City Man closes 2022 with Fort Lauderdale victory

[1]

City Man and Joel Rosario cruise to rail-skimming victory in Saturday’s Grade 2 Fort Lauderdale. Lauren King/Gulfstream Park Photo.

City Man started his 2022 season with an open company stakes victory, and did one better in his finale.

The 5-year-old New York-bred son of Mucho Macho Man delivered on New Year’s Eve for owners Dean and Patti Reeves of Reeves Thoroughbred Racing and Peter and Patty Searles and trainer Christophe Clement, coming up the inside under Joel Rosario to win Saturday’s 66th renewal of the Grade 2 Fort Lauderdale Stakes at Gulfstream Park.

City Man improved to 5-for-8 with the victory – all stakes wins – and added the Fort Lauderdale to prior open company wins in the Danger’s Hour in early April at Aqueduct and Grade 3 Forbidden Apple at Saratoga Race Course. He also inched closer to the seven-figure earnings mark, collecting $115,320 to boost his bankroll to $987,120, ahead of a more lucrative start in the January 28 $1 million, Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational at Gulfstream.

“He was running so well up in New York and we just felt like he was really on top of his game,” said Dean Reeves. “I’ve never seen him run this well. We thought, ‘Let’s run another race and really see how he does against open company in a Grade 2,’ and if we did well there we’d look probably to go to the Pegasus. Christophe stables at Payson Park, so we’ll leave him here in Florida and get him ready for the Pegasus.”

Sent off as the 3-1 second choice in the field of 12 behind last year’s Pegasus World Cup Turf winner and even-money choice Colonel Liam, City Man and jockey Joel Rosario tracked in third early. Winfromwithin, a 34-1 longshot under Chantal Sutherland, set the pace on an open lead through splits of :23.62 and :46.92 ahead of Decorated Invader, City Man and Colonel Liam.

Winfromwithin continued to lead through 6 furlongs in 1:10.11 over the firm ground with Decorated Invader within a half-length and City Man and Rosario looking for room on the inside.

The room eventually came as the field turned for home and City Man spurted clear on the rail. He drew off from there, widening his advantage inside the final eighth as Decorated Invader held second in a four-way photo with Street Ready, Winfromwithin and Good Governance. The latter two finished in a dead-heat for fourth and Colonel Liam checked in sixth.

City Man, the winner of nine of 26 in his career, won in 1:46.10.

“It was a good trip,” Rosario said. “He came out of the gate well so I could get a good position. I was in a good spot. He did the rest after that.”

City Man made it three straight in the Fort Lauderdale, after victories in the Ashley T. Cole Stakes and Mohawk Stakes, both over New York-breds during the Belmont at the Big A meeting at Aqueduct. He also finished second in the Grade 3 Bernard Baruch Handicap on Closing Day at Saratoga Race Course this season.

Clement was pleased with the performance, of City Man and his rider.

“The idea was to be forward with him. I told [Rosario] not to fight him and be comfortable, and he won well,” Clement said. “It’s a nice race, a prep for the Pegasus. That would be the plan. He’s a New York-bred, so I gave him a break [in the winter] in the past. But this year, I just thought we had never run in the Pegasus and I told Mr. Reeves, ‘Why don’t you try to run in the Pegasus?’ It’s a beautiful turf course, well done by Gulfstream. They got it right. All the jockeys have been very positive about it, and I’m delighted.”

Bred by Moonstar Farm, City Man is the fourth foal out of the winning City Zip mare City Scamper. A half-sister to New York stakes winner Alysinstilettos and stakes-placed Always For You, City Scamper is also the dam of the five-time winning and $105,017-earning New York-bred Majestic Warrior mare Go Kelly Go and two-time winning and $61,687-earning New York-bred Laoban ridgling El Mayor.

City Man originally sold for $20,000 as a weanling at the 2017 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga fall mixed sale. He showed up in the OBS April sale 18 months later and was purchased by Dean Reeves for $185,000. He was in the second crop of Mucho Macho Man, whom Reeves campaigned to a victory in the 2013 Breeders’ Cup Classic.

City Scamper also produced a New York-bred colt by Hoppertunity in early March 2020 and is the dam of the yearling full sister to City Man, Miss City Girl, born April 7, 2021. Moonstar Farm bred those two, along with a weanling filly by Vino Rosso born May 10, 2022.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/CityMan-FortLauderdale-LaurenKing.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/31/city-man-closes-2022-with-fort-lauderdale-victory/


NYTB Stallion Season Auction Returns Jan. 27 – 31 on Wanamakers.com

[1]

New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc. (NYTB) will conduct its annual Stallion Season Auction from Friday, January 27 to Tuesday, January 31 on Wanamakers.com[2].

The auction raises funds that allow the NYTB to carry on its two-fold mission of promoting New York breeding and racing and protecting the welfare of industry stakeholders.

The auction has routinely attracted donated seasons from farms in the Empire State and Kentucky, including McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds, Sequel New York, Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions, Rockridge Stud, Darley, WinStar Farm, Darby Dan Farm, and Gainesway Farm.

“The benefit of our annual stallion season auction is that it allows participants to find great value on stallions from leading farms in New York, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and elsewhere while helping our mission to protect and enhance the incentives and awards that have made the New York-bred program the strongest regional breeding program in the country,” said New York Thoroughbred Breeders Executive Director Najja Thompson.

New York-bred program stakeholders receive more than $60 million distributed in purse money, incentives, and awards for New York-breds who compete in more than 600 New York-bred races run annually on the New York Racing Association circuit and Finger Lakes Gaming & Racetrack.

Additionally, there are specific enhanced programs targeted for New York-Sired New York-breds, including the $2.3 million 10-race New York Stallion Stakes Series and the New York-sired owner’s bonus programs on the New York Racing Association circuit.

Donations of stallion seasons will be accepted until the beginning of the auction. Please visit nytbreeders.org [3]to view the current list of stallions in the auction and contact NYTB directly at 518.587.0777 or info@nytbreeders.org[4] to donate a season.

Participants must register with Wanamakers.com prior to bidding. All bids will be subject to the rules and conditions of the auction and each season’s conditions will be posted. Click here to register your account with Wanamakers.com in advance.

Available Seasons
*Current as of 1/24

Stallion Standing At State
Accelerate Lane’s End KY
Alternation Darby Dan Farm KY
Aloha West Mill Ridge Farm KY
Authentic Spendthrift Farm KY
Al Khali Rockridge Stud NY
A Shin Forward Rockridge Stud NY
Bal A Bali(BRZ) Calumet Farm KY
Bee Jersey Darby Dan Farm KY
Big Brown Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
Bravazo Calumet Farm KY
Catalina Cruiser Lane’s End KY
Capo Kane Bonner Hill PA
Central Banker McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds NY
Channel Cat Calumet Farm KY
Copper Bullet Darby Dan Farm KY
Country House Darby Dan Farm KY
Courageous Cat Questroyal North NY
Core Beliefs Walmac Farm KY
Cross Traffic Spendthrift Farm KY
Disco Partner Rockridge Stud NY
Dolphus Darby Dan Farm KY
DR Large Oriskany Creek Farm NY
Eddington Ackerman Farm AZ
Enticed Darley Stud KY
Fire at Will Sequel New York NY
Flat Out Mighty Acres OK
Flameaway Darby Dan KY
Frank Conversation Rockridge Stud NY
Freud Sequel New York NY
Frosted Darley KY
Gift Box Lane’s End KY
Good Samaritan WinStar Farm KY
Goldencents Spendthrift Farm NY
Hangover Kid Majestic View Farms NY
Hence Calumet Farm KY
Hightail Calumet Farm KY
Higher Power Darby Dan Farm KY
Honor A.P. Lane’s End KY
Honor Code Lane’s End KY
Honest Mischief Sequel New York NY
Keepmeinmind Sequel New York NY
Keen Ice Calumet Farm KY
Killybegs Captain Mill Creek Farm NY
King For a Day Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
Leofric Darby Dan Farm KY
Lexitonian Lane’s End KY
Lookin At Lee Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
Mind Control Rockridge Stud NY
Mitole Spendthrift Farm KY
Modernist Darby Dan Farm KY
Mission Impazible Sequel New York NY
Optimizer Calumet Farm KY
Oxbow Calumet Farm KY
Pat on the Back Bonner Hill Farms PA
Pinehurst Walmac Farm KY
Raging Bull Gainesway Farm KY
Raison d’Etat Calumet Farm KY
Ransom the Moon Calumet Farm KY
Real Solution Calumet Farm KY
Redesdale McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds NY
Rock Your World Spendthrift Farm KY
Sacred Life(FR) Buck Ridge Pond KY
Slumber(GB) Rockridge Stud NY
Solomini McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds NY
Spun to Run Gainesway Farm KY
Tapwrit Gainesway Farm KY
Tale of Ekati Calumet Farm KY
Tale of Silence Darby Dan Farm KY
Tale of Verve Darby Dan Farm KY
The Factor Lane’s End KY
Tourist Rockridge Stud NY
True Timber Calumet Farm KY
Unified Lane’s End NY
Venezuelan Hug Mill Creek Farm NY
Waiting Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
War Dancer Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
Warrior’s Charge Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions NY
West Coast Lane’s End KY
Wicked Strong Pine Oak Lane Farm PA
Yaupon Spendthrift Farm KY
Mr. Z Calumet Farm KY
Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/NYTB_Wanamakers.jpg
  2. Wanamakers.com: http://wanamakers.com
  3. nytbreeders.org : http://nytbreeders.org/
  4. info@nytbreeders.org: mailto:info@nytbreeders.org

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/28/nytb-stallion-season-auction-returns-jan-27-31-on-wanamakers-com/


Mind Control to stand at Rockridge for unique partnership

[1]

Mind Control, who capped his career with a win in the Grade 1 Cigar Mile in December, retires to Rockridge Stud in Hudson for the 2023 season. Joe Labozzetta/NYRA Photo.

Red Oak Stable’s and Madaket Stable’s multiple Grade 1 winner Mind Control, who capped his career with a gritty victory in the Cigar Mile Handicap, will enter stud in 2023 in New York. The 6-year-old son of Stay Thirsty will stand at Rockridge Stud in Hudson under the management of Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions and Rockridge Stud.

Mind Control, who will stand for $8,500 live foal, stands and nurses, is the most accomplished horse to begin his stud career in New York in decades. Bred by Stephen P. Brunetti’s Red Oak Stable, Mind Control won 12 of 29 starts with three seconds and six thirds for $2,185,834 in earnings. He was a graded stakes winner in each of his five seasons on the racetrack, and a Grade 1 winner at 2, 3 and 6.

“We are excited and looking forward to standing Mind Control at Rockridge Stud,” said Red Oak Stable racing manager Rick Sacco. “There was considerable interest from stud farms in the U.S., Japan and the Middle East, but given that his three Grade 1 victories were on the NYRA circuit, we believe Rockridge Stud in the state of New York is the perfect place for Mind Control to begin his stallion career.

“Ultimately, Stephen Brunetti wanted the horse to stand in the U.S. Sol Kumin agreed, a deal was struck with Rockridge Stud, Irish Hill Farm and Dutchess Views Stallions, and a partnership was formed.”

Mind Control will serve stallion duty as the property of Rockridge Stud, Irish Hill Farm, Dutchess Views Stallions, Hidden Lake Farm, and Waldorf Farm, as well as Red Oak Stable and Madaket Stable.

“This is a significant development for Rockridge Stud, Irish Hill Farm, Dutchess Views Stallions and for the breeding industry in New York,” added Rockridge’s owner/operator Lere Visagie. “Getting this group of partners together to support Mind Control gives us a phenomenal opportunity to make him the most successful stallion to ever stand in the state.”

Mind Control’s first Grade 1 victory came in the 2018 Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga Race Course. Fresh off a 6-furlong maiden win at Monmouth Park in his second start for trainer Gregory Sacco, Mind Control shipped to upstate New York and won the 7-furlong Hopeful on the front end in 1:22.09.

Mind Control started his sophomore season with a victory in the Jerome Stakes at Aqueduct before returning again to Saratoga for another Grade 1 victory – in the 7-furlong H. Allen Jerkens Stakes in 1:21.43. He won two more stakes on the NYRA circuit as a 4-year-old, taking the Grade 3 Toboggan Stakes and Grade 3 Tom Fool Handicap, both at Aqueduct.

[2]

Mind Control and John Velazquez win the Cigar Mile. Chelsea Durand/NYRA Photo.

Transferred to Todd Pletcher in late spring 2021, Mind Control won his first start for the new barn in the Grade 2 John A. Nerud Stakes. He later added the first of two Parx Dirt Mile Stakes wins before taking three of six starts in 2022. Mind Control won the Grade 3 Salvator Mile Stakes at Monmouth Park and Parx Dirt Mile this year, before defeating Get Her Number, White Abarrio, Zandon and others in the $750,000 Cigar Mile.

“That was a phenomenal performance,” Pletcher said after the Cigar Mile win. “It’s just great to see him have a victory like that in his final career start. He deserved to go out that way.”

“It’s not only great for him to go out on a win, but for him to do it in the style that defines his character and fight off challenges from the Florida Derby winner on the inside, the American Pharoah winner on the outside. Three Grade 1-winners battling it out across the track. He showed that signature move of his where he puts his head in front and won’t be denied.”

Mind Control is the fourth foal out of the stakes-winning Lightnin N Thunder mare Feel That Fire. He’s a half-brother to four winners led by Goddess of Fire, runner-up in both the Grade 2 Rachel Alexandra Stakes and Gulfstream Park Oaks this past winter and spring and third in last summer’s Grade 1 Alabama Stakes at Saratoga Race Course. A debut winner at 2 at Saratoga who placed in two other stakes, Goddess of Fire earned $335,875 through Friday.

Feel That Fire is also the dam of winners Urban Burn, Gangbusters and My Gift From Above, and the 2-year-old Candy Ride filly White Hot Gold who made her debut Dec. 3 at Tampa Bay Downs.

“I’m extremely proud of everything Mind Control accomplished on the racetrack,” Brunetti said. “I’ve been breeding horses for 25 years and he’s the best one I’ve ever bred. From a breeding perspective, Mind Control has excellent conformation and size. He displayed fierce courage, he hails from a strong and active female family, and he won Grade 1 races from 7 furlongs to 1 mile.”

Rick Sacco described Mind Control’s final career start as almost like a movie ending.

“It was a fitting end to his impressive racing career and it was awesome that Johnny V. came in from California to ride Mind Control in his final race,” he said. “We’re very proud of the horse, our breeding program and the Red Oak Farm operation led by Barry Dolan. I just want to congratulate Todd and his entire team and to remember the excellent job my brother Gregg did with Mind Control earlier in his career winning two Grade 1 races.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/MindControl-JoeLabozzetta.jpg
  2. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/MindControlChelseaDurand.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/21/mind-control-retires-to-rockridge-for-unique-partnership/


General Banker gives Seacoast Thoroughbreds big win in Great White Way

[1]

General Banker picks the right day to break his maiden, taking the $500,000 Great White Way division of the NYSS at Aqueduct. Chelsea Durand/NYRA Photo.

By Paul Halloran

Prior to Saturday, John Forma’s biggest thrill in a half-century in horse racing was when his Take the El Train won at 128-1 odds at Aqueduct in 2013. The winner’s share of $21,600 was nice, but Forma recalls collecting even more at the mutuel window.

“That was my biggest accomplishment,” said Forma, who races under Seacoast Thoroughbreds of New England.

Make that second-biggest.

General Banker, a homebred son of leading New York sire Central Banker, made a sweeping move on the far turn and pulled away to an 8 1/2-length win in the $500,000 Great White Way division of the New York Stallion Series Stakes at Aqueduct. The $275,000 winner’s share brought his career earnings to $345,600.

The Great White Way was the first win in eight starts for General Banker, who is out of Seacoast’s broodmare Elusive Jozi and was bred and foaled at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs.

“Imagine, breaking your maiden for half-a-million dollars,” Forma said. “That’s crazy.”

Crazy good, that is.

Trained by Jimmy Ferraro and ridden confidently by Eric Cancel, General Banker sat off a pace set by longshot Playingwithmatches and favorite Vacation Dance, went five-wide on the turn and took the lead at the stretch call before running up the score. The winning time was 1:25.49 for 7 furlongs over the muddy and sealed surface.

“I thought he was in a great spot,” Ferraro said. “Those Central Bankers love the mud. At Saratoga, he was still really green. He’s still learning things.”

He gets a straight-A for his performance Saturday, much to the delight of his owner, a Brooklyn native who has lived in Portsmouth, N.H., for 25 years and named his stable accordingly.

“I told the trainer to get him a massage and let him feel great (after his last race),” Forma said. “Between the blinkers (added three races back), the massage and good training, we got the win.”

It was a 1-2 finish for McMahon of Saratoga stallions as Ramblin’ Wreck, a son of Redesdale, finished second.

“Central Banker has been so much fun,” Joe McMahon said. “His oldest horses are 5 now and he just keeps coming up with nice horses. It’s a real credit to our syndicate, our help, and everybody. We’re having a great run.

“And Redesdale, too. A Redesdale ran second in the other race [Midtown Lights in the NYSSS Fifth Avenue] as well. He’s a very well-bred stallion. He won 3-of-4 starts and all four Beyers over 90. I’m glad to see his book picking up as well.”

Forma claimed Elusive Jozi for $20,000 at Belmont Park in 2013 with the intention of turning her into a broodmare. She had her first foal in 2016, Wailin Josie, also by Central Banker, who earned $249,863 in 42 starts and will become a broodmare next year, Forma said. Olivers Fortune, a 4-year-old gelding by Laoban, has won twice in 29 starts. General Banker was the third foal for Elusize Jozi, who died earlier this year.

“I own some shares in Central Banker with Joe McMahon so all my horses are bred in-house,” Forma said. “I have a lot of Central Bankers. I have four on the track now.”

Forma is a longtime participant in the New York breeding program and wouldn’t have it any other way.

“I don’t know if I’d want to be in Thoroughbred racing if not for the New York breeding program,” he said. “It gives you such an edge. The residual income (from breeder awards) makes a big difference.”

 

 

 

 

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/GeneralBanker-GreatWhiteWay.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/17/general-banker-gives-seacoast-thoroughbreds-big-win-in-great-white-way/


Wudda U Think Now upsets Alex M. Robb

[1]

Wudda U Think Now and jockey Dylan Davis head to the winner’s circle after Saturday’s Alex M. Robb at Aqueduct. Joe Labozzetta/NYRA Photo.

Wudda U Think Now loves Aqueduct. The Elkstone Group’s 5-year-old Fast Anna gelding came into Saturday’s $100,000 Alex M. Robb Stakes for older New York-breds with five wins in nine starts at the Big A – not counting a decent fourth last time out in the Hudson Stakes on Empire Showcase Day at the so-called Belmont at the Big A meeting.

Wudda U Think Now added a sixth win in the 1-mile Alex M. Robb, saving ground most of the way and giving the field the slip turning for home en route to a 3 1/4-length win over Sea Foam as the second longest shot on the board. Sent off 9-1 in the field of seven, Wudda U Think Now won his third stakes of 2022 after taking the 6-furlong Hollie Hughes in February and the 6-furlong John Morrissey in August.

“We were a little concerned about the distance, but he went a mile at Aqueduct [as a 3-year-old],” winning trainer Rudy Rodriguez said. “He loves Aqueduct and he loves the winter. As soon as the winter gets to him, he gets stronger in the mornings. He’s a nice horse to be around.”

Wudda U Think Now also pushed his earnings past $500,000 for owner Stuart Grant, adding $55,000 from the Alex M. Robb to go to $503,750 in his career from eight wins in 19 starts.

Dylan Davis, who also rode Venti Valentine to victory in the Bay Ridge Stakes Saturday, came away impressed in his first ride on the gelding.

“I’m always happy with one [stakes win], and if I can get a second one for the day, it’s always a bonus,” Davis said. “I’ve been working this horse a couple times and I’ve been very impressed with him. He’s aggressive, strong and I’m happy I got on him because he’s a horse where if you fight him too much, he’s going to get aggressive with you.”

Wudda U Think Now and Davis battled early for the lead from the inside with Empire Classic winner Dr. Blute to their outside and Sea Foam tracking in third. The top pair clicked off strong splits of :22.96 and :45.72 before Wudda U Think Now opened up by a length through 6 furlongs in 1:11.23.

Wudda U Think Now drew off from there, opening up 4 lengths in midstretch as Sea Foam rallied past Dr. Blute and into second. Sea Foam held second at the finish, 2 3/4 lengths ahead of Perfect Munnings with Market Alert fourth and 2-1 favorite Barese sixth of seven. Wudda U Think Now won in 1:39.33 over the muddy and sealed main track.

“I was a little concerned because the other horse, Sea Foam, he’s a nice, solid horse, too,” Rodriguez said. “When I see him sitting third, I said, ‘Oh my God, we’re just setting the race up for him.’ But I think the track has changed a little bit. I thought the inside was a little tiring, but Dylan took him outside. I was a little concerned with him changing leads, but I think he changed leads because they went fast early and he was kind of tiring. But we got the job done.”

Bred by Mina Equivest LLC and foaled at Five Oak Farm in Saratoga, Wudda U Think Now is out of the stakes-placed Unbridled Jet mare Unbridled Grace.

Grant purchased Wudda U Think Now for $60,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale. He’s one of five winners from five foals to race out of Unbridled Grace. In addition to Wudda U Think Now, Unbridled Grace is the dam of New York-bred stakes performers James Jingle and C d’Cat.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/WuddaUThinkNow-AlexMRobb.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/17/wudda-u-think-now-upsets-alex-m-robb/


Les Bon Temps adds NYSS Fifth Avenue to growing resume

[1]

Les Bon Temps wins second straight stakes in Saturday’s Fifth Avenue division of the NYSS. Susie Raisher/NYRA Photo.

Les Bon Temps delivered as the favorite and significantly padded her bankroll with a victory in Saturday’s $500,000 Fifth Avenue division of the New York Stallion Series Stakes at Aqueduct.

The 2-year-old daughter of the late Laoban, upset winner of the Maid of the Mist Stakes on Empire Showcase Day in late October during the Belmont at the Big A meeting, won the 7-furlong Fifth Avenue as the 6-5 favorite in the field of 10 under Jose Lezcano. Owned by Deuce Greathouse, Cindy Hutson and Brett Setzer and trained by Mike Maker, Les Bon Temps improved to 3-for-6 with two thirds with $462,260 in earnings.

Bred by Southern Equine Stables, foaled at Irish Hill Century Farm in Stillwater and out of the unraced Tapizar mare Winsanity, Les Bon Temps was purchased by Greathouse and Pura Vida Racing for $65,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October yearling sale.

“She was a big, pretty filly,” Greathouse said of his first impressions of Les Bon Temps at the October sale. “People like Laoban. She didn’t have that huge, flowing walk at the yearling sale that everybody pays the real money for. If she had a big walk, she probably would have brought $125,000 or $150,000, but she just didn’t want to walk and that turned a lot of people off, I think, right away. Obviously, that doesn’t affect her running.”

Lezcano was content to let Les Bon Temps run seventh early as Gulfstream Park maiden winner Forces Sweetheart clicked off the opening quarter-mile in :22.86 ahead of Central Speed, Small Pebbles and Fema Funds.

Les Bon Temps inched up to fifth after a half in :46.92 as Forces Sweetheart continued to lead and Sweet Liberty ranged up on the outside. Sweet Liberty appeared poised to roll by the field until she bore out badly on the turn, all while Les Bon Temps continued to make progress toward the lead.

Midtown Lights came away with the lead in the stretch, just ahead of Little Linzee but couldn’t hold off Les Bon Temps inside the eighth pole. Les Bon Temps took over at the sixteenth pole and won by 1 1/4 lengths in 1:27.28 over the muddy and sealed main track. Midtown Lights held second, 1 3/4 lengths ahead of Little Linzee with Dream on Cara fourth.

“With this kind of filly, you have to use her,” Lezcano said. “You have to keep her in position. I had to keep waiting until making my move at the quarter pole. When I did, she went on and won the race. It was easy to get to the outside. She handled the track well. The only thing is I think she could have used somebody next to her to keep going more.”

Les Bon Temps made her first three starts for Norm Casse before being transferred to Maker, who prepped the filly for her New York startings out his Belmont Park barn.

Les Bon Temps finished third in her first start for Maker, beaten just 2 1/2 lengths in the Joseph A. Gimma in late September before her victory in the Maid of the Mist. She won her debut May 26 at Churchill Downs going 5 furlongs in the slop before a third to presumptive Eclipse Award winner Wonder Wheel in the Debutante and a fourth in the Seeking the Ante on Saratoga Showcase Day in late August.

“Honestly, when she ran at Saratoga, I don’t think the mud bothered her. She hadn’t run in a while and she just looked like she needed that race really badly,” Greathouse said. “Mike just worked her one time and ran her up here and she was on the lead and got a little tired. I thought her last start was us finally getting to see what kind of a filly she was, and obviously she built off that, so that was great.”

Les Bon Temps is the second foal out of Winsanity, who also produced the winning New York-bred 3-year-old Bodemeister gelding The Man to See, and a yearling full brother to the Maid of the Mist winner and a weanling New York-bred filly by Honest Mischief foaled March 1. The latter two foals were bred by Cypress Creek Equine.

Greathouse applauded the Stallion Series and hinted that Les Bon Temps could show up in some other top New York races after the New Year.

“It’s a great program they’ve put together and I wish there were more of these New York sire races,” Greathouse said. “We’re going to see what Mike says. At some point she deserves a chance [at open company]. She broke her maiden in open company. So, I don’t know, maybe the Busanda [January 14] or the Busher [March 4]. We’ll see what Mike says. Two turns is going to be her friend.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/LesBonTemps-NYSSFifthAvenue.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/17/les-bon-temps-adds-nyss-fifth-avenue-to-growing-resume/


Venti Valentine ends season with Bay Ridge score

[1]

Venti Valentine adds the Bay Ridge Stakes to her 2022 resume Saturday at Aqueduct. Chelsea Durand/NYRA Photo.

By Melissa Bauer-Herzog

New York-bred champion Venti Valentine returned to her winning ways on Saturday with a 3 3/4-length victory in the $100,000 Bay Ridge Stakes at Aqueduct.

Racing at a mile on the dirt as the second choice in the race, Venti Valentine broke strong on the sealed, muddy track before settling a few lengths off the pacesetting Mashnee Girl. Racing a few paths off the rail under Dylan Davis, Venti Valentine easily settled as they raced through early fractions of :23.24 and :46.94.

The complexion of the race changed around the turn when most of the field converged on the leader and Venti Valentine went wide for her challenge. It didn’t take long for the 3-year-old daughter of Firing Line to stick her nose in front with only Know It All Audrey the closest rival as they raced through the stretch. That rival didn’t have enough left to stick with Venti Valentine and she faded to finish 3 3/4 lengths off the winner with Spungie ralling for third and another 6 3/4 lengths back. Venti Valentine won in 1:39.19.

“Everything worked out great today,” winning trainer Jorge Abreu said. “Being in the outside post [helped], too. I don’t think she likes being on the inside. I felt pretty comfortable turning for home and Dylan was just sitting there. He had plenty of horse and everything played out good.”

The Bay Ridge was the second win of the year for the homebred filly for Final Furlong Racing Stable, which bred her with Maspeth Stable and races her with Parkland Thoroughbreds. Venti Valentine won the listed Busher Invitational Stakes in March before finishing second in the Grade 3 Gazelle Stakes. The 3-year-old also finished third in the $200,000 Fleet Indian Stakes in late August at Saratoga Race Course.

Venti Valentine’s record sits at four wins in 10 starts with three other top-three finishes, including two wins and a second as a juvenile. Saturday’s victory took her earnings to $524,250. Abreu said that the immediate plan for the filly is a winter break, with Venti Valentine heading to Ocala for 60 days off Tuesday.

Foaled at Schuylerville Thoroughbred Farm in Schuylerville, Venti Valentine is one of two stakes winners out of the winning Medaglia d’Oro mare Glory Gold, whose produce record includes multiple stakes winner Espresso Shot. That mare was also raced by Venti Valentine’s connections and trained by Abreu.

Espresso Shot was sold for $300,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton November Sale three years after Final Furlong purchased Glory Gold carrying Venti Valentine for $13,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November breeding stock sale. They purchased that mare after being impressed with Espresso Shot, who they purchased for $69,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale.

“The best part of today is the breeders’ awards we’ll get from it,” said Final Furlong Racing Stable’s co-managing partner Dan Zanatta. “Being the breeder of a stakes horse always makes it extra meaningful. We still have the mare [Glory Gold] and she’s in foal to Munnings and will go back to Uncle Mo next year. We’re really supporting her and we have a lot of progeny we’re waiting for. The New York breeding program is great, and we’ve invested a lot of money into the breeding program, not just the racing program. We’re big supporters of it.”

The dam of four winners from five runners overall, Glory Gold had a New York-bred filly by Omaha Beach last year. Bred by Final Furlong Racing Stable and Maspeth Stable, that filly sold for $500,000 to Lael Stables at this year’s Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale of selected yearlings. Glory Gold did not have a foal this season.

 

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/VentiValentine-BayRidge.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/17/venti-valetine-ends-season-with-bay-ridge-score/


NYTB, SUNY Cobleskill launch Thoroughbred industry course

NYTB logo[1]The New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc., and the State University of New York College of Agriculture and Technology at Cobleskill will team up to offer an accredited course for upper-class students in the Animal Science program to experience all aspects of the Thoroughbred breeding and racing industry.

The pilot program will be offered to 15-20 junior undergraduate students that have met prerequisites. The course, which runs from late August to early December, falls in line with the NYTB’s goals to make outreach with upper-level science students majoring in equine studies and finding the next generation of the industry’s workforce and leaders in racing and breeding.

NYTB President Tom Gallo and SUNY Cobleskill Associate Professor in Animal Science Raymond Whelihan collaborated to develop the program.

“I’ve been doing lectures there for years, probably going back 15 years and I’ve always wanted to do something for the students that really have an interest in the industry and get credit,” Gallo said. “It’s one of the goals I’ve had as president, and being on the NYTB board for a long time, to do something meaningful with a lasting benefit for the program, for the state and for the New York breeding industry. With this level of students, they’ve already made up their mind and they’ve invested three years of school. Now we’re going to give them a taste of every aspect of the industry.”

“The NYTB as an organization and many individual members have greatly assisted our students for literally the last three plus decades,” Whelihan said. “Members have opened up their farms to visits, have served on our academic advisory committee, welcomed our students for hands on experiences at sales and have travelled to the college to guest lecture. The Bachelor of Technology in Animal Science degree requires a full semester internship the final semester, and New York Thoroughbred farms and trainers have provided many internship opportunities over the years.”

The program’s goals are to introduce students to every aspect of the Thoroughbred breeding and racing industry via a consistent schedule of Zoom session and on-site visits.

The course’s tentative schedule:

“The program is essential to our industry because it allows our breeder membership organization and experienced members to work directly with students already interested in pursuing a career in the equine field,” said Najja Thompson, Executive Director of the NYTB. “Giving them direct access and exposure to the multitude of jobs and careers in our industry. We are thankful to start this pilot program working with Ray Whelihan and SUNY Cobleskill. It has unlimited potential going forward in partnering with more schools in the future to help ensure a knowledgeable and dedicated workforce for the immediate future of Thoroughbred breeding and racing.”

“We’re looking forward to working with the NYTB next fall and would like to thank the NYTB and its members for continually reaching out and providing meaningful immersion experiences for our students,” Whelihan said. “I have to thank Tom Gallo as the driving force in connecting the industry to our academic program. Tom has visited the college many times over the years to guest lecture and offered his experience and encouragement, bringing a positive message to students. This initiative will serve to encourage students to pursue careers working in the New York Thoroughbred industry, energize a younger fan base and provide that crucial link, bridging academics and industry.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/NYTB-Logo-for-web-e1614620864994.png

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/16/nytb-suny-cobleskill-launch-thoroughbred-industry-course/


Betsy Blue wins Garland of Roses off short rest

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Betsy Blue storms from off the pace to win Saturday’s Garland of Roses at Aqueduct. Susie Raisher/NYRA Photo.

Betsy Blue went from Grade 3-placed to open stakes winner in a weeks’ time Saturday, taking the $116,400 Garland of Roses with a last-to-first run through the Aqueduct stretch.

Cloud Nine Stable’s 4-year-old daughter of Tonalist bounced out of her third in the Grade 3 Go for Wand last week at Aqueduct and shortened up to win the 6-furlong Garland of Roses by 1 1/4 lengths over Beguine. Jose Lezcano rode the winner for trainer Linda Rice.

“We accomplished what we wanted with the Grade 3 [placing] and, frankly, I knew it was back on short rest, but she’s won all of her conditions and there’s limited opportunities for her,” Rice said. “It’s on her home court and she came out of the race great, so I said ‘let’s go right back.’ ”

Betsy Blue not only added the Garland of Roses to her third in the 1-mile Go for Wand, she collected her second stakes victory after taking the 2021 Bouwerie Stakes on Big Apple Showcase Day. She improved to 9-for-20 and boosted her bankroll to $604,510.

Bred by Blue Devil Racing and foaled at Sugar Maple Farm in Poughquag, Betsy Blue was claimed by Rice for $50,000 out of a victory March 25, 2021 at Aqueduct. Betsy Blue won her next two starts, including the Bouwerie, during a sophomore campaign where she went 4-4-1 in nine starts.

Betsy Blue has been equally effective at 4, now with five wins in 11 starts to go with three seconds and a third. She won back-to-back starts in allowance-optional company in mid-August at Saratoga Race Course and at the Belmont at the Big A meet before a fourth in the Iroquois Stakes on Empire Showcase Day in late October.

Betsy Blue went off as the 2-1 second choice in the field of five for the Garland of Roses, behind even-money choice Smash Ticket.

Lezcano was content to let Betsy Blue trail the field – which was reduced by two after the scratches of Hot Peppers and Dontletsweetfoolya – as Smash Ticket and Disco Ebo battled through the opening quarter-mile in :22.51. Beguine, racing just behind the top two early, took over before the half in :45.78 with Betsy Blue still 4 1/2 lengths back trailing the field.

“I saw Lezcano was urging her to keep her close enough to win and that was the idea,” Rice said. “She’s coming off of a mile, so he had to encourage her a little bit but she’s such a professional and she loves what she’s doing.”

Lezcano tipped Betsy Blue wide turning into the lane, gained on the leader with every stride and took control inside the sixteenth pole to win going away. Betsy Blue won in 1:10.92 with Beguine second, 4 1/4 lengths ahead of Disco Eba. Snicket, another New York-bred running back on short rest, finished fourth with Smash Ticket fifth.

“She’s a very good mare. She always tries hard and gives me her best,” Lezcano said. “They went pretty quick in front early on and when they turned for home she found another gear, went on and won the race. Any race from a mile to three quarters, she always tries hard.”

Betsy Blue is the fourth foal out of the stakes-placed Yonaguska mare Honest to Betsy. Her first foal, the City Zip mare Sand City, won two of 25 starts with 10 placings and earned $87,895. Honest to Betsy is also the dam of the unraced 2-year-old New York-bred Unified filly Midnight Confession and a New York-bred colt by Mitole foaled April 30.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/BetsyBlue-GarlandRoses.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/10/betsy-blue-wins-garland-of-roses-off-short-rest/


Snapper Sinclair to stand at McMahon of Saratoga

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Snapper Sinclair, winner of the 2021 Tourist Mile at Kentucky Downs, will enter stud in 2023 at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds. Coady Photography.

McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs will add stakes winner and $1,857,642-earner Snapper Sinclair to its roster for the 2023 season. The 7-year-old son of City Zip out of the Yes It’s True mare True Addiction will stand his initial season for $5,000 live foal, stands and nurses.

McMahon of Saratoga will welcome Snapper Sinclair to the stallion barn at 180 Fitch Road in Saratoga Springs from 1-4 p.m. Saturday.

Campaigned by Jeff Bloom’s Bloom Racing and trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, Snapper Sinclair won seven of 39 starts with nine seconds and four thirds. He won the Fasig-Tipton Turf Showcase Juvenile Stakes as a 2-year-old at Kentucky Downs and placed in key Kentucky Derby preps at 3. Snapper Sinclair won the Tourist Mile Stakes as a 4-year-old at Kentucky Downs and added another major victory there in the TVG Stakes at 6 in 2021.

“I love this horse because he showed up every time, whether dirt or turf, sprinting or two turns,” said Jeff Bloom. “He raced in the toughest company throughout his career and always tried.”

Snapper Sinclair ran in three Breede.rs’ Cup events – the Grade 1 Juvenile Turf in 2017 at Del Mar, Grade 1 Dirt Mile in 2019 at Santa Anita and Grade 1 Dirt Mile in 2021 at Del Mar. He also placed in six graded stakes, including a runner-up in the Grade 1 Cigar Mile Handicap at Aqueduct.

“What a cool horse, he’s so versatile-could run on any surface and would run against anyone,” Asmussen said. “I love him and believe he deserves a chance at stud.”

Bloom purchased Snapper Sinclair for $180,000 at the 2017 OBS April sale of 2-year-olds in training. He’s the sixth foal out of the Grade 2-placed True Addiction, who is also the dam of stakes-placed winner Cat Addiction and winners Yo No Se, Tripendicular and Phonybooksnrecords.

“His combination of race record, pedigree and high regard for connections of Jeff Bloom and Steve Asmussen convinced us,” said McMahon of Saratoga’s John McMahon. “You never know from where a stallion might come and his sire City Zip started in New York at $7,500 before he moved to Lane’s End and became a leading sire. You think about iconic stallions like Storm Cat, Tapit, War Front, Into Mischief, and they all stood for $10,000 at one time, and we believe Snapper Sinclair has enough of the right ingredients to become a successful stallion.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/SnapperSinclair-Coady.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/12/10/snapper-sinclair-to-stand-at-mcmahon-of-saratoga/