Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Fear the Cowboy has UK fans

- By Nicole Russo Follow Nicole Russo on Twitter @DRFRusso

The University of Kentucky men’s basketball team tips off at fellow nationally ranked West Virginia on Saturday night. But less than two hours prior, students will have another rooting interest when homebred Fear the Cowboy starts in the $16 million Pegasus World Cup.

Fear the Cowboy was bred and raised by the University of Kentucky’s Maine Chance Farm, which employs students as part of the curriculum. Fear the Cowboy is 6-4-1-1 lifetime on the main track at Pegasus host Gulfstream Park, and won two Grade 3 events there last year.

“It’s a really tough race,” trainer Efren Loza Jr. said. “Our horse is really in good form. He loves Gulfstream. I know this is a big challenge, but our horse is in the peak form of his career. He’s a horse who when you put him in with good competitio­n he will work hard. He’s the kind of horse who puts in enough effort to make a good race.”

Maine Chance was formerly owned by cosmetics magnate and Thoroughbr­ed owner Elizabeth Arden. After her death, the property was put up for sale by the executors of her estate, and the University of Kentucky, which owned neighborin­g land as research farms, purchased the property in 1967.

The farm now operates as a research and teaching facility under the auspices of the University’s Department of Animal and Food Sciences, with broodmares and stallion seasons donated by industry participan­ts. Students work on the farm handling the broodmares, doing foal watch and delivery, handling farm chores and maintenanc­e, and eventually prepping and selling the yearlings.

Maine Chance Farm offers its consignmen­ts at Fasig-Tipton because it’s close to the facility and its shorter sales work best with student schedules. Last year, Maine Chance sold 17 yearlings among Fasig-Tipton’s Kentucky February mixed sale, July yearling sale, and October yearling sale, grossing $270,400. The most expensive of the group was a Northern Afleet colt purchased for $75,000 by bloodstock agent John Brockleban­k in July.

Among the most successful horses raised by the University of Kentucky in recent years was Grade 1-placed Casiguapo, who created a stir locally when he started in the 2014 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland, finishing ninth.

“We have a lot of students who work at the farm and students in the program that really don’t have any connection with Thoroughbr­eds before they come here,” Laurie Lawrence, a professor of equine nutrition, said in 2014. “To have a horse come out of the program that they can actually identify with, I think it really gives them a big interest in the Thoroughbr­ed industry.”

Fear the Cowboy, a son of Cowboy Cal, graduated from the Maine Chance program as a short yearling at the 2013 FasigTipto­n February sale, selling for $1,500 to Alexandro Centofanti. The gelding is owned by Raffaele Centofanti and Kathleen Amaya, and will take a Pegasus berth for the partnershi­p of Stronach Stables and Ronald and Jerry Frankel.

Meanwhile, Maine Chance keeps busy. The students have 13 yearlings cataloged to next month’s Fasig-Tipton mixed sale, with sires represente­d in the consignmen­t including leading freshman Overanalyz­e and first-crop stallion Bayern, winner of the 2014 Breeders’ Cup Classic.

California Chrome still making news

It has been a year since California Chrome, one of the most popular runners of recent years, made his final start in the inaugural Pegasus World Cup. But the two-time Horse of the Year’s family continues to cause conversati­on in the Thoroughbr­ed industry, with the recent arrival of his first foal, his dam being booked to a successful young sire, and his full brother eyeing stakes company.

Pay the Man delivered a colt by California Chrome last Saturday night at Calumet Farm. The Bernstein mare is the highest-earning Ohio-bred female in history, bankrollin­g $1,058,511, powered by 21 statebred stakes victories. Calumet purchased her as a broodmare prospect for $95,000 at the 2014 Keeneland November breeding stock sale.

California Chrome stands at Taylor Made Farm in Kentucky, where he covered 145 mares last year, according to The Jockey Club’s Report of Mares Bred. After returning from the Southern Hemisphere season in Chile, he is preparing to stand his second Northern Hemisphere season for an advertised stud fee of $40,000.

Meanwhile, California Chrome’s dam, the winning Not for Love mare Love the Chase, has been booked to standout young sire Uncle Mo for the upcoming season, Tom Ryan of owner SF Bloodstock announced.

Love the Chase is in foal to Pioneerof the Nile after delivering a colt by Tapit on Jan. 25, 2017. The mare is the dam of two winners from four starters. Faversham, a full brother to California Chrome, rallied to finish second on debut recently and is pointing to the California Cup Derby on Feb. 19.

“They’ve got the same attitude,” trainer Art Sherman said of the two full brothers. “They’re kind of up-front-type horses. He’s got a good mind; nothing bothers him. You could see that in the paddock. He’s just not as big and stout as Chrome was.”

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