Awesome Feather will soon have a new home
November 6, 2010LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Awesome Feather will soon have a new home.
The winner of the $2 million Juvenile Fillies is 6 for 6, and headed to the sales ring. Fred Brei, the filly's owner and breeder who races as the Jacks or Better Farm, will sell her Sunday.
Brei and trainer Stanley Gold are based in Florida and would rather stay there.
``I prefer to race in South Florida,'' he said. ``Stanley doesn't prefer to run all over the country and so we're better off to let somebody own her that will run her where she needs to run.''
With the latest win, the price undoubtedly went up. The new owner will be buying an unbeaten 2-year-old champion with a huge upside. Had she lost, Awesome Feather would have gone home to Florida.
``The deal was, and Stan knew well, we win the race, she goes to the ring,'' Brei said. ``We run back in the pack, she goes home. That's the difference.''
It was a bittersweet moment for Gold, still savoring his first Breeders' Cup win.
``There's the sport of racing and there's the business of racing,'' Gold said. ``We just reached the pinnacle of the sport and the elation that I get from it. I guess I just end up on the short end of the stick on the business end. I'll miss her, but that's the business. I understand it. I'm just happy to do what I did with her.''
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BUSINESS UP: Attendance for opening day of the Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs was 41,614, an increase of 10.5 percent over the Friday session last year at Santa Anita.
The total handle for the card was $53,010,624 - a 9.4 percent increase over last year's Friday card.
``This is a very encouraging start for the event with excellent support in the local market as we head into Zenyatta's quest for perfection on Saturday,'' said Breeders' Cup president and CEO Greg Avioli.
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GOOD SIGNS: Zenyatta sent trainer John Shirreffs all the right signals on Friday, one day before she tries to make history with a repeat victory in the $5 million Classic.
``I always look for her to settle in her stall because she's in a new environment, so you'd like to see her get back to being like she would be at home,'' Shirreffs said. ``Comfortable, not really paying attention to what's going on around her. Today was very much like that.''
It hasn't been easy to find a familiar routine with Zenyatta's every move closely scrutinized since her arrival from California on Tuesday.
``Today was a great day once again,'' Shirreffs said. ``Back at the barn, we had a lot of people stopping by and taking pictures while she was out grazing. It's a time to appreciate what she's accomplished and what she's meant to so many people around the world. It's a time for me to sit back, relax and enjoy it.''
Zenyatta had an easy morning with an uneventful 1 3/4-mile gallop the day before she puts a perfect 19-0 record on the line in the 1 1/4-mile race that concludes Breeders' Cup weekend at Churchill Downs.
``This morning we trained her a little more because yesterday she was a little into the bridle,'' Shirreffs said. ``She was a little aggressive, so today she went twice around. This was her normal gallop in California. I was a little cautious the first couple of days here. She seemed to be into the bridle and full of energy so I let her do her regular gallop today.''
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TWO SCRATCHES: Rightly So and Crown of Thorns were scratched from the Breeders' Cup on Friday.
Rightly So, the 3-1 morning line favorite for the $1 million Filly & Mare Sprint later in the day, was scratched by the veterinarian.
``The veterinarians came back to the barn and they looked at her again,'' trainer Tony Dutrow said. ``They were not happy with the way she was moving and said they would not allow her to run.''
It was a disappointing turn of events for Dutrow.
``I am sure that whatever is wrong with Rightly So, we will get to the bottom of it and take care of it and then go on from there,'' he said.
Rightly So won her last two races, including the Grade 1 Ballerina Stakes at Saratoga.
Crown of Thorns, the 4-1 second choice for the $1 million Dirt Mile on Saturday, was sidelined by a ``flare up of an old injury,'' according to Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella.
He noticed a problem with the horse when he was cooling out after a training gallop Thursday.
``There was some heat in his right front knee,'' Mandella said. ``He's had an issue with that knee for the past few years and it has come back. It's nothing real serious; not a fracture or anything like that. But coming up to a race like this there's just no way you could think about running him given the circumstances.''
Now 5 years old, Crown of Thorns has run only eight times. He finished second in his last four races, all Grade 1 stakes. He missed by a nose in last year's Breeders' Cup Sprint.
Mandella believes Crown of Thorns might need surgery before returning.
``It's the kind of thing where I think we can do a procedure on him, give him a little time off and bring him back for next year,'' he said.
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HOLLYWOOD IS CALLING: Hollywood has an eye on Mine That Bird.
Plans are in the works for a movie about the New Mexico-based thoroughbred that won the 2009 Kentucky Derby as a 50-1 long shot.
The director will be Jim Wilson, the Academy Award-winning producer of ``Dances With Wolves.'' The production team also includes Tony Mark, executive producer for the Academy Award-winner, ``The Hurt Locker.''
Among those being considered for roles are Mine That Bird himself and jockey Calvin Borel.
The film will follow the adventures of an undersized horse and his cowboy owners and trainer. The horse is owned by Dr. Leonard Blach and was trained by Chip Woolley during the Triple Crown before being transferred to D. Wayne Lukas.
Mine That Bird, winless in the eight races since his Derby victory, is a 20-1 long shot in the $1 million Dirt Mile on Saturday.