Sackatoga Scores Tonalist Filly at Midlantic Sale

Courtesy of BloodHorse.com by

Fresh off his win in the June 20 Belmont Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets (G1) with Tiz the Law, trainer Barclay Tagg made the trek to the June 29 opening session of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training to purchase a special Tonalist  filly for Sackatoga Stable.

Consigned as Hip 27 by Kirkwood Stables, agent, the daughter of the Lane’s End Farm stallion was bred in New York by John Lauriello out of the Harlan’s Holiday mare Holiday Apple. She was knocked down to Sackatoga for a final price of $290,000.

The filly’s second dam is the grade 2-placed Clever Trick mare Miss Mary Apples, a proven producer and dam of Fantasy Stakes (G3) winner Lady Apple, stakes winners Dr. Diamonds Prize and Miss Red Delicious, and granddam of Parlor who finished third in the June 20 Wise Dan Stakes (G2T) at Churchill Downs.

Hip 27 was previously purchased by Smart Angle for $75,000 from the consignment of Indian Creek to the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling Sale. She worked a quarter-mile in :22 1/5 during the Midlantic sale under tack show.

Tagg said the prerequisite for any purchase for Jack Knowlton’s Sackatoga Stable was that the juvenile be a registered New York-bred.

“Jack Knowlton just uses New York-breds,” said Tagg. “She’s a very attractive filly, and I liked everything about her when I watched her for a couple of days. We didn’t think she would cost that much money, but I think she’ll be worth it.”

Tagg, who trained 2003 Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness (G1) winner Funny Cide for Sackatoga, has navigated a tricky American classic season with the talented Tiz the Law.

A son of Constitution , the flashy bay picked up a top-level score at 2 with a victory in the Champagne Stakes (G1) and has continued to develop into a force to be reckoned with at 3. Undefeated in 2020, Tiz the Law took winning honors in the Feb. 1 Holy Bull Stakes (G3) and March 28 Curlin Florida Derby (G1) at Gulfstream Park before heading to New York to run away with the Belmont Stakes.

With 272 qualifying points to his name, Tiz the Law sits atop the leaderboard for the rescheduled Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (G1).

“Tiz the Law made them (Sackatoga) a little more money,” joked Tagg, adding that the filly would be the only purchase for the New York operation June 29.

As for Tiz the Law, Tagg said the colt is looking happier than ever and hopes the winning streak will continue.

“He’s doing well, very well,” said Tagg. “He came out of his last race great. and we’re very pleased with him.”

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/29/sackatoga-scores-tonalist-filly-at-midlantic-sale/


Critical Value much the best in Bouwerie

[1]

Coglianese Photos

Courtesy of NYRA.com

ELMONT, N.Y. – Ten Strike Racing’s Critical Value rallied to a smart score in Sunday’s $100,000 Bouwerie, a seven-furlong sprint for New York-bred sophomore fillies at Belmont Park.

Trained by Jeremiah Englehart, the Bodemeister bay captured the Maid of the Mist going a one-turn mile in October on Big Sandy and kept her perfect Belmont record intact with a 4 1/2-length score in the Bouwerie.

“She ran really well. This filly just brings her lunch pail every time,” said Englehart. “She didn’t look like one of our stars last summer, but she came to work every day and she’s just a really nice filly to be around. She tries hard every time. She likes to run, and I’ll take those all day long.”

Her stablemate, Risky Mischief, was away awkwardly but was hustled between rivals by Jose Ortiz to mark the opening quarter-mile in 22.60 seconds and the half-mile in 45.70 on the fast main track while under pressure from Courageous Girl and Big Q.

Critical Value, patiently handled by Junior Alvarado from the inside post, saved ground along the rail in fourth and waited until late in the turn to tip out and circle past her rivals en route to a facile score in a final time of 1:23.07.

Big Q, who raced three-wide throughout under Hall of Famer John Velazquez, completed the exacta 1 1/4-lengths in front of Naked Avenger. Risky Mischief and Courageous Girl rounded out the order of finish. Ilchester Cheetah was scratched.

Alvarado said he took a patient approach with the returning Critical Value.

“I got the one-hole, so I had to stay there for as long as I could. I just tried to save a little bit of ground,” said Alvarado. “I tried to give her the best chance I could without getting her tired. She hadn’t run in a while. By the time we hit the five-sixteenths [pole], I gave her a little reminder because sometimes she needs to get going, but once she got going, that was it. Once she puts up the run, you just have to hang on.”

A maiden winner at second asking in August at Saratoga, Critical Value arrived at the Bouwerie off a six-and-a-half month layoff from her prominent fourth in the Grade 2 Demoiselle on December 7 at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Englehart said the hard-trying Critical Value has matured.

“She’s a lot better in the paddock. In Saratoga, she was always very nervous, but she was much more professional today,” said Englehart. “She’s filled out a little bit. She’s not a very big filly, but she’s a really nice filly.”

Bred in the Empire State by Ten Strike Racing’s partners Marshall K. Gramm and Clay Sanders, Critical Value banked $55,000 in victory while improving her record to 5-3-1-0. She paid $3.70 for a $2 win ticket.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/critical-value-the-bouwerie.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/28/critical-value-much-the-best-in-bouwerie/


Mentality in winning state of mind in $75K Hessonite

[1]

Chelsea Durand

Courtesy of NYRA.com by Ryan Martin

ELMONT, N.Y. – Lindy Farms’ Mentality backed up her favoritism and kept a consistent record at Belmont Park intact against five other New York-bred fillies and mares in Friday’s $75,000 Hessonite going six furlongs over the Widener turf course.

Piloted by Dylan Davis, the 5-year-old daughter of Freud broke well and sat a close second early on, just to the outside of stakes-winner Kid Is Frosty. Into the far turn, Mentality took command from a rank Kid Is Frosty producing fractions of 22.78 and 46.07 over firm footing.

At the top of the stretch, five-time winner Hannah’s Smile confronted Mentality, but the leader dug in and kept her foe at bay drawing off to a 2 ¼-length victory in a time of 1:08.69. Hannah’s Smile held second from a late-charging Saratoga Treasure.

Completing the order of finish were Kid Is Frosty, Purrageous Dyna and Jc’s Shooting Star. Sadie Lady was scratched.

Mentality, trained by Wesley Ward, has posted all five of her lifetime victories over the Belmont turf. She now boasts an overall record of 15-5-3-3 and a bankroll of $295,934, returning $3.60 for a $2 win bet as the 4-5 favorite.

Mentality arrived at the Hessonite off a runner-up finish against allowance optional claiming company, where she was beaten two lengths to graded stakes placed Dalika.

Davis, who guided Mentality to her last three victories, said his mount was full of run when asked.

“She was laying second or third but she’s not really one to be grabbing. I just tried to keep her happy,” said Davis. “Irad [Ortiz, Jr. aboard No. 4 Kid Is Frosty] took the lead, but she was not wanting to settle and she inherited the lead. I tried to keep her happy with a long hold and when the horses came up to me on the outside at the quarter pole, she really dug in hard. She ran hard all the way to the wire.”

Mentality had been training forwardly heading into Friday’s race with two bullet workouts over the inner turf.

“I breezed her the last two times [on the turf] and she gets over it well and is aggressive,” Davis said. “Her last workout coming here, she was on edge. She worked very sharp. I loved the way she worked, and she had a lot left. She was ready to run today.”

Bred in New York by Joemar Racing Stables, Mentality is out of the Lemon Drop Kid broodmare Lemon Drop’s Love.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mentality-the-hessonite-credit-chelsea-durand.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/26/mentality-in-winning-state-of-mind-in-75k-hessonite/


Tiz the Law to Stand at Ashford Stud Upon Retirement

[1]

Credit Nancy Rokos

Courtesy of BloodHorse.com

Belmont Stakes (G1) winner Tiz The Law will stand at Coolmore America’s Ashford Stud upon his retirement, it was announced June 25. The son of Constitution  will continue to run for owners Sackatoga Stable throughout his racing career.

“Tiz The Law is the outstanding colt of his generation so we are obviously delighted he’ll be coming here,” said Coolmore America manager Dermot Ryan. “From day one when he broke his maiden at Saratoga, we have been watching him closely, and he has everything one looks for in a stallion prospect. We are grateful to Jack Knowlton and his partners in Sackatoga Stable for letting us be a part of such an exciting horse, and also to (trainer) Barclay Tagg, Robin Smullen, and their team who have done a tremendous job with him. He’s a grade 1-winning juvenile and is now a classic winner. Combined with his near perfect race record, he’s very good-looking and is a very well-bred individual.”

Constitution was second only to American Pharoah  on the freshman sire table last year and leads the way in 2020, while Tiz The Law’s dam Tizfiz was the winner of seven races, including the 2008 San Gorgonio Handicap (G2) carrying top weight of 118 pounds.

Bred in New York by Twin Creeks Farm, Tiz the Law was a $110,000 purchase by Knowlton from Sequel New York’s consignment to Fasig-Tipton’s New York-Bred Yearling Sale in 2018. He broke his maiden at first asking Aug. 8 at Saratoga Race Course and went on to race exclusively in graded stakes company, with a victory in the Oct. 5 Champagne Stakes (G1) at Belmont Park next out. His lone loss, a third in the Nov. 30 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes (G2) at Churchill Downs, was followed by a three-race win streak: the Feb. 1 Holy Bull Stakes (G3) and the March 28 Curlin Florida Derby (G1) at Gulfstream Park, and the June 20 Belmont Stakes in his most recent start.

Sackatoga Stable plans for Tiz the Law to run in the Aug. 8 Runhappy Travers Stakes (G1) at Saratoga, the Sept. 5 Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (G1), and the Oct. 3 Preakness Stakes (G1) en route to the Nov. 7 Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1) at Keeneland.

“Tiz The Law is such a pleasure to be around. He impresses me every day with how easy he does everything; nothing is out of reach for him,” Tagg said of the grade 1 winner at 2 and classic winner at 3. “I have been training horses for such a long time, and I have never had a horse like him. He makes my life very easy. We are looking forward to running him in the Travers then on to the Derby and Preakness. He has achieved so much already and is a very exciting horse for the future, I wouldn’t change him for the world.”

“Sackatoga Stable is pleased that Tiz The Law will stand at Coolmore America’s Ashford Stud,” said Knowlton, operating manager of Sackatoga Stables. “It is an honor that he will become a part of the world’s largest breeding operation of Thoroughbred racehorses. We are excited to see what Tiz The Law has in store on the track for the remainder of his 3-year-old year and beyond, and then look forward to his career as a stallion at Ashford.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/25/tiz-the-law-to-stand-at-ashford-stud-upon-retirement/


Tiz Quiet

[1]

Coglianese Photos

Courtesy of The Saratoga Special/This Is Horse Racing

Barclay Tagg eased his weight against the front rail of his box – the third he sat in at the near-empty Belmont Park Saturday afternoon – and fixed his eyes to the infield screen while the minutes ticked down to post for the 152nd Belmont Stakes.

Robin Smullen, Tagg’s longtime assistant and partner, pinned her binoculars to her face while she leaned back in her seat.

If they weren’t dressed for the races or if an NBC cameraman wasn’t standing just out of the line of sight recording the scene it wouldn’t be a stretch to think the scene was cut from a typical morning at the racetrack.

Their nearest peers – Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott and his wife Tina – sat in a box maybe 75 feet away doing much the same. The only others nearby were four reporters from a small pool of 15 invited to the spectator-free Belmont. The other scribes found spots closer to the finish post, where another group of horsemen including Todd Pletcher settled into their seats with the proper amount of social distancing.

Everyone sat or stood in near silence, a stark contrast to a few recent Belmonts that attracted crowds approaching 90,000 when American Pharoah and Justify completed recent Triple Crown sweeps and a little further back when 120,000 strong tried to will Smarty Jones over the finish in his near-miss in 2004.

They all watched the Belmont’s 10 runners go through their final warm-ups before taking the first steps on the 2020 Triple Crown that won’t be forgotten thanks to significant alterations in a race that usually tests champions in a place that reveres them more than most.

The coronavirus pandemic changed a lot of that – and so much about life for everyone in 2020 – yet none of that mattered much while those minutes turned into seconds for Tagg and Smullen.

Tagg went to his binoculars when the infield screen read 0 minutes to post. While he watched Manny Franco give Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz The Law a few more turns behind the starting gate almost a half-mile away, the only sounds from the stand were mumbled conversations, chirps from birds that took up residence in the steel and concrete ceiling above and the ongoing prattle of the in-house analysts opining the looks and credentials of the field.

Tiz The Law had the other nine beat on both accounts and ran to it in the Belmont’s shortened 9 furlongs, delivering a performance that surely will see an undeserving asterisk attached to the victory. Tiz The Law and Franco won by 3 3/4 lengths from Dr Post with Max Player another 1 1/2 lengths back in third. The winner, a son of Constitution bred in New York by Twin Creeks Farm, ran the 9 furlongs in 1:46.53 on the fast track that played that way all afternoon.

“It looked to me like everything just worked like clockwork,” Tagg said of Tiz The Law’s third Grade 1 win and second at Belmont. “That’s the way the horse likes to run, that’s the position he likes to be in, Manny knows the horse very well, we discussed it very quickly before I put him up on the horse, I felt very confident that Manny would ride him that way. It worked out and I’m very happy with it.”

Tagg, a former steeplechase jockey and respected horseman known for his patience and instincts, didn’t show a bit of anxiousness watching the Belmont through his binoculars. He started watching the race directly as the field broke from the 1 1/8-mile pole at the far corner of the expansive Belmont grounds before shifting to watching on the infield monitor through the binocs. He shifted back again when the field went into the far turn, with Tap It To Win and John Velazquez leading through after early splits of :23.11, :46.16 and 1:09.94.

Tiz The Law, sent off at 4-5, raced third behind Tap It To Win and California-based longshot Fore Left down the backstretch before inching up with ease past the opening 6 furlongs.

Tagg and Smullen stood up when the field turned for home, the latter making the first move while Franco made his.

“Come on Tizzy, come on Tizzy,” Smullen said, breaking the muted scene.

Before NYRA announcer John Imbriale could call the inevitable while Tiz The Law drew off, Smullen slung the strap of her binoculars over her shoulder, grabbed Tagg by his, squeezed a few times and set off down the aisle to the horsemen’s steps leading to the winner’s circle.

A few congratulations and claps of applause filled the air and within seconds everything went quiet again. The field galloped out, 39 1/4 lengths stretching from Tiz The Law to the last-place Jungle Runner, a strung-out group that saw Dr Post earn a classic placing in his fourth start and first graded try, Max Player finish third in his first start since the Grade 3 Withers Feb. 1 and Pneumatic check in fourth. The rest, including Tap It To Win in fifth and Grade 3 Sam F. Davis winner Sole Volante, were beaten double-digit lengths.

“I was pretty confident by the time we hit the seven-eighths pole,” said Franco, winning his first classic about seven months after his first Breeders’ Cup victory aboard Sharing at Santa Anita Park. “He was so kind and relaxed for me. He was so comfortable and never got keen. That was the key.

“I’m very happy for the opportunity that the owner and trainer have given me; I’m in good hands. They know what they’re doing and the horse is really good. I’m not going to lie I was little bit nervous [in the gate], but at the same time I was confident because I know what I have under me. Like I said, I’m in good hands with Barclay.”

[2]

Coglianese Photos

Tagg conceded that he let his own confidence creep in that he’d win his first Belmont about 100 yards from the finish. He later changed the answer when asked about watching Franco look back at about the quarter-pole, scanning for competition that never arrived.

“I should have said 300 yards,” Tagg joked to a well-spaced group of print and TV journalists assembled in the Belmont Café in the clubhouse. “I thought if he’s what we think he is this is right where I’d like him to be and right where I’d like him to move. It all just worked out to perfection.”

Tagg’s preparation for Tiz The Law’s classic score also worked to perfection, although far from customary, typical, regular or normal. Pick your adjective; they all seem to apply to 2020.

Tiz The Law’s course toward the traditional opening jewel of the Triple Crown – the Kentucky Derby – started after a troubled third in Churchill Downs’ Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club late last November. Tagg and Jack Knowlton of Sackatoga Stables picked the Kentucky race instead of the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile – where Tiz The Law might have been one of the favorites off a 4-length win in the Grade 1 Champagne at Belmont – to get a run over the track in Louisville.

The team went to Florida after that race, to Tagg’s usual wintertime base at Palm Meadows Training Center in Boynton Beach and Tiz The Law trained to his ability. He won the Grade 3 Holy Bull at Gulfstream Park in his 2020 debut, despite some trouble and jumped up the list of top contenders for the May 2 Kentucky Derby.

They purposely skipped the Fountain of Youth, the next step on Gulfstream’s path to the Kentucky Derby, and set sights on the Florida Derby. That would give Tiz The Law eight weeks between races and then five weeks until the Kentucky Derby, which Sackatoga and Tagg won in 2003 with Funny Cide.

Enter Covid-19.

Training and racing schedules were thrown for a loop in March as tracks closed, canceled meetings and Churchill Downs made the decision March 17 to postpone the Kentucky Derby until Sept. 5. Already on track for the Florida Derby, Tagg and Knowlton stayed the course and Tiz The Law rolled to a 4 1/4-length win in front of a spectator-free grandstand at Gulfstream March 28.

Eventually more tracks returned to racing or stayed open, including Oaklawn Park, which shifted its Arkansas Derby to the first Saturday in May. That could have been an option but Tagg passed, continuing to train Tiz The Law with hopes the rumors he’d heard that the Belmont would be run at a shorter distance in June with the Travers moved from late August to early August.

Instead of going to the post for the Kentucky Derby as the favorite – or at least one of the favorites – Tiz The Law breezed 5 furlongs at Palm Meadows May 2 in 1:01.45. The work was one of five at the distance between the Florida Derby and the Belmont, along with five half-mile moves to give him 10, all seven to eight days apart without missing a beat.

“I couldn’t see any sense in changing,” Tagg said of the routine. “I could have turned him out for two weeks, brought him back in and started over again but I thought, ‘Why do it? You don’t know when they’re going to open up.’ And we really didn’t. We had no idea, not with enough time to get a horse ready.

“We had to just keep on the plan. I didn’t do anything really strenuous with him, I didn’t hook him up with Citation and try and outrun him down the stretch to get him fit. I thought we’d just use common sense and brought him along the right way and it worked out.”

Tagg, Smullen and their crew stayed in Florida longer than usual, all while the coronavirus spread throughout the world. New York took the biggest hit, especially the city and Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester counties. The disease killed more than 24,700 in the state through Sunday, including more than 17,500 in New York City.

Tagg said he felt lucky that neither he nor anyone from his team got sick. He also said before the Belmont that his routine didn’t change much, that he and Smullen “trained our horses every day, we went home and stayed at our little house at night. Nothing changed.”

When Tiz The Law and Tagg returned to Belmont Park in early June they showed up at the same grand facility that didn’t look altogether different than the one they left last fall, nor the one that anyone on the restricted list to attend the Belmont Stakes saw when they walked through the clubhouse entrance.

The black floors lacked their usual shine, crunchy leaves littered some of the concrete floors of the grandstand and construction crews continued to work on a new arena to house the New York Islanders ice hockey team at the west end of the grandstand.

An all but empty Belmont seemed like a shell of its grand self on its biggest day.

[3]

Coglianese Photos

None of what racing fans and horseman come to expect on Belmont Day was evident.

Barely any traffic on the Cross Island Parkway, Grand Central Parkway or Hempstead Avenue for the small list of essential individuals cleared to attend the races.

No program sellers or merchandise booths awaited those that clicked through the turnstiles. No hawkers selling a cold Budweiser or a boozy Belmont Breeze. Nowhere to get a bite to eat or a snack with the backyard picnic area vacant of food trucks and the Sabretts, Crop & Saddle, Belmont Café, Woodford Saloon, Belmont Room and Clubhouse Café all dark and dusty from a long winter and now springtime slumber.

No lines for the betting windows or automated tote machines, with no terminals in sight. No place to make a bet. Imagine that, going to the races and not having a bet.

And no families, college kids or 20-somethings reveling in the backyard, nor were there horsemen, racing fans and industry professionals, or celebrities and wannabes decked out in their Saturday best in the clubhouse.

There weren’t even pigeons, but maybe they’re still at Aqueduct.

The only thing that seemed much the same were helicopters that passed over the track throughout much of the day.

NYRA still played Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” for the post parade of the Belmont, which had been run at 9 furlongs before but not since 1894.

Tagg, a horseman’s horseman who couldn’t care less about much of that, didn’t mind the scene.

“Actually it’s very nice,” he said. “I can’t complain about that. I’m not trying to be a jerk about it but I thought the quiet was very nice.”

Tagg now knows both sides, having won the Belmont in front of a sparse crowd with Tiz The Law and the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes with Funny Cide in front of the usual raucous gathering (he lost a loud and crowded Belmont with Funny Cide, too). He conceded that big crowds, especially on racing’s signature events like the Triple Crown and Breeders’ Cup and even normal Saturdays, are good for the game.

But Saturday at Belmont Park suited him just fine, just a man and his horse and about 150 others. If that.

“When they’re all there your horse gets really nervous. All the horses get nervous, or at least most of them do,” Tagg said. “The ones that don’t might run a little better than they usually do that day. It’s nice to see no commotion for a change. You work and work and work on these horses and then you bring them over on Saturday afternoon and you feel like everything’s falling apart because everybody’s screaming and hollering, stuff like that.

“Not that it’s not nice, you want to have people enthusiastic and all that, but still, from the other point of view it’s very hard on the horses. It’s nice to see them walking around the paddock nice and comfortably. The jocks get up nice and comfortably. Even after the race it was nice. There wasn’t so much shouting and all that kind of stuff. I just think it’s nice.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-19.jpg
  2. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-20.jpg
  3. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-23.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/21/tiz-quiet/


Tiz the Law victorious in G1 Belmont Stakes

[1]

Credit Elsa Lorieul

By Brian Bohl courtesy of NYRA.com

ELMONT, N.Y. – The traditional playing of “New York, New York” is a hallmark of the prelude to the Belmont Stakes. Frank Sinatra’s refrain resonated strongly on Saturday, as Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz the Law overtook Tap It to Win coming out of the turn and drew away for a 3 ¾-length triumph in the 152nd running of the Grade 1, $1 million Belmont Stakes, becoming the first state-bred in 138 years to win the American Classic.

Tiz the Law became just the fourth New York-bred and first since Forester in 1882 to earn a trip to the Belmont Stakes winner circle. The Constitution colt already has registered three Grade 1 victories, adding scores in the Champagne as a juvenile and a last-out win in the Florida Derby in March at Gulfstream Park and now has five wins in six career starts and is 3-for-3 as a sophomore.

To garner the traditional carnation blanket, Tiz the Law, the 4-5 mutuel favorite, broke well under jockey Manny Franco and settled in third position as Tap It to Win led the 10-horse field through the opening quarter-mile in 23.11 seconds and the half in 46.16 over the fast main track.

Franco tipped out his charge slightly entering the turn, putting Tiz the Law in prime position to overtake Tap It to Win to his outside at the top of the stretch. Tiz the Law took over from there and pressed strong to the wire, completing the one-turn 1 1/8-mile course in a final time of 1:46.53.

“It looked to me like everything just went like clockwork,” said winning trainer Barclay Tagg. “That’s the way the horse likes to run and that’s the position the horse likes to be in. Manny knows the horse very well. We discussed it quickly before I put him up on the horse and I felt very confident Manny would ride him that way. I felt pretty solid about halfway down the lane. It’s a good feeling.”

The Belmont Stakes – being contested as the Tripe Crown’s first leg for the first time in history and run at a distance other than 1 ½ miles for the first time since 1925 – offered 150-60-30-15 qualifying points to the Kentucky Derby, slated for September 5 at Churchill Downs. It was held without spectators.

[2]

Credit Rob Mauhar

The ageless Tagg said he will consider Tiz the Law for the Grade 1, $1 million Runhappy Travers on August 8 at Saratoga Race Course to facilitate what he hopes is a run in the re-ordered Triple Crown series, with the Derby scheduled for the following month and concluding with the Preakness on October 3 at Pimlico.

“The long-range plan would be the Travers, the Derby and then the Preakness. After that, they’ll probably want me to take him to the Breeders’ Cup,” Tagg said.

For Tagg, the Belmont Stakes was the only remaining Classic that eluded him. He teamed with Sackatoga Stable in 2003 to campaign Funny Cide, who won that year’s Kentucky Derby and Preakness before running third in that year’s Belmont. Now, the veteran conditioner can claim a career Triple Crown, adding another milestone to an illustrious career that saw him train his first winner in 1972.

“For a lot longer before that I was hoping to win the Belmont,” Tagg said. “Funny Cide got us close anyway and we topped it off with Tiz the Law here today.”

Franco, NYRA’s leading rider the last two years, ensured Saturday was a memorable day for him. The 25-year-old won his first career Triple Crown race and has piloted Tiz the Law to all four of his graded stakes victories, including three in a row starting with the Grade 3 Holy Bully in February at Gulfstream Park.

[3]

Credit Joe Labozzetta

“I was pretty confident by the time we hit the seven-eighths pole. He was so kind and relaxed for me,” Franco said. “He was so comfortable and never got keen, so I think that was the key.

“I’m not going to lie I was little bit nervous [in the gate], but at the same time I was confident because I know what I have under me. Like I said, I’m in good hands with Barclay,” he added.

Tiz the Law, bred in the Empire State by Twin Creeks Farm, returned $3.60 on a $2 win wager, increasing his career earnings to more than $1.5 million.

A $110,000 purchase at the Fasig-Tipton New York-bred sale in Saratoga, he also improved to 5-for-5 on fast tracks, with his only non-winning effort coming with a third-place effort in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club in November on a sloppy and sealed Churchill Downs track that capped his 2-year-old year.

“It’s tremendous [to win the Belmont with a New York-bred],” said Jack Knowlton, Sackatoga Stable’s operations manager. “We’ve been with Barclay Tagg for 25 years and I keep telling everybody, Barclay doesn’t get a lot of big horses, big opportunities, but when he does he knows what to do. He’s got his and Sackatoga’s got theirs. Triple Crown, two different horses, two different years [Funny Cide, 2003], and not a lot of people can say that.”

Dr Post, trained by three-time Belmont winner Todd Pletcher, bested Max Player by 1 ½ lengths for second in his graded stakes debut.

“He ran great. No excuse,” said Dr Post jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. “He got beat by a good horse too. The winner is a nice horse, New York-bred and he ran great. My horse is improving. He’s only had three races [going into the Belmont]. He just needs a little more time to figure things out.”

Linda Rice, whose Max Player bid to make her the first female to win a Triple Crown race, was 2 ½ lengths the best of Pneumatic for third, marking the fourth time in as many career starts he finished on the board.

“He got shuffled back a little after the break and had a wide trip through the turn, but he was still running on at the end of it,” Rice said. “He hasn’t run in five months, so it was a pretty good effort.”

Tap It to Win, Sole Volante, Modernist, Farmington Road, Fore Left and Jungle Runner completed the order of finish.
Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-credit-elsa-lorieul.jpg
  2. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-credit-rob-mauhar.jpg
  3. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/tiz-the-law-the-belmont-stakes-credit-joe-labozzetta.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/20/tiz-the-law-victorious-in-g1-belmont-stakes/


Ratajkowski worth the wait with victorious seasonal debut in Critical Eye

[1]

Coglianese Photos

By Brian Bohl courtesy of NYRA.com

Gary Broad’s Ratajkowski looked fresh off a seven-month layoff, leading a six-horse field through every point of call and repelling Mrs. Orb’s furious bid in the final sixteenth for a victory by a neck in Thursday’s one-mile $125,000 Critical Eye for New York-bred fillies and mares 3-years-old and up at Belmont Park.

Ratajkowski, the 6-5 second choice, broke alertly under jockey Jose Ortiz, edging even-money favorite More Mischief at the front with an opening quarter-mile in 22.64 seconds, the half in 45.10 and three-quarters in 1:09.04 over the fast main track.

Out of the turn, Ortiz kept Ratajkowski tucked inside, where she pulled away from More Mischief. But Mrs. Orb, under Dylan Davis, gained ground and made a strong bid from the outside. Despite making her first start since November, the 6-year-old stayed on strong down the lane, hitting the wire in a final time of 1:35.05.

Unraced until her 5-year-old year, Ratajkowski went 4-1-1 in 2019, including a win in the Empire Distaff in October at Belmont for trainer Brian Lynch. Transferred to the care of conditioner Graham Motion, the Drosselmeyer daughter trained at Fair Hill in Maryland before her awaited 6-year-old debut and responded by winning for the fourth time in five starts over Belmont’s Big Sandy.

“She’s a nice filly; very big and has a beautiful stride and also has some speed, so we used it early and then she got going,” Ortiz said. “If they have speed and have the stride she does, just don’t get in their way. They’ll prove that they have a lot of ability. You don’t want to get in their way unless someone else goes crazy. We went kind of fast. But she always throws those kinds of fractions. She’s fast and she stays. She has speed and stamina, so she’s easy to ride.”

Ratajkowski, bred by John Hicks and H & H Farm, returned $4.70 on a $2 win wager. She increased her career earnings to $369,490.

“I thought the race was going to be between me and Manny’s filly [Franco, aboard More Mischief], but I don’t know if Manny’s filly wants to go that long,” Ortiz said. “I knew if I set a good, fast-controlled pace, she couldn’t keep up with my filly and that’s what happened. But I wasn’t counting on Mrs. Orb flying late.”

Mrs. Orb, off at 17-1 for trainer Michael Miceli, had capped her 2019 campaign with four straight victories, including a nose win in the Bay Ridge on December 29 at Aqueduct, before running sixth in the Biogio’s Rose on February 9 at the Big A. Making her first start at Belmont since besting allowance company in October, the 5-year-old Orb mare was 3 ¼-lengths clear of More Mischief for second.

“She ran hard and almost got there,” Davis said. “She ran great off the layoff.” The Great Johanna and No Hayne No Hayne completed the order of finish. English Soul bore out around the turn, was pulled up and walked home under her own power.

 

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/3Ratajkowski-Critical-Eye.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/18/ratajkowski-worth-the-wait-with-victorious-seasonal-debut-in-critical-eye/


Lucky Move springs huge upset in Obeah Stakes at Delaware Park

By Sarah Mace

True to her name, Lucky Move catapulted dramatically to the lead in the far turn to pull off a huge 42-1 upset in the $100,000 Obeah Stakes, Delaware Park’s opening day feature. Campaigned by Marshall Gramm’s Ten Strike Racing and trained by Juan Guerrero, the 6-year-old daughter of Lookin at Lucky was ridden confidently to victory by Roberto Rosado. On opening day of the 83rd season of live racing at Delaware Park, spectators were permitted to attend the races under enhanced safety protocols and enforced social distancing

Based at Parx and making her Delaware debut, Lucky Move came into the 1 1/16-mile contest with a remarkably consistent record dating back to June 14, 2019, her first start after being claimed from Half Century Racing for $30,000 out of a turf race at Churchill Downs.

In 10 subsequent starts, all dirt routes, Lucky Move compiled a record of 2-3-4 with one fourth-place finish. The tally also includes a trio of stakes tries resulting in three placings. She finished third in the Saratoga Dew last August and was a close runner-up in both the Bay Ridge Stakes for New York-breds and open Ladies Handicap at Aqueduct (December and January respectively). She was certainly overdue to put some black type in the win column.

Drawn in the outside post in the whittled-down field of eight after scratches, Lucky Move broke readily before settling two-wide on a loose rein at the rear of the group, sharing the caboose with fellow longshot Trolley Ride, seven lengths off the pace.

Taken wider by Rosado in the approach to the far turn, Lucky Move picked off some low hanging fruit before launching a big sweeping move in the turn in tandem with Vault (2-1 second choice). She made the front before the field even started to straighten away.

Vault proved to be a tenacious rival to Lucky Move’s inside, but Lucky Move finally put her away for good, edging off to a decisive 1 1/4-length victory. After honest early fractions of 23.30, 47.22 and 1:11.35, Lucky Move stopped the timer at 1:42.28 for the 1 1/16 miles over the fast going.

The Obeah is the main prep race for the Delaware Park Handicap which will be contested at the new distance of 1 1/8 miles on July 11. Since the Obeah Stakes was inaugurated in 1996, only the 2006 older female champion Fleet Indian and I’m a Chatterbox, who won the race in 2016, have won the race and followed with a victory in the Delaware Handicap.

Lucky Move’s fifth career win and first stakes victory improves her earnings to $264,573 in 27 starts with seven seconds and four thirds.

Bred by Maltese Cross Stables and Stonegate Stables, Lucky Move is one of two winners from three starters out of Quiet Mover, a  Kentucky-bred daughter of Quiet American, who won six times on dirt and earned over $220,000 after bringing only $7,000 as a yearling in 2006. Her most recent reported foal is a juvenile Tapiture colt.

Offered at public auction only once, Lucky Move went to Steve Perlig from Harry Landry’s consignment for $57,000 at the 2015 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October yearling sale.

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/17/lucky-move-springs-huge-upset-in-obeah-stakes-at-delaware-park/


Bloodstockauction.com to host New York-bred dedicated online sale June 18-23

[1]

Bloodstockauction.com[2] has announced that it will conduct an online auction dedicated to New York-breds next week. The catalog will be released and open for bidding at 7:00pm ET on Thursday 18th June 2020, with the final countdown commencing at 7:00pm ET on Tuesday 23rd June 2020.

Press release from Bloodstockauction.com

2020 will be long be remembered as the year that has thrown up more challenges than any other in recent history.

With so many disruptions and uncertainty within the horse racing and breeding industry, companies have been forced to look at new and innovative ways to conduct their business online.

If COVID-19 has taught us anything, it’s that organisations that are responsive to change, and use new technology, have gained an advantage over their competitors.

One new concept that has been gaining a lot of attention recently has been the launch of online thoroughbred auctions.  Having said that, online thoroughbred auctions are not new, and have been operating successfully in other regions around the world for more than 5 years.

The leader in the online thoroughbred auction space is a company called Bloodstockauction.com. Bloodstockauction.com was founded in Sydney, Australia and commenced their first auction in late 2014, and since then has conducted more than 250 successful online thoroughbred auctions.  The high demand for its services in Australia and New Zealand has resulted in auctions being held there on a weekly basis, with 100+ hips offered each and every week.

It’s not difficult to see why online auctions have gained so much support.  Online auction platforms operate 24/7 and expose the horse to a much wider audience.  They are not affected by external events, and they are much more cost-effective compared to traditional live auctions.  There is no requirement to ship horses, which reduces the risk of injury to the horse.  Horses are only transported once they are sold.

Online auctions are open for bidding for 5 full days, which means that there is plenty of time for buyers to organize inspections and complete vet checks prior to placing their bids.

Bloodstockauction.com has listed more than 17,000 thoroughbreds, and with a clearance rate of over 73%, this is a testament to the support their auctions attract from their loyal members.

Their success online has even attracted leading stud farms, Arrowfield and other large commercial studs, who have recently held their own dedicated yearling, weanling and broodmare sales through Bloodstockauction.com.

The good news is that Bloodstockauction.com has now launched its services here in the USA, with auctions being conducted on a monthly basis to start.  Their catalogs are released and open for bidding with an auction held every month.

This week Bloodstockauction.com is holding a dedicated New York Bred Yearling Sale to support the breeders of New York.  The catalog will be released and open for bidding at 7:00pm ET on Thursday 18th June 2020, with the final countdown commencing at 7:00pm ET on Tuesday 23rd June 2020.

So if you have New York Bred Yearlings that you need to move on, now’s the time, no need to wait until the end of the year.

Perhaps it’s time to embrace the future and put your New York Breds under the online hammer with Bloodstockauction.com[2].

Call them today on 1800 501 0218, and start a new tradition.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Bloodstockauction-flyer-for-web.jpg
  2. Bloodstockauction.com: https://www.bloodstockauction.com/

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/14/bloodstockauction-com-nyb-auction-june-18/


Captain Bombastic works out a clever trip to win Mike Lee

[1]

NYRA/Chelsea Durand

By Sarah Mace

Team Hanley’s athletic Captain Bombastic (Forty Tales), who kept himself busy at Oaklawn Park while New York racing was shuttered, celebrated a triumphant return to his home state Sunday with a clever victory in Belmont’s $100,000 Mike Lee Stakes for New York-bred sophomores at seven furlongs on the main track.

Set to make his sixth career start and third start at three, Captain Bombastic had the advantage of more recency than many of his seven rivals, but more important, the Jeremiah Englehart-trainee had been honing his skills against stakes-quality rivals in a pair of allowance races in Hot Springs Arkansas.

On March 14, he handled the sloppy going to finish a solid second to Taishan, who came back to finish third in the Oaklawn Stakes to longshot Mr. Big News and Belmont Stakes-bound Farmington Road. On April 11 going a mile he finished second to Belmont Stakes contender Pneumatic.

Englehart said, “[Captain Bombastic]’s races [at Oaklawn Park] were against some tough competition, especially in the last couple of months. It got very competitive.”

Oaklawn aside, coming into the Mike Lee Captain Bombastic had never run a bad race. A maiden-breaker on debut at Belmont going 6 1/2 furlongs on September 28, he came right back to win the Sleepy Hollow on Showcase Day by a determined head. He completed his juvenile campaign with a third-place finish in the slop in the hotly-contested $500,000 Great White Way division of the New York Stallion Stakes.

In the Mike Lee betting Captain Bombastic was the 3-1 second choice under Luis Saez behind three-time stakes winner Dream Bigger, who was favored to win at odds of 3-2.

Possessed of good gate speed, Captain Bombastic, was right up with the scrum battling for the lead after the break. Listentoyourheart, the longest shot on the board, came out on top of the early tussle, joined soon by Three Jokers and Dream Bigger, as Captain Bombastic settled at the rail in fourth through early fractions of 22.51 and 45.45.

Listentoyourheart preserved his lead under pressure rounding the far turn, while a ground-saving Captain Bombastic stuck to the rail through upper stretch.

[2]

Coglianese Photos

By midstretch Captain Bombastic faced possible trouble as he found himself directly behind Listentoyourheart and Three Jokers, who were racing in tight quarters. Luckily the pair separated, a seam opened and the Captain Bombastic took advantage, accelerating through and edging off to win by 1 1/4 lengths. He completed the seven furlongs in 1:21.94.

Listentoyourheart, winner of last year’s Aspirant at Finger Lakes but utterly dismissed by bettors at odds of 38-1, held well for second, finishing a length in front of Dream Bigger in third. Completing the order of finish were City Man, Three Jokers, Mission Wrapitup, Bourbon Bay and Gandy Dancing. [VIDEO REPLAY[3]]

“He just looked really good coming into this race,” Englehart said. “He’s not really a big horse, he’s just very athletic and I thought Luis [Saez] did a great job. I didn’t want to be down in behind horses on the fence, I thought we’d be more in the clear, but it worked out well.

“I thought we would sit a stalking trip on the outside, but Luis rode him very confidently, saved the ground on the turn, split horses and had horse to finish.”

Saez reported, “There was a nice pace up front. That was the plan. I knew we had a couple speed [types] outside of us, so the plan was to track them. We got our spot and when we made our move he responded. I was very comfortable. I had a lot of horse. When he put me in that spot, I knew he was going to win.”

As to the under-the-radar runner-up, Listentoyourheart’s jockey Junior Alvarado said, “He ran a big race. He broke very sharp and I decided to try and take it from there. I thought maybe because I’m on a longshot, they would let me go out nice and easy. He did show that he belonged with these horses. He finished up well.”

Bred by Chester and Mary Broman, Captain Bombastic issues from a familiar and highly accomplished family. A half-brother to multiple graded stakes winner and millionaire Highway Star (Girolamo), he is one of five winners out of Stolen Star, a multiple stakes-placed homebred for the Bromans by Cat Thief, and a half-sister to the Bromans’ multiple stakes winner and Friend or Foe, now a sire, whose progeny include multiple stakes winner and millionaire Mr. Buff. Stolen Star has a yearling filly by Malibu Moon and foaled a colt by Good Magic on March 26, 2020. Chester Broman purchased Stolen Star’s dam, Unbridled Star (Unbridled), for $115,000 at the 2002 Keeneland November Sale.

When Captain Bombastic was offered at public auction for the first time as a juvenile at the OBS March sale last year, bloodstock agent Pete Bradley of Bradley Thoroughbreds guided future owner Jay Hanley in the colt’s direction and signed the $80,000 ticket to seal the deal.

Englehart said, “He’s a really cool horse. He’s not the biggest horse. He’s small compared to most of the horses in this race, but he likes to run. His sister [Highway Star] is the same way. [Trainer] Rodrigo [Ubillo] did a great job with Highway Star and it’s just a very nice family.”

He added, “Pete Bradley did a really good job picking this horse out for Jay Hanley and the partners.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/captain-bombastic-the-mike-lee-credit-chelsea-durand.jpg
  2. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/captain-bombastic-the-mike-lee2.jpg
  3. VIDEO REPLAY: https://www.nytbreeders.org/includes/video-player.cfm?date=20200614&track=BED&race=9

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2020/06/14/captain-bombastic-mike-lee/