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Today’s Lock Is At Northfield Park On Race 2

Tuesday’s “Lock” is at Northfield PARK on race 2 with the #1 HydropanenHenry -from 7 hole to rail, was 2nd last 2- Wins tonight-Kurt Sugg drives.

Last “Lock” was off the board and the pick record is at 1543 of 2437 wins with 433 seconds and 166 thirds. Thank you for your support of IdaBet.com!

 

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Today's Tracks

Wednesday May 13th

  • Greyville (SAf)    6:35am
  • Happy Valley (HK)    6:40am
  • Milan ITA (TB)    8:30am
  • York (UK)    8:45am
  • Yarmouth (UK)    9:05am
  • Perth (UK)    9:30am
  • Punchestown (IRE)    11:45am
  • Gulfstream Tropical    12:00pm
  • Laurel Park    12:00pm
  • Bath (UK)    12:05pm
  • Monticello Raceway    12:10pm
  • Delaware Park    12:20pm
  • Newton Abbot (UK)    12:30pm
  • Thistledown    12:50pm
  • Horseshoe Indianapolis (TB)    2:10pm
  • Buffalo Raceway    2:30pm
  • Bangor Raceway    3:00pm
  • Ajax Downs    3:30pm
  • Harrington Raceway    4:30pm
  • Indy Turf Pick 3    4:45pm
  • Scioto Downs    5:15pm
  • Hoosier Park (H)    5:30pm
  • Northfield Park    6:00pm
  • Delta Downs    7:15pm
  • Riccarton Park NZ    7:35pm
  • Assiniboia Downs    8:30pm
  • Mackay AUS TH    10:25pm
  • Murwillumbah AUS TH    10:40pm
  • Hawkesbury AUS TH    10:55pm
  • Werribee AUS    11:00pm
  • Mombetsu JPN    11:20pm
  • Cambridge NZ Hr    11:55pm
  • Australia Harness 1    11:55pm
  • York AUS TH    11:55pm
  • Kawasaki JPN    11:55pm

Carryover Information

Carryover Wager Type Track Date
$130,864 JP PICK 5 PARX RACING May 12
$27,236 JP PICK 6 THISTLEDOWN May 12
$678 PICK 4 KILLARNEY May 12
$242 PICK 4 SLIGO May 12
$1,726 PICK 4 SCIOTO DOWNS May 12
$5,043 PICK 5 SCIOTO DOWNS May 12
$1,863 PICK 5 SARATOGA HARNESS May 12
$363 JP HI 5 SARATOGA HARNESS May 12
$6,873 JP HI 5 PLAINRIDGE May 12
$614 PICK 5 BUFFALO RACEWAY May 13
$1,636 PICK 6 HOOSIER PARK May 13
$1,958 PICK 5 HAWTHORNE May 14
$1,867 JP PICK 6 HAWTHORNE May 14
$3,144 JP HI 5 PENN NATIONAL May 14
$57,998 JP PICK 6 CHARLES TOWN May 14
$793 JP PICK 6 EVANGELINE DOWNS May 14
$2,003 JP HI 5 BELTERRA PARK May 14
$1,700 JP PICK 6 SAM HOUSTON May 14
$5,233 JP HI 5 SAM HOUSTON May 14
$1,878 PICK 5 CHARLOTTETOWN May 14
$3,758 JP Pick 6 Laurel Park May 14
$28,957 JP HI 5 WOODBINE TB May 15
$24,141 JP PICK 6 WOODBINE TB May 15
$1,536 JP HI 5 PRAIRIE MEADOWS May 15
$8,037 JP HI 5 WOODBINE MOHAWK May 15
$2,018 JP PICK 6 EMERALD DOWNS May 16
$25,491 PICK 9 CAYMANAS PARK May 16

Player News

  • Tuesday’s “Lock” is at Northfield Park on race 02 with the #1-Punisher Eleven-Going for 4 wins in a row-Wyatt Farmer drives. Last “Lock” Won again and the pick record is at 1625 of 2568 wins with 449 Seconds and 180 thirds. Thank you for choosing IdaBet.com!

    read more
  • Here are the picks from Howard “The Lock” for Guest Handicapper for Western Fair Tuesday May 5, 2026:  1. 2-4-1-5    2. 2-1-3-4 3. 6-3-4-1  4. 3-6-5-1  5. 7-3-1-6  6. 4-2-7-3 7. 3-8-1-5   8. 5-3-1-6 9.  3-2-1-4 10. 3-4-1-2 11. 1-3-6-4 Thank you for placing your wagers at IdaBet.com!

    read more

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Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer

Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer

With a clearance rate of 91%, the Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale closed Tuesday with gross sales of $2,229,500. Topping the 69 sold was Blessed Flyer (Dialed In), who hammered for $270,000 to Mike Tomlinson, agent for Mark Farrar and Patricia’s Hope LLC. Consigned by Evergreen Equine, agent and sold as hip 1, Blessed Flyer is a 2-year-old colt who captured his debut in a Keeneland maiden special weight Apr. 16.

“I’m really excited about the results, especially as we had only a week from the April sale to put together this catalogue,” said Fasig-Tipton’s Director of Digital Sales Leif Aaron. “Every segment of the market was strong, including breeding stock, and the repository was busy as well. The market is showing that there is still a huge demand for horses of all types.”

Other May Digital Sale top sellers included Contrary Thinking (Into Mischief) (hip 3), who sold for $130,000 to Amanda Gillman, agent as a horse of racing age by ELiTE, agent for White Birch Farm, Inc.; racing/broodmare prospect Dreaming of Abba (Fast Anna) (hip 4), sold for $110,000 to Thiele Thoroughbreds LLC and consigned by Sean S. Perl Bloodstock, agent; multiple stakes-placed broodmare prospect My Lil Punky (Outwork) (hip 9), sold for $105,000 to H. Cruise and offered by Lane’s End, agent; and Contribution (Constitution) (hip 88), sold as a horse of racing age by ELiTE, agent for Resolute Racing for $100,000 to Clarity Thoroughbreds, agent for Katherine Neilson.

Fasig-Tipton’s June Digital Sale will be held June 25-30, with entries closing June 15.

The post Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

read more
‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works

‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works

TIMONIUM, MD – The first of two sessions of the under-tack preview of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic May 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale got underway under brilliantly sunny skies and a brand new format Tuesday at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium. Some 250 horses previewed over the track, and, while they were cascaded by the beeps of stopwatches from onlookers in the grandstand, Fasig-Tipton provided no times for the works.

With forecasted wet weather later in the week, the under-tack show was condensed to two days, leading to close to nine hours of previews, but when the last horse had left the track Tuesday, Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning said he was pleased with the results of the new format.

“I thought today went exceptionally well,” Browning said. “The horses seemed to preview very consistently. The racetrack was in very good condition from start to finish and seemed to play very fairly. I honestly couldn’t be more pleased with the first half of the under-tack show and how it went today. I thought the consignors displayed their horses in a very professional manner and the feedback that we got from the buyers was generally very, very positive. Hopefully the conditions will be fine again tomorrow.”

Consignors were given the choice on how their horses would perform on the racetrack, resulting in everything from galloping down the lane to full-out breezes, but riders faced added restrictions on whip use and were required to keep their hands on the reins during the entire preview.

“I have been on record for several months now, saying that we are going to do what I call farm breezes,” consignor Becky Thomas said after sending out a colt by Flightline (hip 54, video) early in Tuesday’s session. “For me, they’re three-quarter tilt breezes so everyone can see them stretch their legs without being under a hustle.”

Of Tuesday’s untimed preview Thomas said, “Every year before every horse breezes, I always feel sick to my stomach. I am not sick today.”

Thomas’s Sequel consignment includes six horses bred by longtime client Chester Broman. In addition to the Flightline colt, who is out of Grade I winner Bar of Gold (Medaglia d’Oro), the group includes a filly by Curlin (hip 240, video), who previewed later in the session, and a daughter of Gun Runner (hip 357), scheduled to work Wednesday.

“We expected him to look just like he did,” Thomas said of the colt’s performance on the racetrack. “He’s a beautiful mover. He’s been a special horse from the time we got to have him. And  we’ve also got a Gun Runner and a Curlin for Mr. Broman in this sale, too, that are pretty exciting.”

Those marquee pedigrees may fare better next week when the action moves from performance on the racetrack to bidding in the sales ring.

“We will have to see how we sell, because that’s what we are all here for,” Thomas said. “I am hoping that the buyer base will change to accommodate the new format. And that is stressful, thinking, ‘Are all these horses going to get sold?’ I think the big pedigreed horses are going to be fine, but we’ve all got a lot of horses that are maybe not the top pedigrees. But as far as how the breeze show is going, I’m super happy.”

Clovis Crane’s Crane Thoroughbred Services had horses run the gamut on the track Tuesday. The consignment had a pair of gallopers early in the day before a gray colt by Volatile (hip 13) turned in a flashy work (video) during the session’s fifth of nine sets.

“He’s just been brilliant all winter,” Crane said of the colt. “He’s beautiful. Every time we’ve done something, he’s been perfect. He’s never done anything wrong. He’s just nice colt who has developed wonderfully.”

Hip 13 | Fasig-Tipton

Crane and Joe Besecker purchased the colt for $18,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall sale.

“He had the right physical to be a runner,” Crane said of the colt’s appeal. “At the end of the day, we are looking for runners. A little of this and a little of that, we can tolerate because we are looking for horses to be racehorses, not just pinhook horses. He looked like a horse who would be a sound, solid runner.”

Crane continued, “Some of my earlier horses galloped. I had a horse who had a cut on his butt. Another horse had a shin and they are just back in training.”

Crane said his focus is always to have his horses move forward from the under-tack show.

“I take a page out of Cary Frommer’s book,” he said. “Many years ago, she said this should just be another day in their training and their progression. I really admire her for saying that. I really believe it’s the way it should be. It’s just another day forward in their training. Instead of being worried that this has to be the best day of their lives.”

Asked if he thought buyers would be receptive to the new format, Crane said, “I hope so. I think anytime we are doing the right thing for the horses, it’s good for all of us. I think that’s important.”

Buyers who have been conditioned to expect speedy breezes may have to shuffle their priorities ahead of sale time, according to trainer-turned-bloodstock agent John Kimmel, who was among the many observers in the grandstand Tuesday.

“My assessment is that the criteria we use to make our judgements is going to change a little bit,” Kimmel said. “Back at the OBS sales, time and gallop-out times were a major criteria–probably number one–followed by physical and pedigree, then technological details like radiographs and scoping. But here, I think we’re just going to give a movement mark instead of getting so hung up on time, which might fall a little farther down on the totem pole of criteria that we use to judge.”

Asked if that would be a good thing for buyers, Kimmel said, “I guess time will eventually tell whether that’s a positive. I really can’t say right now, but for me, I always have to have a good physical anyway on a horse. I won’t buy a horse that doesn’t pass for my physical assessment. So maybe the physical moves up to number one category, followed by an okay or better than average mover and then the time might come in a little bit and then followed by radiographic assessments.”

As for how he will consider times, Kimmel said, “I am clocking them, but I really don’t have any idea exactly what it means. You have Caliente [Thoroughbreds] little better than two-minute licking from the three-eighths pole and then you have some horses that are going fairly full strong quarter-mile breezes. So it’s quite a spectrum of presentations.”

Bloodstock agent Mike Ryan was seeing plenty to like on the track Tuesday.

“It’s a beautiful day and the track is in great shape,” Ryan said. “Compliments to the maintenance people that work on the track. It’s lively, it’s got good bounce to it, and horses are getting over it well.”

Of the horses he is watching perform on that track, Ryan said, “I like the new format because I think it gives you a chance to see their action a lot better. They’re not on their heads. They’re not forcing themselves to go :9 3/5 or :9 4/5 and I think you get a better read on them. And you certainly get a better read on them on the dirt. At least that’s my personal opinion. I find it much easier to separate horses on the dirt and mostly we are going to run on the dirt anyway.”

Mike Ryan | Fasig-Tipton

Ryan said he was timing the previews, but added, “It’s not the be all and the end all by any stretch. But it’s interesting just to see. A lot of them are going in :10 and change, and gallop-outs are a little slower because the cones are way out. But it’s more impressed with how the horse is traveling. How well are they doing it. Are they on their heads or are they just doing it nicely in control and on the bridle.”

Of how the format might change his buying process, Ryan said, “It’s pretty much the same thing. And then, of course, it all comes down to the barn. It’s like a yearling sale. You’ve got to go back to the barn and figure it all out.”

Bloodstock agent Pedro Lanz said he was seeing what he needed to see from the grandstand Tuesday.

“So far, I have seen relaxed horses going very nicely and without all the urging that you normally see at a 2-year-old sale,” he said. “We can separate out the good ones from the ones that are not as good.”

He continued, “It’s very good to see the action of the horse. You can calculate the length of a stride. You can even listen to them. And it’s especially good for me to watch these horses train on the dirt, since I am mostly buying dirt horses for Saudi Arabia.”

Taking in the previews trackside, Legion Bloodstock’s Kristian Villante said, “I think the conditions have been great today. You get to see them move. They are all going at a pretty good clip, even without the timer, but I think it’s been a great day to get to see them move and see how they actually get over the ground.”

Of timing the previews, Villante said, “Everyone seems to be doing it a little bit differently, so you have to take that into account when you’re looking at it. Not everyone’s really going the same speed here on purpose.”

As to how the new format might change the team’s approach to shopping over the next week, Villante said, “We’re about to find out. I think, ultimately, it kind of goes back to the yearling sales, but you actually get to see them gallop. It’s really not that different from what we do all year long. We are still looking for an athlete.”

With rain forecasted for later in the week, Fasig-Tipton has condensed its under-tack show to two sessions. The show will conclude with a final session Wednesday beginning at 8 a.m. The Midlantic May sale is scheduled to be held next Monday and Tuesday with bidding beginning at 11 a.m. both days.

The post ‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

read more

Player News

  • Tuesday’s “Lock” is at Northfield Park on race 02 with the #1-Punisher Eleven-Going for 4 wins in a row-Wyatt Farmer drives. Last “Lock” Won again and the pick record is at 1625 of 2568 wins with 449 Seconds and 180 thirds. Thank you for choosing IdaBet.com!

    read more
  • Here are the picks from Howard “The Lock” for Guest Handicapper for Western Fair Tuesday May 5, 2026:  1. 2-4-1-5    2. 2-1-3-4 3. 6-3-4-1  4. 3-6-5-1  5. 7-3-1-6  6. 4-2-7-3 7. 3-8-1-5   8. 5-3-1-6 9.  3-2-1-4 10. 3-4-1-2 11. 1-3-6-4 Thank you for placing your wagers at IdaBet.com!

    read more

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Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer

Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer

With a clearance rate of 91%, the Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale closed Tuesday with gross sales of $2,229,500. Topping the 69 sold was Blessed Flyer (Dialed In), who hammered for $270,000 to Mike Tomlinson, agent for Mark Farrar and Patricia’s Hope LLC. Consigned by Evergreen Equine, agent and sold as hip 1, Blessed Flyer is a 2-year-old colt who captured his debut in a Keeneland maiden special weight Apr. 16.

“I’m really excited about the results, especially as we had only a week from the April sale to put together this catalogue,” said Fasig-Tipton’s Director of Digital Sales Leif Aaron. “Every segment of the market was strong, including breeding stock, and the repository was busy as well. The market is showing that there is still a huge demand for horses of all types.”

Other May Digital Sale top sellers included Contrary Thinking (Into Mischief) (hip 3), who sold for $130,000 to Amanda Gillman, agent as a horse of racing age by ELiTE, agent for White Birch Farm, Inc.; racing/broodmare prospect Dreaming of Abba (Fast Anna) (hip 4), sold for $110,000 to Thiele Thoroughbreds LLC and consigned by Sean S. Perl Bloodstock, agent; multiple stakes-placed broodmare prospect My Lil Punky (Outwork) (hip 9), sold for $105,000 to H. Cruise and offered by Lane’s End, agent; and Contribution (Constitution) (hip 88), sold as a horse of racing age by ELiTE, agent for Resolute Racing for $100,000 to Clarity Thoroughbreds, agent for Katherine Neilson.

Fasig-Tipton’s June Digital Sale will be held June 25-30, with entries closing June 15.

The post Fasig-Tipton May Digital Sale Topped by Blessed Flyer appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

read more
‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works

‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works

TIMONIUM, MD – The first of two sessions of the under-tack preview of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic May 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale got underway under brilliantly sunny skies and a brand new format Tuesday at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium. Some 250 horses previewed over the track, and, while they were cascaded by the beeps of stopwatches from onlookers in the grandstand, Fasig-Tipton provided no times for the works.

With forecasted wet weather later in the week, the under-tack show was condensed to two days, leading to close to nine hours of previews, but when the last horse had left the track Tuesday, Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning said he was pleased with the results of the new format.

“I thought today went exceptionally well,” Browning said. “The horses seemed to preview very consistently. The racetrack was in very good condition from start to finish and seemed to play very fairly. I honestly couldn’t be more pleased with the first half of the under-tack show and how it went today. I thought the consignors displayed their horses in a very professional manner and the feedback that we got from the buyers was generally very, very positive. Hopefully the conditions will be fine again tomorrow.”

Consignors were given the choice on how their horses would perform on the racetrack, resulting in everything from galloping down the lane to full-out breezes, but riders faced added restrictions on whip use and were required to keep their hands on the reins during the entire preview.

“I have been on record for several months now, saying that we are going to do what I call farm breezes,” consignor Becky Thomas said after sending out a colt by Flightline (hip 54, video) early in Tuesday’s session. “For me, they’re three-quarter tilt breezes so everyone can see them stretch their legs without being under a hustle.”

Of Tuesday’s untimed preview Thomas said, “Every year before every horse breezes, I always feel sick to my stomach. I am not sick today.”

Thomas’s Sequel consignment includes six horses bred by longtime client Chester Broman. In addition to the Flightline colt, who is out of Grade I winner Bar of Gold (Medaglia d’Oro), the group includes a filly by Curlin (hip 240, video), who previewed later in the session, and a daughter of Gun Runner (hip 357), scheduled to work Wednesday.

“We expected him to look just like he did,” Thomas said of the colt’s performance on the racetrack. “He’s a beautiful mover. He’s been a special horse from the time we got to have him. And  we’ve also got a Gun Runner and a Curlin for Mr. Broman in this sale, too, that are pretty exciting.”

Those marquee pedigrees may fare better next week when the action moves from performance on the racetrack to bidding in the sales ring.

“We will have to see how we sell, because that’s what we are all here for,” Thomas said. “I am hoping that the buyer base will change to accommodate the new format. And that is stressful, thinking, ‘Are all these horses going to get sold?’ I think the big pedigreed horses are going to be fine, but we’ve all got a lot of horses that are maybe not the top pedigrees. But as far as how the breeze show is going, I’m super happy.”

Clovis Crane’s Crane Thoroughbred Services had horses run the gamut on the track Tuesday. The consignment had a pair of gallopers early in the day before a gray colt by Volatile (hip 13) turned in a flashy work (video) during the session’s fifth of nine sets.

“He’s just been brilliant all winter,” Crane said of the colt. “He’s beautiful. Every time we’ve done something, he’s been perfect. He’s never done anything wrong. He’s just nice colt who has developed wonderfully.”

Hip 13 | Fasig-Tipton

Crane and Joe Besecker purchased the colt for $18,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall sale.

“He had the right physical to be a runner,” Crane said of the colt’s appeal. “At the end of the day, we are looking for runners. A little of this and a little of that, we can tolerate because we are looking for horses to be racehorses, not just pinhook horses. He looked like a horse who would be a sound, solid runner.”

Crane continued, “Some of my earlier horses galloped. I had a horse who had a cut on his butt. Another horse had a shin and they are just back in training.”

Crane said his focus is always to have his horses move forward from the under-tack show.

“I take a page out of Cary Frommer’s book,” he said. “Many years ago, she said this should just be another day in their training and their progression. I really admire her for saying that. I really believe it’s the way it should be. It’s just another day forward in their training. Instead of being worried that this has to be the best day of their lives.”

Asked if he thought buyers would be receptive to the new format, Crane said, “I hope so. I think anytime we are doing the right thing for the horses, it’s good for all of us. I think that’s important.”

Buyers who have been conditioned to expect speedy breezes may have to shuffle their priorities ahead of sale time, according to trainer-turned-bloodstock agent John Kimmel, who was among the many observers in the grandstand Tuesday.

“My assessment is that the criteria we use to make our judgements is going to change a little bit,” Kimmel said. “Back at the OBS sales, time and gallop-out times were a major criteria–probably number one–followed by physical and pedigree, then technological details like radiographs and scoping. But here, I think we’re just going to give a movement mark instead of getting so hung up on time, which might fall a little farther down on the totem pole of criteria that we use to judge.”

Asked if that would be a good thing for buyers, Kimmel said, “I guess time will eventually tell whether that’s a positive. I really can’t say right now, but for me, I always have to have a good physical anyway on a horse. I won’t buy a horse that doesn’t pass for my physical assessment. So maybe the physical moves up to number one category, followed by an okay or better than average mover and then the time might come in a little bit and then followed by radiographic assessments.”

As for how he will consider times, Kimmel said, “I am clocking them, but I really don’t have any idea exactly what it means. You have Caliente [Thoroughbreds] little better than two-minute licking from the three-eighths pole and then you have some horses that are going fairly full strong quarter-mile breezes. So it’s quite a spectrum of presentations.”

Bloodstock agent Mike Ryan was seeing plenty to like on the track Tuesday.

“It’s a beautiful day and the track is in great shape,” Ryan said. “Compliments to the maintenance people that work on the track. It’s lively, it’s got good bounce to it, and horses are getting over it well.”

Of the horses he is watching perform on that track, Ryan said, “I like the new format because I think it gives you a chance to see their action a lot better. They’re not on their heads. They’re not forcing themselves to go :9 3/5 or :9 4/5 and I think you get a better read on them. And you certainly get a better read on them on the dirt. At least that’s my personal opinion. I find it much easier to separate horses on the dirt and mostly we are going to run on the dirt anyway.”

Mike Ryan | Fasig-Tipton

Ryan said he was timing the previews, but added, “It’s not the be all and the end all by any stretch. But it’s interesting just to see. A lot of them are going in :10 and change, and gallop-outs are a little slower because the cones are way out. But it’s more impressed with how the horse is traveling. How well are they doing it. Are they on their heads or are they just doing it nicely in control and on the bridle.”

Of how the format might change his buying process, Ryan said, “It’s pretty much the same thing. And then, of course, it all comes down to the barn. It’s like a yearling sale. You’ve got to go back to the barn and figure it all out.”

Bloodstock agent Pedro Lanz said he was seeing what he needed to see from the grandstand Tuesday.

“So far, I have seen relaxed horses going very nicely and without all the urging that you normally see at a 2-year-old sale,” he said. “We can separate out the good ones from the ones that are not as good.”

He continued, “It’s very good to see the action of the horse. You can calculate the length of a stride. You can even listen to them. And it’s especially good for me to watch these horses train on the dirt, since I am mostly buying dirt horses for Saudi Arabia.”

Taking in the previews trackside, Legion Bloodstock’s Kristian Villante said, “I think the conditions have been great today. You get to see them move. They are all going at a pretty good clip, even without the timer, but I think it’s been a great day to get to see them move and see how they actually get over the ground.”

Of timing the previews, Villante said, “Everyone seems to be doing it a little bit differently, so you have to take that into account when you’re looking at it. Not everyone’s really going the same speed here on purpose.”

As to how the new format might change the team’s approach to shopping over the next week, Villante said, “We’re about to find out. I think, ultimately, it kind of goes back to the yearling sales, but you actually get to see them gallop. It’s really not that different from what we do all year long. We are still looking for an athlete.”

With rain forecasted for later in the week, Fasig-Tipton has condensed its under-tack show to two sessions. The show will conclude with a final session Wednesday beginning at 8 a.m. The Midlantic May sale is scheduled to be held next Monday and Tuesday with bidding beginning at 11 a.m. both days.

The post ‘Time Will Tell’: Midlantic May Under-Tack Show Opens with Untimed Works appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

read more