Advertisement |
If my man here pays the check to get in
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup Oct 09, 2006
She won some stakes in France and we knew she was really good and she keeps proving it
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup Jun 19, 2006
He had a little injury and we gave him a little time
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup Apr 10, 2006
I knew the leader had a lot of speed, but I thought he'd come back to me
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup Oct 18, 2010
She was going to run Thursday, but she didn't get in, so we ran her in here
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup Jan 10, 2011
Patrick Louis Biancone (born June 7, 1952 in Mont-de-Marsan, Landes, France) is a Thoroughbred racehorse trainer. He is currently based in the United States, but enjoyed success in both Europe and Hong Kong earlier in his career. He was the head trainer for the Daniel Wildenstein stable in France, where his horses won numerous important races including back-to-back victories (with All Along and Sagace) in the 1983 and 1984 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. After leaving his native France, for most of the 1990s Biancone trained in Hong Kong but in 1999 was suspended after two of his horses tested positive for banned medications.
Biancone trained Triptych, who won the 1987 Irish Champion Stakes and the 1988 Coronation Cup. However, his most famous horse is the '83 Arc winner All Along, a filly who also raced in North America and was voted both French and U.S. Horse of the Year honors and was inducted into the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame.
Among his efforts in the United States, Patrick Biancone trained Lion Heart, who finished second in the 2004 Kentucky Derby. In 2005, he trained Angara to win the Beverly D stakes. The following year, Biancone's Gorella took the Beverly D.