Saturday, June 17, 2017

Welcome To The 21st Century Thoroughbred

By Calvin L. Carter and Dallas Carter
©2017 Calvin L. Carter. All rights reserved.

Welcome to Classic Champion Thoroughbreds, LLC: a new vision, standard of excellence for an old industry.
Owned and operated by Calvin L. Carter, Classic Champion Thoroughbreds is an innovative bloodstock consulting firm and leader in cutting-edge software analysis of Thoroughbred breeding, sales and race potential.
With over 22 years of experience studying Thoroughbreds, Calvin is the creator of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® which was developed into a software program by his brother, Dallas, in 2014.
The profile assigns each horse a numerical score and grade ranking which is the indicator of that horse’s potential. The higher the score, the more potential that horse has to become a quality stakes horse or classic champion.
In 2015, we made this video about the software program:




The ability to know the potential of a horse before he goes to the breeding shed, sales ring or race track is of utmost importance. The empirical data gathered by the robust power of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® software easily shows which horses have the potential to be quality stakes winners or classic champions.
The profile software is a powerful analytical tool that takes the guesswork out of breeders making mating selections, it also evaluates the graded stakes and classic potential of horses bought at auction or in handicapping races.


BREEDING

● The Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® unlocks the secret of the Ancestral Herd influence.

● Is a valuable analytical tool that shows horse owners and breeders how a mare can upgrade or downgrade a stallion she is bred to through the profile score of the foal from that mating.

● Shows if the foal has the potential to be a quality stakes horse or classic champion.

● Shows horse owners how their entire herd of bloodstock can be upgraded by using the profile score to help them make the best breeding decisions resulting in less overbreeding and fewer potential equine welfare issues.


SALES, AUCTION

● The Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is a valuable Thoroughbred sales analytical tool that shows buyers at auction how make the best decisions and investments when buying horses.

● Shows buyers at auction how to save on their time and monetary investments by helping them to zero in on the horses that have the best potential to become graded stakes winners or a Classic Champion Thoroughbred.


RACING, HANDICAPPING

● The Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® shows handicappers, horse owners and trainers which horses have the best potential to be a top-quality stakes winner or a classic winner of races like the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont.

● Shows horse owners and trainers the best race distance that their horse will have the most success, be it in sprint racing, middle distance or routing, and can help them spot their horses in those races.


If you are planning to breed, or purchase horses at auction, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is the analytical tool you need to take the guesswork out of breeding and buying champion racehorses. The profile will give you the important information necessary to make the best decisions and investments when breeding or buying horses at auction.
If you are racing horses, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® can help you spot them in races where they will have the most success.
For a free consultation, please contact us at our website contact page here.

Monday, June 12, 2017

Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® Picks Belmont Stakes Exacta, Trifecta; Shows Power As Handicapping, Breeding, Sales Analytical Tool

©2017 Calvin L. Carter. All rights reserved.

Once more, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® shows that it is a powerful handicapping tool. Congratulations to all who may have used my Belmont Stakes (G1) picks as a $2 dollar wager on the exotics could have netted them $45.20 (Exacta), $624.00 (trifecta) and, perhaps, $4,486.00 (superfecta) if they used Gormley in their superfecta wagers.
The Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is an analytical tool I use to measure the graded stakes and classic potential of young horses. The profile assigns each horse a numerical score and grade ranking which is the indicator of that horse’s potential. The higher the score, the more potential that horse has to become a quality stakes horse or classic champion.
In addition to Irish War Cry, who was favored in this race, Patch, Lookin at Lee and Tapwrit were horses I liked and wrote about on my blog. Honorable mention was given to Gormley, J Boys Echo and Twisted Tom who I thought could, perhaps, be factors in the exotics.
Here’s a look at the profile grade ranking and finish of the horses in Belmont Stakes 149:


 


Our research which is documented in my numerous blogs and website, shows that a majority of horses run close to their Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® score which is a measurement of the breeding influences found in the five-generation pedigree.
As you can see in the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile®, J Boys Echo has the best breeding in this herd but he has not yet fully lived up to his breeding. That’s why in the Data Mining chart (see chart below) he was ranked seventh and finished ninth. In addition, Gormley is ranked third in the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® and ranked fifth in the Data Mining chart. He ultimately finished fourth in the Belmont Stakes (G1).
When horses like Gormley and J Boys Echo fail to run close to their profile score, then the issue[s] preventing them from reaching their full potential needs to be investigated. And there can be many contributing factors for a horse not running to his profile score – Effinex is a good example of that.
Data Mining variables are another tool for analyzing classic potential and when added to the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® and Behavior Index, they can also move some horse up like Lookin at Lee who’s a proven competitor on the classic trail.
In the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® Lookin at Lee is ranked sixth and in the Data Mining chart he was ranked second but finished seventh.
The Data Mining Chart is a subjective analysis based on other variables, and it was also correct in many of the selections:




In addition to being an exceptional handicapping tool and predictor of classic races like the Kentucky Derby, Preakness, and Belmont, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is also a valuable tool for horse owners and breeders helping them to take the guesswork out of breeding and purchasing horses at auction.
The ability to know the potential of a horse before he goes to the race track is of utmost importance and the empirical data of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® will easily show you which horses have the potential to be quality stakes winners or classic champions.
For the first time in the history of the Thoroughbred, the empirical evidence gathered through the robust power of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® software shows that the pedigree is the only true standard, indicator of horse performance, especially of their classic potential.
Some unique features of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile®:

  • It unlocks the secret of the Ancestral Herd influence.

  • Is a valuable handicapping tool that shows in the profile score which horses have the potential to be top-quality stakes winners or a classic winner of races like the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont.

  • Is a valuable breeding analytical tool that shows horse owners and breeders how a mare can upgrade or downgrade a stallion she is bred to through the profile score of the foal from that mating.

  • Shows if the foal has the potential to be a quality stakes horse or classic champion.

  • Shows horse owners how their entire bloodstock can be upgraded by using the profile score to help them make the best breeding decisions resulting in less overbreeding and fewer potential equine welfare issues.

  • Is a valuable Thoroughbred sales analytical tool that shows buyers how to make the best decisions and investments when buying horses at auction.

  • Shows which horses purchased at auction may have the potential to be a top-quality stakes winner while a select few will have a profile score that indicates they could be a winner of a classic race like the Kentucky Derby.

If you are planning to breed, or purchase horses at auction, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is the analytical tool you need to take the guesswork out of buying and breeding champion racehorses.
The profile will give you the important information necessary to make the best decisions and investments when breeding or buying horses at auction. For a free consultation, please contact us at my website Classic Champion Thoroughbreds, LLC.
























Friday, June 9, 2017

Irish War Cry Favored In Bid To Win Belmont 149

©2017 Calvin L. Carter. All rights reserved.

This Saturday, the trail to classic glory takes us to Belmont Park in Elmont, New York, where Irish War Cry will go the starting gate as the lukewarm 7-2 morning line favorite in the 149th running of the $1.5 million Belmont Stakes (G1) which is the last jewel of the prestigious American horseracing Triple Crown.
Prerace television coverage begins at 3 p.m. ET on the NBC Sports Network with race coverage switching to NBC at 5 p.m.
Knowing as much as possible about the Thoroughbred and what it takes to produce a classic champion has been a passion of mine since the early 1990s and my research and study led to the creation of the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile®  which is an analytical tool I use to measure the graded stakes and classic potential of young horses.
In 2014, the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® was developed into a software program by my brother, Dallas, and it assigns each horse a numerical score which is the indicator of that horse’s potential. The higher the score, the more potential that horse has to become a quality stakes horse or classic champion.
Let’s take a look at the profiles of the horses in Belmont Stakes 149:


 


In addition to Irish War Cry, Patch, Lookin at Lee, Tapwrit and Epicharis are horses that I like in this race.
Classic Empire probably would have been favored in Belmont 149 but he was removed from contention due to a foot abscess. Also, a recent Bloodhorse story reports that the status of Epicharis is also in question as he was treated on June 7 for lameness in his “right front, possible hoof” and did not train on June 8 (see write up below).
Our research which is documented in my numerous blogs and website, shows that a majority of horses run close to their Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® score which is a measurement of the breeding influences found in the five-generation pedigree. In addition to the profile score, the Behavior Index and Data Mining are important tools I use to determine horse potential.
As you can see in the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® chart above, 75 percent of the horses in Belmont 149 have a profile grade rating of C or better.
In the Behavior Index chart, some horses that have a B or C profile grade rating like Epicharis, Irish War Cry, Lookin at Lee and Twisted Tom can be moved up because their Behavior Index makes them competitive, enabling them to sometimes win races that are shorter than the classic 10 furlong distance.
For example, in my blog about the nine-furlong 2016 Wood Memorial Stakes (G1), I noted that Outwork, who had an E grade rating, was a horse I liked because his Behavior Index showed me he had the potential to be competitive. Indeed, he went on to win the Wood. However, in the Kentucky Derby (G1) Outwork’s grade rating had him ranked sixteenth and he finished fourteenth.
In addition to moving some horses up, the Behavior Index can also move some horses down like J Boys Echo, Gormley and Tapwrit. I’ve liked Gormley since last fall and he was my upset pick in the FrontRunner Stakes (G1). Since then, he’s had issues and he’s not fully lived up to his breeding.
When horses like Gormley, J Boys Echo and Tapwrit fail to run close to their profile score, then the issue[s] preventing them from reaching their full potential needs to be investigated. And there can be many contributing factors for a horse not running to his profile score – Effinex is a good example of that.
Data Mining variables are another tool for analyzing classic potential and when added to the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® and Behavior Index, they can also move some horse up like Lookin at Lee who’s a proven competitor on the classic trail. He’s the only horse in this race that has been moved up with Data Mining and time will tell if that was justified.
In addition to the top five horses listed in the Data Mining chart honorable mention goes to Gormley, J Boys Echo and Twisted Tom who could, perhaps, be factors in the exotics.
In the final analysis, the Behavior Index and Data Mining variables are applied to a select few horses while the Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® is the standard of measurement for the rest of the horses in the race.
Let’s take a look at the horses I like in Belmont 149:


PATCH (12-1) is a sire-line descendant of the Northern Dancer Ancestral Herd and he comes into this race for trainer Todd Pletcher with 1-2-0 record in four starts including a nice second-place finish to Girvin in the Louisiana Derby (G2) and a fourteenth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1).  Here’s the video and chart call of his Derby finish:

PATCH chased off the rail, edged up between rivals leaving the far turn, was checked and bounced around with GIRVIN near the five sixteenths causing him to lose any chance and came up empty.

Patch was my long shot pick in both the Louisiana and Kentucky Derbies and, despite his poor showing last out, I’m willing to overlook that race.
Union Rags, the sire of Patch, was a competitive colt on the trail to the 2012 Kentucky Derby (G1), compiling an overall 5-1-1 record in eight career starts with $1,798,800 in earnings.
As a two year old, he won the Three Chimneys Saratoga Special (G2) and Champagne (G1) stakes and finished second in the Grey Goose Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1) stakes.
At the age of three, Union Rags won the Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) stakes and finished third in the Florida Derby (G1) en route to a seventh-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1). He finished his career with a narrow win by a neck over Paynter in the Belmont (G1) stakes.
I like it that veteran and classic-winning jockey John Velazquez picks up the mount on Patch. I look for him to have Patch more engaged early on in the race and with an A Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® ranking Patch has the breeding to win.
Another move forward could make Patch very competitive and, perhaps, upset at a nice price.


LOOKIN AT LEE (5-1) is a sire-line descendant of the Mr. Prospector Ancestral Herd and he comes into this race for trainer Steve Asmussen with a 2-3-2 record in eleven starts including a second-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and a fourth-place finish in the Preakness Stakes (G1). Here’s video and chart call of the Preakness:

LOOKIN AT LEE leaned in causing an awkward break, dropped in early and lagged well back, was under pressure near the far turn, angled five wide for the drive and kept trying to the wire.

Lookin at Lee is proven competitor on the classic trail. He likes to run at the back of the herd and that running style has enabled him to close with good energy to finish second in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and fourth in the Preakness Stakes (G1). And it could bode well for him in the Belmont, too.
Lookin at Lucky, the sire of Lookin at Lee, was an exceptional two year old who was undefeated in four starts, including victories in the Best Pal Stakes (G2), Del Mar Futurity (G1) and Norfolk Stakes (G1), before suffering his first loss by a neck to Vale of York in the 2009 Grey Goose Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Stakes (G1).
As a three year old, Lookin at Lucky won the CashCall Futurity (G1), Rebel Stakes (G2) and he finished third in the Santa Anita Derby (G1). Lookin at Lucky finished sixth in the Kentucky Derby and he earned the title Classic Champion Thoroughbred with a three-quarter length victory in the Preakness Stakes (G1).
Jockey Irad Ortiz rode Creator to victory in the 2016 Belmont Stakes (G1) and he picks up the mount on Lookin at Lee.
I look for the pair to run a good race.


IRISH WAR CRY (7-2) is a sire-line descendant of the Mr. Prospector herd and he’s compiled a 4-0-0 record in six starts for trainer Graham Motion with wins in the Marylander Stakes, the Holy Bull Stakes (G2) and the Wood Memorial Stakes (G2). He comes into the Belmont off of a tenth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1). Here’s the video and chart call of that race:

IRISH WAR CRY bore in at the break initiating a chain reaction of trouble, straightened and relaxed four wide stalking the pace, edged closer nearing the half, was a daunting presence three deep to the quarter pole, failed to go on with the winner and weakened in the final three sixteenths.

Irish War Cry, like Gormley, has been disappointing on the classic trail and I thought he would be among the top finishers in the Derby. Despite his good breeding, he’ll need to improve his game considerably in order to make it into the winner’s circle.
Curlin, the sire of Irish War Cry, was an outstanding racehorse that compiled an 11-2-2 record in 16 career starts with $10,501,800 in career earnings.
Curlin did not start as a two year old. But, at the age of three, Curlin was 6-1-2 in nine starts with $5,102,800 in earnings including wins in the Rebel Stakes (G3) and Arkansas Derby (G2) en route to a third-place finish in the 2007 Kentucky Derby (G1). He went on to win the Preakness Stakes (G1) and he finished second in the Belmont Stakes (G1).
Other important stakes wins include the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1), Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1), twice, Dubai World Cup (G1), Stephen Foster Handicap (G1), Woodward Stakes (G1), and the UAE Jaguar Trophy Handicap.
With a B Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® Irish War Cry has the breeding to be competitive in this race. It remains to be seen if he can rebound off of his poor Derby finish to take another step forward and earn classic stakes honors.


TAPWRIT (6-1) is a sire-line descendant of the A.P. Indy, Bold Ruler Ancestral Herd. He’s compiled a 3-1-0 record in seven starts for trainer Todd Pletcher with a second-place finish in the Sam F. Davis Stakes (G3) and wins in the Pulpit Stakes, and Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby (G2). He comes into this race off of a sixth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1). Here’s the video and chart call of that race:

TAPWRIT was forced into tight quarters by IRISH WAR CRY at the break, steadied off heels in the opening furlong, gained while being brushed between foes near the five sixteenths, altered to the fence in the lane and kept trying.

Tapwrit finished a respectable sixth in this race and was improving his position at the end.
Tapit, the sire of Tapwrit, was a multiple graded stakes winner that compiled a 3-0-0 record in six starts with $557,300 in career earnings.
As a two year old, Tapit was undefeated in two starts including a win in the Laurel Futurity (G3).  Tapit was troubled by a lung infection for much of his three year old season but he did win the nine-furlong Wood Memorial Stakes (G1) in route to a ninth-place finish in the 2004 Kentucky Derby.
At stud, Tapit has been America’s leading sire for the past three years and he’s the sire of the Belmont Stakes (G1) winners Tonalist and Creator.
With an A Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® rating Tapwrit is one of the best bred colts in this race but he’s yet to fully live up to his breeding. Another move forward could make him very competitive in the Belmont Stakes (G1).


EPICHARIS (4-1) is a sire line descendant of the Sunday Silence Ancestral Herd and he comes into this race with a 4-1-0 record in five starts for trainer Kiyoshi Hagiwara.
Epicharis is one of the most accomplished runners in this race. As two year old, he won his first three races by a combined 25 lengths and I especially like the way he won with ease by 12 lengths in the nine-furlong Hokkaido Nisai Yushan.
As a three year old, his victory in the Hyacinth Stakes and second-place finish in the UAE Derby (G2) qualified him to run in the Kentucky Derby (G1) but his connections passed on that race. Here’s the video of the UAE Derby.
Epicharis broke alertly and led for most of the race until Thunder Snow beat him by a head at the wire.
Gold Allure, the sire of Epicharis, was a multiple graded stakes winner in Japan that compiled an 8-1-1 record in 16 starts. As a two year old, he was 1-1-0 in three starts with a fourth-place finish in the Hopeful Stakes.
As a three year old, Gold Allure was 5-0-1 in 10 starts with wins in the Tango Stakes, Japan Dirt Derby (G1), Derby Grand Prix (G1), Japan Cup Dirt (G1), Tokyo Daishoten (G1) and he finished fifth in the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby).
At the age of four, Gold Allure was 1-1-0 in three starts with wins in the February Stakes (G1) and Antares Stakes (G1).
As a stallion, Gold Allure is currently ranked ninth in the Japan Racing Association Sire Ranking.
Christophe LeMaire has ridden Epicharis in all of his previous starts and he’s the leading jockey in the Japan Racing Association Jockeys Ranking.
With a B Classic Champion Thoroughbred Profile® rating, Epicharis has the breeding to win this race. However, with the recent treatment for lameness a lot will depend on if he goes to the track to train on Friday.
"He looked a little different favoring his right front [Wednesday] afternoon, so we treated his hoof and gave him Bute," said trainer Kiyoshi Hagiwara in a Jay Privman news story. "It looks like it is getting better and I think there is no problem with him running in the race. We still have time, so we will give him the best care we can."
On Friday, a Jay Privman story noted that Epicharis was fitted with a glue-on horseshoe and that he would not go to the track but would walk at the barn.
Currently, Epicharis is ranked first in the Data Mining chart and I really liked his chances in this race. However, due to the events of the past couple of days his status is questionable and I’ll watch him closely leading up to the race.