Lifliilla "We of Ing Frame
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Dutch Masters *§
C-4 •?•THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C. THINGS MUCH MORE SIMPLE THEN SUNDAY, AUGUST SS, 1985 Thane of Wales' iFarmer Takes Forest1 Witch Domino Ran Dead Heats Doubles Title Races Sweeps Class In Trapshoot Wins in Upset In 2 of 3 Match ! VANDALIA, Ohio, Aug. 27 • t Continued from Page C-l Star1 account simply states that .UP).— Hugh McKinley. 40-year- it resulted in a dead heat, with;AI Gaithersburg old farmer from Harrisburg, Haymarkel Futurity At praised Domino highly allj bets declared off and no run- Ohio, today won the national —end Jockey Fred Taral extrava- ( Racing By BRUCE FALEB, JR. championship at By ROBERT B. PHILLIPS winning off. The American doubles the gantly-i-for with 130, Manual's records on Domino add I Special Correipondent of The Star Grand American Trapshoot with Special Correspondent ofThe Star up after half-hour post pounds a little,j except that the Keenes’ Nancy Gorrell rode her vet- a score of 97 of 100. HAYMARKET,Va.. Aug. 27. delay. also pointed out that | It json of Himyar was the l-to-2 gray gelding Thane of collided , -1 eran In the doubles event—nearest Forest Witch, a big chestnut at the start Dobbins favorite and the race was run a sweep thing Hyderrabad, Domino’s sta- 1 Wales to clean in the : to bird shooting in the mare, turned up the surprise with inj 1:12%. points targets as blemate, violently that Over- three classes for 15 and field—two are thrown so • colts went on to greater, .the small pony championship in simultaneously a 40-degree ! conformation hunter champion ton, Hyderabad’s rider, Both at was' things 3-year-olds in a Montgomery County angle. -
Bob Baffert, Five Others Enter Hall of Fame
FREE SUBSCR ER IPT IN IO A N R S T COMPLIMENTS OF T !2!4/'! O L T IA H C E E 4HE S SP ARATOGA Year 9 • No. 15 SARATOGA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER ON THOROUGHBRED RACING Friday, August 14, 2009 Head of the Class Bob Baffert, five others enter Hall of Fame Inside F Hall of Famer profiles Racing UK F Today’s entries and handicapping PPs Inside F Dynaski, Mother Russia win stakes DON’T BOTHER CHECKING THE PHOTO, THE WINNER IS ALWAYS THE SAME. YOU WIN. You win because that it generates maximum you love explosive excitement. revenue for all stakeholders— You win because AEG’s proposal including you. AEG’s proposal to upgrade Aqueduct into a puts money in your pocket world-class destination ensuress faster than any other bidder, tremendous benefits for you, thee ensuring the future of thorough- New York Racing Associationn bred racing right here at home. (NYRA), and New York Horsemen, Breeders, and racing fans. THOROUGHBRED RACING MUSEUM. AEG’s Aqueduct Gaming and Entertainment Facility will have AEG’s proposal includes a Thoroughbred Horse Racing a dazzling array Museum that will highlight and inform patrons of the of activities for VLT REVENUE wonderful history of gaming, dining, VLT OPERATION the sport here in % retail, and enter- 30 New York. tainment which LOTTERY % AEG The proposed Aqueduct complex will serve as a 10 will bring New world-class gaming and entertainment destination. DELIVERS. Yorkers and visitors from the Tri-State area and beyond back RACING % % AEG is well- SUPPORT 16 44 time and time again for more fun and excitement. -
THE DIXIANA STUD Pace.Quarter 'In 24Vi Seconds.That Ballard Had Been Be Second in 12, Third in 13, Fourth in Were Among the Last to Finish
that marked some of those offered on Mon¬ and business like, with his rusty gray coat, BY GREAT TOM. day. Bay colt, by imp. Great Tom.Happy Girl; wound up the procession. The sale will be continued at noon to¬ race is described in detail elsewhere, J. Brennan 200 The here day, and among those that will be offered and there is nothing that need be said are some of BY LONGSTREET. race more run. the "stars" of the lot. except that never was a truly The details of sales as Bay filly, by Longstreet.Hilda Hamlin.. 100 Fred Taral said he had no excuse to offer follows: yesterday's are for Clifford. The Commoner, he said, did BY FENTLON. wide into the BY IMPORTED LOYALIST. Bay filly, by Fenelon.Floretta; J. W. carry him a trifle turning Bay colt, by imp. Loyalist.Miss Ryan; H. Smith stretch, but the Interference amounted to Warnke loo worth mentioning. "Henry of Na¬ Black $275 nothing had the foot colt, by imp. Loyalist.Tennessee Grand total for sixteen head $4,400 varre was the better horse, and Seasons Three Belle; Louis Stuart 500 Average 275 of Clifford at ever stage of the game," waa Opens with Very Black filly, by imp. Loyalist.Irony; J. W. how the "Dutchman" put it. Rogers 625 What Henry Griffin said was borne oat by Fair Races, but Some Sur¬ HORSE WORLD. a>l the and that even better evi¬ Total for three head.. «..$1,400 jockeys onlookers. Average 407 dence, the eyesight of expert Result. The sale of the Belle Griffin rode a beautifully judged race, and prises BY INSPECTOR B. -
Run for the Roses May 1 Marks the 136Th Running of the Kentucky Derby — One of the World’S Largest and Richest Sporting Events
Vol. 30 • No. 4 ComplimeNtary Copy april 2010 Florida’s Leading Newspaper For Active, Mature Adults Run for the Roses May 1 marks the 136th running of the Kentucky Derby — one of the world’s largest and richest sporting events. Whether you visit Churchill Downs in person, host your own Derby Day party or catch the action at our own Tampa Bay Downs, this issue of Senior Voice will guide you. For more than 135 years, the Kentucky From the time Kentucky was settled, Derby has been everyone’s race. From the fields of the Bluegrass region were dapper men and beautiful women in noted for producing superior race hats sipping on frosty mint juleps to the horses. laid-back infield crowd who picnic on In 1872, Col. Meriwether Lewis Clark, fried chicken and toss Frisbees, Churchill Jr., grandson of William Clark of the Downs, near Louisville, welcomes more Lewis and Clark expedition, traveled than 150,000 spectators to witness the to England, visiting the Epsom Derby, most thrilling two minutes in sports. a famous race that had been running “Riders up” booms the paddock annually since 1780. judge… From there, Clark went on to Paris, Trainers give a leg up to the riders; where in 1863, a group of racing enthusi- and send them out through the tunnel asts had formed the French Jockey Club and onto the world’s most famous track and had organized the Grand Prix de as the University of Louisville band Paris, which at the time was the greatest strikes up Stephen Foster’s “My Old race in France. -
Domino by Kathleen Jones
Domino by Kathleen Jones Domino was an amazing phenomenon in the annals of American thoroughbred breeding. He exists in the pedigrees of perhaps half of the recent stakes winners in this country, yet that he appears in any is a miracle. But we are getting ahead of ourselves. Domino was dark brown colt with a peculiar coat which appeared to change color depending on in which light it was viewed. (The coat of Equipoise, Domino's great grandson, was similar in nature.) On cloudy days, his coat was dark as coal, yet in bright sunlight, people would swear they had seen a chestnut horse. He was known by several racing nicknames including "the brown phenomenon" and "the black whirlwind". He was foaled at Major Barak Thomas' Dixiana Farm, a son of the speedy Himyar, and the stakes producing mare Mannie Gray. He was his dam's ninth foal, and she had already produced the good runners TEN STRIKE (by Ten Broeck), BANDALA (by King Ban), and the great handicap mare CORRECTION (by Himyar) for whom the present-day Correction Handicap is named. Domino was a beautiful specimen of a horse, and Thomas sent him to the Tattersall's yearling sales with high expectations. For a sale in which the average selling price was $895, Domino fetched an eye-popping $3000 (the second top price of the sale). The new owner was Foxhall Keene. Keene placed the colt in the capable hands of African-American yearling-handler Albert Cooper, who broke and trained the young horses for the Keenes. The colt worked a quarter mile at Coney Island in such fast time that Cooper was certain his watch had malfunctioned. -
Travers Stakes Travers Stakes
TRAVERS STAKES TRAVERS STAKES 2016 Media Guide NYRA.com 2016 Media Guide NYRA.com T1 TABLE OF CONTENTS ........................................................................3 TRAVERS STAKES MILESTONES HORSES TRAINERS Travers Stakes and Champion Horses ...................................4 Most Wins by a Trainer .................................................16 The Travers and Horse of the Year .......................................4 Records of Modern-Day Trainers ...............................16 Divisional Winners That Lost the Travers ............................4 Juvenile Champions in the Travers .........................................5 JOCKEYS Performance of Triple Crown Winners..................................5 Leading Riders ................................................................19 Derby Winners in the Travers .................................................6 Most Mounts ..................................................................19 Preakness Winners in the Travers............................................6 Records of Modern-Day Jockeys ................................20 Belmont Winners in the Travers .............................................6 Travers Winners and their Preps .............................................7 RECORDS Performance of Favorites ........................................................8 Travers Trophy ...............................................................24 Fastest Fractional Times............................................................9 Travers Day Attendance and -
My Drift Title: Triple Crown Written By: Jerry D
My Drift Title: Triple Crown Written by: Jerry D. Petersen Date: 20 May 2017 Article Number: 259-2017-15 The Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Horse Racing, better known as the Triple Crown, is a title awarded to a three-year-old thoroughbred horse who wins the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Belmont Stakes. The three races were inaugurated in different years, the last being the Kentucky Derby in 1875. These races are now run annually in May and early June of each year. The Triple Crown Trophy, commissioned in 1950 but awarded to all previous winners as well as those after 1950, is awarded to a Triple Crown winner. The Triple Crown Trophy Churchill Downs thoroughbred racetrack is located on Central Avenue in south Louisville, Kentucky. It is most famous for hosting the Kentucky Derby annually (on the first Saturday of May). This race is nicknamed, “The Run for the Roses.” The track is named for John and Henry Churchill who provided the land. It officially opened in 1875 and held the first Kentucky Derby and the first Kentucky Oaks in the same year. Churchill Downs has also hosted the renowned Breeders' Cup on eight occasions, most recently in 2011. Churchill Downs Front Inside Churchill Downs The Kentucky Derby Pimlico Race Course is a thoroughbred horse racetrack in Baltimore, Maryland, most famous for hosting the Preakness Stakes. Its name is derived from the 1660s when English settlers named the area where the facility currently stands in honor of Olde Ben Pimlico's Tavern in London. The racetrack is nicknamed "Old Hilltop" after a small rise in the infield that became a favorite gathering place for thoroughbred trainers and race enthusiasts. -
Friday's Digital Edition of the Saratoga Special
Year 14 • No. 18 Friday, August 8, 2014 T he aratoga Saratoga’s Daily Newspaper on Thoroughbred Racing Curlin Hall of Fame Racing’s class of 2014 inducted at Spa today Ashado Tod Marks (2) Tod 22 Members of the Racing Hall of Fame were Foaled/Raised at Claiborne BOLD RULER GO FOR WAND OMAHA BUCKPASSER GRANVILLE PERSONAL ENSIGN DAHLIA INSIDE INFORMATION RIVA RIDGE EASY GOER JOHNSTOWN ROUND TABLE FOREGO KELSO RUFFIAN GALLANT FOX LA PREVOYANTE SEABISCUIT GAMELY LURE SLEW O’ GOLD NASHUA Congratulations to the 2014 Inductees Post Office Box 150 Paris, Kentucky 40362-0150 Tel.(859) 233-4252 claibornefarm.com 2 14-0555.CLB.HallofFame.SarSp.Aug9.indd 1 The Saratoga Special Friday, August8/7/14 8, 8:57 2014 AM here&there... at Saratoga NAMES OF THE DAY Confrontation, third race. The 4-year-old gelding is by War Pass out of Successfully Sweet. Steve, sixth race. No real reason, but you have to like a horse named Steve. LICENSE PLATES OF THE DAY SPAFAN – Kentucky. PICK 6 – Connecticut. BY THE NUMBERS O: Trainers who have won more than one jump race at the meet. Kate Dalton, Jimmy Day, Elizabeth Voss, Richard Valentine, Jack Fisher and Todd Wyatt have shared the first half-dozen races. Six more to go. 4: Career starts (in 16-race jump career) vs. fellow fillies/mares for Cat Feathers – two wins, two seconds. WORTH REPEATING “She’s a route filly and I can’t train one to go one turn anyway, I’m more like a jump trainer.” Dave Donk, after Selenite won a two-turn stakes Monday “Working for Woody, there’s like a big checklist, all those boxes and you’re looking to check them off, when you check a lot of them off, you’re going to have some fun with them. -
Inside ❱ Red Giant Wins Fourstardave Stakes
SUBSCR ER IPT IN IO A N R S T COMPLIMENTS OF T !2!4/'! O L T IA H C E E 4HE S SP ARATOGA Year 8 • No. 11 SARATOGA’S DAILY NEWSPAPER ON THOROUGHBRED RACING Monday, August 4, 2008 Sales Days Fasig-Tipton holds first Saratoga sale of new era Inside ❱ Red Giant wins Fourstardave Stakes. ❱ Talking sales with Boyd Browning and consignors. ❱ Hall of Fame profiles. ❱ Entries, Handicapping for Monday. Tod Marks photos EDDINGTON, a son of UNBRIDLED, won/placed in nine stakes, all graded. His first foals are yearlings this year. 2008 Fasig-Tipton Select Yearlings Eddington by UNBRIDLED 1st Crop Yearlings from Grade 1 SW of $1.2 Million sss 98 filly / Actceptional 101 colt / Appealing Jewel Pulpit by A.P. INDY Four Graded SWs in 2008 18% Stakes Horses from Foals Lifetime sss 35 colt / Ramatuelle 146 colt / Doppio Espresso Strong Hope by GRAND SLAM 2 Winners in 1st 5 Starters Brilliant Winner of the Jim Dandy-G2 sss 39 colt / Reboot 43 filly / Rose of Summer 59 colt / Soccory 111 colt / Bisbee 182 filly / Ionlyhaveeyesforu Selling August 4 & 5 Post Office Box 150 Paris, Kentucky 40362-0150 Tel.(859) 233-4252 Fax 987-0008 claibornefarm.com INQUIRIES TO BERNIE SAMS e-mail: [email protected] PHOTO © HORSEPHOTOS.COM 80868.CLB.Sale.SarSpec. Aug2.indd 1 8/1/08 3:46:34 PM 2 Monday, August 4, 2008 rethink everything. going on now! Fuccillo Hyundai of Schenectady 5Liner.com (518) 382-0274 Prices as of 7/30/08 based on New York State averages according to www.fuelgaugereport.com Monday, August 4, 2008 3 Th e ARATOGA Here & There at Saratoga 100 Lake Avenue -
144º Belmont Stakes En La TV De San Isidro
La prueba integrará el programa del sábado 9 de junio 144º Belmont Stakes en la TV de San Isidro El próximo sábado 9 de junio el Hipódromo de San Isidro transmitirá en directo y con apuestas, las alternativas del prestigioso Belmont Stakes (G1 – 2400 metros, US$ 1.000.000), tercera y última etapa de la Triple Corona de USA, donde participarán los mejores potrillos de tres años de ese país. La competencia tendrá una particularidad histórica pues entre sus participantes estará I’ll Have Another el héroe del Kentucky Derby (G1) y del Preakness Stakes (G1), las dos primeras instancias de la serie selectiva. En caso de vencer en el Belmont Stakes, el potrillo entrará en la historia mundial y se convertirá en un nuevo triplecoronado del turf de USA, hazaña que no se concreta desde 1978, temporada en la que el legendario Affirmed derrotó a Alydar en las tres carreras de grado uno. I’ll Have Another comenzó la Triple Corona con victoria en el Kentucky Derby y a las dos semanas también se quedó con el Preakness Stakes. El próximo sábado irá por el Belmont y toda la gloria… El Hipódromo de San Isidro acercará las alternativas de una competencia histórica, en directo y con apuestas, que se sumará al programa habitual. Además, el clásico estará incluido en la programación del sábado y acompañará la realización del Clásico Santiago Lawrie (G3 – 1000 metros), para todo caballo de tres años y más edad, que se disputará sobre la pista de césped, y el Clásico Manuel Anasagasti (L – 1000 metros), para productos de dos años, que se hará en el mismo trazado. -
Suspense Magazine December 2012
Suspense, Mystery, Horror and Thriller Fiction January 2013 Kick off 2013 with Brad Meltzer Kay Hooper Brad taylor Kane GilMour Focus on True Crime The sTrange saga of rider John e. haThaway Andrew Peterson & The Kindle Serial ProjecT A Look Inside “Touch and Go” by Lisa Gardner C r e di t s From the Editor John Raab President & Chairman Why do we love to read books? Shannon Raab Creative Director January 2013 is upon us, which means that anybody that believed in the Mayan calendar was Romaine Reeves wrong, which is a good thing. However, now I’m CFO another year older, and that is a bad thing. I had Starr Gardinier Reina another letter written for this month, but like with Executive Editor any good suspense/thriller book we got thrown a major curve ball, and that happened to everyone Terri Ann Armstrong Executive Editor outside of the pages of the book with the horrific tragedy that happened in Newtown, Connecticut. Jim Thomsen When something like this happens, questions Copy Editor start to be asked that will never be answered. We, the readers and authors of this genre, Contributors live in a world filled with violence and horror; however, those are simply the words and Donald Allen Kirch imagination of the author writing them. Mark P. Sadler We read books to get away from everyday life and the negative forces that threaten Susan Santangelo DJ Weaver to harm us. Hearing what happened in Newtown touched me deeply as a parent of four CK Webb children. It affected our family, to realize that anything can happen at any time in a blink Kiki Howell Kaye George of an eye.