Bill Downes Takes Over Microphone At Emerald Downs

Emerald Downs lifts the lid on its 27th season Sunday with a new voice high atop the grandstand.

Bill Downes takes over the microphone when the nine-race card begins at 2:15 p.m. The 52-day meet runs through September 18 and features 23 stakes events including the 87th renewal of the $150,000 Longacres Mile on August 14.

A Chicago native, Downes becomes only the fourth track announcer in track history, following Robert Geller (1996-2015), Matt Dinerman (2015-2017), and Tom Harris (2018-2021).

“I'm excited to learn about all the horses and horsemen participating in horse racing at Emerald Downs,” Downes said. “From my previous experiences here as a fan and handicapper, what impressed me was the on-track experience.”

Downes, who spent the last nine seasons calling races at Indiana Grand near Indianapolis, recently drove from Pittsburgh, PA, to Auburn, Wash., a 2,500-mile trip that included stops in his hometown of Chicago, as well as Rapid City, Billings and Spokane. The only thing missing upon arrival was warm weather, but things figure to heat up soon.

At Emerald Downs, the 27th season is highlighted by the 87th renewal of the $150,000 Longacres Mile on Sunday, Aug. 14. The track's signature race has been raised $50,000 in value for 2022 and anchors a stakes quadruple-header featuring the $75,000 Emerald Distaff, $75,000 Muckleshoot Derby, and $75,000 Washington Oaks. The Distaff, Derby and Oaks are all up $25,000 from 2021.

Overnight purses, meanwhile, are up 20 percent from last season and takeout on Win/Place/Show wagers has been reduced to 14.7 percent—lowest in North America.

Alex Cruz, who edged Julien Couton 75-74 for the 2021 riding title, bids for a third straight riding crown in 2022 while Juan Gutierrez—the track's all-time leading rider—begins the season needing just three wins to reach the 1,500-win mark at Emerald Downs. Javier Matias, Kevin Radke and Jennifer Whitaker—among the top 10 all-time at Emerald Downs—return for another season while Kevin Orozco, last year's top big-money rider with five stakes wins, also returns.

Joe Toye bagged his first Emerald Downs training title last year with 29 wins but faces a tough task while gunning for a repeat. Frank Lucarelli, second last season with 26 wins, is the track's all-time leader with 1,093 wins and figures to make a strong bid for his eighth career Emerald Downs crown. Jeff Metz, a four-time leading trainer, and Blaine Wright, with two titles, also have strong stables for 2022, while Washington Hall of Famers Tim McCanna, Howard Belvoir and Doris Harwood also figure prominently. Kay Cooper, last year's leading stakes trainer, is another strong contender.

John Parker's yellow and black silks led all owners with 19 trips to the winner's circle in 2021, the fourth time the Lake Bay resident has topped the owners' standings. He and trainer Candi Cryderman have a strong stable of horses in a bid for a fifth title in 2022.

Windribbon and Papa's Golden Boy, second and fourth in last year's Longacres Mile, are both training forwardly for 2022. A 6-year-old California-bred gelding owned by Seamist Racing and trained by Blaine Wright, Windribbon missed by a head last year, opening a 2 ½-length lead in midstretch before Background nailed him in the last jump. Papa's Golden Boy, a 6-year-old Washington-bred gelding owned by the Lusk family of Puyallup, has been the state's fastest sprinter the last two years. Background, meanwhile, has fared well since his Mile triumph, recently winning a $106,000 allowance race at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark.

Other top horses returning for 2022 include stakes winners Ms Lynn, Midnight Mojo, Daffodil Sweet, Koron, A View From Above and 2020 Horse of the Meeting Dutton. Top Executive, 2021 Horse of the Meeting after sweeping all three open stakes for 3-year-olds, moves into the older horse division and gives Wright a terrific one-two punch with Windribbon. Owned by John and Janene Maryanski and Gail and Gerald Schneider, Top Executive is 5 for 9 lifetime with $125,648 in earnings.

A 23-race stakes schedule begins with the $50,000 Seattle Stakes for 3-year-old fillies and $50,000 Auburn Stakes for 3-year-olds, both on Sunday, June 19. The $50,000 Budweiser Stakes on Sunday, June 26, is first stop 3-year-olds and up on the road to the Longacres Mile.

Opening week features a single day of racing followed by a pair of two-day weekends (May 21-22, May 28-29) before settling into a Friday thru Sunday schedule the weekend of June 3-5.

Emerald Downs is located right off Highway 167 in Auburn, Washington.

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Saturday Racing Insights: $450k Into Mischief Firster Debuts At Woodbine

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

2nd-WO, $126K, MSW, 2yo, f, 4 1/2f, 1:43 p.m.

Trainer Mark Casse debuts 2-year-old ADORA at Woodbine on Saturday for owner Tracy Farmer. The daughter of leading sire Into Mischief was purchased for $450,000 from prolific Canadian breeder Sam-Son Farm at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale. Dam and Sam-Son home-bred Southern Ring, out of a half-sister to Canadian Ch. 3-year-old filly Catch the Ring (Seeking the Gold), took both the GIII Ontario Fashion S. and the GIII Whimsical S. and was herself sold for $875,000 to Determined Stud at the 2021 Keeneland January Horses of all Ages Sale carrying a full-sibling to Adora. The bay has had several works from the gate at Woodbine recently including a bullet Apr. 23, going three furlongs in :35 (1/34) and again Apr. 30 where she worked in :34 3/5 (2/29). Adora picks up jockey Patrick Husbands, who has also been aboard for her works, for her career debut.  TJCIS PPs

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‘Do It Just To Make Me Happy’: Jockey Lauralea Glaser Wins With First Mount In 398 Days

Herman Braude's Jimmy the Kid cruised to a front-running 2 ¾-length triumph in Friday's fifth race at historic Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md., giving jockey Lauralea Glaser a win with her first mount in 398 days.

Jimmy the Kid ($8), a 4-year-old gelding trained by Richard Sillaman, ran six furlongs in 1:11.01 over a fast main track in the claiming event for 3-year-olds and up that had never won two races.

“Jimmy is a horse I get on every morning,” Glaser said. “Looking at his past races, he prefers to be on the front end. He's pretty quick out of the gate so I let him break, let him get out front, and there were some other horses that came up early to us. He seemed pretty relaxed with it so I just sat and he drew away from them going around the turn and when I asked him to kick on he just kicked on.

“It feels great, especially for Ricky,” she added. “He's always been good to me and I've worked on and off for him for the last eight years. It's always good to kind of come back home and work for somebody like that.”

Glaser, 28, had not ridden in a race since last April 11 at Laurel Park. She rode only 12 races in 2021 and now has 83 career wins from 873 mounts since 2014.

“It was just the way things happened,” she said. “Last spring, Laurel shut down to do some repairs. I was working for [trainer] Cal Lynch at the time and he was going up to Fair Hill and I didn't want to make the move up there, so I took a little time off. Then Ricky called me and said he was headed to Tampa for the winter, so I went down there and galloped for the winter and came back here. [I'm] just taking things as they come.”

A native of Bliss, N.Y., a small farming community of little more than 500 residents located about an hour southeast of Buffalo, Glaser grew up with horses. After graduating from Hall of Fame jockey Chris McCarron's North American Racing Academy she embarked on a pro riding career in Maryland.

Glaser won her first professional race in October 2014 and 58 more over the next three years before deciding to take a break. She didn't ride a race between Dec. 15, 2017 and July 27, 2019, picking up the first win of her comeback July 27, 2019. Glaser had 17 wins from 75 mounts in 2020, and has earned nearly $2 million in purses in her career.

“I've tried to make a point of doing this because it makes me happy,” she said. “I've tried to do this full-time, riding races, and it ends up being more stressful than fun and that's not why I got into it. I try to pick and choose and do it just to make me happy.”

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