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Centennial Farms Ranks Top Ten Buyers Session One

By | Latest News, Pure Excitement, Rising Star, Securitiz, True to Form

New Partnership Formed 2013 Rising Star, LLC

The Centennial Acquisition Team worked diligently to comprise a “keeper” list of twelve colts for the 2013 September Keeneland Yearling Sale. All these individuals met our strict conformation requirements. While bidding was highly competitive, we were able to secure three top prospects during the first session on Monday ranking Centennial among the top ten buyers.

These colts are represented by some of the most well respected stallions in the thoroughbred world today: Dynaformer, Tapit and Tiznow. Following the sale closely, the remaining colts on our list sold well above our price range with three of the nine selling for over $1,000,000. After looking at all results over the first four day we feel that we were able to get great value and the new Keeneland format of combining books one and two worked in our favor.

Striking Dynaformer Colt – Hip 92

Horizon Colts Arrive at Belmont

By | Horizon, Juba, Latest News, Wicked Strong

Both Juba and Wicked Strong had their first three furlong breeze on June 19 at Belmont and continue to impress Jimmy Jerkens. The slideshow is comprised of photos taken on June 7.

Salisbury Knight shipped in good order from Middleburg, Virginia on June 18 to Jimmy Jerkens’ stable at Belmont. We look forward to their continued workout schedule and debut at historic Saratoga Racecourse.

Remembering Colonial Affair

By | Colonial Affair, Latest News

Written by Centennial President Don Little, Jr.

As the Triple Crown season is approaching, I wanted to reflect on one of its historic moments. In light of Colonial Affair’s death this week at the age of 23, my mind kicked into gear remembering that rainy Saturday in June 1993.

My father, Don Little, Sr., had no recollection of the weather stating “the sun is shining in the Big Apple” on ABC for the whole racing world to see. As the horses turned for home, I was watching in an area away from our hopeful and excited partners. I could not really see clearly through the fog but heard the call. I slowly advanced back to the owners’ box where people began to cheer “come on Julie!” They of course were cheering for Julie Krone, the female jockey aboard our entry Colonial Affair in the 1993 Belmont Stakes. Could this mark the first Triple Crown victory by a female jockey? The crowd was encouraging her down the stretch and our partners were cheering even louder. Eyes full of excitement and joy as he crossed the finish line in front of a field of 14.

History had been made on the 20th anniversary of Secretariat’s record 30 length victory. It has been almost twenty years since that great day. Most of the partners were new to horse ownership, something Centennial has always taken pride in. Many are still involved in some way to this day. A few things have changed since then as both trainer Scotty Schulhoffer and my father are no longer with us. The love of the sport and the thoroughbred continues on with the Centennial Farms’ family. Thanks to all our partners especially Betty Moran and Fred Martin, Colonial Affair’s groom Vicente Zapien, Scotty’s assistant Sal Russo, Dr. Stephen Carr, Paula Parsons and most of all to Julie Krone who made the dreams of many become a reality.

They say things come in threes, the number three that is. It was a Triple Crown race in 1993. It is Centennial’s thirtieth anniversary so maybe that dream once again will become reality with the new crop of Centennial two year olds in 2013. May our partners, current and new, once again experience the feeling we all had on that rainy Saturday in June.

Who knows, maybe my father and Scotty are watching him breeze right now.

Centennial’s Colonial Affair Dies in Argentina

By | Colonial Affair, Latest News

Courtesy of BloodHorse.com

Belmont Stakes (gr. I) winner Colonial Affair died on the morning of April 23 at Haras El Paraiso in the Buenos Aires province of Argentina.

The 23-year-old son of Pleasant Colony—Snuggle, by Nijinsky II, was shipped to Haras El Paraiso in 2003. He was previously retired from stallion duty.

Owners Pablo and Victoria Duggan reported in an e-mail message that Colonial Affair was found dead in his paddock, possibly of a heart attack or some other infirmity of old age. The owners said the stallion would be buried at their horse cemetery.

“It was a honor for us to be able to stand such a good horse at our farm,” they wrote.

Colonial Affair helped Julie Krone make history in 1993 by becoming the first female jockey to win the Belmont Stakes (gr. I) and first to win any of the Triple Crown races. He won three other graded stakes—the Jockey Club Gold Cup (gr. I), Whitney Handicap (gr. I), and the Excelsior Handicap (gr. II)—all in 1994.

Out of 20 career starts, Colonial Affair won seven times and placed in another seven races. His career earnings totaled $1,635,228.

He has sired 15 U.S. stakes winners and 20 worldwide, including the Argentine group I winner Cafrune, who was bred by El Paraiso and has won 15 stakes to date.

Virginia-bred Colonial Affair and Julie Krone made history together

By | Colonial Affair, Latest News

by Nick Hahn – Reprinted with permission www.theracingbiz.com

With no Virginia-bred headed to Louisville for the Kentucky Derby, recently departed Colonial Affair will remain the most recent state-bred to win a Triple Crown race.

Twenty years ago, Colonial Affair provided a landmark win with major impacts, one immediately apparent after the Belmont Stakes and one that would go unrecognized for years to come.

Colonial Affair died in his stall apparently of natural causes on April 23. The 23-year old had been retired from stallion duties in Argentina, where he stood for about a decade.

In delivering the wide sweeping Belmont Stakes win, Julie Krone became the first female jockey to win a Triple Crown Race — a milestone win that crossed over into mainstream media.

Colonial Affair was bred by Herman Greenberg’s Rutledge Farm in Middleburg, sired by a Virginia stallion that won the Kentucky Derby in 1981, Pleasant Colony. He was out of the winless Nijinsky II mare Snuggle.

“(Colonial Affair) was a big, scopy horse that could cover distances in an effortless motion,” recalls winning owner Don Little of Centennial Farms. “He kicked it up a notch when the tack was put on him. Otherwise he was lying down.”

Paula Parsons , the farm trainer for Centennial Farms, broke Colonial Affair in Middleburg.

“He was a big, quiet horse that was easy to ride,” confirmed Parsons. “Certainly not obnoxious as colts can be at that age.”

Centennial picked up Colonial Affair at the 1991 Saratoga yearling sale for $100,000, a deal if you could see potential.

“Funny thing about Pleasant Colony was that he was one of the least impressive horses to look at while Colonial Affair was good looking,” said Little. “He must have got it from his mother (Snuggle). But we knew Pleasant Colony was a sire of horses that would get the distance. He was a big lanky colt but you could look past that and picture what he would look like as a grownup.”

Little passed on the Derby and Preakness, despite the obvious allure, to have Colonial Affair at his best in the Belmont Stakes.

“Belmont was the target,” explains Little. “We didn’t pay any attention to the Derby or the Preakness. Our focus was to win a classic distance type of race.”

After Krone’s determined ride in the middle of the Belmont stretch, it may not have figured that Colonial Affair would be the last Virginia-bred to stroll into a Triple Crown winner’s circle.

His victory came during a renaissance of Virginia racing, a golden age. Hansel won the Preakness in 1991. In the Belmont starting gate with Colonial Affair was Paul Mellon’s Sea Hero, the reigning Kentucky Derby winner.

The impact of this mini-golden age was a huge asset in bringing in-state racing to life in Virginia. In October of that same year, the Virginia Racing Commission set a deadline for track construction applications. New applicants were interested thanks to the passing of simulcast wagering legislation earlier in the year in the General Assembly. A little over a year after Colonial Affair’s Belmont, the Virginia Racing Commission awarded an unlimited license to Stansley Racing.

It would have been ideal for Virginia breeders if the state had had racing during the early Nineties. Capitalizing on those on-track successes might have led to changes that would still be apparent. The number of Virginia-bred registered foals increased briefly in 1994 and then again when Colonial Downs finally opened. Currently however, it’s a little over a third of what is was in 1993.

“We never had a program to reward breeders,” observed Parsons. “It’s hard to know how much a lack of the program hurt us because we were successful despite not having one.”

Yet despite a diminishing foal crop, Virginia-breds continue to produce quality if not quantity, results. Quality Road and Bodemeister have launched legitimate campaigns in recent year looking to hang a Triple Crown blanket on a Virginia-bred label. Quality Road would have been the favorite in the Kentucky Derby in 2010 if not for a quarter-crack. Last year, if not for I’ll Have Another, Bodemeister, first runner up in the Derby and Preakness might have made a Triple Crown bid in the Belmont stakes.

Within the last month Swagger Jack became Virginia’s latest Grade one winner in the $400,000 Carter Handicap.

As for this year’s class, Code West is the best chance for a Virginia-bred to make a Triple Crown starting gate, probably in the Belmont Stakes.

Julie Krone, meanwhile, remains the only female jockey to win a Triple Crown race. Rosie Napravnik will attempt to add to that list when she rides Mylute in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.

Offspring of Three Top Sires Join Centennial Roster

By | Horizon, Juba, Latest News, Wicked Strong

New colts make up the 2012 Horizon, LLC

Tapit, Hard Spun and Bernardini are three of the hottest sires in the world today as well as the sires of the three new yearling colts that are the assets of Centennial’s new 2012 Horizon, LLC.

The colts were recent purchases from the Keeneland September Yearling Sale which saw high demand for quality horses and a great deal of competitive bidding between leading buyers. Centennial ranked in the top fifteen buyers at the conclusion of Thursday’s session. Our Acquisition Team worked diligently, sticking to a plan and budget that worked well to secure three spectacular individuals that fit the Centennial model of athletic ability, conformation and pedigree.

Total capitalization for this new partnership is $1,480,000 with all expenses paid through the end of 2013. There is a very attractive investment incentive to participate before year-end as both the accelerated depreciation and expense allowance within the horse industry will expire on December 31, 2012.

For more information on the colts click on the Horizon Partnership on the left hand side of the page. Please feel free to contact with the office with any questions.

Hard Spun colt purchased for $375,000

Chelokee Sires First Winner

By | Chelokee, Latest News

Chelokee’s two-year-olds marked their first win for the stallion over the weekend at Prairie Meadows. Filly Lady Kee won by 5 ½ lengths in a Maiden Special Weight race on July 8. She ran the 4 ½ furlong race in :52.71.

We hope that Centennial’s Beat Of the Drum will add to Chelokee’s success as a stallion when he begins his racing career later this summer or early fall. He has been training well at the farm and we are excited about his prospects.

Donald Little – A Life Remembered

By | Latest News

Horses were a passion throughout a well-lived life

Donald V. Little, the founder and chairman of Centennial Farms, died on February 29th from injuries sustained from a jumping accident during the Masters Classic in the International Arena at the Winter Equestrian Festival in Wellington, Florida.

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Mr. Little inherited a love of horses from his mother, the accomplished horsewoman Janice Snow. He shared this passion with his loving wife of 57 years, Judith Lewis Little, his two children, Andrea Little Eaton and Donald V. Little Jr., and anyone else he could convince to get on a horse or to learn about racing.

Mr. Little was a talented horseman who began his lifelong obsession with the sporting life while foxhunting and show jumping during his pre-teen years. As a teenager, he won several steeplechase races before, at age 16, he used $500 saved from jobs worked during high school to purchase his first thoroughbred, Gladhadagal. The goal was to compete at regional fairs in New England and it was with overflowing enthusiasm that Mr. Little prepared Gladhadagal for a start at the Topsfield Fair by galloping her around the polo fields at Myopia Hunt Club in Hamilton, Massachusetts. Mr. Little’s hopes of equine success with Gladhadagal were quickly dashed when the filly reared up after hearing the ringing of the bell for the call of the post, dropped her rider, and retreated to the barn.

Despite that inauspicious beginning, Mr. Little’s passion for thoroughbreds only grew as he matured. He rarely retreated and always sought the means and people to move forward.

Following two years at the University of Pennsylvania studying to be a veterinarian, Mr. Little joined the Air Force, where he spent six years flying B-47 bombers. At the time, Mr. Little was the youngest aircraft commander of the select Strategic Air Command.

After ending his military service and returning to the North Shore of Boston, horses resumed their position as a true passion in Mr. Little’s life.

Mr. Little dabbled with some claiming horses at Suffolk Downs, but his desire was to enter the winner’s circle in the premier races. Combining his savvy business sense and expert horsemanship, Mr. Little, with the backing of two lifelong friends – Tony Woodruff and Judson Streicher – started Centennial Farms in 1982 with the goal of sharing his passion for horses with others and winning races at the highest levels of the sport.

Before purchasing any horses to race in the tan and red Centennial Farm’s colors, Mr. Little hired a pair of recent Harvard Business School graduates to conduct research on the thoroughbred markets. The result was one of the core philosophies of Centennial Farms: Purchase horses from the premier sales with both the bloodlines and conformation, and those horses will appeal to the leading breeding farms throughout the world if they are successful on the track.

To further improve Centennial’s odds for success, Mr. Little hired two seasoned experts of the thoroughbred business – Dr. Stephen Carr and Paula Parsons – to join the Centennial team. Dr. Carr, who Mr. Little met playing polo in Aiken, South Carolina, was a leading veterinarian at the premier thoroughbred tracks on the prestigious New York/ Florida circuit. Ms. Parsons was a thoroughbred trainer highly respected within the tight-knit racing community for her ability to spot talented young horses and to provide those colts and fillies the education and training needed before they ship to the racetrack to begin their careers.

In 1983, with five or six investors and the assistance of Carr and Parsons, Mr. Little purchased a colt from Danzig’s first crop and named him Nordance. That colt won the Pilgrim Stakes as a two-year-old before being retired to stud in Great Britain, returning a substantial profit for his partners. High class stakes-winning fillies Top Issue and Silent Account soon followed and Centennial quickly established itself as one of the premier stables in North American horse racing. Throughout the 1980s, Mr. Little and Centennial competed in the heady bloodstock markets of the time, bidding against the likes of the Maktoum family of Dubai, D. Wayne Lukas, and Allen Paulson for the most fashionable bloodstock at the leading thoroughbred auctions.

While Mr. Little was enjoying major success in the thoroughbred business, the entire equine world benefited from his passion for horses. In 1989 Mr. Little founded the Boston Jumper Classic, bringing Olympic Caliber International Show Jumping to the region. The event has grown into a top equine event in New England and one of the premier show jumping events in the country.

It was also during this period that he served as Captain of Polo at Myopia Hunt Club in Hamilton Massachusetts, President of the United States Polo Association, and began his longtime post of Joint Master and then Master of the Hunt at the Myopia Hunt Club. Mr. Little continued as Master until his death.

While winners and success were on display throughout the 1980s – including total earnings of $873,732 in 1986 – Mr. Little and Centennial would make a major change in the early 1990s that would lead to some of his most memorable accomplishments in thoroughbred racing. In 1991, Mr. Little hired veteran trainer Scotty Schulhofer and they enjoyed a tour de force through the most prestigious races on the NYRA circuit. This included dominating the sprint division with Rubiano, who would be voted Champion Sprinter for 1992.

Just a year later, a late developing colt would provide Mr. Little with arguably his biggest victory of a lifetime filled with equine accomplishments. In a mild upset, Colonial Affair captured the 125 th running of the Belmont Stakes, the longest and third jewel of thoroughbred racing’s Triple Crown. Many remember the victory for the accomplishment of jockey Julie Krone, who at the time became the only female jockey to ever win a Triple Crown race.

Despite his own success, Mr. Little was always willing and actively looking to share his passion for horses with others. He served as an early adviser to billionaire Carl Ichan when the fellow investor decided to enter the thoroughbred business during the 1990s. At this time, Mr. Little raised a substantial portion of the millions of dollars needed to reopen and renovate Suffolk Downs after the Boston track was closed for two years.

Centennial Farms went through major changes in the late 1990’s, including the retirement of trainer Scotty Schulhofer and the transition as Donald V. Little, Jr., took over day-to-day operations. However, the company continued to enjoy considerable success and that success continues. King Cugat dominated the turf divisions throughout North America from 1999-2001, finishing on the board in 15 of 16 career races and earning over $1.2 million in purses.

Mr. Little could often be seen at the major races with Centennial throughout the last few years. He attended races all over the East Coast by flying the single engine Navion plane inherited from his stepfather. It was during this period that Mr. Little got to witness arguably the most memorable to date of the Centennial racehorses. In 2006, the talented but temperamental chestnut named Corinthian carried the Centennial colors to victory in some of the most prestigious races on the thoroughbred calendar. After establishing himself as a leading contender for the 2006 Triple Crown, Corinthian was sidelined until the beginning of 2007 with a minor injury. Centennial’s patience paid big dividends. Reappearing as a 4-year-old, Corinthian won two races impressively in Florida before capturing the Metropolitan Handicap and earning himself a future career as a stallion in Kentucky. Corinthian would end his career in the pouring rain at Monmouth Park in 2007, winning the inaugural running of the $1,000,000 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile at Monmouth Park. As with most victories, Mr. Little’s greatest thrill with Corinthian’s success was that he was able to enjoy it in the company of great friends, some of whom he introduced to thoroughbred ownership.

Mr. Little will always be remembered for his specific, tangible contributions to the world of horse racing, polo and fox hunting. However, these accomplishments only suggests his true impact on the equestrian community, which was to challenge, inspire and most of all encourage any horse enthusiast and rider who had the privilege to cross his path. We here at Centennial Farms will always appreciate and be thankful for the time we spent in Mr. Little’s company, and for the guidance and wisdom he provided. We look forward to Centennial Farm’s continued success in his honor.

A memorial service will be held at Noon on Thursday, March 8, 2012, at the Christ the Redeemer Anglican Church, 188 Elliott St , Danvers, Massachusetts. A reception will follow at the Myopia Hunt Club Hamilton, MA.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to: Fisher House Boston, 111 Rockville Pike, Suite 420, Rockville, MD 20850, Dana Farber Cancer Institute & Jimmy Fund, 10 Brookline Place West, 6th Floor, Brookline, MA 02445, Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, PO Box 3387, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, or the Life Fund FBO, Boston Park Rangers Mounted Unit, 125 The Fenway, Boston, MA 02115.

Arch Traveler Wins Ziggy’s Boy Stakes

By | Arch Traveler, Latest News

By Dave Grening – Courtesy of DRF

Arch Traveler has the pedigree and the body type to suggest that he will go a distance of ground, but the 3-year-old colt demonstrated again on Thursday that shorter races may be his forte.

Under Jose Lezcano, Arch Traveler slipped through an opening along the rail in mid-stretch, then spurted clear to win Thursday’s $60,000 Ziggy’s Boy Stakes by three lengths. Glickman, who set the pace under Eddie Castro, finished second by three-quarters of a length over the late-running Rocking Out. Free Entry and The Fed Eased completed the order of finish.

Arch Traveler raced a close-up fourth while rating on the inside behind fractions of seconds and 45.58 seconds set by Glickman. Coming to the top of the stretch, Lezcano got into a brief wrestling match with Arch Traveler before guiding him through a narrow opening along the rail. It took a few strides before Arch Traveler would go through the opening, but once he did he closed in a solid 12.48 seconds for the final furlong.

Arch Traveler, a son of Sky Mesa owned by Centennial Farms, covered the seven furlongs in 1:21.87 and returned $3.80 to win.

“He doesn’t accelerate right away,” Jerkens said, adding that Lezcano told him “you feel like you turn the reins loose he’s going to surge, but he doesn’t, he stays there. You got to ask him, then he’ll go.”

Arch Traveler was making his first start since finishing sixth in the Grade 1 Florida Derby on April 3. Before that, he won a first-level allowance race going 1 1/8 miles after winning a seven-furlong maiden race. Those efforts came three weeks apart at Gulfstream.

“He probably prefers this, but I think he could win at a route in the right spot,” trainer Jimmy Jerkens said.

Jerkens said that the Grade 2, $250,000 Woody Stephens here on June 11 is a logical next start for Arch Traveler.

On the Triple Crown Trail!

By | Arch Traveler, Latest News

Arch Traveler joins Triple Crown chase with allowance win

Arch Traveler took another step towards the Triple Crown trail and a potential start against graded-stakes company with a sharp victory over a strong allowance field on Saturday, February 26 at Gulfstream Park.

A son of Sky Mesa, Arch Traveler was coming back on less than three weeks rest while making his debut beyond seven-furlongs.

While questions were asked before the race about the quick turnaround and extended distance, the colt passed both tests with high marks to establish himself as a possible starter for either the $1,000,000 G1-Florida Derby on April 3 or the $750,000 G1-Wood Memorial on April 9.

Trained by Jimmy Jerkens, the colt broke sharply and he was briefly in front as the field entered the first turn. At that point, jockey Jose Lezcano slowed down the pace and took Arch Traveler back to second, where he settled a half-length off the lead as the field moved down the backside. Arch Traveler moved to the front as the field turned for home before kicking clear through the final eighth of a mile. Nacho Business made a bold move late, but Arch Traveler was always safe, posting a ¾-length victory to confirm his status as one of the better three-year-olds on the East Coast.

“He’s now run three races pretty quickly by today’s standings but I wanted to get this one under his belt,” said Jerkens. “There’s a chance he could come back in the Florida Derby. We’ll see if there are any defections along the way. We’ve got plenty of time to decide but this could also give us the chance to wait until we get back to New York.”

Arch Traveler was purchased by the Centennial Farms selection team of Dr. Stephen Carr, Paula Parsons and Don Little, Jr. at the 2009 Keeneland September Yearling Sale for $260,000.

The colt now shows a record of 2-1-1 from 4 starts for $60,250. Arch Traveler is currently ranked as #25 on the NTRA Triple Crown prospects poll.