Redesdale colt Cable Ready wins Tin Cup Chalice

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Redesdale’s Cable Ready scores maiden victory in Tuesday’s $40,000 Tin Cup Chalice Stakes. SV Photography.

Cable Ready made a successful return to sprinting and came away with a maiden-breaking victory in Tuesday’s $40,000 Tin Cup Chalice, the final stakes of the 2023 season at Finger Lakes.

The 2-year-old son of leading New York-based second-crop sire Redesdale powered to a 1 3/4-length victory in his fourth start, which came after back-to-back runner-up efforts in 1-mile and 70-yard maiden events at Finger Lakes. Owned by Linda Dixon and Hector Alejandro and trained by Dixon, Cable Ready made his debut Sept. 25 at Finger Lakes.

Cable Ready joins Ramblin’ Wreck as stakes winners sired in 2023 by Redesdale, a 10-year-old son of Speightstown who stands for $2,500 at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs.

The 7-2 co-fourth choice in the field of six under Nazario Alvarado, Cable Ready raced fourth early as Benji Brown took the early lead under pressure from Love That Bird. Those two hit the opening quarter-mile in :23.06, about 3 lengths clear of the tandem of Ranger Blue and Cable Ready, with One Witheverything and Cruzin for Chaos trailing.

Benji Brown continued to lead after a half in :46.72, shrugging off Love That Bird around the far turn and slipping away turning for home. Cable Ready continued his sustained run that started midway on the turn through the stretch, took over at the sixteenth pole and drew off late. Ranger Blue got up for second, 1 3/4 lengths ahead of Benji Brown, who headed Love That Bird for third. Cruzin for Chaos, the 2-1 favorite shipping in from Mountaineer Park, finished fifth with One Witheverything completing the field. Cable Ready won in 1:13.50 over the fast track.

Bred by Wasabi Ventures Stables, Michael Slezak, Bruce Wells, Kara Wells, et al and foaled at Oriskany Creek Farm in Clinton, Cable Ready is one of five winners out of the Dynaformer mare Cable.

Cable is also the dam of Cut the Cord, a 4-year-old New York-bred gelding by Creative Cause who is 4-2-1 in 15 starts with $146,100 in earnings. Cut the Cord is entered in Wednesday’s third race at Finger Lakes, a $24,700 allowance-optional at 1 mile and 70 yards.

Cable Ready earned $24,000 for his victory in the final stakes of the 2023 season at Finger Lakes, boosting his bankroll to $39,822.

Redesdale’s leading runner in 2023, Ramblin’ Wreck won Saratoga’s Rick Violette Stakes and the Spectacular Bid division of the New York Stallion Series Stakes at Belmont Park. Redesdale is also the sire of stakes-placed Red Moon and Midtown Lights. He’s the leader on New York’s second-crop sire list with earnings of more than $700,000 and 12th on the state’s general sire list through the Tin Cup Chalice.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/11-7-23-R5s-Cable-Ready.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2023/11/07/redesdale-colt-cable-ready-wins-tin-cup-chalice/


Bucchero relocates to McMahon of Saratoga

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Multiple graded stakes winner Bucchero will relocate to McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds for the 2024 season. Serita Hult Photo.

Bucchero, the sire of the current 2-year-old stakes winners Book’em Danno and Mattingly and of the stakes-placed and Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint fifth-place finisher Shards, will relocate to McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds in Saratoga Springs for the 2024 season.

The 11-year-old son of Kantharos, who bred 471 mares while standing five seasons at Pleasant Acres Stallions in Florida, will stand in New York for $7,500. He joins a powerhouse roster at McMahon of Saratoga, which also stands leading New York sire Central Banker and Solomini.

“Traditionally, New York breeders have not had the opportunity to breed to a new stallion who was already on the upswing with proven runners on the ground, but that certainly should be changing in the future with the exceptional program New York has developed and actively improved,” said Bucchero Managing Partner Harlan Malter. “We have broken the mold a bit with Bucchero and we feel we are doing it again with our move to New York.”

Bucchero has enjoyed a breakout season in 2023. His second crop has produced two unrestricted juvenile stakes winners, taking his total to three overall, and he has been represented by nine stakes-placed horses from 84 starters. Bucchero is the sire of 52 individual winners, a percentage of 62 percent that is second-best among his peers with 50 or more runners and higher than the likes of Justify and Good Magic. His runners have finished in the top three in more than 47 percent of their combined appearances.

Bucchero is currently the second-leading sire of 2-year-olds by earnings outside the state of Kentucky ($856,604). In New York, his current 2-year-old progeny earnings would make him the leading juvenile sire in the state and his total 2023 progeny earnings of $2,291,021 would make him the third-leading sire overall in New York behind only Central Banker and Tourist.

Led by Shards, who sold for $175,000 at the 2023 OBS March sale, Bucchero has excelled in the 2-year-old market with consistently quick under-tack previews that have translated to the sales ring. From a $5,000 stud fee, Bucchero averaged nearly 10 times his stud fee with a $48,595 average from 21 sold in 2022 and built upon that in 2023 with an average of $51,133 from 30 sold.

Bucchero has quickly become a “trainers’” stallion as many went right back to the well in the second crop after campaigning first-crop runners.

“I have now trained eight of them and they do nothing but run,” said Joe Orseno, trainer of first-crop stakes winner Beauty of the Sea and second-crop stakes winner Mattingly (85 Beyer in his most recent stakes start). “Mattingly is a perfect example, a stakes winner on synthetic, stakes placed short on the turf and 7 furlongs on dirt and I am now pointing him to the $300,000 In Reality Stakes going 1 1/16 miles on the dirt. They are fast and smart, versatile and racy.”

“We are thrilled to bring Bucchero to McMahon and the New York program as we feel Bucchero is built for a program like this,” said John McMahon. “He has shown he produces fast, precocious and, most importantly for New York breeders going forward, runners that can win on anything.”

Malter, who campaigned Bucchero along with the current ownership group, is equally thrilled.

“All of us involved with Bucchero started as small breeders looking to survive in a very difficult market segment,” Malter said. “Bucchero has proved he can get a breeder a quality sales horse and possibly even more importantly, a runner who will keep them looking forward to that ‘mailbox money’ small breeders depend on to succeed.”

Breeders of New York-sired runners can receive awards of up to 30 percent of the purse money earned, with a cap of $40,000 per award, compared to just 15 percent and $20,000 for non-New York-sired.

Stallion Owner’s Awards for all races run in New York are also paid to owners of stallions registered in New York at the time of conception. The awards are 10 percent of the purse money earned for first through third place by progeny of registered New York stallions, with a $10,000 cap per award.

Bucchero will make a pit stop in Kentucky on his way from Florida to New York during the second week of the Keeneland November breeding stock sale for a stallion show from 1-4 p.m. November 14 at Kesmarc at 258 Shannon Run Road in Versailles.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Bucchero©SeritaHult190906-32R.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2023/11/07/bucchero-relocates-to-mcmahon-of-saratoga/