Major Stables Represented In Sunday’s Stakes Rich Houston Racing Festival

Sam Houston Race Park will host its annual Houston Racing Festival on Sunday, January 31. A special post time of 1:45 pm (CT) has been set for the marquee day of the Houston, Texas, track's 2021 Thoroughbred meet with six featured stakes.

Two graded stakes will be contested, the Grade 3, $300,000 Houston Ladies Classic and the Grade 3, $200,000 John B. Connally Turf. Full and highly competitive fields have been drawn for the remaining four undercard stakes, with an encouraging weather forecast for the Sunday afternoon program.

Exceptional Group of 3-Year-Olds To Run in $200,000 Texas Turf Mile
The quality and quantity of entries exceeded expectations for the first running of the $200,000 Texas Turf Mile last January. The race garnered even greater interest this year with an overflow field and 3-year-olds from a wide range of the leading North American trainers.

Eclipse Award winning trainer Todd Pletcher has entered two promising runners and confirmed that Fighting Force will make the trip from South Florida. The Kentucky-bred son of Air Force Blue drew post position five with Jesus Castanon in the saddle. The dark bay colt broke his maiden on December 5, advancing into stakes company, finishing second in the $75,000 Dania Beach at Gulfstream Park on January 2 for owners Michael B. Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier and Derrick Smith.

“Fighting Force has been very consistent,” said Pletcher. “He faced tough company in the Dania Beach and gave a good effort.”

Pletcher, who won the 2017 Houston Ladies Classic with Unbridled Mo, was not surprised that the stakes, in just its second year, drew such a competitive field.

“It's a great spot on the calendar with a good purse,” he added.

William T. Reed's homebred Excess Magic brings a two-race win streak into the stakes and drew post position three with jockey Miguel Mena up. Trainer Bret Calhoun, who has won a high percentage of Texas-bred stakes at Sam Houston Race Park, is keen on the colt by Magician.

“I love the post and Miguel will not have to worry about saving ground,” said Calhoun. “Excess Magic was disqualified in his first start (at Evangeline Downs on August 21) and destroyed them on his turf start at Remington Park. This horse has a really good turn of foot; I'm proud of him!”

Prominent horseman Mark Casse who ran Jack and Noah (FR) in the 2020 Texas Turf Mile, will ship in Palazzi, a colt by Pioneerof the Nile. Owned by John C. Oxley, he exits a maiden special weight win on the Fair Grounds turf last month. Declan Carroll has the call and will break from the rail.

The Texas Turf Mile will run as the seventh race on the card with an approximate post time of 5:00 pm CT.

The field, from the rail, with riders and morning-line odds is as follows: Palazzi, Declan Carroll, 6-1; Texas Bad Boy, Domingo Chacaltana, 15-1; Excess Magic, Miguel Mena, 9-2; Invincibility, Stewart Elliott., 12-1; Fighting Force, Jesus Castanon, 3-1; Harlan Estate, Ruben Fuentes, 10-1; Red N Wild, Sophie Doyle, 15-1; Chess's Dream, Julien Leparoux, 20-1; Dyn O Mite, Ty Kennedy, 20-1; Bobby Brinkley, Danny Sorenson30-1; Winfromwithin, Albin Jimenez, 7-2 and Catman, Rafael Hernandez ,20-1. Two also-eligibles include Flash of Mischief. Ry Eikleberry, 20-1 and TD Dance, Reylu Gutierrez, 20-1.

12 Contenders to Vie Five Furlongs in $100,000 Pulse Power Sprint 

The $100,000 Pulse Power Turf Sprint, a five-furlong turf stakes, will kick off the stakes action with a full field of 12 competing in the fifth race of the Houston Racing Festival card.

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, who has been honored as Sam Houston Race Park's leading trainer 12 times, won the 2012 edition of this stakes with Great Mills.  He will saddle Share The Upside who has a perfect three-for-three turf record for owners Hill n Dale Equine Holdings, Inc. and Windsor Boys Racing LLC. Sam Houston's leading rider Stewart Elliott will guide the 6-year-old son of Maclean's Music.

“He's won some really nice races,” said Asmussen. “He's undefeated on the turf and as fast as he is, it doesn't matter where he draws.”

Conditioner Joe Sharp returns with Brad Grady's Fast Boat, a 6-year-old son of City Zip. He has won seven of his 21 turf starts and will be ridden by Lindey Wade as the 7-2 morning line choice. Last year, he ran a game second to Real News.

“Brad and I discussed our options and just felt that Fast Boat had not shown an affinity for the Fair Grounds turf course,” said Sharp. “He drew a little further outside in this year's sprint. We have faith in Lindey getting him in a good position.”

Carotari will make his Sam Houston Race Park debut for trainer Brian Lynch, who is also shipping in Spooky Channel for the Grade 3, Connally Turf Cup. The 5-year-old son of Artie Schiller will be ridden by Julien Leparoux for owner William Branch. This will be his first start since the Grade 2, Turf Sprint at Churchill Downs on September 4.

“He's a very fast horse,” stated Lynch. “He set a five-furlong track record at Saratoga and faced some serious company last year. We gave him a freshening and he's been working well for this.”

Notables include eight-time turf winner Mo Maverick and Tiger Blood, from the barn of Mike Maker and Kingpin, a son of Quality Road who will break from the far outside post for trainer Michael Stidham.  It will be very nice to welcome back conditioner Michelle Lovell, a former jockey, who began her training career at Sam Houston Race Park in 2003. She will send in Change of Control, a 5-year-old mare by Fed Biz. She exits a third-place finish in the Nelson Menard Stakes at Fair Grounds and will be ridden by Sophie Doyle.

Veteran Bourbon Cowboy Sets Sights on Victory in $75,000 Stonerside Sprint 

A field of nine will compete Sunday in the $75,000 Stonerside Sprint, which will run as the sixth race of the card. Nitrous, a 5-year-old son of Tapit, owned by Winchell Thoroughbreds LLC and Stonestreet Stables LLC, drew the rail post position in the six-furlong main track sprint. Stewart Elliott has the call aboard the 8-5 choice for Steve Asmussen. The gray, who has earned $547,796 in 18 starts, ships to Houston following his victory in the $125,000 Thanksgiving Classic at Fair Grounds.

“He's a Winchell homebred coming off a good win,” said Asmussen.

While Nitrous and fellow Fair Grounds shipper Hollis, from the barn of John Alexander Ortiz, will likely garner the heavy share of the betting public, trainer Scott Young has high hopes for Bourbon Cowboy.  The 9-year-old son of Cowboy Cal was claimed at Remington Park last August for $20,000 by Young and his owner Terral Hogan. He won sprinting at the Oklahoma City racetrack on December 12 and his four-length victory at Sam Houston on January 9 propelled Young to nominate the Kentucky-bred gelding for the Stonerside Sprint.

“It took a couple of races for him to get his confidence back,” explained Young, who is hitting the board at Sam Houston at a 41% clip this meet. “This is such a neat horse; he's quite a character and loves attention.  He's been training tremendously, so we hope for a good race on Sunday.”

Formerly named the Sam Houston Sprint Cup, this stakes was renamed in 2019 to honor the late Robert C. McNair and his Stonerside Stable. The well-respected Thoroughbred operation, based in central Kentucky, produced national and international racing stars, including Congaree, Bob and John, Tout Charmont and Chilukki. McNair sold Stonerside Stable to Darley in 2008 to devote his full attention to his Houston Texans NFL team and numerous philanthropic causes.

Catch a Bid Leads Field of Fillies and Mares in $75,000 Jersey Lilly Turf Stakes

The $75,000 Jersey Lilly Stakes, a mile and-one-sixteenth turf feature for fillies and mares, will close out the Houston Racing Festival card.

Catch a Bid, a 5-year-old mare by Real Solution, has been installed as the 7-5 morning line favorite. Owned by Highlander Training Center, she is trained by Joe Sharp, who looks forward to her Sam Houston Race Park debut.

“She was formerly trained by Chad Brown and faced some very tough company,” said Sharp. “We bought her out of the November Mixed Sale at Keeneland. She should like the firm Connally Turf course and we felt this would be a good starting point for her year.”

Stunning Sky, owned by Paradise Farms Corp., will ship in for trainer Mike Maker. The  4-year-old daughter of Declaration of War, made her last start at Gulfstream Park, running fifth in the $75,000 Tropical Park Oaks. Julien Leparoux has the call on the 3-1 second choice.

Morning Molly, who made her last start at Tampa Bay Downs for conditioner Tom Proctor is another solid contender. Trainer Mark Casse sends in No Mo Temper, who closed well in her most recent turf start also at Tampa.  Curlin's Journey, who ran fourth in last year's edition of the Jersey Lilly, returns for the Dallas Keen barn with jockey Sophie Doyle in the saddle.

Two Graded Stakes Set for Houston Racing Festival

The ninth renewal of the Grade 3, $300,000 Houston Ladies Classic will run as the eighth race on the Houston Racing Festival Card. The field of seven, from the rail, with riders and morning line odds, is as follows: Motion Emotion, Miguel Mena, 7-2; Jeweled Princess, Reylu Gutierrez, 8-1; Ujjayi, Rafael Manuel Hernandez, 6-1; Lady Apple, Stewart Elliott, 4-1; Figure It Out, Lane Luzzi, 15-1; Shes Our Fastest, Ry Eikleberry, 20-1 and Letruska, Jesus Castanon, 1-1.

In addition, the Grade 3, John B. Connally Turf Cup, which will run as the ninth race on the card, attracted a full field of turf specialists. The field for the one and one-half mile stakes, from the rail, with riders and morning-line odds is as follows: Celerity, Iram Diego, 30-1; Signalman, Reylu Gutierrez, 12-1; Ajourneytofreedom, Jesus Castanon, 10-1; Tenfold, Stewart Elliott., 6-1; Conviction Trade, Rafael Hernandez, 7-2; Marzo, Albin Jimenez, 10-1; Tuts Revenge, Ry Eikleberry, 9-2; Chagi, Weston Hamilton, 50-1; Vettori Kin(Brz), Miguel Mena, 20-1; Spooky Channel, Julien Leparoux, 5-2; Strong Tide, Sophie Doyle, 30-1 and Henley's Joy, Declan Carroll ,15-1.

Houston Racing Festival Broadcast Team

Sam Houston Race Park has assembled a talented group of handicappers and Thoroughbred industry veterans to guide racing fans through the premier day of the 2021 Thoroughbred season. The team includes Sam Houston's track announcer Chris Griffin; racing publicist Martha Claussen who will conduct post-race interviews and special guest, former Parx announcer Keith Jones, who now calls Houston home. In addition handicappers Nick Tammaro, Trey Stiles, Jessica Paquette and Andy Villanueva will combine for paddock previews of each of the races, comprehensive analysis and suggested Pick 4 tickets which will be posted on the live feed and shared on Twitter.

 

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Gulfstream Park Changing Post Times Feb. 3; Thursday’s Rainbow 6 Has $150,000 Jackpot Guarantee

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $150,000 Thursday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

The popular multi-race wager went unsolved Wednesday following Sunday's mandatory payout. Multiple tickets with all six winners were each worth $16,001.

The jackpot pool 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.

There will also be a Super Hi-5 carryover of $3,049.65 heading into Thursday's card.

Post-Time Changes Scheduled for Next Week
Post-time changes are scheduled at Gulfstream Park next week.

Beginning Wednesday Feb. 3, first-race post time for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday will be 1:10 p.m. First-race post time will be 12:10 p.m. on Saturdays and 12:40 p.m. on Sunday.

WHO'S HOT: Junior Alvarado rode a pair of winners, scoring aboard Gege Conquest ($8.20) in Race 3 and Meade ($23.60) in Race 8.

Irad Ortiz Jr. also doubled, tallying aboard Irish Honor ($8,80) in Race 6 and Eight Seven North ($17.80) in Race 10.

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Pletcher Tandem Of Prime Factor, Amount Jump Into Holy Bull Off Sharp Debut Wins

WinStar Farm LLC and CHC Inc.'s Prime Factor and Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable's Amount are scheduled to bring a combined total of two races of experience into Saturday's $200,000 Holy Bull (G3) at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Jumping from maiden special weight company into a graded-stakes may be a lot to ask of lightly raced 3-year-olds, but their trainer, Todd Pletcher, has a history of success with late-developing colts during the winter months at Gulfstream.

The 1 1/16-mile Holy Bull, the first graded stakes for 3-year-olds on the Road to the Curlin Florida Derby presented by Hill 'n Dale at Xalapa Farm, will headline a 12-race program with five graded stakes worth $600,000 in purses. A qualifying race for the Kentucky Derby, the Holy Bull offers 17 points to the top four finishers (10-4-2-1).

“It's kind of that time of year where you have to see where you are,” Pletcher said.

The 16-time Championship Meet training champion visited the Florida Derby winner's circle with a pair of lightly raced 3-year-olds in 2014 and 2015. Constitution (2014) and Materiality (2015) both won their career debuts at Gulfstream on Jan. 11, captured their second starts against more experienced and established 3-year-olds, and won the Florida Derby within 11 weeks.

Prime Factor debuted at Gulfstream Dec. 12 with a stunning 8 ¼-length victory, running six furlongs in 1:10.38 while drawing away powerfully after closely stalking the early pace.

“He was brilliant in his debut and has trained sharply since then. We kind of considered going into an allowance race but that never materialized,” said Pletcher, who has saddled two winners of the Holy Bull, Algorithms (2012) and Audible (2018). “It's always a big step to go from maiden race against winners, giving up experience, but he can hopefully overcome it.”

Defending two-time Championship Meet titlist Irad Ortiz Jr. has the return mount on the son of Quality Road, who was purchased for $900,000 at the 2019 Keeneland September sale.

Amount overcame bumping at the starts of his Dec. 26 debut, rallying from off the pace to score by 5 ¾ lengths, completing seven furlongs in 1:24.68 under Ortiz Jr.

“His debut was very professional. Again, we were limited in options,” said Pletcher, who has saddled five Florida Derby winners. “I think, ultimately, he's a horse that will appreciate more distance,”

Luis Saez has the call aboard the son of Curlin, who was purchased at the 2020 OPS July 2-year-olds-in-training sale for $110,000.

Courtlandt Farms' Greatest Honour brings four-race experience into the Holy Bull. The Shug McGaughey-trained son of Tapit finished a late-closing third in his first two starts at sprint distances before showing marked improvement when stretching out around two turns in his two most recent starts. He was beaten by a neck while finishing second behind Known Agenda at Aqueduct at 1 1/8 miles, before graduating Dec. 26 at Gulfstream. He overcame bumping at the start and some traffic on the first turn before closing to graduate by 1 ½ lengths.

The homebred colt schooled in the paddock and walking ring during the second race at Gulfstream Wednesday.

“I'm very pleased with what I saw today, very pleased. He's developed a lot,” McGaughey said. “I was just sitting there thinking if, through the winter and spring, he keeps going in that direction, he'll be good.”

Jose Ortiz has the mount aboard Greatest Honour.

Albaugh Family Stables LLC's Sittin On Go, who launched his career with a debut victory and an impressive score in the Iroquois (G3), will seek to improve on off-the-board finishes in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) at Keeneland and Kentucky Jockey Club (G2) at Churchill Downs.

“He's ready for another big race,” trainer Dale Romans said. “He's sitting on go. He's had two good works. He's ready. If he's good enough, he'll run big.”

Corey Lanerie has the mount aboard the son of Brody's Cause.

Tarantino, who is a nose short of being undefeated in his three starts on turf, is slated to make his dirt debut in the Holy Bull. The son of Pioneerof the Nile broke his maiden at Del Mar before finishing second by a nose in the Zuma Beach at Santa Anita for trainer Bob Baffert. After being transferred to trainer Rodolphe Brissett, he captured a mile optional claiming allowance Dec. 11 at Gulfstream Park.

Edgard Zayas has the return call aboard Tarantino, who is owned by SF Racing LLC, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables LLC and partners.

Magic Stables LLC's Papetu and John Fanelli and partners' Awesome Gerry, who finished second and third in the Jan. 2 Mucho Macho Man; OMGA Investments LLC and Off the Hook LLC's Jirafales, a 4 ¾-length debut winner at Gulfstream Park West; and Lea Farms LLC's Willy Boi, who is undefeated in two starts against Florida-bred opposition at Gulfstream, round out the field.

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Sharp To Appeal Kentucky Levamisole Rulings

Days after the publication of stewards' rulings for five levamisole positives, counsel for trainer Joe Sharp says Sharp will be appealing those rulings. Attorney Clark Brewster told the Paulick Report Wednesday that the stewards erred when they wrote a series of decisions declaring the drug to be a Class B substance according to Kentucky's regulations.

“I found it to be extraordinarily unfair and damaging to Joe,” Brewster said. “It's just the intransigence of the stewards not having the courage to recognize the truth and to say, 'Ok, we're sorry about that. Let's get it right.'”

Levamisole is approved by the FDA for use in cattle, sheep, and goats as a dewormer. Brewster said Sharp had been advised to use it as a dewormer for his stable as part of an effort to switch between different anti-parasitic products. He purchased the product over the counter at Tractor Supply.

Managers and trainers have been advised for years not to use the same deworming products too frequently because there is a growing drug resistance among the most common parasites impacting horses. Most veterinarians have discouraged dewormer use according to schedule and instead suggest deworming based on fecal egg counts. The levamisole product used by Sharp came in a powder form and was mixed with water and given orally. Brewster said Sharp preferred this administration because he felt his horses got more complete doses of the drug than from traditional paste dewormers.

Sharp was hit with the levamisole positives in Kentucky around the same time he encountered issues with it in Louisiana, where eight horses were disqualified for post-race positives for the substance between Dec. 1 and Dec. 28, 2019. Sharp was later fined $1,000 for each violation there but was not issued a suspension. Louisiana regulates medication based on guidelines from the Association of Racing Commissioners International, which considers levamisole a Class 2 drug with a B penalty class. ARCI's schematic requires a minimum 15-day suspension and $500 fine for the first violation in the B penalty class.

Kentucky stewards ruled earlier this week to issue a $500 fine for each Kentucky positive and a 30-day suspension to be served concurrent for all five violations. The ruling cited mitigating circumstances, pointing out that he hadn't been notified of the first positive when the subsequent ones occurred.

Kentucky does not follow ARCI's classification guidance for medications and penalties, although there are many similarities between the two.

An important difference to Brewster is the history of changes of levamisole's classification. At one point, the drug was considered a Class A drug (the most serious category) and was later made a Class B. Then, in 2015, commissioners for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission unanimously agreed to remove levamisole from the drug classification scheme altogether after they detangled the association between levamisole and another drug called aminorex. Aminorex is a stimulant which has the potential for performance enhancement and was the primary substance of concern, they concluded. Initially it had been unclear whether one was a sign that the other had been administered, but Brewster said it's now generally accepted that levamisole can metabolize into aminorex, but not the other way around.

(Read more about the challenges of regulating levamisole and aminorex in this 2018 feature.)

There is a provision in Kentucky's regulations allowing for some flexibility beyond the drug classification chart that's in the states regulations. If a substance comes up in a post-race test that isn't rated on the drug schedule — particularly a new designer drug — the commission can establish an appropriate classification after consulting with ARCI or the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium and call the positive.

But Brewster said this provision shouldn't allow the commission to declassify a drug, only to have stewards call it by its old classification and penalty years later.

“What about Panacur or ivermectin? The horsemen rely on the commission to tell them what they can and can't use. Why couldn't this man rely on what the commission tells him?” said Brewster. “I certainly believe if there's cheating going on or something to gain an advantage or mask pain when a horse shouldn't be running, let's get the classification schedule right, let's take action and police the sport in the most rigorous and fair way possible. This is a situation where somebody's made a terrible mistake and it's really impacted the trainer and they don't have the courage to retreat and do the right thing.”

He also said he notified the stewards of all this at the time of Sharp's hearing in December 2020 and was frustrated to see the ruling state levamisole as a Class B violation anyway. He questioned whether the stewards realized the drug had been delisted five years before.

“This is truly beyond the pale of regulation,” he said. “[The positives were] all over the news. Joe couldn't get stalls at Fair Grounds for a while. People pulled their horses, including one that ran in the Kentucky Derby (Art Collector). He was completely pilloried in the press, all on the basis that the stewards just didn't read the list.”

If the commission wanted to add levamisole back onto the drug classification schedule, Brewster believes the regulatory body should have gone through the usual rule-making process to do so.

“If that's the case, wouldn't we have an opportunity to say why it shouldn't be listed?” he said. “Wouldn't it be listed at a public hearing in the same fashion where it was delisted? But they just quietly wouldn't respond.”

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission declined comment on Brewster's arguments, citing a policy of not commenting on active cases.

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