Hallie Hardy Named Horse Country’s New Executive Director

Hallie Hardy has been named executive director of Horse Country, Inc., replacing Anne Sabatino Hardy who has led the nonprofit since its founding in 2015.

“Horse Country is proud to announce Hallie as its new executive director,” explained Gathan Borden, president of the Horse Country board of directors. “She brings not only a necessary skill set and diverse experience, but also sincere enthusiasm for the organization's mission and the desire to continue the growth of this critical fan development initiative. We are grateful to Anne and the foundation of success she leaves behind for Horse Country. The Board looks forward to working with Hallie and our members to build upon that foundation as the organization steps into this next phase.”

Departing executive director, Sabatino Hardy agreed.

“I have appreciated the opportunity to be a part of this effort and am grateful for the relationships and shared accomplishments – I can't wait to see what's next,” said Hardy. “Hallie brings a unique set of skills and experiences that make her ideal to lead the organization. Having worked for Horse Country member locations she's seen firsthand the impact experiences have on fan development. Her relationships, vision and passion for the mission will inspire the next phase.”

Hallie Hardy, a native of Frankfort, Kentucky and who is unrelated to the former executive director, brings to Horse Country a wealth of experience ranging from tour intern, to client relations and marketing, to nomination sales. Throughout her career, she has focused on broadening her overall knowledge of the Thoroughbred industry and sharpening her long-term desire to market and promote it.

As an undergraduate in the University of Kentucky's Equine Program, she held an internship at WinStar Farm, leading its public and private tours. Following graduation, she joined America's Best Racing (ABR) as one of six brand ambassadors who traveled the country to promote the sport's biggest race days. After ABR, Hardy was accepted to the Irish National Stud Breeding Course and then Godolphin Flying Start.

Since completing Flying Start, Hardy has worked for trainer Graham Motion and again at WinStar Farm. She most recently worked for Godolphin as part of the nomination sales and marketing teams, as well as assisting with several charitable initiatives and Godolphin's tour experience.

“I don't think I can properly convey my excitement for this opportunity,” Hardy said. “It has been a lifelong goal of mine to promote this industry in a significant way—not just as one farm or one racetrack but as a unified industry. I am particularly happy to be promoting one of my home state's signature industries as well. I have been incredibly fortunate on my journey in this industry and am so grateful to those whom I have had the privilege of working with along the way. I look forward to this new responsibility and to working with Horse Country's members as we continue to grow the mission—connecting guests to the horse, land, and its people with experiences that inspire the love of the animal and Kentucky.”

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New York Stakes Turf, Flower Bowl Bonus Return To NYRA In 2022

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) today announced it will incentivize its Turf Triple series for fillies by again offering a pair of lucrative bonus opportunities at the upcoming Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course meets.

The “New York Stakes Turf Bonus” and “Flower Bowl Bonus,” first offered in 2021, will again be offered by NYRA as further incentive for owners to participate in the prestigious filly Turf Triple series.

“We are pleased to again offer this bonus opportunity to our past filly Turf Triple series winners as they return in a highly competitive older filly and mare division,” said Frank G. Gabriel, Jr., NYRA's Senior Vice President, Racing Operations. “NYRA is committed to attracting the best turf fillies and mares in the division and providing our fans with the most exciting live racing on the continent.”

The Turf Triple series for fillies kicks off July 9 at Belmont with the 10-furlong Grade 1, $700,000 Belmont Oaks Invitational. The series continues with the G3 Saratoga Oaks Invitational at Saratoga and is completed by the G3 Jockey Club Oaks at the Belmont fall meet.

The “New York Stakes Turf Bonus” will provide $315,000 to the owner and $35,000 to the trainer of any previous winner of the Belmont Oaks, Saratoga Oaks or Jockey Club Oaks who captures the 2022 edition of the Grade 1, $750,000 New York, a 10-furlong turf test for older fillies and mares to be held June 10 at Belmont.

The “Flower Bowl Bonus” will provide $300,000 to the owner and $30,000 to the trainer of any previous winner of the Belmont Oaks, Saratoga Oaks or Jockey Club Oaks, who captures the G2 Flower Bowl, an 11-furlong test for fillies and mares 4-years-old and up in September at Saratoga. The Flower Bowl is a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” event offering a berth in the G1 Filly and Mare Turf in November at Keeneland.

The Turf Triple series, launched by NYRA in 2019, showcases the best 3-year-old turf runners in the country. Last year, a competitive renewal of the Turf Triple series for fillies saw three separate winners with Santa Barbara capturing the Belmont Oaks en route to defeating older fillies and mares in the G1 Beverly D.; Con Lima, who was named Texas Horse of the Year, taking the Saratoga Oaks; and Shantisara, who exited her Jockey Club Oaks score to capture the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup.

For more information, visit NYRA.com.

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Green Light Go Brings Recent Form Into Saturday’s Stymie

Stronach Stables homebred Green Light Go brings rejuvenated form to Saturday's $125,000 Stymie, a one-turn mile for older horses at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Jimmy Jerkens, the 5-year-old Hard Spun bay enters from a romping nine-length score in a one-mile optional-claimer on Jan. 13 at the Big A that garnered a career-best 101 Beyer Speed Figure. That effort followed a closing second in the six-furlong Grade 3 Fall Highweight on Nov. 28 at Aqueduct.

Jerkens said he is cautiously optimistic that Green Light Go will replicate the figure.

“Those things have to be taken with a grain of salt. The track was much, much faster that day,” Jerkens said. “When he ran second in the Fall Highweight, the track was slow. He came running but fell a little short. You just have to get them over there the best you can.”

The precocious Green Light Go, a Kentucky homebred, graduated on debut in July 2019 at Saratoga Race Course and followed one month later with a 3 3/4-length score in the G2 Saratoga Special. He completed his 2-year-old season with a distant second to Tiz the Law in the G1 Champagne in October 2019 at Belmont Park.

Green Light Go raced twice as a sophomore, finishing third in the Grade 3 Swale and second in the Roar, both at Gulfstream Park.

“I had him as a 3-year-old early on and he just didn't make as good a transition,” Jerkens said. “You see that sometimes, especially horses that come around really fast at two like he did. The development gets stunted – almost as if they've gone too far already. He didn't hold his flesh as well down in Florida in his 3-year-old year. He finally got good and strong toward the end of the meet and ran second in the Roar, where I didn't think he could get beat.”

Last year, Green Light Go won once in six starts – an optional-claiming event in April at Oaklawn Park – while in the care of Hall of Fame trainer Jerry Hollendorfer. Green Light Go rejoined Jerkens late last summer at Saratoga and has flourished in two starts since.

“We got him back at the end of Saratoga last year and we didn't train him hard right away. We just kept him well fed and happy and he responded,” Jerkens said.

Green Light Go enters with a trio of bullet breezes over the Belmont dirt training track, including a five-furlong effort in 1:01.98 on Saturday.

Jerkens said a good result Saturday could see Green Light Go target the Grade 1, $300,000 Carter Handicap, a seven-furlong sprint for older horses on April 9 at the Big A.

“It seems like he has the speed where if we do decide to cut back to the Carter, there's ways to sharpen his speed up a bit,” Jerkens said. “Seven-eighths or a mile around one turn are his best races.”

Dylan Davis will guide Green Light Go from the inside post.

Wertheimer and Frere homebred Waxman will look to maintain a perfect in-the-money record while making his stakes debut.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, the 4-year-old Empire Maker colt, who boasts a ledger of 5-2-3-0, enters on a two-race winning streak at the Big A. Waxman graduated at fourth asking traveling a one-turn mile on Dec. 2 ahead of a last-out 1 3/4-length allowance score at nine furlongs that garnered a career-best 95 Beyer.

Byron Hughes, Pletcher's Belmont-based assistant, said the dark bay colt has the tactical speed to be effective.

“I think he'll handle the cutback fine. He's a very handy horse and well minded,” Hughes said. “He'll do whatever you ask him to do, so it shouldn't be an issue.”

Hughes said Waxman has improved with racing experience after starting his career with a trio of runner-up finishes.

“He's gotten more mature and more professional and appears to have figured things out in his past couple starts. We're happy with how he's doing right now,” Hughes said.

Jose Lezcano will pilot Waxman from post 2.

Robert Brittingham, James Wasserson and Louis A. Bisso, Jr.'s Milton the Monster will make his stakes debut for trainer John Servis.

The 5-year-old Jack Milton chestnut drew off to an open-lengths romp over a sloppy and sealed main track last out under Frankie Pennington on Jan. 17 at Parx. The 12 3/4-length score in a seven-furlong optional-claiming sprint registered a career-best 100 Beyer.

The Kentucky-bred Milton the Monster made his first start for the Servis stable in September and has posted a record of 2-2-1 in five starts since, including a 6 3/4-length score in a 6 1/2-furlong optional claimer in October over a sloppy and sealed Parx main track.

“I've liked him since Day One. He really seems to be maturing and putting it all together,” Servis said. “His two mud races are big races and I think eventually he's going to want the turf with his pedigree. It might be why he looks like he's so much better on the slop.”

Milton the Monster was hampered by awkward starts in two of his non-winning efforts at Parx, including on Dec. 27 when racing from well back around two turns before closing to finish second in a one mile and 70 yard optional-claimer.

Servis said Milton the Monster should appreciate Aqueduct's one-turn mile configuration.

“The way he ran going two turns I know the distance won't be a problem, and I think the one-turn mile might be ideal for him,” Servis said.

Pennington retains the mount from post 5.

Gulliver Racing, Craig W. Drager and Dan Legan's 6-year-old graded stakes winner Pirate's Punch will make his first start for trainer William Morey since his 2-year-old campaign.

The Shanghai Bobby gelding made a trio of sophomore starts for Jeff Mullins before moving to the barn of Grant Forster after a sixth-out maiden score in July 2019 at Ellis Park.

Pirate's Punch posted a strong 2020 campaign, crossing the wire first in the G3 Philip Iselin at Monmouth only to be disqualified and placed second. The dark bay enjoyed immediate redemption, taking down the G3 Salvator Mile one month later at the same track.

Winless in five starts last year, the owners opted to send Pirate's Punch to New York to re-ignite the $90,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase's career under Morey's tutelage.

“We want to give him a chance and see if we can get him back on the beam,” Morey said. “My wife [Elizabeth Morey] and I bought him as a yearling for those clients. I recommended Grant to train them in Kentucky and they had a really good run with him. The owners wanted to try something different, and they called me about trying him in New York.”

Out of the Malibu Moon mare Catch the Moon, Pirate's Punch is a half-sibling to Grade 1-winner Girvin and Grade 3-winner Midnight Bourbon.

Pirate's Punch will emerge from post 6 under Jorge A. Vargas, Jr.

Rounding out the field are Doubly Blessed [post 4, Manny Franco], who makes his first appearance since finishing third in the Grade 2 Kelso in September at Belmont; New York-bred stakes winner Our Last Buck [post 7, Kendrick Carmouche] and stakes-placed Hanalei's Houdini [post 3, Trevor McCarthy].

The Stymie is slated as Race 8 on Saturday's nine-race card. First post is 12:50 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.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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The Comments Section: Your Reactions To Medina Spirit’s Derby DQ

Over a year after permanently disabling comments on The Paulick Report, the comments section is back! Well, sort of. We can't fire up story comments again. The number of hours our staff was collectively losing in moderation was too great, and the few bad actors out there made it too labor-intensive to continue, even as we tried many different systems to combat them.

The good news is, we are still including reader voices here on the Paulick Report with this feature. Read a previous edition here.

Nearly 300 days after the 2021 Kentucky Derby, it appears we finally have an official winner. The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission stewards announced on Monday that first-place finisher Medina Spirit would be disqualified from the race for a betamethasone overage. Trainer Bob Baffert also faces a 90-day suspension connected to the positive, pending a likely appeal. Read the story here.

If the result stands as announced, this means Mandaloun is the 2021 Kentucky Derby winner, and Baffert could potentially be suspended through the Triple Crown season.

In this edition of The Comments Section, we've collected the many takes we've seen on social media and in our inboxes regarding the ruling, and its implications for the present and future.

 


Want to email us your thoughts? Click Ask Ray in the red header bar. Please include a good contact email where the staff can reach you with questions. 

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