|    Soaring 
              High 
              Mary Lou and Terry Griffin prove you can meet your grandest goals 
              in Washington 
              By Lenny Shulman (Blood-horse.com) 
              Date published: November 11, 2006 
             Mary Lou and Terry Griffin have bred a grade 1 winner and sold 
              a million-dollar horse from their homebase of Griffin Place, located 
              in the foothilss of Mt. Rainier. Read 
              the entire story [pdf]... 
             
            Expect to see some talented babies  
              By Jay Privman (drf.com) 
              Date posted: July 17, 2006 
            Chancellor, out of Cozzene's 
              Angel, bred by Griffin Place is suggested to be one of trainer 
              Gary Mandella's best 2-year-olds. Read 
              article... 
             
            Keagan Out jumps Sky Diving at Turf 
              Paradise 
              by Blood-Horse.com 
              Staff 
              Date Posted: 2/11/2006   
            Keagan, ridden by Scott Stevens, collared the 3-5 choice Sky Diving 
              near the sixteenth pole and drove to a one-length victory in the 
              $75,000 Turf Paradise Derby for 3-year-olds Saturday in Phoenix. 
            Trained by Eric Kruljac, part owner of the Washington-bred son 
              of Basket Weave along with Gary Olson, Randy Bafus, Gary Stevenson, 
              Keagan went off at odds of 10-1. The bay colt, a $26,000 yearling 
              purchase who is not nominated for the Triple Crown, won in a time 
              of 1:43 4/5 for the 1 1/16-mile distance. 
              The race was expected to be a prep on the Triple Crown trail 
                for Sky Diving, a $310,000 son of Aptitude owned by B. Wayne Hughes. 
                Bob Baffert trains the dark bay colt who broke his maiden by 14 
                lengths at Bay Meadows Jan. 25.  
              In his first start against winners, Sky Diving forced the pace 
                for jockey Tony Farina, who rode the colt for the first time, 
                before opening up a clear advantage on the final turn. But Keagan 
                wound up his run while wide on the turn and soon headed the favorite. 
                The two battled through the stretch before Keagan drew away late. 
                It was 7 1/2 lengths back to the third-place finisher, 49-1 shot 
                Soft Seventeen. 
              Keagan, was coming off a fifth-place finish in Turf Paradise's 
                Rattlesnake Jan. 22, his first attempt at a route of ground after 
                seven sprint races. Keagan won the 6 1/2-furlong Arizona Juvenile 
                Dec. 26. Overall, he owns a 3-2-2 record in nine starts with earnings 
                of $110,199. 
              
            The winner, bred by Mr. and Mrs. William T. Griffin, 
              paid $23, $6.20 and $4.40. Sky Diving returned $3 and $2.80. Soft 
              Seventeen was $6.40 to show. 
             
            Achilles of Troy easy Whirlaway winner, Keagan takes Turf 
              Paradise Derby 
              by ThoroughbredTimes.com 
              Date Posted: 2/11/2006   
             Paraneck Stable's Achilles of Troy kept himself solidly on the 
              Triple Crown trail Saturday as he easily disposed of six competitors 
              in the $70,915 Whirlaway Stakes at Aqueduct. 
            The three-year-old son of Notebook tracked the early lead of One 
              Way Flight in the 1 1/16-mile contest through reasonable fractions 
              of :23.08 and :46.82. Up the backstretch the dueling rivals opened 
              up a clear lead on the rest of the field, and, as they approached 
              the final turn, jockey Ramon Dominguez gave Achilles of Troy his 
              cue.  
            The gray or roan son of Notebook eased past One Way Flight and, 
              given a couple of reminders from Dominguez, surged into the lead. 
              Once clear Dominguez looked back, saw he was in complete control, 
              and wrapped up on the colt in the final hundred yards as they crossed 
              the wire in 1:43.28, 4 3/4-lengths clear of One Way Flight. It was 
              another six lengths back to third place finisher Rob'em Blind. 
            "He's just very deceiving," winning jockey Ramon Dominguez 
              said. "He just covers a lot of ground with ease. I got to the 
              three-eighths pole, and I even got a little concerned because he 
              was so relaxed. I wasn't sure if he was going to fire, but I didn't 
              want to test him that early. As soon as I got to the top of the 
              stretch I shook him up and got an immediate response. In the stretch, 
              once I knew he wasn't going to get beat, I put my hands down and 
              he eased himself up. He's a real smart horse and he's got a great 
              attitude." 
            Trainer Jennifer Pedersen was not on hand for the victory because 
              her daughter had a doctor's appointment, leaving owner Ernie Paragallo 
              to accept congratulations for the win. 
            "As soon as [Dominguez] chirped him, he just explodes," 
              Paragallo said. "As soon as Ramon asked him to ease up, he 
              eased up. This horse can do anything you want him to do." 
            Paragallo indicated that the plans are to send the colt to Florida's 
              Classic Mile Training Center and possibly start him in the Fountain 
              of Youth Stakes (G2) on March 4 at Gulfstream Park. 
            Achilles of Troy is out of the Relaunch mare Steamy Recipe. 
            In the only other Saturday stakes race for three-year-old males, 
              Keagan, a Washington-bred son of Basket Weave, upset heavily favored 
              Sky Diving, in the $75,000 Turf Paradise Derby at Turf Paradise. 
            Sky Diving, who had forced a contested early pace with Rock Creek 
              Pass and Wait in Line, took over on the far turn of the 1 1/16-mile 
              contest, and appeared on his way to victory before Keagan came charging 
              down the lane to post a determined one-length win in 1:43.90 over 
              the fast track. Second place finisher Sky Diving was 7 1/2-lengths 
              clear of third place finisher Soft Seventeen. 
            Of the top three finishers, only Sky Diving is an early nomination 
              for the Triple Crown.  
            Keagan, trained and partly owned by J. Eric Kruljac, is the first 
              stakes winner out of the Huckster mare Atoyac. 
             
               
             
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