Author Archives: Darrell Wood

Charlie Davis, Exercise Rider For Secretariat, Battling Lung Cancer

The Secretariat Team announced today that Charlie Davis, the colorful and engaging exercise rider for 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat, has been diagnosed with Stage 3 lung cancer and will immediately begin chemotherapy and radiation treatments to combat it.

“Charlie is in good spirits and ready to take on this challenge,” said Leonard Lusky, spokesman for the Secretariat Team. “His family and friends have rallied around him, and we stand ready to do what we can to help.”

Davis, who turns 78 next month, has regularly made appearances at racing venues, the Secretariat Festival and other events to the delight of generations of fans, always willing to share stories of Big Red and his first-hand experiences as a member of the Meadow Stable Team. Those appearances are a primary source of income for Davis, but due to his illness, he has not been able to travel.

To assist with uncovered medical bills and unforeseen living expenses, his family has launched a fund-raising effort, which already has been seeded long-time pal jockey Ron Turcotte, the family of Penny Chenery, and Secretariat.com along with a few special friends and an associated GoFundMe account. Fans wishing to offer their support can find more information at gofundme.com/charliedavis1973. As a token of appreciation, Davis will sign and send an autographed photo of himself aboard Secretariat to each donor. Cards and letters for Davis can be mailed to:

Charlie Davis
℅ Secretariat.com
P.O. Box 4865
Louisville, KY 40204

Charlie Davis, long time exercise rider for Secretariat.

Davis, a native of Eutawville, S.C., was a member of legendary trainer Lucien Laurin’s “Holly Hills” crew and exercised some of the era’s top racing stars of the 1960s, including champion filly Quill and Belmont Stakes winner Amberoid. In 1971, when Laurin took over Christopher Chenery’s Meadow string, Davis was assigned as exercise rider for the stable’s champion colt Riva Ridge and later Secretariat. He still enjoys sharing memories of the 1973 Triple Crown winner he affectionately calls “Red.”

“He give me a vibe,” Davis remembers. “Like your kid is talking to you, but it was a stronger vibe, like, ‘Hey, I’m the man, you just along for the ride.’”

Stellar Wind Again Named Top Mid-Atlantic Horse

or the second time in three years, Stellar Wind has been chosen as the top horse bred in the mid-Atlantic region in the final Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred/The Racing Biz Top Midlantic-bred Poll.

One year after narrowly losing out to Maryland-bred Cathryn Sophia for Top Midlantic-bred honors, Stellar Wind, a Virginia-bred, edged Mor Spirit to take the 2017 laurels.

The Mid-Atlanic Thoroughbred/The Racing Biz Top Midlantic-bred Poll is comprised of nearly 30 media members and other participants in mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred racing. The top seven horses combined to win six Grade 1 events among their 16 graded victories.

Stellar Wind is shown with jockey Victor Espinoza after winning the Beholder Mile. Photo courtesy of Santa Anita.

“Some of the most exciting runners in the country this year were Midlantic-breds,” said The Racing Biz founder and publisher Frank Vespe. “It was a thrill for regional racing fans to see so many runners of such quality thriving in major races around the country.”

During the season, Stellar Wind won three of four starts, all in Grade 1 company. Among her wins were the Apple Blossom Handicap at Oaklawn in April, the Beholder Mile at Santa Anita in June, and the Clement L. Hirsch Stakes at Del Mar in July. She concluded her season with a disappointing eighth-place finish in the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Distaff.

For her career, Stellar Wind has won 10 of 16 career starts, and the $800,000 in earnings she piled up in 2017 brought her career mark to more than $2.2 million.

Hronis Racing’s Stellar Wind and jockey Victor Espinoza, left, outleg Vale Dori (Mike Smith), right, to win the Grade I, $300,000 Clement L. Hirsch Stakes, Sunday July 30, 2017 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar CA.© BENOIT PHOTO

Stellar Wind was bred in Virginia by Peggy Augustus’ Keswick Stables & Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC. She is a daughter of Curlin out of the winning Malibu Moon mare Evening Star.

Sold twice as a yearling, she was purchased the second time, for $86,000, by Barbara Houck at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling sale. She began her career in Houck’s colors, with Donald Barr training her at Laurel Park. She broke her maiden – by nearly nine lengths – in her second start and was sold privately to Hronis Racing, LLC, for whom she campaigned through the 2015, 2016, and 2017 seasons, going on to win nine graded races, six of them Grade 1 events. All of that work came under the tutelage of trainer John Sadler.

She earned Top Midlantic-bred honors in 2015 following a season in which she won four graded events, including the Grade 1 Santa Anita Oaks, and earned an Eclipse Award as champion 3-year-old filly. That year she finished a near-miss second in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff, which would turn out to be the best of her three results in that event.

Following her 2017 campaign, Hronis Racing sold her at the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale for a staggering $6 million. But plans to breed her are – temporarily – on hold. Coolmore, which bought her, has sent her to trainer Chad Brown’s Palm Meadows operation, where he is prepping her for the $16 million Pegasus World Cup later in January at Gulfstream Park.

“Stellar Wind has been one of the most effective and consistent Midlantic-bred runners of recent vintage,” said Cricket Goodall, executive director of the Maryland Horse Breeders Association, which publishes Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred. “With plenty of tough company, she has once again earned the nod as the region’s best.”

The remainder of the top seven are:
•    Mor Spirit (PA), winner of the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap;
•    Unique Bella (PA), winner of five graded stakes, including the Grade 1 La Brea;
•    Irish War Cry (NJ), winner of two Grade 2 events, including the Wood Memorial;
•    Finest City (PA), a Grade 2 winner in 2017 who also placed in four other graded events;
•    Tom’s Ready (PA), a Grade 3 winner and Grade 1-placed in 2017; and
•    Green Gratto (NJ), whose two graded wins for the year included the Grade 1 Carter Handicap.

The Legacy of Visionary Breeder “Ned” Evans Is Burning Brighter Than Ever

The following piece was written by Nancy Sexton

As the ultimate American racing showpiece, the Breeders’ Cup can be relied upon to provide its share of threads for discussion.

That is especially true from the perspective of those in the bloodstock industry, who walked away from this year’s event having seen it again pay tribute to More Than Ready, the sire of two winners in Roy H (Sprint) and Rushing Fall (Juvenile Fillies’ Turf), as well as Clarkland Farm’s wonderful producer Leslie’s Lady, the dam of Into Mischief and Beholder, whose latest 2-year-old, Mendelssohn, enriched the mare’s stud record yet further by landing the Juvenile Turf.

It was also a meeting of which the late Edward P. ‘Ned’ Evans, former chairman of Macmillan publishing, might have been particularly proud.

Evans bred over 100 stakes winners at his Spring Hill Farm in Virginia from 1969 to 2010, including Horse of the Year Saint Liam, multiple G1 winner Quality Road and Irish champion Minstrella, the controversial 1986 Cheveley Park Stakes winner who was the highlight of his period dabbling in Europe.

Many were the products of families integrated into Spring Hill over an extended period, and the subsequent cultivation and level of investment was such that today a Ned Evans family – among them those descending from Christmas Bonus, Execution, Flight Dancer, Intentional Move and Prayer Bell – remains easily recognisable and highly sought after. Nowhere was that more evident than the Evans dispersal sold at Keeneland through Lane’s End Farm after his death in 2010, which turned over $62,347,000 for 220 horses sold.

Gun Runner: furthering the influence of one of ‘Ned’ Evans’ outstanding families. Photo by Ting Shen/Eclipse Sportswire

Intuition and intellect

“Mr Evans had a very long-term view,” says Chris Baker, manager of Spring Hill Farm for 11 years, “and the sole metric he used to measure all decisions was racing performance. He loved depth of pedigree, but performance was of paramount importance.

“He cultivated numerous families. All had specific traits for temperament, maturation rates, distance and surface aptitude – over time you learn how to accentuate the positive in all of them to maximize the chance for racing success.”

He adds: “He never bred commercially. His long-term view underlined his belief that racing performance was the best way to create commercial value and he was proven and is still being proven to be correct in his assessment. This philosophy, along with his intuition and intellect for breeding, racing and business in general, made him successful.”

Six years on following his dispersal and the Evans name continues to burn bright through the deeds of Quality Road, one of his last big runners, who is gaining real traction at stud at Lane’s End Farm in Kentucky, and Gun Runner, a product of Evans’ outstanding Flight Dancer family, also responsible for Saint Liam. Both did their bit to ensure an Evans flavour at Del Mar’s Breeders’ Cup; Gun Runner’s romp in the Classic will live long in the memory, while Quality Road was represented as the sire of Juvenile Fillies’ heroine Caledonia Road.

Confidence in Quality Road

Bred by Evans out of Kobla, Quality Road had stood just one season at Lane’s End when Evans died in December 2010, aged 68. It says much for the power of the breeding operation at Spring Hill that the son of Elusive Quality went on to owe a lot of his early success to foals out of mares hailing from the Evans dispersal, among them Prix Morny runner-up Hootenanny (bred by Barronstown Stud out of More Hennessy, bought out of the dispersal for $360,000), G2 winner Blofeld (bred by Keats Grove Farm out of Storm Minstrel, bought for $150,000) and the G3-placed Seve’s Road (bred by WinStar Farm out of Silk Road, bought for $435,000).

Today, he is the sire of six G1 winners from four crops of racing age, among them this year’s Kentucky Oaks heroine Abel Tasman, the aforementioned Caledonia Road and Del Mar Futurity winner Klimt, who is about to start his own stud career at Darby Dan Farm. Three of them came in the past year, and as a result Quality Road is due to stand the 2018 season at $70,000, up from $35,000.

“Mr. Evans always had the utmost confidence in Quality Road to be the horse in racing and breeding that would finally make sense of the longstanding commitment he made to playing at the top of the game,” says Baker. “Given what Quality Road has done, I am confident that if Mr. Evans were still alive to be a part of his success he would in essence ‘double down’ and invest further to pursue his passion for racing.”

The stallion accounts for only a share of Evans’ posthumous influence, however. The 51 yearlings that grossed a total of $6,527,000 came to include G2 winner Valid (bought for $500,000 by John Ferguson), G3 winner Code West (bought for $340,000 by Ben Glass) and minor stakes winners Mail (bought for $470,000 by Mike Ryan) and Maleeh (bought for $350,000 by Shadwell Estates).

The mares were an altogether more explosive affair. Offered alongside the weanlings and horses of racing age, they were led by the G1 Ashland Stakes winner Christmas Kid, who commanded $4.2 million from Aisling Duignan on behalf of Coolmore while in foal to Bernardini.

The foal she was carrying at the time turned out to be Father Christmas, third in the 2015 G2 King Edward VII Stakes for Aidan O’Brien, and was followed by the Galileo colt Black Sea, successful in the 2016 Leopardstown 2,000 Guineas Trial. Coolmore also came away with the mare’s Elusive Quality weanling Michaelmas, a $525,000 purchase through Timmy Hyde who went on to be G3-placed.

Emerging force

Yet not every buyer needed deep pockets. Three Chimneys Farm paid $75,000 for Elusive Raven, subsequently the dam of G3 winner Lost Raven, while James Keogh as agent for N. L. P. Racing paid $100,000 for Here Music, dam of this year’s G2 Fair Grounds Oaks runner-up Wicked Lick.

Perhaps the real winner, however, was Benjamin Leon’s Besilu Stables, then a rapidly emerging force in the American market, who paid $11.4 million for six lots, the majority of whom represented Saint Liam’s family.

Top of the list was Saint Liam’s Giant’s Causeway half-sister Quiet Giant, a three-time stakes winner herself that year, who commanded $3 million. Leon also came away with two of her half-sisters in Dance Quietly, another young stakes winner who cost $2 million, and a Medaglia d’Oro weanling filly, Miss Besilu, who cost $2.6 million and later ran third in the G1 Coaching Club American Oaks and G1 Alabama Stakes. Completing the spree was Saint Liam’s dam Quiet Dance herself; then aged 18, she joined Besilu on a bid of $800,000.

“At the time of the dispersal, I strongly believed that the next ten years were going to be filled with greater racing and breeding accomplishments than the previous ten years for Mr. Evans and Spring Hill Farm,” says Baker. “Based on the performance of Gun Runner, Unified, Valid and many, many more at the races and Quality Road at stud, it looks like I might have been correct.”

There is a sadness that Saint Liam only lived long enough to sire one crop of foals at Lane’s End Farm, especially as one of that 98-strong group became Horse of the Year Havre De Grace. Another is So Sharp, the dam of recent G1 Cigar Mile winner Sharp Azteca.

However, his Flight Dancer family now has another high-profile shot of furthering its influence via a male in Gun Runner, bred by Leon out of the aforementioned Quiet Giant. The son of Candy Ride, who races for the partnership of Winchell Thoroughbreds and Three Chimneys Farm, is the first foal out of Quiet Giant and followed by the placed Malibu Moon filly Quiet Flirt and a pair of fillies by Tapit.

Throwback to a former age

Evans purchased Flight Dancer, a granddaughter of champion Gallorette who ran third in the Queen Mary Stakes, during the 1970s. Her best foal was Minstrella, the Irish champion 2yo filly of 1986, although it is one of her lesser fillies, Misty Dancer, who features as the dam of Quiet Dance.

Top-class and durable, Gun Runner has packed in a career for Steve Asmussen that is almost a throwback to a former age. Third in the Kentucky Derby to Nyquist, he signed off his busy 3yo campaign by winning the G1 Clark Handicap and returned this year to run second in the G1 Dubai World Cup before sweeping the G1 Stephen Foster Handicap, G1 Whitney and G1 Woodward Stakes en route to his romp in the Breeders’ Cup Classic. Plans now call for a career swansong in the Pegasus World Cup, after which he is scheduled to retire to Three Chimneys Farm at a fee of $70,000.

“Mr. Evans would have been extremely proud of how all of his families have carried on, especially Gun Runner’s accomplishments to date in racing and Quality Road’s accomplishments at stud,” says Baker.

“Quality Road was certainly a favourite horse but the development over generations of so many G1 winners and the way in which we were involved in every step of the process from matings to raising them to initial training then racing management and back to the farm as broodmares or stallions made the sense of engagement and accomplishment greater than I have ever seen elsewhere.”

Free $500 Handicapping Contest Set For Sat. Jan 13 at Richmond’s Breakers OTB; Contest Races Announced

$500 in cash prizes will be up for grabs in a free handicapping contest at Breakers Sports Grille on the Saturday of Martin Luther King holiday weekend — January 13th. Fans will get a chance to select a horse in 8 contest races. They will receive a mythical $2 win/place bet on each of those selections. The contestants that accumulate the five highest bankrolls will share in the $500 prize pool as follows:

1st – $250;  2nd – $125;  3rd – $60;  4th – $40; 5th – $25

$500 in cash prizes will be up for grabs in the January 13th free contest at Breakers.

 

Here are the 8 contest races, in post time order. The first contest race is at 4:00 PM and the final one is at 6:35 PM. Contestants do not have to be present at the end of the contest. Prizes can be claimed during a future visit. Entries must be turned in by 4:00 PM.

1                                 $75,000 Duncan Kenner Stakes                  Fair Grounds, Race 5

2                                 $150,000 Marshua’s River Stakes              Gulfstream, Race 9

3                                 $75,000 Marie G. Krantz Stakes                 Fair Grounds, Race 6

4                                 $200,000 Fort Lauderdale Stakes              Gulfstream, Race 11

5                                 $150,000 Silverbulletday Stakes                 Fair Grounds, Race 7

6                                 $125,000 Col. E.R. Bradley Handicap        Fair Grounds, Race 8

7                                 $200,000 Lecomte Stakes                            Fair Grounds, Race 9

8                                 $75,000 Louisiana Stakes                             Fair Grounds, Race 10

“Tuesday Talks” Scheduled At Marion Dupont Scott Equine Medical Center In Leesburg

VT Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center

E-News from Virginia Tech’s Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center

 

 

“Tuesday Talks”

The first in a series of four “Tuesday Talks” will be held at the Center on Tuesday, January 9, 2018. Come and meet Dr. James Brown, Clinical Assistant Professor of Equine Surgery, who will present a lecture highlighting the use of standing computed tomography (CT) to diagnose equine paranasal sinus and upper airway conditions in the horse. 

Recent availability of commercial standing computed tomography (CT) combined with the development of standing surgical procedures, permits efficient diagnosis and treatment of sinus and upper airway conditions in the horse.  This lecture-based discussion will outline procedures available at the EMC without the risks and expense of general anesthesia. 

To register your attendance or for more information about future “Tuesday Talks”, please email Sharon at speart@vt.edu  There is no cost to attend; doors open at 6:30 pm with the lecture starting at 7:00 pm. Complimentary light snacks and drinks will be available.

VT Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center

17690 Old Waterford Road
Leesburg, VA | 20176 US

Phone: 703-771-6800
Fax: 703-777-9131

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Virginia-Bred Greyvitos Named Remington Park Horse Of The Year

Greyvitos, the talented gray who won the $400,000 Springboard Mile by 2-1/4 lengths, has been voted the 2017 Remington Park Horse of the Meeting. The seasonal titles are determined by a vote of media that covered the season along with track and racing department officials.

Greyvitos is shown at Remington Park. Photo courtesy of Dustin Orona.

Owned by Triple B Farms of North Hollywood, Calif. and trained by Adam Kitchingman, Greyvitos was ridden to victory in the Springboard by National Racing Hall of Fame jockey Victor Espinoza. Greyvitos, a Virginia-bred colt by Malibu Moon from the Najran mare Snow Top Mountain, overcame his outside number 12 post in the Springboard, to take over the top 2-year-old race of the season with just under a half-mile remaining. Greyvitos set a stakes record for the Springboard Mile, crossing the finish in 1:37.14 over a fast track.

Greyvitos (blue silks) heads to the finish in the $400,000 Springboard Mile Stakes December 17th at Remington. Photo by Dustin Orona.

Greyvitos was also a unanimous selection as the Champion 2-year-old Male for the Remington Park season. He was bred by Audley Farm Equine.

Pegasus World Cup Remains ‘Targeted Race’ For Stellar Wind

Champion Stellar Wind remains on course for a start in the G1 Pegasus World Cup at Gulfstream Park Jan. 27.

The Daily Racing Form reports that the chestnut mare is currently in training with trainer Chad Brown at Palm Meadows.

Stellar Wind is shown at the 2017 Keeneland November Sale

Stellar Wind was purchased by Coolmore at the 2017 Keeneland November sale. The original plan was to retire her and breed her to American Pharoah this year. However, the plan changed shortly after purchasing the mare, and she was instead sent to Brown in Florida.

“She continues to train well, and as of now, we’re moving forward towards the targeted race, which is the Pegasus,” Brown told the Form.

“She’s scheduled to do a little more, have a little more serious workout this weekend, and we’ll really know where we stand with her after that.”

All 3 Virginia Bets OTBs Are Open Today (Friday); Many Major Tracks Are Still Racing

The snow and cold around the country has forced some tracks to cancel racing this week including today (Friday January 5th), but the good news is all three Virginia Bets Off Track Betting (OTB) Centers are open again with plenty of “good weather” tracks to showcase.

For today, Aqueduct, Laurel, Monticello, Freehold, Penn National and Turfway have cancelled, but tracks like Gulfstream, Tampa Bay Downs, Fair Grounds, Santa Anita, Golden Gate, Delta Downs, Hawthorne, Meadowlands and Miami Valley are all a go.

The OTBs in Richmond at Breakers Sports Grille and Ponies & Pints, along with the Buckets Bar & Grill OTB in Chesapeake, will be open from 11 AM – 11 PM. For the most updated information as winter continues, follow Virginia Horse Racing on facebook.

Today, Gulfstream Park has a nice carryover in one of their most popular wagering pools. The 20-cent Rainbow 6 went unsolved for the 21th consecutive program Thursday, growing the jackpot carryover to $1,004,785.38 for Friday’s card.

Multiple tickets with all six winners were each worth $769.60.

The carryover jackpot is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day’s pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

The carryover jackpot pool going into Thursday’s six-race sequence (Races 5-10) was $902,535, generating a Rainbow 6 handle of $426,081.

In Virginia, 2017 Brought Progress, But Still No Racetrack

The following appeared in The Racing Biz January 2nd.

by Nick Hahn

In Virginia, 2017 was a year of wins and losses.  While still actively chasing a return to hosting live racing, state Thoroughbred interests also sought to provide its remaining racing infrastructure enough sustenance to be there when it finally settles on a new home.

Among the notable advances, the Virginia Thoroughbred Association launched its Virginia-Certified Residency program on July 1, 2017.  Horses that spend at least six months in the Old Dominion prior to the end of their two-year-old year become eligible to receive 25 percent bonuses whenever they win anywhere in the mid-Atlantic.

Over 360 horses have been registered thus far and are spending their time at 79 different Virginia farms or training centers throughout the state. The program appears to have arrived just in time, and could preserve a large component of Virginia racing’s green space and dozens if not hundreds of jobs in agri-tourism.

“If not filling the barns of our guys, it’s certainly allowing them to enjoy new business,” reports Debbie Easter, executive director of the Virginia Thoroughbred Association and president of the Virginia Equine Alliance. “It sizably is increasing the population.  Now they are hiring employees and doing some capital improvements that some haven’t been able to do in a long time.  We’ve always known who the breeders are, but now with this program been able to reach out to other aspects of the thoroughbred industry.”

Virginia’s thoroughbred industry continues to work to emerge from the fog after the closure of Colonial Downs. Photo by Nick Hahn.

The rebuilding of the state’s off-track betting network crept forward, going from one to three outlets with the opening of Ponies and Pints in downtown Richmond in January and Buckets in Chesapeake in November.  The first center in the new era opened at Breakers in Richmond’s west end in 2016.

Late in 2017, the Virginia Racing Commission approved a Henry County off-track betting center in Collinsville, just outside of Martinsville near Virginia’s southern border.  The OTB Is in line to become Virginia’s fourth.  Though not yet restored to the levels of Colonial Downs’s 10-outlet operation, the off-track facilities have been providing horsemen “a larger slice of that pie than ever” according to Easter.

Where Virginia didn’t make as much progress was in finding a viable long-term home for live flat racing.

Possible venues shifted from Morven Park to Powhatan Planation even to Colonial Downs once again during 2017, though no significant advancements were charted by the year’s conclusion.  The return to Colonial Downs would be linked to its sale, and while there reportedly are interested parties, all was quiet on that front as the year wound down.  The future site of Virginia’s next live racing venue remains at best undetermined.

On the track, Virginia-bred Stellar Wind may have enjoyed the wildest ride of her career, once again performing at the highest levels as she won three Grade 1 races during the year.  A disappointing result in the Breeder’s Cup Distaff knocked her out of year-end honors.  But just when a retirement appeared to be imminent, a $6 million sale at a broodmare auction could lead her to one of the toughest challenges of her career in the Pegasus this month at Gulfstream.

Dual-classic winner Hansel’s annual clock finally stopped at the age of 29.  Until his passing he was the oldest surviving Preakness and Belmont Stakes winner, relishing his retirement at Lazy Lane Farm in Upperville.

“You give me 90 days and we could go to Charles Town and win a race,” joked farm manager Frank Shipp about the old-timer’s fitness in 2016.

Sadler’s Joy returned Renee and Lauren Woolcott’s Woodslane Farm to national attention in earning over a $1 million during the year as well as taking the Grade 1 Sword Dancer at Saratoga.  He also finished a respectable fourth in the Breeder’s Cup Turf. The international quest of Virginia-bred Long On Value, bred by Snow Lantern Thoroughbreds now located in Augusta County, led from Dubai to England, the US and Canada during the year and included placings in a pair of Grade or Group 1 events.

Virginia said its goodbyes to native national matriarch of racing when Penny Chenery, the owner of Secretariat, passed away on September 16 at the age of 95.  Noted sportsmen centenarian Randy Rouse, a major player in the steeplechase world, died at age 100 in April.  Rouse donated the Middleburg Training Center to the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation.  Oliver Iselin, III, also of Middleburg, was a loss at the age of 90 in October.

Looking ahead, Easter said she would like to see a Virginia-bred named Greyvitos, winner of the Springboard Mile in mid-December, go on to win the Kentucky Derby. Clarke County’s Audley Farm, which bred 2012 Kentucky Derby and Preakness runner-up Bodemeister, also bred Greyvitos. Grevitos won Remington Park’s Springboard Mile after winning the Grade 3 Bob Hope at Del Mar prior – and in between, he was one of the dozens of horses who had to be rescued from the San Luis Rey fire in southern California.  Other New Year’s wishes of Easter include expanding opportunities for Virginia thoroughbred entities to race year-round, whether at Colonial Downs or other venues in or out of state.

“Difficult’ But ‘Not Impossible’ For Virginia-Bred Greyvitos To Make Kentucky Derby

The following appeared in The Paulick Report January 3rd.

Remington Springboard Mile and G3 Bob Hope Stakes winner Greyvitos recently underwent surgery to remove bone chips from his knee, according to horseracingnation.com, but the 3-year-old son of Malibu Moon may still be able to make the Kentucky Derby in May.

“It’s going to be difficult, but it’s not impossible,” trainer Adam Kitchingman said. “They were very, very small chips and were in a place where they came out nice and easy.”

Greyvitos (blue silks) heads to the finish in the $400,000 Springboard Mile Stakes December 17th at Remington. Photo by Dustin Orona.

Originally based at San Luis Rey Downs, Kitchingman will have to determine where he wants to train Greyvitos as the colt prepares to come back from surgery.

“We’re still planning on trying to make it to the Derby,” added Kitchingman. “Obviously we still need more pints and lots of things need to go right. It’s a step back, that’s for sure.”

Virginia-bred Greyvitos is shown in the winners circle after capturing the Bob Hope Stakes.

Read more at horseracingnation.com.