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Other Animals : Curlin's Owner
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The number of members that recommended this message. 0 recommendations  Message 1 of 7 in Discussion 
  (Original Message)Sent: 10/23/2008 2:51 AM
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The number of members that recommended this message. 0 recommendations  Message 2 of 7 in Discussion 
Sent: 10/23/2008 2:52 AM
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 Message 3 of 7 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameballetcatterrieSent: 10/23/2008 2:53 AM
Jess Jackson is a new breed of owner 
 
In the business only since 2003, Jackson wants horses to race longer to please the public.  That includes horse of the year Curlin.
 
October 19, 2008 by Bill Dwyre - There are at least two ways to ponder the vision of a Cal sophomore named Jess Jackson, playing football in the late 1940s for the semipro San Francisco Seagulls against the Petaluma Leghorns.  Without a helmet.  One is the obvious: He is how he is today because of the hits he took back then.  Or the other: Anybody who would do that is stubborn, tough, hard-charging and unstoppable.  With the benefit of hindsight, we can assume the latter.  Jackson is 78 now, ranked somewhere around No. 500 by Forbes magazine in its list of the richest people in the world. He has been a successful San Francisco lawyer and an even more successful vintner. With his first wife, Jane Kendall, he founded Kendall-Jackson Winery 26 years ago. Most likely, you've either sipped it or heard of it.  Suffice to say, he and his will never want for anything.  Also suffice to say, most billionaires in his position, at his age, would have found a comfortable rocking chair next to a big fireplace to sit and count their money.  Instead, in his early 70s, Jackson got his hands off the wine business little by little in a sort of slow retirement that seldom goes easily with hands-on people.  "He was driving all the people around the business crazy," says Barbara Banke, his wife.  So, what does a guy do who loved to play rugby as well as football, who as a high school quarterback in San Francisco played against Ollie Matson, who not only loved the physical action, but the visual as well? What does a guy do who can recall the "wonderful charm of the Bing Crosby days at Del Mar racetrack?" Or who loves to talk about seeing Seabiscuit and Silky Sullivan?  What indeed?  He goes into horse racing. He buys horses, buys farms to breed them and raise them. He gets one of the best trainers in the world, Steve Asmussen, to prepare them so he can race them. He spends gobs of money, knowing full well it may be years before he gets any back.  And then, if he is Jess Jackson, he hits the jackpot.   Today is the start of Breeders' Cup week, leading to Saturday's Breeders' Cup Classic, where all eyes will be on Jackson's jackpot, the horse named Curlin, of which he owns 80%. When Curlin leaves the starting gate at Santa Anita, along with 13 others all seeking the winner's portion of the $5-million purse, racing may be in for an upheaval.  Jackson's Curlin is the star, and a victory Saturday would make him horse of the year for the second straight year, as well as a repeat Breeders' Cup Classic champ. Both are huge deals in racing, and to the owner of that excellence goes both the right, and the leverage, to be heard.  That Jackson is still racing Curlin, the 2007 Preakness winner, at age 4 is telling. More so is that, even with Curlin's breeding value already through the roof, Jackson is not necessarily looking at this race as the last one for Curlin.  "I am pursuing a vision I have for him," Jackson says.  As a relative newcomer to the thoroughbred world -- he started his buying and breeding operation in 2003 -- he has the chance to move the needle a bit in an industry that has been driving 55 mph for 55 years.  He talks about running Curlin as a 5-year-old so he could show racing that it can be done, that stars such as Curlin, with proper care and handling, can be extended in time as a gesture to a racing public that pays the bills and has always shown an appetite for great older horses.   Jackson talks about starting a racing league, with maybe 150 older horses, with a commissioner who would actually have some power over that league, and with a Triple Crown-type series that offered similar money, similar exposure and a less-dangerous time frame between races.   His theory is that, once the value is seen of keeping horses around, the industry's biggest problem will be reversed.  "Isn't it enough that we have had Barbaro, and Eight Belles?" he says. "When do we stop racing to breed when we should be breeding to race?"  Certainly, Jackson is not alone in this. After these highly publicized breakdowns in recent Triple Crown races, the Jockey Club, the sport's most powerful entity, has been hard at work on plans and strategy.  But it appears Jackson isn't enamored of the current power structure of his sport.  "The entire industry is controlled by a bunch of breeders in central Kentucky," he says.  The likelihood is that Curlin will not run as a 5-year-old, even though Jackson always uses the phrase "I'm tempted" when asked. He is torn because he also sees the value of introducing Curlin's genes into the thoroughbred pool as soon as possible.  It also could happen that Curlin throws in a clinker in the Breeders' Cup and his value as a future beacon for the sport drops. But the horse has already done enough to give Jackson a pulpit, and, as it did in the 1990s with the late Bob Lewis and his phenomenal success, the establishment is watching and listening.  Lewis sent two horses in three years to the Belmont with a shot at a Triple Crown. Jackson has a horse of the year and a Breeders' Cup Classic winner, with a great chance of having the words "two-time" put in front of both designations. He also has the top money-winning horse in the history of North American racing in Curlin's current $10-million-plus career.  Add to that the fact that the most expensive purchase at the September yearling sale in Lexington, a filly sired by A.P. Indy with the broodmare Chimichurri, was from Stonestreet Stables in Kentucky, owned and operated by Jackson. The filly brought $3.1 million, from Sheikh Muhammad, ruler of Dubai.   So it has been a good year for the man who proudly calls himself a "14th-generation American," who was born in downtown L.A., a short drive from Santa Anita's track, and who not only has a passion for the business success brought by Curlin, but a passion for Curlin.  "He knows when I'm there," Jackson says. "I could lay down and sleep right under him in the barn, and he'd never step on me."  To know what it is dealing with, racing needs only to know Jackson's answer to the question of why he would play football without a helmet.  "For the love of the game," he says, "and a beer."

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 Message 4 of 7 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameballetcatterrieSent: 10/23/2008 2:55 AM

 

 

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 Message 5 of 7 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknamethe_slewSent: 10/23/2008 9:58 PM
Curlin.....what a super 4YO he has turned out to be.  I wish him good luck in his bid for the Breeder's Cup Classic this Sat.......

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 Message 6 of 7 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknamethe_slewSent: 10/23/2008 10:02 PM
I also want to welcome Alysheba home!!!  We are so glad you are returning to us!!!!
 
Alysheba to Return to U.S.
Date Posted: October 23, 2008
Last Updated: October 23, 2008

Alysheba to Return to U.S.
1988 Breeders' Cup Classic winner and Horse of the Year Alysheba will reside at the Kentucky Horse Park.
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Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt

Horse of the Year and Kentucky Derby (gr. I) winner Alysheba is returning to the United States from Saudi Arabia. He will reside in the Hall of Champions at the Kentucky Horse Park.

According to a release from the Kentucky Horse Park, the public is invited to the Kentucky Horse Park for Alysheba’s welcome home reception, Oct. 31 at 1:15 pm in the Hall of Champions.

Until two-time Horse of the Year Cigar, who also resides at the Horse Park, came along, Alysheba was the world’s richest Thoroughbred, with earnings of $6,679,242.

Alysheba, who was known on the track as “America’s horse,�?has spent the last eight years in the royal stables of HRH King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, after standing his first years at stud at William S. Farish's Lane's End Farm in Versailles, Ky.  He will soon arrive back home on his native soil thanks to the king, who is sending Alysheba to the Kentucky Horse Park as a gift to the American people.

John Nicholson, executive director of the Kentucky Horse Park stated, “His Royal Highness King Abdullah realized how much Alysheba means to American racing fans and we are grateful for this magnanimous gift of one of his favorite horses to our country.  We are grateful as well for the great care His Majesty has provided for Alysheba.�?nbsp;

According to Frank McGovern, general manager of the king’s stables, “The king’s only concern in returning Alysheba to the United States was that priority be given to Alysheba’s well-being and that he be based somewhere that his fans could easily visit him �?hence the choice of the Kentucky Horse Park.

“Shipping a 24-year-old horse is not without risk so we had to take every precaution to ensure that the process was stress free.  Alysheba’s comfort and safety were of such importance to the king that his two-month pre-export quarantine was spent in the luxury of the ultra-modern Nad Al Sheba Quarantine Centre in Dubai.  We are very thankful to the Nad Al Sheba Quarantine team for the care and attention that they gave Alysheba during his stay there.�?/P>

Bred by Preston Madden at Hamburg Place in Lexington, Alysheba (Alydar-Bel Sheba, by Lt. Stevens) was sold as a yearling to Dorothy and Pam Scharbauer for $500,000.  They campaigned him under the guidance of Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg, who said, “He stuck out like a diamond in a rock pile.�?nbsp; Later, Van Berg observed, “He was so smart he knew what he was doing all the time.�?nbsp;

Alysheba won the 1987 Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes (gr. I), Super Derby (gr. I), and an Eclipse Award as champion 3-year-old colt. 

As a 4-year-old, he won six grade I stakes:  the Strub Stakes, Santa Anita Handicap, Iselin Handicap, Woodward Stakes, Meadowlands Cup, and the Breeders�?Cup Classic. He was ridden in 17 consecutive starts by Hall of Fame jockey Chris McCarron.  

His career highlights also included Horse of the Year honors, enshrinement in the racing Hall of Fame, and track records for 1 1/4 miles at Belmont and The Meadowlands. Along the way, he defeated Risen Star, Forty Niner, Bet Twice, Seeking the Gold, and another Kentucky Derby-winner, the ill-fated Ferdinand.

Nicholson continued, “Alysheba will live out the rest of his life on his native soil, in a Bluegrass pasture surrounded by white plank fences and old oak trees, where his fans can visit him daily.  It’s the kind of fairy tale ending that every champion �?every horse �?deserves, and the generosity of King Abdullah has made this possible for Alysheba.�?nbsp;

The 24-year-old Alysheba will take up residence in the stall formerly occupied by another Horse of the Year, John Henry, which is already outfitted with a heater and well-suited for an older horse.  Since Alysheba has been in a very hot climate for the past several years, it will make his transition more comfortable by ensuring he stays warm enough until his winter coat develops.  He will live across the aisle from Cigar, the second-leading money-earning Thoroughbred of all time.
            
Nicholson concluded, “It’s a very good day for Kentucky when one of our home-bred, Kentucky Derby-winning stallions returns.  We invite all of Alysheba’s fans to the Kentucky Horse Park to make him feel welcomed.�?/P>

Watch Alysheba's 1987 Kentucky Derby

Watch Alysheba's 1988 Breeders' Cup Classic


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 Message 7 of 7 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameballetcatterrieSent: 10/23/2008 10:23 PM
Oh!  Thank goodness he is HOME!

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