Former Claimer Greeley And Ben Named Remington’s Horse Of The Meet

Greeley and Ben has been named Remington Park's Champion Horse of the Meeting for the 2021 fall thoroughbred meeting, ending a three-year reign for the all-time winningest horse here, Welder.

Greeley and Ben, owned by End Zone Athletics of Mansfield, Texas, and trained by Karl Broberg, not only was Champion Horse of the Meet, but has to be considered for claim of the year in the country. Broberg picked him up for a mere $10,000 at Oaklawn Park in a waiver claiming race on March 7 this year and all he did was win 10-of-12 after that for Broberg and his conglomerate of End Zone Athletics. Greeley and Ben has earned $296,277 with 11 wins from 15 starts in 2021.

The 7-year-old gelded son of Greeley's Conquest, out of the Langfuhr mare Traci's Wild, extended his winning streak to nine in a row, taking the $150,000 David M. Vance Stakes at Remington Park on Sept. 26, a race in which Welder ran fifth. It was arguably the toughest David Vance Stakes in history at Remington Park as multiple stakes winner Mr. Money Bags ran second, beaten 2-1/2 lengths. The third-place finisher, Long Range Toddy, had won the $400,000 Springboard Mile in 2018 and followed that up with a victory in the Grade 2, $750,000 Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., in 2019, beating a Kentucky Derby favorite, Improbable, in the process. Long Range Toddy then ran in the Kentucky Derby and was interfered with by the disqualified winner Maximum Security in the turn for home.

The 2021 Vance Stakes also included Share the Upside, who beat Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Whitmore, at Oaklawn two years ago in a stakes there, and, of course, Welder, who finished his career with 16 wins over this racing surface. Welder, owned by Ra-Max Farms (Clayton Rash) of Claremore, Okla., and trained by Teri Luneack, is the only horse to ever win Horse of the Meeting more than once.

The Vance Stakes was the first black-type win for Greeley and Ben. He won his championship at Remington winning both of his starts this season. Nationally acclaimed jockey Joe Talamo came in to ride this champion sprinter in the Vance and Remington's leading rider for the fourth year in a row, David Cabrera, was aboard in an open allowance win here on Sept. 4. The allowance was won by a full length over Empire of Gold, the fourth-place finisher in the Breeders' Cup Sprint, behind Whitmore in 2020.

“When did I know I had a stakes horse on my hands during the streak?” Broberg said on the night of the Vance Stakes. “Tonight, when he hit the finish line. I have worked very hard to keep this horse out of spots like this.”

Talamo was thrilled to get the call to ride Greeley and Ben for the first time in the horse's 26 starts and made a little joke in the winner's circle after the huge victory.

“I'll give you $10,000 for the horse right now,” Talamo said to Broberg. “Maybe more!”

Greeley and Ben earned nine times the price Broberg paid for him in the initial claim – $90,000 for the victory in the Vance.

“I just thought he was a horse that looked like he was worth $10,000,” Broberg said. “If I said there was anything genius to it, I'd be making up a story. I'll still be looking for a $10,000 starter allowance for him.”

The winner covered the six furlongs in 1:09.79 on the fast track and lit the track on fire in his allowance win, going 1:08.88.

Greeley and Ben was also voted the season's Champion Sprinter and Champion Older Male. He was bred in Kentucky by the Millard R. Seldin Revocable Trust.

The Remington Park seasonal divisional champions are selected by ballots submitted by media covering the season and track racing-affiliated personnel.

The post Former Claimer Greeley And Ben Named Remington’s Horse Of The Meet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Out of Prison, Jockey Logan Cormier Making Most of His Second Chance

The character Leo Brock in the movie “Jockey” has been through a lot, the years of riding, reducing and accidents leaving him worn down. But Leo's spirit remains in tact and he pushes on, always hoping for a better tomorrow.

Logan Cormier was a natural to play the role. He, too, is a survivor.

The last thing on Cormier's mind when he showed up on opening day for the 2020 meet at Turf Paradise was that he would be cast in a movie. He was coming off a year in which he won just 15 races and was hoping to revitalize a career that included a 16-year gap, time he spent away from the game while sentenced to prison. But a chance encounter in the kitchen in the jockey's room with Clifton Collins, Jr., who stars in the movie in the role of jockey Jackson Silva, led to Cormier getting an audition to play Brock. Collins and director Clint Bentley were so impressed with Cormier's audition that he not only got the part, the role was expanded.

“I didn't get paid hardly anything for the movie,” the 42-year-old rider said. “But it's brought some excitement to my life. It's something to be proud of.”

Considering all that Cormier has been through, those things matter.

It all started simply enough. When Cormier was 16, he left his native Louisiana and started riding as an apprentice on the Maryland circuit.

He won 86 races during his first two years riding and seemed destined to become a steady force wherever he rode.

“I got blessed because I got to ride for guys like Bud Delp and King T. Leatherbury when I had my bug,” he said. “I didn't realize back then how good I had it. I was born on the backside, literally. This is what I was meant to do. At the time, I didn't realize what I had. I was young.”
Riding in Louisiana and Texas, he had the best year of his career in 2003. By the end of September, he had 88 wins and $901,083 in earnings. But serious trouble was brewing away from the track. Cormier was descending into a personal hell fueled by a serious drug addiction. Needing money for drugs, he committed a robbery in Texas and was charged with criminal trespassing, robbery and evading arrest or detention.

“When I had my bug I did really good, but I let my street life and the stuff outside the track slow me down,” Cormier said.
Cormier would spend the next 4 1/2 years in the Texas prison system. Upon his release, he reverted back to old habits and was caught dealing drugs.

“What drugs was I taking? Everything,” he said. “I let my addiction override my desire to ride. After I got paroled, I was still running the streets, doing things I shouldn't be doing. I'm good for now. I have it under control, but addiction is a hard thing to overcome.”

Charged with violating his parole, he was forced to serve another 4 1/2 years. When Cormier walked out of a Texas prison in 2016 a free man after nine total years behind bars, he weighed 170 pounds, hadn't ridden in a race in 13 years and didn't know if anyone would ever license him.

“I never thought I'd make it back and be able to ride again,” he said.

The hardest part would be finding someone who would give a convicted felon a license to be a jockey. In 2019, he got the break he was looking for when he was able to convince the Arizona Department of Gaming to give him a second chance. After getting his Arizona license, he says he lost 40 pounds in three weeks and he won on his first mount back in a July 6, 2019 race at Wyoming Downs. It had been nearly 16 years since his last ride. Cormier went from there to Arizona Downs and then to Turf Paradise.

He was glad to be back, but wrestled with what had become of his career. He had become a struggling jockey trying to make it at the sport's lowest tier tracks.

“I wound up at these nothing tracks like Turf Paradise,” he said. “When I was going good, I used to watch Turf Paradise on TV and I said to myself I will never go to a place like that. They don't run for any money there.”

It has not gotten any easier for him. He won 10 races in 2020 and has just five wins this year. He believes that owners and trainers are holding his past against him.

“People make it hard,” he said. “They'll use me to get horses ready and then when they run them will put someone else on them. They judge me for my past transgressions. They look at what you did wrong, not at the good things you have done.”

After the 2021 Turf Paradise meet ended, he rode at Fairmount Park and then at Fair Meadows in Oklahoma. He has not had a mount since July 20. He left Oklahoma to return to Louisiana to fight for custody of his 9-year-old daughter. He would like to ride in Louisiana at Delta Downs, but the state racing commission there will not license him. To stay fit and to make money, he has been breaking yearlings.

“It's been driving me insane that I can't ride,” he said.

He hopes to return to riding soon, if not in Louisiana then maybe back in Arizona.

“I'm at an age where I'll get one last run in,” he said. “Not too many years left in me. If I get in another 10 years I will be lucky.”

Things may be tough for Cormier, but not as tough as they were while he was rotting away in prison having thrown away what should have been the best 16 years of his career. His career may be on hold, but he will ride again, he's clean and sober and he's drawing nothing but positive reviews for his portrayal of Leo in Jockey.

“To go to prison is lowest you can go,” Cormier said. “You can't get any lower than that. That's rock bottom. If I can make it back, ride again and be a productive member of society, then anybody can.”

The post Out of Prison, Jockey Logan Cormier Making Most of His Second Chance appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Santa Anita’s $20,000 ‘Pick ’Em’: Free Online Contest Offers Sports & Racing Props

Santa Anita's popular $20,000 “Pick 'Em,” a free online contest offering a series of popular sports and horse racing propositions, makes its return to The Great Race Place this Sunday, Opening Day of the track's traditional Winter/Spring Meeting.

Santa Anita Pick 'Em will be offered every Saturday, Sunday, and Holiday Monday through April 17. The fan that makes the most correct selections each weekend will win $500.

Fans can also register and compete for the season-long contest and the fan making the highest number of correct selections from Sunday, Dec. 26 through Sunday, April 17, will receive a $2,000 prize.

Fans are encouraged to sign up free, at santaanita.com/pickem.

For additional information on Santa Anita's $20,000 Pick 'Em online contest, please call the Santa Anita Marketing Department at (626) 574-6384.

First post time for an 11-race card on Sunday is at 11 a.m., admission gates open at 9 a.m.

The post Santa Anita’s $20,000 ‘Pick ’Em’: Free Online Contest Offers Sports & Racing Props appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Santa Anita: $7,500 Online ‘Showvivor’ Contest Back For Opening Day

Santa Anita's popular free online “Showvivor” will again be available to players everywhere beginning Opening Day, Sunday, Dec. 26. In addition to its existing season-long total prize money of $7,500, this year's Showvivor will also be complemented by another free online contest titled Santa Anita Pick 'Em, which offers $20,000 in prize money.

To sign up and for additional details regarding Santa Anita Pick 'Em, please visit santaanita.com/pickem

With special early first post time for an 11-race card on Opening Day at 11 a.m., fans are encouraged to register to play at showvivor.santaanita.com prior to first post time. The contest offers players a variety of cash incentives, highlighted by the $2,500 top prize, which will be awarded to the longest “Show Streak” over the course of the entire Winter/Spring Meet which concludes on June 19.

Players can select one horse from one race each racing day. That horse must run no worse than third in order for the player to “Showvive.” If the player's selection fails to run 1-2-3, that individual is not totally eliminated, as he or she may start up a new streak the next racing day. The player with the longest Show Streak on June 19 will be declared the top prize winner of $2,500.

Fans are advised the longest Show Streak is just one of five separate ways to win beginning Dec. 26.

SHOW STREAK The player that has the longest “show” of no-worse than third place finish streak at the end of the Winter/Spring Meet will win the Grand Prize of $2,500. If a player fails to make an online selection on a given race day, their streak is still alive, but they will not be given credit for any days missed.

WIN STREAK This carries a $1,000 prize and is intended to reward players who have selected the most consecutive first place finishers. If a player fails to make a selection on a given day, his or her streak may continue, but the player will not receive credit for any days missed.

TOTAL WINS On closing day, June 19, the player that has selected the most total wins will receive a $500 prize.

HIGHEST SINGLE WIN PAYOUT This carries a $500 prize and will be awarded to the player wit the single highest win payout (on a Two Dollar wager) over the course of the entire meet.

TOTAL WIN EARNINGS This is a Showvivor category which also carries a $500 prize and is awarded to the player that accumulates the highest total dollar amount-won based on their selections at the end of the meet. For example, each time an entrant's selection finishes in first place in the official standings (Wins), the dollar amount, based on Santa Anita's official Two Dollar Win payout, will be added to that player's total money-won to date. The winner will be determined on closing day.

MONTHLY CONTEST, NEW WAY TO WIN Separated into five different date ranges, beginning Dec. 26 through Jan. 31, and ending June 4 through June 19, the winner, by Total Monthly win Earnings, of each of these individual calendar periods earns an entry into the next $500 Live Money Handicapping Contest via Xpressbet and thus an opportunity to compete for more cash and prizes. No exchanges are offered.

Entries for Opening Day, Sunday, Dec. 26, are now available at santaanita.com. For additional information on ShowVivor, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

The post Santa Anita: $7,500 Online ‘Showvivor’ Contest Back For Opening Day appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights