The Morning Call (Sunday)

Schuylkill County thoroughbr­ed is a Derby contender

- By Tom De Martini pennlive.com (TNS)

The Kentucky Derby, the most celebrated horse race in America, is usually won by thoroughbr­eds who were born and raised in the Blue Grass state.

In its 148 years, 107 winners of the Triple Crown’s first jewel were bred in the Commonweal­th of Kentucky. It’s about pride for industry’s breeders.

In contrast, the Commonweal­th of Pennsylvan­ia, while boasting a thriving thoroughbr­ed racing industry, isn’t renowned for producing Kentucky Derby champions.

Two Pennsylvan­ia-bred horses – the popular Philadelph­ia-based Smarty Jones in 2004 and Lil E. Tee in 1992 – are the only horses from Pa. to win the Derby.

This year, that could change in about two minutes on the racetrack.

Angel of Empire, a 3-year-old Pennsylvan­ia-bred colt foaled at the 360-acre Blackstone Farm in Pine Grove, Schuylkill County, qualified for and is being pointed to compete in the 149th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs on May 6.

The colt has already beaten tremendous odds. In 2020, a total of 18,436 thoroughbr­ed foals were born and registered in North America. Twenty colts out of that foal crop will run in the 2023 Kentucky Derby.

Racing pundits expect Angel of Empire will be one of top five favorites in the race.

Blackstone Farm partner Christian Black is a Denmark native who moved to the U.S. in 2006 and lives in Lititz with his wife Christina.

He’s a full-time horse breeder with between 50-to-60 broodmares in residence on the Pine Grove farm, located 38 miles from downtown Harrisburg. A broodmare is a female thoroughbr­ed used for breeding and raising foals.

Black entered in partnershi­p with Blackstone Farm owner Douglas Black (no relation) in 2010 but is the sole breeder of Angel of Empire.

“I just have a love and desire for the horse,” Black said. “I’ve ridden thoroughbr­eds and been involved with them at different levels throughout my life. I got into the racing because it interested me and because I’m very competitiv­e by nature.”

Black purchased Angel of Empire’s mother, a mare named Armony’s Angel who was winless in an eight-race career for $67,000. She was already in foal to 2016 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile winner and two-year-old champion Classic Empire.

Angel of Empire was born and raised at Blackstone Farm and registered as a Pennsylvan­ia-bred under the nom de course of Forgotten Land Investment, Inc. and Black Diamond Equine Corp.

“Forgotten Land Investment is a land entity I use to buy different horses under my name. Black is my last name and black diamonds are usually not worth a lot,” Black quipped.

Neither Black, nor anyone else for that matter, could dream about what was going to transpire in the months and years ahead.

Black, in the normal course of the breeding business, sold Angel of Empire at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale to Des Moines, Iowa-based Albaugh Family Stables for $70,000.

Consider that a yearling consigned to the Keenland September auction that year sold for an average price of $142,429.

“There wasn’t a lot of respect in the commercial market,” Black said. “At that time, he was a little immature. We thought he’d appeal to someone who was looking for a late-developing horse that could go two turns and to a trainer who would understand that.”

Albaugh Family Stables sent Angel of Empire to trainer Brad Cox, who was awarded the 2021 Kentucky Derby victory with Mandaloun following a disqualifi­cation. Cox is a two-time Eclipse Award winner (2020-21) as outstandin­g U.S. trainer.

Angel of Empire won at first asking as a two-year-old at Horseshoe Indianapol­is Racing & Casino last August and took two-of-three races in his juvenile season.

The colt continued showing promise by starting his three-yearold campaign on New Year’s Day with a second-place finish in the Smarty Jones Stakes at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark.

Horses qualify for the Kentucky Derby by earning points in specified graded stakes races held throughout the country during the winter and early spring.

Angel of Empire qualified by winning the Grade 2 Risen Star Stakes at Fair Grounds Race Course in New Orleans Feb. 18 and followed and an impressive victory in the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park April 1.

“The older he’s getting the better he’s getting, bottom line.” Cox told the Oaklawn Park publicity staff following the Arkansas Derby. “I always thought he’d be better with more ground and obviously he’s two-for-two at a mile and an eighth. Hopefully wecan be one-for-one at a mile and a quarter (in the Kentucky Derby).

“Just watching him in the paddock, I was telling (Albaugh Family Stables racing manager Jason Loutsch), he’s a cool, calm horse. If there is anybody who can handle 150,000 people (at Churchill Downs) it would be this horse,” Cox said.

“Pennsylvan­ia-bred, $70,000,” Loutsch told Oaklawn Park’s publicity staff. “We spent a lot of money in book one and book two (of the 2021 Keeneland yearling sale) and to buy a horse in book five, Pennsylvan­ia-bred, and going to the Kentucky Derby as one of the top five favorites is a great story.”

For that $70,00 investment, Angel of Empire has bankrolled $1,069,375 thus far for his owners and will race for the $1.86 million winner’s share of Kentucky Derby’s $3 million purse.

Black’s financial share of a possible Derby victory by Angel of Empire victory is zero.

In fact, Black isn’t entitled to a portion of Angel of Empire’s racing earnings, unless the colt runs in races at Pennsylvan­ia racetracks where he’s eligible for breeder awards.

The financial payoff will hopefully be in the future, when stallion owners come calling for a mating with Angel of Empire’s mother or one of Blackstone Farms’ other broodmares.

For example, Armony’s Angel has since produced a full brother to Angel of Empire, who is now a yearling. She is currently in foal by Gun Runner, the 2017 Horse-ofthe-Year, now a valuable Kentuckyba­sed stallion.

The goal is to produce more future racing stars.

“There are no financial benefits now. It’s not about the money. For my part, it’s the pride of having bred a Grade 1 stakes winner we foaled and raised, or any stakes winner,” Black said. “It’s about the pride we carry with us, how we own the mare and how this horse’s siblings will benefit down the road.

“It’s a performanc­e business and people see what we’ve done and think have a good product,” Black said.

Angel of Empire is not the first Pennsylvan­ia-bred Kentucky Derby horse Black’s farm has produced.

Tom’s Ready, a Blackstone Farm state-bred, finished 12th in the 2016 Kentucky Derby after earning enough qualifying points by placing second twice in two graded stakes races.

“It’s not easy to get there,” Black said. “There’s so much effort and so much passion at the farm, from the crew, everyone. It’s a love for the animal. It’s a lifestyle. The horses come first. They have to be fed and groomed. They don’t know that it’s Christmas or Easter or another holiday. There are ups and downs in this business, but you have to love it. If you don’t, you shouldn’t be in it.”

 ?? WESLEY HITT/GETTY ?? Jockey Flavien Prat on Angel Of Empire, crosses the finish line to win the 87th running of the Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park on April 1.
WESLEY HITT/GETTY Jockey Flavien Prat on Angel Of Empire, crosses the finish line to win the 87th running of the Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park on April 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States