Fresh Starts: Jockeys Junior Alvarado, David Lopez Working Hard At Gulfstream Park

Junior Alvarado, who has made the decision to ride year-round at Gulfstream Park, got off to a quick start for the Spring/Summer Royal Palm Meet while scoring an upset victory aboard Discreet Tune in Thursday's Race 6 featured optional claiming allowance.

“When you make a new start, you want to show people what you're capable of. When you start something new, you want to show them you're still on your game and that it doesn't matter if it's a $6,000 claimer or the best race of the day,” Alvarado said. “I came here to win races.”

The 35-year-old jockey, a mainstay in New York in recent years, notched his 1911th career success aboard Carlos David-trained Discreet Tune ($9) in the five-furlong turf dash.

Jonathan Thomas-trained High Front, who was coming off a dazzling 6 ½-length debut victory Jan. 28 at Gulfstream, was sent to post as the 2-5 favorite. Facing older rivals for the first time, the 3-year-old son of Summer Front was fractious while loading into the starting gate and was shuffled back to last shortly after being crowded at the start. High Front made steady progress under Luis Saez to reach contention on the far turn. However, he was unable to sustain his drive as Discreet Tune, who stalked early-pacesetter Phase Out, kicked clear in the stretch to win by 2 ¼ lengths.

Discreet Tune, a hard-knocking veteran of 20 starts (five wins) ran five-furlongs on a firm turf om 55.69 seconds. Ruse closed late to finish a nose ahead of a tiring High Front.

“When we broke out of there [High Front] didn't break very good and the horse inside him came out and bumped him a little. I sent my horse. I expected to take the lead but another horse got it, and I just decided to sit there and wait,” Alvarado said. “I saw the big favorite moving by the 5/16ths pole, but after making that move and breaking slow like he did, I knew, for a younger horse, he was going to pay the price. I bided my time a little bit. When I turned for home, I turned my horse lose and he ran on really well.”

Alvarado ranked sixth with 49 wins during the Championship Meet that ended Sunday.

Paco Lopez rode three winners on Thursday's program, scoring aboard Shanghai Warrior ($8.20) in Race 1, Smart Spending ($6) in Race 3 and Uno Tiger ($4.20) in Race 7.

Jockey David Lopez has ventured from Golden Gate Fields looking for a fresh start during Gulfstream Park's Spring/Summer Royal Palm Meet.

The 32-year-old journeyman is the son of C. C. [Chuck] Lopez and grandson of Carlos Lopez.

“I did well at every course in California, I just wanted to be on the East Coast – that's where my family is,” Lopez said. “My dad, my grandfather did well here.”

Lopez, who won his first race at Monmouth Park in 2011, enjoyed his best year at Golden Gate Fields in 2015 with 107 victories and made headway into Southern California in 2016. Unfortunately, he would be out of action for 2 ½ years with injuries sustained in a morning training accident.

“I broke my L1 to L3 vertebrae and herniated a disc. That was a long recovery, longer than I expected,” said Lopez, who returned to action in May 2019 and has been riding at Golden Gate Fields with moderate success the past couple years.

On his second mount at Gulfstream, Lopez guided Khopilot to a second-place finish in Thursday's Race 4.

“He broke a little green,” Lopez said. “He took a few steps out. I corrected him and had about four horses come over on me. I decided to just sit and wait and after turning for home, I tipped out and asked him and he finished well. He couldn't get the winner.”

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Big-Race Showdown: Wood Memorial, Blue Grass, and Santa Anita Derby Picks

For the sixth year in a row, America’s Best Racing is challenging some of the brightest minds in horse betting to come up with their top three picks for key races every weekend leading up to the 2022 Triple Crown and then continuing through the 2022 Breeders’ Cup World Championships. The handicappers face off in what we like to call the “Big Race Showdown.”

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Equibase Analysis: Smile Happy, Zandon To Battle It Out In Blue Grass

The $1 million Toyota Blue Grass Stakes was restored to Grade 1 for this year's running and should live up to its billing with a field of 12 3-year-olds all vying for the all-important 100 points the winner will earn on the Road to the Kentucky Derby, which assures said horse of a spot in the starting gate. The 40 points the runner-up will earn should be good enough to propel that horse on to the Derby in four weeks as well.

Many in the group did not run well in their most recent races, with six of the dozen entering the race off finishes of third or worse. That group of horses is likely going to go all out to win this battle and hope to have regrouped when the big race comes calling in one month.

Among the rest, Grade 2 Risen Star Stakes runner-up Smile Happy and third-place finisher Zandon appear to have an edge as both ran well as 2-year-olds and are making the second start of their 3-year-old campaigns. Smile Happy won the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes before his layoff and Zandon was a nose shy of winning when second in the Grade 2 Remsen Stakes in his final race at two. Blackadder won the non-graded El Camino Real Derby on an all-weather track at the distance of the Blue Grass in his most recent race and hopes to step up in class and repeat the effort.

Similarly, Grade 2 Rebel Stakes runner-up Ethereal Road hopes to give Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas a starter in the Kentucky Derby as well as the Kentucky Oaks, where stablemate Secret Oath is headed after a third-place finish in the Arkansas Derby last weekend.

Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby runner-up Grantham hopes to improve from an often disadvantageous extreme outside post, while Tampa Bay Derby fourth-place finisher Golden Glider is looking to earn enough points to move on to the big dance in Louisville. Volcanic was third in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes when last seen and is another hoping to improve and be more competitive in this situation, as is Grade 2 Fountain of Youth Stakes fourth-place finisher Emmanuel. Fenwick just earned his first career win, in his fifth career start and Commandperformance is still searching for his first win. Both are facing significantly tougher competition as compared to their most recent races.

Rattle N Roll won the Grade 1 Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland last October but has finished sixth and fourth in his two starts this year. Trademark has finished 12th and fifth in his two races this year.   

Analysis and top contenders:

Three-year-old horses at this time of year are maturing rapidly, both physically and mentally. As such, they should be running faster in April than they did in February and March. We measure how fast they have run using speed figures, which compare horse's times using sophisticated mathematics and include factors we can't see, like the difference in each track's surface, weather, moisture and other things.

In looking at this field, many ran slower in their most recent races than the one preceding it. Some ran faster in their most recent race as compared to the one before it, but still much slower than some of the other Toyota Blue Grass Stakes entrants. Looking at the field as a whole and anticipating who is going to improve and run the fastest and therefore win this race, Zandon and Smile Happy come to the fore. 

Zandon won his debut last October at six furlongs, after banging the gate at the start to get away poorly. Showing maturity like a horse that was not making his debut, Zandon still rallied and drew off. Next he was stepped way up in class to run in the Remsen Stakes, run at the same 1 1/8-mile distance of the Blue Grass. In that race while running farther than most of the others as he was three paths wide on both turns, Zandon battled head-and-head the length of the stretch before settling for second by a nose.

In the Remsen, Zandon tied the 93 Equibase Speed Figure he had earned in his debut win. Wisely given time off to mature, Zandon returned without a sprint prep first and ran in the Risen Star Stakes, also at this nine-furlong trip. This time Zandon hopped in the air at the start and lost position, finding himself last of 10. Nevertheless he started to pass horses after a half-mile, eventually finishing third and a half-length behind runner-up Smile Happy. Once again Zandon earned a 93 figure. Considering both he and Smile Happy are going to improve in their second starts off long layoffs, but factoring in the trouble Zandon experienced in the Risen Star, I believe he's going to improve a bit more than Smile Happy and win this year's Toyota Blue Grass Stakes. 

Smile Happy has had a very similar career to Zandon, having run three times. However, whereas Zandon won his debut in a six-furlong sprint, Smile Happy won his debut last October at the distance of 1 1/16 miles. He earned a 95 figure with that victory, which earned him a start in the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes the next month. Relaxing in fifth of 11 in the early stages, Smile Happy commenced a rally four paths wide on the turn and drew off to a fairly easy 3 1/4-length win, improving to a 100 figure.

Like Zandon, Smile Happy made his 3-year-old debut and first start after nearly three months off in the Risen Star Stakes, a race in which winner Epicenter had already run in 2022. Rallying from eighth to second in the race and earning the same 93 figure as Zandon, Smile Happy should show a good deal of improvement in his second start as a 3-year-old. Certainly, if he improves as much as he did in his second career start when victorious in the Jockey Club Stakes, he can win. At the minimum he and Zandon will  put on a show in this race.

Honorable mention goes to four horses, all with significantly less probability to win but with a chance to finish third, if not second, potentially at high odds.

I'll start with Fenwick, who ran the best race of his career last month when easily winning with a 91 figure after the addition of blinkers. He's a son of Curlin, probably the best sire of top 3-year-olds the last few years among this field's sires. Ethereal Road finishes fast and could be passing a number of horses in the stretch in this race. He did just that in the Rebel Stakes at the end of February when rallying from fifth to lead late in the race, before settling for second with a 90 figure. The horse he beat for second, Barber Road, returned to finish second in the Arkansas Derby last week, somewhat flattering Ethereal Road.

Blackadder is the only horse in the field to have won at this nine-furlong distance, having done so in the El Camino Real Derby in February on the all-weather surface at Golden Gate Fields in California. His Equibase Speed Figures have improved from 67 three races back, to 83 two back, to 85 in the El Camino Real¸ and although the best of those is short of how fast I expect Zandon and Smile Happy to run, it's not unthinkable Blackadder could improve more than expected and run well at high odds.

Grantham finished a fine second in the Tampa Bay Derby with a 100 figure when last seen. He had the rail for that race and gets the potentially disadvantageous extreme outside post for the Blue Grass which will mean he has to go wide on the first turn or drop back farther in the early stages than he's been in any of his four races to date. Still, he does appear to have the ability to compete in this field based on his last effort.   

The rest of the field, with their best Equibase Speed Figures, is Commandperformance (102), Emmanuel (98), Golden Glider (99), Rattle N Roll (100), Trademark (99) and Volcanic (97).

Win Contenders:
Zandon
Smile Happy

Contenders for second and third:
Fenwick, Ethereal Road, Blackadder, Grantham

Toyota Blue Grass Stakes – Grade 1
Race 9 at Keeneland

Saturday, April 9 – Post Time 5:10 p.m. ET
One Mile and One Eighth
3-Year-Olds
Purse: $1 Million
T.V.: NBC 4:30 – 6 p.m. ET

Ellis Starr is national racing analyst for Equibase

 

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Breeders’ Cup Attendance: 2022 At Keeneland Will Be Capped At 45,000

On Thursday, the Breeders' Cup, Keeneland, and the City of Lexington begin the official countdown to the 2022 Breeders' Cup World Championships, as the best horses from around the world are set to compete at historic Keeneland Race Course on Nov. 4 and 5, 2022.

In accordance with Breeders' Cup's longstanding commitment to delivering a curated and intimate fan experience, and to ensure maximum safety and comfort, attendance for the event will be capped at 45,000. Available single-day ticket prices range from $75 to $504 on Friday, and $125 to $689 on Saturday. Two-day packages available for purchase range from $200 to $1,568. All tickets will be sold in advance of the event. No tickets will be sold on event days at the racetrack.

As announced in March, tickets for the 2022 World Championships at Keeneland will go on sale to the public on Monday, May 9, at Noon ET at BreedersCup.com/Tickets. Anticipation and demand for tickets are expected to be high. Fans are encouraged to visit BreedersCup.com/2022 now to sign up to receive the latest ticket information and news.

“We're excited to officially begin our countdown to the 39th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships this fall in our hometown of Lexington,” Breeders' Cup President and CEO Drew Fleming said. “We're so grateful to work alongside leaders like Mayor Gorton, our friends at Keeneland, and so many others throughout the Lexington community to ensure that this year's World Championships and Festival are the best in Breeders' Cup history.”

“Lexington is excited to step back into the international spotlight as we again host the Breeders' Cup,” Mayor Linda Gorton said. “This year, the Breeders' Cup will crown racing's true champions in the Horse Capital of the World at the best track in the world, Keeneland! Join us for a celebration that our international visitors and our local residents will enjoy.”

“Keeneland is excited to kick off the countdown to Breeders' Cup this fall, and to share this great international championship with our fans,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “The Thoroughbred industry is so important to the Lexington community, and we thank our friends at Breeders' Cup, Mayor Gorton and leaders throughout the city for their enthusiasm and support. We look forward to welcoming fans and racing participants from around the world to Lexington to celebrate the Breeders' Cup in a way this event richly deserves.”

This year will mark the third time the World Championships have been held in the Horse Capital of the World following the event's first running at Keeneland in 2015 and subsequent return in 2020. As the 2020 World Championships were held without fans on site due to COVID-19, Breeders' Cup is delighted to be coming back to Lexington after two short years to give the local community and loyal fans the opportunity to experience the World Championships at its full potential.

A highlight of the global racing calendar, the Breeders' Cup World Championships will bring an exciting combination of premier Thoroughbred horse racing, world-class culinary experiences, high fashion, and top entertainment back to Keeneland this fall. To further elevate the experience for all fans and participants, Breeders' Cup and Keeneland will invest over $10.5 million in the coming months to expand seating areas and enhance hospitality offerings. This investment will add 165,000 square feet of luxury chalets that will provide 7,500 premium dining seats and 1,800 temporary box seats, including:

  • Trackside Luxury Chalets, triple-decker and double-decker chalets located trackside with views of the stretch run that are enclosed and climate-controlled, offering a gourmet buffet luncheon, cocktail service to tables, private wagering, and TVs situated throughout the spaces for enhanced viewing.
  • The Silks Lawn Chalet, a 50,000-square-foot, glassed-in and climate-controlled chalet with reserved seating, private bars, TVs located throughout, dedicated mutuel tellers, and incredible views of the racetrack from the rail along the final turn.
  • The Saddling Paddock Chalet, which offers premium views of the Championship contenders as they circle the saddling paddock before each race, as well as access to the first and second floors of the Grandstand and the track apron for live racing views.
  • Temporary Loge Box Seats that will span the apron from the 1/16th pole to the finish line, offering incredible views of the homestretch along with access to both the first and second floors of the Grandstand and dedicated cocktail service to every box.

As announced in September 2020, fans who purchased 2020 Breeders' Cup World Championship tickets had the right to repurchase the same or similar seats as they had previously. The Breeders' Cup Ticketing office has been in direct communication with 2020 purchasers about how to secure their spot at the 2022 World Championships. 2020 ticket purchasers who have not yet received communication from the Breeders' Cup Ticketing office should email tickets@breederscup.com or call (859) 514-9428.

The Breeders' Cup Festival, presented by CHI Health, will begin Sunday, Oct. 30, and continue through Championship Saturday, Nov. 5. Some of the many exciting plans include nightly live music at Tandy Park, culinary tributes to the international racing community at local restaurants, and the return of Horse Mania, featuring over 100 artist-designed, life-size Thoroughbred statues.

“The Festival's goal is the same as it was in 2015: to put on a world-class week of entertainment worthy of the world championships of Thoroughbred racing,” said Breeders' Cup Festival Chair Kip Cornett. “There's no place like Lexington to celebrate the great sport of racing – and the festival will do its part to energize the city for local fans as well as our guests.”

Breeders' Cup will offer public shuttle service to and from Keeneland at one dedicated off-site Park-and-Ride location on Friday and Saturday. Parking on-site at Keeneland will be limited and only available to those with official pre-paid parking credentials. All parking will have dedicated routing and will be coordinated by on-site parking staff, traffic control staff, and local law enforcement. All traffic and directions will be communicated in real-time through Google Traffic and Waze. Additionally, the Hill will not be available for seating this year and will instead be used to accommodate additional on-site parking. More information is available on our website at BreedersCup.com/Transportation.

The 39th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships on Nov. 4 and 5 will be televised live by NBC Sports Group. Stay tuned for additional announcements in the coming months outlining how fans can experience race-day thrills at home, as Breeders' Cup continues to lead the industry in virtual viewing and engagement offerings in addition to on-site attractions and hospitality.

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