16/12/2021. Mondo Ippico Internazionale: Elsworth, Baffert, Dascombe by TDN – RacingPost by Martin Stevens – Army Mule by thetdn.com – New NTRA President (TDN)

 

David Elsworth Retires From Training

Legendary dual-purpose trainer David Elsworth will not renew his license next year, and thus retires after 66 years in the sport. The news was first reported by Racing Post. “I don’t think it’s a big deal… [To read this entire TDN News Story, click here.]

 

Baffert Wins Attorneys’ Fees from NYRA

A federal judge has ordered that the New York Racing Association (NYRA) must pay trainer Bob Baffert $109,124 in legal expenses. Those fees and costs were incurred in the early stages of the trainer’s civil… [To read this entire TDN News Story, click here.]

 

Owen, Dascombe Part Ways

Trainer Tom Dascombe will leave Michael Owen’s Manor House Stables after a 12-year stint. Dascombe’s greatest success during his Manor House tenure came when winning the G1 Irish St Leger with Brown Panther (GB) (Shirocco {Ger}),… [To read this entire TDN News Story, click here.]

 

 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Thursday

The email bloodstock wakes up to

 

Coolagown Stud owner David Stack is a firm friend, so it’s hard for me to be objective about the stallions he stands. But I really do think he’s on to something good with his latest recruit Malinas, and to fend off any accusations of bias I’ll explain why using cold, hard facts.

Malinas (pictured below), who will stand at the County Cork operation in a joint-venture with Rathbarry Stud from next year, was bred by Gestüt Fährhof by sending champion German three-year-old filly Majoritat, a close relation to the mighty Monsun, to multiple Group 1 hero Lomitas.

The imposing dark bay was bred to be more than useful, then, and he maintained family honour by winning the Oppenheim-Union-Rennen, a leading trial for the Deutsches Derby, before finding only the future superstar Shirocco too good in the big race at Hamburg itself.

He notched another three Group 1 placings, twice in the Rheinland-Pokal and once in the Gran Premio del Jockey Club, before retiring to stand at Haras de Hetraie in Normandy.

Malinas’s first crop of 57 foals, born in 2007, yielded three black-type scorers, all in Britain or Ireland – Black Thunder, Medinas and Touch The Eden. There were another 20 winners in that generation besides.

His next crop of 48 foals has delivered 16 winners, including another three at black-type level – Easter Day and Union Dues, high-class performers for Paul Nicholls and Willie Mullins respectively, and Le Bel Anjou, who was a prolific presence in the winner’s enclosure at home in France.

Malinas’s 37 progeny born in 2009 included 12 winners, two of them (Mater Matuta and Vic Royal) successful in black-type races in France, and his crop of 28 foaled in 2010 contained another dozen winners, and a fabulous four who struck in black-type contests – Accentus, Mali Borgia and Malineglaces in France and Harry Fry’s useful chaser American in Britain.

Next came Malinas’s final two French-conceived crops, which were also his smallest. His 27 offspring born in 2011 include nine winners, none at black-type level but with the lightly raced Baltazar D’Allier having run second in the Challow Novices’ Hurdle for Gordon Elliott, and there are seven winners among his 22 foals of 2012 headed by Chinco Star, a Listed chase scorer in France.

Malinas was sold and moved to Yorton Farm in 2012, where he spent four seasons. Not all French sires click with British and Irish mares after their import from across the English Channel, but it’s safe to say he has.

His first British-conceived crop of 53 foals born in 2013 contains 16 winners to date, including three black-type winners – and pretty decent ones at that. Harambe took the Greatwood Handicap Hurdle in 2019, Mighty Thunder landed the Scottish Grand National this year and Mister Malarky has scored in the Reynoldstown Novices’ Chase and Betway Handicap Chase among many laudable efforts.

 

 

By that year the secret was out about Malinas, thanks to those early stars Black Thunder, Medinas and Union Dues, and he covered a bigger book to produce 94 offspring in 2014. There are already 25 winners among them, including the black type-placed Malinas Jack, Malystic and Tile Tapper.

His third British-conceived crop of 51 six-year-olds is responsible for 11 winners, including Tom Symonds’ Listed-winning and Grade 2-placed hurdler Llandinabo Lad and Jack Barber’s recent Huntingdon Listed bumper fourth Flying Sara. There are another 13 placed performers among that generation who could be converted to winners in the months ahead.

The final Yorton Farm crop of 38 five-year-olds contains six winners and two place-getters so far, and they are headed by the Neil King-trained Malina Jamila, who won the Huntingdon contest in which Flying Sara finished fourth.

Malinas enjoyed a second wave of popularity among breeders in 2016, as success snowballed on the track and he was relocated across the Irish Sea to Glenview Stud. His first crop conceived in County Cork comprises 68 four-year-olds and although only a handful have run, the omens are good.

Dark Raven remained unbeaten in two starts for Willie Mullins with an 11-length victory in the competitive Tattersalls Ireland George Mernagh Memorial Sales Bumper at Fairyhouse in April, while Viva Devito was sent out by the same trainer to win a Tramore bumper by an imperious 16 lengths last Thursday.

Malina Girl, of the same vintage, took a Wexford bumper and Bellewstown maiden hurdle in good fashion for Gavin Cromwell over the summer.

Malinas has been rewarded for his fine strike-rates and knack for regularly getting a ‘Saturday horse’ with solid results for his stock at the sales. This year his three-year-old store average came in at 18,741gns, and the lots were bought by the likes of Gordon Elliott, Highflyer, Donald McCain, Monbeg, Harley Dunne, Ballyboy and Milestone Stables, as well as Mighty Thunder’s trainer Lucinda Russell, who went back in for three.

 

With such encouraging early signs from his five-year-old and four-year-old crops, it would be no surprise to see him eventually become the subject of a third wave of popularity and for prices paid for his progeny to shoot up at future sales.

So there you have it: that’s my independent-as-I-can-be appraisal of Malinas. There was a really admirable strength in depth to his early crops, and there’s good reason to believe his best days are still ahead of him.

Come to think of it, I don’t know why I should worry about being accused of having my opinion bought by the master of Coolagown Stud. Whenever he gets to the bar he says he’s forgotten his wallet anyway.

 
 
 
 
New NTRA President/CEO Tom Rooney
on How His D.C. Background Can Help Racing
 
    It’s a hell of a time in racing to become the new head of one of the sport’s foremost national organizations, but new National Thoroughbred Racing Association president and CEO Tom Rooney says he’s ready for the challenge. Wednesday morning, the former U.S. congressman joined the TDN Writers’ Room presented by Keeneland‘s final show of 2021 as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss what the NTRA’s top priorities will be under his stewardship, how his previous experience on the Hill can benefit the industry, what he thinks the NTRA’s role should be in racing’s ongoing public relations battle and much more.
 
  “I think it’s going to be absolutely huge,” Rooney said of trying to win the narrative for racing in the court of public opinion during crises. “Publications and media outlets look for a response from somebody, and we just hired a new communications director who is going to be starting this month, and we are hopefully going to be one of the go-to voices in response to [crises]. For all those people who get up at God knows what hour every day and go down to the racetrack or the farm barn or cover this stuff like you do and want the sport to be successful and something we can be proud of, I think they’re sick of being lumped in with this idea that we’re all a bunch of cheaters who are drugging horses and don’t really care about them and are just using them for our personal benefit. I just don’t believe that, and I’m looking forward to being the voice to push back against that. Now, if something went wrong, there also has to be accountability on our side, which is a good thing. [Calfiornia] Senator [Dianne] Feinstein wrote a letter saying she wants transparency and thoroughness in the process [of investigating Medina Spirit's death]. Great. We agree. We want that too. One of the first things I learned in Congress was that you cannot let an accusation that harms you or your constituency go [unanswered], because if you do, it’s almost an admission that what they’re saying is right. You have to respond. And sometimes the response is tough love. But I think it’s incumbent upon groups like the NTRA to make sure that the public has the other side of the story.”
 
  Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by CoolmoreWest Point ThoroughbredsXBTVLane’s EndThree ChimneysHill ‘n’ Dale and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers discussed the impending sentencing of Jorge Navarro and, in their year-in-review segments, picked their favorite races and biggest stories of 2021 as well as what horses they’re most looking forward to seeing in 2022.