Back To A Mile For Alcohol Free

G1 Coronation S. and G1 Sussex S. winner Alcohol Free (Ire) (No Nay Never) will revert to the mile distance over which she won those two features for the Oct. 16 G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. after beating just one home in Wednesday's G1 Juddmonte International over a mile and a quarter. The 3-year-old filly, who also won last year's G1 Cheveley Park S., was racing beyond a mile for the first time.

“Going up to a mile and a quarter was always going to be a punt,” said trainer Andrew Balding. “She looked like she had come there and was only going to be beaten a couple of lengths into second. Having looked like she was going to get placed, she didn't quite get home over the last 100 yards, but we have learned something from it. She was fine this morning. She will have a little holiday now as she has been busy enough. She is entered in the [G1] Sun Chariot, but the plan is to come back and have a go at the Queen Elizabeth II S. at Ascot on Champions Day.”

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Mattson, Padilla And Quinonez Team Up For Minnesota Derby, Oaks Sweep

Owner Pete Mattson, trainer Tim Padilla and jockey Alonso Quinonez teamed up to sweep Wednesday night's richest races at Canterbury Park in Shakopee, Minn. Thealligatorhunter, a prohibitive favorite, won the $100,000 Minnesota Derby and Molly's Angel, at 9-1 odds, won the $100,000 Minnesota Oaks, the premier races for 3-year-olds bred in the state.

Thealligatorhunter, who weaved left and right down the stretch but never made contact with Bayou Benny, prevailed by one length at the 1 mile and 70-yard distance. Mattson, Quinonez and Padilla waited anxiously for the decision, surviving a nail-biter of an inquiry as the stewards ruled that the Thealligatorhunter's antics did not change the order of finish. He paid $2.80.

In the Minnesota Oaks, Molly's Angel passed odds-on favorite Star of the North in the stretch, drawing off to win by 5 1/2 lengths, and paying $20.60, The Derby/Oaks sweep has never been accomplished by the same trainer, owner and jockey at Canterbury.

“We got em' all!” exclaimed Padilla following the Oaks.

Mattson of Prior Lake, who co-owns the Derby winner with Padilla, has 15 wins individually at the meet plus five additional in partnership. He sees a bright future for Thealligatorhunter “There's more to win. We think this horse can do a lot more so we're pretty excited about it,” he said.

Jockey Ruben Fuentes used a rail skimming ride aboard Zoe's Delight to win the $50,000 Wally's Choice Stakes for trainer Tony Rengstorf and owner Winchester Place Thoroughbred, LLC. The 5-year-old prevailed by 3/4 length over Cinco Star. He paid $20.20 to win.

Ready to Runaway raced unchallenged gate to wire in the $50,000 Glitter Star Stakes as the 1 to 5 favorite. This was the third consecutive win in the Glitter Star for the 5-year-old mare who has now won $427,735 in her 21-race career. She is owned by John Mentz of Lakeville and trained by Mac Robertson. Roimes Chirinos was aboard the winner who paid $2.40.

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O’Rourke, Serling, Ortiz Join 100th Writers’ Room

The crew of the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland celebrated a major milestone Tuesday, recording the 100th episode of the ever-growing podcast, and did so with a star-studded show shot from the New York Racing Association's television stand overlooking the majestic paddock at Saratoga. Welcoming as guests NYRA CEO David O'Rourke, America's Day at the Races analyst and Saratoga veteran Andy Serling and Eclipse champion jockey Jose Ortiz, the writers got insight on the future of New York racing both upstate and downstate, the significance of fans returning to Saratoga, what it takes to win a Spa meet rider's title and much more.

First up on the set as the Green Group Guest of the Week was O'Rourke, who touched on a variety of industry issues, including the moral imperative to institute major drug reform, the way forward on partnering with sports betting outfits and whether closing Aqueduct and/or downsizing Belmont figures into NYRA's long-term plans.

“Five, ten years out, if there's one facility [downstate] it will be Belmont Park,” O'Rourke said. “That's really our hub. That's what we're going to attack this winter in terms of planning. What are our options? There are three. You can knock [Belmont] down and build a smaller building, you can redo it, or, one of the things we did this year was build the Triple Crown room on the second floor. That was, in a sense, an experiment. What would it start to look like if we took sections of this building, and build out rooms that we need for big dates like Belmont Stakes Day, or potential Breeders' Cups? So those answers will start to flow out. What you're looking at is a smaller conditioned footprint at Belmont for 10 months a year, and the ability to expand out for something like the Belmont Stakes or Breeders' Cup.”

Next up was Serling, who has been coming to Saratoga for decades and has recently become a key cog in NYRA and FOX Sports' successful daily broadcast from Saratoga and Belmont. Known to many as an outspoken, opinionated personality, Serling was asked whether or not he gets blowback, personally or professionally, for his style of speaking candidly on air.

“I never get that from NYRA,” he said. “[NYRA Bets President and TV Executive Producer] Tony Allevato and Dave O'Rourke have my back actually. If I said something out of line, Tony might say, 'You might want to tone that down,' but he would be right if he said it. I don't understand this whole notion that I'm this incredibly outspoken person, because I've been betting horses my whole life. Horseplayers are argumentative, that's what we do. Isn't that what we like about racing? That we have differing opinions? We throw them around, we say, 'You're an idiot,' 'I'm an idiot', then they run the race and we're probably both wrong, and you move on and try to learn from it. What do people want? Do they want people who say, 'I like the 4-5 favorite, I don't dislike anybody, they're all beautiful.' I thought that's what people want to do about racing is, argue about it. So I'm not going to change what I do. It seems to be working. I mean, at least they're listening. Love, hate, they're all listening.”

Last but not least on the set was Jose Ortiz, 2017's Eclipse Champion Jockey, currently enjoying a successful meet, sitting second as of this writing in the Saratoga jockey standings. He was asked about how the Puerto Rican jockey school and older Puerto Rican trailblazers have helped him and other young riders successfully transition to America.

“It's huge,” Ortiz said of the Escuela Vocacional Hipica. “Angel [Cordero] and Johnny [Velazquez] set the path for us, and hopefully we're setting the path for the ones coming behind us. And it's good for the school because it works on government funds. So if the government keeps seeing the results like they see now, they're going to keep helping the school, and we need that. We work hard, because I have in the back of my head that everything I do is going to be reflected on the school back home and the kids that look up to us now. You've got to keep that in mind at all times.”

Elsewhere on the milestone Writers' Room, which is also sponsored by West Point Thoroughbreds, Spendthrift Farm, Legacy Bloodstock and the 2021 Minnesota Thoroughbred Assoication Yearling Sale, the crew celebrated being back together along with fans at Saratoga, reacted to a huge weekend of turf racing and the unceremonious goodbye some got from Arlington Park, and discussed the suspension of leading trainer Wayne Potts at Monmouth. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Loose Wiring Blamed For ‘After the Bell’ Betting at Thistledown

Dislodged wiring within the United Tote Company circuitry at Thistledown resulted in betting pools remaining open for nearly a minute into a one-mile race on Tuesday. Wagering had to be manually stopped once the error was discovered mid-race, and the race was eventually declared a “no contest” for pari-mutuel purposes.

Based on pool totals shown on the Thistledown post-race video feed, this meant refunds of $82,191 in wagers for the sixth race Aug. 17.

It is unclear how much of that money was bet “after the bell.”

A lack of communication seems to have compounded the confusion, with horseplayers taking to the Internet to vent frustration and wonder what happened in the immediate aftermath of the no-contest decision, which led to a 57-minute gap until the next Thistledown race was run. The Equibase chart described it only as a “tote malfunction.”

Bill Crawford, the executive director of the Ohio State Racing Commission, did not reply to a TDN voicemail message seeking an explanation prior to Wednesday's deadline for this story.

It was up to Dave Basler, who is not a regulator, but the executive director for the Ohio Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, to first explain what happened via social media.

“Apparently, the tote system was not locked until 54 seconds after the horses broke from the gate…. Just wanted to pass along what information I do have now, as my phone has been ringing nonstop with questions,” Basler wrote in a post. He noted that purses were paid out for the race.

Later on Wednesday, Patrick Ellsworth, the director of racing at Thistledown, told Horse Racing Nation (HRN) that the betting was left open for 52 seconds, and that the cause was wiring that had come undone.

That HRN story stated that (as is typical at many North American tracks), betting is locked by stewards via a button pressed in the judges stand as soon as the race goes off. At the same time, another button is pressed in the tote room as a backup.

“The cables that had been determined to be dislodged have been replaced, tested,” Ellsworth told HRN. “We don't anticipate this being a problem going forward, but extremely unfortunate.”

The sixth race Tuesday was an Ohio-bred MSW won by Little Bita Smoke (Paddy O'Prado). The 4-year-old gelding was 0-for-10 going into the race and was listed as the second choice in the morning line behind a favored pari-mutuel coupling.

Just prior to the gates opening, Little Bita Smoke was 2-1 on the track's video feed, with the entry bet down to 3-5 odds.

Little Bita Smoke veered sharply outward at the break of the one-mile race, then gunned to a contending position on the turn and seized the lead onto the backstretch.

One clue that something might have been pari-mutuelly amiss was that no running order and odds were listed at the bottom of the track's video feed, which is customary at Thistledown.

As the field hit the far turn, the running order briefly flashed on the broadcast feed. With a tenuous lead and three furlongs left in the race, Little Bita Smoke had plunged in price to 4-5, while the entrymates were bearing down in second and third at rising 6-5 odds.

Although Little Bita Smoke eventually swatted away the advances of the entrymates and was drawing clear by 2 1/2 lengths approaching the finish, the gelding gave his would-be backers a scare by jumping tire tracks left by the starting gate just prior to the wire. The track was listed as “fast” on the chart, but rain during the race had quickly turned the track wet

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