The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Casse Bullish On Synthetics

“Horses were not bred to run on the dirt,” said trainer Mark Casse. “They were bred to run on the grass, and Tapeta is as close to grass as you can get.”

Casse – inducted into the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame this year after a 2016 induction in the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame –  is this week's special guest on the Friday Show, joining Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills to share his extensive knowledge and strong opinions about track surfaces. This week, Gulfstream Park in South Florida became the first facility in North America to have three unique racing surfaces: dirt, turf and the Tapeta Footings synthetic track.

Other tracks could follow suit, Casse said. “I think New York may be flirting with synthetic tracks somewhere down the line,” he said. “And I think it would be great and I think it would pay for itself in no time.”

What about the anecdotal contention by some horsemen suggesting that, while synthetics may result in fewer fractures or fatal injuries, more soft-tissue problems develop on a synthetic track?

“That is the biggest bunch of hogwash that I've ever heard,” said Casse. “That's the most ridiculous statement. I can tell you we have far more soft tissue injuries on dirt than we ever do on synthetics. That's somebody saying things and they don't know what they're talking about. Whenever I hear that I just laugh.”

Casse also brings viewers up to date on some of his stable stars, including two-time Grade 1 Fourstardave Stakes winner Got Stormy.

This week's Woodbine Star of the Week is Pink Lloyd, the Canadian sprint superstar who scored his 24th career stakes win last week in the Grade 3 Bold Venture Stakes.

Watch this week's Friday Show, presented by Woodbine, below:

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Tapeta Surface Unveiled at Gulfstream

A new era began Thursday at Gulfstream when the 4-year-old claimer Emoji Guy (Khozan) won the opening race on the card, the first to be run over the newly installed Tapeta track. It was the first of four races on the day run on the synthetic surface.

As is the case with all of the synthetic races, the first was largely uneventful. Trained by Kathleen O'Connell and ridden by Edwin Gonzalez, Emoji Guy was fifth early before launching a bid nearing the turn. He made the lead in mid-stretch and was comfortably in front from there, winning by 1 3/4 lengths.

“He was good and comfortable. The horse really liked it,” said Gonzalez. “You have to ride it like the turf. I wanted to make one move and I was pretty happy where he was. It's good. I have to tell you, they did a really good job. Right now, it's good, and when the tractors start working it more, it's going to be better.”

Early indications were that the track is going to produce slow times. The first, a mile-and-a-sixteenth $12,500 claimer, went in 148.08 and the third, a $16,000 maiden claimer run at 5 1/2 furlongs, was completed in 1:08.56. The fifth, a maiden special weight going 5 1/2 furlongs, went in 1:08.09. The final Tapeta race, the seventh, a mile-and-70-yard starter allowance, was completed in 1:45.36.

That didn't bother trainer Saffie Joseph, Jr., whose Strategy Queen (Fed Biz) won the fifth, a $60,000 maiden special weight race on the Tapeta. The filly was ridden by Cristian Torres.

“We put a horse on it we thought would like it,” Joseph said. “Cristian said, at first, she was a little green, but there was no kick-back and she was able to maintain her position. One of the things about Tapeta is you don't get dirt in your face. I think that's why some turf horses run on it better than they do on dirt.”

Among the horses who started in the Tapeta races, not one had a prior start on a synthetic surface. But that didn't give handicappers any problems. Three of the four winners were the favorite and the fourth, Strategy Queen, paid just $11. The other winners paid $5.60, $5.40 and $4.40.

Nor was there any apparent bias. Two of the races were won wire to wire, a third winner stalked the pace and Emoji Guy was a winning closer.

O'Connell said she wasn't surprised that Emoji Guy won since he is a horse who seems to handle any surface he runs over. But she still doesn't know what to expect from other horses in her barn.

“It's an experiment and we're all going to have to learn as we go along,” she said. “The horse I ran today is what I would call an 'all-terrain' horse. He can handle any surface, so I was happy he was my first horse on Tapeta here. A lot of turf horses like the Tapeta, but not all of them do. I left Colonial one year and I took eight over to Presque Isle and four of them liked the surface and did well and four of them you couldn't find with a search warrant. It's an individual type of thing. But as long as it is safe for the horses I am all for it. That it's safe, that's all that I want.”

O'Connell said the Tapeta at Gulfstream appears to be different from the one at Presque Isle. She noted that the Gulfstream surface is much lighter in color than the one she has raced over at Presque Isle.

“It's a different kind of Tapeta here, which you can tell by the color,” she said. “The Tapeta at Presque Isle is very different. It's the consistency. Supposedly, this was made for the climate here.”

The post Tapeta Surface Unveiled at Gulfstream appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Re-Routed Private Mission Tops Zenyatta Field

Bob Baffert's budding star Private Mission, originally scheduled to run in the Grade 1 Cotillion Stakes near Philadelphia Sept. 25, will take on older competition for the first time on Sunday as she bids for her third consecutive win in the Grade 2, $200,000 Zenyatta Stakes at Santa Anita. Named in honor of racing's 2010 Eclipse Horse of the Year, the Zenyatta, which has attracted a field of eight fillies and mares three and up, will be contested at a mile and one sixteenth. A Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifier, the Zenyatta winner will earn a fees-paid berth into the Grade 1, $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff Nov. 6 at Del Mar.

In what was her second start of the year and first time around two turns, Private Mission, a 3-year-old filly by Into Mischief, was a resounding 6 ½ length winner going a flat mile in the Grade 3 Torrey Pines Stakes Aug. 21 at Del Mar, a race in which she galloped out a football field in front of her competition mid-way around the clubhouse turn. Private Mission, who is owned by Baoma Corporation, retains the services of Flavien Prat, will no doubt be forwardly placed as she seeks her fourth win from five career starts.

Although beaten a combined 27 lengths in a pair of Grade 1 stakes, the Clement Hirsch at Del Mar on Aug. 1 and the Personal Ensign at Saratoga Aug. 28, Baffert's As Time Goes By will hope to regain the form she held when winning both the Grade 2 Santa Maria here on May 22 and the Grade 2 Santa Margarita (by 9 ¼ lengths) on April 24. Second to Eclipse Champ Swiss Skydiver five starts back in the Grade 1 Beholder Mile on March 13, As Time Goes By has three wins from five tries over the Santa Anita main track. Owned by Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith and Mrs. John Magnier, As Time Goes By, a 4-year-old filly by American Pharoah, is 9-4-2-1 with earnings of $415,600.

Don Alberto Stable's homebred Stellar Sound will stretch out off a third place finish in the Rancho Bernardo while Peter Miller's streaking Samurai Charm, an impressive gate to wire allowance winner going one mile in her last two starts, tries stakes company for the first time and seeks her fifth consecutive win. Phil D'Amato's Miss Bigly, fresh off victory in the restricted one mile Tranquility Lake Stakes Aug. 27, seeks her first graded stakes win in what will be her 23rd career start.

THE GRADE 2 ZENYATTA STAKES WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 9 of 10 Approximate post time 5 p.m. PT

  1. Samurai Charm—Kyle Frey–122
  2. As Time Goes By—John Velazquez—124
  3. Private Mission—Flavien Prat—120
  4. Miss Bigly—Juan Hernandez—122
  5. California Kook—Abel Cedillo–122
  6. Miss Stormy D—Geovanni Franco—122
  7. Lady Kate—Joe Bravo—122
  8. Stellar Sound—Drayden Van Dyke–122

The Zenyatta is one of five stakes on a 10-race card Sunday with first post time at 1 p.m. For additional information, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

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