Aqueduct: Sunday Card Features $44,856 Pick 6 Carryover

Sunday's nine-race card at Aqueduct Racetrack will be bolstered by a carryover of $44,856 after Saturday's Pick 6 went unsolved.

The $1 Pick 6 returned $2,990 to those who selected 5-of-6 horse correctly in the multi-race wager.

Saturday's sequence began in Race 4 when the Orlando Noda-trained Mister Larry [No. 3, $44.20] upset a field of eight New York-bred sophomores under Trevor McCarthy for his second of four wins on the card.

Jaqueline Davis then piloted Betty's Smile [No. 2, $56.50] to a five-length claiming victory in Race 5 for trainer Karl Grusmark before McCarthy earned his third win of the day with South Sea [No. 1, $6.50] in Race 6 for trainer Michael Miceli.

Trainer Todd Pletcher sent out First Constitution [No. 2, $7.90] to earn his first American stakes victory in Race 7, the nine-furlong Jazil, with Jose Lezcano aboard. The 6 1/2-furlong Franklin Square followed in Race 8 with Trevor McCarthy scoring his fourth win of the day aboard Sterling Silver [No. 2, $15,40], who captured her first stakes win for trainer Tom Albertrani.

With the carryover already confirmed, Oliver's Fortune [No. 8, $11.80] broke his maiden under Eric Cancel for trainer Ralph D'Alessandro in Race 9, a $25,000 maiden claimer, to close out the card.

Sunday's Pick 6 kicks off in Race 4 at 1:48 p.m. Eastern and includes the featured $100,000 Busanda for sophomore fillies with 10-4-2-1 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points awarded to the top-four finishers. First post on the nine-race card is 12:20 p.m.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

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Chilean Group 1 Winner First Constitution Goes Wire-To-Wire In Aqueduct’s Jazil

Don Alberto Stable, WinStar Farm and Twin Creeks Racing Stables' First Constitution made every pole a winning one in Saturday's $100,000 Jazil, a nine-furlong test for older horses at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, First Constitution, a Group 1-winner in his native Chile, secured his first win in North America with the 6 3/4-length score under Jose Lezcano.

First Constitution broke well from post 2 and was hustled to the front through sharp splits of 23.13 seconds and 46.78 over the fast main track under pressure from Core Conviction. The duo continued their pace battle into the final turn with Why Why Paul Why tracking in third ahead of Twelve Volt Man and Forewarned.

The 5-year-old Constitution chestnut extended his advantage through the final turn as Kendrick Carmouche guided Why Why Paul Why into contention outside of a fading Core Conviction and Forewarned – a 42-1 upset winner of the Queens County last out – launched his trademark late run.

Lezcano continued to ask his charge for more, opening up a 5 1/2-length lead at the stretch call and never looked back en route to a smart score in a final time of 1:47.96. Why Why Paul Why completed the exacta by 10 lengths over Twelve Volt Man.

The prominent score marked the first stakes win of 2022 for Lezcano, who said he felt confident throughout despite the sharp splits.

“He broke sharp enough to be there and he did it very comfortably and solid,” Lezcano said. “He brought his race today. He broke running and finished running. I know I was going pretty fast, but he did it confidently.

“When we got to the backside, [Core Conviction] gave me a half-length in front of my horse and we really got comfortable,” Lezcano added. “When we got to the half-mile he jumped back in the bridle and I knew I had a lot of horse. He's a very nice horse and did everything right to win the race today.”

Forewarned and Core Conviction rounded out the order of finish. Empty Tomb, who will contest next Saturday's Grade 1, $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational at Gulfstream Park, and Splicethemainbrace were scratched.

The victory marked the second Jazil win for Pletcher, who captured the inaugural running in 2015 with Micromanage. Byron Hughes, Pletcher's New York-based assistant said the prominent steer from Lezcano paid dividends.

“The two speed horses scratched and we weren't sure what Kendrick was going to do,” Hughes said. “I think Jose just took matters into his own hands and was a little aggressive into the first turn, but it paid off.”

First Constitution captured the Group 1 Gran Criterium Mauricio Serrano Palma in his native Chile in October 2020. He was transferred to Pletcher last season and kept good company through four starts, garnering a career-best 98 Beyer with a runner-up effort to stakes-placed Speaker's Corner in October at Belmont ahead of a runner-up effort in November at the Big A to Empty Tomb.

Hughes said the nine furlongs proved beneficial for the classy First Constitution.

“He's a Group 1 winner going a mile and three sixteenths in South America, so you would imagine a mile and an eighth wouldn't be a problem up here,” Hughes said. “Todd will get with the ownership group and decide what's next for him.”

Bred in Chile by Haras Don Alberto, First Constitution banked $55,000 in victory while improving his record to 9-4-2-2. He returned $7.90 for a $2 win bet.

Live racing resumes Sunday at the Big A with nine-race card, headlined in Race 8 by the $100,000 Busanda – a nine-furlong test for sophomore fillies offering 10-4-2-1 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points to the top-four finishers. First post is 12:20 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

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Eclipse Finalist Ce Ce Possible For Santa Monica

GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint heroine Ce Ce (Elusive Quality) could launch her 6-year-old campaign in the GII Santa Monica S. at Santa Anita, trainer Michael McCarthy told the Santa Anita notes team before adding that she remains a possibility for the GII Inside Information S. on Pegasus Day at Gulfstream Park next Saturday, Jan. 29.

A run in the Santa Monica would come five days before the 2021 Eclipse Award ceremonies, where Ce Ce is among the three candidates for champion female sprinter.

“We're very proud of her being a finalist for an Eclipse Award,” McCarthy said of the Bo Hirsch homebred. “I thought her year was very good. She shipped a few times and ran respectably wherever she went. Her Breeders' Cup performance was dominating.

“We're leaning this way [Santa Monica], but I'm going to keep all my options open,” he added.

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Evan Shipman Jackson, Successful Trainer Who Gave Up A Career At The Track For Life In Florida Keys, Dies At 88

His biggest horse was named Mr. Right, who defeated Damascus by a nose in the 1968 Woodward Stakes, but training Thoroughbred racehorses in the modern era turned out to be the wrong profession for Evan Shipman Jackson, who quit the game in the early 1990s and spent the last 25 years of his life operating dive boats in the Florida Keys.

Jackson died in Key Largo, Fla., on Jan. 7, failing to wake up after taking an afternoon nap. Active until the end, gardening and riding his bike around town, he was 88 years old.

Born Aug. 13, 1933, in Keswick, Va., Jackson was named for his uncle, the esteemed horse racing writer Evan Shipman. He grew up around  horses in the Charlottesville, Va., area where his trail-blazing mother, Mary, operated a riding school on her farm. Mary Jackson did a lot of buying and selling of show horses and was referred to in one article as “Saratoga's most unique buyer” at yearling sales in upstate New York.

Evan Jackson would become a steeplechase rider in his teens and rode at various meets throughout the Midatlantic region into the early 1960s – his riding career interrupted while serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War.

Jackson transitioned to trainer when his riding career ended and within a few years was winning big races on both coasts.

Mr. Right, owned by the wife of bandleader and pianist Peter Duchin, was his first major horse, winning the 1968 Santa Anita Handicap. The victory made the son of Auditing the first New York-bred to win a $100,000 race and a stakes in California.

Mr. Right went on to beat 1-10 favorite Damascus by a nose in the 1968 Woodward Stakes and shortly thereafter was sold for $400,000 to a partnership that included singer Frank Sinatra. For Sinatra and his partners, Jackson sent Mr. Right out to win the Trenton Handicap and Suburban Handicap in 1969 before the horse went to stud.

Other major stakes winners followed, including Acorn winner Cathy Honey and Haskell Handicap winner Gladwin – both for Californian Hastings Harcourt in 1970. Others included El Cajon Stakes winner Quick Bluff in 1973; G2 Del Mar Handicap winner Redtop III in 1974; G1 Century Handicap winner Winds of Thought in 1976; Grade 1 Flower Bowl Handicap winner Rossard (Den) in 1984; and Grade 3 Affectionately Handicap winner Descent in 1985.

Jackson's two daughters, Tara and Kelle, remember their father training for celebrities both in New York and later when he moved his stable to California.

“I remember the time a limo came to our house in New York to pick my dad up for dinner and it was Frank Sinatra,” said Tara Jackson.

Summers in Del Mar were special for the trainer's children, who lived with their mother most of the year on the East Coast after their parents divorced. “We would rent a beach house for six or eight weeks and it was so much fun,” Tara Jackson said of their Del Mar summers. “That was when you could take horses from the track over to the beach. My dad loved loved his horses and loved doing that.”

“Those summers were exciting,” remembered Tara Jackson. “Dad was playing tennis with Farrah Fawcett and Lee Majors and he trained for Burt Bacharach and Angie Dickinson. He got his pilot's license and I remember he would train in the morning and fly to Mammoth Mountain to ski in the afternoons.”

But everything wasn't rosy with Evan Jackson.

“He had a very strong will, was an old-school horseman and a big animal advocate,” said Tara Jackson. “He butted heads with owners and didn't like the direction the game was going. I remember listening to him and (the late Hall of Fame trainer) Allen Jerkens lamenting the lack of long-distance races. He hated it when he started seeing horses brought into the paddock with lip chains. Racing simply didn't fit him any more and he said he'd rather be with any animals over most humans.”

Jackson quit training and went to work at a ski resort in Taos, N.M., then landed in the Florida Keys, where he worked air traffic control at a small airport and eventually began operating dive boats.

“My Dad walked away from the only thing he knew as an occupation and way of life – because anyone that works in Thoroughbred horse racing knows it's a way of life not just a job – because he couldn't fall in line with what he saw happening,” Kelle Jackson said.

“He was a quintessential horseman – which worked well when horse training was a craft and a sport – when the horse mattered and intuition, observation and personal judgment were more important than the business, more than the person with the heaviest pocketbook. But times started changing and the quintessential horseman became not as important as the business. He knew his horses personally and he treated them as such. He admittedly had some regrets in life but he was a man that was driven by 'to thine own self be true.'

“My dad was not an easy man to deal with when he was sure he was right about something,” Kelle Jackson continued. “And I'm not so sure owners appreciated that or that he could find the right balance to allow for some change in the industry while doing what he thought was best for his horses. He chose his own personal integrity over the work that was so near and dear to him for decades and that he was born into.”

In addition to daughters Tara and Kelle, he is survived by a son, Evan Jackson Jr., by Kim Welchel, his daughter from a previous marriage, and by nine grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

An animal lover throughout his life, Jackson is also survived by his beloved cat, “Trim,” who he adopted as a stray many years ago in Key Largo. Trim has been taken in by a group of people that lived in the same community as Jackson for the last 17 years.

Kelle Jackson said her father's wishes were to be cremated and have the ashes spread at his childhood home in Keswick, Va. That will be done this spring.

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