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September Derby Week – Virtual Tours

Happy 2020 Kentucky Derby Week, 2.0! While we celebrated #DerbyatHome in May, we’re excited that the run for the roses is officially upon us – less than a week away now! While this year is different in so many ways, one thing hasn’t changed: for many of the Kentucky Derby hopefuls, it all starts here in Horse Country. From breeding and foaling to training, sales, and then life after racing, there’s a reason we’re known as the Horse Capital of the World. 

We’ve partnered this year with Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby to offer virtual content at Horse Country locations. To stay up to date on the schedule, check out the KY Derby Watch and Follow page here.

All tours will be streamed via the Kentucky Derby Facebook Page & Kentucky Derby YouTube Page, and shared on the Horse Country Facebook Page.

You don’t have to have a Facebook account to watch videos. All videos will be shared to the Horse Country Virtual Tour library after they have been posted.  For a complete list of live streaming activities during Derby week, be sure to check out the Kentucky Derby Watch & Follow page!

2020 Travers Stakes – Horse Country Connections

Tiz the Law won the Belmont Stakes June 20, 2020. The son of Constitution drew the 6th post for the Runhappy Travers Stakes August 8. Photo: wsj.com

The 2020 Runhappy Travers Stakes, a Grade 1 $1 million race held annually at Saratoga Racetrack, looks a little different this year. Notably: the race is being run three weeks earlier than usual, and is this year a part of the Road to the Kentucky Derby.

All eyes are on Tiz the Law, winner of the 2020 Belmont Stakes, and the field is full of Horse Country connections. Will you be tuning in Saturday? The race will be broadcast nationally on FOX; for more information on where to watch or listen, check out this list from our friends at America’s Best Racing.

In post position order, here are the contenders in the 2020 Runhappy Travers Stakes:

  • First Line – sired by First Samurai, who stands at Claiborne Farm
  • Country Grammer – sired by Tonalist, who stands at Lane’s End Farm
  • Uncle Chuck – sired by Uncle Mo, who stands at Coolmore America
  • Max Player – sired by Honor Code, who stands at Lane’s End Farm
  • Shivaree
  • Tiz the Law -sired by Constitution, who stands at WinStar Farm
  • Caracaro -sired by Uncle Mo, who stands at Coolmore America
  • South Bend – sired by Algorithms, who stands at Claiborne Farm

We wish the best of luck and a safe ride to all!


2020 Whitney Stakes – Horse Country Connections

Goldencents stands stud at Spendthrift Farm. One of his progeny, By My Standards, competes Saturday in the Whitney Stakes at Saratoga. Photo from the farm.

This Saturday, August 1st, we’ll be tuning into one of the hallmarks of summer racing at Saratoga: the Whitney Stakes. The $750,000 Grade 1 race is also a Win and You’re In Breeders’ Cup race, giving the winner automatic entry into the $7 million Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic at Keeneland this November.

There are a number of Whitney winners who currently reside in Horse Country (Blame, Medaglia D’Oro, Frosted, Cross Traffic, Honor Code to name a few) – and this year’s field represents another three stallions who live at Horse Country farm locations (listed below in order of post position).

By My Standards: Sired by Goldencents who stands at Spendthrift Farm

Improbable: Sired by City Zip, who stood at Lane’s End; partly owned by WinStar Farm

Code of Honor: Sired by Noble Mission, who stands at Lane’s End; owned by William S. Farish of Lane’s End

Mr. Buff

Tom’s d’Etat


You can join America’s Best Racing and Breeders’ Cup for a live-streaming experience as they discuss the Whitney as well as the Personal Ensign Stakes, a Win and You’re In challenge race for the Longines Breeders’ Cup Distaff. Tune in to Breeders’ Cup YouTube at 4pm Eastern for #BCLIVE.

For more info about these runners, their race record and connections, check out America’s Best Racing’s Cheat Sheet. We wish the best of luck to all contenders and hope for a safe and thrilling ride for all!


2020 Belmont Stakes – Horse Country Connections

As if we needed a reminder that 2020 is a remarkable year, the Belmont Stakes arrives this Saturday, June 20 to kick off this year’s Triple Crown races — instead of serving as the final stop in the series. Additionally, instead of its traditional distance of one and a half miles, the Belmont this year will be run at one and an eighth miles.

What’s at stake? In addition to the $1 million, the winner of this Grade 1 stakes race earns points for the Kentucky Derby, and presumably a de facto place in history as the winner among the most unusual circumstances. So who’s a contender? The field of 10, outlined below in order of post position, is headlined by Tiz the Law – but indeed has many interested competitors and many, many connections to Horse Country!

Horse Country member Lane’s End Farm, in Midway, KY, is home to four stallions with progeny running in the 2020 Belmont Stakes Saturday, June 20, 2020. Photo provided by the farm.

Tap It to Win: Sired by Tapit, who stands at Gainesway Farm; trained by Mark Casse who runs on Hallway Feeds

Sole Volante: Sired by Karakontie who stands at Gainesway Farm; was raised on Hallway Feeds

Max Player: Sired by Honor Code, who stands at Lane’s End

Modernist: Sired by Uncle Mo, who stands at Coolmore America; trained by Bill Mott who runs on Hallway Feeds

Farmington Road: Sired by Quality Road, who stands at Lane’s End

Fore Left: Sired by Twirling Candy, who stands at Lane’s End

Jungle Runner: Sired by Candy Ride, who stands at Lane’s End

Tiz the Law: Sired by Constitution, who stands at Winstar Farm

Dr Post: Sired by Quality Road, who stands at Lane’s End Farm

Pneumatic: Sired by Uncle Mo, who stands at Coolmore America

For more info about these runners, their race record and connections, check out America’s Best Racing’s Cheat Sheet. We wish the best of luck to all contenders and hope for a safe and thrilling ride for all!


Where Are They Now?

Catching up with Kentucky Derby winners Nyquist + Street Sense at Godolphin’s Jonabell Farm

Jonabell Farm is one of Godolphin’s six Kentucky farms and home of the Darley stallions, making it the site of Godolphin’s Horse Country tours. We’re catching up today with Brianne Sharp, who in addition to being on the Marketing team at Godolphin, hosts many of the Horse Country experiences & serves as a Horse Country Board Member. Brianne is updating us on 2007 Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense and 2016 Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist, offering a peek into their day-to-day life!

What is a normal daily routine for these guys?

During breeding season, they will have a mare to breed most mornings at 7am.  After that, they will go outside to their paddock for about five hours.  At noon, their groom will bring them in from the paddock and they will be bathed and groomed before the afternoon breeding session at 1pm.  They are available for viewing by potential breeders in the afternoon from 2:30-3pm.  Then they are fed their afternoon meal and some of them will lay down and take an afternoon nap after they finish eating.  Street Sense loves a good nap!  Sometimes they will have a third mare to breed at 6pm at night.  They spend the night inside the stallion barn, and we have a night watch person who stays with them all night.  

When we aren’t in breeding season they keep basically the same daily routine, minus the trips to the breeding shed.  We’ve recently put in an aqua treadmill that the stallions get on daily in the months leading up to breeding season to build up their fitness.  Nyquist LOVES the treadmill.  They have to put him on it first every day – he doesn’t like it if someone else gets to go ahead of him!

We’re all snacking a bit more during quarantine. What do these guys eat?

Most of our stallions are fed grain twice a day – at 5am and 3:30pm.  They have as much hay as they want in their stall and obviously grass in their paddock.  And lots of carrots – we go through about 75 pounds of carrots per week in the stallion barn!  

Do either of them have particular personality quirks that are notable/funny?

Nyquist notices everything.  If there’s something new or something out of place from where it usually is, he wants to go investigate it.  
Street Sense has a funny way of asking for carrots – he’ll lift his front leg.  If you don’t give him a carrot right away he’ll try the other leg and keep going back and forth.  They are both very smart!

Can you share any memories of the 2016 Kentucky Derby, when Nyquist won?

We had been watching Nyquist train at Keeneland in the weeks leading up to the Derby so the anticipation was high.  There was obviously a lot of buzz around him since he was the favorite.  I watched the race on TV with a bunch of friends and I just remember screaming my head off.  It was awesome.  He was the first two-year-old champion since Seattle Slew to stay undefeated through the Kentucky Derby – what a superstar.

How do these superstars handle the fans on Horse Country tours?

Both of them seem to enjoy the tours.  They usually come to the gate or the front of the stall to say hello to the visitors.  I definitely think they like the attention.

Street Sense’s progeny have had some success. Can you share about any particular offspring that have been fun to watch?

Street Sense has had a number of top class horses, but certainly my two favorites would be his two G1 winners for Godolphin – Wedding Toast and Maxfield.  Wedding Toast’s win in the G1 Ogden Phipps at Belmont in 2015 was my first ever trip to the winner’s circle in a G1 race, so that will always be a special memory. And of course Maxfield winning the G1 Breeders’ Futurity last fall at Keeneland was so much fun to share with the whole team.  Hopefully he will be in the gate for the Kentucky Derby in September!

Brianne’s top 3 tips for work from home/surviving quarantine/social distancing?

Puzzles, Zoom calls with friends/family, and of course Horse Country virtual tours!

Derby Winners in Horse Country

Though 2020 has brought challenges that mean the Kentucky Derby won’t be run this coming weekend – on its traditional day of the first Saturday in May – we’re Kentuckians through and through and this week can not not be associated with the greatest two minutes in sport.

We’re known as the Bluegrass, Central Kentucky, the Commonwealth of Kentucky….home of KFC and Ale8One and Abe Lincoln’s birth state…but perhaps no moniker is as fitting for our region, especially this time of year, as Horse Capital of the World. So much of what happens at Churchill Downs every spring starts right here in the limestone-rich rolling hills of our region, and very often continues as these athletes begin their breeding careers post-racing.

So we’re looking around, celebrating the many Derby champions who now call Horse Country home. Did you know these guys live right here and are very often visited on Horse Country farm tours? Indeed they’re living their best life just a few miles down the road from where they made Derby history.

2019 – Country House – Blackwood Stables

Photo: Dale Crosby via the Bloodhorse

2018 – Justify – Coolmore America

2017 – Always Dreaming – WinStar

2016 – Nyquist – Godolphin at Jonabell

2015 – American Pharoah – Coolmore America

2013 – Orb – Claiborne

2007 – Street Sense – Godolphin at Jonabell

2000 – Fusaichi Pegasus – Coolmore America

Others in the area….

1997 Kentucky Derby winner Silver Charm resides at Old Friends Equine.
2003 Kentucky Derby winner and 1994 Kentucky Derby winner both reside at the Kentucky Horse Park.

2019 Breeders’ Cup Classic Connections

The Breeders’ Cup 2019 Longines Classic goes off at 8:44PM EST Saturday November 2 and we are so excited to cheer for the many Horse Country connections who will make the trip!

Math Wizard: Sired by Algorithms, who stands at Claiborne Farm

Owendale: Bred and raised by Stonestreet; Sired by Into Mischief who stands at Spendthrift Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds

War Of Will: Sired by War Front, who stands at Claiborne Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.

Yoshida: part-owned by WinStar Farm, LLC

Elate: Sired by Medaglia d’Oro, who stands at Godolphin at Jonabell Farm / bred and owned by Claiborne Farm in partnership

Higher Power: Sired by Medaglia d’Oro, who stands at Godolphin at Jonabell Farm, bred by Pin Oak Stud

McKinzie: Sired by Street Sense, who stands at Godolphin at Jonabell Farm

Code Of Honor: Sired by Noble Mission (GB), who stands at Lane’s End, owned and bred by W.S. Farish of Lane’s End

Godolphin at Jonabell Farm, home to Medaglia d’Oro and Street Sense, who have a combined 3 runners in the Breeders’ Cup Classic Saturday, November 2, 2019.
Photo by Mary Speer

150th Travers Stakes

The 150th running of Travers Stakes is approaching quickly at Saratoga August 24th. Horse Country Kentucky is well represented in this race as 11 of the contenders are sired from KY. See our connections below – we are wishing them all the best of luck and most importantly for a safe trip.

  • Owendale: Sired by Into Mischief who stands at Spendthrift Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Code of Honor: Sired by Noble Mission who stands at Lane’s End Farm. Tacitus: Sired by Tapit who stands at Gainesway Farm.
  • Highest Honors: Sired by Tapit who stands at Gainesway Farm.
  • Laughing Fox: Sired by Union Rags who stands at Lane’s End Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Everfast
  • Tacitus: Sired by Tapit who stands at Gainesway Farm.
  • Mucho Gusto: Sired by Mucho Macho Man who stands at Adena Springs.
  • Chess Chief: Sired by Into Mischief who stands at Spendthrift Farm.
  • Looking At Bikinis: Sired by Looking at Lucky who stands at Coolmore.
  • Scars Are Cool: Sired by Malibu Moon who stands at Spendthrift Farm.
  • Endorsed: Sired by Medaglia d’Oro who stands at Godolphin Farm. Owned and bred by Godolphin
  • Tax: Sired by Arch who stands at Claiborne Farm.

Medaglia d’Oro, who stands at Godolphin at Jonabell Farm, was the 2002 Travers Stakes winner and has a runner this Saturday’s Travers Stakes Race in Saratoga, Endorsed.
Photo by Mary Speer

Belmont Stakes 2019

Hard to believe that it’s time already for the Belmont Stakes again. For it seems like just yesterday we were waiting and anticipating what could be a second Triple Crown victory in three years – and oh, how thrilling it was! Justify defied odds and won – and we’ve been celebrating ever since.

This year’s Triple Crown races have been exciting, interesting, and unique in their own way – so as the series wraps up, our eyes are on Belmont Park this weekend. Again, we’re proud to have another race with such deep Horse Country member connections. We’re rooting for a healthy and happy and competitive race!

War of Will and Tacitus face off this Saturday in the 151st running of the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes. Both are sired by stallions standing in Horse Country Kentucky. Photo by Eclipse Sportswire via America’s Best Racing

Horse Country connections to the 2019 Belmont Stakes:

Tax (Sponsored by local accounting firm Dean Dorton), sired by Arch at Claiborne

Bourbon War, sired by Tapit at Gainesway

Spinoff, sired by Hard Spun at Jonabell Farm, home of the Darley Stallions

Sir Winston, sired by Awesome Again at Adena Springs; fed by Hallway Feeds

Intrepid Heart, sired by Tapit at Gainesway, bred by WinStar

War of Will, by War Front at Claiborne; fed by Hallway Feeds

Tacitus, by Tapit at Gainesway; fed by Hallway Feeds

Master Fencer, fed by Hallway Feeds

144th Preakness Stakes

The one thing we can all agree on about the kick off to Triple Crown season is that it has been interesting for sure! Derby brought a great deal of attention to the sport of kings and we find ourselves already preparing for the 144th running of the Preakness Stakes – the second jewel of the Triple Crown, this weekend at Pimlico.

Horse Country Kentucky is well represented again as the nation tunes in Saturday to watch the racing unfold. See our connections below – more than anything, we’re rooting for a safe trip for all!

  • War of Will: Sired by War Front who stands at Claiborne Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Bourbon War: Sired by Tapit who stands at Gainesway Farm
  • Warrior’s Charge: Sired by Munnings who stands at Coolmore, Is fed by Hallway Feeds
  • Improbable: Sired by City Zip who stood at Lane’s End Farm, Dam is Rare Event who lives at St. George, Owned by Winstar Farm, China Horse Club, and Starlight Racing, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Owendale: Sired by Into Mischief who stands at Spendthrift Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Market King Sired by Into Mischief who stands at Spendthrift Farm
  • Alwaysmining: Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Signalman: Is fed by Hallway Feeds
  • Bodexpress: sired by Bodemeister who stands at WinStar Farm
  • Everfast
  • Laughing Fox: Sired by Union Rags who stands at Lane’s End Farm, Is fed by Hallway Feeds.
  • Anothertwistafate Sired by Scat Daddy, who stood at Coolmore
  • Win Win Win

Into Mischief, who stands at Spendthrift Farm, has two runners in Saturday’s Preakness Stakes – Owendale & Market King.
Photo by Autry Graham