Saratoga’s Sweet Summer

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  PhotoGrid_1438722363728Saratoga is having a big summer! I won’t be able to make it there myself, but our regularly contributing handicapper friend did. He spent the end of the week and last weekend visiting and got us some great pictures. Saratoga is the place to be for Thoroughbred racing right now.

Saratoga Race Course was established in 1864 in Saratoga Springs, New York. It had its first race over 150 years ago. Today, 8/5, the city of Saratoga Springs will celebrate its Centennial.  The city was founded in 1915. The Saratoga Sales, put on at Fasig-Tipton, will take place in Saratoga Springs on August 10th and 11th. This Saratoga race course meet started on July 24th, with live racing, and will remain open through September 7th. Above we see a welcoming sign and the backyard where Saratoga’s sweet summer is savoured. The race course motto is, “Health, history and horses”. The racetrack is located on 350 acres of land. The main track is 1 and 1/8th mile. The turf track is 1 mile in length. Other smaller courses are located throughout. In the many stables, there are over 1,800 stalls. The facility can hold about 70 thousand fans but the record attendance has exceeded that.  The largest one day handle was over 10 million dollars. That was on Travers Day in 2003 which brings us to yesterday’s big news.  American Pharoah’s next race will be the  grade 1 Travers Stakes on August 29th!

AmericanPharoah just won his 8th straight graded Stakes race while at Monmouth Park in New Jersey this past weekend. He easily beat out Keen Ice in the grade 1 William Hill Haskell Invitational Stakes on Sunday, 8/2.  Keen Ice riden by Kent Desormeoux and trained by Dale Romans put in a great effort.  Keen Ice was 7th in the KY Derby and 3rd in the Belmont is showing improvement.  That race gave the park a record crowd of over 60 thousand fans. Meanwhile, over 3 million viewers tuned in to television to watch the live race on NBC. The plan is to race American Pharoah in the Breeders Cup in October at Keeneland in Lexington, KY. We are all waiting on pins and needles to see where he goes next, in the meantime. For now, we know he made it safely back to Del Mar in California and he will make his Saratoga debut later this month in the Travers.

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Back in Saratoga last week, Thursday was a bit wet and the live racing that day included the John Morrissey won by Moonlight Song with Jose Ortiz riding.  Friday Saturday and Sunday featured some big races too but those weren’t limited to just the horses. There were several activities to raise money for the Permanently Disabled Jockey Fund and one of those events was a jockey foot race. Above, see a photo of the gates being loaded for a soggy Thursday race and a shot of the jockeys running.

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When the fans weren’t watching PDJF events or Thoroughbred racing they could check the Walk of Fame. Above we see a display for Angel Cordero, Jr. and D. Wayne Lukas. Cordero was born May 8, 1942 in Puerto Rico. He had over 7 thousand career wins as a jockey. He won 3 Kentucky Derby races, 2 Preakness Stakes, 1 Belmont Stakes and 4 Breeders’ Cup races in addition to many other graded stakes. He has 3 Eclipse Awards, he is a member of the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame, he was the leading rider at Saratoga for 13 years and he was the jockey for Triple Crown winning Seattle Slew when Cordero had his best ride ever in the 1978 Marlboro Cup Handicap. I have had a lot of good things to say about D. Wayne Lukas before and I met him in June and covered that in my post Birthday, Breezing, Betting and Backside.  I also met several of his horses that day too. One was Hillbilly Style who ran 2nd in a claiming race at Saratoga this weekend. Lukas also took the stage in the finale of the jockey karaoke fundraiser for the PDJF this weekend.  He will have another entry in at Saratoga on 8/7 in a maiden special weight allowance optional claiming race. Lukas is a top trainer and top class in my book.

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So, what about those big races at Saratoga last weekend?  Well, Texas Red beat out Frosted in the grade 2 Jim Dandy Stakes seen in the two pics above. Texas Red was riden by Kent Desormeaux and trained by the jockey’s brother. He is looking like a fine runner and has placed in multiple graded stakes including a win in the Sentient Breeders’ Cup Juvenile in 2014 and ranked 16th in earnings that year. Frosted, sired by Tapit, a descendant of Secretariat, riden by Joel Rosario and trained by Kiaren McLaughlin has a fine racing history as well with a win in the grade 1 Wood Memorial Stakes, 4th in the KY Derby and 2nd in the Belmont Stakes. Not pictured, but I must mention, Rachel’s Valentina’s win in the Maiden Special Weight at Saratoga too.  I am excited about this Todd Pletcher trained and Joel Velazquez riden daughter of Rachel Alexandra. Rachel Alexandra won the Kentucky Oaks, Mother Goose and Haskell in 2009. She was an amazing runner in her day. I hope her little girl does as well. Her sire, Bernardini swept the Preakness, Jim Dandy and Jockey Club Gold Cup in 2006 with a 2nd place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Classic that year too. Another big filly win at Saratoga this past weekend went to Stopchargingmaria over Untapable in the grade 3 Shuvee Handicap. Stopchargingmaria won the Black-Eyed Susan, Alabama Stakes  and the Coaching Club of American Oaks last year. Untapable has an Eclipse Award and a win in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff as well as a win in the Kentucky Oaks and Mother Goose. That was quite a showdown of great fillies.

I wish to extend thanks to our friend and tipster with the photos.  I hope someone wants to share some info on the Saratoga Sale and other fine races ahead. Tapit has yearlings for sale with hips 24, 34, 51, 70, 160, 177, and 182.  The Tapit filly at Fasig-Tipton’s July Sale brought in the most money.  I hope you all enjoyed this peek at Saratoga as much as I did. Have a great week!

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Horse Park Happenings

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Time flies!  I can’t believe it has almost been a week since I spent a day at the world famous Kentucky Horse Park.  On July 25th the park hosted Hats Off Day to  salute Kentucky’s Horse Industry and to benefit the Kentucky Horse Park Foundation and the Kentucky Equine Humane Center.  Both are fantastic charities.

The KY Horse Park was built in Lexington, KY in 1978.  The park is both a horse farm and an educational facility.  Many competitions take place here as well.  I arrived at lunch and had a nice picnic taking in the views of the last of the white fences.  I have fond childhood memories of visiting and even camping at the park.  It has always had endless looking acres of white fences with lush green grass and horses everywhere.  About 18,000 horses visit the park annually and some live here permanently.  Very recently the decision was made to start painting the fences black as the white paint is too expensive to maintain.  I could see some of the new fence work in place.  It seems a little sad.

After lunch, I began photographing the beautiful statues and plaques in place to honor some of the most famous Thoroughbreds.  I also toured some barns and the museum.  I could write all year about the things I saw here but a picture is worth a thousand words.  Here are some Secretariat pics.

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Also, some nice Man O’ War photos.

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I got some Alysheba and John Henry pics too.

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Then, I saw my favorite part of the day!  My parents said it was like taking me to Disneyland.  We saw the Hall of Champions featuring Funny Cide, Go For Gin and Da Hoss. The KY Horse Park is the only home of 2 live Kentucky Derby winners.  Funny Cide won both the 2003 KY Derby and Preakness as well as an Eclipse Award that same year.  Go For Gin won the KY Derby in 1994 and ran 2nd in both other parts of the Triple Crown in 1994 too.  He is the oldest living KY Derby winner.  Da Hoss won the 1996 and 1998 Breeders’ Cup Mile.  I got to see each of theses beauties in the barn and the show presentation.

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I had such a great trip last weekend. There was some great racing going on this weekend.  Saratoga, in New York, featured several graded stakes including the Grade 1 Diana and Grade 1 Coaching Club of American Oaks.  Go For Gin showed 3rd at Saratoga in the Forego in 1994.  Forego lived in Funny Cide’s stall until he passed away in 1997.  Forego won 8 Eclipse Awards.  Funny Cide has a Saratoga race named for him that will take place August 28, 2015.  Da Hoss finished 1st place in the Fourstardave Stakes at Saratoga in 1996.  The race I am most excited about is this Sunday, 8/2/15, at Monmouth Park, in New Jersey.  It is the first time our Triple Crown winner, American Pharoah will race since he won the Belmont Stakes.  The race he will be in is the $1.75 Million William Hill Haskell Invitational.  Funny Cide showed 3rd in this same race back in 2003.  For sure there will be great Thoroughbreds making history this weekend that will someday be memorialized or perhaps even come to live at The Kentucky Horse Park!

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Heaven’s Horsemen

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I would have loved to have made it to Saratoga for opening day yesterday but instead I took advantage of one of the gems in my lovely home state.  I took a self guided walking tour through The Lexington Cemetery founded in 1849.  With a little Google search and the help of a map and data base at the cemetery office I was able to locate several of the industry’s great horsemen’s final resting place.

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First, I visited the grave of Benjamin Gratz Bruce.  He passed away in 1891.  He and his brother were responsible for the journal “Turf, Field and Farm”.  Bruce made the first two volumes on the “American Stud Book” and he created “The Livestock Record” in Lexington.  He was an expert on Thoroughbred bloodlines and racing and he was an officer for many racing organizations.

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Dr. Elisha Warfield, Jr. was buried here as well after his death in 1859.  He owned The Meadows, a stud farm where he bred the great U.S. Hall of Famer,  LexingtonLexington was the leading sire in North America 16 times, making him one of the greatest sires of all time.  Warfield also contributed to the creation of this cemetery.

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I also located the site where Barak G. Thomas was laid to rest in 1906.  He owned Dixiana Farm.  He bred Himyar who placed in the Kentucky Derby in 1878 and Domino, a Champion 2 Year Old and American Horse of the Year.  Dixiana is still a great and active Thoroughbred farm and training facility today.

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Byron McClelland died in in 1897.  He is buried here too.  He owned the MCClelland Stable where he owned and/or trained many great horses including Sallie, Bermuda, Henry of Navarre and Margrave.  McClelland had wins in all 3 of the legs that eventually became the Triple Crown.

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John R. Gaines was buried here in 2005.  He founded the Breeders Cup and owned the famous Gainesway Farm.  Gainesway is still an active and successful Thoroughbred farm.   Gaines also founded the National Thoroughbred Association.

There are over 71,000 people buried in this cemetery and many more, than I found yesterday, that have great Thoroughbred history connections.  I plan to go back and enjoy the serenity again. Share in the comments if you know of a great horseman that is buried here, in The Lexington Cemetery.  Have a nice weekend!

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Midterm Musing

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It is hot and sticky here today in Kentucky.  There are no live races at Keeneland or Churchill Downs right now and that is certainly a bummer, but I’m using this time to reflect on the Thoroughbred scene on a more national and even international level.

Del Mar in California just got started this Thursday and attending there would certainly be a fantasy vacation for me.  Also, we got word this week that California Chrome should heal up nicely as he is moving to Taylor Made Farms in Kentucky soon.  Just hours ago, Taylor Made announced that in about 60 to 75 days they will host a Fan Day for Chrome after he rests up.  I live nearby and I am hoping I get to see Chrome.  Additionally, we are right about in the middle of the year for the 78 international stakes races, or Breeders’ Cup Challenge, that feeds winners into the corresponding 13 Grade 1 races that make up the  32nd Breeders’ Cup World Championships.

I touched on the Breeders’ Cup before in Racing Renaissance.  To refresh you, there are 13 countries that come to North America and once in Canada to compete.  The race moves annually to different tracks and some with repetition.  This is the 1st year Keeneland, in Lexington, KY, will host the event which is the richest 2 days in sport.  The purse is $26 million dollars.  The richest day is sport happens to be the Dubai World Cup Night.  The Breeders’ Cup got its start in 1984.  The BC Classic is the best race of the series.  The purse for that race alone is $5 million dollars.  The other races are the Juvenile Turf, Dirt Mile, Juvenile Fillies Turf, Longines Distaff, Juvenile Fillies, Filly and Mare Turf, Filly and Mare Sprint, Turf Sprint, Sentient Jet Juvenile, Longines Turf, Sprint and finally, the Mile.  First, contenders are elected 3 ways. They may enter based on performance in the Breeders’ Cup Challenge, or by a point system, or be chosen by an expert panel.  The point system uses Grade 1, 2 and 3 select races to give 10 points to a winner, 6 to place and 4 to show at Grade 1.  Grade 2 awards 6, 4, and 2 points respectively while Grade 3 gives 4, 2 and 1 points, in that order.  Each of the 13 BC Championship races,except for the Dirt Mile, has 14 horses entered.  The Dirt Mile has just 12.  Of these half come from the BC Challenge and points and the other half from the panel.

The “Win and You’re In” BC Challenge began gathering contenders January 10th. There were 2 races in January, 3 in April, 2 in May, 9 in June, 8 occurring this July, 15 to take place in August, 22 in September and 16 will finish up in October.  We have 21 winners already.  The two BC Classic Contenders from the Challenge are Noble Bird And Hard Aces.  The 1st of the 7 BC Challenge races, that lead to the Classic, was the Stephen Foster Handicap where Noble Bird won at Churchill on 6/13/15.  On 6/27 Victor Espinoza rode Hard Aces in the Gold Cup at Santa Anita.  Next we have the Haskell Invitational Stakes on 8/2 in Monmouth Park where American Pharoah will compete for the 1st time since his 2015 Triple Crown sweep. 8/8 will bring the Whitney Handicap in Saratoga, then the Pacific Classic will take place at Del Mar 8/22.  On 9/26 the Awesome Again Stakes will be held at Santa Anita and then The Jockey Club Gold Cup will be at Belmont Park on 10/3.

In between and all around these dates a whole lot of other races for the BC Challenge and regular Thoroughbred racing will take place too.  I am excited to try and keep up with it all.  I am looking forward to the Haskell Invitational. American Pharoah has 7 consecutive wins and Bob Baffert has won the Haskell 7 times.  I’m hoping 8 is lucky for the both of them.  I have a friend who owns Quiet Force who is racing in the Arlington Million on August 15th.  This was suppose to be California Chrome’s next race before the bruise.  I wish Quiet Force all the luck.  If he wins he will qualify for the BC Longines Turf.

If you can’t make it to the races right now, like me, keep on watching and reading!  One reader wants help identifying Willie Shoemaker’s white and black checkered silks with a yellow cap that he won at auction.  The Shoemaker Mile, named for this famed jockey, took place 6/13/15.  It is a BC Challenge race and the winner Talco may now contend in the BC Mile.  Is there anyone that can help my reader out? Please, check out the comments section.  I’ve been looking but I don’t have his answer yet.  I haven’t quit trying yet but feel free to make it easy on me.  Thank you!

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Mother Goose

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I am horsing around today for sure.  I got an early start this morning at the Thoroughbred Center watching the horses breeze and petting them and a barn cat. Tonight, I am attending Downs After Dark at Churchill Downs for some live racing, including some graded stakes.  In between, I am watching the Mother Goose Stakes at Belmont Park.  It is a busy day for this blogger and I will share some trip photos and stories later but now let’s focus on the Mother Goose Stakes.

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The Mother Goose Stakes started in 1957 and was named for Mother Goose, herself.  She had the distinction of being the winner of the Breeders’ Cup Futurity in 1924.  The Grade 1 stakes race is 1 and 1/16 miles on dirt.  It is currently held at Belmont Park in New York, where we recently saw American Pharoah win the Triple Crown.  The Mother Goose is for 3 year old fillies.  The purse is $300,000.  At different periods, in our nation’s history, this race has been considered part of the filly triple crown or triple tiara.  The other legs were usually the Acorn and the Coaching Club American Oaks.  Those two races and the Alabama Stakes are currently considered the New York Triple Tiara.  The fastest and largest margin to win the Mother Goose was Rachel Alexandra.  She also won the Kentucky Oaks and the Preakness.  She holds the record for the largest win at the Kentucky Oaks too.  She was the first filly to win the Preakness in 85 years.  She has the record for speed at the Mother Goose and was less than a second from Secretariat’s speed record.   Tonight at 5:28 pm, the Mother Goose Stakes will be race 9 at Belmont.  The Acorn and Coaching Club American Oaks won’t take place until late July and August.  It has only been 3 weeks since the Acorn.  Curalina won the Acorn Stakes and she will not be participating in the Mother Goose.  In fact, only one horse in this stakes race was entered at the Acorn. The 10 featured horses are:

  1. Embellish the Lace
  2. Include Betty
  3. Hot City Girl
  4. Munasara
  5. Chide
  6. Pleasant Tales
  7. Money’soncharlotte
  8. Danessa Deluxe
  9. Eskenformoney
  10. Wondergal

Embellish the Line won both of her 2 starts this year.  This will be her 1st stakes race.  Include Betty came in 8th at the Kentucky Oaks and 2nd in the Black-Eyed Susan stakes.  She is the horse with the experience to win this, having 9 career starts including 4 graded stakes, 1 of which she won.  Hot City Girl is one of only 2 New York bred horses in this race, the rest are from Kentucky.  She has 7 starts but just 1 win, back in January, and none of her races have been graded stakes.  Munasara is my favorite.  She is undefeated but she has had just 2 entries.  The last win was at Belmont Park.  I like her tainer Kiaran McLaughlin and her jockey John Velazquez.  Her jockey won the Mother Goose last year on American Champion 3 Year Old, UntapableChide has won 2 of her 3 starts.  Her last two races were at Churchill Downs.  Pleasant Tales has been in a total of 4 races at Churchill, of her 8 starts, and she won her last race there.  Moneysoncharlotte came in lucky 13 in the Kentucky Oaks.  That was her last race of 7 career starts.  Danessa Deluxe was 4th in the Black-Eyed Susan when she had John Velazquez for a jockey.  Tonight, Manuel Franco will ride her.  She has not won in 2015 but she has 7 lifetime starts, with the last 3 being graded stakes.  Eskenformoney came in 10th in the Kentucky Oaks.  She has had 10 starts with 3 of them being graded.  In those graded stakes she was third and then 2nd before her Kentucky Oaks race.  Finally, Wondergal is considered the favorite.  She is the other New York filly.  She was 3rd in the Acorn as well as the 14 Hands Winery Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies race.  5 of her 6 starts were graded stakes.

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Brothels, Books and Bloodstock

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Thoroughbred blogging takes an incredible amount of research time.  I have not read so much in years.  One of my more enjoyable reads was “Madam Belle: Sex, Money and Influence in a Southern Brothel” by Maryjean Wall.  I had been tipped off that this biographical book, about a madam, is actually a wonderful account of horse racing in Lexington, Kentucky, as it was in the late 1800s and early 1900s.  Harlots and horses!

Belle Brezing was a madam known internationally in her times and historically.  She was born in Lexington on June 16th of 1860 as Mary Belle Cox to an unwed mother who later married a man with the last name Brezing.  Belle had a sad childhood and became a mother herself in her mid-teens to a daughter with poor mental function.  During her daughters early years her own mother died.  Belle gave her daughter away and the child spent her life mostly institutionalized.  Belle than began her career on Christmas Eve as a prostitute.  She found work at a brothel owned by Jenny Hill.  This brothel was once the family home of Mary Todd Lincoln before she married the United States’ 16th President.  Belle was quite popular and influential as a prostitute.  The profession was much more acceptable and normal during the Victorian Era.  Lexington once had more than 150 brothels in operation.  Belle met the right people and she made enough money through her work and real estate investments that she was able to open her own brothel, establishing herself as a madam.  She eventually owned the best brothel in Lexington.  Her visitors came from all over the U.S. and her name was known as far as Argentina.  Belle is assumed to be the influence for Margaret Mitchell’s book, turned classic film, “Gone with the Wind” character Belle Watling.  Other books have been written on Brezing as well.  Additionally, many horses have been named for her as well.  One of these horse name connections was also named Belle Watling, the dam of War Story, who came in 16th in the 2015 Kentucky Derby but did better, just days ago, with a 4th place finish in the Ohio Derby.  Belle Brezing had a fascinating life and ran her brothel until 1917.  On 8/11/1940 Belle died, in her home, of uterine cancer.

In Belle’s hay day Lexington was, as it is, the horse capital of the world.  Downtown Lexington there was a racetrack, the Kentucky Association Track.  It was built in the 1830s.  The 1 mile dirt track was, of course, on Race Street.  During the Victorian Era anybody who was anyone in Lexington and even the school children spoke horse talk.  Pedigrees were rattled off from memory.  People came to Lexington to breed, buy, race and sell horses.  Other than the track the best places to discuss Thoroughbreds was either the Phoenix Hotel or Madam Brezing’s brothel.  Brezing, having access to speak to all of the right people was an expert on horses.  She loved to attend races at the KY Association as well as Louisville, Cincinnati or maybe even Saratoga.  She traveled to New York often to obtain her high fashion wardrobe.  The KY Association track was a big deal in its day and is a huge part of Thoroughbred racing history.  The amazing horse, Man O’ War ran his last race here on 1/28/1921.  It is where the Grade 3 Phoenix Stakes began as the Phoenix Hotel Handicap in 1831.  This race is the oldest stakes race in the United States.  It took place at the KY Association Track until 1930.  The track’s wooden grandstand caught fire in 1933 and burned the place down.  Keeneland race track took the race over starting in 1937.  It will take place this coming October and is part of the “Road to the Breeders’ Cup Classic” both to be held at Keeneland this year.  Other important races got their start at the KY Association Track too.  The Grade 1 Ashland Stakes ran at Keeneland, this past April and since 1936, was 1st the Ashland Oaks.  The Breeders’ Cup Futurity Stakes began at The KY Assoc. in 1910 until 1930 and moved to Keeneland in 1938.  It is a Grade 1 race that is also a qualifying race for the Breeders’ Cup Classic.  In 1911 the KY Assoc. initiated the Blue Grass Stakes, another Grade 1 race that was moved to Keeneland in 1937.  Also, the Ben Ali Stakes originated at the KY Association Track.  This Grade 3 race began in 1917 and moved to Keeneland in 1937.

Keeneland racetrack opened in 1936, three years after the fall of the Kentucky Association track.  In addition to adopting all of the races listed above Keeneland also obtained some unburnt bleachers from the destroyed track.  I was most shocked to find that the posts seen throughout Keeneland at the entrance, finish line, and perhaps elsewhere are actually also from the KY Association track.  Currently, Keeneland uses aluminum replicas that came from the mold of an original post.  The real posts were placed at Keeneland but destroyed by repeated car wrecks.  The KA symbol seen in my above picture collage doesn’t stand for Keeneland Association after all.  It really is the original symbol for the Kentucky Association.  I am so shocked!

Belle Breezing did her part to entertain and maintain the Thoroughbred racing industry and its people.  Judge her profession, or not, she is an important part of racing history.  If you have the time read up on Belle and the industry’s exciting past.

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Chromies Will Miss Out On Crown Again

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Before American Pharoah took home the much anticipated Triple Crown in 2015, there was another California horse that tried his best to do so last year.  The 2014 Horse of the Year, California Chrome, came in 1st in both the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes only to find disappointment in the Belmont Stakes, when he ran 4th place.  His loyal fans, lovingly called the California Chromies, didn’t lose faith.  California Chrome continues to race very well and he was going to run in the Royal Ascot’s Prince of Wales Stakes tomorrow, Wednesday, June 17th, 2015 until a foot bruise that showed up on Monday resulted in an abscess.  The Royal Ascot was started by the British monarchy and continues to be attended by the Royal Family annually. Queen Elizabeth II is said to be a Chromie herself.  It is a shame that now we won’t know if California Chrome has what it takes to win a royal race and he will miss this crowning moment.

California Chrome is a 4 year old chestnut colt, with white markings,  bred and born in California. He came into this world on February 18, 2011 as the foal of Lucky Pulpit, his sire and Love the Chase, his dam.  His sire, from Kentucky, placed in multiple graded stakes.  His dam came from Maryland and only had 1 win in 6 lifetime starts. Both parents had reported breathing issues. People made fun of breeders and owners Perry Martin and Steve Coburn for this breeding choice and the men turned the bullying around choosing to name themselves DAP for Dumb A## Partners and appropriately putting those initials and a donkey on their purple silks.  The white markings on a horse can be called chrome.  That gave rise to the horses name.  He ran his 1st race in April of 2013 at Hollywood Park where he placed second with Alberto Delgado as his jockey.   California Chrome had an amazing career in 2014.  He won the 1st two legs of the Triple Crown but getting stepped on, at the Belmont Stakes, he injured his heel and that may have been what cost him the race.  That did not stop him though.  He went on to run 6th in the Pennsylvania Derby, then 3rd in the Breeder’s Cup Classic, followed by a win in the Hollywood Derby.  That year he ranked 2nd in earnings and 46th in wins.  He ran with the now Triple Crown winning jockey, Victor Espinoza in most of 2014 and early 2015.  In addition to the Eclipse American Horse of the Year title he also won American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse.  The Kentucky Derby win was called the National Thoroughbred Racing Association’s Moment of the Year.  He also obtained the Secretariat Vox Populi Award.  This year he has ran 2nd in both the San Antonio Stakes and the prestigious Dubai World Cup.  After the missed Royal Ascot race he will return to the United States to race more and try for contention in the 2015 Breeders’ Cup.  He has a few more races to get in before 2015 wraps when he is expected to retire to stud in Kentucky.

The Royal Ascot was founded by Queen Anne in 1711.  It takes place in Ascot, at a race course of the same name, located in Berkshire, England just a few miles from Windsor Castle.  The event lasts 5 days, Tuesday (today) thru Saturday.  Over 300,000 visitors are expected to attend.  The Prince of Wales Stakes , created in 1862 for King Edward VII, is a Group 1 turf race of 1 mile and 2 furlongs.  There will be 30 races in all.  California Chrome was to be the most anticipated horse.  The overall purse for the event is 5.5 million pounds.

It is rumored that Perry Martin, being the 70% owner of California Chrome, had pushed to enter this race.  Trainers Art and Alan Sherman, a father and son team, were not fans of this choice.  California Chrome has only ran 1 turf race prior, he did win that race but also the surface is a lot choppier at Ascot.

If California Chrome had raced in England he would have used jockey William Buick.  Buick won the Prince of Wales Stakes last year riding The Fugue.  Jockey, Buick, has had major wins in 7 countries including the United States where he won the Arlington Million with Debussy in 2010.

I have been preparing for this post for over a week and it is a shame it has now taken such a different direction.  I was very excited, hoping to see California Chrome compete on an international level.  Most importantly, I pray the wound heals quickly and we can get our beloved champ home to race a little bit longer and win a few more big races.  I would love to see him run in the Breeders’ Cup in Lexington, KY this October and then have him stick around for his retirement thereafter.  This Chromie won’t give up on hope!

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Fabulous Pharoah!

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It took 37 years but yesterday we finally got another Triple Crown winner!  American Pharoah proved he is a champion Thoroughbred winning the Belmont Stakes in just 2:26.65.  I watched from the simulcast televisions at Keeneland race track as happy tears streamed down my face.  90,000 fans attended the Belmont.  It was exactly what I had been wanting to see but I was just so surprised that it finally happened.

American Pharoah held back for just a second when the gates opened but injust 2 jumps, coming from post #5, he took the lead and kept it.  He won this race by 5 and 1/2 lengths. This is the 4th largest margin ever.

The bay colt, Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont stakes winner was born on Groundhog’s day, 2/2/2012 at Stockplace Farm in Kentucky.  His sire was Pioneer of the Nile and his dam was Littleprincessemma by Yankee Gentleman Pioneer of the Nile was 2nd in the 2009 KY Derby.  American Pharoah has ran just 8 times and won the last 7 in a row.  He was the 2014 Eclipse Award Champion 2 Year Old Colt. He will likely continue to run this year and compete in the Breeders’ Cup but is expected to retire to stud at the end of 2015.  His stud rights have already been sold to Ashford Stud in Kentucky.

American Pharoah’s  trainer is Robert A. Baffert born 1/13/1953.  He was born and raised in Arizona.  He became a jockey at a young age.  Baffert received a B.S. from University of Arizona’s Track Industry Program.  He has trained 4 KY Derby winners, 6 Preakness winners, 2 Belmont winners, 2 KY Oaks winners, 10 Breeders Cup winners and 2 Dubai Cup winners.  He won the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Trainer in 1997, 1998 and 1999.  He was inducted into the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame in 2009.

Victor Espinoza was the jockey.  He was born 5/23/72 in Mexico.  He became a jockey there and then in California.  He has won the KY Derby 3 times and the Preakness 3 times.  He was the 1st jockey ever to have a third chance at the Triple Crown and this time it worked out well for him.  He is also the 1st Latino jockey to win all 3 legs and at 43 he is the oldest to do so as well.

Ahmed Zayat of Zayat Stables, LCC. is the breeder and owner of American Pharoah.  He was born in Cairo, Egypt 8/31/62.  He now lives in New Jersey. He has been racing Thoroughbreds since 2005 and has many graded stakes winner and has frequently lead in earnings.

I am hoping that American Pharoah continues to race some more and that I get a chance to see him in the Breeders’ Cup!

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Pharoah’s Crown?

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I am six months in on blogging now and I must say this is the most excited I have been for a race thus far.  It is time for The Test Of The Champion, The Run For The Carnations, The Triple Crown, The Belmont Stakes!  I’m literally waiting on pins and needles to see if we finally have a Triple Crown winner.

The field of 8 horses is strong but I really just want to see American Pharoah win.  Not since Affirmed won it all in 1978, have we had a new champ to add to the list of only 11 horses to win all three parts of the triple crown; The Kentucky Derby, The Preakness Stakes and The Belmont Stakes.  The horses who have won it all include Sir Barton, Gallant Fox, Omaha, War Admiral, Whirlaway, Count Fleet, Assault, Citation, Secretariat, Seattle Slew and AffirmedSecretariat holds the record at 2:24.

The Belmont Stakes race is the 147th running for 3 year olds of 1 and 1/2 miles on dirt.  It is a Grade 1 race with a purse of 1.5 million dollars.  The race is named for 19th century banker and 1st president of The Jockey Club, August Belmont Sr.  The Belmont was 1st held in 1867 making it the oldest leg of the Triple Crown.  The location of the race has varied but there is a 200 year old white pine in the paddock, at Belmont Park, that marks the original location and it is now held annually at this track in Elmont, New York.  The race will take place at 6:50 P.M. EST today, June 6, 2015.  The event is a to p attended Thoroughbred race in North America and holds high television viewing as well.  It can be seen live on NBC.

In terms of traditions this race too has a song, a drink, a blanket, and a trophy.  The song has been changed a few times over the years.  Some think all the changes have brought on bad luck but currently they play the theme from “New York, New York”.

The drink has changed too.  It used to be the White Carnation, then the Belmont Breeze and now it is the Belmont Jewel.  Get the recipe here: Belmont Jewel.  The blanket is the same.  It is made of 700 white carnations glued to 7 yards of green velvet.  The flower represents luck and love.  It takes 5 hours to construct this blanket.  Personally, I think there should be a real crown too.  Perhaps, made of carnations, for the horse, if it is a Triple Crown winner.  The trophy is the August Belmont Memorial Cup made by Tiffany and Co.  The winning owner gets to keep it for a year.  It is silver with a representation of 1869 winner Fenian on top.  On the bottom are Herod, Eclipse and Matchem, the grandsons of the original Thoroughbreds; The Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian and the Godolphin Barb.  The owner, jockey and trainer of the winner get to each keep a mini version too.

Only 8 horses are racing to win the Belmont Stakes.  Just American Pharoah can compete for the Triple Crown based on his past 2 wins.  See what we knew about these horses going into each leg here Derby Dreaming and Preakness Planning.  This is our field now:

  1. Mubtaahij
  2. Tale of Verve
  3. Madefromlucky
  4. Frammento
  5. American Pharoah
  6. Frosted
  7. Keen Ice
  8. Materiality

 Mubtaahij won the United Arab Emirates Derby which is huge but then he just ran 8th in the Kentucky Derby and skipped the Preakness altogether.  Supposedly, the surface at the Belmont will be more his preference than at Churchill.  He has got in 6 workouts at Belmont and had more time to adjust to the environment at that track.   His best hope is probably that he has Irad Ortiz for his jockey.  Ortiz was 2014 leading New York rider. His odds are right about middle 5th off the best end, 4th off the worst.  Tale of Verve did not qualify for the KY Derby but popped into the Preakness as the long shot and fetched 2nd place.  He only has one win to his name which he got at Keeneland.  It might have been the muddy field that helped him out at the Preakness.  His current odds have him tied for 2nd to being the long shot once again.  Madefromlucky is one of two Todd Pletcher owned horses in this race.  He did not participate in either of the 1st two legs of the crown.  He did, however, just win at Belmont in the G2 Peter Pan Stakes less than a month ago.  His odds are slightly better than MubtaahijFrammento ran 11th in the KY Derby, he did not run in the Preakness.  He has not raced since the KY Derby and has not won a race this year.  He is the long shot for this race.  He has only won one time ever and that was at Keeneland last October.  American Pharoah…what needs to be said? He won the KY Derby by a length and the Preakness by 7 lengths.  In 6 of 7 races he has ran at speeds of 100 or better.  The talk is that he appears to be gaining weight and showed no signs of wearing out in his 2 workouts since his Preakness win.  He drew a good post position too.  My fingers are crossed that he will be our Triple Crown winner.  Frosted is the biggest threat.  He has the 2nd best odds and I fear he is the major challenger.  He had throat surgery that really seemed to help him out.  Competing against American Pharoah is about speed and this guy has it.  In the G1 Wood Memorial Frosted came in first with a speed of 103.  He came in 4th in the KY Derby, clocked at 100.  He did not run the Preakness.  He has placed at Belmont before.  Keen Ice has only one win in 8 starts.  He is tied 2nd for worse odds.  He came in 7th at the KY Derby and then skipped the Preakness.  One advantage, not to discount, is he does have Curlin for his sire.  Last but not least, Materiality is ranked with the 3rd best odds.  This is our other big threat.  He is another Pletcher horse.  He ran 6th in the KY Derby and skipped the Preakness.  He is a speed horse.  Materiality won all 3 off his other races. 2 at speeds of 102 and the G1 Florida Derby at 110.

So what will it take to stop American Pharoah from winning? 13 horses since Affirmed have come into the Belmont with wins in the first 2 legs to lose in the Belmont.  The reasons ranged from a safety pin in the foot, a few losses by a nose, a couple of un-explainables, one didn’t take his Lasix, a couple of leg injuries, tumbling at the start, a sloppy track, too much congestion, fatigue, distance and one jockey flat out stopped a horse whom the vets said had no injuries.  Anything can happen!

It is all luck and talent from here.  Good luck American Pharoah, I hope you get your crown!

Update: My dreams came true.  American Pharoah won the Belmont stakes and thus is our 1st Triple Crown winner in 37 years.  Frosted placed 2nd, followed by Keen Ice at 3rd and finally Mubtaahij at 4th.

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Nuts For The Acorn

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Unfortunately, I don’t have the same enthusiasm for this race as I do for the Belmont Stakes since we won’t have a Triple Crown winner in this race but I’m still really excited!  We do have an amazing group of horses running and this is a very important G1 stakes race, so I am still anxious to see who wins.  Also, while this is the final race of the Filly Triple Crown, it is the 1st race of the U.S Triple Tiara.

The Filly Triple Crown consists of the Kentucky Oaks, The Black-Eyed Susan Stakes and the Acorn Stakes.  See the stories of the former two races here: Get Stoked For The Oaks and Filly Friday.

The American Triple Tiara of Thoroughbred Racing consists of the Acorn Stakes, ran at Belmont Park, The Coaching Club of American Oaks, ran at Saratoga race track, and the Alabama Stakes also held at Saratoga.  All 3 parts of the Tiara are for 3 year old fillies and they all take place in New York.  Historically, on occasion, the Mother Goose has replaced either the Acorn or Alabama stakes, in other configurations.

This is the 85th running of the Acorn Stakes.  It is a mile race on dirt.  The winning purse is $750,000.  It will take place in the 7th race, about 3:15 P.M. EST on Saturday June 6th, 2015, the same day and place as the Belmont Stakes.  Some years this race was held at Aqueduct.  This year will feature 12 fillies:

  1. Oceanwave
  2. Wonder Gal
  3. By the Moon
  4. Calamity Kate
  5. Bar of Gold
  6. Curalina
  7. Condo Commando
  8. Shook Up
  9. Promise Me Silver
  10. Light The City
  11. Miss Ella
  12. Danzatrice

We have seen Oceanwave before in the KY Oaks where she finished 7th.  Her other past performances had her coming in at 1st, 2nd or 3rd.  Her current odds place her about middle.  Wonder Gal has the same odds presently.  She is trained by last years winning trainer, Leah Gyarmati, who won this race in 2014 with Sweet Reason with a time of 1:34.98.  By the Moon has worse odds.  She is very unpredictable having often ran 1st and 2nd but also once coming in 5th and 8th each in past performances.  Calamity Kate is the longest shot of this race.  She did come in second to the favorite for this race, last November, in the Demoiselle Stakes at Aqueduct.  She also won the only race she entered this year, at Monmouth Park, last month.  Bar of Gold does not have good odds at this time.  This is somewhat surprising since she is undefeated. However, she has only ran three races, once in August of last year and again this past March and April .  Curalina has better, about mid range odds but also just has the experience of 3 races total.  She came in 2nd and then 1st the past 2 races.  Her biggest advantage might be that she has the excellent trainer, Todd Pletcher and her sire is CurlinCurlin won the Preakness Stakes, the Breeders’ Cup Classic, and Horse of the Year in 2007.  In 2008 he was Horse of the Year again, which it is very rare to win twice, and he won the Dubai World Cup.  Also, she has jockey Jorge Velazquez.  He is tied for the jockey with the 2nd most wins in the Acorn.  Eddie Arcaro has him beat with 5 wins but has not won the Acorn since 1961.  Condo Commando ran ninth in the KY Oaks.  However, she looks to be the favorite for this race.  That was her seventh race.  Previously, she has always ran 1st except for once when she came in fourth.  Shook Up placed in the KY Oaks.  She is favored second to win this race.  In her former 6 races she has always been second except for 1 win and 1 time in fifth place.  Promise Me Silver has the third best odds.  She is undefeated in all 8 of her races.  Due to the experience she has over the other horses and her winning streak she is my favorite.  This is an opinion and not a tip. Only her last race was graded.  It was the G3 Eight Bells Stakes at Churchill Downs.  She has jockey Mike E. Smith.  He is tied for 2nd as the jockey with the most wins in the Acorn at 4 wins.  Light the City has jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. who rode last years winner.  She has 7 starts in which she has ran 1st twice, 2nd twice, 3rd once and 5th once.  Her last race she was pulled up to score last at 7th or in other words, she did not finish.  Miss Ella has very good odds.  She is also undefeated but she has only ran twice.  Her last race was on 4/12/15 at Keeneland in the G2 Adena Springs Beaumont Stakes. Finally, Danzatrice has unfavorable odds but she has been 1st in all 4 of her previous races except for once, placing second last October.  Also, she is getting faster. The speed record for the Acorn was made by You in 2002, at 1:34.05.

Not a single horse from The Black-Eyed Susan stakes is participating in the Acorn.  Only 2 of these horses ran in the KY Oaks.  Hopefully, we will see more continuity into all parts of the Triple Tiara.  I am putting this out a little early because I have to get in my Belmont story soon too.  So much racing so little time for blogging. Have a great weekend!

Update:  Curalina took 1st place, By the Moon was 2nd, Wonder Gal came in 3rd and Danzatrice was 4th.

 

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