Heather Smullen an Integral Part of Team Tiz

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – Every morning when Tiz the Law (Constitution) goes out to the track for his exercise, there is a Smullen from Oxford, PA on his back.

Most days the likely favorite for the GI Kentucky Derby is carrying Robin Smullen, trainer Barclay Tagg’s longtime assistant and life partner. Once a week, when the colt has his timed workout, though, Heather Smullen, Robin’s 38-year-old niece, has the assignment. It is a challenge, she acknowledges, to keep the four-time Grade I winner to the task while not getting in the way.

“He is pretty impressive,” Heather Smullen said. “The goal is always to make it look–for him, it is effortless–for the person sitting on his back, you want to make it look as effortless on your part, because the more I do, the more it either annoys him or distracts him. He knows to do his job. When he was younger he was a little bit green. Now he does his job very well. That being said, you’ve got to tell him. ‘We’ve got to stop. We can’t be going this fast. We really don’t need to go quite this fast.’ You have to do it in a way that he is cooperative because you don’t demand anything of him. You ask him nicely and hope he agrees because he is a very athletic horse.”

Like her aunt, Heather Smullen grew up around horses and moved from the show ring to the business of Thoroughbred racing. Since graduating from Cecil College in Northeast Maryland near the Fair Hill Training Center, where she studied photography and digital imaging, she has added to her resume working for trainer Ralph Hicks and Alan Cohen’s Arindel Farm. Since her teens, Smullen has been connected to Tagg’s stable. Tagg quipped “I haven’t been able to get rid of her since” she spent a summer in Saratoga with Robin and him about 20 years ago.

The enthusiastic teenager has emerged as an important member of the team that is preparing Sackatoga Stable’s once-beaten colt for the Derby. As usual, she was up on Tiz the Law when he worked five furlongs in a bullet :59.47 in the darkness at 5:30 a.m. Sunday. She will be aboard when he has his final Derby work this weekend and will accompany the New York-bred on his flight to Louisville on Monday.

Smullen said it is clear that he understands what is ahead on the mornings when they are together.

“He knows I get on him and he gets to have fun. He gets to go fast, essentially,” she said. “So, when I get on him, he’s like, ‘game time.’ He puffs up and he will put on a show. That’s what he likes to do.”

Smullen said that Tiz the Law is very much aware of who he is, what he can do and the array of people around him.

“He knows everyone. He is very smart,” she said. “Every horse had a different level of intelligence. Some horses are very smart. He, in particular, is very smart. He knows his people. He knows his people he likes. You see him for the cameras. The ears are up. He is alert. He is like, ‘look at me, I am beautiful, I am good at what I do.’ He knows.”

Heather Smullen is the daughter of Robin’s older brother, Randy. Robin and Randy and their siblings were raised on the family’s 120-acre farm that was home to 25 horses. A couple of decades later, history repeated itself with the next generation of Smullens. Robin was already in the formative years of her Thoroughbred racing career when Heather was a youngster with an interest in horses.

“She grew up on that farm riding show horses, ponies and anything she could get her hands on she rode,” Robin Smullen said. “She learned everything from experience. She kind of grew up the same way I did. She learned everything from experience, riding and doing.”

Robin described the relationship with her niece as being more like they are sisters and said she was proud of what she accomplished.

“Oh, sure. How could I not be?,” Robin Smullen said. “She does everything really the way you want it done. She’s very astute with soundness issues. A lot of that she learned from me, too. Hind-end issues she really picked up on right away. But, there again, she grew up on a horse, so she learned it quickly. She had to re-adjust her riding skills to get along with the racehorses. She can hold a really strong horse and she’s a little tiny thing. I showed her easier ways to hold horses and she caught right on when she started doing it.

“I was kind of out of the picture with her when she started learning to gallop, but when she went to work for Barclay and got on some real difficult horses I showed her the best way to get along with a real difficult horse. She just caught on. Everything is really natural to her.”

During her career as an exercise rider and assistant trainer Heather Smullen has been up on many top-level horses. She was the regular rider of the Ralph Nicks-trained GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies winner Caledonia Road (Quality Road) and handled Tale of Ekati (Tale of the Cat) and Big Truck (Birdrun) among others for the Tagg stable. On a few occasions, Smullen filled in for her aunt on Funny Cide (Distorted Humor), Sackatoga’s 2003 Derby and GI Preakness S. winner. She called him the strongest horse she has been on as she compared him to Tiz the Law.

“And he would give you goosebumps just going. The stride on him was incredible,” she said. “But he only had one way of going and that was fast. And this horse is much more tactical. He is much more manageable but he does play games. He messes with other horses, and messes with you if you don’t let him go fast enough.”

Smullen smiled as she explained how Tiz the Law “messes” with other horses on the track.

“He will either try to buzz horses or he will be like, ‘let’s go to the outside, let’s go past this horse and go faster,'” she said. “He is just smart, so he plays games. If you don’t let him go fast, he will find something else entertaining to do. So, with him, the most impressive thing about him is that he has a turn of foot like no other horse that I have ever been on. You can be going at a cruising speed, which is fast, and if you just put your hands down and smooch to him and say ‘go’ two or three strides, he is gone. Most horses it takes a sixteenth of a mile to get running.”

To make her point, Smullen explained how horses can be slow to accelerate in a race when a jockey asks them to get into a spot, which can cost them position and ground.

“It does not take him awhile to get running. There are very few horses I have ever been on that have the turn of foot he has,” she said. “I have never gone on him as fast as he can go. We were joking the other day about that. I have never ever been on him in a work where you had to say ‘go’ because he goes so fast. When he was a baby you would ask him because you were teaching him stuff. Now he knows. So, how fast would he be if you asked him? I don’t want to find that out. I just want to keep him nice and sound and win a lot of races.”

The post Heather Smullen an Integral Part of Team Tiz appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Mandatory Payout Featured In Saturday’s Rainbow 6 At Gulfstream Park

Four stakes races will highlight a mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool Saturday, Aug. 29 at Gulfstream Park.

Saturday's Rainbow 6 sequence will begin with the seventh race and include the $200,000 FTBOA Florida Sire Stakes Affirmed for 2-year-olds, the $200,000 FTBOA Florida Sire Stakes Susan's Girl for 2-year-old fillies, the $75,000 Proud Man and $75,000 Sharp Susan.

The Affirmed and Susan's Girl will both be contested at seven furlongs on the main track. The Proud Man and Sharp Susan will feature 2-year-olds on a mile turf course.

The Rainbow 6 pool will be guaranteed at $450,000 when racing resumes Thursday with a noon post time. The popular 20-cent wager has gone unsolved for eight consecutive race days.

The Rainbow 6 carryover jackpot is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

The post Mandatory Payout Featured In Saturday’s Rainbow 6 At Gulfstream Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Finalists Announced For 2020 Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards

The finalists for six of the seven prestigious Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards have been announced. The winner of the Thoroughbred Industry Community Award, which has one first-place prize, has been decided. This year's recipient is Maria Cristina Vasquez with the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

Three finalists in each of the six categories, along with Maria Cristina Vasquez, will be recognized at a virtual awards program to be held at 2:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 6, with the assistance of Studio 46 Media in Lexington, Kentucky.

The shortlist judging panel, the first of the two judging panels, collaborated on a video conference on Monday, August 24, to decide the finalists as well as the Community Award winner. The second and final stage of judging will take place in late September.

Panel Chair Susan Martin stated, “The experience of serving on the final judging committee last year was immensely rewarding so I was delighted and honored when asked to serve as chair of this year's initial shortlist panel. I think we all have an idea of how hard the behind-the-scenes individuals work in our sport, but when you have the opportunity to dig a little deeper into their amazing stories, you truly realize what an impressive group they really are.

“Like so many others during this pandemic we are having to adjust the way we communicate so we held our judging panel via a virtual teleconference. I will say this did not dampen my enthusiasm nor that of the rest of the panel. The importance of these awards is not lost on us, and we, like the final judging panel in September, take this duty to heart. And although the decisions we made in order to narrow down what is a most impressive field were difficult, I think all will see from the list of finalists that we are blessed with an incredible workforce in our industry.

“It's also so important to recognize Godolphin and Sheikh Mohammed, along with the National HBPA, TOBA, The Jockey Club and Breeders' Cup, without whose underwriting and additional support these awards would not be possible to implement. Our media partners as well – BloodHorse, TDN, Daily Racing Form, TVG, Paulick Report and Fox Sports – all deserve our heartfelt thanks.”

The shortlist panel was composed of Chair, Susan Martin, Director of Marketing, The Jockey Club Information Systems, Lexington, KY; Stephanie Brennan, industry activist; Corey Johnsen, CJ Racing Stable and former owner of Kentucky Downs; Cate Masterson, Executive Director of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, Saratoga Springs, NY; and David Pope, President and Co-owner of Siena Farm.

The finalists are:

Administration Award
Lynelle Fox-Smith – Oregon Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association
Michelle Holbrook – Silver Springs Stud
Dionne Johnson – New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, Inc.

Dedication to Breeding Award
David Kyle – Fasig-Tipton Company, Inc.
Helen Otero – Coolmore America
Steve Avery – Taylor Made Sales Agency

Dedication to Racing Award
Gregory Smothers – Niall Brennan Stables
Marcelo Arenas – Leah Gyarmati Stables
Patrick “Shawn” Autry – McPeek Racing

Leadership in Breeding Award
Matt Lyons – Candy Meadows Farm
Wayn Clem – Claiborne Farm
Christy Holden – Country Life Farm

Leadership in Racing Award
Carmen McShane – D/M Racing
Cindy Hutter – George Weaver Racing
Roy Smith – Indiana Grand Racing and Casino

Newcomer Award
Robert Cole – Florida Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association
Alexis Kolasa – Denali Stud
Aaron West – Bradley Thoroughbreds LLC

Thoroughbred Community Award Winner
Maria Cristina Vasquez – New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association

The post Finalists Announced For 2020 Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Nine-Day Meadowlands-At-Monmouth Meet Added To Thoroughbred Racing Calendar

A nine-day Meadowlands-at-Monmouth Park meet will be added to the Thoroughbred racing calendar starting on Preakness Day, Saturday, Oct. 3, pending regulatory approval, it was announced Wednesday.

Live racing will be held Oct. 3 and 4 at Monmouth Park and then every Wednesday and Saturday for the remainder of the month. There will also be a special Columbus Day holiday program on Monday, Oct. 12.

The Meadowlands-at-Monmouth meet will feature a stakes schedule totaling $900,000, highlighted by the Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes at a mile and an eighth on the turf on Oct. 10.

First race post time throughout October will be 12:50 p.m. Parking and admission are free.

Monmouth Park was originally scheduled for a 56-day meet starting May 2, but had that reduced to 37 days starting July 3 because of COVID-19. An additional live racing program was lost due to inclement weather.

The Monmouth Park meeting ends on Sunday, Sept. 27.

The stakes schedule for the Meadowlands-at-Monmouth Park meet:

3-Oct-20: Virgil “Buddy” Raines Stakes – $75,000 – 3 and up – 5 1/2 furlongs (Turf)

4-Oct-20: Nownownow Stakes – $150,000 – 2 YO – 1 Mile (Turf)

7-Oct-20: Lady's Secret Stakes – Listed $100,000 – F & M 3 and up – 1 1/16 miles

10-Oct-20: Monmouth Stakes – G3 $150,000 – 3 and up – 1 1/8 Miles (Turf)

12-Oct-20: Born to Run Stakes – $100,000 – 2 YO – 5 1/2 furlongs (Turf)

14-Oct-20: Jersey Shore Stakes – $100,000 – 3 YO – 6 Furlongs

17-Oct-20: Dan Horn Handicap – NJ Breds $75,000 – 3 and up – 1 1/16 miles (Turf)

21-Oct-20: Smart N Classy Handicap – NJ Breds $75,000 – F & M 3 and up – 1 Mile

24-Oct-20: Pinot Grigio Stakes – NJ Breds $75,000 – F & M 3 and up – 5 1/2 Furlongs (Turf)

The post Nine-Day Meadowlands-At-Monmouth Meet Added To Thoroughbred Racing Calendar appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights