Mo Forza Gets First Mare In Foal

The first mare bred to Grade I winner Mo Forza (Uncle Mo), Alice Bamford's two-time winner Californiasunshine (Lucky Pulpit), has checked in foal on a single cover.

Mo Forza, who entered stud this year at Rancho San Miguel in the Golden State, won no fewer than seven graded races in the course of his career, including the 2019 GI Hollywood Derby at Del Mar.

“Mo Forza has handled the transition to his breeding career with class and vigor, just like he sailed through his racing career,” said Rancho San Miguel Owner/Manager Tom Clark. “The amount of interest we are receiving for him from regional breeders is exceptional, and we are thrilled to be affiliated with a stallion of his magnitude and tremendous potential. The sky is the limit.”

Mo Forza is standing for a fee of $9,000, life foal guaranteed.

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Delacour’s Five February Victories End Early Season Slump, Earning Him Tampa Bay Downs Trainer Of Month Honors

On a typical morning during the Tampa Bay Downs season in Oldsmar, Fla., trainer Arnaud Delacour observes his horses working out from a box seat across from the finish line, alert to any hiccups in the routine that may occur.

Smartphone – check. Binoculars – check. Stopwatch – check. And, in a nod to modern technology, a two-way radio that allows him to communicate with his exercise riders during a workout.

“I'm trying to say almost nothing” during the morning breezes, the Salt Rock Tavern Trainer of the Month said March 3 during the break between training sessions. “Just give them (the riders) their (furlong) times. … '13 (seconds). Twelve and change. Let him pick it up. Great.' It also helps them to get their timing right. It's a question of practice. The more they do it, when they're starting too fast, they can feel it.”

Delacour and his wife Leigh, a trainer from 2007-2013, employ four exercise riders, one of whom, Moises Nava, is also the assistant trainer. “They each have their fortes and strong points, and we try to adjust to find the best guy for each horse, or the other way around,” Delacour said.

In recent years at Tampa Bay Downs, few trainers have been as successful as Delacour in fitting the right horses to the right races. His skills were on full display two years ago, when he sent out 5-year-old mare Jehozacat to win the Wayward Lass Stakes on the dirt and, three weeks later, the Grade 3 Lambholm South Endeavour Stakes on the turf for owner Lael Stables.

With 20 graded-stakes victories to his credit, a 2016 Eclipse Award finalist in sprinter A. P. Indian – who won six consecutive stakes that year, including two Grade 1 races at Saratoga – and a classic-placed runner in 2015 Preakness third-place finisher Divining Rod, a Grade 3 winner who previously finished second in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes and third in the Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby, Delacour is among the best trainers whose names rarely get mentioned by the industry's media talking heads.

But even the normally unflappable product of Lisieux, France, grew a bit concerned when he failed to win a race from 19 starters from Jan. 8 through Feb. 12.

“For a trainer, for a jockey, for an owner, it's always a concern when you're not winning races. I'd be lying if I didn't say so,” Delacour said. “But we keep doing what we do every day – train them, assess them, make sure they're sound, happy and fit, and hopefully enter them in the right races. Usually, it works out.”

After breaking his mini-slump with two victories on Feb. 13, Delacour added two more on Feb. 20, including a thrilling nose victory on the turf by 5-year-old gelding Commence. A maiden special weight victory by 3-year-old filly Dawn on Feb. 27 clinched the deal – from dry spell to recognition as the Salt Rock Tavern Trainer of the Month in a span of nine racing days.

Of course, every horse progresses at a different pace, and it is Delacour's responsibility to gauge where each best fits on a racing card. In a sport in which a 15-percent strike rate translates to success, such calculations take on added importance.

“With our young horses, not all of them are maiden special weight or allowance caliber,” Delacour said. “By the time we get them assessed fully, we're more able to aim them a little better and put them in the right spots. It's a great feeling to be able to take a young horse that doesn't know anything, develop it step-by-step, point it in the right direction and eventually win a race.”

Delacour, who keeps about 30 horses at Tampa Bay Downs and 10 at Classic Mile in Ocala, shares his passion with Leigh. They race out of Fair Hill Training Center in Maryland during the summer.

The Delacours have three sons: Luca, 9; Julien, 7; and Alistair, who turns 4 on March 15. “We are trying to expose them to racing, and if they have the vibe for it, that's great,” Delacour said. “But we're not going to push them into it. That's going to be up to them.”

Delacour and Lael Stables, owned and operated by Roy and Gretchen Jackson, have been a force on the graded-stakes scene, with victories by Jehozacat, Divining Rod, 2019 Lambholm South Endeavour Stakes winner Hawksmoor, Magic Attitude – who won the Grade 1 Belmont Oaks Invitational in 2020 and the Grade 2 Sheepshead Bay Stakes in 2021 – and others. “Mark Grier is also a very good supporter of our operation,” said Delacour, who trained that owner's Eons to a 2019 victory in the Grade 3 Kent Stakes and a runner-up finish in last year's Grade 3 Tampa Bay Stakes.

The post Delacour’s Five February Victories End Early Season Slump, Earning Him Tampa Bay Downs Trainer Of Month Honors appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Nadeau, Mailloux Handicap 1/ST Saturday Turf, Dirt Low Takeout Pick 5 Wagers

Saturday's inaugural 1/ST Saturday, an innovative collaboration between Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., and Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., will offer Thoroughbred racing fans a chance to win a $5 million jackpot in a free contest linking all 15 stakes races [14 graded], and test their handicapping skills with the Coast-to-Coast All Dirt Stakes Pick 5 and Coast to Coast All Turf Stakes Pick 5.

Brian Nadeau's Coast-to-Coast All Turf Pick 5:

 

Ashley Mailloux's Coast-to-Coast All Dirt Pick 5:

The $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2), a tradition-rich prep for the April 2 $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) and Triple Crown, will headline Gulfstream's 13-race program with a first-race post time of 12:10 p.m.

Tami Bobo's Simplification, a gutsy second-place finisher in the Feb. 5 Holy Bull (G3) behind White Abarrio following a slow start and wide trip, has been installed as the 5-2 morning-line favorite. The Antonio Sano-trained 3-year-old son of Not This Time scored an impressive front-running victory in the Jan. 1 Mucho Macho Man. WinStar Farm LLC and Siena Farm LLC's Emmanuel, undefeated in two impressive career starts, is rated second in the morning line at 3-1 for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher.

The Fountain of Youth, a 1 1/8-mile event that will offer 50 Kentucky Derby qualification points to the winner, drew a deep field of 12 sophomores, including Grade 1 stakes winner Rattle N Roll, who is slated to make his 2022 debut after winning the Breeders' Cup Futurity (G1) at Keeneland in October.

The Fountain of Youth is one of eight graded stakes among a total of nine stakes on Gulfstream's program, while the $650,000 Santa Anita Handicap (G1) will anchor a slate of six grades stakes at Gulfstream's sister track.

The ownership of Diamond 100 Racing Club will sponsor Best Turned Out Groom and Horse at Gulfstream Park and Santa Anita Park on 1/ST Saturday, March 5. For each race at Gulfstream and Santa Anita, the groom of the best turned out horse will receive a $100 gift card.

Judges examine the presentation and appearance of both horse and groom in the paddock to determine a winner.

The Coast to Coast All Dirt Stakes Pick 5 and the Coast to Coast All Turf Stakes Pick 5 will both include races from Gulfstream and Santa Anita. The all-dirt Pick 5 will be kicked off with the $200,000 San Carlos (G2) in Santa Anita's Race 4, followed by the $200,000 Gulfstream Park Mile (G2) in Race 10 at the Hallandale Beach, FL track, the $400,000 San Felipe (G2) in Race 6 at Santa Anita, the $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) in Race 12 at Gulfstream and the $650,000 Santa Anita Handicap (G1) in Race 11 in Arcadia, CA.

The $125,000 Palm Beach and the $150,000 Honey Fox (G3) in Races 7 and 8 at Gulfstream will kick off the all-turf Pick 5, followed by the $200,000 Buena Vista (G2) in Race 5 at Santa Anita, the $125,000 Herecomesthebride (G3) in Race 13 at Gulfstream and the $500,000 Kilroe Mile (G1) in Race 10 at Santa Anita.

To enter the free contest that offers a $5 million jackpot for picking all 15 stakes winners visit: www.1st.com/1st-Saturday.

The post Nadeau, Mailloux Handicap 1/ST Saturday Turf, Dirt Low Takeout Pick 5 Wagers appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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HBPA Conference Panel Focuses on Backstretch Workers

HOT SPRINGS, AR–The chronic shortage of backstretch workers is as critical as an issue facing horse racing as the need for medication reform and finding homes for retired racehorses.

That's the view of Remi Bellocq, the Bluegrass Community and Technical College's executive director for equine studies. Bellocq moderated a panel on employee development Friday morning for the National Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Association Conference at Oaklawn Racing Casino Resort.

“What does it matter if you want to expand your operation with horses, build a new extension to our farm or barn if you don't have the workers to muck out the stalls, to care for the horses?” he said.

“In many cases, we have valued employees, but how do we keep them?” asked Bellocq, a former National HBPA executive director before going into academia. “How do we keep them from running down the street to go work at Amazon? Is it about pay? Is it about housing? Is it work-life balance or a combination? It's a lot easier to keep somebody than to train a new worker…. Is this an important enough issue for us to start the charge in our industry to elevate workforce to a national issue, just as we've done equine welfare and medication? I submit it is.”

Even before COVID hit the world, American horse trainers faced a chronic shortage of workers. Will Velie is one of horse racing's pre-eminent immigrant attorneys. However, he emphasized the necessity of the industry to build a pipeline nationally to find, train and retain American employees. He said it's vital to show the government the programs and efforts that horse racing makes to recruit domestic workers before requesting visas to provide a supplementary workforce.

Oscar Gonzales, a member of the California Horse Racing Board who also is assistant secretary for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, echoed that the industry can't bank on immigration reform coming to the rescue. But he offered a glimmer of hope through the Farm Workforce Modernization Act that has passed the U.S. House and is pending before the Senate. That bill would allow non-U.S. residents working in agriculture to receive Certified Agricultural Worker Status and put them on a path to being lawful, permanent residents.

“I try to remind people in the horse-racing industry there is tremendous upside to embracing our agricultural roots,” said Gonzales, who worked as a groom growing up and through college. “We've just got to figure out a way to get workers on racetracks … eligible for that.”

The panelists encouraged trainers to learn about and utilize existing resources that could make a difference for employees' quality of life. Those include access to education with programs such as Bellocq's, the Groom Elite courses offered at many tracks and English lessons.

Panelist Dr. Reid McLellan developed the Groom Elite program to improve the horsemanship skills of backstretch workers.

McLellan said that his team will take its training program to wherever there is a potential employment pool, such as correctional facilities. He said that also could include an area such as western Kentucky, where hundreds of chicken- and candle-factory workers are without jobs, homes or transportation in the wake of the devastating tornadoes in December.

Bellocq said having trained help is critical and that one issue facing racing is that horsemen don't know some of their employees' abilities.

“… A trainer hires a guy and he's on his phone trying to figure out how to put bandages on. Because the trainer didn't have any way of verifying 'what can this person actually do as far as his skill level?' That's one of the things we need to do.”

Gonzales noted there is a lot of grant money available if horsemen and their representatives develop partnerships with entities such as community colleges, chambers of commerce and health clinics.

“It is so incumbent upon us to tell our story, especially to policymakers,” he said. “Never let an opportunity go by to have your voice heard.”

Bellocq, who said the vast majority of his BCTC students are female, said it's a different world than when he came on the racetrack in 1975.

“You have to adapt; you can't make the workforce change for you,” he said. “If a young gal graduates from our program, she'll say, 'I don't want to work for Amazon. They're offering me more money, retirement, insurance. But I love horses. So meet me half way. Pay me enough so that's not a temptation for me to go work over there.'… The trainers, the owners, the farm managers who get that and understand that are the ones who are retaining their workers longer. The ones who refuse to change have a lot of turnover.

“… As business people, as horsemen, we're no different than the guy who has a landscaping or construction business down the road or Amazon. Either we compete and compete successfully for the workforce, or we don't. It's not a gray area.”

One thing facing today's horsemen is the extensive paperwork both employees and employers must fill out to be in compliance with labor regulations. McLellan spelled out best practices in managing a stable's workforce, recommending horsemen do a self-evaluation of their stable.

“The question to ask when you get done is: 'Would I work for me?'” he said. “… Make a labor plan. Let's sit down and look at a budget and see how can we afford to do the things we need to do to be competitive in the marketplace. Take advantage of what organizations like the HBPA offer. Because we do have access to bring in accountants, human resources people. We provide a lot of service. Because if you train your team, they will help you train your horses.”

Jennie Rees is a horse-racing communications specialist in the horse-racing industry, including working for the National and Kentucky HBPA.

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