March 11, 2025

Curlin crowned Horse of the Year

Last updated: 1/22/08 1:29 PM












Curlin sealed Horse of the Year honors in the Breeders’ Cup Classic
(Alex Evers/Horsephotos.com)





After a brilliant season marked by twists and turns worthy of a gripping
page-turner or a blockbuster film,
CURLIN
(Smart Strike) was acclaimed Horse of the Year and champion three-year-old male at
Monday night’s Eclipse Awards ceremony at the Beverly Wilshire Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly
Hills, California. The powerful chestnut ranks as just the second horse to begin
his sophomore season as an unraced maiden and finish it as the nation’s Horse of
the Year. Since the modern era of championships dawned in 1936, only Tiznow in
2000 had achieved a similarly meteoric rise.

Curlin was purchased for $57,000 at the 2005 Keeneland September Yearling
Sale on behalf of Midnight Cry Stable, the nom de course of Shirley Cunningham
Jr. and William Gallion. Cunningham named the colt after his great-grandfather,
Charlie Curlin, a former slave and Civil War veteran.

Initially trained by Helen Pitts, Curlin made his career debut in early
February at Gulfstream Park, trouncing his nearest rival by 12 3/4 lengths. That
scintillating performance earned rave reviews and caught the attention of Jess
Jackson’s Stonestreet Stables, George Bolton, and Satish Sanan’s Padua Stables.
Those three parties soon joined forces and acquired an 80-percent interest in
Curlin for a reported $3.5 million. For the rest of the season, Curlin would
sport each owner’s silks on a rotating basis.

Curlin was promptly transferred to Steve Asmussen, who had no hesitation to
step up him into stakes company, and stretch him out to two turns, in the Rebel S. (G3)
at Oaklawn Park. Easily handling all of his new tests at once, Curlin cruised by
5 1/4 lengths. He extended his record to a perfect three-for-three in resounding
fashion in the Arkansas Derby (G2), galloping by 10 1/2 lengths. The
inexperienced Curlin endured a trial by fire in the Kentucky Derby (G1), where
he was forced to steady early and raced much farther back in the pack. He did
well in the circumstances to grab third, but he didn’t threaten Derby hero
Street Sense or runner-up Hard Spun.



Advancing rapidly on his learning curve, Curlin was about to prove his true
class in the Preakness S. (G1). After stumbling and nearly going to this knees at the break,
the chestnut regrouped and launched a stirring late rally to nail Street Sense
by a head at the wire. Curlin turned in a similarly game effort in the Belmont
S. (G1), but despite his never-say-die attitude throughout a memorable stretch
drive, he was outdueled by champion three-year-old filly Rags to Riches. After a lackluster third in the Haskell Invitational (G1) at Monmouth,
where he didn’t seem to enjoy the far turn, a much sharper Curlin wore down
champion older male Lawyer Ron in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1).

The stage was then set for the Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1), the definitive
showdown with year-end honors on the line. Judging by Curlin’s less than stellar
effort in the Haskell, it was not altogether clear that he would handle Monmouth
any better this time, especially being untested in the slop. Curlin answered
every question in the Classic. Roaring around the far turn with agility, he
outgunned the rail-hugging Street Sense as the pair commenced their rallies, and
Curlin blew past the pacesetting Hard Spun en route to a 4 1/2-length success.
With the Classic on his resume, Curlin improved his record to 9-6-1-2 and more
than doubled his earnings to $5,102,800.

Unfortunately, while Curlin covered himself in glory on the track, his
ownership was involved in a maelstrom of controversy off the track. Midnight Cry
principals Cunningham and Gallion became embroiled in legal problems arising
from their settlement of the fen-phen lawsuit, and both are currently in jail in
Boone County, Kentucky, awaiting trial. Padua was the first to bow out of the partnership,
selling its share of Curlin to Stonestreet and Bolton shortly after the
Breeders’ Cup Classic. Just a few days before Christmas, Stonestreet announced
that it had purchased Bolton’s share in the chestnut. No price was revealed for
the transaction, which boosted Stonestreet’s ownership of the colt to 80
percent. The remaining 20-percent interest is still held by Midnight Cry, but
that stake remains the subject of legal action on the part of the fen-phen
plaintiffs.

Jackson confirmed during the awards ceremony that they plan to race Curlin in
2008.

Bred in Kentucky by Fares Farm Inc., Curlin is the first stakes winner out of the unraced Sherriff’s
Deputy (Deputy Minister), who has since produced an unnamed juvenile filly by Medaglia d’Oro and an
unnamed yearling filly by Saint Liam. This is the family of 1997 champion two-year-old filly and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) victress Countess Diana (Deerhound) as well as the ill-fated multiple Grade
1-winning Exogenous (Unbridled).










DIVISION   HORSE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES*
         
HORSE OF THE YEAR   CURLIN   249
    Rags to Riches   12
    Invasor (Arg)   2
         
THREE-YEAR-OLD MALE   CURLIN   262
    Street Sense   3
    Hard Spun   1


*The tallies represent only first-place votes from members of the consolidated
voting entities, NTRA/Equibase, Daily Racing Form and National Turf
Writers Association. For each division, the three horses, or people, with the
most first-place votes are listed. 











Rags to Riches compiled a five-race winning streak while racing in top company
(Benoit Photo)


RAGS TO RICHES
(A.P. Indy) entered 2007 owning just a fourth-place finish in
her maiden debut but exited the year with her name firmly established in the
history books, not only as champion three-year-old filly but also as the first
filly in 102 years to win the prestigious Belmont.

The Todd Pletcher-trained miss made her sophomore bow on January 7 at Santa
Anita, and dominated a maiden special weight field of six rivals by six lengths.
She stayed at that venue and stretched out for her next one, making her stakes
debut in the Las Virgenes S. (G1), and gave the first indication that she was
something really special in that one-mile event. Breaking to the right when the
gates opened, Rags to Riches stayed five wide around the turn and four wide down
the backstretch, running farther than any of her rivals on that day. She
continued her wide trip down the stretch, but the added ground didn’t affect her
chances as she stormed home a three-quarter of a length victress in a
spectacular display.

The blaze-faced lass continued her dominance in the three-year-old filly
ranks on the West Coast in her next start, the Santa Anita Oaks (G1). Once again
parked wide, but not as wide as in the Las Virgenes, Rags to Riches loped along
while tracking the pace before putting in her devastating outside run to score
by 5 1/2 lengths. Talk immediately began of entering the flashy chestnut in the
Santa Anita Derby (G1) about a month later, and possibly even the Kentucky Derby
(G1) two months down the road, but her connections decided to keep her running
against the fillies, a move that paid major dividends next out in the Kentucky
Oaks (G1).

Another wide trip awaited Rags to Riches in the Kentucky Oaks as she raced
between rivals down the backstretch, but that nine-furlong test never seemed to
challenge the favorite. Coming out four wide for the stretch run, she simply
drew away from the field, eventually crossing under the wire 4 1/4 lengths the
best while making her first start on a sealed, muddy track.



After such a devastating display in the Kentucky Oaks, Rags to Riches’
connections were finally willing to try their star against the boys, but chose a
race that no filly had won in 102 years. In the 1 1/2-mile “Test of Champions,”
Rags to Riches received her first real challenge since beginning her sophomore
campaign. Stumbling out of the gate of the Belmont, the filly quickly moved up
to settle in fifth behind the pacesetters before starting her now familiar wide,
late run around the turn. She wasn’t alone, though, as Preakness hero Curlin
split horses coming out of the turn and kept pace with his rival. Those two
battled nip and tuck to the line, but Rags to Riches had just enough left to
stick her head in front at the wire. In the process, she became just the third
winning filly in the storied history of the Belmont.

Rags to Riches raced just once more in 2007 and suffered her only loss of the
year when a courageous half-length second in the Gazelle S. (G1), after which it
was revealed she had suffered a hairline fracture to her right front pastern
during the running of that 1 1/8-mile test. That came after three months of waiting
for her return.

Originally expected to show up in the Coaching Club American Oaks (G1), she
spiked a fever and was withdrawn from consideration for that event. Then just a
week later, she was pulled up during a routine morning workout, prompting her
connections to call for a complete physical for their celebrated filly. Though
given the green light to commence training after no problems were found,
Pletcher opted to skip her next expected start in the Alabama S. (G1) and
instead point her for the Ruffian H. (G1), with the Gazelle against her own
age-group as a back-up. Instead, she spiked another fever and her conditioner
decided to keep her against three-year-olds in the Gazelle, where she would
finish out the year with a 6-5-1-0 mark and $1,340,028 in earnings.

Rags to Riches has so far earned $1,342,528 from a 7-5-1-0 career line. With
her Belmont victory, she followed in the hoofsteps of older half-brother Jazil
(Seeking the Gold), who captured the 2006 edition. Both classic winners are out
of Grade 2 winner Better Than Honour (Deputy Minister), who placed in the 1999
Acorn S. (G1) and Mother Goose S. (G1). The 12-year-old mare has also produced
the unraced three-year-old Casino Drive (Mineshaft) as well as unnamed yearling
and weanling colts by Giant’s Causeway.







    THREE-YEAR-OLD FILLY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    RAGS TO RICHES   258
    Octave   4
    Panty Raid   2
         

The case was made with brilliant victories in the Woodward S. (G1), Whitney
H. (G1) and Oaklawn H. (G2), and the verdict went to
LAWYER RON (Langfuhr) for
champion older male. Owned by Stonewall Farms and Hines Racing, the Pletcher-trained colt broke a 33-year-old mark when establishing a new track
record at Saratoga, turning 1 1/8 miles in 1:46 3/5 in the Whitney, and the
chestnut turned in one of the gamest performances of the year in defeat when
second to Horse of the Year Curlin in the Jockey Club Gold Cup.

A millionaire entering the season, Lawyer Ron banked an additional $1.32
million while compiling an 8-4-2-1 line in 2007. He opened his four-year-old
campaign with an easy score over allowance/optional claiming rivals at Gulfstream Park and then shipped to Oaklawn Park, site of his 2006 victories in
the Arkansas Derby (G2), Rebel S. (G3) and Southwest S. Lawyer Ron didn’t
disappoint his legion of fans in the Razorback State, rolling to a four-length
score in the prestigious Oaklawn H. He proceeded to finish second in the
Salvator Mile (G3) and third in the Metropolitan Mile H. (G1), and next came
Saratoga.

Dominant might understate his impact in the two premier races for older
horses at the Spa. Lawyer Ron crushed his rivals when posting a 4 3/4-length win
in the Whitney, and he was even more impressive in the Woodward five weeks
later, walloping his opponents with an 8 1/4-length decision. It was difficult
to imagine any horse in training beating him in upstate New York.

Lawyer Ron prepped for the Breeders’ Cup Classic with an excellent second in
the Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont Park, battling head and head in the stretch
with Curlin before falling a neck short in the final strides, but the sloppy
track at Monmouth Park wasn’t to his liking. Lawyer Ron never got involved in
the running on Breeders’ Cup Day and checked in seventh. That uncharacteristic
performance didn’t dissuade voters, however, and Lawyer Ron was justifiably
rewarded with the Eclipse Award.

Bred by James T. Hines, Lawyer Ron is out of the Lord Avie mare Donation, who
has produced an unraced sophomore filly named Ron’s Lady and a juvenile filly
named Miss Deanna D,
both by Elhayq (Ire). She also has an unnamed yearling colt by Smarty Jones.

Lawyer Ron compiled a total of nine
stakes wins and $2,790,000 in earnings from a 26-12-4-4 line during his stellar career. The
Kentucky-bred will stand his first year at stud in 2008 at Stonewall Farm near
Versailles, Kentucky, for a
$30,000 fee.







    OLDER MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    LAWYER RON   147
    Invasor (Arg)   94
    Corinthian   13
         


Frank Stronach’s
GINGER PUNCH kept the party going at Adena Springs Farm as
she garnered a second straight Breeders’ Cup Distaff (G1) score for her sire,
Awesome Again. However, the chestnut went one farther than last year’s winner by
also being honored as the 2007 champion older mare. In 2006, Round Pond brought
home the Breeders’ Cup trophy but missed out on an Eclipse Award to Fleet Indian, who entered the Distaff undefeated and exited with an injury.

Unlike Fleet Indian, Ginger Punch came into the Breeders’ Cup with three
losses on the year, but no off-the-board finishes. She wasn’t well known when beginning her four-year-old season and dropped her first start
when second in the Madison S. (G2) over Keeneland’s Polytrack. Trainer Bobby
Frankel moved his up-and-coming charge to Churchill Downs for her next start,
and she rewarded that decision with an easy allowance score on the Kentucky
Derby undercard.

For her next five starts, Ginger Punch would stay in New York, competing at
Belmont Park and Saratoga. Following a game runner-up finish, just a neck back
of the winner, in the Ogden Phipps H. (G1), the chestnut posted three straight
scores. Dropped back to seven furlongs in the First Flight H. (G2) at Big Sandy,
she responded by taking the lead soon after the start and going on to finish
five lengths better than her closest rival. Another easy win followed in the
nine-furlong Go for Wand H. (G1) at Saratoga as she successfully negotiated two
turns for the first time to be six lengths clear on the line.

Ginger Punch added the Ruffian to her resume on September 8, tracking
the early pacesetter before taking over and repelling challenges from two rivals
in late stretch to score by three parts of a length. Frankel wheeled her back 22
days later in the Beldame S. (G1), but she could never quite catch up with the
leaders, settling for third at the end of that 1 1/8-mile affair.

Then, finally, Breeders’ Cup Day arrived, but overcast and muddy, not bright
and clear. Because she wasn’t Breeders’ Cup nominated, Ginger Punch’s
connections had to supplement her into the championship event, and she was
facing a sloppy track for the first time since running in her sophomore finale.
Neither of those factors made a difference to the betting public, as they sent
her off the 4-1 favorite, but more importantly, it made no difference to Ginger
Punch. Saving ground on the inside down the backstretch, she moved up to take
the lead entering the stretch, but found company in the form of Hystericalady
(Distorted Humor). Those two battled all the way down the lane, pushing and
shoving each other, with Hystericalady actually knocking Ginger Punch into the
rail and off stride. She wouldn’t be denied, though, and fought back while in
tight quarters to get up for the neck victory over her equally game rival.

While many Breeders’ Cup winners are immediately retired, racing fans will
get a chance to see Ginger Punch run in 2008, beginning in Saturday’s Sunshine
Millions Distaff. Last
year, she racked up an 8-5-2-1, $1,827,060, record, and improved her career line
to 14-7-5-1 having banked $1,901,679 in earnings. She is, so far, the best foal
produced by 1995 Comely S. (G2) winner Nappelon (Bold Revenue), who is also
responsible for an unraced sophomore filly named Gold Revenue (Touch Gold) and an unnamed
juvenile filly by Red Bullet.







    OLDER FEMALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    GINGER PUNCH   247
    Nashoba’s Key   18
    Take D’ Tour   1
         


WAR PASS
(Cherokee Run) wrapped up his juvenile season with a 4 3/4-length romp in
the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1), and the unbeaten colt was the easiest of
winners in the voting for champion two-year-old male. None of the other
finalists received more than one first-place vote as War Pass garnered 262.

Trained by Hall of Famer Nick Zito, War Pass won all four starts in
wire-to-wire fashion in 2007. The speedy colt captured his career debut at
Saratoga in late July, taking a six-furlong maiden by 2 3/4 lengths, and
garnered a six-furlong allowance/optional claiming event by 5 1/2 lengths later
in the meet. War Pass then made a smashing stakes bow in the one-mile Champagne
S. (G1) at Belmont Park in early October.

With regular rider Cornelio Velasquez in the irons, the Robert LaPenta
colorbearer shot right to front when the gates opened in the Champagne and
quickly opened a daylight lead through testing fractions in :22 4/5, :45 3/5 and
1:10 1/5. War Pass kept right on going, drawing off by 5 1/2 lengths in
midstretch, and remained in complete control to the wire. It was a foreshadowing
of what was to come at Monmouth Park three weeks later.

Favored at 2-1 over 10 rivals in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, War Pass
eliminated any suspense during the early stages as he increased his advantage at
every internal point of call while ripping through splits of :22 3/5, :45 2/5
and 1:09 3/5. He reached midstretch with a seven-length lead and was under wraps
late, hitting the wire 4 3/4 lengths the best. His final time for 1 1/16 miles
over the sloppy track, 1:42 3/5, was two seconds faster than the winner of the
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) one race earlier.

Bred in Kentucky by Cherry Valley Farm LLC, War Pass is out of the multiple
stakes-placed Vue (Mr. Prospector), making him a half-brother to 1996 Spinaway
S. (G1) heroine Oath (Known Fact), 2004 Raven Run S. (G2) runner-up Vision of
Beauty (Danzig) and an unnamed juvenile colt by Monarchos. War Pass’s fourth dam
is Bayou (Hill Prince), the champion three-year-old filly 1957 and a noted
producer, whose illustrious descendants include two-time champion and
$3.5-million earner Slew O’ Gold and multiple Grade 1-winning millionaire
Aptitude. The two-year-old champion was purchased for a bargain $180,000 as a
Keeneland September yearling and has now earned $1,397,400.

The focus now turns toward the Kentucky Derby (G1) following War Pass’
outstanding juvenile season.








    TWO-YEAR-OLD MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    WAR PASS   262
    Court Vision   1
    Kodiak Kowboy   1
    Nownownow   1
         


Speed also ruled supreme in the Eclipse voting for two-year-old filly with
the unbeaten

INDIAN BLESSING
(Indian Charlie) taking home championship honors. A blessing
indeed for her connections, the Bob Baffert-trained lass dominated her rivals in all
three outings in 2007, concluding her season with a 3 1/2-length score in the
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies.











Indian Blessing’s hallmark is her blazing early speed
(Benoit Photo)





The Patti and Hal J. Earnhardt III homebred made her first appearance under
silks in a 5 1/2-furlong maiden special weight in late August at Saratoga and
romped to a 5 1/4-length decision. The one-mile Frizette S. (G1) at Belmont Park
came next and after dueling for the lead through an opening quarter-mile in :22
2/5, Indian Blessing quickly shook loose of her competition, opening up a 5
1/2-length margin through a half-mile in :45 2/5. It was a laugher the rest of
the way, with the dark bay filly leading by eight lengths in midstretch before
being throttled down late by regular rider Garrett Gomez, and Indian Blessing headed to
Monmouth Park off the easy 4 1/2-length tally.

Sent off the overwhelming 8-5 choice over 12 opponents, Indian Blessing
sailed over the sloppy track at Monmouth Park. She increased a narrow early lead
into a three-length advantage at the half-mile mark and then really poured it
on, opening up by six lengths in midstretch as she cruised to the finish line.
Indian Blessing captured her three starts last season by a combined 13 1/4
lengths.

Bred in Kentucky, Indian Blessing is out of the stakes-winning and multiple
Grade 3-placed Shameful (Flying Chevron). She has a pair of younger
half-brothers, the juvenile colt He’s Shameful (Candy Ride [Arg]) and an unnamed
yearling colt by Roman Ruler.



Indian Blessing, who opened her 2008 campaign with a victory in the January
13 Santa Ynez S. (G2) at Santa Anita, has now amassed $1,447,200 in earnings.







    TWO-YEAR-OLD FILLY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    INDIAN BLESSING   250
    Country Star   11
    Pure Clan   2
         


James T. Scatuorchio’s

ENGLISH CHANNEL
(Smart Strike) has been a high-class turf performer for
three straight years, and his consistent excellence finally garnered him an
Eclipse Award as champion turf male. In the process, English Channel and newly
crowned Horse of the Year Curlin presented their sire, Smart Strike, with an
unprecedented double. Since 1953, when the turf category was first introduced,
no stallion had ever been responsible for two different horses honored as Horse
of the Year and champion turf horse in the same season. Smart Strike has now
made history, courtesy of Curlin and English Channel.

English Channel’s 2007 campaign began auspiciously with a course
record-setting victory in a Gulfstream Park allowance. Next time out in the
Dubai Duty Free (UAE-G1), the Pletcher charge wound up a thoroughly
uncharacteristic 12th in a 16-horse field, the only dismal performance in his
illustrious career. Once back in the United States, English Channel would never
again finish out of the top two.

After missing by a head in the Manhattan H. (G1), he defended his title in
the United Nations S. (G1) at Monmouth in course-record time. English Channel
was upset when second in the Sword Dancer Invitational S. (G1) at Saratoga, but
he rebounded with a daring, bounce-off-the-rail rally to score back-to-back
triumphs in the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic Invitational S. (G1). English Channel
thereby became only the third horse in history to win the Joe Hirsch twice. Even
more remarkably, the chestnut came within a head of taking it three times,
having narrowly failed in the 2005 edition as a sophomore.

The often headstrong English Channel saved his best race for last. In his
third try at the Breeders’ Cup Turf (G1), following a fifth in 2005 and a third
in 2006, he traveled supremely well on Monmouth’s rain-soaked ground to
annihilate a world-class field by seven lengths. Never in the previous 23 years
of the Breeders’ Cup had a horse won a turf contest by such a dominant margin.

With this final career start in the books, English Channel retired with a
mark of 23-13-4-1 and $5,319,028 in earnings. He boasts 10 career stakes scores,
six of them at the Grade 1 level, and he has placed in a total of five Grade 1
contests. In 2006, English Channel captured the Woodford Reserve Turf Classic (G1) and Canadian Turf H.,
and in 2005, he took the Virginia Derby (G3), Colonial Turf Cup S. and Woodlawn S.

Bred by Keene Ridge Farm in Kentucky, the winner was sold to Scatuorchio for $50,000 at the 2003 Keeneland
September Yearling Sale. The now six-year-old is the first registered foal from the unraced Belva (Theatrical
[Ire]), making him a full brother to Lane’s End S. (G2) runner-up Sedgefield,
who was a commendable fifth in the 2007 Kentucky Derby (G1). He has three
half-sisters — an unraced sophomore named Lura (Street Cry [Ire]), an unnamed
juvenile by Aldebaran and an unnamed yearling by Ghostzapper. Belva is herself a full
sister to Grade 1 winner Pharma and multiple Grade 2 winner Hap, all of them out
of Committed (Hagley), a European champion and multiple Group 1-winning sprinter
in 1984-85.

English Channel will commence his stud career this season at Hurricane Hall
near Lexington, Kentucky, for $25,000, live foal.






    TURF MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    ENGLISH CHANNEL   251
    Kip Deville   6
    After Market   5


In contrast, Shadwell Stable’s homebred
LAHUDOOD
(GB) (Singspiel [Ire]) was a late arrival to the filly and mare turf scene. The
Kiaran McLaughlin trainee chose the right moments to shine, however, and was
rewarded with an Eclipse Award as champion turf female.

Making her American, and 2007, debut in an entry-level allowance at Belmont
in June, Lahudood was just caught by a neck and settled for second. The bay
wasted no time in clearing that condition next time out, rolling to a 3
1/4-length tally, and was then pitched into the Beverly D. S. (G1) against
top-level opponents at Arlington Park. Lahudood threw in the worst effort of her
entire career. After racing within striking distance of the pace, she retreated
to finish last of seven, and her connections cited the rain-softened ground as a
major factor.

Few could have foreseen that Lahudood would not taste defeat again. Ignored
at 21-1 in the Flower Bowl Invitational S. (G1), she stormed home along the rail
to get up by three-quarters of a length over Rosinka (Ire) (Soviet Star), with
champion and 4-5 favorite Wait a While third. When the heavens opened at
Monmouth and the course came up soft for the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf
(G1), Lahudood appeared to be at a disadvantage. As things turned out, nothing
could have been further from the truth. Driving through the bog, she opened up a
two-length lead in midstretch and stayed on dourly to hold off Honey Ryder by
three-quarters of a length.

Lahudood began her career under the direction of John Hammond in France. She
scored her first stakes victory in the 2006 Prix de Liancourt, and that same
year, she placed
in the Prix de Malleret (Fr-G2), Prix de Royallieu (Fr-G2) and Prix de Psyche
(Fr-G3). Lahudood sports a record of
12-4-5-1, $1,695,373.

Bred in Great Britain, Lahudood is out of the winning Arazi mare Rahayeb
(GB), who is also the dam of an unraced sophomore filly named Kareemah (Peintre
Celebre) and a juvenile colt named Alhudud (Sinndar). Lahudood springs from the
family of once-beaten dual classic winner Nashwan (Blushing Groom [Fr]),
multiple Group 1-winning highweight Nayef (Gulch), multiple English Group 2 hero
Unfuwain (Northern Dancer) and Japanese superstar Deep Impact (Sunday Silence).

Now retired, the five-year-old Lahudood will try to add further laurels to
the family as a member of the Shadwell broodmare band.







    TURF FEMALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    LAHUDOOD (GB)   188
    Nashoba’s Key   43
    Precious Kitten   16
         


Convincing wins in the Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1) and Forego S. (G1)
netted MIDNIGHT LUTE (Real Quiet) the Eclipse Award for champion male sprinter.
Those were the only victories in 2007 for the Baffert-trained colt, but they were more
than enough to earn the most coveted honor for short-distance specialists.

Arguably the most impressive Sprint winner in history, Midnight Lute broke nearly
last of 10 runners over Monmouth Park’s sloppy track. The dark bay trailed far
behind during the early stages over a speed-friendly oval and began to circle
rivals after Gomez swung
him out for clear sailing on the far turn, but there was still plenty of ground to make up on the leaders as
Midnight Lute arrived at the top of the stretch. Once he straightened into the
lane, though, he flew home, closing dramatically down the middle of the racetrack. Midnight Lute steamrolled past
his opposition like they were standing still, turning a major deficit into a
clear lead in seemingly the blink of an eye, and he hit the wire 4
3/4 lengths in front, completing six furlongs in a snappy 1:09. It was quite a
performance.

The seven-furlong Forego also turned into a one-sided affair, with Midnight Lute
racing closer to the pace over the fast track at Saratoga before delivering a
devastating turn of foot. The Watson & Weitman Performance & Mike Pegram
colorbearer quickly opened up by daylight in upper stretch and cruised to the wire, winning by
a 2 1/4-length margin.

Midnight Lute opened 2007 with a runner-up finish in the 1 1/16-mile San
Fernando S. (G2), missing by only a nose to eventual Breeders’ Cup
Classic third-placer Awesome Gem (Awesome Again) in a gutsy effort. He followed
that with a pair of respectable fourths in the Strub S. (G2) and Commonwealth S. (G2), and then earned a 4 1/2-month freshening, triumphantly
returning to races in the Forego. Midnight Lute capped last season with a
runner-up finish in the Cigar Mile H. (G1) at Aqueduct.

Bred in Kentucky by Tom Evans, Macon Wilmil Equines and Marjac Farms,
Midnight Lute notched his first stakes win in the 2006 Perryville S. (G3). He
sold for $70,000 at the 2004 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. Produced from
the unraced Candytuft (Dehere), Midnight Lute is a half-brother to the current
stakes-placed sophomore Tusculum Rd (Gilded Time), an unnamed juvenile colt by
Sir Cherokee and an unnamed yearling colt by Maria’s Mon.

Midnight Lute will embark upon his five-year-old campaign in 2008 with an
11-5-3-1 career record and $1,610,600 in earnings. Plans call for Midnight Lute
to return to action in the February 16 San Carlos H. (G2) at Santa Anita.







    MALE SPRINTER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    MIDNIGHT LUTE   229
    Hard Spun   18
    Fabulous Strike   9
         


MARYFIELD (Elusive Quality) recorded three stakes victories in 2007, closing
out with a pair of important victories in the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint
and Ballerina S. (G1), and the now seven-year-old mare took home the inaugural
Eclipse Award for champion female sprinter. The classy Doug O’Neill runner came
a long way over the past two seasons after being claimed for $50,000 in January
2006.

Wearing the colors of Mark Gorman, Nick Mestrandrea and Jim Perry, Maryfield
scored in the Distaff H. (G2) at Aqueduct in March and just missed
by 1 1/4 lengths when fourth in the Princess Rooney H. (G1) at Calder in July.
She followed the latter effort with a determined tally in the seven-furlong
Ballerina, getting up in the final strides to win the prestigious event at
Saratoga. She continued the dramatic, late-running heroics in the first running
of the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint.

After rating well off the pace over the sloppy track at Monmouth Park,
Maryfield chose the cleanest path to glory, rallying down the middle of the
track to catch Miraculous Miss (Mr. Greeley) in the shadow of the wire for a
half-length decision. She completed six furlongs in 1:09 4/5 and pushed her
career earnings past the $1 million mark.

Bred in Ontario by Mike Carroll and John C. Harvey Jr., Maryfield fetched a
bid of $80,000 at the 2002 Keeneland September Yearling sale. All five of her
stakes wins came over different tracks, with victories in the Very Subtle S. at
Churchill Downs and the Flower Girl H. at Santa Anita in 2006, and she placed in
four black-type events during her career, compiling an overall mark of 28-9-5-1,
$1,334,331. The bay mare sold for $1.25 million to Southern Equine Stables at the recent
Fasig-Tipton Kentucky November
sale.

Maryfield is out of the stakes-placed Sly Maid (Desert Wine) and counts as a
half-sister the Canadian Grade 3-placed Quiet (Roar), who is herself the dam of
Canadian Grade 2 runner-up Quietly Mine (Belong to Me).







    FEMALE SPRINTER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    MARYFIELD   155
    Dream Rush   61
    River’s Prayer   32
         


There was a changing of the guard in the steeplechase division, as Sonny
Via’s
GOOD NIGHT SHIRT (Concern)
dethroned three-time champion McDynamo, who had won the Eclipse Award for the
past two years. Good Night Shirt compiled a 5-3-1-0 mark while racing
exclusively in Grade 1 company in 2007, and his $314,163 in earnings are a
single-season National Steeplechase Association record.

The John Fisher charge earned his championship by soundly defeating McDynamo
twice in their three meetings this season. When Good Night Shirt romped in the
Iroquois Hurdle (NSA-G1) in May, and ground out a gallant victory in the
Colonial Cup Steeplechase (NSA-G1) in November, McDynamo checked in fourth and
sixth, respectively. Good Night Shirt’s lone unplaced effort this year came as a
fourth to McDynamo in the Breeders’ Cup Grand National Steeplechase (NSA-G1).

In Good Night Shirt’s other two outings, the chestnut gelding landed the
Lonesome Glory Hurdle S. (NSA-G1) and finished a rallying second  to Mixed
Up (Carnivalay) in the Royal Chase for the Sport of Kings (NSA-G1).

The now seven-year-old has amassed a bankroll of $483,563 from his 26-8-4-3
career line, including his starts on the flat. Good Night Shirt’s steeplechase
resume also includes a score in the 2006 David L. “Zeke” Ferguson Memorial
Steeplechase S. (NSA-G3) and a total of five stakes placings.

Bred in Maryland by Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bowman, Good Night Shirt is out of
the stakes-placed Hot Story (Two Punch). This is the family of Heartlight No.
One (Rock Talk), the champion three-year-old filly of 1983, and Grade 1-winning
millionaires Afternoon Deelites (Private Terms) and Soul of the Matter (Private
Terms).









    STEEPLECHASER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    GOOD NIGHT SHIRT   222
    McDynamo   13
    Floodlights   1
    Planets Aligned   1
         


Horseman Todd Pletcher, who topped the year-end standings with a record
$28,111,700 in stable earnings, continued his dominance with a fourth straight
Eclipse Award for leading trainer. His horses won 289 races from 1,228 starts in
2007. Pletcher was represented by champions Rags to Riches, English Channel and
Lawyer Ron during Monday’s ceremonies.

A native of Dallas and the son of veteran trainer J.J. Pletcher, the
40-year-old conditioner garnered his first Triple Crown win when saddling Rags
to Riches to an historic victory in the Belmont. She became the first filly in
102 years to win the “Test of Champions.” English Channel netted a third
Breeders’ Cup win for Pletcher when capturing the Turf at Monmouth Park. Lawyer
Ron captured a pair of Grade 1s at Saratoga, including a track record-setting
triumph in the Whitney.

He was also represented by Grade 1 winners Any Given Saturday, Scat Daddy,
Octave, Panty Raid, Cotton Blossom and Unbridled Belle in 2007.

Pletcher grew up around horses and worked as an assistant for Charles
Whittingham and Henry Moreno while at the University of Arizona. He then went to
work for his mentor, Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas, handling many successful
runners during his seven-year stint. He went out on his own at the end of 1995
and saddled his first winner in February 2006.

Pletcher broke the previous earnings mark that he established in 2006. Based
primarily in New York, Pletcher also maintained divisions in California,
Kentucky and Florida last year. He recently recorded his 2,000th career win.








    TRAINER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    TODD PLETCHER   139
    Steve Asmussen   65
    Kiaran McLaughlin   39
         


After missing in a close vote 12 months ago, Garrett Gomez proved to be a
runaway winner for leading jockey in 2007, garnering his first Eclipse Award. He
established a new single-season record by winning 76 stakes, and earned the
William Shoemaker Award for outstanding jockey during the 2007 Breeders’ Cup,
registering two wins and a pair of thirds.

A native of Tucson, Arizona, the 36-year-old jockey ranked first for all
North American jockeys in earnings last season with $22,800,074, and Gomez won
265 races from 1,258 starters. The California-based pilot guided champions Rags
to Riches, Midnight Lute and Indian Blessing in 2007, and other notable mounts
included Any Given Saturday, Wait a While (Maria’s Mon), Majestic Warrior (A.P.
Indy), Shakespeare, Honey Ryder, Panty Raid, Lady of Venice (Fr), Georgie Boy
(Tribal Rule), Crossing the Line (NZ) (Cape Cross [Ire]), Pussycat Doll (Real
Quiet) and Spring at Last (Silver Deputy).

Gomez, who has won four Breeders’ Cup races during his career, notched his
fourth overall jockey title at Hollywood Park during the recently completed
Autumn Meet. He began his riding career in 1988 at Santa Fe Downs in New Mexico.








    JOCKEY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    GARRETT GOMEZ   248
    Robby Albarado   11
    Russell Baze   2
         


After making a splash at Fair Grounds last winter, apprentice Joseph Talamo
moved his tack to Southern California during the spring and continued his
winning ways. On Monday night, he was named champion apprentice jockey.

Born in Marrero, Louisiana, the recently turned 18-year-old rider won 249
races and ranked 14th nationally with $10,705,403 in earnings in 2007. He’s the
regular rider of Nashoba’s Key (Silver Hawk), guiding her to victories in the Vanity
Invitational H. (G1), Yellow Ribbon S. (G1), Milady Breeders’ Cup H. (G2) and
Clement L. Hirsch H. (G2), and Talamo also rode Grade 1 winners Artiste Royal
(Ire) (Danehill) and Bilo (Bertrando).

The youngster began riding Thoroughbreds at 11 and his first racing
experience came at a bush track in Duson, Louisiana, where many other recognized
jockeys got their start. He finished second in the standings at the Hollywood Spring/Summer Meet,
the second-highest total for an apprentice rider in track history.








    APPRENTICE JOCKEY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    JOE TALAMO   254
    Carol Cedeno   2
    Arnaldo Bocachica   1
         


Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum’s Shadwell Stable was honored as the
leading owner. A major presence upon the international scene, Shadwell made a
big impact in the United States in 2006 with Horse of the Year Invasor (Arg) and
Belmont S. winner Jazil. The stable enjoyed another fantastic season in 2007.

Invasor got the year off to a good start with his victory in the Donn H.
(G1), but he was retired before ever appearing under silks again in North
America. Grade 1 stars Lahudood (GB), Lear’s Princess (Lear Fan) and Daaher
(Awesome Again) helped fill the void. Lahudood captured the Breeders’ Cup Filly
& Mare Turf and Flower Bowl Invitational en route to championship honors for
female turf horse. Lear’s Princess won the Gazelle, upsetting champion Rags to
Riches, and finished second
in both the Coaching Club American Oaks and Alabama. Daaher wrapped
up his season with excellent wins in the Cigar Mile and Jerome H.
(G2), stamping himself as a contender for Horse of the Year honors in 2008.

Kiaran McLaughlin conditions Shadwell’s U.S. division.








    OWNER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    SHADWELL STABLE   144
    Stronach Stables   59
    Maggi Moss   18
         


If a dynasty is defined by continued excellence with a stranglehold upon
championship honors, Frank Stronach’s Adena Springs fits the bill. For the
fourth straight year, and fifth time overall, Adena Springs captured the Eclipse
Award for outstanding breeder. It’s the first time one operation has been named
champion breeder four consecutive years.

With breeding and stallion operations in Kentucky, Florida and Ontario, Adena
Springs led all breeders by money earned for the fifth consecutive time with
$18,057,205 in 2007, more than twice as much as the second leading breeder.
Adena’s flagship horse was champion older mare Ginger Punch.








    BREEDER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
         
    ADENA SPRINGS   203
    Fares Farm Inc.   13
    Martin and Pam Wygod   12