After Weather Delay, Russell Sends Trio Of Winter Sprintfest Entrants On ‘Field Trip’ To Pimlico

With two program favorites for Laurel Park's rescheduled Winter Sprintfest program and another horse listed as second choice on the morning line, trainer Brittany Russell took her stakes trio on a mini road trip to keep them sharp for the big day.

Winter Sprintfest, featuring six stakes, two graded, worth $900,000 in purses, was postponed to Feb. 20 due to a winter storm that hit Laurel leading up to the original Feb. 13 date. The weather also caused training over the main track to be suspended over the weekend.

Areas north of Laurel didn't see as much ice and mixed precipitation, so Russell was able to ship Hello Beautiful, Maythehorsebwithu and Little Huntress the 45 minutes to historic Pimlico Race Course Monday, which remained open for training.

“They really enjoyed themselves, actually. It's quiet and it was an easy enough little deal,” Russell said. “My assistant went with them. It was good. They all seemed like they were pleased with themselves when they came home, so that was good.

“Hopefully we can just give them a few spirited gallops during the week and just keep them happy and doing enough,” she added. “Shoot, if I have to put them on a truck to go to Pimlico again I'm not going to hesitate to do that. It's just a little field trip.”

Russell's main stable is at Laurel with additional horses at Pimlico and, for the first time, at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream Park's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County, Florida. Hello Beautiful is a five-time stakes winner, the last three of them in succession heading into the $250,000 Runhappy Barbara Fritchie (G3), where she is tops at 8-5 in a field of eight.

Maythehorsebwithu is the 2-1 narrow choice over multiple stakes winner Kenny Had a Notion (5-2) in the $100,000 Miracle Wood for 3-year-olds. Little Huntress, a 14-length maiden winner in her second start Dec. 27 at Laurel, is listed at 3-1 for her sophomore and stakes debut in the $100,000 Wide Country for 3-year-old fillies. Five-time stakes winner Street Lute is favored at 2-1.

“They're all actually really good. Hello Beautiful [was] coming back in four weeks so, to be fair, I didn't mind an extra week. She likes a little bit of time. They're all pretty good-training horses and as long as they're galloping they get enough out of it,” Russell said. “I always feel a little bit of pressure because I want all my horses to run well but especially horses like that.

“We want them to be good. You want to win stakes. You want them to step up and be better horses. It's exciting. To be honest, when the day comes I'm just kind of ready for it to be over and know the result,” she added. “It can be mentally draining but it's nice that those are the kinds of horses that we're worrying about. That's what it comes down to.”

Russell would have had another major Winter Sprintfest contender in Whereshetoldmetogo, back-to-back winner of the Frank Whiteley and Dave's Friend to cap 2020 who was nominated to the $250,000 General George (G3). Instead, he is being pointed to make his 6-year-old debut in the $75,000 Not For Love for Maryland-bred/sired horses March 13 at Laurel.

“He just needed a little bit more time. He's fine, but I think we can have him a little better for the Maryland-bred race,” Russell said. “We decided to make that the goal. I missed a little bit of time with him, no big deal, but it was just one of those things where it looked like the better way to go with him.”

Russell has five wins and has finished in the top three with 13 of 18 starters (72 percent) at Laurel's winter meet, which runs Jan. 1 through March 28. She reached a career high with 46 wins and $1.6 million in purse earnings in 2020, challenging for leading trainer honors at the calendar year-ending fall stand.

“I think we stay so busy and we're so humble about it. I still worry about the $5,000 horses,” Russell said. “[Stakes horses] aren't the only ones you're worrying about, so it kind of keeps you grounded.”

The Laurel area is bracing for another hit from Mother Nature. A winter storm warning has been issued from 3 a.m. Thursday to 6 a.m. Friday with heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain in the forecast, which is calling for 3 to 6 inches of snow.

“It is what it is,” Russell said. “Everybody's kind of in the same boat. You just keep them happy until they get to run.”

It's been a more hectic month than usual for Russell, who balances work with being a wife to Laurel rider Sheldon Russell and mother of 18-month-old daughter, Edy. On Feb. 9, Russell had 3-year-old Hello Hot Rod sell for $335,000 at Fasig-Tipton's winter auction in Kentucky, just 10 days after the colt's victory in the Jimmy Winkfield at Aqueduct.

Russell and Dark Horse Racing purchased Hello Hot Rod for $10,000 as a yearling in October 2019. A son of leading Mid-Atlantic freshman sire Mosler, he won his last three starts including maiden and allowance victories at Laurel to cap his juvenile season. New owner George Sharp has many of his horses with trainer Shawn Davis, based at Turf Paradise, which hosts the Turf Paradise Derby March 12.

Hello Hot Rod is the younger half-brother to Hello Beautiful, herself a $6,500 purchase by Russell at Fasig-Tipton's Midlantic December 2018 mixed sale now owned by Madaket Stables, Albert Frassetto, Mark Parkinson, K-Mac Stables and Magic City Stables.

“It's pretty exciting. Bittersweet, though,” Russell said of Hello Hot Rod's sale. “But, we just have to be happy that he sold well and maybe we can pick another one up. Maybe the third time's the charm. Maybe the third one will be the best.”

The post After Weather Delay, Russell Sends Trio Of Winter Sprintfest Entrants On ‘Field Trip’ To Pimlico appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Empire Maker Filly Runs Away With UAE Oaks

Mnasek (Empire Maker), a $15,000 purchase by Al Rashid Stables at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale last June, continued to write her fairytale story at Meydan on Thursday, posting her second win from three starts and first stakes win with a facile score in the G3 UAE Oaks. A longshot 6 3/4-length winner on debut going seven furlongs at Meydan on Dec. 17, Mnasek had to settle for second, seven lengths behind Saturday's Saudi Derby contender Soft Whisper (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), after missing the break in the Listed UAE 1000 Guineas up to a mile on Jan. 28.

Away much more smoothly up to 1900 metres on Thursday, Mnasek broke on top from the rail but soon dropped back to allow Jumeirah Beach (Ire) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}) to take up the running. Fourth and about three lengths off the lead rounding the first bend, jockey Pat Dobbs made a deliberate move to put the filly on the outside midway down the backstretch and she was poised ominously four-wide rounding the bend. Shooting to the lead as they straightened, Mnasek drew clear effortlessly to crush her overmatched opposition by 6 1/2 lengths. Nayefah (Super Saver) made eye-catching headway late to be second, while Last Sunset (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) was third.

Winning trainer Doug Watson said, “She just goes out there and tries hard. We've done very little with her since she [last] ran. She's a small filly and she has a lot of talent. We worked her in company out of the gate and that helped. Today she didn't enjoy being behind and when she was tipped out you could see it. She was the best filly. I don't know if they'll want to run her in the [G2 UAE] Derby, but who knows. Fair dues to Shane [Ryan, starter] and the gate crew. They did a great job helping us out. Obviously, she's a little funny in the gate and she broke great tonight. [The owners] should send her to America. That's her second win here. She's got a lot of options over there. If she stays sound and training like she is, she could win over there.”

Dobbs added, “She's very brave. She didn't enjoy the early part of the race, getting the kickback, but once she got out, she travelled super. She stays very well. She's a little bit light-mouthed, but she's got a big heart and is a lovely mover.”

Pedigree Notes

Mnasek is the sixth foal out of her GII Bayakoa H.-winning dam Washington Bridge (Yankee Gentleman), who was bred by Brereton Jones and bought by Don Alberto Corp. for $750,000 at Fasig-Tipton's November sale in 2013 in foal to Tapit, having been bought by Town and Country Farm as a maiden mare for $330,000 at Keeneland January the year prior. Washington Bridge is out of the listed-winning Stirling Bridge (Prized), who has also produced the multiple listed winner Jose Sea View (Badge Of Silver). The third dam is the GIII Suwannee River H. scorer Early Lunch (Noble Table). Washington Bridge, who was offered at Keeneland November last year but led out unsold at $37,000, has a 2-year-old filly by Street Sense named West Love, a yearling full-sister to Mnasek and was bred to Liam's Map for 2021.

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TRF Launches Partnership with Dept. of Juvenile Justice in Ocala

Building on more than 35 years of experience “Saving Horses and Saving Lives” in partnership with Correctional Facilities across the United States, the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) has established its first-ever partnership with a Department of Juvenile Justice program.

Presented as a live-streaming launch event, the TRF and the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice will introduce the new equine program, TRF Second Chances Juvenile Program at CSI-Ocala, to a national audience Feb. 23. The event will feature remarks from the Secretary of the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice and include a tour of the new equine program facility constructed at the Center for Success and Independence (CSI), a juvenile residential commitment program operated by Youth Opportunity Investments in Ocala, Florida. The audience and media in attendance will meet the TRF retired racehorses and the equine program instructor, learn about the skills-based and therapeutic curriculum and hear examples of the positive outcomes for the youths in the program.

“The launch of the Juvenile Program in Ocala represents a meaningful milestone in the long history of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation”, said Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation Executive Director, Pat Stickney. “The TRF Second Chances Juvenile Program at CSI-Ocala is the first of its kind in the United States and it represents the beginning of a new chapter for our flagship program. The partnership with the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice has been the critical catalyst in our long-held dream of placing the retired Thoroughbred racehorses of the TRF in an environment where they can positively influence the lives of young people. This new program will set a new standard for the impact of the TRF horses by changing the trajectory of the lives of young people who are deemed at risk.”

Event Details:
Location: TRF Second Chances Juvenile Program at CSI-Ocala
Date: Tuesday, Feb. 23
Time: 10 a.m. ET (30 min duration)
Access: Streaming live on TRF YouTube and on Facebook and Twitter
No Tickets or RSVP Required.

Details at: https://www.trfinc.org/juvenile-at-csi-ocala/

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Exercise Rider Becomes TikTok Sensation

How do we market racing to the younger generation?

It seems to be the million-dollar question, but an exercise rider named Electra Boone may be nearing an answer. In just two years, Boone has reached an audience of millions on TikTok.

The assistant trainer for Palm Meadows-based trainer Carlos David posts videos on the popular social media platform showcasing her daily life on the backstretch. Today her account, @electraboone, has 150,500 followers and has received 6.4 million likes. Each of her videos receive thousands of views and some of her most popular clips have reached up to 10 million viewers.

TikTok, a short-form, video-sharing social media network, has exploded in popularity in the past year. Although known as the app for Gen Z, TikTok has over a billion monthly active users of all ages. Unlike many social media channels where a user's feed is based on the people they choose to follow, TikTok users scroll through videos created by strangers from around the globe based on a feed individually formulated by the app's algorithm.

Boone said she originally started her TikTok account to create fun videos with a friend just as the app was on the verge of popularity in the U.S.

“I got TikTok two or three years ago when it wasn't anything special,” she recalled. “I just made videos for fun. I had maybe 10 followers and was just posting videos of my dog or a random horse. My friend and I started making cool horse racing videos and we randomly had one video blow up really big and we both gained a huge following at the same time.”

Boone realized they might be on to something, so she began editing her videos further and getting more creative with her content. Soon, she had gained nearly a hundred thousand followers.

“I was thrown off by that because I was just doing it for fun; I wasn't trying to get attention from it,” she said.

Boone's videos range from hilarious to artistic to informative. Her audience has grown attached to some of the stable's stars with Boone often posting progress videos on many of their trainees. One dark bay mare, Jost Sayin (Big Drama), is known as the 'Black Beauty of TikTok'.

Viewers followed the saga of Boone's favorite horse getting claimed and later returning to the David stable, but were confused by the concept of the claiming game. In response to many questions from her followers, Boone made three extensive videos teaching the ins and outs of claiming.

Many viewers ask questions based off Boone's videos and she will post response videos explaining everything from why horses wear nasal flair strips, how to wrap a leg, or why a horse is hosed off before a race.

“I get a lot of questions regarding how to become a jockey,” she said. “A lot of people want to ride and they ask me about weight and height requirements because they've always been told they have to be the size of a jockey to ride, which isn't true if you just want to gallop. So I try to answer the questions on how I got started riding and the best ways to get into it and I try to steer them on the right path in that way.”

Boone had no familial connection to racing when she first started her career in the industry as a photographer at Churchill Downs as a teenager. She had ridden horses all her life and dreamed of one day becoming an exercise rider. She moved on to a job as a hotwalker and then later a groom, working for several trainers in Kentucky, New York and California. After making a trip to Dubai at the age of 17, she was ready to take the next step towards her goal.

“Dubai was a surreal, crazy experience but when I came back I was so tired of hot walking and ponying, I just wanted to ride,” she recalled.”The man that galloped California Chrome, Dehigi Gladney, is a really good rider and runs Doug O'Neil's baby farm in California. I started breaking babies there and he taught me everything. He built my foundation as a rider.”

After six months, the racing stewards came out to the farm to give their approval for Boone to move on to the main track.

“Once I started galloping on the track, I rode for a lot of different trainers,” she said. “I went to Saratoga, which I probably wasn't ready for, but I did it anyways because I'm pretty headstrong. I rode for Todd Pletcher, Brad Cox and Jeremiah Englehart and it was really neat to see how the bigger barns work.”

A year an a half ago, Boone decided to move to Florida despite the fact that she'd never before visited the state. But the decision proved favorable when she met her boss, and now boyfriend, trainer Carlos David.

“He completely changed my form and made me a better rider. He has taught me everything,” she said.

Although Boone's TikTok influence has grown significantly since her move to Florida, she still says that she uses the social media platform as a personal account and doesn't hesitate to post fun, non-equine content.

“It's more of a personal account,” she said. “I don't have much of a filter and will be very straightforward with people about it. I try to be very positive on the app and shift people away from the idea that horses are mistreated. There are a lot of bad apples in the industry, but I try to show that there are a lot of good trainers out there too.”

Still, Boone said she does receive a lot of hate and negative feedback because of her involvement in racing.

Boone said her goal on TikTok is to stay positive and be an advocate for the industry. | photo courtesy Electra Boone

 

“A lot of the comments I get are super nasty because people have completely the wrong idea about the industry,” she said. “A lot of people have no idea and assume horses are slaughtered when they're done with racing. So I try to show how we re-home all of our horses to good homes and how they look now.”

She added that she has had to learn to cope with the ongoing malicious comments.

“I think the hate has gotten to me a bit,” she admitted. “I try to take a step back from TikTok because there is a lot of hate, but then I come back and bring a lot more content.”

TikTok's algorithm offers some insight on Boone's audience.

“I mostly have female followers and I do get a lot of horse people follow me,” she said. ” It's a lot of younger people, I would say mostly 14 and 15-year-olds, but I do get a lot of adults and a lot of equestrians that do show jumping and stuff like that. Everyone is super curious. From what I've gained from TikTok, I've learned there are so many people who have the wrong idea about horse racing and actually have no idea how it works. I try to inform them in that way and that's how I use my platform.”

As Boone's account has grown in popularity, she is now considered a TikTok influencer and gets paid for the videos she posts based on the number of views they receive.

“I never expected to be paid to post things that make me happy. I just post whatever I'm feeling and I get paid for it, usually like $200 a month.”

Boone offered her insight on how the industry can best bring in a new audience based on her experiences.

“I think the biggest thing is people want to be exposed to what's happening and how our days go,” she said. “I've had countless people ask me to make a YouTube channel and show a whole day of what I do. I think my race day videos get so much attention because I'm showing every aspect from bridling the horse, getting him ready, saddling and everything else. People want to see everything to do with the horse. Racing coverage, you don't get to see much of the actual animal, but people want to really see what we do with them. Social media is huge. People want to see more videos of the backside.”

While Boone has fulfilled and surpassed her dream of becoming an exercise rider, she said she now has new dreams in the making as an advocate for the industry on TikTok.

“I'd like to take it bigger and have a more positive voice,” she said. “I'm trying to bring in younger people. That's my big thing is making that good impression about the industry on younger people.”

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