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Two Tales of Living the Life (IRE) Half Brothers Racing this Week

Commodore Perry (KY) makes start 13–Silver Blur debuts

Commodore Perry (KY), by Pioneer of the Nile, is Living the Life’s first foal. Living the Life won two Grade 2 and one Grade 3 Sprint Stakes, all on Tapeta All Weather Tracks. Living the Life (IRE) is also Grade 1 placed on the dirt. Living the Life (IRE) produced 10 wins and $1 million plus in earnings during her racing career.

Living the Life Chapman Painting

Now a broodmare, Living the Life (IRE) produced a Pioneer of the Nile colt named Commodore Perry (KY) in April 2018. When Commodore Perry (KY) matured and launched his racing career, he became the classic morning glory. A morning glory being a horse who demonstrates significant talent during morning workouts, but fails to perform in the afternoons.

As a result Commodore Perry (KY) has been tried on various surfaces, distances and locales. by HnR Horseracing and his trainers. In an attempt to run him against competition he could overwhelm, we lost him to a claim, but successfully claimed him back. Commodore Perry (KY) now resides at Fair hill under the tutelage of Phil Schoenthal. He is completely sound, very robust, easy to handle, and often flashes extraordinary talent during morning training.

As a result we are not prepared to give up on him yet. As a result, career start 13 will be at Presque Isle Downs on Tuesday in a mile allowance race on a Tapeta track. Commodore Perry (KY) two career wins have come at Turfway on their Tapeta track.

Commodore Perry (KY) winning at Turfway before returning to HnR Horseracing

Commodore Perry (KY) will be returning to the locale of Living the Life (IRE) ‘s most significant accomplishments. In three starts at Presque Isle Downs for Gary Mandella, Living the Life (IRE) with Mike Smith up won the Masters Stakes sGrade 2 in 2015, won th Masters Stakes with Joe Bravo up in 2016 and was a short nose 2nd in 2017 with Flavian Prat up, pocketing a total $560K in purse money.

Further, Commodore Perry (KY), in honor of Living the Life (IRE) accomplishments at Presque Isle, is named after the War of 1812 hero of Lake Erie, Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry. Commodore Perry built his wooden fleet of sailing craft at Presque Isle before defeating the British in a pivotal battle on LakeErie. From this battle emerged one of, if not the, most famous saying in US Naval History “Don’t give up the Ship!”. Commodore Perry (KY) will be decked out in HnR Nothhaft Horseracing’s Navy Blue and Gold color of owner Hank Nothhaft’s alma mater the U.S. Naval Academy.

We are hoping, Commodore Perry (KY) will be inspired at demonstrate his morning prowess in the afternoon on the shores of Lake Erie.

Silver Blur is an entirely different situation going into his Maiden Start on Sunday in Race 4 at Churchill Downs. Bred by HnR and sold for $300K as a yearling at the Fasig Tipton Select Sale he is by Top US stallion of the decade Tapit.

Working forwardly as a 2yo, Silver Blur encountered a soft tissue injury that pushed his first start out to this weekend in May. Owned by successful owner, Tom Durant, whose top horse based on earnings is Silver Dust, he is in the hands of super successful trainer Bret Calhoun. (also trained Silver Dust). Adam Beschizza, emerging journeyman, jockey will be in the irons.

Silver Blur colt by Tapit o/o Living the Life (IRE) yearling Fasig Tipton Select Sale

Given the purse structure at Churchill Downs, it is not surprising that Silver Blur will face a full field of formidable competitors entered by a group of world renowned owners and trainers and ridden by many top US jockeys. As the saying goes, you must start somewhere. No telling at this time whether Silver Blur will be a sprinter or two turn horse or favor the dirt or turf, but much will be revealed during Sunday’s 5 1/2 furlong turf sprint. Good luck to all the connections.

MAIDEN SPECIAL WEIGHT

Purse: $ 120,000. (Includes $56,500 – KTDF – Kentucky TB Devt Fund) . For Maidens, Three Years Old And Upward. Three Year Olds, 118 Lbs.; Older, 124 Lbs. (preference To Horses That Have Not Started For Less Than $50,000 In Last 3 Starts). (if Deemed Inadvisable By Management To Run This Race Over The Turf Course, It Will Be run on the main track at Five and a Half Furlongs.). Five And One Half Furlongs. (Turf)

Lady Lynne moves to 2nd Career

4 yo Jump Start Filly Concludes 13 race Career 2 wins 2 place 2 show completely sound, moving to post race career

HnR Horseracing decided to retire Lady Lynne, PABRED, Homebred rather than compete at lower claiming ranks where she remained competitive. Retiring sound, in our view, gives Lady Lynne the best chance to find the perfect forever home.

Lady Lynne Winning at Delaware Park

Lady Lynne winning her final career race at Delaware Park Sept 2021

Beyond the Races has undertaken the task of finding Lady Lynne her post racing home. Check out this overview on Beyond the Races FACEBOOK PAGE. https://www.facebook.com/AfterTheRaces/posts/372160141619729

Made in America wins 37th Running of the Forego Stakes

In his sixth start, Made in America became a Stakes Winner, and as first foal of his dame, became Kindle’s first Stakes winner as well. Besides surviving the San Luis Rey fire (AKA Lilac Fire) that killed 46 horses, Made in America has overcome two soft tissue injuries that kept him off the track 7 months and 9 months respectively. As a result, Made in America (KY) made his 6th start at the beginning of his five year old campaign.

MIA Post Parade Forego Stakes
Made in America on his toes in the post parade

Timing of his comebacks has resulted in five of his starts taking place at Turfway Park. Three starts were on the old Polytrack, and he has now booked two races on the new Tapeta track, racking up a 5 starts 3 wins 2 places record. The places coming after the long aforementioned lay-offs. Four of his starts have been 6.5 furlong affairs and one allowance win at a mile. HnR believes that Made in America (KY) is a miler and is winning the sprints on shear talent.

Given the condition book at Turfway Park and the fact that Made in America (KY) is fit and sound our goal is to run there two more times before the end of the meet, preferably at a mile or greater. Ideally, Made in America (KY) would run in his next Allowance condition and then in the Kentucky Cup Classic at 1 1/8 miles to wrap up the campaign.

After being checked and bumped, Made in America was not to be denied in a late rally

If we are fortunate to achieve these goals, Made in America (KY) trains well on the dirt, so we will be looking at all dirt and all weather opportunities as we work through the year. Made in America (KY) ships well and the Mid-Atlantic/Kentucky/Indiana circuits are our targets, His Dame Kindle (KY) won on the turf, dirt and all weather. We know that the great Tiznow was an astonishing performer on the dirt.

Made in America (KY) heads to the post parade with Declan Cannon up

Below is the Thoroughbred Daily News summary of the Forego Stakes.

FOREGO S., $63,410, Turfway, 1-15, 4yo/up, 6 1/2f (AWT), 1:16.70, ft.

1–MADE IN AMERICA, 120, g, 5, Tiznow–Kindle (MSW & MGSP, $243,370), by Indian Charlie. 1ST BLACK TYPE WIN.

O/B-HnR Nothhaft Horseracing LLC (KY);

T-Ben Colebrook;

J-Declan Cannon. $38,285. Lifetime Record: 6-3-2-0, $112,010. 2–

Made in America (KY) connections award presentation
Made in America Connections and owner/breeder Hank Nothhaft accept trophy from Mike Matagllia

Hurricane Highway, 120, g, 5, Quality Road–Stormy Kiss

(Arg), by Bernstein. ($10,000 Wlg ’16 KEENOV; $80,000 Ylg ’17 OBSOCT; $15,000 2yo ’18 FTKFEB; $95,000 2yo ’18 OBSAPR).

O-Contreras Stable, Inc. and Trostrud Jr., Earl J.; B-Marchanta Syndicate (KY); T-Cipriano Contreras. $12,350.

3–Lookin to Strike, 120, g, 6, Lookin At Lucky–Miss Bonnie, by Officer. ($22,000 Wlg ’15 KEENOV; $32,000 RNA Ylg ’16

OBSAUG; $210,000 2yo ’17 OBSAPR). O-Gary Barber; B-Fedai Kahraman (KY); T-Mark E. Casse. $6,175.

Margins: HD, 3/4, NK. Odds: 7.90, 8.10, 4.50.

Also Ran: Dabo, Eagle Song (Ire), Frosted Ice, What’s Up Dude, Guildsman (Fr), Bango, Unmoored. Scratched: Awesome Gent, Escapade, Fast Fire.

Made In America scored a narrow upset to earn his black-type badge at Turfway Friday night. Keeping tabs from third early, the gelding rallied down the center of the track in the lane to get the win by a head.

Graduating at third asking at Turfway in February, Made in America captured an optional claimer there a month later. Subsequently shelved, he resurfaced Dec. 31 at this oval, finishing second in an allowance.

Made in America is the first foal out of MSW & MGSP Kindle, whose recent produce includes the now-3-year-old colt Palazzi (Pioneer of the Nile) and a yearling colt by Into Mischief. She was bred back to American Pharoah.”

Pennsylvania's Thoroughbred Elite-Finest City-Everything Happens for a Reason

by Averie Levanti for Pennsylvania Horseracing Association

In a typical year, 1,600 Pennsylvania-breds compete on the racetrack for average earnings of $27,600. Of the 50,000+ who have raced across the globe since 1985, only an elite group of 31 horses have broken the seven-figure mark in earnings. Over the course of summer 2020, the Pennsylvania Horse Racing Association will be chronicling a ten-part series featuring the select group of Pennsylvania-breds who reached the unique and rare accomplishment of $1,000,000 in racetrack earnings. Join us to celebrate and remember some of the greatest racehorses the Keystone State has produced.

When Hank Nothhaft attended the 2011 Keeneland November Sale, he had a specific goal in mind: purchase a handful of broodmares to support his newest stallion acquisition, the Breeders’ Cup Sprint winning Silver Train, who Nothhaft had purchased a couple of months prior and moved to the Pennsylvania branch of Northview Stallion Station.

Three Day old Finest City @Northview Stallions PA

Alongside his bloodstock agent Carl McEntee, Nothhaft ended up taking home three new broodmares. One was Be Envied, a stakes placed daughter of Lemon Drop Kid who was in foal to the up and coming stallion City Zip. Sent to Northview PA, Be Envied foaled out her chestnut filly on March 28th, 2012.
Nothhaft named his newest filly City Envy, and she quickly began to bring raving reviews. McEntee advised Nothhaft that the filly would be a great weanling sale prospect, and the decision was made to prepare for the 2012 Keeneland November Sale after she x-rayed clean. Her high expectations led Nothhaft to set her reserve at $50,000, but they expected her to bring as high as $150,000 with all of the buzz surrounding her.

Nothhaft with Finest City at the 2012 Keeneland November Sale

To the surprise of Hank Nothhaft and everyone else involved with City Envy, she hammered right on reserve at $50,000 for Cobra Farm. What had happened? How could they have been so wrong? Soon after, it was discovered that City Envy was not vetting cleanly and happened to have a cyst on a stifle, a problem that was not detected on her initial x-rays. Nothhaft dealt with mixed emotions following the sale knowing he would not have sold his filly if he had known she had had an issue.

Finest City Northview MD with Hank

City Envy was sent to new owners Cobra Farm and prepared as a pinhook for the 2013 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. She brought $85,000 as a yearling and was purchased on behalf of the San Diego-based stable Seltzer Thoroughbreds. Seltzer ended up renaming City Envy to Finest City as an ode to their hometown. Once settled into California, the newly- named Finest City was turned over to a third generation horseman, albeit a brand new trainer, in 28-year-old Ian Kruljac.

Finest City Breeders Cup Champion and Eclipse Award Winner

Finest City developed a reputation as a quirky horse, and she dealt with a handful of minor physical maladies. Kruljac was patient with his filly, and his small stable allowed him to give her the attention she needed. His careful and patient handling ensured that Finest City did eventually make it to the races, and she debuted at Del Mar in July of her three-year-old season, finishing a close second at odds of 33-1.
Finest City made her next start on August 23, 2015, romping to an 8 ½ length maiden victory at Del Mar. Her impressive score earned her a try in stakes company next out, and she finished a respectable fourth in the Unzip Me Stakes in her turf debut. Returning to the main track, Finest City rolled to another easy victory at Del Mar, this time taking an allowance event by 3 ¼ lengths. Her short first year ended with another second place effort in allowance company before a dull effort in the G1 La Brea on a quick turnaround. It was the last time she finished outside of the superfecta for a long time.

Finest City making her winning move with Mike Smith up Breeders Cup

Starting her four-year-old campaign in the Grade 2 Santa Monica Stakes at Santa Anita, Finest City suffered a heartbreaking loss after dueling with 64-1 longshot Lost Bus for the duration of the race before falling a head short at the wire. She proceeded to finish third in allowance company and fourth in the G3 Las Flores Stakes before stepping back up into Grade 2 company in the Great Lady M Stakes at Los Alamitos

Sent off at 8-1 in the field of seven, Finest City settled towards the back of the pack before making a four-wide bid around the turn to put her within contention. In a perfectly timed ride, the filly ran down the leading pair of Las Flores winner Fantastic Style and Santa Monica winner Lost Bus to enact her revenge by 1 ¼ lengths.


Fresh off her first graded stakes triumph, Finest City tried Grade 1 company in the Vanity Mile, where she faced a dynamic duo of champions in Beholder and Stellar Wind. In an incredibly respectable effort, she finished third
while beaten only 2 ¼ lengths by Beholder, who would go on to win her second consecutive Champion Older Mare title by year’s end.

Having shown her versatility with an ability to handle turf in the past, Finest City returned to the turf for her next two races. After finishing a close fourth in the Grade 2 Yellow Ribbon Handicap, the filly stretched out to the furthest distance of her career in the 11/8 mile Grade 2 John C. Mabee Stakes. Finest City put up a gutsy effort at a distance that was probably past her prime, closing a 2 length advantage on Avenge in the final furlong to lose by a diminishing head.

HnR Bred Finest City Breeders Cup F&M Sprint Champion & Eclipse Award Winner 2016

With the Breeders’ Cup looming two months out, Finest City trained up to the world championship event with her sights set on a return to the dirt in the Fill-y & Mare Sprint division. Everything was coming together perfectly for Hank Nothhaft, who also planned to run his filly Living The Life in the same race. Living The Life was entering the Breeders’ Cup off a close second in the G2 Presque Isle Masters in her bid to win the race for a third consecutive year.

HnR Bred Finest City PABRED Horse of Year; Best Female Sprinter; Best Female Older Horse 2016

Nothhaft had his tickets and travel plans in order to cheer home both a filly he owned and a filly he had bred when disaster struck. Living The Life turned up lame after her final workout for the Breeders’ Cup. In the immediate air of disappointment, Nothhaft cancelled his travel plans and gave away his Breeders’ Cup tickets. It was a decision he would end up regretting. tickets. It was a decision he would end up regretting.

Finest City drew post twelve in the field of thirteen. Despite having not won since April, she was sent off as the fifth betting choice at 8-1 for her consistent, well-placed efforts. When the gates sprung, Hall of Fame rider Mike Smith hustled Finest Cit-y towards the front, locking into a three-wa-y speed duel with Gloryzapper and Paulassilverlining. The trio set down blistering fractions of 21.98 for the opening quarter and 44.82 for the opening half.

With Gloryzapper falling away as the field rounded the turn, Finest City and Paulassilverlining turned into the stretch as one. Defending champion Wavell Avenue was catapulting from the back of the pack to range up alongside the dueling pair. Finest City finally gained an advantage over Paulassilverlining before being confronted with a new challenge from Wavell Avenue. Regardless, Finest City found it within herself to hold off her rival for the final half furlong, and she soared under the wire ¾ length in front.

Finest City’s score in the Filly & Mare Sprint was the fourth victory at the Breeders’ Cup World Championships for a Pennsylvania-bred and the first in twenty-four years. It was a first for many involved: the first Grade 1 victory for the fill-y herself, the first for Seltzer Thoroughbreds and young trainer Ian Kruljac, and the first for Hank Nothhaft as a breeder. At year’s end Finest City was named Pennsylvania-bred Horse of the Year and won the Eclipse Award for Champion Female Sprinter.

A few hours before she was officially christened a champion, Finest City made her five-year-old debut in the G2 Santa Monica. She went one better than the year before, cruising to an easy 3 ¾ length victory in wire to wire fashion. The Santa Monica would ultimately end up being the final win for Finest City’s career, but she remained consistent through year’s end with second place efforts in the G1 Santa Margarita and the G1 Humana Distaff and thirds in the G1 Beholder Mile and G2 Great Lady M.

Finest City still intended to defend her title in the Breeders’ Cup, and Hank Nothhaft made sure not to miss out the second time. On November 4, 2017, the consistent, hard-trying mare made the final start of her career at the world championships, but a repeat was not meant to be. Finest City turned in the poorest effort of her career when eighth in the field of fourteen.

Despite the disappointing end to her racing career, there was no time to ruminate. Finest City was due to sell at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale two days after the Breeders’ Cup, and she shipped to Kentucky the following morning. Hank Nothhaft followed his filly and watched her step into the sales ring on Monday evening. The bidding jumped up past seven figures before finally hammering at $1,500,000 for legendary Japanese horseman Katsumi Yoshida, owner of Japan’s breeding powerhouse Northern Farm.

From Finest City’s three seasons on the racetrack, she faced the starting gate twenty times with five wins, six seconds, and four thirds for earnings of $1,266,394. She only finished worse than fourth twice throughout her entire career. She took home three graded stakes triumphs and placed in seven others, with her finest hour coming with a Breeders’ Cup victor-y and subsequent Eclipse Award.

Finest City sells for $1.5 Million @ Fasig Tipton

Despite offering Finest City as a weanling at Keeneland, Hank Nothhaft maintains that he has no regrets when it comes to selling her that day. He reflects on how the circumstances, timing, and luck culminated with her ending up with the right trainer at the right time to maximize her talent. Nothhaft believes that ending up in a small barn like Ian Kruljac’s was crucial to Finest City’s success because she received the individual attention that was required to work out her kinks and minor problems.

Before being sent to her new home in Japan, Finest City made a stop in England for a date with world-renowned sire Frankel. The resulting colt sold at auction for 108,000,000 -yen (around $1,000,000 USD) as a foal. She continues to reside at Northern Farm, where she delivered a colt by Lord Kanaloa in 2020.

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HORSES OF RACING AGE HIGHLIGHT FASIG-TIPTON MID-ATLANTIC DECEMBER SALE

Article originally published in the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders’ Association January, 2020 Monthly Newsletter

Fielder wins Marshall Jenny Stakes

Five of the six top- priced PA-Breds sold at the Fasig-Tipton Mid-Alantic December Mixed and Horses of Racing Age held Dec. 10 at the sales pavilion in Timonium, Md., were horses of racing age.In all,44  PA-Breds sold  for $703,900.

Stakes winner Fielder topped the offerings when Ron Paolucci Racing bid $100,000 for the gelded son of Sidney’s Candy. Consigned by agent Bill Reightler,  Fielder campaigned for the majority of his 27-start career for Waldorf Racing Stables LLC, who purchased the gelding for $70,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Horses of Racing age sale in July 2017.

Bred by Hank Nothhaft’s HnR Nothhaft Horseracing out of stakes- placed Karakorum Fugitive (by Ten Most Wanted), Fielder had been a $47,000 RNA as a weanling, and was sold as a yearling at the 2015 Keeneland September sale for $180,000 to Juddmonte Farms, who sent him to California to Bob Baffert.  He made his career debut at Del Mar in a six and a half-furlong maiden special weight in November 2016, finished fifth, and was sold after that only start the following summer.

It took five months, and five attempts, for Fielder to break his maiden for his new owner, which came at Parx Racing. Trained by Marya K. Montoya, Fielder was a solid allowance horse sprinting on the main track, but became a stakes performer when put on the turf.  In his grass debut, July 21, 2018, at Parx, he won the Marshall Jenney.  Other stakes performances were two placings in the Laurel Dash in Maryland, both on the turf. In his five most recent starts he was second or third four times (including a second in the Laurel Dash beaten less than a length),and fourth in the Grade3 Turf Monster Stakes. With a career mark of eight wins, five seconds and six thirds, Fielder has amassed $351,225.

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Passion Play by Lenny Shulman “Bloodhorse Magazine” 12 January 2019

Hank Nothhaft builds a top breeding program from scratch

BY LENNY SHULMAN
PHOTOS COURTESY OF HANK NOTHHAFT

Nothhaft traded venture technology companies for a career in horses

Nothhaft-bred Finest City, winner of the 2016 Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint

ELEVEN YEARS AGO VENTURE· TECHNOLOGY COMPANY CEO
Hank Nothhaft looked at himself in the mirror and realized that, after three decades, he was los­ing his passion for his work. He needed a new challenge, one that satisfied his all-encompassing, adrenaline-driven, compulsive lifestyle.

               Hello Thoroughbred breeding and racing.

A decade of immersion into every­ thing horses has yielded significant results for the 74-year-old Nothhaft, a native of Pennsylvania who has traveled the world in both his military and civilian lives. Under HnR Nothhaft Horse Racing (the “R” coming courtesy of wife Randie) Nothhaft has bred Breeders’ Cup Champion Finest City, multiple graded stakes winner Daddy ls a Legend , and multiple stakes-winning homebred Grand Prix. He has also campaigned multiple graded stakes winner Living The Life and multiple grade 2-placed stakes winner Kindle, and has specialized in purchasing modestly­ priced stock that has gone on to perform on the racetrack and in the breeding shed.

There were no horses or racing in Nothhaft’s youth in Sharon, Pa ., between Erie and Youngstown, although today that area is littered with race tracks that didn’t exist decades ago. Nothhaft graduated from the United States Naval Academy and served in Vietnam , achieving his MBA in information systems technology after he exited the military. He assumed ownership of a series of tech companies, which

Nothhaft with Finest City at the 2012 Keeneland November Sale

took him from Washington D.C., to Dallas, and eventually to Silicon Valley in Northern California. There, the racing bug  bit him on friends-and-family outings to Bay Meadows.”   We loved that place, and I developed a positive view of horse racing,” noted Nothhaft. “I was going back and forth to England quite a bit , and read all the Dick Francis novels on those trips, and began going to race tracks like Lingfield, near London, and really enjoyed it. ”

Those good feelings persuaded Nothhaft to take up the challenge of trying to survive in the horse industry, initially as an owner .

“I analyzed a bunch of different industries, and I ended up with Thorough-hred racing,” he said. ” I do look back and chuckle at my naivete in thinking I could do what has subsequently occurred.  I love the competition and the immediate feedback you get on your decisions .

“What I find appealing is you can immerse yourself in the data side of it. I always had a dashboard on any company I was running and loved to throw myself into the statistics and analyze the company in as many ways as possible. So when l started looking at pedigrees and bloodlines, I thought,  ‘Wow, that amount of data is perfect for an insatiable appetite like mine.’ ”

Nothhaft did his homework. He attended seminars put on by the Thoroughbred Owners of California, watched BloodHorse videos on conformation, read books, and then went out and raced some cheap claimers in Northern California, seeking to have fun, enjoy the competition, and hopefully break even. ‘The plan didn’t work well, and Nothhaft used the economic meltdown of 2009 to liquidate his stock, learn from his early mistakes, and start over again.

With the benefit of advice from Gary Mandella and Mary Knight, he began buying better Cal-breds. Chalking it up to “dumb luck,” he bought Randie’s Legend at auction for $ 43,000 in 2008 .

She would go on to produce Daddy ls a Legend. But Nothhaft turned the corner when he decided that Pennsylvania offered more opportunity than did the situation in California. He enlisted Carl McEntee to help buy bloodstock and the operation clicked. Nothhaft grabbed Kindle for  $50,000, Be Envied for $37,000, Living The Life for less than $50,000, and Halljoy, who would become group stakes -placed. for $150,000 . All became valued members of his broodmare band, with Be Envied producing Finest City and Grand Prix.

“Hank came to realize that buying more-commercial broodmares was the most productive place to be, and safest to work within,” McEntee noted. “We’ve had good success and have made smart decisions on our breeding selections, which we both spend a lot of time on. ‘There’s luck involved, because this is the ‘Thoroughbred industry, and there are no certainties. But the harder you work, the luckier you seem to get.”

‘Today, Nothhaft’s 10 broodmares produce Pennsylvania-breds after being bred to Kentucky stallions, and he him­self is on the board of the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association.

“One of the side benefits of getting into horses is that I’ve reconnected with my home state,”  he said. “I’ve traveled the world, lived for three decades in California (today he lives in Austin, Texas) , and came back to my roots; in Pennsylvania.  I’ve won the Presque Isle Downs Masters Stakes (G2) twice. Where other guys have Kentucky Derby fever, I want to get a PABRED to win the Masters,” which has never happened . It takes all kinds of people, right?”

Most of the mares Nothhaft owns today either raced for him or were bred by him, the notable exception being Sulis, whom he bought specifically to breed to Silver Train, a stallion Nothhaft bought and stood in Pennsylvania, hut who died after just two years. Having paid $105,000 for Sulis, a daughter of Maria ‘s Mon, Nothhaft proceeded to sell weanlings  out of her for $250,000, $130,000, and $ 220,000 within four years.

Nothhaft with his grandchildren at Golden Gate Fields

Nothhaft with Living the Life UK All Weather Champion and 2 times winner Masters Stakes Gr2

As legendary Kentucky horseman Robert Courtney used to say, that’s how you make money in this business.

Because the Pennsylvania incentive program is going well, Nothhaft said he might increase his mare population to 15, but generally he is concentrating on improving the quality of the band rather than increasing its number.

“Carl and I made a decision not to take the risk of raising them to be yearlings .” Nothhaft said of his early preference for selling weanlings . “At least until now. The yearling market is crazy right now so I’m not unhappy to hold onto them another year because the financial advantage is shifting that way. That hasn’t always been true.” That updated strategy comes in part from the American Pharoah-Kindle weanling colt Nothhaft sold for S400,000 who was pin hooked by Peter O’Callaghan and sold for s2.2 million at last September’s Keeneland yearling auction.

Kindle and Kindle 17 who became the most expensive American Pharoah sold so far at $2.2M

Nothhaft supported McEntee during the latter’s time at Darby Dan Farm and has helped bankroll McEntee’s move to open Ballysax Bloodstock, which now consigns the Nothhaft-breds.

“Carl is all energy and is a hard worker,” said Nothhaft. “In his first year in 2018 he’s had good-quality consignments and gotten good results.
“Hank is an incredibly passionate man who has to have something to d rive him and I’m the same way,” noted McEntee.”He’ll call me at 4 or 5 a.m. his time to talk. He knows only one speed, and that’s 100 mph .”

Nothhaft’s single most notable day in the business came on Nov. 5, 2016. when the Breeders Cup Filly & M are Sprint (G 1) was run at Santa Anita Park. The Nothhaft-owned Living The Life, who had won the Presque lsle Downs Masters in 2014 and 2015 and the All American Stakes (G3) in 2016. was slated to compete against the Nothhaft-hred Finest City, whom the breeder had sold as a weanling in 2012 for $50,000.  ‘·My wife and l and other family members were planning to go from our home in Saratoga. Calif. Nothhaft stated. “Then a week before the race,  Living the Life came up lame and had to be retired. I was so bummed out I had a knee-jerk reaction to give my tickets away. So we watched from home. I bet heavy on Finest City  and when she won. there was an eruption . My phone started going crazy, so there was a lot of recognition of our connection to the horse. But l felt silly watching Gary Mandella accept our trophy.”

In the past, Nothhaft annually compiled what he now calls a “fantasy list ” of stallions for his mares, where he and McEntee would generate a roster of studs that fit his mares although they knew they wouldn’t he able to get to those stallions. Today, it is a different story.

“Now that I have better mares. we know we’re able to get to all the stallions on our list this year.” said Nothhaft. “So we’re not playing fantasy football anymore.” Nothhaft bought back a Pioneer of the Nile-Kindle weanling colt in November 2018 on a final bid of $375,000. He .also kept an American Pharoah-Halljoy year­ling filly who RNA’d for $335.000. Those babies are indicative of the quality of stallions to whom he now sends his mares.

“This is a very faddish industry in my opinion,” he stated. “So going to American Pharoah in his first year-if you pick the right first-year stallion it can be a bonanza when you’re selling the progeny. Certainly American Pharoah was a good pick. So we do use some select first-year or young stallions, we call ‘Living the Dream stallions.’ They don’t have anything running yet, or at least won t before (the progeny) sell.

“As far as more proven stallions, we’re not generally going to the heavy hitters such as Tapit, Candy Ride, Into Mischief, and so on. When I was starting out, I bred to Tizbud. a full brother to Tiznow.  Now, I love Tiznow, who is one of the less expensive studs I go to today, so that highlights where I started and where I’m at. But I’m also smart enough to know the minute you think you’ve got it all figured out, you’re actually really stupid because the gods are about to come down and chop your knees off. So I keep my feet on the ground.”

Said McEntee, “Hank is unlike most business people who come into the horse industry, where they tend to lose all of their previous business acumen. Hank has maintained the smart decision-making that got him to where he is.”

Nothhaft has worked diligently to try and help ensure that the Pennsylvania incentive program remains on sound footing, although that has proven to be a tricky enterprise in the past. ”Pennsylvania has had a great program for years,” said Nothhaft, “except that the state (government) kept coming up short on funds and taking money away from the breeding program for the general fund. As a breeder, you never knew what was going to be there going forward. What we’ve done is put  the program in a trust; while that can still be broken, there is a significant penalty for the state if it decides to take funds away, so we feel more comfortable going forward.

“The number of foals is increasing in the state. There are new sires and brood­ mares showing up, and the quality of the talent you need is increasing. We know New York-bred and Cal-bred races are tough, but Pennsylvania isn’t a lay-up, either. But it does run between 400 and
500 races a year for state-breds, and if you have a decent horse, you can find a level at which to race and have a good chance of earning some money which is attractive.” ‘ The man on the street- which I con­sider myself- who doesn’t have 200 horses can realistically breed Pennsylvania-breds and sell or race them with the anticipation of a reasonable financial outcome. That’s the world I thought I was getting into way back at the start.”

A dose of naivete represent standard equipment for those seeking entrance to the Thoroughbred industry as a business proposition . And the addition of successful business people such as Hank Nothhaft to its ranks swells the legitimacy as well as the feasibility of this world of horses. He has embraced a challenge far too puzzling for most; entered on the ground floor and built a sturdy operation upward despite knowing nothing about its workings when he started. That horses can rekindle this sort of passion in a person of substance such as Nothhaft is a huge positive.

“l have been retired from the tech world for three or four years now, and I thank God every morning that l got involved in the horse business because it so satisfying,” he said. “It is extremely difficult, so when things do go right, the satisfaction and the adrenaline and the good feeling you get is so significant that it’s worth all the effort. “For a small guy like me, you have to work really hard to have something good going on, and when it does, it keeps you in a good mood for a while and you re­ally have to inhale the happy fumes and the success . You have to ride over what I call th e Valley of Despair to keep your self going and motivated if you’re passionate about it.”■

HnR’s Small Broodmare Band Produces Big 2018 Results

Breeding Highlights 2018

Bred highest priced American Pharoah yearling sold at Auction & 2nd highest priced 2018 yearling by any sire at $2,200,000 o/o Kindle (Kindle 17)

 

Hip 91, 2018 Keeneland September Yearling Sale

Bred highest priced Tiznow weanling sold at Auction  in 2018 $180,000 o/o Randie’s Legend (Randie’s Legend 18)

 

Randie’s Legend filly by Tiznow

   

Bred and bought out foal share partner on Kindle 18 by Pioneer of the Nile for $375,000 at Keeneland November

Kindle 18 colt by Pioneer of the Nile

Produced a handsome Pioneer of the Nile colt (KY)  o/o Multiple Graded Stakes winner Living the Life (Living the Life 18)

Living the Life 18 colt by Pioneer of the Nile

Bloodhorse article on Kindle 17 12th most viewed story out of 5600 postings 

Other 2018 HnR foals:  Shoscombe Prince (PA) (C) by Bluegrass Cat o/o Fly Down Too (PA); Verrazano filly (KY) o/o Halljoy (Halljoy 17); Miss Roxy (PA) (F) by Noble Mission o/o Macaabra; Jump Start filly (PA) o/o Stormy Randie (Stormy Randie 18) and Bodemeister colt (PA) o/o ultra commercial mare Sulis (Sulis 18).  Sulis 4 weanlings sold at auction total $670,000.

Halljjoy 17 filly by Verazzano

In addition to the commercial and weanling activity, HnR has a number of homebreds in the pipeline for racing in 2019.

Courageous Lynne by El Padrino o/o Stormy Randie is currently racing for Bernie Houghton.

Made in America (KY) by Tiznow o/o Kindle.  Injured as a two year old, he is in early stages of training for debut in 2019 for Ben Colebrook at Keeneland.

Made in America (KY) 2yo Tiznow colt p/o Kindle. He is Kindle’s first foal

Sunny Holly(CA) filly by Shackleford o/o Fly Down Too should make her 2nd start as a three year old in January 2019 for Bernie Houghton at Penn National.

Noble Flight (PA) by Jump Start o/o Stormy Randie.  She overcame a minor back injury and will return to training soon with the goal of racing as a 3 year old in 2019 for Bernie Houghton.

Belleau Wood (PA)colt by City Zip o/o Randie’s Legend  in training at Payson Park FL.  Looks like he will probably be and early two year old.  No trainer determined.  Looking to base at PARX.  Virginia certified.

Belleau Wood (PA) by City Zip 1/2 to Daddy is a Legend

Envied (KY) filly by American Pharoah o/o Halljoy.  A $335,000 RNA at Keeneland September, HnR decided to keep and race.  She has been in training at Miacomet Farm and is targeted as an early two year old for Ben Colebrook at Keeneland.  Virginia certified.

Envied by American Pharoah o/o Halljoy

Former Marine (PA) colt by El Padrino o/o Stormy Randie is in training at Eagle Point Farm.  He will be turned out soon, resume training in a couple of months and then make his move forward as a 2 year old colt in 2019. Virginia Certified.

Former Marine our last El Padrino homebred o/o Stormy Randie

Lithographer (CA) colt by Papa Clem o/o Fly Down Too in training at Eagle Point Farm.  Same program as Former Marine.  Virginia Certified.

Great Again (CA) colt by Champ Pegasus o/o Gracious Girl.  Same as above.  Virginia Certified.

 

Snapshot HnR Bred Racers (2018 only)

Daddy is a Legend  (PA) Winner Lake George’s Stakes Grade 3 and 2nd Matriarch Grade 1  7 races 1 win 1 place 2 show $217,500\

Fielder (PA) Winner Marshal Jenny Stakes 11 races 5 wins 1 place 3 show Earnings $219,909

Fielder (PA) by Sidney’s Candy o/o  o/o Karakorum Fugitive

Roll on Big Mama (PA)  12 races 2 wins 2 place 2 show $95,456

Regal Anticipation (PA) by  Great Notion o/o Double Your Luck

Regal Anticipation (PA) 9 races 3 wins 4 places 2 show $58,293.  Other winners This is how we roll (PA) and Courageous Lynne (PA).

Mister Nofty Wins Wire to Wire Buddy Delp Stakes

HnR has now bred 5 Stakes winners:  Finest City (PA) Breeders Cup Champion, Eclipse Award, PABRED Horse of the Year, Multiple Graded Stakes, Millionaire; Daddy is a Legend (PA) Multiple Graded Stakes Winner, TDN Rising Star, Grade 1 Placed; Grand Prix (PA) Multiple Stakes Winner; Mister Nofty (PA) and Fielder (PA).  All of these stakes winners are PABRED’s.

Finest City Breeders Cup Champion and Eclipse Award Winner
Graded Stakes Producing Randie’s Legend Northview PA

 

HnR’s (HnR Nothhaft Horse Racing) now consists of eleven broodmares.  Homebred Multiple Stakes Winner Grand Prix (PA) by Tale of the Cat o/o Be Envied, 1/2 to Finest City is the latest addition after retiring sound in December 2018.

Grand Prix Teresa Garapollo Stakes

She joins other recent, young HnR homebreds Oh No by Pioneer of the Nile o/o Walking Path 1/2 to Mister Nofty and Move by Silver Train o/o Be Envied 1/2 to Finest City and Grand Prix, who were bred in 2018 and will produce first foals in 2019.  Both these mares are PABRED’s.

Kindle winning the Cool Air Stakes at Hollywood Park

HnR’s Broodmare Band  All HnR mares came through the HnR racing program and/or are homebreds.

NAME                                          2018 SIRE                          2019 SIRE CHOICE

Fly Down Too (PA)              Shackleford*                       Always Dreaming

Grand Prix (PA)                            NA                                   Mendelssohn 

Halljoy (IRE)                           Connect *                           Mendelssohn

Kindle (KY)                                  NA                                      Into Mischief

Living the Life (IRE)             Tapit                                    Justify

Living the Life Stretch Drive with Mike Smith up wins the Masters Stakes

Macaabra (IRE)                       Looking at Lucky*           Practical Joke

Move (PA)                                  Verrazano*                          Cairo Prince

Oh No (PA)                                 Cupid*                                   Jump Start

Randie’s Legend (CA)           Candy Ride*                         Justify

Stormy Randie (KY)               Jump Start*                         Speightster

Sulis (KY)                                      NA                                         Practical Joke

Sulis with Sulis 16, AKA California Daddy by Scat Daddy promising colt racing in Ireland. $220K Weanling, $330K yearling

*Planned PABRED