New Jersey Commission Allows Cashing Of Tickets Expired During Pandemic

Per the New Jersey Racing Commission, winning tickets and vouchers that expired during Meadowlands Racetrack and Winners Bayonne closures due to COVID-19 can now be cashed.

Bettors with Meadowlands and Winners expired winning tickets that expired in 2020 are encouraged come out to the track and cash-in at any mutuels window at the Meadowlands or Winners.

In addition, the mutuels department and NJRC must verify any tickets from September 16th, 2019 – Nov 1st, 2019 before they will be cashed.

Tickets and vouchers can also be cashed in via registered mail by sending in the tickets along with a self- addressed and stamped envelope to:

Meadowlands Racing & Entertainment
Attn: Mutuels Department
1 Racetrack Drive
East Rutherford, NJ 07073

Any questions can be sent to Mutuels Director Stu Berman at sberman@playmeadowlands.com

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Letter to the Editor: John Fulton

On Memorial Day, we saw a great race between Country Grammer and Royal Ship (Brz), a horse that I purchased in Brazil for Fox Hill Farm and Siena Farm. Two classy horses battling to the wire and neither giving up. But, what Royal Ship was giving up was weight to the winner and that is the issue that I want to address. Why, in a Grade I stakes race, or any graded stakes for that matter, are the horses not running with equal weights or, at least, weight for age or sex?

I'm not saying that the two pound difference in the Gold Cup made a difference in the outcome, as Country Grammer ran an amazingly game race. But where do we draw the line on who deserves to be classified as a graded winner?

Many years ago, I trained a horse named Big Whippendeal for George Steinbrenner and won the Hialeah Turf Cup in track-record time. I then took him to California for the GI Century H., which he also won. We went back to Hollywood Park for the GI Sunset S. and my horse lost by a nose to a horse named Greco II.

If I remember correctly, Greco ll was in with 108 pounds with the great Bill Shoemaker aboard. My horse carried 126 pounds with another great in Laffitt Pincay. Shoe closed on the far outside and Laffitt didn't even see him and he brought Big Whippendeal back to the winner's circle to get our picture taken. In the end a nose, and eighteen pounds, beat us out taking that photo.

Does Greco ll deserve to be classified as a Grade I winner? I don't think so, but any catalogue page will list him as such and give more value to his entire family.

I have always  believed that any horse who achieves the classification of being a graded stakes horse should have to accomplish that without having advantages over his competition.

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Trainer Faith Wilson Saddles First Winner With ‘Project Horse’ At Her Home Track

Ever wonder how a Thoroughbred trainer celebrates their first career victory?

For 33-year-old Faith Wilson, it was cake at home with her two children, ages five and two.

Wilson, the daughter of former trainers, recorded her first victory in her first year as a trainer – and in her 14th start – when La Luisa captured the ninth race, a $10,000 maiden claimer, at Monmouth Park on Monday.

“I'm beyond ecstatic, especially because this was a project horse that my husband and I own,” she said. “She was a bad bleeder when we got her. We gave her six months off and since then she has been very consistent (with a win, second and third in four starts for Wilson).

“I literally can't wait to get home and have cake with my kids and tell them about this.”

Wilson, an assistant for nine years for a variety of trainers, intended to launch her career at Monmouth Park a year ago “but we got here too late to get started.”

“So we decided to go to Tampa Downs and start there this winter,” she said. “We had a good winter at Tampa (with four seconds and a third from 13 starters) but I guess it was meant to be that I would get my first winner at my home track.”

Wilson's parents, Bill and Donna Wilson, both dabbled as trainers, with her mother spending her career (1989 through 1994) on the New Jersey circuit, which then included Garden State Park, the Meadowlands and Atlantic City Racecourse.

But Wilson will not have much time to savor the victory — though she will be able to have her cake and eat it too. She said she will be back at her barn on the Monmouth Park backstretch first thing Tuesday to tend to her seven horses.

“We have four running next weekend that I have to get ready,” she said.

La Luisa, a 3-year-old daughter of Suns Out Guns Out, returned $10.60 to win for her 1 ¼-length victory.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Dempsey Aiming To Become First Known Female Starter In The States

The crews working on the starting gate at a racetrack will tell you their job is often a study of opposites: it requires strength and the wisdom to know when a gentle hand will work better; it requires you to be agile and move quickly, but also to know when to stand your ground; it requires fearlessness and an instinct for when to get out of the way. 

Working on the gate also takes a good dose of horse sense, the ability to get along with all kinds of people (and their egos), and above all, a keen sense of timing. 

In the primarily male-dominated racing industry, working on the gate crew is often considered a man's job. Cassie Dempsey is breaking that mold. She aims not just to continue to work on the gate, but to one day lead a gate crew of her own. 

“It's kind of an adrenaline rush,” said Dempsey, 30. “I was always comfortable in the gate as an exercise rider, and something always drew me to it. I love the horses, the jockeys, and the whole crew. It's just a fun, cool job.”

Dempsey has spent the past several months working under the tutelage of head starter Nick Corbisello at Thistledown Racino in North Randall, Ohio. 

“Cassie worked for me a year or two ago at Presque Isle, and she's as good an assistant starter as any man I know, which to me is big,” said Corbisello, 62. “When I got to Thistle this year, I needed an assistant and I knew who the best was. She's even better than I thought she was.

“She schools [the horses] in the morning, and she knows them better than I do. She puts everything on the computer, talks to the trainers for me. She knows them all. The girl is as good as they come.”

Dempsey grew up around horses, and began galloping racehorses at a training center when she was just 14 years old. She began galloping at Mountaineer as soon as she turned 16, and worked at a handful of different racetracks in various positions over the ensuing years. Dempsey stepped away from galloping when her back started to bother her, but waiting tables and working retail just wasn't the same. 

Returning to the track in 2014, Dempsey got a job on the starting gate at Mahoning Valley.

“I knew very quickly that this is something I wanted to pursue,” she said.

Earlier this year she got the call from Corbisello to come work for him at Thistle, and neither has looked back since.

“She told me, 'I want to be a starter,'” recalled Corbisello. “Now, I never knew any woman to start a horse race, but I said, 'I'll do everything I can to help you.'”

So far, Dempsey has been pushing the button to open the gates for one race per afternoon at Thistle, learning to read the entire lineup of horses, jockeys, and the crew at the same time, to anticipate all their moves.

“She has all of them's respect, the crew, the trainers, everybody,” said Corbisello. “The administration was all on board when I threw the idea at them. She's as good as they come in every aspect. One big word is she cares. She really cares about everything, in particular the horses.”

Based on incomplete records, it appears there has never been a female head starter in North America. Dempsey plans to be the first.

“I'm loving every second of it,” she said.

Corbisello plans to support her every step of the way.

“I've only got, at best, a couple years left in my illustrious career,” he said genially. “I'm going to do all I can to have her step into my position here, but if not, I know lots of starters and I'm going to do everything I can to get her a starter position.

“She's the daughter I never had — fearless, just good in every aspect.”

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