Reserved Seats Available for Lone Star

Reserved seating for Lone Star Park's 2021 Thoroughbred Racing Season will go on sale Monday, Mar. 22. The season opens Thursday, Apr. 22 and continues through Sunday, July 11.
Lone Star Park has implemented a new ticketing system for 2021. Customers can purchase any ticket type, including general admission for any date at www.LoneStarPark.com/Tickets beginning Monday at 6 a.m. or by calling the reservation line at 972-263-PONY at 9 a.m. Monday.

General Admission is just $5 and reserved seating options range from $10 to $25 per person (includes admission) on most race days except on big event days and Kentucky Derby Day, which have separate pricing plans.

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Florida Cup Tickets On Sale

Tickets to the 18th annual Florida Cup Mat. 28 are being sold online on the track website and at the customer service booth on the first floor of the grandstand on racing days. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, fans must have a pre-purchased ticket to attend. The Florida Cup, which was cancelled last year due to the worldwide pandemic, is comprised of six Florida-bred stakes, three on the dirt and three on turf.

General admission tickets are $10, plus a service fee if purchased online. Picnic area tables are also available for $50, which covers the cost of admission for six fans.

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Letter to the Editor: Macagone’s Tribe

This past Saturday, we witnessed some great racing and stellar racehorses, but a group of horsepeople who work in racing were focused on the evening's 4th race at Turfway Park.

A few weeks earlier, a fellow “racetracker” and friend had posted on her social media page that she needed help. Laura Tilbury, “Tils” to everyone who knows her, has worked in racing for four decades, as an exercise rider and assistant trainer in New York and Florida. She is spending the winter in Aiken with her own horse Jack, but as always, she keeps a close watch on a few of her old favorite horses that she has worked with in the past. Tils had gotten an alert that one of her favorites, 10-year-old Macagone, was entered in a $5,000 claiming race at Turfway Park. Tils had galloped “Mac” years ago and fell in love with this classy turf stakes horse. His career began in 2014 and after a successful run for a number of trainers who had him, winning 11 of his 47 starts, earning Beyers of over 100 in 19 of those races and $654,981 in earnings for his owners and trainers, here he was in a bottom-level claiming. Tils knew it was time to help him.

She made contact immediately with his current trainer asking to buy him before the race, but unfortunately it was a hard `no.' She had already asked her Facebook clan to help with raising the funds to buy him and since that wasn't going to happen, she wanted to claim him and the wave of the tribe began. The power of the horse community is a beautiful thing. Within a few days, the money was promised–$20, $50, $100, and more–all from those in the racing industry workforce. Exercise riders, grooms, retired backstretch workers, trainers and others were contributing to help this old warrior retire. An upstate New York nonprofit racehorse rescue, Inherit the Gold Foundation, offered him a home to retire at Haven Oaks Farms. Morriseys Horse Pullmans was quick to offer him a courtesy van ride from Kentucky to New York, and many others asked how they could help. Then the morning of the race, he was scratched.

Tils was devastated; what would happen now? Another week passed and then came the alert that Mac was back in the entries, again for $5,000 at Turfway. The tribe regrouped, a trainer in Kentucky answered the call to make the claim and the hope and love from Mac's Tribe proved to be stronger than even imagined. As everyone was ready to watch the fourth race that night, praying all going in favor for Team Mac, Tils got a 4 p.m. phone call that Mac had again been scratched.

As it was a late scratch, she was nervous and decided to just make the call to the trainer right away and try to get him. The conversation was short and sweet. She told him she wanted him to retire, she had someone to come get him that evening, the ride to his new home was already in place and with that, the trainer decided to give him to Tils for free.

It was sweeter than ever imagined. Just like that, Buff Bradley, who had kindly offered to help in Kentucky, walked Mac from the stall where he was preparing for the race over to his barn. Mac was safe and on his way to a well-deserved new life. After a few days with Buff, Mac left Kentucky last night and has just arrived at Haven Oaks Farm. He walked off the van with his regal head high, almost knowing that he had a whole tribe of love with him. The folks at the farm were delighted to meet him and he happily received a blanket and mints. He is settling in very well and has already had a roll in the round pen at his new home. Mac will begin a new chapter in his life, one that all racehorses deserve.

The big hearted horse and his angel Tils are so grateful to the racing community. The heart and passion of people who work in racing is undeniable. We care to no end, the majority would do anything for the horse and this tale of a 10-year-old racehorse is proof. Actually, almost daily you can find someone from the racetrack community posting on social media about a horse that needs a home, one who needs to be rescued from a kill pen, and every day, racetrackers are putting their hands and hearts out to help. THIS IS HORSE RACING, the backbone and heart of a sport at its finest.

–Amanda Roxborough

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Classy United Returns To Action In Saturday’s San Luis Rey Stakes

Richard Mandella's classy multiple stakes winning United, idle since early November, will square off with Richard Baltas' sharp recent winner Masteroffoxhounds, as they head a field of five older horses going a mile and one half on turf in Saturday's Grade 3, $100,000 San Luis Rey Stakes at Santa Anita.

A winner of four out of nine Santa Anita turf starts, United has been idle since running a disappointing eighth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf on Nov. 7 at Keeneland—a race in which he finished second, beaten a head at Santa Anita on Nov. 2, 2019.

A 6-year-old gelding by Giant's Causeway, United enjoyed a terrific year in 2020, winning four out of his six starts, all in graded stakes, and finishing a close second in another, the Grade 2 Del Mar Handicap three starts back on Aug. 22.

A gate to wire winner of the Grade 2 John Henry Turf Championship at a mile and one quarter here two starts back on Sept. 26, United's lone “misfire” came in the Breeders' Cup Turf, a race in which he pressed the early pace but tired to be beaten 9 ¾ lengths.

Owned by LNJ Foxwoods, United will be ridden by Flavien Prat, who's been aboard for his last 11 starts, winning five of them. With two second place finishes in three tries at 1 ½ miles on turf, United is easily the leading money earner in the field with $1,453,549 from an overall mark of 17-7-4-1.

A 4-year-old Kentucky-bred colt by War Front, Masteroffoxhounds made his first six starts in Ireland, winning one of them. A non-threatening seventh in his U.S. debut going one mile on turf three starts back on Nov. 7, he's shown rapid improvement going longer distances for Baltas—airing by 4 ¼ lengths in a 1 3/8 mile turf allowance Nov. 28 at Del Mar and most recently, winning the Grade 2, 1 ¼ mile turf San Marcos Stakes here on Feb. 6 by 1 ¼ lengths.

Although ridden by Joel Rosario for the first time in the San Marcos, Masteroffoxhounds will get the first-time services of Umberto Rispoli. With an overall mark of 9-3-1-1, Masteroffoxhounds, who is owned by Rockingham Ranch, has earnings of $172,942 and will be trying a mile and one half for the first time.

As is often the case on grass at Santa Anita, trainer Phil D'Amato will be very well represented, in this case, by a pair of horses, Ontario, Canadian-bred Say the Word and California-bred Acclimate.

In his first start for D'Amato, the current Winter/Spring leader with 10 stakes wins, Say the Word, a dedicated deep closer, finished with a flourish two starts back to be third, beaten one length, in the Grade 2 Hollywood Turf Cup going a mile and one half at Del Mar on Nov. 27. Subsequently 11th going 1 3/16 miles in the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational Turf Jan. 23 at Gulfstream Park, he's worked six times since over Santa Anita's inner dirt training track, a regimen that has worked well for D'Amato this winter.

A 6-year-old gelding by More Than Ready that is owned by his breeder, Sam-Son Farm and Agave Racing Stable, Say the Word's chances would be greatly enhanced by a lively pace. A Group 1 winner at a mile and one half on turf at Woodbine Race Course, he's got an overall mark of 27-5-2-5, good for earnings of $469,292.

With leading rider Flavien Prat opting to stick with United, Say the Word will be ridden for the first time by Mike Smith.

D'Amato will hope to “have 'em surrounded” in the San Luis Rey, as his 7-year-old gelding Acclimate, will likely go to the front and try to take the field as far as he can under Tyler Baze. Bet to the 6-5 favorite in the Grade 2 San Marcos on Feb. 6, this California-bred son of Acclamation showed the way until collared by Masteroffoxhounds in a 1 ¼ length defeat—which was his third start off a one year absence.

With four wins, two seconds and as many thirds from 13 tries over the Santa Anita turf, Acclimate's connections will hope a hillside start may bolster their front-running chances on Saturday. Owned by the Ellwood Johnston Trust, Timmy Time Racing, LLC and Ken Tevelde, Acclimate, who was bred in-part by Old English Rancho, has earnings of $439,872.

THE GRADE 3 SAN LUIS REY STAKES WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 7 of 9 Approximate post time 4:00 p.m. PT

  1. Acclimate—Tyler Baze—120
  2. Masteroffoxhounds—Umberto Rispoli—124
  3. United—Flavien Prat—124
  4. Say the Word—Mike Smith—124
  5. Multiplier—Abel Cedillo—120

First post time for a nine-race card on Saturday is at 1 p.m. All of Santa Anita's races are offered free of charge at santaanita.com/live and fans can wager at 1st.com/bet. For additional information, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

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