special - Paulick Report
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special - Paulick Report
AUGUST 8, 2016 SP EC I A L .COM Think Before You Rake: Racetrack Horsekeeping May Not Help Respiratory Health By Natalie Voss There’s a lot going on in a racing stable to get a person sneezing — shaking out straw bedding, raking loose dirt aisles, sweeping dusty feed rooms. Research and commentary presented at the recent Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit suggested many traditional components of horsekeeping at the track could be wreaking havoc on horses’ airways, too. The summit, hosted by the Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation, featured talks from Dr. Susan Holcombe of Michigan State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine and veteran owner/breeder Bill Casner. Longtime horsemen know lung health is crucial to a horse’s athletic performance, but Holcombe presented some interesting numbers about the prevalence of airway disease and impact of reduced oxygen flow. Horses have more mitochondria in their muscle cells than almost any other mammal, and those structures rely on oxygen to help the muscle function. This is why horses’ athletic performance is limited not by their heart’s ability to function (as is true for humans) but by their lungs. A horse’s lung capacity increases almost 30-fold from rest to racing, moving five liters of air per breath. According to Holcombe, this is why a horse with an inflamed airway can appear to be breathing well in the stall but will experience reduced performance during exercise. Current research indicates that inflammatory airway disease, one cause of poor respiratory health, may impact as much as 33 percent of the racehorse population. Allergens, particulates (including dust), and endotoxins are known to cause inflammation and production of mucus characteristic of IAD. “When horses (and people) breathe these things in, it will induce an inflammatory change in the lung,” said Holcombe. “Not only does it cause inflammation within the lung, that inflammation will ASK RAY QUESTION: Can Monmouth Park really penalize an owner $1,000 for shipping to race at Suffolk Downs? ANSWER: Only if their horse returns to Monmouth Park. Suffolk Downs paid owners $1,000 to ship in, so it’s like getting $200 to pass “Go” in Monopoly and then using that $200 for rent after landing on someone’s property. also diminish the lung’s immune responsiveness. Horses (like people) are then less able to fight viruses and bacterial infections.” Where are these floating particles and toxins coming from? Holcombe said they’re in the air inside the barn, where racehorses spend most of their day. She showed diagrams of three different barns at an unidentified racetrack where particulate concentration was measured in the air at several points throughout the day. Results were color-coded, and in some cases, white stalls (those with very little dust) were across from or even next to amber or red-colored stalls. Amber or red stalls were those whose dust concentration exceeded Occupational Safety and Health Administration parameters for humans. More mucus was found in the tracheas of horses in those amber and red stalls than those in the white stalls. Continued on Page 5 Page 2 Stallion Spotlight Frankel and Galileo Shine at Saratoga By Frank Mitchell No young stallion has a more electric presence than champion Frankel, unbeaten in his racing career of 14 races over three seasons in England. Now the first-crop of racers by Frankel is raising the pulses of breeders and racing fans with the performances of his fleet sons and daughters, which include nine winners to date and stakes winner Fair Eva among them. As a result, the presence of a pair of Frankel yearlings at the famed Saratoga select yearling sale will guarantee Fasig-Tipton will receive elevated attention from fans and especially from committed owners looking to capture an outstanding prospect by an exciting new sire. The first session of the Fasig-Tipton select yearling sale at Saratoga includes Hip 65, a bay daughter of Frankel out of the multiple graded stakes winner J’Ray, a broodmare by the high-class Mr. Prospector son Distant View. Winner of the G2 Canadian Stakes, J’ray scored three victories at the G3 level, the Matchmaker Stakes, Bayou Handicap, and My Charmer Handicap. second session, and is a dark bay colt out of champion 2-year-old filly She Be Wild (Offlee Wild). In her first season of racing, She Be Wild won the G1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies and G3 ArlingtonWashington Lassie, and she also was second in the G1 Alcibiades Stakes on her way to an Eclipse Award for her division. While the second-crop yearlings by Frankel will have a distinctive appeal to buyers, there are two yearlings by Frankel’s sire Galileo also scheduled to sell at the Saratoga select sale. The first of these is Hip 20, a bay colt who was bred in Ireland out of the War Front mare Emerald Gold. The dam’s best effort on the racetrack was a third in the G1 Del Mar Debutante, and this colt is her first foal. Emerald Gold is one of two stakesplaced performers out of the Seeking the Gold mare Dina Gold, a half-sister to stakes winner Rileys Monarch. This is the family of G1 Ashland Stakes winner Frankel Willa on the Move (Assert) and Travers winner Will’s Way (Easy Goer). An earner of $745,089, J’Ray was among the very best performers sired by Distant View, a handsome and talented son of Mr. Prospector that Juddmonte bred and raced successfully, then stood at their farm in Lexington, Ky. The dam of four foals of racing age, J’Ray has already produced the stakes winner General Jack (by Giant’s Causeway), who has earned more than a quarter-million, and two other winners. The second Frankel yearling is Hip 148, which comes in the sale’s The second Galileo yearling will come in the second session of the sale and is Hip 104, a chestnut filly bred in Ireland out of the Stravinsky mare Mystical Echo. The dam is a full sister to G2 stakes winner Chinese Dragon and stakes-placed Special Interest. Their dam is Fabulous Fairy, a daughter of Alydar and 1,000 Guineas winner Fairy Footsteps (Mill Reef). Galileo has sired more than 200 stakes winners, and breeders always give his stock a special and deserved attention. PRS YOUR ADVANTAGE Call us toll-free at 866-678-4289 or visit www.NTRAadvantage.com AS A MEMBER OF A QUALIFYING EQUINE ASSOCIATION, YOU ARE ELIGIBLE FOR SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS ON NATIONALLY KNOWN PRODUCTS THROUGH NTRA ADVANTAGE. Your involvement entitles you to special savings on products used for your equine farm, business, or personal use. Member To Do List: 1. Mow the yard & bale the hay 2. Paint the barn & house 16-500-330 Adv toDo List_7.5x2.5_PaulickReport.indd 1 3. Replace the fence 4. Order supplies 5. Ship packages 6. Get an oil change 7. Make sure we are covered 8. Replace garbage cans & benches 9. Order pond & lake dye 8/4/16 12:25 PM Page 3 Honor Roll Songbird Takes Smooth Strides Toward Greatness By Scott Jagow nine starts, no rival has been within 3 1/2 lengths of Songbird at the finish line. When she steps up to 1 1/4 miles in the Alabama Stakes later this month, she could prove even more dominant. “One thing that really stands out is her efficiency of moving,” McGreevy said. “It’s just amazing how smooth she is, how she covers the ground.” The daughter of Medaglia d’Oro also bounces back from races exceptionally well, said McGreevy. And like the great ones, surface makes little difference to her. Songbird has won at four different tracks — East Coast, West Coast and in between. 2013 Dark Bay Filly, Medaglia d’Oro — Ivanavinalot, by West Acre. Consigned by Hill ’n’ Dale Sales to the 2014 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale, purchased by Fox Hill Farm for $400,000. “Who knows how she’ll stack up in history? She’s got a ways to go yet,” McGreevy said. “But there aren’t many horses in history that have started out their career the way she has.” PRS The great ones all seem to have a certain quality, says Tom McGreevy, bloodstock agent for Fox Hill Farm. It’s a confidence you can’t teach, an aura of calm that’s often noticeable in the stressful sales environment. “They know they’re good and they just walk out and say ‘what you got,’ McGreevy said. “That ‘want to’ is very difficult to determine sometimes, but it relates a lot to their demeanor at the sale and how they handle the stress.” Undefeated 3-year-old filly Songbird was a standout in that respect. When McGreevy saw her at the 2014 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale, he knew she was a yearling he had to take home to Rick Porter’s farm. FEATURED YEARLING SESSION “Every time I pull her out or happen to be walking by, she’s the same every time,” said McGreevy. “Just very comfortable and happy.” Such a demeanor doesn’t always translate to race day afternoons, but Songbird has already proven beyond a shadow of a doubt she has both the will and the talent of the great ones, too. After running off by 6 1/2 lengths in her debut at Del Mar last year, Songbird rattled off three commanding Grade 1 victories to cap off her championship juvenile season. She has remained untouchable as a sophomore, most recently putting away the classy filly Carina Mia by 5 ¼ lengths in the Coaching Club American Oaks. In her MIXED SALE – HORSES OF ALL AGES OCTOBER 9, 2016 Reasonable Rates Great Facility Entry Deadline Aug. 25th, 2016 www.heritageplace.com email: info@heritageplace.com Serving the Equine Industry for 38 Years! 2829 South MacArthur Blvd., Oklahoma City OK 73128 405.682.4551 Page 4 Back Ring Getting to know Darby Dan bloodstock director Carl McEntee Carl McEntee, sales and bloodstock director of Darby Dan Farm in Lexington, Ky., is a native of Dublin, Ireland, and a fifth-generation horseman. Son of a jockey who later became a trainer, he is one of three brothers now working in Central Kentucky (Paul is a trainer based at the Thoroughbred Center in Lexington and Mark is manager of Bill Harrigan’s Miacomet Farm in Georgetown); another brother Phillip (twin brother of Mark) is a trainer based in Newmarket, England, who took over his father’s stable. “I also have a sister who never went into the horse business but became very wealthy,” McEntee said. “I probably should have followed her.” What Pandora stations do you listen to? My wife (Rachel) is from Eastern Kentucky, so we listen to a lot of country music. My favorite is ‘60s soul: Wilson Pickett, Lou Rawls, Sam Cooke and Otis Redding. Had you considered becoming a jockey in your younger days? I rode as an amateur on the flat at 15 and 16 and over jumps as well. My last race was at 18 over jumps. I’m six-foot-two, so that pretty much ended that career. Do you have a favorite movie? Two. Braveheart and Forrest Gump. What do you love most about the game? The whole draw for me is horse racing. It’s so quintessentially beautiful. The idea of taking a horse, raising and training it to be the best it can be, and then taking on someone else’s horse. That is it for me. Are there any changes you would like to see? The biggest thing I would like to see is true uniformity in drug laws, consistency throughout the country. I also see states promoting their breeding programs and see Ireland promoting its horse industry, but I seldom see Kentucky horses being pushed. State programs produce very good horses and so do other countries, but the best horses come out of Kentucky and we really need to do more to promote them. What was your last concert? That would have been Miranda Lambert with my wife. Shackleford is off to a strong start with six 2-year-old winners already. Are you surprised? He’s obviously had very good books of mares, but we are excited about how well they are coming out early on. I thought he would be a good late 2-year-old sire, but I am really excited about him having two TDN Rising Stars. Also, Dialed In has five winners and a stakes winner. Darby Dan has two freshman sires in the top 10 nationally, so I think we are doing very well. PRS I got some inside information that you are quite the karaoke singer. True? I have been known to sing karaoke now and then, but I’ve got three young children and it’s been a long time since I’ve been out to a karaoke bar. PRS About For advertising inquiries please call Emily at 859.913.9633 Ray Paulick - Publisher ray@paulickreport.com Emily Alberti - Director of Advertising emily@paulickreport.com Scott Jagow - Editor-in-Chief scott@paulickreport.com Mary Schweitzer - News Editor mary@paulickreport.com Natalie Voss - Features Editor natalie@paulickreport.com Chelsea Hackbarth - Asst Editor chelsea@paulickreport.com Esther Marr - Custom Publishing Editor Frank Mitchell - Contributing Writer COPYRIGHT © 2016, BLENHEIM PUBLISHING LLC Page 5 Continued from Page 1 “We know that when horses inhale dust, we will see changes in their lung and their lung function within 20 minutes,” she said. “Not only is that a health issue and maybe a humane concern for horses, it’s also very important for performance.” DISTRIBUTED AT SARATOGA SALE GROUNDS AUG 9 & 13-14 Stall cleaning, feeding, raking, and feeding from haynets were all associated with higher dust readings in Holcombe’s study. Haynets are problematic because horses pull mouthfuls of hay into the stall, flinging dust around their faces as they do so. Casner believes the design of most racetrack barns — low ceilings with hay and straw above — lends itself to mold growth, and lots of ammonia, dust, and bits of straw trapped inside. Muck pits outside the barn also stir up dirt when they’re filled and emptied each morning. Casner developed a number of preventative techniques to reduce the risk of airway inflammation or infection. He designed the training barn at WinStar Farm, which has a high ceiling with skylights, open-front stalls, giant overhead fans, and windows to keep air flowing. He also limits bedding to shavings or wood pellets rather than straw, which tends to be dusty, especially if it is poor quality. Hay is given in corner feeders on the ground, minimizing the stirring of particulates, and hay is often steamed. Besides dust, Casner said he has struggled with bacteria lurking in stalls. “The biggest challenge in trying to achieve a clean respiratory environment is the challenge of years of accumulated pathogens and contaminants in that stall,” said Casner. “When I was training in the 1970s, I trained at Oaklawn Park and was assigned the same stalls every year. I had a horse each year get a terrible case of skin disease out of the same stall. The symptoms were always exactly the same. After the third horse got it, I put two and two together and started power-washing and disinfecting my stalls before we moved in.” It isn’t typical for racetrackers to power-wash or even scrub down stalls before moving their horses in at the start of a meet and certainly not between horses once racing has started, Casner said. He has started a routine of fogging all stalls every two weeks to kill bacteria, viruses, and biofilms. This routine could prove helpful not only to racetrackers, but also to farm managers. Casner suspects the mild respiratory infection often seen in weanlings isn’t a normal part of growing up for young horses but a sign of environmental contamination. THE LASTEST NEWS “That was always my first question when I’d hit the barn in the YOUsaid FINGER TIPSyears morning — ‘Who’s gotAT a temp?’” Casner. “Three REPORT ago we startedPAULICK fogging the stalls twice a weekSPECIAL with an antimiBE fourth SURE group TO LOOK OUR in. NEXT ISSUE crobial, before the thatFOR I brought Amazingly DISTRIBUTED MARCH 16snot, TH ATand OBS enough, we have not had one cough, not one not one ADVERTISING INFO PLEASE CONTACT EMILY AT: PRS temperature inFOR the last three years [since.]” 859.913.9633 CELL • EMILY@PAULICKREPORT.COM EBF Nessa Joyce +353 85 759 0970 GBRI Carter Carnegie +1 646 335 6838 FRBC Cécile Adonias +33630983624 ITM Charles O'Neill +353 87 2535253 THE LATEST NEWS AT YOUR FINGER TIPS PAULICK REPORT SPECIAL LOOK FOR OUR OTHER SELECT SALE & NY-BRED ISSUES AT THE SARATOGA SALE GROUNDS AUGUST 9 & 13-14 FOR ADVERTISING INFO PLEASE CONTACT EMILY AT: 859.913.9633 CELL • EMILY@PAULICKREPORT.COM Page 6 Five to Watch: A look at some of the sale’s top hips By Frank Mitchell Hip 17 Gray colt by Shanghai Bobby x Electric Shock, by Cure the Blues: Colt from the first crop by champion 2-yearold Shanghai Bobby (by Harlan’s Holiday) and a half-brother to Grade 3 Dwyer Stakes winner Fish Trappe Road (Trappe Shot). They are out of the stakes-winning mare Electric Shock, who is the dam of three other black-type horses and is a half-sister to three stakes winners. Hip 27 gray colt by Tapit x Fashion Cat, by Forest Wildcat: Son of the leading American sire is going to get plenty of attention. Not only is Tapit a world-class draw, but this colt is a half-brother to G2 Saratoga Special winner Corfu (Malibu Moon) and to stakes-placed Runway Ready (Mr. Greeley). Their dam is a winning half-sister to two stakes winners, including multiple G1 winner Peace Rules (Jules), winner of the Haskell and Blue Grass Stakes, second in the Travers, and third in the Kentucky Derby. Hip 36 chestnut colt by Orb x Fun Crowd, by Easy Goer: This colt is from the first crop by Kentucky Derby winner Orb (Malibu Moon) and is out of the major producer Fun Crowd, a daughter of champion Easy Goer (Alydar). Fun Crowd’s best foal is G1 Dixie Union–Unacloud, by Unaccounted For 163768-WinStar-FirstYearlings-Half-PRS.indd 1 Coaching Club American Oaks winner Funny Moon, by Orb’s sire Malibu Moon. Fun Crowd is a half-sister to three stakes winners, including champion Vanlandingham, winner of the G1 Jockey Club Gold Cup and Washington D.C. International. Hip 61 dark bay filly by Ghostzapper x Ivanavinalot, by West Acre: This filly leaps off the page because she is a halfsister to unbeaten champion Songbird (Medaglia d’Oro), who was sold at this sale two years ago. G2 winner Ivanavinalot is one of three stakes winners out of the second dam. This filly’s sire is Horse of the Year Ghostzapper (Awesome Again), winner of the Breeders’ Cup Classic and sire of champion Judy the Beauty and G1 winners Moreno and Better Lucky. Hip 110 bay colt by Eskendereya x Northern Station, by Street Cry: Half-brother to G3 winner Barbados (Speightstown) is by the sire of early season star Mor Spirit (G1 Los Alamitos Futurity), and this colt is out of a young daughter of major sire Street Cry. Northern Station was a stakes winner, like her third dam, who is a half-sister to major producers Ascutney and Words of War (both by Lord at War). PRS Awesome Again-Tizso, by Cee’s Tizzy A.P. Indy-Take Charge Lady, by Dehere 8/5/16 5:00 PM
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