Rascal Cat, a 17-year-old son of Pulpit who won 11 times during his career and stood most recently at Arkansas State University, is headed to the Northeast to help establish a Thoroughbred breeding program at Cazenovia College in Central New York.
BloodHorse reported the move last week in its online story titled “Rascal Cat Helping to Launch Another College Program.”
Here is the full report, courtesy of BloodHorse:
Dr. William McGuire is expanding the breeding program at Cazenovia College near Syracuse, N.Y., with the same stallion that helped him establish a Thoroughbred breeding program at Arkansas State University.
Rascal Cat, a 17-year-old son of Pulpit, has been relocated to New York where he will train students in how to handle stallions and will be available to outside breeders for a $1,000 fee.
“He has the perfect stallion temperament for helping train college students,” said McGuire. “While he is definitely a stallion, his demeanor lessens the risk to students that are just learning how to handle stallions in the live cover breeding process.”
McGuire started the breeding program at Arkansas State in 2017 and brought in Rascal Cat from Oklahoma. The stallion was a standout as a yearling, selling for $1.3 million to Stonestreet Stables out of Taylor Made Sales Agency’s consignment at the 2006 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. He is out of the winning Storm Cat mare Razzi Cat and is a half brother to group 1 winners Rocking Trick and Randy Cat. His family is rich in European success, with 35 stakes winners named under his third dam, Vale.
As a racehorse, Rascal Cat was hampered by a condylar fracture and yet he won 11 races and placed in 20 others out of 68 starts and earned $203,124. He had limited opportunities as a stallion without a stakes win to his credit. His six crops are represented by 33 foals that include 19 starters and seven winners. His best runner to date is Rascal Candy who has won five times and placed in 12 other races out of 27 starts on his way to earning more than $50,000.
“He has a nice conformation and has sired winners from a limited number of offspring,” said McGuire. “As far as what he will add to the New York-bred program, I feel that he brings excellent bloodlines for a very affordable fee for owners.”
The only Thoroughbred mares Cazenovia owns right now are used for equitation classes, so McGuire said the school is seeking mare donations for the breeding program. The resulting foals from the program will be used for weanling and yearling management classes and eventually will be prepped for a sale.
The college has one other stallion, a Holsteiner named Royal Appearance, who is used for training in artificial insemination and is bred to warmblood mares.
McGuire began at Cloud County Community College in Concordia, Kansas, where he taught animal science classes, anatomy, and physiology, and implemented the college’s equine program. He also started the college’s rodeo team, equestrian team, and coached the horse judging team. After 15 years in this position, he accepted a job with New Mexico State University and served as a Northern New Mexico Horse Specialist among many other roles. He next went to Arkansas State and then took a job in 2019 as assistant manager at Sequel Stallion New York. He became a visiting instructor at Cazenovia College in August 2021.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/28/rascal-cat-moves-to-stand-at-cazenovia-college/
By Tom Law
Cypress Creek Equine LLC’s Un Ojo shocked the 31,000-strong at Oaklawn Park Saturday and put a New York-sired colt on the road to the Kentucky Derby with a monstrous victory in the $1 million Grade 2 Rebel Stakes.
The 3-year-old son of the late Sequel New York resident Laoban, given his name after losing one eye in a paddock accident as a yearling, shocked the crowd on one of Oaklawn’s biggest days with the half-length win over Ethereal Road as the longest shot on the board at 75-1. The victory earned Un Ojo 50 points toward a spot in the Kentucky Derby starting gate – basically an automatic bid – and gave trainer Ricky Courville the biggest stakes win of his career.
“It’s crazy. It’s kind of shared between me and Tony (trainer Tony Dutrow) because I sent him to Tony, to Aqueduct, for the winter and Tony had him until Monday and sent him back to us,” Courville said. “Gosh, I feel bad for Tony. The owners kind of decided (on the Rebel). I think Tony was wanting to keep him up there for the Gotham, but they wanted to not go back to a one-turn mile and (Kevin Moody of Cypress Creek Equine) wanted to send him down here and take a shot at the money. He kept saying the two turns is going to be better for us.”
Un Ojo, who had previously collected 4 points with his second in the Grade 3 Withers Stakes at Aqueduct, moved into second on the leaderboard with 54 total points toward Kentucky Derby eligibility.
Clay Courville, Ricky Courville’s 25-year-old son and assistant trainer, couldn’t hide his excitement for the victory.
“I’ve loved this horse since Day 1,” he said. “I knew he had the talent to be this kind of horse. I always had the confidence in him. He just improved so much every single day, every single race. This is a dream come true. Two strong efforts in his last two races. Closed really well in the last two races with Mr. Anthony Dutrow, who has done a great job with the horse.
“He sent him down here for us to run and he came here. We were hoping he would close good. He kind of laid a little closer than we thought. He grinded away today.”
Bred by Southern Equine Stables LLC and foaled at Fort Christopher’s Thoroughbreds in Fort Edward, Un Ojo is out of the multiple stakes-placed A.P. Indy mare Risk a Chance. Southern Equine purchased Risk a Chance, herself a second generation New York-bred from the Bromans’ program, in foal to Laoban for $40,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga fall mixed sale.
Risk a Chance is also the dam of Risky Analysis, an active daughter of Freud who is already a five-time winner of over $115,000. Her four-year-old, Chief Commander, a New York-bred colt by Quality Road, sold for $550,000 at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale of selected yearlings. Un Ojo has a 2-year-old half-brother by Ghostzapper who sold for $180,000 to Calumet Farm at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale.
Un Ojo finished eighth, beaten 24 lengths, in his career debut going 6 furlongs Oct. 9 at Keeneland before a 4 1/4-length victory in a 6 1/2-furlong maiden at Delta Downs a month later. He finished fourth in the Jean Lafitte Stakes at Delta on Nov. 20 for Ricky Courville before shipping north to Dutrow at Belmont Park. He finished a late-running second in his return to the Empire State in the $500,000 Great White Way division of the New York Stallion Stakes Series in mid-December. Uno Ojo finished second in the Grade 3 Withers at 9 furlongs on a muddy track at Aqueduct Feb. 5 before returning to the Courville barn earlier this week.
Un Ojo earned $600,000 for his Rebel victory to pad his earnings to $776,321.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/26/eye-on-the-derby-un-ojo-upsets-rebel-stakes/
By Melissa Bauer-Herzog
It isn’t often a mare can lay claim to champions in multiple disciplines, but the popular broodmare Naughty Natisha can do just that through her sons Naughty New Yorker and Jacob’s Arch.
The more well-known of the two in racing circles, Naughty New Yorker was a millionaire racehorse who also took home New York-bred Horse of the Year honors during his eight seasons on the track. His year-older half-brother Jacob’s Arch was no slouch on the track, winning five times and earning $100,345 during a 23-race career, but has become an even better dressage horse.
Jacob’s Arch’s career ended in 2008 when he fractured a knee but his story was just beginning. Breeders Dr. Bill Wilmot and Dr. Joan Taylor happily brought the then 7-year-old home to rehab and start a new career. After a few false starts when Jacob’s Arch decided the new careers weren’t the right ones for him, he was connected with Justine Watson of Lincoln University, Pa., through the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance-accredited After The Races when he was 17.
Watson admits that she was told by some people that an off-track Thoroughbred may not be the best choice for her first horse, but “Archer” was her perfect choice.
“I was looking for my first horse, I had just picked up riding a few months prior and I was leasing an off-track Thoroughbred, so I was looking around and found After the Races,” she said. “I thought he looked really cute, and he was described as a really classy guy with a good brain, so I went out and took a look at him.
“He was really in-tune with things. I took my horse friends to come look at him with me, so they rode him first and they liked him, so I got on him. Instead of being up and ready to roll, he was very kind. He listened and seemed to know I didn’t have that much experience.”
The pair started learning about dressage and four years later are competing in Training Level and First Level with Lauren Annett. Watson’s biggest moment in the time she’s owned Jacob’s Arch came last year when they qualified for their United States Dressage Federation region’s finals and rode into the famed Rolex Stadium at the Kentucky Horse Park.
“I just took up riding when I was 28 or 29 and this was our first year doing recognized,” she said. “It’s been really cool having him. I don’t know if I’d be able to do it without him, to be honest. I know we didn’t place but it’s a historic place to ride.”
That wasn’t the only accomplishment on their resume last year. During an awards ceremony Feb. 19, the pair took home six divisional championships in their local dressage organization and two reserve championships in the USDF’s All Breeds – Jockey Club category.
“It was a nice way to reflect back on our season,” she said. “I’m pretty sure we had 30-plus competitive rides this season, which is no small feat in itself, let alone our first season. We have come so far in a very small amount of time, and he still improves almost every ride. I know people get caught up in winning things, but a lot of dressage is against yourself. You’re trying to get them more through and straighter to get that 0.5-1.0 more in the transition score to bump your overall. And by getting your horse to go better, you’re preserving them. That’s the real prize for me.”
Jacob’s Arch turned 21 this year and has given no signs he’s ready to retire. Watson and Jacob’s Arch are aiming toward a return to regionals and possibly USDF finals this year. Jacob’s Arch seems as happy as ever to compete.
“He’s going to have to be the one to tell me what he wants to do,” Watson said. “He’s really happy having a job because he always shows up and is so professional. Even when he doesn’t want to do something he’ll just give an old-man groan. I’ll ride him until he says he can’t do this anymore.”
No matter what they do, they have a built-in cheering squad with his breeders.
The late Todd Yaeger, longtime manager at Wilmot and Taylor’s Stepwise Farm in Saratoga Springs, was also excited to hear about Jacob’s Arch every time he saw Watson and even took her to see the workouts and meet different people at Saratoga Race Course.
“I have to give a major shoutout to Bill and Joan,” Watson said. “You always hear horror stories about these horses, but I talk to Bill pretty frequently. He keeps me up on other horses they’ve bred, they really do care about their horses. I’ve gotten to do a lot of cool things [because of Jacob’s Arch]. I’ve always been into horse racing but knowing these guys, I got to meet up with Todd Yeager and when I went to Saratoga and see the morning workouts. He was always a big, big Archer fan and always wanted to know what the old man was up to.”
Watson’s job as a physician assistant in cardiac surgery keeps her busy enough that she’s not yet thinking about buying a younger horse to have ready when Jacob’s Arch retires, but said another OTTB will be at the top of her list.
“I would like to continue with OTTBs because I just love their work ethic,” she said. “They’re super-cool horses. They’re beautifully bred. The OTTB for 500 bucks may get you farther than the dressage-bred horse you spent $30,000 on. I wish more people would get on board with taking them up the levels because I think they’re very smart and very athletic horses and they’re bred for stamina and working, why not? I’m hoping I can get another Thoroughbred.”
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/23/jacobs-arch-continues-to-thrive-in-second-career/
By Tom Law
Saratoga Snacks, a multiple New York-bred stakes winner and popular resident of ReRun in East Greenbush, was euthanized due to metabolic issues at the age of 13.
Campaigned for most of his career by Hall of Fame football coach Bill Parcells’ August Dawn Farm and trainer Gary Sciacca, Saratoga Snacks retired to ReRun’s Thoroughbred retraining and adoption organization in late 2016. He served as one of ReRun’s equine ambassadors in retirement, alongside former New York stallion Frost Giant, who also died this year.
Parcells continued to support Saratoga Snacks during his retirement and Sciacca was a frequent visitor to the gelding through the years. Saratoga Snacks will be buried at ReRun alongside Frost Giant.
“It was really weird in the barn (recently) without those two on the end,” said Lisa Molloy, executive director of ReRun Inc. “I’m pretty honored that I had both of them.”
Bred by Mrs. Gerald A. Nielsen, the son of Tale of the Cat was purchased by Sciacca at the 2010 Fasig-Tipton New York-bred yearling sale for $60,000. He made his debut about a year later for August Dawn and Parcells, finishing second in a 5-furlong state-bred maiden race at Saratoga Race Course before winning a similar race stretched out to 6 1/2 furlongs the final Saturday of the meet.
Saratoga Snacks won four of five starts in 2012, including the Alex M. Robb Stakes late in the year at Aqueduct, to earn a nomination as champion New York-bred 3-year-old male. He won two more stakes at 4, including the Empire Classic Handicap on Empire Showcase Day at Belmont Park. Saratoga Snacks didn’t win at 5 but returned as a 6-year-old in 2015 and won or placed in five of his six starts, including a victory in the Saginaw Stakes at Belmont and a runner-up finish in the Evan Shipman Stakes at Saratoga.
Saratoga Snacks retired with nine wins, six seconds and four thirds for $693,500 in earnings. He was one of five winners produced by the winning Red Ransom mare Near and Dear, along with Baby Snacks, Chestnut Street, Hurricane Jackie and Speed Dating.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/22/fan-favorite-saratoga-snacks-dies-at-13/
By Tom Law
Maggie Seidman thinks of her horses – ex-racehorses, broodmares, young foals or even horses she’s sold – as members of her family.
“They’re like my kids,” Seidman said Monday afternoon before heading off to celebrate her grandson’s second birthday. “They’re just beautiful animals and do these things we ask them to do. They deserve a good life.”
Yo Cuz, one of the horses Seidman sold, continued to live the best version of her good life Monday with a victory in the $100,000 Maddie May Stakes on Aqueduct’s President’s Day card. Jose Ortiz came in from Florida to ride the daughter of Laoban for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott and owners Dream Maker Racing and Yo Cuz delivered a 3 1/4-length score in the 1-mile stakes for New York-bred 3-year-old fillies.
Seidman watched at home and enjoyed every moment of Yo Cuz’s front-running triumph.
“I’m really excited; my baby won,” she said.
Yo Cuz continued a strong run for Seidman and her Tale of Ekati mare Steve’s Philly, who she named for her late husband and his hometown. Yo Cuz won the Fifth Avenue division of the New York Stallion Series Stakes in mid-December. About a month later Seidman sold her short yearling full brother for $160,000 to Reeves Thoroughbred Racing at the OBS January winter mixed sale. Now, about a month later, Yo Cuz added a second stakes victory in the 1-mile Maddie May.
“She’s strong willed and confident,” Seidman said. “I’ve had horses that were terrified of everything. She never was as a baby. She was happy. You look at the foal and you have an idea sometimes.”
The second foal out of Steve’s Philly, Yo Cuz was born and raised at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs.
“They don’t pamper them, they get them out,” Seidman said. “They’re not in a hot house. When she was born she got up right away, stared at everybody. She’s always been a happy baby. This one was special. It was hard to see her go but I’m happy for them.”
Seidman was thankful for a call from Dream Maker’s Tom Gallo after the race. Dream Maker bought Yo Cuz for $125,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic May sale of 2-year-olds in training, after the filly impressed in presale gallops and did not turn in a timed breeze. Gallo said that was a positive selling point after the Fifth Avenue and Seidman said after the Maddie May that it was by design.
“I talked to Mark Roberts at Hidden Brook and said, ‘I don’t see going in :10 and pushing them,’ ” Seidman said. “They do those two-minute licks in :12,: 24, :36. I said, ‘I’d rather have the horsemen see my horse gallop strong and make the decision. If I lose money, or don’t feel right, I’ll keep the horse.’ We heard a lot of people were vetting her out. She looked beautiful.”
Bettors liked the looks of Yo Cuz in the Maddie May, sending her off at 9-10 in the field of six ahead of flashy maiden winner Stone Creator, Busanda Stakes third Reigning Chick and Franklin Square Stakes third Thinking It Over.
Yo Cuz brushed the side of the gate at the break and veered out a touch before Ortiz regrouped and put her on the lead. They led out of the chute and into the backstretch by a length over Stone Creator in :23.41 for the opening quarter-mile with Moam and Thinking It Over chasing ahead of Caragate and Reigning Chick.
“Being on the outside sometimes they break a step out, but I corrected her nicely,” Ortiz said. “She has very good early speed and she put me where I wanted to be without using her. I thought the (Stone Creator) would probably go, but I took the lead so easy and I think that’s why Kendrick [Carmouche] let us have it.”
Carmouche and Stone Creator, a 5-length winner in her debut Jan. 16 for Charlton Baker and owner-breeder Roddy Valente, continued to chase a length back as Yo Cuz hit the half in :46.91. Yo Cuz opened up on the turn and after clicking past 6 furlongs in 1:12.10, she and Ortz were 2 lengths clear. They margin widened in the lane, to 3 1/2 at the eighth pole, and Yo Cuz cruised past the finish in 1:38.91. Stone Creator held second, 4 ½ lengths in front of 26-1 longshot Caragate with Reigning Chick fourth.
The decision to fly up from Florida, regardless of the fact there was no President’s Day card at Gulfstream Park, was an easy one for Ortiz.
“Bill asked me to come up and I said, ‘sure,’ ” he said. “We won the $500,000 race last time, today it was just $100,000 but I really like her going forward. She’s very good.”
Yo Cuz picked up $55,000 and boosted her bankroll to $332,800 from her record of two wins in three starts. Gallo said the $200,000 Park Avenue division of the New York Stallion Series going 6 ½ furlongs April 24 at Aqueduct could be next.
“She was very impressive,” Gallo said. “This was sort of a test for her. There were horses with some legitimate form in here and she looks like she’s improving. At this time, that’s a great thing.”
“What we’re aiming for is probably the New York Stallion Stakes Series … unless Bill (Mott) looks at the tape and says something else. This was sort of a prep race for that. We’ll take it one step at a time. Hopefully, she eats up and is in good shape tomorrow.”
A $50,000 purchase by Seidman Stables at the 2015 OBS April sale of 2-year-olds in training, Steve’s Philly is out of the Gone West mare Striking Wonder, who is out of multiple Grade 1 winner Wonder Again from the family of Grade 1 winners Colonel Liam, Tribulation and Graceful Darby.
Steve’s Philly is also the dam of the 3-year-old New York-bred Palace Malice gelding Uncle Jerome, who is in training in New York with owner and trainer Michael Gorham. She didn’t produce a foal in 2022 but was bred last week to Connect.
“Everything seems OK with Steve’s Philly; she’ll come back to New York in 90 days if everything is fine, and foal in New York,” Seidman said. “I don’t breed them every year. I personally don’t. … I let them stay with their babies and recover. Economically people say it’s silly, but I think it’s better for my horses. So, she got a year off, she’s fully healthy and has had easy pregnancies. Mike McMahon, my stable manager, went all over, looked at the physicals, the races, everything and settled on Connect.”
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/21/yo-cuz-adds-maddie-may-to-growing-resume/
By Melissa Bauer-Herzog
The third time was the charm for Wudda U Think Now when the Mina Equivest-bred 5-year-old took the $100,000 Hollie Hughes Stakes by 4 1/2 lengths as the favorite in his third stakes attempt.
The gelding made his intentions known from the start of the 6-furlong race when he sprinted out of the gate to take the lead a few strides into the race with Runningwscissors the only one to stick with him. That pair opened nearly 5 lengths on the rest of the field as they covered the first quarter in :23.16.
Second choice My Boy Tate tried to make his move as the field exited the turn but that move came at the same time Wudda U Think Now started pulling away from Runningwscissors. My Boy Tate tried to chase the leader down but Wudda Think Now would hear nothing of it as he continued to extend his lead down the stretch.
After 1:11.17, it was the sixth win in 14 starts for the Rudy Rodriguez-trained Fast Anna gelding. The victory kept him undefeated in 2022 with career earnings of $358,060 for owner Stuart Grant’s The Elkstone Group.
“Turning for home, when he switches, he just opens up and he really lays it down,” said jockey Trevor McCarthy. “I give these guys a lot of credit. He’s a gorilla in the morning and he likes to be pretty aggressive training. Huge credit to the barn with him. I knew My Boy Tate would be coming, so I said I would ride him hard past the eighth pole and see where I was at. It was a good race.”
Rodriguez had faith that Wudda U Think Now was a stakes horse and now that he has a stakes victory under his belt is eying longer targets.
“I don’t think 7 furlongs is a problem,” Rodriguez said. “He’s a kind horse to rate. There was no speed in the race, but I think he’d be able to rate. Since we got him, I told the owner that he’s a very nice horse and told him that I thought we could win a stake with him, so thank God we got it done.”
Grant has owned Wudda U Think Now since he was a yearling, purchasing him for $60,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-Bred yearling sale.
Wudda U Think Now is one of five winners from five to race out of the stakes-placed Unbridled Jet mare Unbridled Grace. While she is the dam of one stakes winner in Wudda U Think Now, she is also the dam of the New York-bred stakes performers James Jingle and C d’Cat.
Unbridled Grace was a $55,000 broodmare purchase in 2007 and has seen her five runners sell for $30,000 to $55,000 as yearlings. Those horses have paid her back with 32 wins.
Wudda U Think Now is her final foal with the mare being bred one more time to Texas Red the year the Hollie Hughes winner was born but not catching from that mating.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/19/wudda-u-think-now-scores-in-hughes/
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Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/14/special-belmont-stakes-day-promo-discount-for-nytb-members/
By Tom Law
Robert Falcone Jr. wasted little time running Kept Waiting back after a successful debut on the dirt – seven days to be exact – and the 5-year-old mare rewarded her trainer with a victory in Sunday’s $100,000 Broadway Stakes at Aqueduct.
Kept Waiting won the 6-furlong Broadway in her stakes debut as the 2-1 second choice, tracking the loose-on-the-lead speed of multiple stakes winner Sadie Lady early before giving her six opponents the slip in the stretch on the way to a 5 1/2-length score over Time Limit. Breakfastatbonnies, the 6-5 favorite, finished third with Letmetakethiscall fourth. Kept Waiting and jockey Manny Franco won in 1:12.81 over the main track labeled sloppy after morning and lingering afternoon snow in the New York Metropolitan area on Super Bowl Sunday.
The winner of two of four starts last year, Kept Waiting won a 6-furlong state-bred turf optional Dec. 2 to close her 2022 season. She didn’t race again until winning a 6-furlong open-company allowance Feb. 6 at Aqueduct, her first try on dirt in 10 starts.
“She definitely has moved forward,” Falcone said. “We gave her some time off last year after her race in April and she came back in good shape. She needed that first race off the layoff, but after that she was fit enough. She’s always trained well so hopefully she keeps the same form.”
Even though Kept Waiting never raced much closer than a month between starts, Falcone wasn’t concerned.
“I figured we would take things day-by-day, she was coming back quick,” Falcone said. “I did the same thing with Maiden Beauty when she won the Bay Ridge in December, so we wanted to get over this race first. I’m not even looking to March. She ran a few hard races and after coming back in six days and winning like that, she deserves a little break. I’m not going to rush her. I’ll see how she comes around and go from there.”
Sadie Lady and Kendrick Carmouche were aggressive from the start, zipping away from the field and opening up 4 1/2 lengths to the opening quarter-mile in :22.69. Time Limit, Kept Waiting and Breakfastatbonnies chased to that point, before slicing into the lead approaching the half in :46.68.
Kept Waiting and Franco got first run on the leader, passed her into the lane and quickly opened up. They led by 3 lengths past the eighth pole and continued to draw away late. Time Limit finished a half-length in front of Breakfastatbonnies, who was a length clear of Letmetakethiscall. Chasing Cara, Sadie Ladie and Awillaway completed the field.
“She can run on both surfaces and she impressed me because of the way she ran her last two races and today in the company of better horses,” Franco said. “To do it this way was impressive. If I wanted, I could have kept opening up, but I didn’t want to beat her up and I knew I had the win already, so I just saved some for next time. It was perfect. I was able to be where I wanted to be behind the speed and at the five-sixteenths pole, I just tapped her on the shoulder and she was there for me.”
Bred by John Lauriello, Kept Waiting is the fourth foal out of the winning Malibu Moon mare Orient Moon. A $320,000 purchase by George Bolton at the 2010 Keeneland September yearling sale, Orient Moon won two of eight starts with two thirds for $70,660 for Bolton and partners and trainer Todd Pletcher.
Lauriello purchased Orient Moon as a broodmare prospect for $25,000 at the 2013 Keeneland November breeding stock sale. Kept Waiting was originally sold through Indian Creek to Jerry Coult Partners for $65,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale. Kept Waiting half-brother by Practical Joke sold for $250,000 to Klaravich Stable at last year’s Saratoga New York-bred yearling sale.
Kept Waiting started her career for Joseph Bulger and trainer Kelsey Danner, finishing fourth in a 1 1/16-mile state-bred maiden in June 2020 at Belmont Park. Transferred to Mike Miceli after that effort, Kept Waiting finished second in back-to-back similar spots during the 2020 Saratoga Race Course meeting before Falcone claimed her for $40,000 for Goldfarb Sept. 24, 2020 at Belmont Park.
Kept Waiting won her first start for Falcone, Goldfarb and Nice Guys Stable a month later going 7 furlongs on the grass.
She improved to 5-for-11 with the Broadway victory and boosted her bankroll to $266,600.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/13/kept-waiting-wins-broadway-on-quick-turnaround/
By Tom Law
No chance turning for home.
Still pretty slim with an eighth of a mile to run.
A sixteenth? Maybe, but still not likely.
Just before the wire? Book it.
Such was the scenario that unfolded in Saturday’s $100,000 Gander Stakes at Aqueduct with Barese attempting to run down a loose-on-the-front Bold Journey in the stretch. Barese indeed got up in time, continuing a determined rally despite losing a slight stumble and losing a shoe to win by 1 1/4 lengths.
The 3-year-old son Laoban stayed perfect in the 1-mile stakes for New York-bred sophomores, adding Saturday’s win to his come-from-behind win in the $100,00 Rego Park in early January at Aqueduct. Barese won in 1:39.26 over the fast track.
“He definitely handled the mile great,” said winning jockey Dylan Davis. “The distance was not a problem for him. He’s just a horse that now I’ve learned it just takes him a little while to get his run going. Once he does and he lays it down – and he did it late again that last eighth of a mile. He stretches out nicely and gets the job done.”
Bold Journey, a son of Hard Spun coming off a sharp maiden victory going 6 furlongs in his second start, sparred with G Munning up the backstretch through the opening quarter-mile before taking over after a half in :47.51. He and Kendrick Carmouche led by a half-length at that point while Barese, last out of the gate, tracked in third.
Bold Journey continued on the lead around the far turn and opened up a 2 1/2-length advantage through 6 furlongs in 1:12.32. He widened the margin further in the stretch, drawing 4 lengths clear approaching the eighth pole.
“I was cruising,” Carmouche said.
Davis, who didn’t realize Barese lost his left front shoe until he came back to unsaddle, never panicked.
“I got into him early at the three-eighths pole and Kendrick kind of spurted away at the quarter pole and I thought I was riding for second at that time – even the owners said that,” Davis said. “For some reason, like he does, he gets that run going again and that last eighth of a mile he made up a lot of ground and ran a great race.”
Barese sliced into the lead inside the eighth pole while Bold Journey stayed one-paced. Four lengths became 3 in a blink, then 2 and 1 and eventually Barese in front and drawing away.
“I thought he didn’t run as good as I worked him the other morning,” Carmouche said. “With that being said, I do think I was sitting easy next to the lead but I think he wants to have a target to look at. I know he had it easy in his first couple starts but I feel like going around there today, he was just loping. He never picked it up and he never slowed down – he just stayed the same.”
Bold Journey held second as the 3-5 favorite, 5 1/4 lengths in front of Geno with 50-1 longshot Doin’ittherightaway fourth in the field of seven.
Bred by Becky Thomas’ Sequel Thoroughbreds and Lewis Lakin’s Lakland Farm, foaled at Sequel Thoroughbreds in Hudson, Barese is the third foal out of the unraced Successful Appeal mare Right Prevails. Trainer Mike Maker purchased the colt for $150,000 out of Thomas’ Sequel Bloodstock consignment at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale of 2-year-olds in training.
Barese made his winning debut for Maker and owners Paradise Farms Corp. and David Staudacher in one of the first two New York-bred maiden special weight races run last year, taking a 5-furlong event by a half-length May 21 at Belmont Park. Off until Jan. 9, Barese improved to 2-for-2 in the 6 1/2-furlong Rego Park.
“He tries hard every race and just when you think he’s had enough, he just gives you that last gear,” said Paradise Farm Corp.’s Peter Proscia. “It was great. He’s moving forward and Dylan did a great job keeping him together, so we’re very pleased. I didn’t think he was going to get there. My friends here had all the faith in the world, but it was a little sketchy. When he started rolling after the last seventy yards, it was a good feeling.”
“We’ve got three [wins] now – one as a 2-year-old and two stakes as a 3-year-old. It’s good. I’m not sure what the next spot is, but we’ll talk with Mike and the group and see what happens.”
Right Prevails, a full sister to Grade 3 winner and 2005 Kentucky Derby runner-up Closing Argument, had produced one winner from two starters at the time of the Gulfstream sale. Her first winner, Barese’s 5-year-old full sister Breakfastatbonnies, is 3-for-5 and makes her stakes debut in Sunday’s $100,000 Broadway at Aqueduct. An $80,000 purchase by OWL Stable at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale of 2-year-olds in training, Breakfastatbonnies has earned $152,140. Thomas’ Sequel Bloodstock sold Barese and Breakfastatbonnies.
Right Prevails is also the dam of a 2-year-old filly by The Lieutenant and a New York-bred yearling colt by Mission Impazible, both bred in New York and co-bred by Sequel and Lakland.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/12/barese-runs-down-bold-journey-late-to-win-gander/
By Tom Law
Bank On Shea rebounded from a close loss in his 2022 debut – and first start in almost nine months – with a gutsy victory over heavily favored Baby Yoda in Saturday’s $75,000 Pelican Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs.
The 5-year-old son of 2021’s leading New York sire Central Banker collected his third stakes victory in the 6-furlong Pelican for owners She D Boys Stable. Ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr. and making his second start for trainer Carlos David, Bank On Shea won by a neck over Baby Yoda in 1:09.61 over the fast track.
One of three stakes winners sired last year by McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds’ Central Banker, Bank On Shea became his sire’s second thus far in 2022 along with Bank Sting. Bank Sting and Bank On Shea were both foaled at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds and both earned nominations for champion New York-bred honors in 2021, the former in the older dirt female and female sprinter categories and the latter in the male sprinter category.
Bank On Shea earned his consideration off his front-running victory in the Affirmed Success to open last year’s Belmont Park spring-summer meeting. He finished fourth, beaten 3 lengths after racing within a length or less of the lead through most of the race, in an open allowance-optional going 6 1/2 furlongs Jan. 7 at Gulfstream Park.
Ortiz employed different tactics in the Pelican, racing off the early pace of R Mercedes Boy and 2020 Tampa Bay Derby winner King Guillermo. That pair led the field through the opening quarter-mile in :22.45, with 3-5 favorite Baby Yoda and Jose Ortiz just behind in third with Pudding fourth of seven.
Bank On Shea raced fifth through the opening quarter before inching up with an inside run. R Mercedes Boy still led through the half in :45.63 before Bank On Shea cut the corner leaving the half-mile pole. Bank On Shea led by a half-length with a furlong to run and braced for the challenge of Baby Yoda, a flashy two-time winner at Saratoga last summer coming off a distant second behind Flightline in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes Dec. 26 at Santa Anita Park.
Baby Yoda put his head in front inside the furlong grounds before Bank On Shea battled back to win as the 7-2 second choice. Baby Yoda finished 1 3/4 lengths in front of Pudding, with Cajun Cassanova another half-length back in fourth.
Bred by Dr. Scott W. Pierce, Bank On Shea is the first foal out of the unraced Uncle Mo mare Miss Moultree. Shea D Boy Stable purchased Bank On Shea for $110,000 at the 2019 OBS April sale of 2-year-olds in training after the colt breezed an eighth in :10 during presale workouts.
Miss Moultree sold in foal to Central Banker for $2,200 at the 2017 Keeneland November breeding stock sale to Ellen Caines. She did not produce a foal in 2018 or 2019 but did in 2020 – the now 2-year-old Oklahoma-bred Home of the Brave filly Givealittlegee last April. Miss Moultree was bred to Thousand Words in 2021.
Bank On Shea improved to 5-for-7 with a second and a third with the Pelican. He earned $45,000 for the win to boost his earnings to $497,750.
Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2022/02/12/bank-on-shea-bounces-back-in-tampas-pelican/
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