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Cox to Disperse Breeding Stock Edward A. Cox, Jr., who has successfully bred, sold and raced
horses for more than 35 years, announced plans to disperse his broodmares and weanlings at
Keenelands November Breeding stock sale on November 8. The closing of
Arlington Park and the death of several close friends in the horse business caused me to
reevaluate my priorities at a stage in life when its time to slow down, Cox
said.
Cox, 62, a commodities broker and member of the Chicago Board of Trade for 37 years,
resides in Oak Brook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.
With a band of broodmares that numbered between 10 and 15, he bred in his name or in a
partnership more than 25 stakes winners including two champions and a classic winner.
Cox is a regular consignor to Keenelands July Selected Yearling Sale and raced a
small stable that campaigned primarily in Illinois, Kentucky and Florida.
From Coxs consignment in the 1984 summer sale came Irish champion and leading sire
Woodman, and European champion two-year-old of 1985, Bakharoff. He also sold Shaadi,
winner of the 1989 Two Thousand Guineas, and Grade 1 stakes winners Marquetry and Jade
Hunter.
Cox typically sold the colts he bred and raced the fillies, including a pair of Grade 1
stakes winners Bankers Lady and Classy Cathy. Both are among the broodmares
in his dispersal. Cox also campaigned stakes winners Impetuous Gal, Regal Gal, Ms. Margi,
Sum, Royal Cielo and Sports View.
Cox is a long-time client of Claiborne Farm in Paris, Kentucky. He also bred and sold
horses in partnership with the late Warner L. Jones, Jr. His trainer and friend for more
than 25 years, Joe Bollero, died in 1991.
Claiborne Farm is agent for the dispersal, which includes broodmares in foal to A.P. Indy,
Pulpit, Unbridled, Seeking the Gold, Benny the Dip and Hennessy. Also selling are
weanlings by Seeking the Gold, Thunder Gulch, A.P. Indy, Gone West, Hennessy and Go For
Gin.
Janney, Host Named to Keeneland Board
Stuart Janney III, who resides in Butler, Maryland,
and W. James Host, of Lexington, have been appointed to the board of directors of the
Keeneland Association.
Janney, who is chairman of Bessemer Trust Company,
N.A., and Bessemer Securities Corporation, is the owner of Coronados Quest.
Coronados Quest won the Grade I Travers Stakes, the Grade I Haskell Stakes, the
Grade II Dwyer Stakes, the Grade II Wood Memorial and the Grade II Riva Ridge this year.
In addition, Janney is associated with a number of organizations. Janney is the chairman
of the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, steward of the Jockey Club,
chairman of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab, trustee of Johns Hopkins Medicine and
Johns Hopkins University, director of the Maryland Horsebreeders Association,
director of the National Thoroughbred Association and chairman of the Maryland Zoological
Society.
Host is chairman and chief executive officer of
Lexington-based Host Communications, which has 21 offices nationwide. Founded in 1971, the
company has become nationally known for college sports marketing and association
management. Host Communications has handled all corporate marketing, publishing and radio
for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) since 1976. In addition, the
company owns the worldwide rights outside the United States for the NCAA in television and
merchandising in a joint-venture with another group.
Host Communications also does work for a number of
nationally known universities like the University of Kentucky, the University of Tennessee
and Notre Dame.
This year, Host Communications was merged with
Thomas O. Hicks, a Dallas financier, to form Host/USA.
Jockey Club Releases 1997 Breeding Stats
As of September 1, 1998 the Jockey
Club reported, that 4,979 stallions covered 60,054 mares on Northern Hemisphere time in
1997. These coverings have resulted in 34,033 foals of 1998 being reported to the Jockey
Club on Live Foal Reports received as of August 31.
Jockey Club vice president of registration services,
Roger Shook, warned that 1998 foal count is not complete. He estimated that only 90
percent of live foal reports have been received.
A small percentage of breeders have not
submitted their live foal reports on time which makes its difficult to meaningfully
compare these statistics to those of the previous year, he said. However, the
nominal increases in the number of mares bred and live foals so far reported support our
1998 foal crop forecast of 36,000.
The number of stallions decreased 4.6 percent from
the 5,220 reported in 1996 at this time last year. There was a 0.6 percent increase on the
59,719 mares reported in 1996. The Jockey Club stressed that the statistics should not be
taken as representing the fertility record of any one stallion.
Thoroughbred breeding activity in Kentucky outpaced
all other regions. In the Bluegrass State, 17,934 mares reported bred in 1997 produced
12,165 live foals (1996/97, 16,895 mares bred/ 11,288 live foals). Florida reported 6,041
mares bred and 3,622 live foals (5,895/3,455) while California reported 4,812 mares bred
and 3,075 live foals (4,919/2,985).
Remaining states on the top 10 breeding activity
list in 1997 were: Texas, reporting 3,903 mares bred and 1,774 live foals (3,939/1,820);
Oklahoma, 2,192/940 (2,325/1,080); Maryland, 2,150/1,265 (2,205/1,314); Louisiana,
1,878/1,018 (2,018/1,079); Washington, 1,765/907 (1,896/890); New York, 1,757/1,036
(1,654/1,015); and Illinois, 1,328/622 (1,307/601). The statistics include 197 progeny
sired by stallions standing in North America but foaled abroad, as reported by foreign
stud book authorities at the time of publication. In this category, 53 live foals by North
American stallions were reported from Venezuela (32 reported in 1997). Second was Great
Britain, which reported 40 (10) foals.
1998 Churchill Downs Fall Meet Stakes Schedule
November 1, Ack Ack (Grade III)
$100,000 November 6, Pocahantas $100,000 November 7, Abrogate $100,000; Iroqouis (Grade
III) $100,000; Cardinal (Grade III, turf) $150,000; Breeders Cup Championship Day of
Racing (Juvenile Fillies, Sprint, Distaff, Mile, Juvenile, Turf and Classic) November 8,
River City (Grade III, turf) $150,000 November 14, Churchill Downs Distaff (Grade II)
$200,000 November 21, Ms. Revere (Grade II, turf) $150,000 November 26, Falls City (Grade
III) $250,000 November 27, Clark Handicap (Grade II) $400,000 November 28, Golden Rod
(Grade III) $200,000; Brown & Williamson Kentucky Jockey Club (Grade II) $200,000 Post
times are at 1:00 P.M. Tuesday through Sunday, November 1-28. Gates open at 11:30 A.M.
Post times for Thanksgiving Day and Closing Weekend
are 11:30 A.M. Gates will open at 10:00 A.M.
For more information call: (502) 636-4400. |