Queen could win namesake G1 stakes with Magnetic Charm

Today’s Keeneland barn notes:

Magnetic Charm, owned by Her Majesty the Queen, works on the turf last Sunday at Keeneland for this Saturday’s Grade 1 QEII Challenge Cup. Coady Photography

Magnetic Charm (GB) might have an edge in Saturday’s Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup Presented by Lane’s End (G1) for one simple reason: She is owned by Her Majesty, The Queen, who 35 years ago was at Keeneland for the first running of the race named in her honor.

The Queen is an astute Thoroughbred breeder and owner who has raced horses since the late 1940s. Her visit here in October 1984 during a private six-day trip to Central Kentucky is one of the most famous chapters in Keeneland history. She watched a mock Thoroughbred sale in the Sales Pavilion, met members of the jockey colony and presented the trophy after Cherry Valley Farm’s favored Sintra, a daughter of Drone ridden by Keith Allen for trainer Steve Penrod, won her namesake race.

Her trip also included visiting nearby farms to see prominent stallions.

The Queen and Prince Philip attended the 2007 Kentucky Derby (G1) as guests of Will and Sarah Farish of Lane’s End Farm.

The Queen has raced a few horses over the years at Keeneland but never has started a horse in her namesake race, which Lane’s End has sponsored since 2014. Her homebred New Assembly (IRE) won an allowance race during the 2001 Spring Meet. Her other Keeneland starters since then, according to Equibase, were homebred Forward Move (IRE), second in an allowance during the 2006 Fall Meet, and homebred Medley (GB), fourth in an allowance during the 2008 Fall Meet.

All three were trained by Christophe Clement.

Magnetic Charm, a daughter of Exceed And Excel (AUS) bred by Godolphin and trained by William Haggas, has won two of eight races. She began her career in England and was second by a neck in the Sandringham Handicap at Royal Ascot while carrying 133 pounds. On Sept. 14, the filly made her North American debut at Woodbine and ran second in the Canadian Presented by the Japan Racing Association (G2).

The Woodbine performance earned Magnetic Charm an invitation to the QEII, and she was vanned to Keeneland with stablemateAwesometank (GB), who was 10th in Woodbine’s Ricoh Woodbine Mile (G1). Awesometank made her next start last Saturday in the First Lady Presented by UK HealthCare (G1).

Haggas’ assistant Harry Eustace was at Keeneland for the First Lady Presented by UK HealthCare, in which Awesometank was sixth.

On Sunday, Magnetic Charm and jockey Florent Geroux breezed 5 furlongs on the Keeneland turf in 1:02.40.

Eustace flew back to England earlier this week and will return for the QE II.

Magnetic Charm will break from post seven in the field of nine with Geroux aboard.

“She’s very straightforward and tries incredibly hard,” Eustace said about the filly. “She ran one of her best races in Canada. She’s trained well since at Keeneland. It’s a great place for horses to come to, and she’s really blossomed since she got there. Fingers crossed, and she can run well and give the Queen something to cheer about.”

Another international competitor entered in the QE II Presented by Lane’s End is Godolphin’s Castle Lady (IRE), who made her first appearance on Keeneland’s main track Wednesday morning, galloping once around under Luc Chasserio.

Unraced since finishing fifth in the Coronation (G1) at Royal Ascot in England in June, Castle Lady arrived at Keeneland Tuesday morning and trained on Keeneland’s all-weather training track.

Trainer Henri-Alex Pantall is scheduled to arrive in Lexington Friday night.


GALLOPING OUT

R.A. Hill Stable and Gatsas Stables’ Vekoma, winner of this spring’s Toyota Blue Grass (G2), “is ready to go back in training,” trainer George Weaver said Wednesday morning.

Unraced since finishing 12th in the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (G1), Vekoma is at nearby Margaux Farm in Midway.

“He grabbed a quarter at Saratoga (while in training this summer) and just wasn’t 100 percent,” Weaver said about the hoof injury

Weaver has Jim and Susan Hill’s Daddy Is a Legend back in his barn after she had a vacation at Margaux.

“She worked a half-mile on the grass (:50.80) on Sunday for Rusty (Arnold) and came back to my barn two days ago,” Weaver said. “I’d like to possibly run her before the end of the meet (Oct. 26).”

Nominated to the Rood & Riddle Dowager (G3) on Oct. 20, Daddy Is a Legend has not raced since finishing third in the Just a Game (G1) in June. She is a two-time Grade 3 winner with graded stakes placing in five other races.

UPCOMING STAKES PROBABLES

$150,000 Sycamore (G3) (Entries taken Saturday; race Thursday, Oct. 17) – Focus Group (trainer Chad Brown), Marzo(Mike Maker), Space Mountain (Maker).

$150,000 Pin Oak Valley View (G3) (Entries taken Sunday; race Friday, Oct. 18) – Blowout (GB) (Chad Brown), Carnival Colors (GB) (Mike Stidham), Catch a Bid (Brown), Maxim Rate (Simon Callaghan), Turf War (Brown), Winning Envelope(Chris Block), Winter Sunset (Wayne Catalano).

$250,000 Lexus Raven (G2) (Entries taken Wednesday, Oct. 16; Saturday; race Saturday, Oct. 19) – Bell’s the One (Neil Pessin), Oxy Lady (Jack Sisterson).

$125,000 Rood & Riddle Dowager (G3) (Entries taken Thursday, Oct. 17; race Sunday, Oct. 20) – Gaining (GB) (Brad Cox), Lafta (Patrick Biancone).

 

 

Jennie Rees is a communications and advocacy specialist in the horse industry who spent 32 years covering horse racing for The (Louisville) Courier-Journal before taking a corporate buyout. In addition to handling communications for the Kentucky HBPA, Rees is Kentucky Downs’ publicity director, manages in-season racing publicity for Ellis Park and serves as a consultant to the National HBPA. Other projects include the Preakness Stakes, Indiana Grand’s Indiana Derby Week and work for various HBPA affiliates and horsemen’s associations.