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English Events Horse Happenings

Multiple G1 winner Carpe Diem withdrawn from Belmont

The connections of Carpe Diem announced Monday morning that they would not run the colt in Saturday’s Belmont Stakes.

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English Events Horse Happenings

Five Preakness Entrants En Route from Kentucky to Pimlico

BALTIMORE – Kentucky Derby winner American Pharoah boarded a plane bound for Baltimore-Washington International Airport following a quiet Wednesday morning at Churchill Downs.

Zayat Stables’ American Pharoah, who is expected to be heavily favored to capture Saturday’s 140th running of the Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course, was joined on the flight by stablemate and third-place Derby finisher Dortmund, Derby runner-up Firing Line, Danzig Moon, fifth in the Run for the Roses, and Tale of Verve, who was entered but didn’t draw into the Derby field from the also-eligible list.

The Tex Sutton charter bringing the horses to Baltimore originated in California Wednesday morning, leaving Ontario Airport at 4:06 Pacific timewith a scheduled arrival in Louisville of around 10:30 Eastern time. The Preakness entrants are expected to arrive at Pimlico between 2 and 3 p.m.

The draw for post positions for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes is set for 5 p.m. Wednesday at the Sports Palace on the third floor of Pimlico.

A reception at 4 p.m. for horsemen, officials and media members will precede the traditional pill bottle draw, which will be hosted by track announcer Dave Rodman.

The event will be streamed live on drf.com.635644336516471748-American-Pharoah---THE-ARKANSAS-DERBY-79th-Running-Grade-I---04-11-15---R11---OP---002

                        Baffert Awaits Arrivals of American Pharoah, Dortmund

For Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, Wednesday was a travel day, a details day and a waiting day.

Baffert checked out his Preakness horses – Kentucky Derby winner American Pharoah and third-place finisher Dortmund – at Churchill Downs then headed to the airport to take a Southwest Airlines flight to Baltimore.

“A lot of people on the plane from Kentucky wished me good luck,” he said.

Baffert met with Maryland Jockey Club officials, had lunch and went to the stakes barn to wait for the arrival of assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes and the horses from his stable being shipped to Pimlico for the Preakness and other stakes.

“Now we’re just chilling out here,” he said. “The horses will be coming and I’m here to help Jimmy out. We’ve got seven of them.”

Baffert said he was revved up the first few times he brought his Derby winners to Pimlico for the Preakness, but said it is a different vibe now.

             “We wait for the draw and get a little tense,” he said. “Once the draw starts, to me, that’s when it starts, once we have the draw and post positions. Right now this is the lull. This is sort of the last chance you can sort of chill and relax.”

                        Mr. Z Sold, Entered in Preakness Stakes

Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas reported this afternoon that multiple graded stakes-placed Mr. Z has been sold and entered in the Preakness Stakes.

             Brad Kelley’s Calumet Farm purchased Mr. Z from his previous owner, Ahmed Zayat, who also owns Kentucky Derby winner and likely Preakness favorite American Pharoah.

             “He is entered with Calumet,” Lukas said. “You always worry about any horse deal until it’s chiseled in stone. We’re dotting all the  I’s and crossing the T’s. They have reached an agreement. I’ve been on the phone negotiating and doing the dialogue. I’m just the messenger in this case.”

             Mr. Z arrived at Pimlico Tuesday afternoon with five other Lukas-trained horses being aimed at Preakness weekend stakes. Most recently, the Malibu Moon colt finished 13th in the Kentucky Derby.

             “He’s doing well,” Lukas said. “I galloped him over the track this morning and he handled it really well.”

             Lukas has won the Preakness six times, most recently with Oxbow in 2013. Oxbow was also owned by Calumet Farm.

             “I don’t know that I pushed the sale. The sale just came through conversation and dialogue,” Lukas said. “Mr. Z is a pretty well-bred horse. He might be the best bred horse in the Preakness if you look at it real critically. Brad flat asked me, ‘Would you run him,’ and I said if I owned him, I’d run him.”

             Corey Nakatani will ride Mr. Z in the Preakness.

                   Firing Line ‘Fit and Fresh’ for Preakness Stakes

            Trainer Simon Callaghan returned to Southern California to tend to his Santa Anita-based stable shortly after he saddled Firing Line for a gutsy second-place finish behind American Pharoah in the Kentucky Derby.

            The 32-year-old trainer left Arnold Zetcher’s 3-year-old colt in the capable and trusted hands of assistant trainer Carlos Santamaria and exercise rider Humberto Gomez at Churchill Downs to prepare for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes.

            All of the updates on Firing Line’s training have been positive, said Callaghan prior to leaving California to reunite with his Sunland Park Derby (G3) winner at Pimlico Wednesday afternoon.

            “Carlos and Humberto have been happy with the way the horse has been training. Everything seems to have gone perfectly between the Derby and now,” Callaghan said. “He seems to have really good energy. He’s seems very happy. He’s showing all the signs you want to see going into a big race.”

            Based on his staff’s reports, Callaghan designed Firing Line’s training program for the Preakness. While none of the four Derby starters scheduled to run Saturday will have had workouts prior to running in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown,  Firing Line was allowed to open gallop while finishing up his morning trips around the Churchill oval Sunday and Monday.

            “We didn’t want to breeze him between the two races. He’s feeling really good and has had lots of energy, so we decided to give him slightly more open gallops just to keep him calm, so he’s not too fresh with not doing any breezes in two weeks,” Callaghan said. “The horse is really fit and fresh going into a big race.”

            Firing Line walked Wednesday morning before being vanned to the Louisville airport.

                        Danzig Moon Gallops before Churchill Departure

John Oxley’s Danzig Moon went through his morning regimen at Churchill Downs, galloping 1 ½ miles under exercise rider William Cano, before being vanned to the Louisville airport. The son of Malibu Moon was the only Preakness entrant to train at Churchill.

The fifth-place finisher in the Kentucky Derby, he has been a true road warrior as a 3-year-old and will be racing at his fifth venue in as many starts for trainer Mark Casse. His only win was a maiden-breaker at Gulfstream in early February, but he finished fourth in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2) and second in the Blue Grass(G1) before trying the Kentucky Derby.

Danzig Moon ran into traffic during his Derby journey.

“I mean that’s one of the reasons we’re coming,” Casse said. “He got knocked around pretty good in the Derby, but he’s a fighter. You always like smaller fields; there’s less horses you have to beat. Normally there’s less traffic in the Preakness, so we’re looking forward to a little smaller field.”

Casse’s son, Norman, has been supervising the colt’s activities in Kentucky. He will be joined by his Canadian-based father at Pimlico on Thursday.

Meanwhile Wednesday morning at Churchill, Charles Fipke’s Tale of Verve, who broke his maiden last time out in a 1 3/16-mile race, walked under tack in trainer Dallas Stewart’s shedrow.

 

Danzig Moon, under Julien Leparoux, wins a maiden race at Gulfstream Park on April 9, 2015.
Danzig Moon, under Julien Leparoux, wins a maiden race at Gulfstream Park on April 9, 2015.

                        Divining Rod: The Name Game

Gretchen and Roy Jackson settled on Divining Rod when naming their Lael Stables’ colt out of broodmare Precious Kitten. The name is connected to top sire Tapit, Gretchen Jackson said.

Long before technology made it easy to see whether water or metals were under ground, a divining rod – a y-shaped stick or rod – was used in dowsing a pseudoscientific attempt to determine where to start digging.

Once the water was found, she noted the next step was to tap into it, or tap it. Gretchen Jackson acknowledged that people have trouble making the connection.

“It’s so hard to name a Tapit,” she said. “It’s not the best name, but if he wins, it will be a great name. The horse makes the name, I think.”

Precious Kitten, a multiple Grade 1 winner purchased from Ken and Sarah Ramsey, has a Medaglia d’Oro yearling and dropped a full sister to Divining Rod in April.

The Jacksons are longtime breeders. Among their many successes was Barbaro, the Kentucky Derby winning colt who suffered catastrophic injuries in the 2006 Preakness.

Divining Rod had a routine morning Wednesday at Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. 

“He’s doing great,” trainer Arnaud Delacour said. “He galloped a mile and a half on the dirt track this morning. It was in perfect condition. I was very happy with everything. He cooled out OK. So far, so good.”

Delacour said that the colt will gallop again on Thursday morning before vanning to Pimlico Race Course.

                 Corrales Confident Bodhisattva Ready to Step Up

Owner/trainer Jose Corrales sent Bodhisattva to the Laurel Park track Wednesday morning for a 1 ½-mile gallop and some schooling at the gate. He plans to van the colt to Pimlico Thursday morning.

Corrales realizes his colt has to step up to compete with the likes of Kentucky Derby winner American Pharoah and the group of Derby also-rans entered for the Middle Jewel, but he’s optimistic he can make an impression Saturday. 

            “This horse has got what I think a horse should be,” he said. “Everything feels OK so far. You go with a mentality that he can compete and you see how he does. Thank God he keeps sound and he keeps improving. I know he’s not 100 percent (potential) yet, but he’s a much better horse now than when he ran at Aqueduct in the Grade 2 Remsen) last year. He was nothing compared to the level he is right now. He’s now mature.”

            Corrales is hoping that the projected smallish field of eight will also boost his chances. He thinks he has one of the field’s fresher horses and he’s hoping that the wear and tear of the Derby and a quick turnaround for four of the top five Derby finishers might work in his colt’s favor.

            “You’ve got to think that these horses from the Kentucky Derby had a lot of preparation to get ready for that race,” he said. “I know they are good horses, but they come here two weeks later and have to travel from Kentucky to Maryland. They are super horses, but super horses also get beat. I have a lot of confidence in this horse.”

                                                                  

Press release courtesy of Pimlico Race Course

Categories
English Fashion Horse Happenings

6th Annual “Hats off to the Horses: The Road to the Derby” Continues with a Chapeau Inspired by Williamstown

GEORGETOWN, KY – FEBRUARY 3, 2015

The online fashion auction, “Hats off to the Horses: The Road to the Derby”, continues today with a fifth handcrafted Derby chapeau on the virtual auction block to raise money for Old Friends, the Thoroughbred Retirement Facility in Georgetown, KY.

 This new hat was inspired by Old Friends retiree Williamstown­, the 25-year-old son of Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew who has been pensioned at Old Friends since 2007. A graded stakes winner, Williamstown captured the Withers Stakes at Belmont Park in 1993 and marked one of the fastest miles in the history of the oval.

For the Old Friends campaign, the beautiful chapeau is modeled in accompanying photos and behind-the-scenes video by leading jockey Rosie Napravnik along with her husband, trainer Joe Sharp.
This is the sixth consecutive year that Old Friends has joined with acclaimed milliner Sally Faith Steinmann of the Massachusetts-based Maggie Mae Designs® to auction off six exclusive Derby hats between November and April, each inspired by one of the non-profit organization’s 150 retired racehorses.
Bidding on “The Williamstown” ends at 8 pm on February 11th.  Interested bidders can go to the Old Friends website at www.oldfriendsequine.org and follow the link.
A wide-brim hat made of rich dupioni silk and various layers of organza, The Williamstown is adorned with the colors of his former racing stable: three yellow rose curls spill down along the hat’s 22-inch brim, each nesting in a medley of textured plum organza leaves.
For a final touch, eight long and curvaceous silk “feathers” are set behind each rose in such a way as to gently frame the wearer’s face.

 

As always, strand of the stallion’s tail hair have been braided and woven into the trim for a physical remembrance.
For more information and additional photos of the hat please visithttp://www.maggiemae.com/OldFriendsAuction-Hat-Williamstown.htm.   For a behind-the-scenes video of Napravnik’s and Sharp’s photo shoot please visit  http://vimeo.com/117009595

For additional information contact Maggie Mae Designs® at sally@maggiemae.com

For more information about Old Friends see their website at www.oldfriendsequine.org or call the farm at (502) 863-1775.

Maggie Mae Designs® Custom Millinery offers magnificent hats for all occasions – from glamorous racing events such as the Kentucky Derby and the Royal Ascot to stunning bridal wear and handsome cocktail fashions. Every hat is carefully handcrafted by milliner Sally Faith Steinmann from her home base in South Harwich, MA. Salons of her fashions can been seen on her website atwww.maggiemaedesigns.com

 PHOTO CAPTIONS Rosie Napravnik and Joe Sharp with Williamstown.  Rosie models the Williamstown hat. Dress by Bella Rose Boutique, photo © and courtesy of EquiSport Photos

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Entertainment Events Horse Happenings Western

Celebrate Oaks and Derby Days at Keeneland

LEXINGTON, KY (April 30, 2013) – Keeneland celebrates Kentucky Oaks and Derby Weekend, May 3-4, with a party to suit everyone’s style, whether it be a casual picnic in the paddock or a hip cocktail party in the clubhouse.

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English Events Horse Happenings

Keeneland Special Events Calendar Showcases Fall Stars

Lexington, KY (Oct. 2, 2012) – Keeneland celebrates its signature “Fall Stars” theme by spotlighting a “star” each week of the fall meet, which runs Oct. 5-27.

Racing is the star as Keeneland opens with its exciting Fall Stars Weekend (Oct. 5-7), with many of the nation’s most talented Thoroughbreds, trainers and jockeys competing in nine graded stakes worth more than $3 million. Seven Fall Stars stakes are Breeders’ Cup Challenge races in which the winners automatically qualify for the Breeders’ Cup World Championships to be held Nov. 2-3 at Santa Anita Park.

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Economic Impact Horse Happenings

Breeders’ Cup impact in Louisville estimated at $53.3M

 

Spreading the Breeders’ Cup World Championships over two days has roughly doubled the amount of money that the event is bringing to the Louisville area, according to a University of Louisville economist’s study.

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English Events Horse Happenings

SBS Farms Wins Top Honors at Alltech National Horse Show

Written by: Kendall Bierer
Client: SBS Farms, Ltd.
Release Date: 2011-11-09

Buffalo, NY – November 8, 2011 – SBS Farms returned home after a great week of competition at the esteemed Alltech National Horse Show, 128th Edition held in Lexington, KY, from November 2-6.