go straight to TDN
America.
FEBRUARY SALES CIRCUITMOVES TO DEAUVILLE
Just shy of 500 horses have been catalogued as Arqana's
season starts on Tuesday with its two-day February Sale in
Deauville.
The 3-year-old Learning To Fly (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}) led last
year's mixed auction when sold for i300,000 by Teo Ah Khing
and Mayfair Speculators, but this time around it may well be
breeding prospects who steal the limelight. The sale features the
conclusion of a dispersal of the stock of Issam Fares, which
began last December, as well as the dispersal from the estate of
the late Marquise de Moratalla, owner-breeder of French Classic
winner Tin Horse (Ire) (Sakhee).
The latter is being handled by Alban Chevalier du Fau's
Channel Consignment, which will send 12 fillies and mares
through the ring, including Graciously (GB) (Shamardal), a
half-sister to G1 Falmouth S. winner Giofra (Fr) (Dansili {GB})
who is being sold as lot 119 in foal to Invincible Spirit (Ire). Also
among the draft is Red Whisper (Fr) (Redoute's Choice {Aus}), a
dual winner at three from the family of Tin Horse (lot 29), and
the G3 Prix Chloe winner Wilside (Ire) (Verglas {Ire}), now 13
and the dam of stakes winner Sarigan (Fr) (Teofilo {Ire}). She is
being sold with a late May cover to Wootton Bassett (GB) as
lot 122.
Cont. p2
RACING TO RESUME ON WEDNESDAY After a six-day shutdown sparked by six equine influenzapositives last week, British racing will resume on Wednesday in aArisk -managed manner.@ The initial six cases were all from the yard of National Hunttrainer Donald McCain, while on Sunday night four positiveswere confirmed from the yard of Newmarket trainer SimonCrisford. Brant Dunshea, the British Horseracing Authority=s ChiefRegulatory Officer, said, AOur approach since hearing about thefirst positive results last Wednesday has been based onaccumulating as much information as we could as quickly aspossible so we could properly understand the risks of thisvirulent strain of flu spreading to more horses. That would beharmful to them and damaging to any trainers= yards thatbecame infected. It has also been our intention to ensure thatwe avoid an issue that could result in a long-term disruption toracing with the risk of many of our major events being undulyimpacted.@ Cont. p2
TDN EUROPE • PAGE 2 OF 6 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
February Sales Circuit Moves To Deauville Cont. from p1
Among five mares to be offered in foal to Le Havre (Ire) is the
Group 3-placed Mark Of An Angel (Ire) (Mark Of Esteem {Ire}),
the dam of GIII Santa Barbara S. and G3 Park Express S. winner
Queen Blossom (Jeremy). From the Fairway Consignment draft,
she will sell on Wednesday as lot 368.
A late call-up to the sale is the 3-year-old Forestiere (Fr)
(Rajsaman {Fr}), a half-sister to La Sardane (Fr) (Kingsalsa),
whose race record stretches to wins at group and graded level in
France and America. She is slated as a wild card in the draft of
the Garcon family's Haras de la Hotellerie as lot 125.
The Channel Consignment will sell the only other wild card (lot
65), the 3-year-old filly Karma Seeker (Ire), by Oasis Dream (GB)
out of a listed-winning half-sister to the Champion Hurdler
Katchit (GB) (Kalanisi {Ire}). Trained by Henri-Francois Devin,
Karma Seeker won at Pornichet over 1700 metres on Jan. 23.
The sale was extended to two days last year from a single
session in 2017. Turnover thus advanced by 37% to i2,797,800
for the 281 horses who changed hands at an average price of
i9,957. Trade begins each day at 10 a.m. local time.
Racing to Resume on Wednesday Cont. from p1
He added, AAfter analysis of thousands of samples, and no
further positive tests on Monday, we still only have two
confirmed sites of infection. We have put robust containment
measures in place around both. From the testing and analysis
conducted the disease appears to be contained at present. The
BHA veterinary committee believe that the swift controls on
movement that were put in place have clearly helped to restrict
the spread of this virus.@ Cont. p3
Tuesday's withdrawals: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 13, 16, 23, 25, 31, 32,37, 39, 42, 47, 48, 53, 54, 58, 59, 60, 62, 121, 126, 150, 157,158, 174, 184, 186, 189, 190, 198, 199, 200, 205, 207, 220, 231,233, 248.
Wednesday's withdrawals: 251, 252, 261, 275, 284, 303, 319,320, 323, 347, 366, 376, 390, 392, 398, 406, 411, 429, 449, 466,481, 491, 496, 497.
TDN EUROPE • PAGE 3 OF 6 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Horses train on Warren Hill in Newmarket amidst
the racing shutdown | Racing Post
Racing to Resume on Wednesday Cont.
AThere have been significant logistical issues associated with
testing and processing so many tests in such a short space of
time,@ he said. AFortunately, owing to the tireless efforts of the
Animal Health Trust, trainers and their local vets, and BHA staff,
the vast majority of yards which had been placed on hold will be
in a position to resume racing.
AClearly, there is some risk associated with returning to racing.
This risk has been assessed and, based on the evidence--and
ensuring biosecurity measures are in place--the level of risk is
viewed as acceptable.@
Jumps fixtures at Musselburgh and Plumpton and all-weather
fixtures at Southwell and Kempton will go ahead on Wednesday.
The BHA=s statement Monday evening revealed that individual
trainers= yards will be categorized according to the level of risk
they have been exposed to, and the ability of runners to return
to racing from those yards will depend on the risk categories the
yards are placed in. The statement read, AWe are finalising
overnight which category individual trainers will currently be
placed in. The BHA will contact trainers tomorrow morning to
inform them of their category and eligibility to run.@
Trainers with runners for Wednesday are advised to declare at
10 a.m., after which the BHA will review all declarations to
ensure none have been declared that do not meet the risk
criteria. Declarations for Thursday=s flat all-weather meetings
will now be at the 24 hour stage.
No entries or declarations will be accepted from horses that
have not been vaccinated in the previous six months. Trainers
will be required to provide a health declaration upon arrival at a
racecourse.
Cont. p4
IN TDN AUS/NZ TODAYSTAR WITNESS IN VOGUE AT INGLIS
Star Witness once again topped a session of the Inglis Classic
Yearling Sale when a A$350,000 filly topped the third day on
Monday. Click or tap here to go straight to TDN Aus/NZ.
Vice President, International OperationsGary King
Twitter: @garykingTDN
+ 1.732.320.0975
International EditorKelsey Riley
Twitter: @kelseynrileyTDN
European EditorEmma Berry
Twitter: @collingsberry
Associate International EditorHeather Anderson
Twitter: @HLAndersonTDN
Marketing ManagerAlayna Cullen
Twitter: @AlaynaCullen
Contributing EditorAlan Carasso
Twitter: @EquinealTDN
Cafe RacingSean Cronin
Tom Frary
Irish CorrespondentDaithi Harvey
Regular ColumnistsChris McGrath | Andrew Caulfield | John Berry
Kevin Blake | Tom Peacock
TDN EUROPE • PAGE 4 OF 6 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Racing to Resume on Wednesday Cont. The BHA=s Director of Equine Health and Welfare, David Sykes,said, AThe BHA and the veterinary committee agree that, onbalance, the level of risk is acceptable for a return to racing. AWe have developed a risk model, which the veterinarycommittee support, in order to assist the return to racing. Wewill observe closely those horses who are taken to theracecourse and will intervene as a precaution to prevent a horserunning or accessing a racecourse if we believe it might putother horses at risk of infection. The veterinary committee areof the view that an unprecedented amount of this disease hasbeen identified in Europe. This is not a typical endemic periodand it was essential that precautions be taken to protect thehorse population.@ British-trained horses were also cleared on Monday afternoonto run in Ireland. The Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board shutthe borders to British horses when the situation began tounravel last week, but Dr. Lynn Hillyer, chief veterinary officer atthe IHRB, confirmed on Monday the ban had been lifted. "They are fine [to run in Ireland], provided they can fill therequirements that we set out in our release on Friday night,which said that horses need to have received a vaccine forequine influenza which contains Clade 1 virus within eight weeksof their race,@ she said. "As long as they can fulfil thatrequirement, they are fine. Obviously, by definition, they will
only be coming from yards which aren't under restriction fromthe BHA. "Having had the opportunity to consider things over theweekend, the board have made the decision that we are able tosupport that movement--which is obviously good news foreverybody. The critical thing is they have to have had the correctvaccination within the eight weeks preceding the run."
DAM OF G1SW FAIRYLAND PASSES AT 12 Tally-Ho Stud mare Queenofthefairies (GB) (Pivotal {GB}--Landof Dreams {GB}, by Cadeaux Genereux {GB}), the dam of >TDNRising Star=, G1 Cheveley Park S. and G2 Lowther S. victressFairyland (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), passed away in January, the RacingPost reported on Monday. Also the dam of MGSW Now or Never(Ire) (Bushranger {Ire}) who was third in the G1 Irish 1000Guineas, the half-sister to European champion Dream Ahead(Diktat {GB}) was 12. Out of MGSW Land of Dreams, the Darley-bred Queenofthefairies brought 32,000gns from Tally-Ho duringthe Tattersalls July Sale in 2010. A 925,000gns yearling out ofthe 2017 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1, Fairylandraces for Evie Stockwell and her price was equaled byQueenofthefairies=s final produce at the 2018 version of the samesale, a juvenile filly by Muhaarar (GB) who went to Shadwell.
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TDN EUROPE • PAGE 5 OF 6 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
IN HONG KONG:
I Am Power (Ire), g, 4, Power (GB)--Bridge Note, by Stravinsky.
Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (,136k/i155k), 1000mT, :57.36. B-Dean
Harron & Ciaran Conroy. *,40,000 Ylg >16 GOFAUG. VIDEO
IN HONG KONG:
Coby Oppa (Aus), g, 3, The Factor--Amazing Tale (SW-US), by
Tale of the Cat. Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (A$166k), 1200mT, 1:09.14.
B-T L Moses (NSW). *A$55,000 Ylg >17 INGFEB. VIDEO
Prince of Gems (Aus), g, 4, I Am Invincible (Aus)--Rivers Secret
(Aus), by Flying Spur (Aus). Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (A$166k),
1200mT, 1:09.76. B-Yarraman Park Stud Pty Ltd, A D Mitchell,
H J Mitchell (NSW). *1ST TIME STARTER. **1/2 to Peace No
War (Aus) (War Pass), SP-Sin, $331,839. ***A$525,000 Ylg >16
MMGCYS. VIDEO
Lean Perfection (Aus), g, 4, Sebring (Aus)--Suzy Rocks (Aus), by
Rock of Gibraltar (Ire). Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (A$351k), 1200mT,
1:09.79. B-F Peisah (NSW). *A$150,000 Ylg >16 MGLJUN.
VIDEO
Super Star (Aus), g, 4, Snitzel (Aus)--Highland Daughter (Ire)
(GSP-Eng), by Kyllachy (GB). Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (A$166k),
1400mT, 1:22.37. B-GLenlogan Park Pty Ltd (Qld). *A$150,000
Ylg >16 MMGCYS; HK$4,700,000 HRA >18 HKIS. **1/2 to
Highland Beat (Aus) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}), SW & MGSP-Aus,
A$372,300. VIDEO
Enrichment (Aus), g, 4, @Teofilo(Ire)--Lovingthelimelight, by
Lemon Drop Kid. Sha Tin, 2-10, Hcp. (A$351k), 2000mT,
2:01.27. B-D Kerr & Mrs L Moore (Vic). *Formerly Belfast (Aus).
**GSP-Aus. ***NZ$130,000 >16 NZBJAN. VIDEO
IN JAPAN:
Fratelli (Aus), c, 3, Frankel (GB)--Lovetorn (Aus) (SW-SAf), by
Giant=s Causeway. Kyoto, 2-9, Cond. (A$183k), 1900m, 1:58.9.
B-China Horse Club Racing Pty Ltd, Grimley BBA Pty Ltd &
Worldwide Bloodstock (NSW). *Led throughout to score by
nine lengths. **A$850,000 Ylg >17 INGEAS. VIDEO
Tosen Alverta (Aus), m, 5, More Than Ready--Alverta (Aus)
(Hwt. Older Mare-Eng at 5-7f, G1SW-Aus, $984,933), by Flying
Spur (Aus). Kokura, 2-10, Cond. (A$374k), 1200mT, 1:08.8.
B-Arrowfield Pastoral Pty Ltd, Planette Thoroughbred Trading
& Belford Productions (NSW). *A$500,000 Ylg >15 INGEAS.
IN SOUTH AFRICA:
Run Fox Run (Aus), f, 3, Foxwedge (Aus)--Victory Cry (Aus), by
General Nediym (Aus). Kenilworth, 2-9, Hcp., 1000mT, :58.93.
O-Messrs C & R Kieswetter & Ridgemont Highlands (Nom:
Craig Carey); B-Mill Park, Quality TB Joint Venture (SA); T-Brett
Crawford. *Remained undefeated in two starts. **1/2 to
Guard of Honour (Aus) (Northern Meteor {Aus}), SW & GSP-
Aus, A$284,185. ***A$420,000 Ylg >17 INGEAS.
Monday, Tokyo, Japan
DAILY HAI QUEEN CUP-G3, ¥67,070,000
(US$607,387/£472,353/€538,629), Tokyo, 2-11, 3yo, f, 1600mT,
1:34.20, fm.
1--CHRONO GENESIS (JPN), 119, f, 3, Bago (Fr)
1st Dam: Chronologist (Jpn), by Kurofune
2nd Dam: In This Unison (Jpn), by Sunday Silence
3rd Dam: Rustic Belle, by Mr. Prospector
1ST GROUP WIN. O-Sunday Racing; B-Northern Farm (Jpn);
T-Takashi Saito; J-Yuichi Kitamura. ¥35,329,000. Lifetime
Record: G1SP-Jpn, 4-3-1-0. *1/2 to Normcore (Jpn) (Harbinger
{GB}), GSW-Jpn, $904,615. Werk Nick Rating: F. Click for the
eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2--Beach Samba (Jpn), 119, f, 3, Kurofune--Fusaichi Airedalre
(Jpn), by Sunday Silence. (-56,000,000 Ylg =17 JRHAJUL).
O-Makoto Kaneko Holdings; B-Northern Farm (Jpn);
-14,166,000.
3--Jodie (Jpn), 119, f, 3, Daiwa Major (Jpn)--Mystique (Ger), by
Monsun (Ger). (-12,000,000 Wlg =16 JRHAJUL). O-Tadakazu
Obama; B-Northern Farm (Jpn); -8,883,000.
Margins: NK, HF, NK. Odds: 1.10, 2.20, 27.40.
Also Ran: Curren Bouquetd=or (Jpn), Red Belle Deesse (Jpn),
Madras Check, Magic Realism (Jpn), Million Dreams (Jpn), Arc
Vigorous (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart or the free Equineline.com catalogue-
style pedigree. JRA Video.
TDN EUROPE • PAGE 6 OF 6 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
JAPANESE GROUP RACES B2019
Date Race Track
Feb. 16 Diamond S. (G3) Tokyo
Kyoto Himba S. (G3) Kyoto
Feb. 17 February S. (G1) Tokyo
Kokura Daishoten (G3) Kokura
Feb. 24 Nakayama Kinen (G2) Nakayama
Hankyu Hai (G3) Hanshin
Mar. 2 Ocean S. (G3) Nakayama
Tulip Sho (G2) Hanshin
Mar. 3 Yayoi Sho (G2) Nakayama
Mar. 9 Nakayama Himba S. (G3) Nakayama
Mar. 10 Fillies' Revue (G2) Hanshin
Kinko Sho (G2) Chukyo
Mar. 16 Flower Cup (G3) Nakayama
Falcon S. (G3) Chukyo
Mar. 17 Spring S. (G2) Nakayama
Hanshin Daishoten (G2) Hanshin
Mar. 23 Nikkei Sho (G2) Nakayama
Mainichi Hai (G3) Hanshin
Mar. 24 March S. (G3) Nakayama
Takamatsunomiya Kinen (G1) Chukyo
Mar. 30 Lord Derby Challenge Trophy (G3) Nakayama
Mar. 31 Osaka Hai (G1) Hanshin
Monday=s Result:
SAGA KINEN-Listed (Jpn-G3), ¥34,500,000
(US$312,428/£242,950/€277,094), Saga, 2-11, 4yo/up, 2000m,
2:05.70, sy.
1--HIRABOKU LA TACHE (JPN), 121, c, 4, Kinshasa no Kiseki (Aus)
1st Dam: Hiraboku Win (Jpn), by Wild Rush
2nd Dam: Encantado, by Rahy
3rd Dam: Floramera, by Seattle Slew
(¥9,000,000 Wlg =15 JRHAJUL). O-Hirata Farm; B-Tsuji Farm
(Jpn); T-Ryuji Okubo; J-Toshiya Yamamoto. -23,000,000.
Lifetime Record: GSP-Jpn, 11-5-2-0.
2--Regent Rock (Jpn), 123, h, 8, Daiwa Major (Jpn)--Lady Indy,
by A.P.Indy. O-Daisuke Miura; B-Hattori Farm (Jpn);
-6,900,000.
3--T O Energy (Jpn), 126, c, 4, by Kane Hekili (Jpn)--Silky Craft, by
Crafty Prospector. O-Tomoya Ozasa; B-Orient Farm (Jpn);
-2,300,000.
Margins: NK, 8, 2. Odds: 4.60, 25.40, 0.40.
SIRE LISTS Sponsored by
FOR ALL TDN SIRE LISTSBINCLUDING INDIVIDUAL CROP-YEAR REPORTS--VISIT WWW.THETDN.COM/TDN-SIRE-STATS/
Cumulative Second-Crop Sires by Graded Stakes Horsesfor stallions standing in Europe through Sunday, Feb. 10
Earnings represent worldwide figures, stud fees listed are 2019 fees.
Rank Stallion BTW BTH GSW GSH G1SW G1SH Starters Wnrs Highest Earner Earnings
1 No Nay Never 6 14 2 5 1 2 61 34 258,868 1,610,505
(2011) by Scat Daddy FYR: 2016 Stands: Coolmore Stud Ire Fee: i100,000 Ten Sovereigns (Ire)
2 Australia (GB) 1 4 1 4 -- 3 68 19 153,338 658,874
(2011) by Galileo (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Coolmore Stud Ire Fee: i35,000 Broome (Ire)
3 Kingman (GB) 5 6 2 3 -- -- 62 26 149,151 903,857
(2011) by Invincible Spirit (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Banstead Manor Stud Eng Fee: ,75,000 Danon Justice (Jpn)
4 Toronado (Ire) -- 5 -- 3 -- -- 59 27 58,466 543,557
(2010) by High Chaparral (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Haras de Bouquetot Fr Fee: i12,000 Watan (GB)
5 Sea the Moon (Ger) 2 4 2 3 -- -- 43 15 104,392 504,147
(2011) by Sea the Stars (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Lanwades Stud Eng Fee: ,15,000 Quest the Moon (Ger)
6 Gregorian (Ire) -- 5 -- 3 -- -- 48 14 108,719 428,739
(2009) by Clodovil (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: National Stud Eng Fee: ,8,000 Irish Trilogy (Ire)
7 Charm Spirit (Ire) 1 2 1 2 -- -- 79 31 51,630 730,328
(2011) by Invincible Spirit (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Tweenhills Stud Eng Fee: ,17,500 Chicago May (Ire)
8 Anodin (Ire) 2 3 1 2 -- 1 49 23 114,494 598,853
(2010) by Anabaa FYR: 2016 Stands: Haras du Quesnay Fr Fee: i15,000 Anodor (Fr)
9 Bungle Inthejungle (GB) 2 2 1 2 -- 1 61 28 108,345 534,164
(2010) by Exceed and Excel (Aus) FYR: 2016 Stands: Rathasker Stud Ire Fee: i12,000 Rumble Inthejungle (Ire)
10 Garswood (GB) 2 2 2 2 -- -- 36 6 85,109 268,468
(2010) by Dutch Art (GB) FYR: 2016 Stands: Cheveley Park Stud Eng Fee: ,3,500 Cala Tarida (GB)
11 Magician (Ire) -- 2 -- 1 -- -- 41 9 113,190 469,520
(2010) by Galileo (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Haras de Corlay Fr Fee: i4,000 Voice of Joy
12 Ruler of the World (Ire) 1 2 1 1 1 1 19 4 402,840 457,096
(2010) by Galileo (Ire) FYR: 2016 Stands: Coolmore Stud Ire Fee: i8,000 Iridessa (Ire)
13 Slade Power (Ire) -- 3 -- 1 -- -- 63 19 73,276 397,829
(2009) by Dutch Art (GB) FYR: 2016 Stands: Kildangan Stud Ire Fee: i7,500 Princess Power (IRE)
14 Mukhadram (GB) 1 2 1 1 -- -- 38 12 193,605 348,762
(2009) by Shamardal FYR: 2016 Stands: Nunnery Stud Eng Fee: ,6,000 A Bit Special (GB)
15 Kuroshio (Aus) -- 2 -- 1 -- -- 17 7 86,220 173,875
(2010) by Exceed and Excel (Aus) FYR: 2016 Stands: Clongiffen Stud Ire Fee: i6,000 Dunkerron (GB)
TUESDAY, 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Lot 475, a daughter of Star Witness, topped the third day of trade
Inglis
Lot 457 | Inglis
STAR WITNESS IN VOGUE AT INGLIS
by Paul Vettise
Widden Stud stallion Star Witness has won over buyers at the
top end of the market at the Inglis Classic Yearling Sale with a
pair of quality youngsters topping days two and three at the
Riverside Stables.
Inglis Classic Day 3: at a Glance$ Star Witness is enjoying a strong sale and for the second
day running he tops the session with a A$350,000 filly
to Orbis Bloodstock.
$ A son of Kermadec (NZ) gets serious attention from
Triple Crown Bloodstock and they secured him for
A$280,000.
$ George Moore is a member of the Dissident fan club
and he parted with A$280,000 on spec for a colt by the
multiple Group 1 winner.
$ At the end of Day 3, Orbis Bloodstock is the leading
buyer at the sale, having purchased 11 individual lots
for A$1,590,000.
$ The overall sale clearance is 82% with an average of
A$77,909 and one day of Book 1 remaining. The
average is down compared to end of sale last year
(A$93,231) but up on the 2017 sale (A$71,342).
Star Witness in Vogue A speed machine with a G1 Coolmore Stud S. to his credit, Star
Witness=s son offered by Noogee Park was sold for A$400,000
on Sunday to Yulong and on Monday the Hong Kong-based Orbis
Bloodstock went to A$350,000 for the Newhaven Park-offered
filly. Lot 475 is out of Madam Nash (Flying Spur), who won on
eight occasions and she is a granddaughter of Tidal Light (NZ)
(Diagramatic {USA}), a Group 1 winner on both sides of the
Tasman and a New Zealand Horse of the Year.
Trainer Kim Waugh has been associated with Orbis for the last
12 months and she signed for the good-looking filly.
AShe=s beautiful, very athletic and correct. I was very
impressed by her,@ she said. AI kept going back to look at her,
four or five times, and I liked her more every time. I thought she
would be expensive. She had a lot of looks and I thought she
would be around that mark. I=ve had a couple by Star Witness
and I really like them. He=s proven himself with a lot of winners
and a couple of very good horses.@
Orbis is managed by former jockey Paul King with Waugh and
Kris Lees their principal trainers in Australia.
AIt=s working really well and at this stage I=ve mainly got all
young horses,@ Waugh said.
In the Zone Military Zone (Epaulette) did his younger half-brother a major
favour when he opened his stakes account with victory in the
recent Listed Gosford Guineas and that was reflected in the ring.
Cont. p2
TDN AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND • PAGE 2 OF 4 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Golden Slipper favourite Tassort (Brazen Beau), ridden by James McDonald, impressed during a Rosehill trial on Monday morning. | Bronwen Healy
Lot 417 | Inglis
Inglis Classic Day 3 Cont. from p1
The Two Bays Farm-offered colt by Kermadec (NZ) won over
Triple Crown Bloodstock and they stretched to a$280,000 for
Lot 457.
AHe=s a big strong colt and a
great mover like a lot of the
Kermadecs are,@ Michael Ward
said. AObviously we race Military
Zone and we think he has Group 1
potential so we=re thrilled to get
him.@
The youngster is out of the
Street Sense (USA) mare Loading
Zone and she is a half-sister to the
dam of the G2 Sweet Embrace S.
winner Scarlet Rain (Manhattan
Rain). It is also the family of the
two-time Group 1 winner and sire
Toorak Toff (Show A Heart).
Dissident Colt Popular Sledmere Stud was celebrating after their good-looking son of
Dissident attracted widespread attention in the ring with the
bidding duel finally won by Hong Kong-based bloodstock agent
George Moore. Lot 417 realised A$280,000 and is the first foal
of the unraced Northern Meteor mare Keep Warm, who is a
three-quarter sister to the G1
Flight S. and dual Group 2 winner
Speak Fondly. Her half-brother
Wild And Proud won the G2
Hobartville S. and this pedigree
also features the G2 QTC Cup
winner Spill The Beans (Snitzel),
whose fledgling stallion career is
underway at Aquis.
AWe bought him on spec. We
don=t have a client right now so
obviously we=ll try and sell him in
the next week and export him to
Hong Kong,@ George Moore said.
AIt=s the third Dissident we=ve
bought and we think he will make
it as a stallion. This is a good type
of horse to spec on and the best mover in the sale. He=s got a
good over-reach and good drive behind.@
Cont. p3
TDN AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND • PAGE 3 OF 4 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Lot 433 | Inglis
Louis Le Metayer | TDN AusNZ
Inglis Classic Day 3 Cont.
He added, AHe=s the type of horse I like to buy and obviously
there was a lot of competition from Hong Kong for him.@
No Doubt About Domeland Domeland has been active on all three days of the sale and
they were in the mix again when going to A$250,000 for a son of
Not A Single Doubt (lot 389) put forward by Canning Downs
Stud. The colt is a brother to the three-time winner Never In
Doubt with their dam Infinito (Encosta de Lago) a daughter of
the G2 Tristarc S. winner Infinite Grace (Prince Of Birds {USA})
and she placed three times at the top level. This is also the
family of the two-time G1 Cox Plate winner Fields Of Omagh
(Rubiton).
Barnmate to Not A Single Doubt, promising young stallion
Dundeel (NZ) had lot 433 sold for A$250,000 to trainer Paul
Perry. Dundeel (NZ) is in hot form as a sire with son
Castelvecchio taking out the A$2-million Inglis Millennium. He
was put forward by Arrowfield Stud and boasts an international
pedigree with his dam La Fouine Tail (Jpn) (Neo Universe {USA})
a daughter of the G1 Japan Cup runner-up Fabulous La Fouine
(Fr) (Fabulous Dancer {USA}).
Filly a Beauty A daughter of Brazen Beau proved popular in the ring with Lot
366 from Yarraman Park Stud eventually knocked down to
Damion Flower=s Jadeskye Racing and Brad Widdup for
A$220,000.
ABrad and I tried to get two last year and missed out, we really
liked Accession,@ Flower said. AThis is a lovely filly. She=s got a
lovely body, very athletic with a good walk and she looks like
she=ll run early. She=s just the type of Brazen Beau we wanted.@
She is a half-sister to the dual South African Group 2 winner
and multiple Group 1 placegetter New Predator (New Approach
{Ire}). Their dam Head Over Heels (Fastnet Rock) is a half-sister
to the three-time black type winner Presently (Unbridled=s Song
{USA}) and to the dam of the G2 Sarten Memorial and G2
Matamata Breeders= S. winner Serena Miss (NZ) (Iffraaj {GB}).
The Brazen Beau filly=s price was matched by a son of Zoustar,
who was signed for by John Foote. Offered by Lustre Lodge, lot
403 is the first foal of It=s One (NZ) (O=Reilly {NZ}) who was a city
winner and her family includes the G2 Reisling S. winner Hips
Don=t Lie (Danehill {USA}) and the G1 New Zealand 2000
Guineas placegetter Rhythm (NZ) (Bakharoff {USA}).
Zoustar Makes His Mark Leading young stallion Zoustar made an impact deep into the
session when his colt, Lot 547, was sold to Carmel Size for
A$220,000. Presented by Widden Stud, he is a son of Muscatels
(Octagonal {NZ}) who is a three-quarter sister to the stakes
winners Jeremiad (Octagonal {NZ}) and Scarf (Lonhro). It is also
the family of the G1 Thorndon Mile winner Sir Kinloch (NZ)
(Rhythm {USA}) with an international flavour added to the page
by the presence of G3 Newmarket Nell Gwyn S. winner Soliloquy
(GB) (Dubawi {Ire}).
Stand-out Hinchinbrook Colt Lot 407 also fetched A$220,000 for consignor Kenmore Lodge
with Louis Le Metayer=s Astute Bloodstock the new owner of the
Hinchinbrook colt. He is a half-brother to two winners with the
dam Jive Lady (Distant Music {USA}) a half-sister to the G2 Rose
Of Kingston S. winner Vormista (Testa Rossa). She also finished
runner-up at Group 1 level three times.
Cont. p4
TDN AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND • PAGE 4 OF 4 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • 12 FEBRUARY 2019
Freshman Make Their Mark at Riverside
Born a Warrior and Tassort Highlight Trials
Zousain and The Autumn Sun Near Return
Moroney Records Half-Century of G1SWs
Sydney Campaign for Ardrossan
AUSTRALIAN GROUP 1 RACES B 2018/2019
Date Race Track
Feb. 16 Lightning S. Flemington
Feb. 23 Blue Diamond S. Caulfield
Futurity S. Caulfield
Oakleigh Plate Caulfield
Mar. 2 Chipping Norton S. Warwick Farm
Surround S. Warwick Farm
Australian Guineas Flemington
Mar. 9 Randwick Guineas Randwick
Canterbury S. Randwick
Australian Cup Flemington
Newmarket H. Flemington
Mar. 16 Coolmore Classic Rosehill
Inglis Classic Day 3 Cont.
AHe=s a tall colt with a lot of scope and with a huge girth,@ Le
Metayer said. AI=ve looked at pretty much every horse here this
week and for me he was one of the stand-outs. I buy mainly on
type and bought him for a Hong Kong client. He=ll go to Archie
Alexander to be pre-trained and trained and if he=s good enough
he=ll end up in Hong Kong.@
McEvoy Goes Deep A daughter of young sire Deep Field took trainer Tony
McEvoy=s eye and he went to A$220,000 for lot 446 from
Glastonbury Farms. She is out of Legato (Danehill {USA}), who is
a half-sister to the G2 Bill Stutt S. winner Schubert (Salieri
{USA}). The former champion Singapore galloper Recast
(Thunder Gulch {USA}) is also a member of this family.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Estihdaaf | Erika Rasmussen
IN TDN EUROPE TODAYBRITISH RACING TO RESUME ON WEDNESDAY British racing will resume on Wednesday after an equineinfluenza scare last week. Click or tap here to go straight to TDN Europe.
PEDIGREE INSIGHTS: FINAL CROP OF ARCH
IS ON THE MARCH
by Andrew Caulfield
The UAE 2000 Guineas, to my mind, has always been one of
the most confusing races staged during the Dubai Racing
Carnival. While this Group 3 contest is confined to 3-year-olds, it
is open to horses from both Northern and Southern
Hemispheres, with the conditions requiring that the older
3-year-olds from the Southern Hemisphere carry an extra 4.5kg
to offset their age advantage.
Despite this penalty, the Southern Hemisphere horses often
triumphed in the past and several of them were to add to their
laurels. One of them, the South African-born Victory Moon, later
finished third behind Pleasantly Perfect and Medaglia d=Oro in
the 2004 G1 Dubai World Cup, while the Argentine-bred Asiatic
Boy was to chase home Curlin in the 2008 World Cup and finish
second in the GI Stephen Foster H. Then there was the South
African-bred Soft Falling Rain, who traveled to England to take
the G2 Joel S.
Another complication is that the race often features horses
switching from turf to dirt, but that hasn=t stopped Northern
Hemisphere-bred colts winning the last five editions. The latest
to do so was Estihdaaf, an American-bred son of Arch who has
shown distinct progress on the Meydan dirt, having won only
one of his four starts on turf. Cont. p3
WES CHAMPAGNE: FARRIER TO THE STARSby Dan Ross
No foot, no horse--an adage that's as true now as when the
world's first plough-horse was sidelined with a stone bruise. And
while that same adage could be repurposed for almost any part
of the horse's anatomy, it's the foot that bears the load. The
hero's yoke.
Of all the farriers around the nation's backstretches toiling
away on those four surprisingly delicate parts of the racehorse,
few have been as highly sought-after for as long as Wes
Champagne.
Nearly 40 years ago, Champagne was an exercise rider who,
too big to follow in the boots of his jockey father, went to
blacksmith school near Sacramento. Forty years later, he boasts
a client list that started early on with Laz Barrera and never
dipped in quality thereafter. Trainers like Charlie Whittingham,
Bobby Frankel, Neil Drysdale, Richard Mandella, Bob Baffert,
John Sadler. Horses like Tiffany Lass, Mister Frisky, Malek,
Labeeb, Fusaichi Pegasus, Megahertz, Medaglia d'Oro, Game on
Dude. Cont. p5
BEST START AT STUD BY A KY DERBY WINNER SINCE SEATTLE SLEWMaria’s Mon - Supercharger, by A.P. Indy • $30,000 S&N
WinStarFarm.com (859) 873-1717
by Winners in 2018
TOP 5 ACTIVE SIREOF 2YOs2018 YEARLING SIRE AVERAGE:
$117,477
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
TIM CONE PASSES AWAY 10Carl Timothy "Tim" Cone, the longtime legal counsel and a former president of Fasig-Tipton Co. from 1988 to 1991, died Feb. 8 at his home in Lexington.
SAN VICENTE WIN EARNS KEENELAND BONUS 11Sparky Ville (Candy Ride {Arg})'s win in Sunday's GII San Vicente S. secured a $7,500 Keeneland September Sale Seller Bonus for breeder Marie Jones.
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The shoes that helped Pegasus fly. Farrier Wes Champagne is the pioneer of glue-on
shoes, now a staple of the backstretch. An early high-profile poster child of his was
Fusaichi Pegasus, pictured above, who was the first horse to win the Kentucky Derby
with glue-on shoes. Story continues on page 5. | Horsephotos
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 3 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Tax (inside) | Sarah Andrew
Final Crop of Arch is on the March(cont. from p1)
The colt=s pedigree--and his 5 1/2-length
winning margin last Thursday--suggest that he
could well go on to better things. There=s also the
fact that his trainer Saeed Bin Suroor also took
the 2017 contest with Thunder Snow. While this son of Helmet
inexplicably disgraced himself with his bronco display in the
GI Kentucky Derby, he has since confirmed his status as a highly
talented dirt performer with his victory over West Coast in the
2018 Dubai World Cup and his third behind Accelerate in the GI
Breeders= Cup Classic.
Estihdaaf still has some way to go before he merits comparison
with Thunder Snow, who was already a Group 1 winner on turf
before he landed the UAE 2000 Guineas. However, his pedigree
is strong enough to encourage the belief that he will prove
better than just a Group 3 winner.
Together with Tax, winner of the GIII Withers S. earlier this
month, Estihdaaf is a member of the final crop sired by
Claiborne=s popular stallion Arch.
There was a time, early in Arch=s career, when it looked as
though he was going to become another disappointing stallion
son of Kris S. Fortunately, he turned his career around to the
extent that he has left a legacy of 40 graded/group winners,
including 11 winners at the highest level. It has to be mentioned
that he did so without covering mammoth books of mares, and
his 17 crops averaged 66 foals. Cont. p4
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 4 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Kentucky Wildcat | Sarah Andrew
Arch raced exclusively on dirt during his seven-race career,
with his finest victory coming in the GI Super Derby.
However, with Roberto and Danzig as his grandsires, he was
sure to sire some notable turf performers and he enjoyed
success in Europe, where his seven group winners were headed
by Les Arcs (G1 July Cup and G1 Golden Jubilee), Nyaleti
(G2 German 1000 Guineas), Pomology (G2 Lancashire Oaks) and
Montgomery's Arch (G2 Richmond S.).
There were also some very talented turf performers by Arch in
North America, including the Grade I winners Arravale, Grand
Arch and Prince Arch. He will always be best remembered,
though, as the sire of the Breeders= Cup Classic winner Blame,
whose stallion career is mirroring Arch=s in that he has restored
breeders= faith in him after a quiet spell.
There was always a good chance that dirt would prove to be
Estihdaaf=s metier. His dam, the American-raced Enrichment, is
by Ghostzapper, who raced exclusively on dirt during a career
which featured Grade I victories in the Vosburgh S., Woodward
S., Breeders= Cup Classic and the Metropolitan H.
Ghostzapper, like his admirable half-brother City Zip, has
proved more versatile when it comes to his progeny=s favored
surface. Several of his American graded winners have enjoyed
success on turf, one of them being Better Lucky, a sister to
Estihdaaf=s dam Enrichment.
Better Lucky did so well that her name figures alongside the
champion turf mares Flawlessly, Wandesta, Ryafan and
Intercontinental on the GI Matriarch S.=s roll of honor. She
landed the 2012 edition by a length and raced for another two
years, holding her form well enough to add the GI First Lady S.
as a 4-year-old. She also failed by only a head to wear down
Judy the Beauty in the GI Breeders= Cup Filly & Mare Sprint on
her final appearance. Cont. p5
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 5 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Click above to watch XBTV video of Wes Champagne in action
Better Lucky has three young colts by Tapit, the first of whom--
Kentucky Wildcat--was runner-up to Well Defined in the
GIII Sam F. Davis S. last week.
Better Lucky and Enrichment are granddaughters of Desert
Stormer, a GI Breeders= Cup Sprint winner who once sold for
$3.6 million. Desert Stormer was less effective as a broodmare,
her best effort being Estihdaaf=s second dam Sahara Gold,
winner of the GII Beaumont S. over seven furlongs. There is
clearly plenty of speed in this family, but Estihdaaf appeared to
stay well enough when he tried 1 3/16 miles on his first
appearance on dirt.
Estihdaaf is the latest indication that Ghostzapper is going to
develop into an important sire of broodmares. Although his
eldest daughters have just turned 12 years old, Ghostzapper
already ranks as the broodmare sire of three Grade I winners,
including a Triple Crown winner in Justify and a Breeders= Cup
Sprint winner in Drefong. The third Grade I winner, American
Gal, was also pretty good, winning both the GI Test S. and the
GI Humana Distaff H. Altogether there are eight graded winners
out of Ghostzapper mares, each of them by a different stallion,
so they are going to have a lot of options.
Wes Champagne: Farrier to the Stars(cont. from p1)
Four years ago, Champagne was the man responsible for
American Pharoah (Pioneerof the Nile)'s Triple Crown-winning
dancing shoes. Champagne repeated the dose this year, putting
the aluminum glint to Justify (Scat Daddy)'s comet-like career.
His most recent high-profile client? A little horse by the name of
Accelerate (Lookin At Lucky), who didn't do too shabby for
himself last year.
The following are some of the topics Champagne touched on
in a wide-ranging conversation with the TDN, from the evolution
of shoeing during the nearly four decades he's been doing it, to
some of the more innovative shoeing techniques he's helped
pioneer, and the ever-changing understanding of racehorse
soundness.
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 6 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Wes Champagne | Horsephotos
Tempering "If you had to ask me what the main difference betweenfarriers of the past and today is, I would say we've becomeinstallers of pre-manufactured shoes versus hand-madehorseshoes," Champagne said, pointing to the rise of thepre-manufactured shoe, designed, like human shoes, fordifferent-shaped, different-sized horses. Not that he'scomplaining. "You can't beat the manufactured shoe. They're not off oneone-hundredths of an inch. I can pull a shoe off, go right back inthe same nail holes the next month if I need to. There's no wayyou can duplicate that."
At the same time, these shoes have become heavier, sturdierover the years. More rigid. "They used to be much thinner,where you could just literally bend it in your hands. Now youcan't budge it," he said. This has introduced some challenges,however. "You want that foot to be pliable," he said, working an actualhoof like a hunk of stiff rubber to illustrate his point. "Out of thefactory, it=s just too rigid--it locks the foot up too much." And so,Champagne takes the hardness--the "temper"--out of thealuminum shoe in the forge. "By heating them in the fire andthen cooling them really quick, you can make them soft, so youcan bend them in your hands." It's still not a perfect system. Along the widest portion of thefoot, the shoe should be "relatively stable and solid," he said,while the shoe around the heel should be more flexible. "Noone's developed a shoe right now that's like that." Nevertheless, Champagne believes that by removing thestiffness from the modern shoe this way, he's seeing importantbenefits. Yes, "sprung" shoes--where a shoe snags and bendsout of shape--are more common once the aluminum has had its"temper" removed. "But if I left the shoe solid, that might havebeen an injury instead."
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 7 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Horsephotos
Wes Champagne at work | Horsephotos
As shoes became heavier, more rigid, Champagne noticed an
increase in suspensory injuries. He believes this has something
to do with the role that suspensory tendons play--that of a shock
absorber in the lower leg. So, the more rigid the shoe is, the
more it impacts the natural movement of the foot. And the
more it impacts the natural movement of the foot, the more it
alters the working mechanics of the suspensory tendons.
The evidence, Champagne said, supports his thinking. Since
softening his shoes this way, he's noticed a "75%" reduction in
suspensory injuries.
"I used to get them all the time," he said. "Upper suspensory,
lower suspensory. Now, I don't hear of it, or only very rarely.
There really is something to the pliability of the shoe."
Length, Toe, Heel Compared to a few decades ago, racehorse feet are getting
bigger, Champagne said. "In the '80s, for instance, most horses
had size five and sixes. Real small feet. Today, most everything's
a size seven and a lot of eights. Feet have gotten a lot bigger."
Whereas before, farriers largely considered small feet a
necessary foundation to soundness, that thinking no longer
holds sway, he said. At least, in general.
On the East Coast, where "the tracks are a lot more forgiving,"
farriers tend to trim the feet smaller, he said. But on the harder
West Coast tracks, "if you start cutting the feet too short, they
can't handle it," he said. "The main thing is just making sure
they're balanced and they have that support."
Is there a basic formula that governs the balance of the foot?
The shoe should be centered in the very middle of the foot, "and
you can gauge that by the frog," Champagne said. "The frog will
never lie to you--it'll sit over the very center of the coffin bone."
This is where the heel comes into play.
In the past, Champagne said, farriers tended to fit shoes "very
tight" and "wrap" them around the heel, which is where the
greatest force on the foot during each stride is exerted.
Whereas now, "we've learned what is most important is to get
the shoe back under the foot, and the heel of the shoe back
under the widest point of the frog."
As a result, "we get much less tendons than we used to get,"
he added. "They're rare now. I think that's one of the things that
has helped the horse more than anything."
High Speed Pain Likewise, conventional wisdom has been to over-trim the toe,
Champagne said. By doing that, however, "you start shifting the
weight to the front of the limb. The pressure just doesn't go
away--you're basically moving it from one area to another.
Everything has to work in harmony."
It's a practice that raises eyebrows, especially among trainers.
But in most cases where the toe looks long, it rarely is--it's that
the heel is too short, Champagne said.
"The first thing a trainer will tell you when they see a horse
like that, 'you've got to get the toe off.' They think you can just
shape it anyway you want, like a block of wood. You can't.
There's a lot of components inside the hoof and you have to
take that into consideration. The hoof capsule is like a shell
similar in thickness to a coconut. It's only so thick."
Which leads to an interesting concept of Champagne's--what
he coins "high speed pain," the notion that horses only feel
certain types of pain when they're extended at full race-pace.
"Dr. Allday [the world-renowned equine veterinarian] once
told me, if a horse runs the first part of a race and he stops in
the stretch, it's always one of three things: It's either they've lost
their air, their hocks are hurting, or their feet are hurting. If their
ankles, knees or anything else is hurting, they won't even run
the first part of the race."
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 8 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
The long-held consensus behind the short-trimmed toe is that
it promotes soundness. But that concept is fundamentally
flawed, said Champagne. That's because, "if a horse gets a little
sore it doesn't want to run that fast again. It starts to protect
itself," he said.
"Say your horse is shooting 12 [seconds a furlong] and he's
sound. Then he's going 11 [seconds a furlong] and he starts
feeling that pain. Horses, they're smart," Champagne added.
"He'll never run an 11 again. He'll run in 12 because he knows if
he goes that speed he won't hurt.@
Glue-On Shoes Champagne is the pioneer of glue-on shoes, now a staple of
the backstretch. "Yeah, I started the whole thing," he said. An
early high-profile poster child of his was Fusaichi Pegasus--the
first horse to win the Kentucky Derby with glue-on shoes.
The idea sprung in the early 1990s from a horse of trainer
Vladimir Cerin's, who had lost "half her foot." And so, unable to
nail the shoe on using traditional methods, the light-bulb pinged
when he saw "someone playing around with a glue" which, at
the time, was used in robotics and the auto and aircraft
industries.
"I put a few nails in the foot and then filled that all in with glue,
and when I came back the next month to try to get it off, I
couldn't. So, I literally went down and bought a hacksaw and I
cut between [the hoof and the shoe] to get it off, and right there
I knew I had it because I didn't even need nails." he said. "I
started playing with it and then figured out part of the holding
power was is in the heels."
There were any number of bugs to work out--how glue, for
example, hated iodine, which was used more prevalently back
then to harden the sole and toughen and disinfect the frog.
However, "after the glue-on shoes everything took off. People
started trying to be innovative with plastics, rubber shoes,
glue-on plastic shoes. It just started a whole craze."
The way Champagne uses glue-on shoes hasn't changed much
over the years, though new plastics have since been developed
with which "we can virtually build a whole new foot."
Nevertheless, he's in two minds as to their long-term impact on
the sport, and the breed itself.
On the one hand, horses that "would never make it, made it"
and are subsequently funneled into the breeding shed, "so it's
kind of backfiring on us in that respect." And yet, when he fixes
an unsound horse, "there's a real satisfaction there. I think it's
helped a lot of pain and suffering--horses that were being
pinched on a daily basis due to thin hoof walls."
Blacksmith Buddy Another of Champagne's innovations is the Blacksmith Buddy,
an anatomically correct prosthetic leg with a detachable and
recyclable hoof, for use by trainee farriers. As explained on his
website, "while live horses can only be worked on once every six
to eight weeks, the Blacksmith Buddy can be put to use anytime,
anywhere."
The contraption--remarkably lifelike, aesthetically too--took
about a year-and-a-half to develop, and required the input from
a variety of experts. An engineer who works at Harvard. A BMW
body design expert. A prosthetist who works with the Navy.
Special effects experts from the movie industry. "It was a lot of
work."
Almost every veterinary hospital in the world, except Cornell,
uses the limb, Champagne added. "I have them in China. I have
them in Australia. I have one in St. Kitts Islands." They've been
especially well-received, he said, at blacksmith schools--just ask
the director of the Pacific Coast Horseshoeing School (the
current iteration of Champagne's Alma Mater).
"He told me the difference is phenomenal for him because,
when he takes his students to the horse for the first time, they
already know how to use their tools--they're not fumbling with
their rasps," Champagne said. "They already know how to use
their tools and work around the horse."
TIM CONE, FASIG-TIPTON LEGAL COUNSEL
AND PAST PRESIDENT, DIES AT 75by T.D. Thornton
Carl Timothy ATim@ Cone, the longtime legal counsel and a
former president of Fasig-Tipton Co. from 1988 to 1991, died
Feb. 8 at his home in Lexington. He was 75 and had been
diagnosed with cancer two years ago.
AHe was a one of those rare people who was blessed with
extreme intelligence and also an extreme amount of common
sense,@ Fasig-Tipton president and chief executive Boyd
Browning, Jr. told TDN via phone Monday. AThat=s a little bit of
an unusual combination. He was a person who was a facilitator
in getting people together. He favored resolution rather than
contention, and was a very, very wise man.
ATim was an impeccably fair and honest person who just tried
to do the right things and live the right way,@ Browning
continued. AThat=s a very simple way of putting it, but I think
that would summarize both his professional and personal
approach.@
Cont. p9
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 9 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Tim Cone | Gess, Mattingly, Saunier & Atchison
Terence Collier, Fasig-Tipton=s director of marketing, said he
worked closely with Cone over the course of several decades,
most notably in sales dispute resolution. That sector of the
bloodstock business requires a deft personal touch in addition to
well-honed legal skills, and Collier said Cone was one of the best
in the industry in that respect.
AHis most endearing quality to me was his total integrity,@
Collier told TDN. AThere was never any fudging room in any
decision that Tim took as the president of Fasig-Tipton and as a
lawyer. It was always what was legally correct and what was
morally right. Those were the things that ran his life.
AI think probably the thing that people misunderstood about
Tim was that he was of a serious demeanor, and one might
confuse that by saying he had no sense of humor and that he
was somewhat dry,@ Collier explained. AThat was far from the
case. He had a very, very unique sense of humor and he used it
frequently, and that would have been a surprise to most people
who knew him.@
According to an obituary first published Sunday in the
Lexington Herald-Leader, Cone was born in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, in 1944. His family moved to Lexington when his
father, a history professor, accepted a job at the University of
Kentucky in 1947.
Cone later graduated from the University of Kentucky and the
University of Kentucky College of Law, beginning practice in
1968. As an attorney and later as a managing partner, he
practiced law with several local firms before beginning his work
with Fasig-Tipton. Cone also served as Commissioner of Law for
the Urban County Government, and at the time of his death, he
was chairman of Dupree Mutual Funds and a director of
Lexington Industrial Foundation.
Cone was active in the Lexington community and served on
the boards of Saint Joseph Hospital Foundation, Lexington Urban
League, Lex Tran, Fayette Tourism Commission, and Legal Aid
Corporation. He was a three-time president of the Northside
Neighborhood Association and was a trustee and treasurer of
Sayre School.
Cone participated in Republican politics and was a
Commissioner of the Fayette County Board of Elections, Chair of
the Fayette County Republican Executive Committee, and
served as chairman of numerous local political campaigns,
according to the Herald-Leader.
Beyond the community and his immersion in the
Thoroughbred world, Cone was an enthusiastic history buff and
a passionate fan of the University of Kentucky Wildcats sports
teams.
Cone is survived by wife, Marcia; a daughter, Regan (Hill)
Parker; a son, Travis (Calle) Cone; and granddaughters Caroline
and Mary Elizabeth Parker.
Private graveside services will be held Feb. 13 at Calvary
Cemetery.
A public memorial service and reception will be held at
Fasig-Tipton, 2400 Newtown Pike, Feb. 16 from 4:00 p.m. to
6:00 p.m.
Cone, according to the Herald-Leader obituary, Athought
flowers were a waste of moneyYso please abide by his wishes
and instead make a contribution in his memory to St. Paul's
Church, 501 West Short Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40507.@
See www.milwardfuneral.com to share remembrances of
Cone in an online guest book.
SAN VICENTE WIN EARNS KEENELAND BONUS Sparky Ville (Candy Ride {Arg})=s win in Sunday=s GII San
Vicente S. secured a $7,500 Keeneland September Sale Seller
Bonus for breeder Marie Jones.
The September Sale Seller Bonus Program, initiated by
Keeneland in 2017, offers cash rewards to sellers of horses sold
at the September Sale who win graded stakes at two or three.
Sellers receive cash rewards based on the following criteria:
$10,000 Seller Bonus for the first Grade/Group 1 stakes win;
$7,500 for the first Grade/Group 2 win; and $5,000 for the first
Grade/Group 3 victory.
Cont. p10
TDN HEADLINE NEWS • PAGE 10 OF 10 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Canterbury Park | Coady Photography
HAVE A NEW FOAL?Click here to submit your Foaling News for
Stakes Winning and/or Stakes Producing Maresfor publication in the TDN.
Trainer Jeff Bonde, on behalf of Del Secco DCS Racing,
purchased Sparky Ville after the chesnut RNA=d for $170,000 at
the 2017 Keeneland September sale.
CANTERBURY OFFERS STARTER INCENTIVES Canterbury Park has unveiled enhanced incentive programs to
attract race-ready Thoroughbreds to its upcoming meeting. The
programs are designed to reward those that arrive and start
horses early in the meet, pay more purse money to all starters
throughout the 66 days of racing, and help with costs of shipping
through a loan program.
Under the incentives, every Thoroughbred starter in all
overnight races will be guaranteed 1% of the purse, or $250,
whichever is greater with the intent of providing purse money to
cover a greater percentage of race-day costs. In addition, every
Thoroughbred starter in all overnight races during the first
condition book (May 3-June 2) will earn an additional $250
participation bonus.
Canterbury Park will again offer a shipping loan program to
qualified applicants who arrive prior to the start of the 2019
racing season. Shipping loan applications will be due with stall
applications and will be reviewed by the stall allocation
committee. The committee will authorize up to $25,000 per
owner to cover the cost of horse transportation to Canterbury
Park. The loan will be repaid through an agreement between the
successful applicant and Canterbury Park. Full terms and
conditions are available with the 2019 stall application.
ACompetition for horses is fierce across the country,@ track
president Randy Sampson said. AShipping horses from meet to
meet is a cost of doing business, but it is also an upfront cost
that can create a cash-flow challenge. With the loan program,
we are looking to erase that barrier, help trainers ship their
stock to Canterbury, and with the purse structure here, repay
that loan throughout the meet.@
Canterbury=s 2019 season opens May 3 and the first condition
book, listing races to be run through June 2, is now available.
Total purses are projected to exceed $14.25 million, with a
per-day average of approximately $215,000.
FUNERAL SERVICES FOR JERRY PARKS SUNDAY Funeral services for Ocala Equine Insurance executive Jerry
Parks will be held Feb. 17 at Grace Episcopal Church, 502 S.E.
Broadway Street, Ocala, Florida, at 2:00 p.m.
A Celebration of Life will be held immediately following the
services from 3:30-6:00 p.m. at Ocala Breeders= Sales Company.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Boys and Girls
Club of Marion County, the Ocala Farm Ministry or Florida
Thoroughbred Retirement Program/Florida Thoroughbred
Charities.
FLASHPOINT BLOODSTOCK TO HOST ONLINE
AUCTION Flashpoint Bloodstock will host an online auction of 70
Thoroughbreds as part of a dispersal ordered by a U.S. District
Court Appointed Receiver in relation to the case of Commodities
Futures Trading Commission v. Rust Rare Coin, Inc. The horses,
based predominately in New Mexico, will sell without reserve
and include Grade III-winning stallion Finale (Scat Daddy) and
Getinthereonetime (Bertrando), a half-sister to champion
Shared Belief who sells in foal to Honor Code.
The auction will begin Feb. 22 and conclude Feb. 25. The on-
line catalogue is available at SportHorseAuctions.com/us-
district-court-auction.
State and federal regulators have alleged that Gaylen Dean
Rust, founder of Rust Rare Coin, has Aengaged in a massive
scheme to defraud@ investors in his Silver Pool investments since
2008.
Contact Sue Finley for details at 732-747-8060 or [email protected]
Saturday, Fair Grounds, post time: 7:02 p.m. EST
RISEN STAR S. PRESENTED BY LAMARQUE FORD-GII, $400,000, 3yo, 1 1/16m
PP HORSE SIRE OWNER TRAINER JOCKEY WT
1 Plus Que Parfait K Point of Entry Imperial Racing, LLC Walsh Leparoux 122
2 Roiland Successful Appeal Durlacher, James and Mary Amoss Graham 122
3 Mr. Money K Goldencents Allied Racing Stable, LLC Calhoun Saez 122
4 Chase the Ghost Ghostzapper Holy Cow Stable, LLC Stewart Murrill 122
5 Henley's Joy Kitten's Joy Bloom Racing Stable LLC Maker Franco 122
6 Hog Creek Hustle K Overanalyze Something Special Racing, LLC Foley Geroux 122
7 Manny Wah Will Take Charge Susan Moulton Catalano Hill 122
8 Owendale K Into Mischief Rupp Racing Cox Bridgmohan 122
9 Country House Lookin At Lucky Shields, Jr., Mrs. J. V., McFadden, Jr., E. J. M. & Mott Saez 122
LNJ Foxwoods
10 Limonite K Lemon Drop Kid Winchell Thoroughbreds & Willis Horton Racing Asmussen Hernandez, Jr. 122
11 Dunph Temple City Three Diamonds Farm Maker Ortiz 122
12 Frolic More K More Than Ready Andrew Farm and On Our Own Stable, LLC Stewart Lanerie 122
13 Kingly Tapit Clearview Stables LLC Baffert Van Dyke 122
14 War of Will K War Front Gary Barber Casse Gaffalione 122
15 Gun It K Tapit Whisper Hill Farm LLC and Three Chimneys Farm Asmussen Santana, Jr. 122
Breeders: 1-Calloway Stables, LLC, 2-James M. Durlacher & Mary Durlacher, 3-Spruce Lane Farm, 4-Himanshu Shukla, 5-Kenneth L. Ramsey & Sarah K.
Ramsey, 6-Hargus Sexton, Sandra Sexton & SilverFern Farm, LLC, 7-Martha Jane Mulholland &Modo Tesio Equine, LLC, 8-Stonestreet Thoroughbred
Holdings, LLC, 9-J. V. Shields, Jr., 10-Roberto Mesquita, 11-Equus Farm, 12-Bill Justice & Dr. Naoya Yoshida, 13-Clearsky Farms, 14-Flaxman Holdings
Limited, 15-Three Chimneys Farm, LLC andBesilu Stables, LLC
Saturday, Fair Grounds, post time: 6:29 p.m. EST
RACHEL ALEXANDRA S.-GII, $200,000, 3yo, f, 1 1/16m
PP HORSE SIRE OWNER TRAINER JOCKEY WT
1 Molto Bella K Violence Six Column Stables, Bloch, Randall L., Manfuso, R, Wilkes Leparoux 122
Merritt, Fred, Seiler, John and Harner, Stephen
2 Street Band Istan Jones, J. Larry, Jones, Cindy and Francis, Ray Jones Doyle 122
3 Serengeti Empress K Alternation Joel Politi Amoss Graham 122
4 Positive Spirit Pioneerof the Nile Michael J. Ryan Brisset Franco 122
5 Liora K Candy Ride (Arg) Coffeepot Stables Catalano Hill 122
6 Oxy Lady Oxbow Calumet Farm Sisterson Beschizza 122
7 Bell's the One Majesticperfection Lothenbach Stables, Inc. Pessin Geroux 122
8 Eres Tu Malibu Moon Seltzer, Edward A. and Anderson, Beverly S. Asmussen Santana, Jr. 122
9 Needs Supervision K Paynter Howling Pigeon Farms, Barber, G, Wachtel Stable O'Dwyer Rocco, Jr. 122
and Madaket Stables LLC
10 Chasing Yesterday Tapit Summer Wind Equine Baffert Van Dyke 122
Breeders: 1-SF Racing Group Inc, 2-Larry Jones, Cindy Jones & Ray Francis, 3-Tri Eques Bloodstock, LLC, 4-Santa Rosa Partners, 5-Dell Ridge Farm,
LLC, 6-Calumet Farm, 7-Bret Jones, 8-Edward A. Seltzer & Beverly Anderson, 9-Mike Abraham, 10-Summer Wind Equine
Saturday, Fair Grounds, post time: 5:25 p.m. EST
MINESHAFT H.-GIII, $150,000, 4yo/up, 1 1/16m
PP HORSE SIRE OWNER TRAINER JOCKEY WT
1 Imperative K Bernardini Ron Paolucci Racing, LLC and Imaginary Stables Quartarolo Bravo 117
2 Harlan Punch K Harlan's Holiday Front Row Racing LLC, Ten Strike Racing, Cox Geroux 120
McReynolds, Kevin and Miller, Bob
3 Krewe Chief K Parading Three Diamonds Farm Maker Franco 114
4 Silver Dust K Tapit Tom R. Durant Calhoun Gilligan 119
5 Lone Sailor K Majestic Warrior G M B Racing Amoss Graham 118
6 Third Day K Bernardini Town and Country Racing, LLC Lynch Ortiz 115
7 Mo Dont No K Uncle Mo Ron Paolucci Racing, LLC Quartarolo Hernandez, Jr. 112
8 Phat Man Munnings Brad Grady Sharp Beschizza 119
9 Flameaway K Scat Daddy John C. Oxley Casse Gaffalione 116
10 Long On Luck K Lookin At Lucky Olivia M. Morales Montano, Sr. Saez 113
11 Ballard High Flat Out Mark H. Stanley Stewart Lanerie 113
12 Thirstforlife K Stay Thirsty Wesley E. Hawley Hawley Mena 115
13 Quip Distorted Humor WinStar Farm, China Horse Club Int’l & SF Racing Brisset Saez 115
Breeders: 1-Glencrest Farm LLC & Darley, 2-Rosemont Farm LLC, 3-Stone Farm, 4-Don Alberto Corporation, 5-Alexander - Groves - Matz, LLC., 6-Janet
Lyons & James Atwell, 7-Beechwood Racing Stable, 8-Kim Nardelli & Rodney Nardelli, 9-Phoenix Rising Farms, 10-Susan Knoll, 11-Richard Snyder &
Connie Snyder, 12-Camas Park Stud, 13-WinStar Farm, LLC
Saturday, Fair Grounds, post time: 5:57 p.m. EST
FAIR GROUNDS H.-GIII, $150,000, 4yo/up, 1 1/8mT
PP HORSE SIRE OWNER TRAINER JOCKEY WT
1 Tiz a Slam Tiznow Chiefswood Stable Attfield Lanerie 121
2 Sir Dudley Digges K Gio Ponti Ramsey, Kenneth L. and Sarah K. Maker Gaffalione 118
3 Sun Lover (GB) Oasis Dream (GB) Andrew Craycroft Murphy Gilligan 113
4 Long On Luck K Lookin At Lucky Olivia M. Morales Montano, Sr. Saez 113
5 Big Changes Midshipman Steve Landers Racing LLC Cox Geroux 119
6 First Premio K Pure Prize Team Valor International Casse Hernandez, Jr. 119
7 Combatant K Scat Daddy Winchell Thoroughbreds & Willis Horton Racing Asmussen Ortiz 115
8 Markitoff K Giant's Causeway Three Diamonds Farm Maker Franco 115
9 Synchrony Tapit Pin Oak Stable Stidham Bravo 122
10 Great Wide Open (Ire) Starspangledbanner (Aus) M and J Thoroughbreds & Riverside Bloodstock Murphy Graham 120
11 Bandua K The Factor Calumet Farm Sisterson Beschizza 115
Breeders: 1-Chiefswood Stables Limited, 2-Bernard McCormack & Karen McCormack, 3-Lofts Hall Stud, B. Sangster & St Albans, 4-Susan Knoll, 5-Joanne
Crowe & Joe Pickerrell, 6-Ronald G. McPeek, 7-Paget Bloodstock, 8-Alpha Delta Stables, LLC, 9-Pin Oak Stud, LLC, 10-Newtown Anner Stud, 11-Judy
Hicks & Kathryn Nikkel
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
IN SOUTH AFRICA:
Oversharing (SAf), g, 3, Speightstown--Observation, by Pulpit.
Turffontein, 2-9, Maiden, 1450mT, 1:30.2. O-Colin Bird;
B-Klawervlei Stud; T-Robbie Sage.
FIRST-CROP STARTERS TO WATCH: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12
Cairo Prince (Pioneerof the Nile), Airdrie Stud, $10,000
228 foals of racing age/23 winners/4 black-type winners
5-Mahoning Valley, Msw 1m, WEMADEITTOFIFTY, 20-1
$77,000 RNA KEE SEP yrl; $45,000 OBS APR 2yo
Goldencents (Into Mischief), Spendthrift Farm, $15,000
256 foals of racing age/32 winners/2 black-type winners
9-Mahoning Valley, Msw 5 1/2f, GOLDEN JASMINE, 8-1
$9,000 RNA FTK OCT yrl
Revolutionary (War Pass), WinStar Farm, $7,500
148 foals of racing age/17 winners/2 black-type winners
7-Parx Racing, Aoc 6f, DANZ A REBEL, 15-1
$7,000 RNA KEE SEP yrl; $25,000 OBS OPN 2yo
5-Mahoning Valley, Msw 1m, DAWN'S LIGHT, 9-5
$27,000 RNA KEE SEP yrl
Strong Mandate (Tiznow), Three Chimneys Farm, $10,000
138 foals of racing age/13 winners/0 black-type winners
9-Mahoning Valley, Msw 5 1/2f, HOPE AND A DREAM, 6-1
$20,000 KEE NOV wnl; $15,000 RNA FTK OCT yrl
ALLOWANCE RESULTS:9th-Santa Anita, $69,540, (NW1$X)/Opt. Clm ($40,000), 2-10,
4yo/up, f/m, 6 1/2f (off turf), 1:17.16, wf.
FIERY LADY (m, 5, Unusual Heat--Lady Railrider {MSW,
$603,041}, by Ride the Rails) Lifetime Record: MSP, 19-6-3-3,
$196,148. O-Dario Bernardi, John Cavalli, Christopher Rusty
Custer, Ron McCauley and Timothy Mickelson; B-Larry D.
Williams (CA); T-Anna Meah. *1/2 to Pulpit Rider (Lucky Pulpit),
MSW, $351,617.
8th-Golden Gate Fields, $41,500, 2-10, (NW1$X), 4yo/up, f/m,
6f (AWT), 1:10.38, ft.
I LOVE ROMANCE (f, 4, Black Seventeen--Romance Writer, by
Bertrando) Lifetime Record: 14-5-5-1, $81,725. O-Dennis Corti,
James Demmert, Steve Pricco and Jonathan Wong; B-Richard
Barton Enterprises (CA); T-Jonathan Wong. *$7,000 Ylg '16
NCAAUG.
5th-Mahoning Valley, $31,300, (S), 2-11, (NW2L), 3yo, f, 6f,
1:10.51, ft.
TOTALLY OBSESSED (f, 3, Tale of Ekati--Dark Obsession, by
Grand Slam) Lifetime Record: 7-2-2-0, $83,817. O-Ron Paolucci
Racing, LLC; B-Schleprock Racing LLC (OH); T-Gary L. Johnson.
*$50,000 2yo '18 OBSOPN. **Full to Dark Vader, GSP, $146,445;
and 1/2 to Obsessionsoptimist (Fire Blitz), MSP, $192,176.
ADDITIONAL MAIDEN WINNERS:
Ready to Rocket, c, 3, Tidal Volume--I'm Ready, by More Than
Ready. Mahoning Valley, 2-11, (S), 6f, 1:12.33. B-Paula Weaver
(OH). *1ST-TIME STARTER. **Won via disqualification.
Word On a Wing, g, 3, Winchill--Merry's Pegasus, by Fusaichi
Pegasus. Parx Racing, 2-11, (S), 6f, 1:11.18. B-Pewter Stable
(PA). *First winner for first-crop sire (by Tapit). **Won by 16
1/2 lengths.
FIND US ON FACEBOOKwww.facebook.com/thoroughbreddailynews
CURLIN - LESLIE’S LADY (TRICKY CREEK)
l Half brother to Kentucky Derby entrant MENDELSSOHN
l Half brother to INTO MISCHIEF, sire of Kentucky Derby entrant AUDIBLE
l By CURLIN, sire of Kentucky Derby entrants GOOD MAGIC, SOLOMINI, and VINO ROSSO
l Half brother to BEHOLDER, 2nd in the 2013 Kentucky Oaks
STUD FEE - $3,500 S&N
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
Sean Feld (859) 519-9665, Maddie Mattmiller (859) 421-1620 or Rancho San Miguel (805) 467-3847
STANDING AT RANCHO SAN MIGUEL STANDING at ROLAND FARM
STUD FEE - $3,500 S&N
l By leading sire WAR FRONT and a HALF to leading sire UNCLE MO
l Breed one mare and earn a lifetime breeding right
WAR FRONT - PLAYA MAYA (ARCH)
For more information call Sean Feld (859) 519-9665,
Maddie Mattmiller (859) 421-1620 orRoland Farm (410) 913-0586
l BY CURLIN - STANDING FOR $175,000l HALF BROTHER TO INTO MISCHIEF
- STANDING FOR $150,000l HALF BROTHER TO MENDELSSOHN
- STANDING FOR $35,000
BREED TO CURLIN TO MISCHIEFFOR ONLY $3,500* S&N
*Multiple mares and prior breeders breed for less!
TDN REGIONAL REPORT • PAGE 2 OF 2 • THETDN.COM TUESDAY • FEBRUARY 12, 2019
Dream Maker (Tapit), a full-brother to Grade I winner Dream
Dancing, emerged from a sharp Saturday allowance win at Fair
Grounds in fine condition and will likely target a Kentucky Derby
prep race in March, according to trainer Mark Casse. | Coady photo
BLACK SEVENTEEN, I Love Romance, f, 4, o/o Romance Writer,by Bertrando. ALW, 2-10, Golden GateTALE OF EKATI, Totally Obsessed, f, 3, o/o Dark Obsession, byGrand Slam. ALW, 2-11, Mahoning ValleyTIDAL VOLUME, Ready to Rocket, c, 3, o/o I'm Ready, by MoreThan Ready. MSW, 2-11, Mahoning ValleyUNUSUAL HEAT, Fiery Lady, m, 5, o/o Lady Railrider, by Ride theRails. AOC, 2-10, Santa AnitaWINCHILL, Word On a Wing, g, 3, o/o Merry's Pegasus, byFusaichi Pegasus. MSW, 2-11, Parx Racing