Friday, October 31, 2014
Aktabantay Out of Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf
Aktabantay, the bay two-year-old colt by Oasis Dream, kicked out in his stall yesterday - he now has a stress fracture in his right hind, and has been scratched from the $1 million Juvenile Turf race today. I do not know if Faithful Creek, the first alternate entry, an Irish-bred bay colt, will take his place in the race or not... The second alternate is Papacoolpapacool, a bay gelding, bred in Kentucky, with Joe Talamo named as the jockey....
Happy All Hallows Eve!
From dark until dawn tonight all the beasties, ghouls, ghosts and things that go bump in the night roam the earth. Today is also the birthday of Ethel Waters, John Keats, Christopher Columbus, Jane Pauley, Dale Evans, Juliette Gordon Lowe, Michael Landon, Peter Jackson, John Candy and Michael Collins - quite a selection of celebrities. Evolving from the ancient Celtic holiday of Samhain, modern Halloween has become less about literal ghosts and ghouls and more about costumes and candy. The Celts used the day to mark the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter; they also believed that this transition between the seasons was a bridge to the world of the dead. Over the millenia the holiday has transitioned from a somber pagan ritual to a day of merriment, costumes, parades and sweet treats for all.
Today is also the beginning of the two days of the Breeders Cup. Today and tomorrow, the best horses in the world of thoroughbred racing will compete in 13 races with purses totaling $24.5 million. Four races will be held today at Santa Anita with a total worth of $5 million. See my previous blogs for my thoughts on each of the races.
Today is also the beginning of the two days of the Breeders Cup. Today and tomorrow, the best horses in the world of thoroughbred racing will compete in 13 races with purses totaling $24.5 million. Four races will be held today at Santa Anita with a total worth of $5 million. See my previous blogs for my thoughts on each of the races.
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horse racing
Thursday, October 30, 2014
The Petrified Man of Hog Island
This is taken directly from The Salisbury Daily Times newspaper, a member of Gannett media.
Mystery of the Hog Island petrified man
Brice Stump, DelmarvaNow5:31 p.m. EDT October 30, 2014
When 18-year-old Coast Guard Seaman Bob Smith walked up to the mysterious object on the beach on Hog Island in 1956, he would be a witness to the most unusual discovery of its kind ever made on the Eastern Shore, if not the nation.
There, lying on the sand was the body of a man in his suit. A morning patrol of the beach by Coast Guard personnel just minutes before had discovered the body and Smith, along with Chief Petty Officer Robert "Bob" Lawson, had come to take it back to the station on the northern end of the island.
Though it was reported the remains of a casket were seen nearby, the condition of the corpse suggested the man may have just died. It was a curious sight, Smith recalled, because of the color of the skin.
"He was black, as black as could be," he said.
Yet there was no question that, based on the features of his face, down to his mustache, the man was Caucasian.
"I remember that day in October 1956 when Bob was at the Coast Guard's Little Machipongo Station and cook Lonnie Brown went on beach patrol. They found this body they thought had washed out of the grave. Lonnie wouldn't mess with 'im, wouldn't put 'im the Jeep so Bob had to bring him back to the station at the north end of the island. I was the junior man then and Bob told me to go with him. On the way down to the beach he told me about it," Smith said.
"He was layin' on top the sand," Smith recalled. "It was the first body I ever handled. He was a small man, short, wasn't too heavy."
When he and Lawson lifted the body to put it in the Jeep, they noticed it was hard.
The body was more than hard, it was stone hard. The body was petrified.
An article, published in the "Enterprise" of October 1956, noted that the discovery of the peculiar corpse, was " ... an authentic instance of a man whose body turned to stone."
As for the suit Melvin wore, its condition was equally remarkable, Smith recalled.
"Oh, it was real strong, just like new, and even his vest was like new. He had a blue three-piece suit on and it fit him perfectly. I think it was blue and in the vest pocket was his wedding ring."
"The features, a mustache, the teeth and the entire upper portion of the body was reported as petrified into permanence," the paper reported. "The clothing, a blue surge vest, white shirt and blue tie, all were reported in good condition."
"Lawson and Seaman Leonard Carriea brought the stone torso ashore to Quinby and turned it over to the sheriff's department at 6:10 p.m., last Monday. Dr. Joe Gladstone examined the torso and it was concluded that the body had been exposed to the seepage of sea minerals over the last quarter century and in the process had turned to stone in much the same manner as petrified wood."
The writer incorrectly used the noun torso. Deputy Sheriff Preston E. Trower, the article noted, described the body as being "in a petrified condition."
"He was in perfect condition," Smith said, "except he was missing his right leg from the knee down." As for the loss of the right leg, Smith said Lawson theorized the waves had "beat it off the body," and it may very well have been buried just under the sand at the site.
So well preserved was the body that people who had known him readily identified the corpse as that of islander George Avery Melvin who died and was buried in 1934.
"That's what amazed everybody, everybody was commentin' about the great condition he was in," Smith said. "No one could understand how he turned black."
Melvin's body had only been in the ground 22 years when his body became like stone. There were no reports of any of the other human remains exposed by erosion or moved by families that had been "petrified."
The last of the island's one-time population of about 250 people left in the mid-1940s. For years residents had not only moved tombstones and human remains, but houses and outbuildings to the Willis Wharf area.
Melvin's body and others in the Hog Island cemetery were revealed in the mid-1950s when waves from the Atlantic Ocean ate into the graveyard on the barrier island.
"People were going over to get the tombstones and remains of their families out of the graveyard because the ocean was tearing it apart," said Fannie Miles, 90, of Salisbury.
She went to the island just weeks earlier with her stepfather, Vernon Simpson of Willis Wharf, to survey the damage and make plans for removing family remains to the mainland.
She took her new camera with her. At the graveyard the men and her son, then about 10, discovered a battered wooden casket in the sand. Inside, the perfectly preserved body of a man.
"We didn't know who he was. Everybody said he was mummified. There was no tombstone by him. We didn't know what to do as other graves were being destroyed and my stepfather and the others were working to get their families moved," Miles said. "So he was just left there."
That body was probably that of Melvin, and in the days following it came to the attention of the Coast Guard.
People seeing the body, when it arrived at Quinby, readily identified it as Melvin. The family was summoned to identify it.
"He had all his features, he was in that good a shape, but he was real, real black. I heard his daughter identified him," Smith said.
That daughter was Missouri Frances "Lou" Melvin Doughty, also known as Mrs. Charles Doughty. She was not alone. The newspaper account said that "Definite identification was made by Albert L. Doughty. Subsequently identification was confirmed to the sheriff's office by Mrs. Henry, Mrs. Charles and Mrs. Betty Doughty."
According to Jerry Doughty, of Willis Wharf, an Eastern Shore of Virginia historian, all of those who identified Melvin's body were folks who knew the deceased, and that included Melvin's daughter.
"My grandmother and mother went to the funeral home and positively identified the body," said Rick Kellam, Melvin's great-grandson. Kellam, who operates Broadwater Bay Ecotours out of Exmore to Hog Island, routinely visits the area on the barrier island known as Southend. About a half mile off the eastern side of the island is the present site of the graveyard, now submerged in the cold Atlantic Ocean.
"I found out that people had seen parts of skeletons washed out on the beach on Hog Island, but nothing like this," Kellam said.
Then came one of the most curious aspects of the story of the petrified man.
"Jack Doughty, of the Doughty Funeral Home in Exmore," Kellam related, "gave the family a price on burying the body. It was a lot of money. The family didn't have the money, so Jack told them 'I can chisel off, or break off, his other leg and bury him in a (cheaper) child-size casket with the leg beside him. So he family agreed and Jack chiseled off the leg, and put it and the body in a child's casket.
While there had been several reports of petrified bodies found in the United States over the years including the Cardiff Giant 'discovered' in New York in 1869. Every one had been exposed as a hoax. Except, perhaps, one. The Smithsonian, Kellam said, wanted the body.
"Jack later told me that he was approached by someone from the Smithsonian Institution. Because the body was 'like stone hard as a brick,' and wasn't like soapstone or a soft stone, the guy from the Smithsonian who had also contacted my mother and grandmother, wanted to take the body to Washington and study it and, in turn, they would cover all the reburial expenses. My grandmother and the rest of the family would have no part of it," he said.
Then fear set in. The funeral director and the family were afraid someone would dig up the body set to be interred in the cemetery in Belle Haven.
"They were really concerned that someone would dig up the body, steal it and sell it because it was such an abnormality," Kellam said. "They buried the casket in an unmarked grave in Belle Haven Cemetery. Jack said the burial took place outside 'normal' working hours. When I came of age, Jack Doughty and I found the location of the grave. My aunt and I had a tombstone put over it in 2000."
To this day, there has never been an detailed investigation into what caused George Avery Melvin, 82, to turn to stone in 22 years. Curious, too, was how the fabrics covering the corpse appeared new and fresh 22 years later.
According to David Hunt, a physical-forensic anthropologist with the Smithsonian Institution, changes to Melvin's body may have been brought on by saponificaion, a process in which fats in the remains turn to soap when alkaline water from the soil saturates the body. The most famous example of a "soap man" is that of a male thought to have been buried in 1800 and discovered in Philadelphia in 1875. It was exhibited for years at the Smithsonian but is no longer on display.
"The best answer would be that the doctor (Gladstone) misinterpreted the adipocere (a waxy substance formed during tissue decomposition) as being stone. Some adipocere can be quite hard and brittle, rather than soft and 'cheese-like'. And this saponification can also take on a discoloration that can be very dark brown or blackish. Of bodies that are preserved by saponification, the chemical transformation of the fats can also leach out into the fabrics surrounding the body and the hair and help preserve the hair and fibers.
"He was just laying' there, like he was waitin' for us, when we found him," Smith said. "I told this story for the next 20 years after we found him and nobody has every heard a story like this."
bstump@dmg.gannett.com
410-845-4653
My Picks for Saturday's Breeders Cup Races
Saturday's first Breeders Cup race is the Juvenile Fillies; twelve two-year-old girls will carry 122 pounds for a mile and 1/16 on the main dirt track. All of the fillies were bred in Kentucky, except Wonder Gal, who is New York-bred. Four of the fillies are chestnuts, the rest are bays. Three of the fillies - Feathered, Danette, and Puca - are descendants of Hyperion. I was able to view half of the field in photos. Based on pedigree and available photos, my picks are: Take Charge Brandi (trained by D Wayne Lukas), Majestic Presence, Puca, Wonder Gal (under Mike Smith) and By the Moon...
All entries in the Filly & Mare Turf are four years or older, so all will carry 124 pounds in the mile and 1/4 race worth $2 million. There is one 6-year-old mare, Abaco, five 5-year-olds, and four 4-yesr-olds in the race. Two are Irish-bred - Just the Judge and Fiesolana - and two were bred in Great Britain - Secret Gesture and Dank, the defending champion. Dayatthespa was bred in New York, Irish Mission was bred in Ontario, Canada, Parranda was bred in Florida, and the other four entries are Kentucky bred. Four of the eleven are related to Hyperion. Honestly, I love the way that each of these ladies look. So, here are my picks, based on pedigree (and avoiding betting the favorites): Secret Gesture, Emollient (with Rosie Npravnik in the irons), Irish Mission and Parranda.
The Filly & Mare Sprint is 7 furlongs (or 7/8 mile) and has a purse of $1 million. The six 3-year-olds will carry 122 pounds,while the two 4- and two 5-year olds will tote 124. Stonetastic is the grey (roan) filly; Thank You Marylou and Judy the Beauty are chestnuts; the other seven entries are bays. Living the Life was born in Ireland; Than You Marylou is Virginia-bred; Artemis Agrotera was born in New York; Judy the Beauty was bred in Ontario, Canada; the others are Kentucky-bred. Four of the ten ladies descend from Hyperion. My picks: Sweet Reason, Stonetastic, Living the Life, and Artemis Agrotera. Mike Smith has the mount on Judy the Beauty, the morning line betting favorite.
The Turf Sprint is worth $1 million and covers about 6 and 1/2 furlongs (.8125 mile). The weight the horse carries depends upon it's sex and it's age; since that can get a little crazy, I'll just list information regarding each entry on a single line...
1. Reneesgotzip 5 year-old chestnut mare; bred in Kentucky; 123 #
2. Silentio 5-year-old dark bay horse; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
3. Sweet Swap 5-year-old chestnut horse; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
4. Tightend Touchdown 5-year-old chestnut gelding; Florida-bred; 126 #
5. Ambitious Brew 4-year-old bay gelding; California-bred; 126 #
6. Bobby's Kitten 3-year-old bay colt; Bred in Kentucky; 124 #
7. Marchman 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
8. Something Extra 6-year-old dark bay gelding; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
9. Free As A Bird 5-year-old chestnut mare; bred in Kentucky; 123 # She refused to board her plane and is scratched - other horses move up in post position and Ageless is now an entry.
9. Home Run Kitten 3-year-old chestnut colt; bred in Kentucky; 124 #
10. Undrafted 4-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
11. Dimension 6-year-old dark bay gelding; Great Britain-bred; 126 #
12. Caspar Netscher 5-year-old bay horse; Great Britain-bred; 126 #
13. No Nay Never 3-year-old dark bay colt; bred in Kentucky; 124 #
14. Ageless 5-year-old bay mare; bred in Kentucky; 123 #
My choices: Silentio (a grandson of Sunday Silence); Ambitious Brew, ridden by Mike Smith; Marchman, with Kent Desormeaux in the irons; Undrafted, with John R Velasquez in the saddle, and owned by Denver Broncos player Wes Welker; and No Nay Never under the guidance of Frankie Dettori.
With American Pharoah out of the Juvenile, eleven 2-year-old colts and one ridgling will carry 122 pounds each over 1 and 1/16 miles on the main dirt track for a purse of $2 million. Upstart was bred in New York (and is the ridgling); Lucky Player and Calculator are Florida-breds; the other nine were bred in Kentucky. Calculator is a grey (roan); Mr. Z is a chestnut; Carpe Diem and Daredevil are listed as chestnuts, but their photos show a black mane, tail and legs - which would make them bays; the others are listed as bays and dark browns. My picks are: Private Prospect; Texas Red ridden by Kent Desormeaux; Mr. Z, with Mike Smith in the saddle and trained by D Wayne Lukas; Upstart, and One Lucky Dane.
The one and 1/2 mile Turf race is open to both sexes, and all ages. All males, aged 4, 5 and 6 years will carry 126 pounds, while the 4-ear-old filly Chicquita will haul 123 pounds, contesting for the $3 million purse. Magician, the defending champion, is scratched due to lameness,which leaves a field of twelve. Telescope and the filly Chicquita were bred in Ireland; Brown Panther and Flintshire are from Great Britain; Big John B is a Florida-bred; Hangover Kid was bred in New York; Starspangled Heat is from California; and the other five entries were bred in Kentucky. Imagining, Starspangled Heat and Main Sequence are chestnuts, the other runners are bays. My picks: Telescope, Twilight Eclipse, Flintshire and Big John B.
The $1.5 million Sprint covers 6 furlongs (3/4 mile)and is a weight for age and sex race. Secret Circle is back to defend his championship. Once again I'll list the post positions and information.
1. Seeking the Sherif 5-year-old dark bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
2. Indianapolis 3-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 124 #
3. Wind Fire 3-year-old filly; Kentucky bred; 121 #
4. Secret Circle 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
5. Private Zone 5-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ontario, Canada; 126 #
6. Rich Tapestry 6-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ireland; 126 #
7. Mico Margarita 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
8. Palace 5-year-old bay horse; bred in New York; 126 #
9. Salutos Amigos 4-year-old bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
10. Big Macher 4-year-old bay gelding; Bred in California; 126 #
11. Bakken 4-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
12. Fast Anna 3-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 124 #
13. Work All Week 5-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Illinois; 126 #
14. Bourbon Courage 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
In this race, my picks are: Wind Fire, the filly; Rich Tapestry; Palace; Bakken under Gary Stevens; Indianapolis with Mike Smith; and Bourbon Courage.
The Breeders Cup Mile is run on the grass for a $2 million purse. With Wise Dan, the two-time defending champion sidelined by injury, the race is wide open. This is a weight for age and sex race; entrants are aged three to six, and are of both sexes. Six of the entries are Kentucky-bred; eight are from other countries. This makes for yet another listing...
1. Grand Arch 5-year-old bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
2. Obviously 6-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ireland; 126 #
3. Veda 3-year-old bay filly; bred in France; 120 #
4. Mustajeeb 3-year-old chestnut colt; bred in Great Britain; 123 #
5. Toronado 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Ireland; 126 #
6. Tom's Tribute 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
7. Kaigun 4-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Ontario, Canada; 126 #
8. Trade Storm 6-year-old bay horse; bred in Great Britain; 126 #
9. Anodin 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Ireland; 126 #
10. Summer Front 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
11. Sayaad 4-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
12. Seek Again 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
13. Tourist 3-year-old dark bay colt; Kentucky bred; 123 #
14. Karakontie 3-year-old bay colt; bred in Japan; 123 #
I really like the looks and breeding of Toronado, but he's the early betting favorite - so here are my picks: Veda, the 3-year-old French filly; Anodin, the brother of Goldikova; Summer Front; Tourist under the guidance of Rosie Napravnik; and Karakontie, the Japan-born grandson of Sunday Silence.
The early betting favorite for the $5 million Classic is Shared Belief, a 3-year-old dark brown gelding, who won the Breeders Cup Juvenile last year. He looks impressive, has a Cryptoclearance and Northern Dancer pedigree, and will have Mike Smith in the saddle. I'd like for him to win, but I like longer shots on the tote board. There is a full field of fourteen horses; 7 of them are 3-year-olds and will carry 122 pounds; the other seven entries are aged four to six, and will carry 126 pounds. California Chrome has not been in the winner's circle since the Preakness in May; he is the only California bred and carries 122 pounds. Zivo is a 5-year-old bay horse bred in New York; all other entries were bred in Kentucky. All of the horses are bays, except California Chrome and V. E. Day, who are chestnuts. The other five youngsters getting a 4 pound weight break are: V. E. Day, Bayern, Toast of New York, Tonalist, and Candy Boy.Since Shared Belief is the betting favorite, my picks are: Prayer for Relief, Toast of New York, Candy Boy under Corey Nakatani, Majestic Harbor with Tyler Baze in the irons, and Moreno with Javier Castellano up.
All entries in the Filly & Mare Turf are four years or older, so all will carry 124 pounds in the mile and 1/4 race worth $2 million. There is one 6-year-old mare, Abaco, five 5-year-olds, and four 4-yesr-olds in the race. Two are Irish-bred - Just the Judge and Fiesolana - and two were bred in Great Britain - Secret Gesture and Dank, the defending champion. Dayatthespa was bred in New York, Irish Mission was bred in Ontario, Canada, Parranda was bred in Florida, and the other four entries are Kentucky bred. Four of the eleven are related to Hyperion. Honestly, I love the way that each of these ladies look. So, here are my picks, based on pedigree (and avoiding betting the favorites): Secret Gesture, Emollient (with Rosie Npravnik in the irons), Irish Mission and Parranda.
The Filly & Mare Sprint is 7 furlongs (or 7/8 mile) and has a purse of $1 million. The six 3-year-olds will carry 122 pounds,while the two 4- and two 5-year olds will tote 124. Stonetastic is the grey (roan) filly; Thank You Marylou and Judy the Beauty are chestnuts; the other seven entries are bays. Living the Life was born in Ireland; Than You Marylou is Virginia-bred; Artemis Agrotera was born in New York; Judy the Beauty was bred in Ontario, Canada; the others are Kentucky-bred. Four of the ten ladies descend from Hyperion. My picks: Sweet Reason, Stonetastic, Living the Life, and Artemis Agrotera. Mike Smith has the mount on Judy the Beauty, the morning line betting favorite.
The Turf Sprint is worth $1 million and covers about 6 and 1/2 furlongs (.8125 mile). The weight the horse carries depends upon it's sex and it's age; since that can get a little crazy, I'll just list information regarding each entry on a single line...
1. Reneesgotzip 5 year-old chestnut mare; bred in Kentucky; 123 #
2. Silentio 5-year-old dark bay horse; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
3. Sweet Swap 5-year-old chestnut horse; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
4. Tightend Touchdown 5-year-old chestnut gelding; Florida-bred; 126 #
5. Ambitious Brew 4-year-old bay gelding; California-bred; 126 #
6. Bobby's Kitten 3-year-old bay colt; Bred in Kentucky; 124 #
7. Marchman 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
8. Something Extra 6-year-old dark bay gelding; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
9. Home Run Kitten 3-year-old chestnut colt; bred in Kentucky; 124 #
10. Undrafted 4-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Kentucky; 126 #
11. Dimension 6-year-old dark bay gelding; Great Britain-bred; 126 #
12. Caspar Netscher 5-year-old bay horse; Great Britain-bred; 126 #
13. No Nay Never 3-year-old dark bay colt; bred in Kentucky; 124 #
14. Ageless 5-year-old bay mare; bred in Kentucky; 123 #
My choices: Silentio (a grandson of Sunday Silence); Ambitious Brew, ridden by Mike Smith; Marchman, with Kent Desormeaux in the irons; Undrafted, with John R Velasquez in the saddle, and owned by Denver Broncos player Wes Welker; and No Nay Never under the guidance of Frankie Dettori.
With American Pharoah out of the Juvenile, eleven 2-year-old colts and one ridgling will carry 122 pounds each over 1 and 1/16 miles on the main dirt track for a purse of $2 million. Upstart was bred in New York (and is the ridgling); Lucky Player and Calculator are Florida-breds; the other nine were bred in Kentucky. Calculator is a grey (roan); Mr. Z is a chestnut; Carpe Diem and Daredevil are listed as chestnuts, but their photos show a black mane, tail and legs - which would make them bays; the others are listed as bays and dark browns. My picks are: Private Prospect; Texas Red ridden by Kent Desormeaux; Mr. Z, with Mike Smith in the saddle and trained by D Wayne Lukas; Upstart, and One Lucky Dane.
The one and 1/2 mile Turf race is open to both sexes, and all ages. All males, aged 4, 5 and 6 years will carry 126 pounds, while the 4-ear-old filly Chicquita will haul 123 pounds, contesting for the $3 million purse. Magician, the defending champion, is scratched due to lameness,which leaves a field of twelve. Telescope and the filly Chicquita were bred in Ireland; Brown Panther and Flintshire are from Great Britain; Big John B is a Florida-bred; Hangover Kid was bred in New York; Starspangled Heat is from California; and the other five entries were bred in Kentucky. Imagining, Starspangled Heat and Main Sequence are chestnuts, the other runners are bays. My picks: Telescope, Twilight Eclipse, Flintshire and Big John B.
The $1.5 million Sprint covers 6 furlongs (3/4 mile)and is a weight for age and sex race. Secret Circle is back to defend his championship. Once again I'll list the post positions and information.
1. Seeking the Sherif 5-year-old dark bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
2. Indianapolis 3-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 124 #
3. Wind Fire 3-year-old filly; Kentucky bred; 121 #
4. Secret Circle 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
5. Private Zone 5-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ontario, Canada; 126 #
6. Rich Tapestry 6-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ireland; 126 #
7. Mico Margarita 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
8. Palace 5-year-old bay horse; bred in New York; 126 #
9. Salutos Amigos 4-year-old bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
10. Big Macher 4-year-old bay gelding; Bred in California; 126 #
11. Bakken 4-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
12. Fast Anna 3-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 124 #
13. Work All Week 5-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Illinois; 126 #
14. Bourbon Courage 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
In this race, my picks are: Wind Fire, the filly; Rich Tapestry; Palace; Bakken under Gary Stevens; Indianapolis with Mike Smith; and Bourbon Courage.
The Breeders Cup Mile is run on the grass for a $2 million purse. With Wise Dan, the two-time defending champion sidelined by injury, the race is wide open. This is a weight for age and sex race; entrants are aged three to six, and are of both sexes. Six of the entries are Kentucky-bred; eight are from other countries. This makes for yet another listing...
1. Grand Arch 5-year-old bay gelding; Kentucky bred; 126 #
2. Obviously 6-year-old bay gelding; bred in Ireland; 126 #
3. Veda 3-year-old bay filly; bred in France; 120 #
4. Mustajeeb 3-year-old chestnut colt; bred in Great Britain; 123 #
5. Toronado 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Ireland; 126 #
6. Tom's Tribute 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
7. Kaigun 4-year-old chestnut gelding; bred in Ontario, Canada; 126 #
8. Trade Storm 6-year-old bay horse; bred in Great Britain; 126 #
9. Anodin 4-year-old bay colt; bred in Ireland; 126 #
10. Summer Front 5-year-old bay horse; Kentucky bred; 126 #
11. Sayaad 4-year-old bay colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
12. Seek Again 4-year-old chestnut colt; Kentucky bred; 126 #
13. Tourist 3-year-old dark bay colt; Kentucky bred; 123 #
14. Karakontie 3-year-old bay colt; bred in Japan; 123 #
I really like the looks and breeding of Toronado, but he's the early betting favorite - so here are my picks: Veda, the 3-year-old French filly; Anodin, the brother of Goldikova; Summer Front; Tourist under the guidance of Rosie Napravnik; and Karakontie, the Japan-born grandson of Sunday Silence.
The early betting favorite for the $5 million Classic is Shared Belief, a 3-year-old dark brown gelding, who won the Breeders Cup Juvenile last year. He looks impressive, has a Cryptoclearance and Northern Dancer pedigree, and will have Mike Smith in the saddle. I'd like for him to win, but I like longer shots on the tote board. There is a full field of fourteen horses; 7 of them are 3-year-olds and will carry 122 pounds; the other seven entries are aged four to six, and will carry 126 pounds. California Chrome has not been in the winner's circle since the Preakness in May; he is the only California bred and carries 122 pounds. Zivo is a 5-year-old bay horse bred in New York; all other entries were bred in Kentucky. All of the horses are bays, except California Chrome and V. E. Day, who are chestnuts. The other five youngsters getting a 4 pound weight break are: V. E. Day, Bayern, Toast of New York, Tonalist, and Candy Boy.Since Shared Belief is the betting favorite, my picks are: Prayer for Relief, Toast of New York, Candy Boy under Corey Nakatani, Majestic Harbor with Tyler Baze in the irons, and Moreno with Javier Castellano up.
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Zenyatta's Daughter Dead; Magician Scratched From Turf
Oh my gosh.... I've had to deal with the death of a promising young horse before - but they are always a complete surprise and extremely hard to grasp and deal with. There was an accident in the weanling paddock yesterday evening at Lane's End Farm in Kentucky. I haven't been able to hear the particulars, but "Z Princess," the third foal, and only filly of champion race mare Zenyatta had to be euthanized on site. Of course, Zenyatta is a young mare, and can be re-bred to War Front for another foal - but still, the loss of such a promising youngster is a blow to the soul. I wanted to name the filly Zen Somme, and wanted to see her run, just like her dam.... These are the latest photos that I have of the gorgeous filly:
In other racing news, Magician, the defending Breeders Cup Turf champion has been scratched from the race on Saturday. Magician was taken out of his stall to jog today, and was found to be profoundly lame in his right fore. He was checked by veterinarians, and the decision was made to remove him from the race.
Friday's Breeders Cup Races Breakdown (My Picks)
First, Handsome Mike is a scratch from the Dirt Mile race on Friday - he has a swelling in his near fore leg and is lame. Second, American Pharoah, the Juvenile betting favorite on Saturday, is also a scratch; he, too, is lame, and it's believed to be a deep foot bruise in his left fore.
I have to admit I haven't been keeping an eye on the races this year - other than a few major stakes races - and I'm completely in the dark about the 2-year-olds who are racing this year. (I guess I've been too focused on Cozmic One, Zenyatta's first foal, who is in training at Belmont Park.) There are not many photos available of many of the juvenile race contenders, so all of my decisions this year about the juvies are based on past racing and their pedigrees. And, since I know that people choose to bet on horses for all sorts of reasons, I always add in birthplace information, color, sex and age. And, if one of my favorite jockeys is riding the horse, you'll be aware of that, also. As always, if you want more information about any entry, I suggest you visit The Bloodhorse website at http://www.bloodhorse.com/ . I am also going to ignore the designated alternate entries that are waiting in line for someone to scratch...
The first race is the Juvenile Turf; all 2-year-old boys carrying 122 pounds for one mile. Wet Sail and Hootenanny are geldings; Daddy D T is a ridgling. Eight were born in Kentucky, three were born in New York, two were born in Great Britain, and Conquest Typhoon was born in Ontario, Canada. Danny Boy is the only grey (roan) in the field; horses in post positions 2, 3, and 4 are chestnuts; and the rest are bays or dark browns. Half of the field traces back to Hyperion (and/or *Forli), my favorite bloodline. (My other favorite is Man o'War, and he is in most American-bred lines.) I have only seen photos of five of the fourteen entries; the most photogenic is #11, Imperia, a dark brown colt, bred in Kentucky, and at 6 to 1 odds. Imperia will have Javier Castellano in the irons. The betting favorite is Hootenanny, a bay gelding, bred in Kentucky, and ridden by Frankie Dettori. The seond betting choice is War Envoy, a bay colt from Kentucky. Mike Smith is riding Luck of the Kitten, a chestnut Kentucky-bred; Corey Nakatani is aboard Daddy D T, another Chestnut Kentucky-bred; and Julien Leparoux will be in the stirrups aborad the grey, Danny Boy. Not having seen any of these colts run, and just looking at their pedigrees, these are my choices: Aktabantay (bred in Great Britain), Danny Boy, Imperia, and Wet Sail. But I also have the feeling that Hootenanny will run a huge race....
With the scratch of Handsome Mike in the Dirt Mile, the longest shot on the betting board is gone, leaving a field of nine. Two three-year-olds (Tapiture and Vicar's in Trouble) will carry 123 pounds; the other horses, two 4-year-olds, four 5-year-olds, and one 6-year-old will each carry 126 pounds. Pants On Fire is the eldest, and the bay horse is still going strong. Goldencents, the winner last year, will start from the #1 post position and is the early betting favorite. Bronzo was born in Chile; Big Bane Theory was born in California, and Vicar's In Trouble was born in Louisiana; the others were born in Kentucky. Bronzo and Carve are geldings; the other boys are intact. Tapiture, who will have Rosie Napravnik in the irons, is the only chestnut in the field; all other runners are bay. Tapiture is also the only horse in the field that does not have Hyperion in his pedigree. Carve will have Mike Smith in the saddle; Joel Rosario will be riding Golden Ticket; and Joe Talamo is aboard Big Bane Theory. My picks are: Vicar's In Trouble (because he's such a small guy), Bronzo, Pants On Fire, and Tapiture.
Gary Stevens returns to the saddle (14 weeks after a total knee replacement) in the Juvenile Fillies Turf; he'll be aboard Irish-bred Sivoliere. Each of these two-year-old fillies will be carrying 122 pounds in the one mile race. Again, there were very few photos for me to look at, so don't expect much... Of the fourteen fillies entered, Sunset Glow is the only grey or roan; there are three chestnuts - Partisan Politics, Isabella Sings, and Rainha Da Bateria; and the other ten runners are bay or dark brown. Three fillies were bred in Ireland - Osaila, Sivoliere, and Qualify; one was bred in Great Britain, Prize Exhibit; Conquest Harlanate was bred in Ontario, Canada; Quality Rocks was bred in Florida; the other fillies are Kentucky-bred. Three of the fillies do not have Hyperion in their pedigree - Tammy the Torpedo, Rainha Da Bateria, and Quality Rocks. The betting favorite is Sunset Glow, ridden by Victor Espinoza; Lady Zuzu has Julien Leparoux aboard for trainer D Wayne Lukas; and Frankie Dettori is in the irons on Osaila. I like: Prize Exhibit, Sivoliere, Lady Zuzu, Osaila, and Nicky's Brown Miss.
The Distaff for fillies and mares, running 1 and 1/8 miles on the dirt for $2 million.... Eleven females; all bred in Kentucky, except Valiant Emilia, from Peru. The three 3-year-olds (Unbridled Forever, Ria Antonia, and Untapable) will carry 121 pounds; the eight older mares will carry 124. Don't Tell Sophia is the eldest racing, at age 6; there are three 4-year-olds (Tiz Midnight, Iotapa, and Close Hatches) while the other four entries are 5 years of age. L'Amour de Ma Vie is the only grey or roan in the group; Belle Gallantey is the only chestnut; and the rest are bays. Five of the ladies are descendants of Hyperion; six are not. Rosie Napravnik is riding Untapable, and they are the betting favorite. Corey Nakatani is aboard Stanwyck; Jose Rosario is on Close Hatches; and John R Velasquez will ride Unbridled Forever. My picks: Untapable, Valiant Emilia, L'Amour de Ma Vie, Close Hatches, and Belle Gallantey.
As always, know that I do this for fun. Do not place wagers on my choices and expect to win. Sometimes my picks are good, and sometimes they stink. Betting (and any type of gambling) can become an addiction. Do not spend any money needed for food, housing, or other necessary payments "playing the ponies." It is not a good idea.
I have to admit I haven't been keeping an eye on the races this year - other than a few major stakes races - and I'm completely in the dark about the 2-year-olds who are racing this year. (I guess I've been too focused on Cozmic One, Zenyatta's first foal, who is in training at Belmont Park.) There are not many photos available of many of the juvenile race contenders, so all of my decisions this year about the juvies are based on past racing and their pedigrees. And, since I know that people choose to bet on horses for all sorts of reasons, I always add in birthplace information, color, sex and age. And, if one of my favorite jockeys is riding the horse, you'll be aware of that, also. As always, if you want more information about any entry, I suggest you visit The Bloodhorse website at http://www.bloodhorse.com/ . I am also going to ignore the designated alternate entries that are waiting in line for someone to scratch...
The first race is the Juvenile Turf; all 2-year-old boys carrying 122 pounds for one mile. Wet Sail and Hootenanny are geldings; Daddy D T is a ridgling. Eight were born in Kentucky, three were born in New York, two were born in Great Britain, and Conquest Typhoon was born in Ontario, Canada. Danny Boy is the only grey (roan) in the field; horses in post positions 2, 3, and 4 are chestnuts; and the rest are bays or dark browns. Half of the field traces back to Hyperion (and/or *Forli), my favorite bloodline. (My other favorite is Man o'War, and he is in most American-bred lines.) I have only seen photos of five of the fourteen entries; the most photogenic is #11, Imperia, a dark brown colt, bred in Kentucky, and at 6 to 1 odds. Imperia will have Javier Castellano in the irons. The betting favorite is Hootenanny, a bay gelding, bred in Kentucky, and ridden by Frankie Dettori. The seond betting choice is War Envoy, a bay colt from Kentucky. Mike Smith is riding Luck of the Kitten, a chestnut Kentucky-bred; Corey Nakatani is aboard Daddy D T, another Chestnut Kentucky-bred; and Julien Leparoux will be in the stirrups aborad the grey, Danny Boy. Not having seen any of these colts run, and just looking at their pedigrees, these are my choices: Aktabantay (bred in Great Britain), Danny Boy, Imperia, and Wet Sail. But I also have the feeling that Hootenanny will run a huge race....
With the scratch of Handsome Mike in the Dirt Mile, the longest shot on the betting board is gone, leaving a field of nine. Two three-year-olds (Tapiture and Vicar's in Trouble) will carry 123 pounds; the other horses, two 4-year-olds, four 5-year-olds, and one 6-year-old will each carry 126 pounds. Pants On Fire is the eldest, and the bay horse is still going strong. Goldencents, the winner last year, will start from the #1 post position and is the early betting favorite. Bronzo was born in Chile; Big Bane Theory was born in California, and Vicar's In Trouble was born in Louisiana; the others were born in Kentucky. Bronzo and Carve are geldings; the other boys are intact. Tapiture, who will have Rosie Napravnik in the irons, is the only chestnut in the field; all other runners are bay. Tapiture is also the only horse in the field that does not have Hyperion in his pedigree. Carve will have Mike Smith in the saddle; Joel Rosario will be riding Golden Ticket; and Joe Talamo is aboard Big Bane Theory. My picks are: Vicar's In Trouble (because he's such a small guy), Bronzo, Pants On Fire, and Tapiture.
Gary Stevens returns to the saddle (14 weeks after a total knee replacement) in the Juvenile Fillies Turf; he'll be aboard Irish-bred Sivoliere. Each of these two-year-old fillies will be carrying 122 pounds in the one mile race. Again, there were very few photos for me to look at, so don't expect much... Of the fourteen fillies entered, Sunset Glow is the only grey or roan; there are three chestnuts - Partisan Politics, Isabella Sings, and Rainha Da Bateria; and the other ten runners are bay or dark brown. Three fillies were bred in Ireland - Osaila, Sivoliere, and Qualify; one was bred in Great Britain, Prize Exhibit; Conquest Harlanate was bred in Ontario, Canada; Quality Rocks was bred in Florida; the other fillies are Kentucky-bred. Three of the fillies do not have Hyperion in their pedigree - Tammy the Torpedo, Rainha Da Bateria, and Quality Rocks. The betting favorite is Sunset Glow, ridden by Victor Espinoza; Lady Zuzu has Julien Leparoux aboard for trainer D Wayne Lukas; and Frankie Dettori is in the irons on Osaila. I like: Prize Exhibit, Sivoliere, Lady Zuzu, Osaila, and Nicky's Brown Miss.
The Distaff for fillies and mares, running 1 and 1/8 miles on the dirt for $2 million.... Eleven females; all bred in Kentucky, except Valiant Emilia, from Peru. The three 3-year-olds (Unbridled Forever, Ria Antonia, and Untapable) will carry 121 pounds; the eight older mares will carry 124. Don't Tell Sophia is the eldest racing, at age 6; there are three 4-year-olds (Tiz Midnight, Iotapa, and Close Hatches) while the other four entries are 5 years of age. L'Amour de Ma Vie is the only grey or roan in the group; Belle Gallantey is the only chestnut; and the rest are bays. Five of the ladies are descendants of Hyperion; six are not. Rosie Napravnik is riding Untapable, and they are the betting favorite. Corey Nakatani is aboard Stanwyck; Jose Rosario is on Close Hatches; and John R Velasquez will ride Unbridled Forever. My picks: Untapable, Valiant Emilia, L'Amour de Ma Vie, Close Hatches, and Belle Gallantey.
As always, know that I do this for fun. Do not place wagers on my choices and expect to win. Sometimes my picks are good, and sometimes they stink. Betting (and any type of gambling) can become an addiction. Do not spend any money needed for food, housing, or other necessary payments "playing the ponies." It is not a good idea.
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
NASA Wallops Island Rocket Explodes
The Antares rocket with the Cygnus cargo spacecraft was due to be launched last night - but 10 minutes before the launch time, a sailboat intruded into the restricted waters around Wallops Island, Virginia. Tonight, the launch countdown went off without a hitch, but 6 seconds after liftoff, the rocket exploded. The rocket was carrying 5,000 pounds of supplies and laboratory equipment to a rendezvous with the International Space Station and the six astronauts aboard it. NASA will hold a press conference tonight on NASA Television to discuss the "mishap."
Since the Wallops Flight Facility has been sending rockets into space, folks have gathered along the Eastern Shore and on Chincoteague Island to view the launches. This was the first night-time launch of the Antares, and quite a few people had traveled to the shore and islands to one. Reports are that no one was harmed by the explosion, but there are many reports of blown out windows in cas and trucks, as well as a few windows in near-by houses. There was a report that a search was underway in the Chicken City Road area of Chincoteague due to reports of large debris in the area. People who were watching the launch at the Curtis Merritt Memorial Harbor on the south end of Chincoteague Island reported feeling "fine particles" hitting their faces and arms after the explosion.
Chincoteague Emergency Services states that there is no known damage on the island.
I'm just happy that no lives were lost and dwellings were undamaged....
Since the Wallops Flight Facility has been sending rockets into space, folks have gathered along the Eastern Shore and on Chincoteague Island to view the launches. This was the first night-time launch of the Antares, and quite a few people had traveled to the shore and islands to one. Reports are that no one was harmed by the explosion, but there are many reports of blown out windows in cas and trucks, as well as a few windows in near-by houses. There was a report that a search was underway in the Chicken City Road area of Chincoteague due to reports of large debris in the area. People who were watching the launch at the Curtis Merritt Memorial Harbor on the south end of Chincoteague Island reported feeling "fine particles" hitting their faces and arms after the explosion.
Chincoteague Emergency Services states that there is no known damage on the island.
I'm just happy that no lives were lost and dwellings were undamaged....
Just before ignition...
Six seconds after ignition
Ten seconds after
Fifteen seconds past...
Saturday's Breeder Cup Races
Here is information regarding the nine Breeders Cup races on Saturday, 1 November. All will have live coverage; the first eight will be carried on the NBC Sports Network, while the last race, the Breeders Cup Classic, with a purse of $5 million, will be carried on local NBC stations. This information includes the post position for the race start, the name of the horse, and the morning betting odds.
The Juvenile Fillies has a purse of $2 million, and covers 1 and 1/16 miles on the main (dirt) track. There are twelve fillies entered:
1. Feathered 8 to 1
2. Angela Renee 3 to 1
3. Danette 20 to 1
4. Conquest Eclipse 4 to 1
5. Cristina's Journey 6 to 1
6. Take Charge Brandi 30 to 1
7. Majestic Presence 20 to 1
8. Puca 6 to 1
9. Hennythelovepenny 20 to 1
10. Wonder Gal 12 to 1
11. Top Decile 10 to 1
12. By the Moon 6 to 1
The 1 and 1/4 mile Fillies & Mares Turf, with a $2 million purse drew eleven entries. Dank, last year's winner is running again this year.
1. Abaco 15 to 1
2. Just the Judge 5 to 1
3. Dank 5 to 2
4. Dayatthespa 8 to 1
5. Secret Gesture 6 to 1
6. Fiesolana 8 to 1
7. Emollient 12 to 1
8. Irish Mission 20 to 1
9. Parranda 20 to 1
10. Stephanie's Kitten 3 to 1
11. Rusty Slipper 20 to 1
The seven furlong Fillies & Mares Sprint for $1 million has ten entries:
1. Sweet Reason 9 to 2
2. Little Alexis 15 to 1
3. Stonetastic 8 to 1
4. Thank You Marylou 20 to 1
5. Artemis Agrotera 3 to 1
6. Leigh Court 4 to 1
7. Judy the Beauty 5 to 2
8. Better Lucky 15 to 1
9. Living the Life 12 to 1
10. Southern Honey 20 to 1
The Turf Sprint champion of the past two years, Mizdirection, has been retired. There are 14 entrants and two alternate entries hoping to win the 6 1/2 furlong $1 million race this year:
1. Reneesgotzip 5 to 1
2. Silentio 8 to 1
3. Sweet Swap 12 to 1
4. Tightend Touchdown 8 to 1
5. Ambitious Brew 12 to 1
6. Bobby's Kitten 10 to 1
7. Marchman 12 to 1
8. Something Extra 20 to 1
9. Free as a Bird 15 to 1
10. Home Run Kitten 12 to 1
11. Undrafted 8 to 1
12. Dimension 12 to 1
13. Caspar Netscher 10 to 1
14. No Nay Never 9 to 2
AE Ageless 20 to 1
AE Za Approval 20 to 1
The Juvenile Colts run 1 and 1/16 miles for $2 million in purse money. The pre-race favorite, American Pharoah, drew post 5 and had odds of 2 to 1. He is lame today, and a deep bruise is suspected in his off fore. He has been scratched from the race.
1. Calculator 15 to 1
2. Private Prospect 30 to 1
3. Blue Dancer 30 to 1
4. The Great War 12 to 1
5. American Pharoah 2 to 1
6. Lucky Player 30 to 1
7. Texas Red 20 to 1
8. Souper Colossal 12 to 1
9. Carpe Diem 4 to 1
10. Mr. Z 20 to 1
11. One Lucky Dane 10 to 1
12. Daredevil 7 to 2
13. Upstart 4 to 1
The 1 and 1/2 mile Turf has a purse of $3 million. Last year's winner, Magician, is in the field of thirteen runners.
1. Telescope 4 to 1
2. Twilight Eclipse 12 to 1
3. Imagining 12 to 1
4. Brown Panther 8 to 1
5. Hangover Kid 30 to 1
6. Finnegans Wake 30 to 1
7. Flintshire 7 to 2
8. Magician 5 to 1
9. Hardest Core 10 to 1
10. Starspangled Heat 30 to 1
11. Chicquita 8 to 1
12. Main Sequence 6 to 1
13. Big John B 20 to 1
The Sprint is run on the main dirt track, covering 6 furlongs, and has a purse of $1.5 million. Secret Circle, last year's champion, is back to defend his title. There is a full field of 14, plus two alternate entries for this race.
1. Seeking the Sherif 20 to 1
2. Indianapolis 12 to 1
3. Wind Fire 30 to 1
4. Secret Circle 9 to 2
5. Private Zone 6 to 1
6. Rich Tapestry 5 to 1
7. Mico Margarita 15 to 1
8. Palace 6 to 1
9. Salutos Amigos 6 to 1
10. Big Macher 12 to 1
11. Bakken 10 to 1
12. Fast Anna 12 to 1
13. Work All Week 10 to 1
14. Bourbon Courage 30 to 1
AE Bahamian Squall 20 to 1
AE Indexical 30 to 1
Wise Dan, who won the last two runnings of the Mile, has a fractured cannon bone and is resting before returning to the races. This $2 million race is wide open without the champion present. There are fourteen entries and one alternate.
1. Grand Arch 20 to 1
2. Obviously 8 to 1
3. Veda 12 to 1
4. Mustajeeb 6 to 1
5. Toronado 5 to 2
6. Tom's Tribute 15 to 1
7. Kaigun 20 to 1
8. Trade Storm 12 to 1
9. Anodin 6 to 1
10. Summer Front 30 to 1
11. Sayaad 30 to 1
12. Seek Again 6 to 1
13. Tourist 12 to 1
14. Karakontie 10 to 1
AE Mr. Commons 30 to 1
The $5 million Breeders Cup Classic is run at the American classic distance, 1 and 1/4 miles, on the main dirt track. This race has a full field of 14, plus one alternate entry. Both the winner and the runner-up last year, Mucho Macho Man and Will Take Charge, have retired to stud. Shared Belief, the early betting favorite, won the Breeders Cup Juvenile last year. California Chrome, who won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, is also entered.
1. Prayer For Relief 30 to 1
2. Cigar Street 12 to 1
3. Imperative 30 to 1
4. Moreno 20 to 1
5. V. E. Day 20 to 1
6. Shared Belief 9 to 5
7. Bayern 6 to 1
8. Zivo 15 to 1
9. Toast of New York 12 to 1
10. Footbridge 30 to 1
11. Tonalist 5 to 1
12. Candy Boy 20 to 1
13. California Chrome 4 to 1
14. Majestic Harbor 20 to 1
AE Big Casanova (no odds listed)
If you'd like more information on the horses and their connections, plus either a 3 or 5 generation pedigree view, please visit The Bloodhorse website at http://www.bloodhorse.com and click on the Breeders Cup tab. Then you can click on the race tab, and then click on the horse's name...
The Juvenile Fillies has a purse of $2 million, and covers 1 and 1/16 miles on the main (dirt) track. There are twelve fillies entered:
1. Feathered 8 to 1
2. Angela Renee 3 to 1
3. Danette 20 to 1
4. Conquest Eclipse 4 to 1
5. Cristina's Journey 6 to 1
6. Take Charge Brandi 30 to 1
7. Majestic Presence 20 to 1
8. Puca 6 to 1
9. Hennythelovepenny 20 to 1
10. Wonder Gal 12 to 1
11. Top Decile 10 to 1
12. By the Moon 6 to 1
The 1 and 1/4 mile Fillies & Mares Turf, with a $2 million purse drew eleven entries. Dank, last year's winner is running again this year.
1. Abaco 15 to 1
2. Just the Judge 5 to 1
3. Dank 5 to 2
4. Dayatthespa 8 to 1
5. Secret Gesture 6 to 1
6. Fiesolana 8 to 1
7. Emollient 12 to 1
8. Irish Mission 20 to 1
9. Parranda 20 to 1
10. Stephanie's Kitten 3 to 1
11. Rusty Slipper 20 to 1
The seven furlong Fillies & Mares Sprint for $1 million has ten entries:
1. Sweet Reason 9 to 2
2. Little Alexis 15 to 1
3. Stonetastic 8 to 1
4. Thank You Marylou 20 to 1
5. Artemis Agrotera 3 to 1
6. Leigh Court 4 to 1
7. Judy the Beauty 5 to 2
8. Better Lucky 15 to 1
9. Living the Life 12 to 1
10. Southern Honey 20 to 1
The Turf Sprint champion of the past two years, Mizdirection, has been retired. There are 14 entrants and two alternate entries hoping to win the 6 1/2 furlong $1 million race this year:
1. Reneesgotzip 5 to 1
2. Silentio 8 to 1
3. Sweet Swap 12 to 1
4. Tightend Touchdown 8 to 1
5. Ambitious Brew 12 to 1
6. Bobby's Kitten 10 to 1
7. Marchman 12 to 1
8. Something Extra 20 to 1
9. Free as a Bird 15 to 1
10. Home Run Kitten 12 to 1
11. Undrafted 8 to 1
12. Dimension 12 to 1
13. Caspar Netscher 10 to 1
14. No Nay Never 9 to 2
AE Ageless 20 to 1
AE Za Approval 20 to 1
The Juvenile Colts run 1 and 1/16 miles for $2 million in purse money. The pre-race favorite, American Pharoah, drew post 5 and had odds of 2 to 1. He is lame today, and a deep bruise is suspected in his off fore. He has been scratched from the race.
1. Calculator 15 to 1
2. Private Prospect 30 to 1
3. Blue Dancer 30 to 1
4. The Great War 12 to 1
6. Lucky Player 30 to 1
7. Texas Red 20 to 1
8. Souper Colossal 12 to 1
9. Carpe Diem 4 to 1
10. Mr. Z 20 to 1
11. One Lucky Dane 10 to 1
12. Daredevil 7 to 2
13. Upstart 4 to 1
The 1 and 1/2 mile Turf has a purse of $3 million. Last year's winner, Magician, is in the field of thirteen runners.
1. Telescope 4 to 1
2. Twilight Eclipse 12 to 1
3. Imagining 12 to 1
4. Brown Panther 8 to 1
5. Hangover Kid 30 to 1
6. Finnegans Wake 30 to 1
7. Flintshire 7 to 2
8. Magician 5 to 1
9. Hardest Core 10 to 1
10. Starspangled Heat 30 to 1
11. Chicquita 8 to 1
12. Main Sequence 6 to 1
13. Big John B 20 to 1
The Sprint is run on the main dirt track, covering 6 furlongs, and has a purse of $1.5 million. Secret Circle, last year's champion, is back to defend his title. There is a full field of 14, plus two alternate entries for this race.
1. Seeking the Sherif 20 to 1
2. Indianapolis 12 to 1
3. Wind Fire 30 to 1
4. Secret Circle 9 to 2
5. Private Zone 6 to 1
6. Rich Tapestry 5 to 1
7. Mico Margarita 15 to 1
8. Palace 6 to 1
9. Salutos Amigos 6 to 1
10. Big Macher 12 to 1
11. Bakken 10 to 1
12. Fast Anna 12 to 1
13. Work All Week 10 to 1
14. Bourbon Courage 30 to 1
AE Bahamian Squall 20 to 1
AE Indexical 30 to 1
Wise Dan, who won the last two runnings of the Mile, has a fractured cannon bone and is resting before returning to the races. This $2 million race is wide open without the champion present. There are fourteen entries and one alternate.
1. Grand Arch 20 to 1
2. Obviously 8 to 1
3. Veda 12 to 1
4. Mustajeeb 6 to 1
5. Toronado 5 to 2
6. Tom's Tribute 15 to 1
7. Kaigun 20 to 1
8. Trade Storm 12 to 1
9. Anodin 6 to 1
10. Summer Front 30 to 1
11. Sayaad 30 to 1
12. Seek Again 6 to 1
13. Tourist 12 to 1
14. Karakontie 10 to 1
AE Mr. Commons 30 to 1
The $5 million Breeders Cup Classic is run at the American classic distance, 1 and 1/4 miles, on the main dirt track. This race has a full field of 14, plus one alternate entry. Both the winner and the runner-up last year, Mucho Macho Man and Will Take Charge, have retired to stud. Shared Belief, the early betting favorite, won the Breeders Cup Juvenile last year. California Chrome, who won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, is also entered.
1. Prayer For Relief 30 to 1
2. Cigar Street 12 to 1
3. Imperative 30 to 1
4. Moreno 20 to 1
5. V. E. Day 20 to 1
6. Shared Belief 9 to 5
7. Bayern 6 to 1
8. Zivo 15 to 1
9. Toast of New York 12 to 1
10. Footbridge 30 to 1
11. Tonalist 5 to 1
12. Candy Boy 20 to 1
13. California Chrome 4 to 1
14. Majestic Harbor 20 to 1
AE Big Casanova (no odds listed)
If you'd like more information on the horses and their connections, plus either a 3 or 5 generation pedigree view, please visit The Bloodhorse website at http://www.bloodhorse.com and click on the Breeders Cup tab. Then you can click on the race tab, and then click on the horse's name...
Wildlife Photos
Australian blue-banded bees
Young pine marten
English bulldog puppy
Swan and cygnets
Kangaroo nose
Ponies on the beach
Montana elk
Friday's Breeder Cup Races
The four Breeders Cup races on Friday will be the Juvenile Turf, the Dirt Mile, the Juvenile Fillies Turf (all run at a mile in distance, for a purse of $1 million apiece) and the Distaff for Fillies and Mares, run at a mile and an eighth, for a purse of $2 million. Taped coverage will be shown on the NBC Sports Network Friday evening/night; the nine races run on Saturday will have live coverage.More information regarding each race, including pedigrees and racing history, may be viewed at The Bloodhorse website at http://www.bloodhorse.com/
The first Breeders Cup race will be the Juvenile Turf; there are 14 entrants and 2 alternate entries, in case of a late scratch. Listed are Post position, name of the horse, and morning betting odds.
1. Wet Sail 15 to 1
2. Daddy D T 15 to 1
3. Luck of the Kitten 8 to 1
4. Commemorative 8 to 1
5. Hootenanny 3 to 1
6. Conquest Typhoon 12 to 1
7. War Envoy 9 to 2
8. Offering Plan 20 to 1
9. Aktabantay 12 to 1
10. Startup Nation 12 to 1
11. Imperia 6 to 1
12. International Star 15 to 1
13. Lawn Ranger 20 to 1
14. Danny Boy 20 to 1
AE Faithful Creek 20 to 1
AE Pappacoolpappacool 30 to 1
There are 10 entries in the Dirt Mile, including Goldencents, who won the race last year:
1. Goldencents 6 to 5
2. Carve 15 to 1
3. Vicar's In Trouble 12 to 1
4. Pants On Fire 6 to 1
5. Handsome Mike 30 to 1
6. Golden Ticket 15 to 1
7. Bronzo 12 to 2
8. Fed Biz 7 to 2
9. Tapiture 6 to 1
10. Big Bane Theory 15 to 1
In the Juvenile Fillies Turf, there are 14 entrants and 2 alternate entries:
1. Partisan Politics 15 to 1
2. Osaila 5 to 1
3. Sunset Glow 7 to 2
4. Lady Eli 6 to 1
5. Isabella Sings 12 to 1
6. Sivoliere 12 to 1
7. Rainha Da Bateria 12 to 1
8. Nicky's Miss Brown 20 to 1
9. Lady Zuzu 15 to 1
10. Quality Rock 20 to 1
11. Conquest Harlanate 10 to 1
12. Tammy the Torpedo 12 to 1
13. Prize Exhibit 20 to 1
14. Qualify 5 to 1
AE Flying Tipat 20 to 1
AE War Alert 20 to 1
The Distaff will be missing Beholder, who still has some inflammation in her lungs after spiking a fever last week. Without last year's winner, there are 11 entries:
1. L'Amour de Ma Vie 15 to 1
2. Tiz Midnight 10 to 1
3. Iotapa 6 to 1
4. Belle Gallantey 6 to 1
5. Unbridled Forever 20 to 1
6. Stanwyck 20 to 1
7. Don't Tell Sophia 5 to 1
8. Valiant Emilia 20 to 1
9. Ria Antonia 15 to 1
10. Untapable 5 to 2
11. Close Hatches 3 to 1
The first Breeders Cup race will be the Juvenile Turf; there are 14 entrants and 2 alternate entries, in case of a late scratch. Listed are Post position, name of the horse, and morning betting odds.
1. Wet Sail 15 to 1
2. Daddy D T 15 to 1
3. Luck of the Kitten 8 to 1
4. Commemorative 8 to 1
5. Hootenanny 3 to 1
6. Conquest Typhoon 12 to 1
7. War Envoy 9 to 2
8. Offering Plan 20 to 1
9. Aktabantay 12 to 1
10. Startup Nation 12 to 1
11. Imperia 6 to 1
12. International Star 15 to 1
13. Lawn Ranger 20 to 1
14. Danny Boy 20 to 1
AE Faithful Creek 20 to 1
AE Pappacoolpappacool 30 to 1
There are 10 entries in the Dirt Mile, including Goldencents, who won the race last year:
1. Goldencents 6 to 5
2. Carve 15 to 1
3. Vicar's In Trouble 12 to 1
4. Pants On Fire 6 to 1
5. Handsome Mike 30 to 1
6. Golden Ticket 15 to 1
7. Bronzo 12 to 2
8. Fed Biz 7 to 2
9. Tapiture 6 to 1
10. Big Bane Theory 15 to 1
In the Juvenile Fillies Turf, there are 14 entrants and 2 alternate entries:
1. Partisan Politics 15 to 1
2. Osaila 5 to 1
3. Sunset Glow 7 to 2
4. Lady Eli 6 to 1
5. Isabella Sings 12 to 1
6. Sivoliere 12 to 1
7. Rainha Da Bateria 12 to 1
8. Nicky's Miss Brown 20 to 1
9. Lady Zuzu 15 to 1
10. Quality Rock 20 to 1
11. Conquest Harlanate 10 to 1
12. Tammy the Torpedo 12 to 1
13. Prize Exhibit 20 to 1
14. Qualify 5 to 1
AE Flying Tipat 20 to 1
AE War Alert 20 to 1
The Distaff will be missing Beholder, who still has some inflammation in her lungs after spiking a fever last week. Without last year's winner, there are 11 entries:
1. L'Amour de Ma Vie 15 to 1
2. Tiz Midnight 10 to 1
3. Iotapa 6 to 1
4. Belle Gallantey 6 to 1
5. Unbridled Forever 20 to 1
6. Stanwyck 20 to 1
7. Don't Tell Sophia 5 to 1
8. Valiant Emilia 20 to 1
9. Ria Antonia 15 to 1
10. Untapable 5 to 2
11. Close Hatches 3 to 1
Monday, October 27, 2014
Linda Lavin on The Good Wife
Post positions for all the Breeders Cup races will be drawn this afternoon at Santa Anita, so I'll write about them tomorrow. Yesterday our temperature was in the upper 70s and I spent most of the day in shorts and a T-shirt. The first cold front came through about midnight, and brought a little light rain. The second wave is pushing in under bright sunshine - but I was wearing jeans, wool socks, a long-sleeved shirt, a heavy fleece jacket and a hat with ear flaps when I walked Rosie this morning. - And it isn't really that cold - it's the north wind that's bone chilling. We're supposed to have our first hard freeze tonight (in the 20s), so I ate as many ripe raspberries as I could find this morning in the berry patch. This cold snap might also bring the apples down in the front yard... Eighty percent have fallen from the back yard trees, but the front yard apple has held tight to it's fruit this year.
Last night I watched The Good Wife, and had a blast, as usual. I watched the Saints and Packers game before and during, so I also got a good dose of football, also. Now, I've been watching each episode of The Good Wife this season, and I have thoroughly detested Cary's pre-trial bail probation officer. Her name is Joy Grubick, and her mannerisms are perfected to drive someone up the wall. And I was really enjoying hating this character, when it suddenly struck me that I knew the actress. I realized that I have talked to her multiple times, and that she was always friendly and easy-going, and completely unlike the character she was portraying. I can't really use the excuse that I've always liked Linda Lavin's work as a comedian as an excuse that I didn't recognize her in a dramatic role. I have watched her play Ms. Grubick in at least 4 episodes, and have loved to hate her - but I didn't realize until last night what a tremendously gifted actress she is. [I "know" Linda Lavin from her time as a home-owner on Chincoteague Island, and her work with (and support of) the Senior Citizens' Center there.] What tipped me off was a thing that Ms. Lavin does with her tongue, when she is thinking - when I saw Joy Grubick make the same move with her tongue last night, I almost fell over in surprise. I hope that the folks writing The Good Wife keep Joy Grubick in the story for the rest of this season - it's great seeing Ms. Lavin again!
Last night I watched The Good Wife, and had a blast, as usual. I watched the Saints and Packers game before and during, so I also got a good dose of football, also. Now, I've been watching each episode of The Good Wife this season, and I have thoroughly detested Cary's pre-trial bail probation officer. Her name is Joy Grubick, and her mannerisms are perfected to drive someone up the wall. And I was really enjoying hating this character, when it suddenly struck me that I knew the actress. I realized that I have talked to her multiple times, and that she was always friendly and easy-going, and completely unlike the character she was portraying. I can't really use the excuse that I've always liked Linda Lavin's work as a comedian as an excuse that I didn't recognize her in a dramatic role. I have watched her play Ms. Grubick in at least 4 episodes, and have loved to hate her - but I didn't realize until last night what a tremendously gifted actress she is. [I "know" Linda Lavin from her time as a home-owner on Chincoteague Island, and her work with (and support of) the Senior Citizens' Center there.] What tipped me off was a thing that Ms. Lavin does with her tongue, when she is thinking - when I saw Joy Grubick make the same move with her tongue last night, I almost fell over in surprise. I hope that the folks writing The Good Wife keep Joy Grubick in the story for the rest of this season - it's great seeing Ms. Lavin again!
Labels:
acting,
actress,
Boulder weather,
disgusting character,
Linda Lavin,
The Good Wife
Sunday, October 26, 2014
Cozmic One and Painted Patchen
Zenyatta's first foal, the colt named Cozmic One, is in training at Belmont Park. He'll be three years old on January 1, and, as he is a large, fast-growing colt, the owners and trainer don't want to race him until he is more athletically mature. Here are his latest photos:
The colt that caught a lot of eyes at the Fasig-Tipton Keeneland Sale this past week was hip number 1093, a son of Thunder Gulch. The colt was bred at Patchen Wilkes Farm in Kentucky, which is known for their white thoroughbreds. This colt, Painted Patchen, was born with a chestnut medicine hat and freckles; however, since his predominant coat color is white, he is registered as a white thoroughbred.
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