Gulfstream Park: $350,000 Guaranteed Jackpot In Thursday’s Rainbow 6

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $350,000 Thursday at Gulfstream Park, where the popular multi-race wager has gone unsolved for 12 racing days since a lucky bettor hit for a $182,098 payoff April 28.

The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70% of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30% is carried over to the jackpot pool.

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Apprentice Jockey Huayas Pilots First Career Winner At Gulfstream

Jockey Jason Huayas broke through with his first career victory Sunday at Gulfstream Park while guiding Lusitano ($9) to a front-running 4 ¼-length triumph in Race 6.

Lusitano was Huayas' fifth mount, and the Rohan Crichton-trained gelding was also the 10-pound apprentice's first mount on April 23, when they finished fourth.

“It's a goal I put my mind to,” Huayas said. “I want to thank everybody for helping me accomplish it.”

Huayas had worked as a hotwalker and groom for trainer Ralph Nicks at Gulfstream Park before setting his sights on a riding career.

“I was 150 when I decided to be a jockey and I got down to 107, 106 with a lot of hard work and determination,” the 29-year-old Huayas said. “I worked as a groom for Ralph Nicks then I became an exercise rider. I worked for a couple trainers and then said, 'You know what? The next step is to become a jockey.' I'm happy to get it done.”

Huayas has one mount on Thursday's card, Dolcisima in Race 3.

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Arzak Goes Wire To Wire In Jacques Cartier To Keep Woodbine Record Perfect

Arzak made it 3-for-3 at Woodbine Sunday after leading at every point of call to capture the $151,200 Jacques Cartier Stakes (G3) for older runners.

​There's something about the Toronto oval that seems to bring out the best in the Arzak, a 4-year-old son of Not This Time. In November 2020, the Michael Trombetta trainee broke his maiden in his second career start. This spring, the chestnut won the Thorncliffe Stakes by 3 ¼ lengths.

​​On a picture-perfect afternoon, the Sonata Stable color bearer once again shone over Woodbine's synthetic Tapeta surface, earning his first graded stakes win.

​​Kazushi Kimura wasted little time in putting Arzak on the engine, with the duo on top by a length through an opening quarter-mile timed in :22.55, as Secret Reserve to the inside, and Silent Poet, to the outside, tracked the pacesetter.

​Arzak extended his lead to 2 ½-lengths after a half-mile reached in :44.99, as Souper Stonehenge, last year's Jacques Cartier victor, graded stakes winner Tap It to Win, and Striker, the LNJ Foxwoods' budding star, all took aim at the front-runner.

​​Ahead by four lengths at in early stretch, Arzak easily fended off his foes to post a 1 ½-length triumph in a time of 1:08.91 for six furlongs. Tap It to Win was second, and Souper Stonehenge was third, a neck in front of Striker. ​ ​

​​“He's a completely nice horse,” said Kimura, who won the 2021 Sovereign Award as Canada's top rider. “I just dropped the lines to show the natural speed and just go wire-to-wire. He doesn't have to go to the lead. I wanted to drop the lines and make it comfortable for him, and he's going to show up for the final stretch.” ​

​It proved to be the winning game plan against an accomplished group of sprinters. ​

​​Bred in Kentucky by John Oxley, Arzak has five wins, to go along with one second and a third, from 13 career starts.

​​“He's a nice horse,” Kimura said of the winner, who is out of the Tapit mare Delightful Melody. “I hope that he's going to be the next [now retired Canadian sprint superstar] Pink Lloyd.”

​​Arzak returned $6.

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Royal Urn Upstages Favored Half Brother In John J. Reilly Upset at Monmouth

If the betting public was surprised that the “other” Kelly Breen horse captured the John J. Reilly Handicap Sunday at Monmouth Park, the trainer insisted he wasn't.

Sent off at 17-1 following a 10-month layoff, Royal Urn outdueled No Cents – coming off a 17-month layoff – to score a half-length victory in the $85,000 feature race, a black-type race for New Jersey-breds. The other horse that Royal Urn held off? Stablemate and half brother Pickin' Time, the even-money favorite also trained by Breen.

Pickin' Time, idle since Nov. 27, was another three-quarters of a length back.

“No. I'm not surprised,” said Breen, seeking a fourth Monmouth Park training title. “This horse needed the rest. He hadn't had a rest since I had the horse. The horse needed his time off. He and Pickin' Time have been working together head and head for the last three workouts.

“I made a comment that I told (owner and breeder) John Bowers that Royal Urn is back. Not that Pickin' Time wasn't, but he does have a tendency to need a race off a layoff. So, no, I'm not surprised. He needed the rest. We gave him the time and the opportunity to recover and he came back the way he was two years.”

It was two years ago that Royal Urn, a 6-year-old son of Kantharos, won the Reilly Handicap. He was fifth in the race a year ago in his last start of the year.

Ridden by Jose Gomez, who is in his first full year as a jockey, Royal Urn was sixth early in a tight pack in the six-furlong race, with Gomez finding room outside entering the final turn. Royal Urn was in full flight coming wide out of the turn, engaging with No Cents, who had slipped through along the rail to take the lead.

The two went nose to nose for the final sixteenth of a mile.

“I broke well, just not as sharp as I wanted him to break. We were in a little tight. I had to get behind horses,” said Gomez, who served as Breen's exercise rider a year ago. “When I saw an opening coming into the turn I went for it and once I got him on the outside and clear he just started going. I didn't take away his momentum. I let him go however he wanted to and in the stretch he was tough.

“Honestly, yes, I was surprised he was this sharp off the layoff. You don't expect a horse to be this ready off a layoff like that. But Kelly was telling me he has been working really well against Pickin' Time.”

For the 21-year-old Gomez it marked his first stakes victory at Monmouth Park.

Royal Urn paid $37 to win. His time for six furlongs on a track listed as “good” was 1:10.36.

No Cents, 4-for-5 as a 2-year-old, was unraced at 3 last year. But trainer Cal Lynch had the son of Goldencents sharp off that prolonged layoff.

“No Cents was dynamite as a 2-year-old,” said Breen. “I didn't think they would have this horse as tuned up as much as he was. He's a quality horse. Those were two good horses dueling in the stretch.”

Third-place finisher Pickin' Time is a 4-year-old son of Stay Thirsty. He and Royal Urn were produced by Born to Royalty, by King of Kings. Both are homebreds of John Bowers Jr.'s Roseland Farm Stable.

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