November 20, 2024

Ben’s Cat makes history as three-time Maryland-bred Horse of Year

Last updated: 2/24/14 6:56 PM


Ben’s Cat makes history as three-time Maryland-bred Horse
of Year

King T. Leatherbury’s popular homebred gelding Ben’s Cat was named
Maryland-bred Horse of the Year for an unprecedented third time in the annual
poll conducted by the Maryland Horse Breeders Association. In addition, he has
become the most decorated statebred in the 62-year history of the awards, taking
three divisional categories in 2013 — champion older male, sprinter and turf
horse — to increase his total to 10.

Incredibly consistent, Ben’s Cat produced a near-identical season to that of
2012, winning five of eight starts, all in stakes company, and earning $505,350,
the most of any Maryland-bred for the year. He defended his title in Parx
Racing’s Parx Dash Handicap, a Grade 3 for the first time last year, as well as
Penn National’s Fabulous Strike Handicap, the latter his only start on the main
track. 

The dark bay kicked off his seven-year-old campaign with a fourth consecutive
victory in Pimlico’s Mister Diz Stakes. He also won, for the second time in
three years, the Jim McKay Turf Sprint Stakes at Pimlico and the Laurel Dash
Stakes at Laurel. His other three starts resulted in stakes placings. He
finished second by a neck in the one-mile Maryland Million Turf Stakes, his only
start beyond six furlongs, and was third in the Grade 3 Turf Monster Handicap
and Pennsylvania Governor’s Cup Handicap.

The son of Parker’s Storm Cat out of Twofox, by Thirty Eight Paces, unraced
until May of his four-year-old season in 2010, has won 24 of his 37 lifetime
starts, with four seconds and three thirds, for career earnings of $1,862,640,
ranking him eighth on the all-time list of top-earning Maryland-bred runners. He
has been named champion turf runner four times (2010 to 2013), champion older
male from 2011 to 2013, and sprinter in 2010, 2011 and 2013.

Six of the 2013 champions were conceived in Maryland: Great Notion (Jonesin
for Jerry and Grateful Nation) and the late Two Punch (Bold Affair) at Northview
Stallion Station; Outflanker (Joint Custody), Shamrock Farm; Yarrow Brae (Foyle),
formerly standing at Murmur Farm; and former Country Life Farm stallion Parker’s
Storm Cat.

Other divisional champions:

Champion two-year-old male: Joint Custody (gr./ro.g., 2011, by Outflanker-Paying
Off, by Malibu Moon). Bred by Janet Wayson; owned by Konrad M. Wayson; trained
by John J. Robb.

Champion two-year-old filly: Jonesin for Jerry (b.f., 2011, by Great Notion-Derwin’s
Lady, by Langfuhr). Bred by Roland Farm; owned by Brad Gould Jr. and Hidden Hill
Farm; trained by John J. Robb.

Champion three-year-old male: Grateful Nation (dk.b./br.g, 2010, by Great
Notion-Trueytoo, by Concern). Bred by Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bowman and Rebecca
Davis; owned by Rebecca B. Davis; trained by Richard W. Small.

Champion three-year-old filly: Walkwithapurpose (b.f., 2010, by Candy
Ride-Lightning Lydia, by Broad Brush). Bred and owned by Sagamore Farm LLC;
trained by Ignacio Correas IV.

Champion older female: Bold Affair (ch.m., 2008, Two Punch-Hunka Hunka Lori
Z, by Colonial Affair). Bred and owned by Charles Reed and Michael Zanella;
trained by Howard Wolfendale.

Champion steeplechaser: Foyle (dk.b./br.g., 2005, by Yarrow Brae-Londonderry,
by Perfecting). Bred by Mrs. C. Frank Hopkins; owned by Merriefield Farm;
trained by H. Bruce Fenwick.

Voting for this year’s champions were the MHBA board of directors,
Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred editors Joe Clancy and Cindy Deubler, Maryland Jockey
Club racing secretary Georganne Hale, stakes coordinator Coleman Blind,
communications director Mike Gathagan, racing analyst Gabby Gaudet and track
announcer Dave Rodman, Bill Brasaemle and Keith Feustle of Equibase, free-lance
writers Dale Austin, Andy Beyer, Ted Black, Sean Clancy, Maggie Kimmitt, Vinnie
Perrone and John Scheinman, radio host Stan Salter, photographer Lydia Williams
and Maryland website blogger Frank Vespe.

Profiles of all the Maryland-bred champions will be posted later this month
at
marylandthoroughbred.com
 and can be found in the March issue of Mid-Atlantic
Thoroughbred magazine.



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