November 22, 2024

Voters take a shine to Chrome for Horse of the Year

Last updated: 1/17/15 10:32 PM











California Chrome put away
the competition entering the stretch and rolled home in the
Kentucky Derby


(Jim Tyrell/Horsephotos.com)



CALIFORNIA CHROME
(Lucky Pulpit) rose from humble beginnings to become Thoroughbred racing’s
biggest star last year, captivating national audiences with his Triple Crown
pursuit, and the dual classic winner was recognized with the sport’s highest
honor during Saturday evening’s 44th annual Eclipse Awards ceremony at
Gulfstream Park, earning the 2014 Horse of the Year title.


He won by a wide margin, receiving 143 first-place votes compared to 53 for
runner-up Main Sequence (Aldebaran) and 36 for third-placer Bayern (Offlee
Wild).

The Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness (G1) winner also garnered the Eclipse Award for
champion three-year-old male in a landslide, winning by a 193-56 margin over
runner-up Bayern.

Owned and bred in California by Steve Coburn and Perry Martin, California
Chrome is trained by Art Sherman. Victor Espinoza serves as the colt’s regular
rider, guiding California Chrome to six wins from nine starts in 2014.



Based at Los Alamitos in Southern California, the striking chestnut completed
his juvenile campaign with a victory over state-bred rivals in the December 22
King Glorious at Hollywood Park. He opened 2014 with another restricted tally in
the January 25 California Cup Derby, strolling away to a 5 1/2-length decision at Santa
Anita.

California Chrome made a seamless transition to open company in the March 8
San Felipe (G2) at Santa Anita, rolling to a dynamite 7 1/4-length triumph, and
followed with another sublime performance in the April 5 Santa Anita Derby (G1),
posting a 5 1/4-length victory in the $1 million event.










California Chrome

striding to the Preakness finish line


(Jessie Holmes/EquiSport Photos)

Next came the Triple Crown and California Chrome justified his 5-2 favoritism
at Churchill Downs, scoring comfortably by 1 3/4-length margin in the 140th
running of the Kentucky Derby. He stretched his win streak to six two weeks
later at Pimlico, recording an authoritative 1 1/2-length triumph in the
Preakness Stakes.

California Chrome became just the third horse in history to sweep the San
Felipe-Santa Anita Derby-Kentucky Derby-Preakness, joining Hall of Famers
Affirmed and Sunday Silence.

His bid for Triple Crown immortality fell short in the 1 1/2-mile Belmont
Stakes (G1) on June 7, with a dead-heat fourth, and California Chrome received nearly
a 3 1/2-month freshening afterward.

He came back a little rusty, checking in a subpar sixth to Bayern in the September 20
Pennsylvania Derby (G2) at Parx Racing, but rebounded notably in the Breeders’ Cup
Classic (G1), finishing a neck back of Bayern in third after just missing with a courageous
rally.



After exiting the Breeders’ Cup Classic in top order, California Chrome’s
connections elected to experiment with the top-class performer four weeks later,
trying him on turf in the November 29 Hollywood Derby (G1). The gamble paid off
handsomely, with California Chrome winning as he pleased by a two-length margin,
and the victory opened up avenues in terms of his four-year-old campaign, with
Sherman mentioning the grassy Arlington Million (G1) next August as a likely
target.










California Chrome earned a
106 BRIS Speed rating for his eye-catching Santa Anita Derby win


(Benoit Photo)

He concluded 2014 with four Grade 1 victories, earning $4,007,8000 from his
nine starts. Overall, California Chrome has bankrolled $4,222,650 from a
16-9-1-1 ledger.

California Chrome was also honored with the Secretariat “Vox Populi” (Voice
of the People) Award on January 10 and his Kentucky Derby victory was recently
named the NTRA Moment of the Year.

He is the first foal from the mare Love the Chase, a daughter of Not for Love
who posted her only victory in an $8,000 maiden claiming race at Golden Gate
Fields in 2009. Coburn and Perry acquired her privately for $8,000.

She was bred to the California-based stallion Lucky Pulpit, a son of the
successful sire Pulpit who posted his only stakes win in the 2005 Smile at
Arlington Park, a five-furlong turf sprint. Lucky Pulpit stood for a $2,000 stud
fee when mated with Love the Chase.



California Chrome’s extended female family includes Cascapedia, the champion
older mare of 1977, but his immediate bloodlines are easily labeled
“blue-collar” given the high-priced, well-bred competition he regularly defeated
during his Horse of the Year season.

“Everyone loves a Cinderella story, and this one was no exception,” said
Penny Chenery, owner of 1973 Triple Crown champion Secretariat and founder of
the Vox Populi Award. “California Chrome, a proven champion and formidable
competitor, reminded us that it doesn’t matter from whence we came but rather
how we dance when we get to the ball.

“Furthermore, his inspiring story and engaging popularity reached beyond the
racetrack stands and into the conversation of a nation.”

California Chrome is the first three-year-old Horse of the Year winner since
the filly Rachel Alexandra in 2009 and the first California-bred since Tiznow in
2000.








HORSE OF THE YEAR  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     

CALIFORNIA CHROME
  143
Main
Sequence
  53
Bayern   36
     







THREE-YEAR-OLD MALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     

CALIFORNIA CHROME
  193
Bayern   56
Shared
Belief
  15











Main Sequence, the ultimate rally artist, has taken over Wise Dan’s mantle as champion older male and champion turf male
(NYRA/Adam Coglianese/Lauren King)





At this time last year,

MAIN SEQUENCE
(Aldebaran) was convalescing as a new arrival at trainer
Graham Motion’s barn at Fair Hill, sick with pneumonia upon his repatriation
from England. His form had deteriorated, his career at a crossroads. Few could
have foreseen that a spectacular renaissance was on the horizon — a perfect
2014 campaign, all in Grade 1 events, culminating in Eclipse Awards as champion older male and
champion turf male and ranking as a finalist for Horse of the Year.

Main
Sequence thus supplanted Wise Dan
(Wiseman’s Ferry), the 2012-13 champion older male and turf male, while not duplicating his sweep of
the Horse of the Year
title. He has nevertheless staked out a unique place in the record
book: Main Sequence is the only U.S. champion turf horse to have gone unbeaten for
the season, albeit over a brief four-race span.

A homebred campaigned by the Niarchos Family’s Flaxman Holdings, Main
Sequence was among Europe’s leading three-year-olds in 2012. He won his first
four starts for trainer David Lanigan in England, including the Lingfield Derby
Trial (Eng-G3) that had been switched to the Polytrack. Main Sequence went off
as a 9-1 chance in the Derby (Eng-G1) at Epsom, and although he couldn’t get
within five lengths of Camelot, he did garner runner-up honors.

The chestnut traveled like the winner in the Grand Prix de Paris (Fr-G1),
only to be stymied in traffic and end up a bitterly unlucky fourth at Longchamp.
He had misfortune of a different sort in the Great Voltigeur (Eng-G2) at York,
in the form of a slow early pace, and he failed by a neck to catch the thieving
Thought Worthy. Main Sequence concluded his classic campaign with a fifth in the
St Leger (Eng-G1) at Doncaster.



His 2013, however, did not live up to that standard. Winless in six outings,
Main Sequence came closest when second, beaten a half-length, by the high-class
Mukhadram in the Brigadier Gerard (Eng-G3) at Sandown. He posted a trio of
thirds — in the Buckhounds at Ascot, the September S. (Eng-G3) on Kempton’s
Polytrack and the misnamed Arc Trial (Eng-G3) at Newbury — along with a remote
fourth in the Pontefract Castle S. After trudging home eighth in the Champion S.
(Eng-G1) at Ascot, the Kentucky-bred was sent back home to the United States.

Motion credits then-trainer Lanigan for that inspired decision.
Interestingly, Lanigan and Motion had spent time together in the summer of 2013,
when Lanigan’s yard was hosting Motion’s Animal Kingdom in advance of the Queen
Anne (Eng-G1). While Animal Kingdom was a bust at Royal Ascot, his English
adventure would have a happy side effect. Motion had the opportunity to see Main
Sequence, a foreshadowing of their future partnership.

Lanigan was convinced that Main Sequence would thrive in U.S. conditions. But
before Main Sequence could vindicate his judgment, he needed time — plenty of
time to recover fully from the pneumonia he contracted in quarantine.










Main Sequence rose from European disappointment to American glory
(Breeders’ Cup Ltd. Photo)





Motion brought him along carefully, until the gelding was training so well
that an ambitious plan was hatched: a comeback in the July 6 United Nations
(G1), a Breeders’ Cup “Win & You’re In” event at Monmouth. Main Sequence broke
tardily, had little in the way of pace support, but unleashed a ferocious late
kick to get up by a neck over Twilight Eclipse (Purim). A turf star was born in
his U.S. debut off an eight-month layoff.

The August 16 Arlington Million (G1) was mooted as a possible target, but the
Niarchos Family had another colorbearer, French-based Smoking Sun (Smart
Strike), penciled in for Chicago. Smoking Sun failed to fire in the Million,
winding up sixth, and inviting thoughts about whether the right Niarchos horse
lined up.

Main Sequence instead headed to Saratoga for the August 17 Sword Dancer
Invitational (G1), and he served up another thriller in nearly carbon-copy
fashion. Slowly away after hitting the gate, he still had a three-length deficit in midstretch. But Main Sequence finished like the proverbial freight train to deny
front-running Imagining (Giant’s Causeway) by a head, with archrival Twilight
Eclipse third. His final time for 1 1/2 firm-turf miles was a sharp 2:24 3/5.



Facing the same duo in the September 27 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic Invitational
(G1) at Belmont Park, Main Sequence showed his usual laxity at the break, and
his now trademark zest in the stretch, to make it three in a row. He bumped with
Twilight Eclipse in the final strides, prompting a stewards’ inquiry and an
objection from Jose Lezcano. But Main Sequence survived the review and kept his
trophy.

As Main Sequence was ascending in the turf ranks, reigning two-time Horse of
the Year Wise Dan was still in a position to retain his crown. The six-time
Eclipse Award winner was in the midst of a perfect season,
despite undergoing emergency colic surgery in May. The $7.5 million earner
successfully defended his titles in the April 11 Maker’s 46 Mile (G1) and May 3
Woodford Reserve Turf Classic (G1) prior to his health scare, and he later
returned victorious in the August 30 Bernard Baruch H. (G2) and October 4
Shadwell Turf Mile (G1).

Unfortunately, Wise Dan was ruled out of a three-peat bid in the Breeders’
Cup Mile (G1) due to a fractured fetlock. The door was opened for Main Sequence,
if he could deliver in the November 1 Breeders’ Cup Turf (G1) at Santa Anita. 










Jockey Rajiv Maragh expertly dealt with Main Sequence’s idiosyncrasies before missing the BC ride due to injury
(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)





With regular rider Rajiv Maragh sidelined by injury, would the “quirky” Main
Sequence respond as well to Hall of Famer John Velazquez? And even so, could the
horse who had fallen from grace in Europe cope with such high-class
internationals as Flintshire (Dansili) and Telescope (Galileo)? Main Sequence
answered every question, turning in his most professional effort on the biggest
stage to clinch a championship. Flintshire could not resist his late charge, and
Twilight Eclipse was beaten by a more convincing margin in third.

As it turned out, his Breeders’ Cup heroics clinched more than the turf male
championship. With the most accomplished older male on dirt, Palace Malice (Curlin),
sidelined for the second half of the season, and no other divisional performer
stepping up to take over his mantle, the Eclipse electorate honored Main
Sequence as champion older male as well.

Having bankrolled $2,610,000 from his perfect four-race season, Main Sequence
has compiled an overall mark of 18-8-3-3, $3,298,311.

Main Sequence is a Niarchos product, top and bottom. He is by the Niarchos’
champion sprinter Aldebaran (who is himself a son of Mr. Prospector and the
Niarchos’ multiple Group 1-winning mare Chimes of Freedom). Main Sequence’s dam,
the Group 3-placed Pivotal mare Ikat, likewise descends from a maternal line
cultivated by the Niarchos family. Ikat is a half-sister to the aforementioned
Smoking Sun.



Main Sequence’s second dam is Group 2-placed stakes victress Burning Sunset (Caerleon),
herself a half-sister to 2007 Epsom Oaks (Eng-G1) winner Light Shift (Kingmambo)
and English highweight mare Shiva (Hector Protector). Main Sequence’s fourth dam
is French champion and classic winner Northern Trick (Northern Dancer), who was
brought into the Niarchos fold when purchased for $530,000 as a Keeneland July
yearling in 1982.

Plans call for Main Sequence to kick off his six-year-old campaign in the
February 21 Mac Diarmida (G2) at Gulfstream Park, a springboard to a Dubai tilt
on March 28.







OLDER MALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
MAIN
SEQUENCE
  127
Palace
Malice
  103
Wise Dan   25
     







TURF MALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
MAIN
SEQUENCE
  243
Wise Dan   18
California
Chrome
  2


Close Hatches — Champion
Older Female










Close Hatches continued the championship tradition of her family when honored as top older female of 2014

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)



CLOSE HATCHES
(First Defence) lost out on champion three-year-old filly
honors in 2013 after running second to Beholder (Henny Hughes) in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff
(G1),
but Saturday night’s Eclipse Award ceremony saw the dark bay mare given due
credit for her talent when named champion older female of 2014.

Close Hatches garnered 155 first-place votes to beat out Breeders’ Cup Filly
& Mare Turf (G1) queen Dayatthespa (City Zip). That mare earned 64 first-place votes
for champion older female but was easily the choice as champion turf female on
the night with 260 votes.

Close Hatches was unable to complete her four-year-old season on the same
glowing note as her sophomore campaign, which saw her go 5-2-0 from eight
starts. Her 2013 Distaff second followed another second in that year’s Acorn S.
(G1) and a seventh-placing, her first off-the-board run, in the Kentucky Oaks
(G1).

Returning for 2014, Close Hatches immediately began racking up the wins. She
wired both the Azeri S. (G2) and Apple Blossom H. (G1) at Oaklawn Park before
trainer Bill Mott gave her the rest of the spring off.

The Juddmonte Farms colorbearer returned in the Ogden Phipps H. (G1) in early
June and found herself facing off against rivals Beholder and
Princess of Sylmar. Close Hatches had beaten Princess of Sylmar in the Gazelle
S. (G2) prior to that one going on to take the Kentucky Oaks. Princess of Sylmar
ended up well back of both Beholder and Close Hatches in the 2013 Breeders’ Cup
Distaff and was looking for a little revenge in the Phipps.










Close Hatches began her Grade 1 hat trick in the Apple Blossom…

(Oaklawn Park/Coady Photography)

It wasn’t to be though, as Close Hatches prevailed following a thrilling
stretch duel.

Close Hatches and Beholder kept each other company in the third flight while
Princess of Sylmar was in the rear of the Phipps field. Stakes debuter Antipathy
(A.P. Indy) had tracked the leader and tried to take over when that one faded,
but Close Hatches just to her outside was quickest to gain command. Beholder
wasn’t far behind and Princess of Sylmar closed fast down the lane, setting up
for a great stretch battle.




Close Hatches maintained a small lead over the stubborn Antipathy while
Princess of Sylmar inched away from Beholder. Princess of Sylmar just ran out of
room as Close Hatches got her head down on the line.

Given another freshening following her gutsy Phipps victory, Close Hatches
returned in August to wire the Personal Ensign S. (G1) by five lengths. It
was her sixth win from her last seven starts, with the only interruption coming
in the 2013 Distaff, but alas the Kentucky-bred would be unable to continue in
that vein.

Close Hatches was expected to utilize the Spinster S. (G1) at Keeneland in
early October as her final prep for the Breeders’ Cup Distaff, and did show up
for the contest but threw in a puzzling fourth-place run that day. It turned
out to be a harbinger, as the filly faded to last in the Distaff on October 31.

“It was a good trip,” jockey Joel Rosario explained his Distaff ride on Close
Hatches. “I was on the outside. We were wide but looking good on the first turn;
very calm and relaxed. Everything was fine. On the backside she was very
comfortable until I hit the three and a half and she just didn’t move forward.
She just kind of wasn’t herself.”










…and wrapped it up with a five-length romp in the muddy Personal Ensign

(NYRA/Chelsea Durand/Adam Coglianese Photography)

“I didn’t like her position around the first turn, but I wouldn’t say that’s
why we ran so dismal,” Mott added after the race. “At the three-eighths pole, we
had a length on Untapable. Our intent was to try to get the first run on her and
we had no run at all. I can’t offer any excuse other than she looks like maybe
she’s had enough.”

Close Hatches still closed out 2014 with a 6-4-0-0 scorecard and $1,340,000
in season earnings. Bred in Kentucky by Millsec Ltd., she is the first
registered foal out of Rising Tornado (Storm Cat), who is herself a daughter of
the listed-placed Silver Star (Zafonic). Close Hatches’ third dam is Group 3
heroine Monroe (Sir Ivor), from whom is descended the likes of English, Irish
and French highweight sire Xaar (Zafonic) and multiple Grade 1-winning stallion
Senure (Nureyev).

Most notably, Close Hatches’ fourth dam is the blue-hen mare Best in Show
(Traffic Judge), who was honored as the 1982 Broodmare of the Year. She is the
dam of 1982 Kentucky Oaks queen Blush With Pride (Blushing Groom), who is the
granddam of champion Rags to Riches (A.P. Indy), Jazil (Seeking the Gold) and
Man of Iron (Giant’s Causeway). Rags to Riches captured the 2007 editions of the
Belmont S. (G1) and Kentucky Oaks, Jazil was king of the 2006 Belmont S. and
Man of Iron proved victorious in the 2009 Breeders’ Cup Marathon.

Best in Show is the ancestress of numerous champions and highweights,
including top sires Aldebaran (Mr. Prospector), Spinning World (Nureyev), Redoute’s Choice (Danehill) and El Gran Senor (Northern Dancer).

Close Hatches has now continued the championship tradition of her family. She
will try to pass it on to her progeny, beginning her broodmare career by
visiting leading sire Tapit.






OLDER FEMALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
CLOSE
HATCHES
  155

Dayatthespa
  64
Don’t Tell
Sophia
  19


Untapable — Champion
Three-Year-Old Filly










Rosie Napravnik celebrates as Untapable takes the Breeders’ Cup Distaff

(Breeders’ Cup Ltd.)


UNTAPABLE
(Tapit) was the unanimous choice for champion three-year-old filly
of 2014 following an unbeaten season against the girls, earning 265 first-place
votes to beat out finalists Sweet Reason (Street Sense) and Stopchargingmaria
(Tale of the Cat) at Saturday evening’s Eclipse Awards ceremony.

In fact, the bay filly’s only loss from seven starts on the year came when
taking on the boys in the Haskell Invitational (G1). She quickly got back to the
winner’s circle in her subsequent efforts to close out her sophomore campaign
with a resounding triumph in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff (G1) on October 31, posting a
7-6-0-0 mark and banking $2,808,600 in earnings for the year.

Untapable’s Breeders’ Cup win will go down in history, thanks to popular
jockey Rosie Napravnik’s sudden retirement announcement, disclosing her pregnancy, in the winner’s
circle to a national audience.

Trained by Steve Asmussen for owner/breeder Winchell Thoroughbreds, Untapable
and Napravnik were a stellar team throughout 2014. They kicked off the season
with a 9 1/2-length win in the Rachel Alexandra S. (G3) followed by a 7
3/4-length victory in the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2), both at the New Orleans track.

Next up Untapable returned to the site of her career opening wins at
Churchill Downs for the Kentucky Oaks (G1) on May 2. The heavy even-money favorite
lived up to the hype with a pulling-away, 4 1/2-length score, which earned her a
career-best 108 BRIS Speed rating.

Untapable was given a brief rest before traveling to the Northeast for the
Mother Goose S. (G1) at Belmont Park. Another romping win, this time by 9 1/4
lengths, cemented her status as the top three-year-old filly in the nation and
gave her connections enough confidence to test her against the boys.

Showing up in the Haskell, Untapable bumped with Social Inclusion (Pioneerof
the Nile) leaving the gate and found herself running three wide in fifth. She
managed to advance to fourth while still wide rounding the turn, but could make
no headway on the front-running Bayern (Offlee Wild), who went on to score by
7 1/4 lengths. Untapable wound up fifth on the wire, just headed by Irish You
Well (Broken Vow) to deny her a top-four placing.

Asmussen gave his Kentucky-bred charge a two-month break after that tough
beat, and she returned better than ever on September 30 to take the Cotillion S.
(G1) by a length at Parx Racing.

Making her seventh start of the year at her sixth different track, Untapable
showed up for the Breeders’ Cup Distaff. Not many were willing to pick against
the Kentucky Oaks romper despite her never having faced older runners, sending
her off as the 8-5 favorite against 10 rivals.










Untapable sporting the lilies after her Kentucky Oaks romp

(Matt Wooley/EquiSport Photos)

Untapable was forced to go three wide rounding the first turn once the gates
opened on the Distaff as Tiz Midnight (Midnight Lute) and Iotapa (Afleet Alex)
hooked up on the front end. The sophomore miss dropped back a bit to run in
midpack as the leaders battled it out through splits of :22 4/5, :46 3/5 and
1:10 4/5, but stayed in good position to pounce.

Tiz Midnight and Iotapa were still going at it as they entered the final
turn, but the former was beginning to fade. Untapable moved up to engage Iotapa,
exchanging a bump with her rival entering the lane, and managed to inch out a
miniscule advantage in the stretch.

While Iotapa continued to dig down on the inside, Don’t Tell Sophia (Congaree)
suddenly burst free from the rest of the pack and came flying down the center of
the track. Untapable refused to yield to either of those opponents, though, and
crossed under the wire 1 1/4 lengths in front while finishing 1 1/8 miles on the
fast main track in 1:48 3/5.

“I can’t say enough about her and how proud I am of her,” Asmussen beamed
after the win. “I’m proud of the whole team, Rosie, (assistant trainer) Scott (Blasi)
and everyone. She’s an amazing mare to put us on this stage and to perform like
she did. Rosie and she are a great combination and they have had a tremendous
season.

“Today, definitely makes her a champion and that’s enough said. She’s had a
great year and she’s a great filly. We had faith her. But, we’ve all been to the
races, so you never know the outcome. She proved she’s a champion.”

Untapable is out of Grade 2 winner Fun House (Prized), making her a
half-sister to Grade 1-scoring millionaire and 2010 Kentucky Derby (G1) third-placer
Paddy O’Prado (El Prado). Her third dam is Carols Christmas (Whitesburg), from
whom a whole slew of black-type runners are descended. Among that group are
Grade 1-winning millionaires and sires Olympio (Naskra) and Pyro (Pulpit); 2012
Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (G1) victor Tapizar (Tapit); and Grade 1-scoring stallion
Cuvee (Carson City).

Others of note in this female family include Fun House’s half-brother Early
Flyer (Gilded Time), a Grade 2-winning sire, and Grade 1 vixen On Fire Baby
(Smoke Glacken).

Untapable will enter her four-year-old season bearing an 8-0-1 mark from 11
career starts and $2,996,725 in career earnings. She arrived at Fair Grounds in
December to begin preparations for 2015 following a brief respite with fellow
Winchell Thoroughbreds homebred Tapiture (Tapit).

“They wintered great,” Winchell Thoroughbreds Racing Manager David Fiske
said. “They both got to the farm after the Breeders’ Cup and took about 30 days
off. Neither were a problem and they looked like they were happy to be doing
something different.

“Everyone at the farm really enjoyed having them, too; they’re both
characters. I don’t think they really lost all that much weight, either.
Tapiture probably came in at about 1,200 pounds and Untapable about 1,150.

“We’ll see how quickly they get ready,” Fiske continued. “We’ll let them tell
us, obviously, but it’s really not hard for either one to get fit. We’ll start
at the Breeders’ Cup and work backwards in five-week intervals and hopefully
have them ready to go at the end of March or beginning of April.

“I could envision (Untapable) doing the same sort of campaign. She does
better when you space her races out and will probably run no more than seven
times. It would be nice to run her at Saratoga. She was supposed to run in the
Adirondack (G2) as a two-year-old there, but colicked the day before. We’ll
focus on Grade 1s with her.”




THREE-YEAR-OLD FILLY  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     

UNTAPABLE
  265











American Pharoah’s win in the FrontRunner proved to be the title-clinching performance

(Benoit Photos)

In the tightest race in the equine categories, Zayat Stables’ homebred

AMERICAN PHAROAH
(Pioneerof the Nile) edged Texas Red (Afleet Alex) by a vote of 126-111 in the race for
juvenile male honors. The one time the two raced each other the outcome was less
close, a result that undoubtedly influenced a plurality of voters to side with
him.

A tiring fifth as the 7-5 favorite in his August 9 at Del Mar going 6 1/2
furlongs, American Pharoah was ambitiously spotted in the September 3 Del Mar
Futurity (G1) in his next start. Running without blinkers, the son of Pioneerof
the Nile showed good speed once again but this time kept going. The 3-1 chance
extended his lead in the stretch and crossed the wire 4 3/4 lengths in front,
giving Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert his 12th victory in Del Mar’s signature
event for juveniles, contested over the Polytrack at seven furlongs.

A heavy 1-2 favorite in the FrontRunner S. (G1) at Santa Anita on September
27, American Pharoah again ran his rivals off their feet with a wire-to-wire, 3
1/4-length score going 1 1/16 miles on the dirt. Five lengths behind the
eventual champion was Texas Red, who would go on to win the Breeders’ Cup
Juvenile (G1) in scintillating fashion by 6 1/2 lengths after trailing by as
much as 11 lengths.

American Pharoah was expected to be the favorite in the 1 1/16-mile Juvenile
at Santa Anita, but was forced to withdraw a couple of days beforehand due to
lameness. An earner of $361,500, he remains in training this year to pursue the
classics.

American Pharoah was bred in Kentucky and produced by Littleprincessemma, a
Yankee Gentleman half-sister to Grade 2 winner Storm Wolf and Grade 3 Misty
Rosette, both full siblings by Stormin Fever.







TWO-YEAR-OLD MALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     

AMERICAN PHAROAH
  126
Texas Red   111
Hootenanny   16


Take Charge Brandi — Champion
Two-Year-Old Filly





Take Charge Brandi ended her juvenile season with three top-class wins to take the Eclipse Award
(Breeders’ Cup Ltd.)


TAKE CHARGE BRANDI (Giant’s Causeway) wasn’t even considered an
Eclipse-worthy candidate early in 2014, but following victory in the
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) the D. Wayne Lukas pupil stamped herself
a legitimate contender as champion two-year-old filly.

That was borne out on Saturday as the chestnut miss was honored as
2014’s top juvenile filly following an 8-4-1-0, $1,620,126, season. She
earned 236 first-place votes as compared to the 23 garnered by undefeated
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G1) heroine Lady Eli (Divine Park).

Take Charge Brandi showed promise early, breaking her maiden first
out at Churchill Downs by 2 1/2 lengths and running second in the
Schuylerville S. (G3) at Saratoga a month later in mid-July. However,
the Kentucky-bred was well-beaten in her next three by
double-digit lengths.

First she ran fifth in the Adirondack S. (G2) at the Spa, filled that
same spot under the Twin Spires in the Pocahontas S. (G2), then faded to
eighth in the Alcibiades S. (G1) at Keeneland on October 3. That was one
month before the Breeders’ Cup, and few expected much from Take Charge
Brandi on the big day.

Sent to post the 61-1 longest shot in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile
Fillies, Take Charge Brandi took command from the start and never
looked back. Jockey Victor Espinoza guided the filly through fractions
of :22 1/5, :45 4/5, 1:10 and 1:35 1/5 while chased on the backstretch
by fellow 52-1 longshot Hennythelovepenny (Henny Hughes). That one faded
after six furlongs, leaving the way clear for By the Moon (Indian
Charlie) to take up pressing duties after stalking in third while three
wide early.

Take Charge Brandi was still in command entering the lane, with By
the Moon putting in her bid before weakening in the stretch. A wall of
horses advanced on Take Charge Brandi nearing the wire, but the Lukas
trainee dug deep and prevailed while stopping the clock in 1:41 4/5 over
the fast Santa Anita dirt.

Even with the Breeders’ Cup win, Take Charge Brandi wasn’t a shoe-in for the
Eclipse Award. At that point, Lady Eli looked a more viable candidate following
her Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf victory to remain perfect in three starts.

While most connections would have put their two-year-old on the shelf for the
rest of the season in anticipation of a three-year-old campaign, Lukas and owner
Willis D. Horton continued on with Take Charge Brandi, possibly with an eye on
the Eclipse Award.

At first the November 29 Golden Rod S. (G2) at Churchill was being bandied
about as her next start, but instead the filly showed up in Louisiana just 21
days after her Breeders’ Cup upset and this time was sent off the 2-1 favorite
against nine rivals in the Delta Downs Princess S. (G3).





Willis D. Horton (right) proudly leads his eventual champion into the Starlet winner’s circle
(Benoit Photos)

With Paco Lopez in the saddle, Take Charge Brandi settled just
outside of the early pacesetter through blistering splits of :22 1/5 and
:46 2/5 before taking over as the early leader faded nearing the final
turn. Meanwhile, Skipalute (Midnight Lute) rallied from just off the
pace to engage Take Charge Brandi around the turn, but could not keep
pace as the Kentucky-bred pulled away in the lane to score by 1 1/2
lengths.

“Her class carried her,” Lukas asserted after the race, adding that
his filly really hadn’t taken to the Delta Downs track leading up to the
race.

Take Charge Brandi had one more start left on the year. Shipping back
to California, the chestnut wired the Starlet S. (G1) at Los Alamitos
just three weeks later on December 13 with Espinoza back in the irons.
She was a half-length clear on the wire while completing 1 1/16 miles in
1:42.18, not far off the track mark of 1:41.62 set a week earlier.

“The whole purpose of coming here was to take the doubt out of it
(the Eclipse Award) if we could,” Lukas admitted. “I told Willis that if
we ran 1-2-3 we would still be very much in the picture.

“It’s completely changed her since we decided just to leave her alone
and let her run her race,” the Hall of Fame trainer added after the
Starlet. “We tried to get too cute with her during the summer and
finally, I woke up and said I’ll just leave her alone. We made that
decision and it’s worked.”

Indeed it has, leading all the way to an Eclipse Award.

Take Charge Brandi’s connections aren’t happy to just sit on their laurels,
though. Lukas has already mapped out a game plan for Kentucky Oaks (G1) glory in the
spring, pointing his filly for the $150,000 Honeybee S. (G3) on March 7 and
$400,000 Fantasy S. (G3) on April 4, both at Oaklawn Park.






TWO-YEAR-OLD FILLY  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
TAKE
CHARGE BRANDI
  236
Lady Eli   23
Condo
Commando
  3











Dayatthespa, who nearly retired after the 2012 Matriarch, enters her new life as a broodmare on a high note
(Breeders’ Cup Ltd. Photo)





After a brief interlude in 2013 courtesy of the British-based Dank, Chad
Brown resumed his role as trainer of the champion turf female with

DAYATTHESPA
(City Zip), who emulated former stablemates Stacelita (2011) and
Zagora (2012). Unlike those European imports, Dayatthespa spent her whole career
in Brown’s care, a New York-bred like her trainer.

The speedy chestnut competed at the highest level in her division for four
consecutive years. At two in 2011, Dayatthespa finished second in the Natalma
(Can-G3) at Woodbine and ninth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G2)
over a rain-affected Churchill course. On her preferred firm ground, she reeled
off a five-race winning spree in 2012, comprising the Sweetest Chant and
Herecomesthebride (G3) at Gulfstream, the Riskaverse at Saratoga, and the
Appalachian (G3) and Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (G1) at perhaps her
favorite haunt, Keeneland.

Dayatthespa looked to crown her sophomore season in the Matriarch (G1) at
Hollywood, only to endure a frightening experience on the clubhouse turn.
Hopping and bobbling when trying to jump the rail, she lost her action before
recovering to finish fifth. It was almost a career-ending mistake, for she cut
her right foreleg in the vicinity of the tendon, a gash that required stitches.



Her ownership group — Jerry Frankel, Ronald Frankel, Steve Laymon and
Bradley Thoroughbreds — considered retiring her. But Dayatthespa maintained her
enthusiasm for the game, and she was brought back for a four-year-old season.

Although she scored two stakes wins versus New York-breds in 2013, the Yaddo
and You Go West Girl, Dayatthespa’s most memorable performance that year came back at Keeneland in the First Lady (G1). A sudden downpour turned the ground against
her, and she went down fighting to Better Lucky (Ghostzapper) by a head. Her
campaign was also marked by a runner-up effort in the Eatontown (G3) at Monmouth
and a fourth in a less eventful Matriarch.

In 2014, Dayatthespa didn’t resurface until the Spa. Tiring to second in the
August 2 De La Rose at Saratoga, the five-year-old clearly needed the race off
the eight-month holiday. She never lost again. Dayatthespa roared right back to
repeat in the August 24 Yaddo by 2 1/2 front-running lengths. That set her up
for another crack at the First Lady, where she had the pleasure of avenging
herself on Better Lucky.

Connections decided to give her a chance at staying 1 1/4 miles in the
Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1). Untried past nine furlongs, Dayatthespa
was a query at the trip, especially against the likes of stablemate Stephanie’s
Kitten (Kitten’s Joy) and an accomplished European team. But the biggest weapon
throughout her career — her early speed — carried her at Santa Anita. Under a well-judged
ride by regular pilot Javier Castellano, she controlled a tepid pace and
quickened decisively. Stephanie’s Kitten, her old conqueror from the Juvenile
Fillies Turf, had to settle for second. Dayatthespa had now come full circle at
the Breeders’ Cup.

Dayatthespa thus took final command of a filly and mare turf division that
had been in search of a clear leader throughout the season. In addition, she
garnered enough support to become a finalist for champion older female as well,
ranking second in the balloting to Close Hatches.

With little time to rest on her laurels at Santa Anita, Dayatthespa dashed off to Lexington
for the Fasig-Tipton November Sale. Barbara Banke’s Stonestreet Thoroughbred
Holdings went to $2.1 million to purchase the champion, who will begin her new
career as a broodmare in 2015.

Dayatthespa retires with a scorecard of 18-11-4-0, $2,288,892. Bred by
Castellare DiCracchiolo Stable, Cracchiolo and Goldsher, she was a bargain
$50,000 yearling at Fasig Tipton’s New York-bred Sale at Saratoga. She is out of
the Doc’s Leader mare M’Lady Doc, who is in turn a full sister to Grade 3 victor
Phi Beta Doc. This is the family of Clev Er Tell (Tell), the Louisiana Derby
(G2) and Arkansas Derby (G2) winner of 1977; New Zealand Group 1 sprint star
Gold Trail (Hussonet); and Grade 2 victress Tricky Code (Lost Code), the dam of
Japanese champion sprinter and sire Hat Trick (Sunday Silence).






TURF FEMALE  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
   

 


DAYATTHESPA
  260
Crown
Queen
  2











Sprint champion Work All Week is only the second Illinois-bred ever to win an Eclipse Award

(Keeneland/Coady Photography)

The unheralded

WORK ALL WEEK
(City Zip) registered a 19-1 upset in the November 1 Breeders’ Cup Sprint
(G1) at Santa Anita, bringing to a close a sprint championship season that saw
him go five-for-six while maintaining his perfect 10-for-10 career mark on dirt.

A homebred campaigned by Midwest Thoroughbreds, Work All Week kicked off 2014
with an allowance victory at Oaklawn Park going 5 1/2 furlongs on January 19,
and then returned to take the $100,000 Hot Springs S. by 1 1/2 lengths on March 8
going six furlongs.

Following a 3 1/2-month break, Work All Week returned to action in the
six-furlong, $125,000 Iowa Sprint at Prairie Meadows in late June, posting a
mild upset win over Delaunay (Smoke Glacken) by a half-length in the mud. Work All Week’s lone
reversal of the season occurred next in the $85,000 Addison Cammack H. at
Arlington on July 26, an Illinois-bred stakes he had also run second in the
previous year. His 1 1/4-length defeat was over the Chicagoland track’s
synthetic Polytrack surface.



Work All Week found the return to dirt for the October 3 Phoenix S. (G3) at
Keeneland agreeable as the son of City Zip opened up a significant lead in the
stretch and then held on to win by a length. Next dismissed by bettors in the
Breeders’ Cup, the Roger Brueggemann trainee was away alertly from post 13,
pressed the early pace, seized control approaching the eighth pole and held off
2013 Sprint winner Secret Circle (Eddington) by a half-length in the division’s definitive
showdown of the year.

Work All Week finished the season with $1,357,571 in career earnings,
$1,131,173 of it earned in 2014 alone. His overall record now stands at
15-12-2-0.

Work All Week is the most recent Eclipse Award winner bred in Illinois, the
last being 1998 turf male champion Buck’s Boy. His two previous stakes wins both
occurred against Illinois-breds in 2013: the Tex’s Zing S. at Fairmount Park and
the Lightning Jet H. at Hawthorne.

The now six-year-old champion was reared by Danzig Matilda, a stakes-placed
daughter of Repriced.







MALE SPRINTER  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
WORK
ALL WEEK
  184

Goldencents
  52
Palace   12











The Las Flores was one of four stakes won by Judy the Beauty during her championship campaign

(Benoit Photos)



JUDY THE BEAUTY
‘s (Ghostzapper) gutsy head victory over longshot Better Lucky
(Ghostzapper) in the
Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) on November 1 secured a female sprint
championship that had eluded her a year earlier when she finished second to dual
champion Groupie Doll in the same race.

Owned and trained by Wesley Ward, a former Eclipse Award-winning apprentice
jockey, Judy the Beauty started and ended her championship campaign at Santa
Anita. Kicking things off in the March 9 Las Flores S. (G3), Judy the Beauty
cruised to a 4 1/2-length win in that six-furlong test. Next out, in the April
12 Madison S. (G1), Judy the Beauty ran her record to four-for-four over the old
Keeneland Polytrack with a 2 1/2-length victory over Better Lucky going seven
furlongs.

Ward subsequently regretted bringing Judy the Beauty back on short rest for
the May 3 Humana Distaff (G1) at Churchill Downs, where the Ghostzapper mare
suffered her lone defeat of the season. Steadily losing ground through the
stretch, Judy the Beauty crossed the wire fourth, six lengths behind Midnight
Lucky who did not race for the remainder of the year.



Out of action for more three months, Judy the Beauty returned a winner in the
August 17 Rancho Bernardo H. (G3) at Del Mar, taking that 6 1/2-furlong dash by
1 1/4 lengths on Polytrack. That was her final prep for the seven-furlong
Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint, where she raced wide down the backside,
seized control approaching the eighth pole, and gamely hung on.

Judy the Beauty earned $896,365 in 2014. She had two prior stakes wins to her
credit — the 2013 Thoroughbred Club of America S. (G2) and 2011 Shady Well S.
— and had placed in past editions of the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint,
Princess Rooney H. (G1), Prioress S. (G1), Spinaway S. (G1), Gallant Bloom H.
(G2), Presque Isle Downs Masters S. (G2), and Winning Colors S. (G3). The now
six-year-old’s career mark stands at 18-9-7-1, $1,662,122.

Bred in Ontario by Adena Springs, Judy the Beauty was produced by the
stakes-winning Holy Blitz, a daughter of Holy Bull. This extended family
includes Grade 1 scorer In the Gold (Golden Missile) and Grade 3 winner Fan the Flame
(Island Whirl).






FEMALE SPRINTER  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
JUDY
THE BEAUTY
  261
Others   4











Demonstrative started a three-race win streak in the New York Turf Writers Cup at Saratoga

(NYRA/Adam Coglianese Photography)

Having won three of U.S. steeplechasing’s six Grade 1 events, and finishing a
nose away from a fourth,

DEMONSTRATIVE
(Elusive Quality) did plenty to deserve accolades as the nation’s best hurdler
in 2014.

A distant sixth to 2013 champion Divine Fortune (Royal Anthem) in his season debut, the
three-mile Iroquois (NSA-G1) at Percy Warner Park in Nashville, Tennessee, on
May 10, Demonstrative zoomed to the head of the division over his next four
starts.

Second by a nose to the ill-fated Makari in the July 31 A.P. Smithwick
(NSA-G1) at Saratoga next out, the seven-year-old gelding made amends by winning
the August 25 New York Turf Writers Cup (NSA-G1) by a half-length while Makari
suffered a fatal fall in the stretch.

Demonstrative next carried his good form downstate to Belmont Park, where he
captured the September 18 Lonesome Glory (NSA-G1) by a length, and then captured
the division’s most lucrative event, the October 18 Grand National (NSA-G1) at
Far Hills, New Jersey, by 3 3/4 lengths over Divine Fortune.



With Demonstrative scoring three top-level wins and possessing a 3-1
head-to-head advantage over Divine Fortune, the season-ending Colonial Cup
(NSA-G1) at
Camden, South Carolina, on November 15 was unlikely to have much impact on the
divisional championship. In the event, Divine Fortune rebounded from earlier
losses in the Smithwick, Lonesome Glory, and Grand National with a nine-length
victory. Demonstrative settled for third.

A gelded son of Elusive Quality, Demonstrative concluded 2014 with a season
record of 6-3-1-1, $362,500. Earlier career highlights include wins in the 2012
New York Turf Writers Cup and Colonial Cup, and the 2013 Iroquois. He also won
three novice stakes from 2010-12. Demonstrative’s career record now stands at
39-12-8-6, $835,074.

Demonstrative is owned by Mrs. George L. Ohrstrom Jr. and is trained by
Richard Valentine. Bred in Kentucky by Gainsborough Farm, he was produced by the
French Group 3 winner Loving Pride, a Quiet American half-sister to multiple
Grade 3 winner Hula Queen (Irish River).

Also hailing from this family are English champion miler Zilzal (Nureyev) and
Canadian champion filly Negligee (Northern Afleet).







STEEPLECHASER  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     

DEMONSTRATIVE
  206
Divine
Fortune
  12
Decoy
Daddy
  5


Todd Pletcher parlayed another banner season into the Eclipse Award for leading trainer,
extending his record to seven. He passed the late Hall of Famer Bobby Frankel
last year and also earned trainer of the year in 2004-07, and 2010.

The 47-year-old native of Dallas led all North American trainers by earnings for the
fifth consecutive year, with stable earnings of $22,476,736.

Pletcher concluded last year more than $7 million ahead of runner-up Chad
Brown ($15,383,930), who also finished second in the Eclipse Award voting by a
100-64 margin. Art Sherman, who conditioned Horse of the Year California Chrome
and became the oldest trainer to capture the Kentucky Derby at age 77, came in
third with 45 votes.

Pletcher won 240 of 999 starts in 2014, a stellar 24 percent win rate. He was
the leading trainer at Saratoga, the Gulfstream Park Championship meet and
Belmont Park spring/summer meet, and the co-leader at the Keeneland fall session.

His top runners in 2014 included Grade 1 winners Carpe Diem, Competitive
Edge, Constitution, Danza, Daredevil and Stopchargingmaria.

In late May, Pletcher passed his mentor, Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas,
for first on the all-time earnings mark. His horses have bankrolled more than
$281 million during his career.







TRAINER  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
TODD
PLETCHER
  100
Chad Brown   64
Art
Sherman
  45


Javier Castellano — Champion
Jockey

After leading all North American riders by earnings for the second straight year,
Javier Castellano easily garnered his second consecutive Eclipse Award for
champion jockey. He received 203 first-place votes, 131 more than runner-up John
Velazquez.

Castellano’s mounts earned $25,056,464 in 2014 as the 37-year-old native of
Venezuela  won 315 of 1,365 starts, producing a gaudy 23 percent win rate.
He captured riding titles at Saratoga and Gulfstream Park’s championship meet,
and tied for the top spot during the Belmont Park spring/summer meet.

His major horses included champion turf mare Dayatthespa; and Grade 1 winners
Coffee Clique, Constitution, Daredevil, Hard Not to Like, Real Solution,
Stopchargingmaria, The Big Beast and V.E. Day.

In 2013, Castellano established a single-season earnings mark of $26,213,507.
He serves as a go-to rider for many top stables, including leading trainers Chad
Brown and Todd Pletcher.







JOCKEY  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
JAVIER
CASTELLANO
  203
John
Velazquez
  34
Mike Smith   8


Voters continued to recognize Ken and Sarah Ramsey for their contributions as
breeders and owners in 2014, awarding them a second consecutive Eclipse Award in
both categories.

The couple received 129 first-place votes for leading breeder, besting Adena
Springs and Winchell Thoroughbreds LLC, who tied for second with 43. The Ramseys
bred the winners of 264 races from 1,771 starts, topping the individual breeders
list for a second straight year with $10,412,411 in earnings, and they ranked
second among breeders including partnerships.

They earned their first Eclipse Award as breeders last year.

Homebred champion Kitten’s Joy, the leading sire of 2013, has been a big part
of the Ramseys’ success. He stands for a $100,000 fee at Ramsey Farm in
Nicholasville, Kentucky.

The Ramseys easily repeated as champion owner after dominating the standings
by earnings, bankrolling $10,544,148 in 2014. They finished 158 votes ahead of
runner-up Midwest Thoroughbreds Inc., with Kaleem Shah another vote back in
third.

With primary trainers Chad Brown, Mike Maker, Todd Pletcher and Joe Sharp,
the Ramseys nearly doubled the earnings of Shah, who finished second with
$5,977,978.

Top performers for the Ramsey Stable included Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1)
winner Bobby’s Kitten; Louisiana Derby (G2) and Super Derby (G2) hero Vicar’s in
Trouble; and Manhattan (G1) winner Real Solution.

Now a four-time winner, Ramseys were also named leading owner in 2011 and
2004.








BREEDERS  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
KENNETH
AND SARAH RAMSEY
  129
Adena
Springs
  43
Winchell
Thoroughbreds LLC
  43
     







OWNER  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
KENNETH
AND SARAH RAMSEY
  179
Midwest
Thoroughbreds Inc.
  21
Kaleem
Shah Inc.
  20


Drayden Van Dyke received the Eclipse Award for leading apprentice jockey.
The 20-year-old, who led all North American-based apprentices by wins and
earnings in 2014, collected 225 first-place votes, with the late Juan Saez
finishing second with 11.

After growing up in Hot Springs, Arkansas, Van Dyke went to work at the
racetrack. Trainer Tom Proctor met him early on and has served as a mentor for
Van Dyke, who won his first race on November 21, 2013 at Hollywood Park. The
up-and-coming youngster went on to capture a pair of titles in Southern
California last year, leading all riders during the summer and fall meets at Los
Alamitos.

Van Dyke captured 192 races from 1,178 starts in 2014, a 16 percent win rate,
and his mounts earned $6,074,102. He ranked 23rd by wins and 31st by earnings
among all North American jockeys, earning his first graded stakes victory aboard
Sistas Stroll in September’s Pucker Up (G3) at Arlington Park.

His father, Seth Van Dyke, was also a jockey who worked in the Thoroughbred
industry until his death last August.







APPRENTICE JOCKEY  
FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
DRAYDEN
VAN DYKE
  225
Juan Saez   11
Trevor
McCarthy
  6


Award of Merit

The winner of the Award of Merit, voted on by a panel of
representatives from the three presenting organizations and previously
announced, is Tom Durkin. The Award of Merit is presented to honor outstanding
lifetime achievement in the Thoroughbred industry.

Special Award

The winner of the Special Award, voted on by a panel of
representatives from the three presenting organizations and previously
announced, is Old Friends Farm. The Special Award honors extraordinary service,
individual achievements in, or contributions to the sport of Thoroughbred
racing.

Media Eclipse Awards

Given in the categories of
photography, audio and multi-media Internet, news/enterprise writing,
feature/commentary writing, national television-feature and national
television-live racing programming to recognize members of the media for
outstanding coverage of Thoroughbred racing. The 2014 Media Eclipse Awards
winners, determined by a judges’ panel for each category and previously
announced, are:


  • Photography — Barbara Livingston, “Tapiture Works in
    Driving Rainstorm,” Daily Racing Form; April 30, 2014
  • Writing — Feature/Commentary: John Scheinman, “Memories of
    a Master: The Determined Life of Dickie Small,” Bloodhorse.com; May 12, 2014
  • Writing — News/Enterprise — Joe Clancy, “Horse of a
    Lifetime,” Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred; July 2014
  • Television — Live Racing: NBC Sports, “The Breeders’ Cup
    Classic,” Rob Hyland, Coordinating Producer; November 1, 2014
  • Television — Feature: NBC Sports, “California Chrome: The
    Unlikely Champion,” Jack Felling, Supervising Producer; June 5, 2014
  • Audio and Multi-Media InternetThe Blood-Horse; “Waiting
    and Waiting for Triple Crown Glory,” Written by Frank Angst; May 28, 2014