Perfect Munnings Leads Pletcher Exacta In Aqueduct’s Rego Park

Trainer Todd Pletcher sent out a trio of contenders in Sunday's $100,000 Rego Park Stakes for New York-bred 3-year-olds at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y.. While Pletcher conditioned the favorite in Uno, his other two entries completed the exacta, with Perfect Munnings besting Storm Shooter by two lengths.

Owned by JP Racing Stable, Perfect Munnings shined in his main track debut, building on his two-length debut score on November 29 over the Big A turf. The Munnings sophomore broke well from the outermost post and was forwardly placed by jockey Manny Franco in third position as stablemate Storm Shooter led the eight-horse field through a contested opening quarter-mile in 23.35 seconds and the half in 47.81 on the fast track under pressure from Lookin for Trouble.

In the final furlong, Franco kept Perfect Munnings to task, overtaking Lookin for Trouble to his immediate inside and Storm Shooter along the rail and completed the 6 1/2-furlong sprint in a final time of 1:20.24.

“We were pretty optimistic because of the way he breezes on the dirt,” Pletcher assistant Byron Hughes said. “He showed that ability today. He had a good post and Manny [Franco] kept him in the clear and he ran well. Obviously, he's won on turf and dirt. We'll keep him up here for now and then we can go back to turf if we have to.

“I told Manny before the race that we probably should use the post to our advantage,” he added. “He got a clean trip and Manny did a good job keeping him out there.”

Perfect Munnings, bred by Tammy and Robert Kilmasewski, improved to 2-for-2 overall. The $50,000 purchase at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Preferred New York-bred Sale, more than doubled his career earnings to $93,500.

Franco said he has benefitted from the brisk pace battle.

“I was really happy stalking the two horses and when I asked my horse to go before the quarter-pole, he started running for me,” Franco said.

My RaceHorse Stable's Storm Shooter, bred by Dr. Jerry Bilinski and ridden by Dylan Davis, bested Lookin for Trouble by 1 ¼ lengths for second.

“It was contentious, but I wanted to lead here. He does well on the lead,” Davis said. “I had to get into him early around the three-eighths pole. I didn't want to get him collared too early because he doesn't like too much company early.

“He keep finding more and more and for a second I thought we were going to get there but the other Pletcher horse had to come and grab me,” he added. “He ran a great race.”

Said Hughes: “He keep finding more and more and for a second I thought we were going to get there but the other Pletcher horse had to come and grab me,” he added. “He ran a great race.”

Uno gave Pletcher three-quarters of the superfecta with his fourth-place effort.

“He broke just a tick slow and looked like he got shuffled back,” Hughes said. “He also made a good run and I thought he got third when I first saw it. I thought he ran a big race, considering the start.”

Windy Nations, Blue Gator, New York One and Halpert completed the order of finish.

Live racing resumes Friday at Aqueduct with an eight-race card. First post is 12:50 p.m. Eastern. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day holiday card is slated for Monday, January 18 and features the $100,000 Interborough for fillies and mares 4-years-old and up. There will be no live racing on Thursday, January 14 to accommodate the special holiday card.

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Malibu Winner Charlatan Likely To Skip Pegasus, Aim For Saudi Cup

Charlatan, who returned to the races after an absence of eight months with a dominating 4 ½-length victory in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., on opening day Dec. 26, will likely make his next start in the world's richest race, the $20-million Saudi Cup at 1 1/8 miles in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Feb. 20, Bob Baffert said Sunday morning.

The winner receives $10 million.

 Charlatan had his first workout Saturday since the Malibu, going four furlongs in 49.80.

The 4-year-old son of Speightstown was making his first start in the seven-furlong Malibu since crossing the wire on top in the first division of the G1 Arkansas Derby last May 2, only to later be disqualified on a medication violation that is under appeal.

The dazzling chestnut colt has reached the finish line ahead of his rivals by a combined margin of 26 1/2 lengths, an average of better than six lengths per race.

“That's the plan right now,” Baffert said of the Saudi Cup. “I've got another week to make up my mind, but he'd be coming back a little quick for the other race ($3-million Pegasus World Cup at Gulfstream Park Jan. 23) off a long layoff, and he ran so hard (in the Malibu), I worry about that.

“The thing I like about the Saudi race is it's a one-turn mile-and-an-eighth and Charlatan is so fast. It's a challenge, but it's $20 million.

“That's a lot of money.”

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Rodriguez Barn Firing On All Cylindars At Big A: ‘We’ve Been Holding Our Own’

Trainer Rudy Rodriguez entered Sunday's card at Aqueduct on top of the trainer standings with a record of 47-10-2-5 and has a number of stakes contenders lining up to bolster purse earnings already at $429,253 at the Ozone Park, N.Y., track. He added one win and a second-place finish on Sunday.

The 48-year-old conditioner, who has won 14 individual NYRA meet titles in his career, captured the 2018 winter meet with 38 wins.

“We've got a good group of people working for us, the same people that have been working for us all along,” said Rodriguez. “When the horses are running the way you see them train, that's a plus. Some horses are running good and some horses are running a little better, we just have to keep working hard and hopefully things will keep working out.

“I'm not really thinking about winning titles, I'm just trying to keep my horses running good,” added Rodriguez. “If it works out that's good, but I think we've been holding our own the past couple years”

The Elkstone Group's Wudda U Think Now, a New York-bred son of Fast Anna, earned an 88 Beyer Speed Figure for his half-length score on Friday when travelling seven furlongs in a first-level allowance sprint for state-breds.

Bred by Mina Equivest, Wudda U Think Now was purchased for $60,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Preferred New York-bred Yearling Sale. Out of the Unbridled Jet mare Unbridled Grace, Wudda U Think Now graduated at second asking in November when sprinting six furlongs on a muddy Big A main track and followed with a good second on December 10 to Jerry the Nipper, who came back to win a second-level allowance tilt.

Rodriguez said Wudda U Think Now has improved steadily since arriving in his care.

“He's been very consistent since we got him,” said Rodriguez. “The people at the farm did a good job and the horse came back very good. I'm just trying to keep it together and the horse is showing that he can be any kind of horse.

“I'll talk to the owner, Mr. Grant, and see what is next but we'd like to break the conditions and then see what we've got,” added Rodriguez. “I don't want to take anything away from the horse. I like him a lot. He's great body wise, behavior and training in the morning. He's a straightforward horse that will improve with racing.”

Michael Dubb's Pete's Play Call was claimed for $62,500 out of a winning effort on November 27 at the Big A and captured the Gravesend on January 2 at first asking for new connections.

“He's been very consistent. We were lucky the other day with five horses in the race and a horse in front to set it up,” said Rodriguez. “Speed held up good that day and thankfully it worked out for us.”

Rodriguez said he will consider pointing the 8-year-old Munnings gelding to the Grade 3, $150,000 Toboggan, a seven-furlong sprint for 4-year-olds and up on January 30.

“That's what we're pointing for and if he trains into that race the same way, I think we'll take the chance,” said Rodriguez.

E.V. Racing Stable's Eagle Orb, winner of the Notebook for state-breds on November 14 at the Big A, finished second last out in the Jerome on New Year's Day in a race won in frontrunning style by Capo Kane.

“I'm not sure if distance will be an issue for him, but the other horse ran a big race. We tried to make a run at the winner but we couldn't catch him,” said Rodriguez. “The owner wants to point at the Gotham so we'll give him another shot at the mile.”

The Grade 3, $300,000 Gotham, a one-turn mile offering 50-2-10-5 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the top-four finishers, is slated for March 6.

Graded-stakes placed Water White, a 4-year-old Conveyance filly also owned by E.V. Racing Stable, was last seen on track in June when a distant third in the Grade 1 Acorn at Belmont.

The talented gray, who captured the Busher Invitational in March at the Big A, returned to the work tab on January 3 and added a second three-eighths breeze Sunday morning in 38.01 on the Belmont dirt tracking track.

Repole Stable's Backsideofthemoon earned a career-best 106 Beyer Speed Figure for his six-length score in the nine-furlong Queens County on December 19 at the Big A.

Rodriguez said the 9-year-old Malibu Moon gelding, who sports a record of 47-8-9-7, will likely return in the $100,000 Jazil, a nine-furlong test for 4-year-olds and up on January 23 at Aqueduct.

“It looks like he came out of the race well. We'll point for the Jazil and hopefully he can have another good year,” said Rodriguez.

Backsideofthemoon won the 2018 Jazil and finished second in last year's renewal to likely returning champion Mr. Buff.

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Keeping Up With Krcmar: A Lifetime of Loving Horses and a Career-Year at 79

Courtesy Woodbine Communications

TORONTO–When Zeljko Krcmar arrived in Ontario, he carried two dollars in his pocket, hope of a better life, and a dream of rekindling his association with horses.

It was 1968 when the young man from Yugoslavia first set foot in Toronto. He can recall the moment as though it happened yesterday.

“I came here to work as a chemist, that was my trade,” recalled Krcmar. “But because my love and my passion was horses, I knew I had to do something for my career that was built around them. I was in show horses most of my life. When I was in Yugoslavia, I was a show jumper. The horses, throughout my life, I have always felt a closeness to them.”

His daughter, Mary Self, has seen the countless photos of his father’s show horse days.

Although each picture is different in what’s depicted, every image shares a connection with the others.

“He’s very, very passionate about horses,” said Self. “He’s one of those old-time horsemen, and he’s been doing it his whole life. Dad started riding when he was in Yugoslavia. The only place to ride horses was in the military–and there was mandatory military duty–so he would ride with the soldiers.”

Krcmar’s skills in the saddle led to other roles outside of the show ring.

“My dad used to box and he was also a stuntman,” said Self. “I remember when I was young going to movie shoots with him. He played Tonto in a movie, and he did tricks on the horses. We had dogs that he would teach tricks to and they were in TV shows. I had quite the childhood seeing him doing all of those different things.”

Horses, however, were, and still very much are, Krcmar’s greatest joy.

Seven years after he came to Canada, he found his way to Woodbine Racetrack. Krcmar felt contentment the moment he walked onto the Toronto oval grounds.

After earning his trainer’s license, he saddled his first horse in 1975. Now, some 45 years after sending his first Thoroughbred postward, Krcmar, nearly 80, is still finding happiness at the racetrack.

His career numbers aren’t nearly as flashy as some of his contemporaries–98 wins, two stakes triumphs (including the 2008 Deputy Minister at Woodbine with Piper in the Glen) and just shy of $2 million in lifetime purse earnings–but Krcmar’s training talents are indisputable.

And he hasn’t lost a step.

In 2020, he won 16 races, a career-best number, from 75 starts. His horses produced $283,401 in earnings, also a lifetime-best mark.

“I changed a lot of things this year,” noted Krcmar, whose racing silks feature the Croatian national flag and colours. “My feeding program was different from anyone else’s program. Plus, with so many years experience, what you learn over time, it all helps. Even mistakes. You learn from your mistakes and that helps you perfect things.”

It also helps when you have a talented team at your side.

Krcmar’s wife, Gail, is a prime example.

“They are just the nicest people on earth,” said Self. “Dad, with his feed program, and the way he takes care of the horses, and Gail–she’s in her 70s–she’s on her hands and knees every day doing their legs, it’s incredible.”

Self is also heavily involved and invested in horse racing, including as a Thoroughbred owner.

Along with Tim Murray, they started owning horses together last year. In 2020, they began the season with six horses. By the end of the Woodbine campaign, they had four–one was claimed, another became a show jumper.

“We’re blessed to have them taking care of our horses,” said Self. “We buy at the sale or privately. We’re not big-time buyers, owners or breeders. We do it the best we can.”

Murray, a native New Yorker now living in Florida, had no prior knowledge of the racing business.

After meeting Self and Krcmar, his interest piqued with more horse talk.

“I knew nothing about horses,” said Murray with a laugh. “I didn’t even know what a halter was. Mary somehow talked me into going to OBS [Ocala Breeders’ Sales] last summer, and she started telling me about the great bonuses you get for purchasing an Ontario-sired or Ontario-bred horse. So, we went off from there. She taught me how to read the pedigree books and everything else.

“I leave it up to Mary and her father when it comes to the conformation side of things. I stick with the paper. I’m like the Brad Pitt character in the movie Moneyball, analyzing the data and the competition. Somehow, our horses always seem to be in the top three.”

Murray has high praise for Krcmar, and not just for his training abilities.

“He’s one of those people that will always help anyone. He treats his horses and people the same way. He’s very humble, family-oriented, and someone who would give you the shirt off his back. He’s a great person, someone you are proud to know and proud to work with.”

Just like those Murray worked alongside during his days as a Marine, a FDNY firefighter and an NYPD policeman.

He was at ground zero the day of 9/11.

“We all went down there. They lost 343 people in the fire department… I can tell you that I’ve been to one too many funerals over the years, but it was an honor to serve in each role I had. I went from the police to the fire department, and that’s how I finished out my career.”

Now retired and living in central Florida, horses have become his hobby.

His ownership silks pay tribute to the firefighters that perished Sept. 11, 2001.

“I had my niece design the colors, which are the colours of the Marines, the red and yellow,” he said. “I have the Marines, my first career, and on the left sleeve is the NYPD, and on the right sleeve is the FDNY. On the blinkers, it has the number 343, out of respect for those from the fire department who died. I feel like… it’s like they are rooting for me from heaven. As corny as it may sound, that’s how I feel.”

Seeing those colors represented in the winner’s circle for the first time was an emotional moment for Murray, Krcmar and Self.

It was Make No Mistake, a Kentucky-bred daughter of Raison d’Etat, who provided the emotional score for her connections on Aug. 9, 2019.

“This sport, it can be a rollercoaster, but you just have to go into it knowing that,” said Murray. “But just that one time in the winner’s circle… it’s just an amazing feeling. There’s really nothing else like it. We won our first race at Woodbine and we were there. I can’t even describe that feeling.”

Although they weren’t able to stand railside at Woodbine July 31 this year, Make No Mistake added another memorable highlight.

The dark bay skipped over the Inner Turf in 1:34.35 for one mile on that day, setting the track record in the process. It was one of four wins she had on the year for the trio.

It was another high point in a banner year for a veteran trainer.

Nothing, not even the premature ending to the Woodbine Thoroughbred season due to COVID-19, could take away from Krcmar’s outstanding 2020 campaign.

“My dad, he just takes it all in stride,” offered Self. “You know, they are just doing what they have to do. He’s so flexible and easy about everything. I think that’s why people like him the way they do. One of our horses got claimed this year and I asked my dad, ‘What are we going to do?’ He said to me, ‘Listen, it’s all part of the sport. It’s okay.’ My dad, he doesn’t want to claim from anyone. He doesn’t want to take the horse away from someone. He did claim two from Mark Casse this year, but he went and asked if it was okay to do it. He smiles every day he is at the racetrack and around his horses.”

For now, Krcmar will attempt to relax, something, admittedly, that is often easier said than done.

Not surprisingly, his association with horses will stay strong over the winter months.

“My son has a big show stable in Aurora, so I’m going to go there and help any way I can, something to keep myself busy, teaching and coaching.”

Krcmar will also no doubt think about the 2021 racing season at Woodbine, which will be his final one as a trainer.

“Two wins away from 100? I will get that,” Krcmar said. “I want to pass that. Hopefully, next year will be the same as this year. I would be happy with that. It was a wonderful year. My wife, she is my stakes horse. Without her, I wouldn’t be able to do this. She just never stops and she takes such good care of the horses. She keeps me going too.

“I still love it, or otherwise I would have quit a long time ago. I’m happy if I have a horse in a stakes race, the same way I’m happy if I have a horse in a $15,000 claimer. It’s exactly the same feeling. I just love my horses.”

And it’s obvious the horses love to run for Krcmar.

“They really do,” said Self. “I always think to myself, ‘Can you imagine being almost 80, getting up every morning and doing what you love?’ But that’s what my dad has done. He defected from a Communist country. He came to Canada with two dollars and he was able to keep his bond with the horses.”

It’s a bond that Krcmar treasures.

“Horses gave me a life in this country,” he said. “If I didn’t have that, I’d probably be working in a chemical plant and be an unhappy guy. But I have done something that has brought me great joy. Always be good to your horses, and don’t push them. They are like crystal and that’s how they should be treated.”

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