Dr. Tony Ryan Book Award Winner Announced

Edited Press Release

Veteran turf writer Mark Shrager has won the 15th Dr. Tony Ryan Book Award, presented by Castleton Lyons, for Diane Crump, A Horse-Racing Pioneer's Life in the Saddle. The winner was announced on May 10 via Zoom conference for the second straight year due to pandemic concerns.

Shrager, a previous Book Award finalist for The Great Sweepstakes of 1877, took top honors for his biography of Crump, who represented the face of hope for aspiring young women in the Sport of Kings in the late 1960s. She would become the first of her gender to ride in a sanctioned North American pari-mutuel race, the first to compete in the Kentucky Derby, and the first to win a stakes event.

As winner of the 2020 Dr. Tony Ryan Book Award, Shrager will receive a check for $10,000, along with a Tipperary crystal replica of Castleton Lyons' iconic stone tower.

Other finalists were: Linda Shantz for her novel Good Things Come, and Vicky Moon for the biography Sylvia Rideoutt Bishop Had a Way With Horses, both of whom will receive $1,000 and a crystal trophy.

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Baffert Runners Arrive at Pimlico

The suspension of Tex Sutton charters meant that GI Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit (Protonico) and his once-beaten stablemate, 'TDN Rising Star' Concert Tour (Street Sense) (video), had to endure a lengthy van ride over from Churchill Downs, but GI Preakness S.-bound duo arrived safely at Pimlico Race Course shortly after 2 p.m. Monday afternoon. The horses were overseen by assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes, who said they departed Louisville about 4:45 a.m. Monday morning.

“It seemed simple,” he said. “Actually, we're here even earlier than we fly sometimes. If you are on the second flight they have to come here and go back. Other than having to drive 600 miles, it went very smooth.”

Also making the trip from Kentucky were Beautiful Gift (Medaglia d'Oro), drawn widest for Friday's GII Black-Eyed Susan S.; 'Rising Star' Following Sea (Runhappy), slated to run in Saturday's GIII Chick Lang S.; and Hozier (Pioneerof the Nile), runner-up to Concert Tour in the GII Rebel S. who is headed to Saturday's Sir Barton S.

 

WATCH: Derby winner Medina Spirit arrives at Old Hilltop for Saturday's GI Preakness S.

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Full-Brothers Fill Out Exacta In Rowland Memorial Handicap At Thistledown

Buckeye Bullet won the Michael F. Rowland Memorial Handicap on Monday at Thistledown for a fourth time, which is remarkable in its own right. Almost as remarkable was the level of family dominance displayed in the order of finish.

Finishing three-quarters of a length behind the 8-year-old Buckeye Bullet was Midnight Mikey, a 6-year-old full-brother to the winner.

Both halves of the exacta are gelded sons of Dark Kestrel, out of the winning Concerto mare Buckler, each racing as Ohio-born homebreds for Louis Ruberto Jr.'s Ruberto Racing Stable. Ruberto also trains both horses.

Buckeye Bullet led at every point of call in the six-furlong race for Ohio-breds, under jockey Erik Barbaran, while Midnight Mikey was second past every pole under Ricardo Feliciano. The two battled within a head of each other for the bulk of the race, and Buckeye Bullet briefly let his stablemate by, but he regained the advantage late and kicked on to prevail.

Dark Kestrel, an 18-year-old son of Stormy Atlantic, stands at Ruberto's farm in Libson, Ohio. The stallion won once in two starts as a juvenile, taking his debut in an Ellis Park maiden special weight by 3 1/2 lengths.

He entered stud in 2005 as a research stallion for the University of Florida, residing at the school's equine centers in Gainesville and Ocala.

While under the University of Florida banner, he sired runners of note including Stormofthecentury, who won the Grade 3 Turf Monster Handicap at Parx Racing under Ruberto's tutelage. The stallion moved to Ohio in 2015, a year after Stormofthecentury's graded stakes triumph.

The dam, Buckler, has had four foals to race, all sired by Dark Kestrel. In addition to the top two in the Rowland Memorial, she has also had stakes-placed Roses for Sharon and Kingofthebuckeye, who won two of five starts.

On her own accord, the Illinois-bred Buckler won 10 of 48 starts over the course of five years, racing primarily in the claiming ranks in Illinois, Florida, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. She was also owned and trained by Ruberto, who bought the mare privately in 2009, and raced her for two more years. Buckler's foals have earned a combined $770,929 on the racetrack.

The Rowland score brings Buckeye Bullet's lifetime record to 11 wins from 24 starts, with earnings of $406,759. Monday's race was the gelding's fourth consecutive victory in the stakes event, after he won the previous renewals in 2017, 2018, and 2020.

In running second, Midnight Mikey improved his lifetime earnings to $296,376, with a record of seven wins in 28 starts. He finished second in the 2019 Rowland Memorial – the one that didn't feature his brother – and he ran sixth to Buckeye Bullet in 2020.

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Optimism High As Oregon’s Grants Pass Downs Begins 2021 Season

CEO Travis Boersma has plenty of reasons to be excited as Grants Pass Downs begins its spring/summer meet with eight-race cards Monday and Tuesday.

Entries for the first two days of racing are very healthy—128 total horses, an average of 8.0 per race. Both stakes races—Monday's $12,000 Caveman Stakes and Tuesday's $11,400 Daily Courier Stakes—drew deep and talented fields.

Moreover, the weather forecast is perfect, and last but certainly not least, fans will be allowed on-track for the races; advance tickets are available at gpdowns.com or at the gate.

“We've got up to 1,200 fans coming and that's a big step for us,” Boersma said. “We're ecstatic. It means energy around the grandstand. As far as an intimate track experience goes, I don't think anybody has something like we have.”

When Portland Meadows shuttered for good in 2019, it could have been ruinous to racing in Oregon. But Boersma, born and raised in the Rogue Valley, had a life-long enjoyment of racing in Grants Pass, stepped up big time. He secured a long-term lease for a commercial meet at the Josephine County Fairgrounds, and in the past two years has made numerous improvements to the facility.

“Here's the thing; I've gone to this track at Grants Pass since I was brought into this life, and so I've got these memories and experiences I'll take with me the rest of my life,” Boersma said. “To think that horse racing could go away in the state of Oregon seemed tragic to me.”

“And I really started to look at how we could save it, that was the first step. And then the second step: could horse racing live without having to be propped up, and the short answer was yes.”

The Flying Lark restaurant and entertainment venue is due to open later this year on the southwest corner of the facility. The state-of-the-art venue will help finance horse racing purses, which currently average over $60,000 daily. As for wagering, the 2020 fall meet averaged a record $377,789 including a blockbuster $868,632 on closing day.

“We are a fun-loving mind-blowing company here to build legacies one race at a time, those principles and values and philosophy of business carry over to (horse racing) for me,” Boersma said. “When we can make an impact in a community in a positive way, when we can take the Josephine County Fairgrounds and start to inject life into it and take care of deferred maintenance and figure out ways to bring jobs to our community and make a difference in agriculture, make a difference in equestrian, and be a draw for horsemen and horsewomen from all over the state, that's where my juices get flowing because that's what it's all about for me, quality of life and how we can live it.”

“We're well on our way to stabilizing horse racing in Oregon, “Boersma said. “Our goal is to have the fair meets rock solid and funded, and our commercial race meet in Grants Pass dialed in and drawing people from all over the western United States.”

Boersma also participates in the races at Grants Pass. He owns a stable of horses with trainers Emilio Guerrero and Quinn Howey including five runners entered opening week, and a band of five broodmares whose progeny begin racing next year.

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