‘It’s Been A Lot Of Hard Work And A Lot Of Help From All My Friends’: Jockey Walter Rodriguez Posts First Career Win At Laurel Park

Rationalmillennial, a 3-year-old filly owned and trained by Jose Corrales, came with a steady run through the stretch to catch front-running Stopwatchsonny and surge past to give apprentice jockey Walter Rodriguez his first career victory in the sixth race Sunday at Laurel Park.

A daughter of 2013 Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Orb, Rationalmillennial ($17.80) ran 5 ½ furlongs in 1:07.25 over a fast main track to win the maiden claimer for fillies age 3, 4, and 5 by a half-length in her eighth career start.

Rationalmillennial broke sharply and raced sixth, saving ground along the rail before Rodriguez straightened for home in third and brought his filly to the center of the track before hitting the wire a half-length in front of Stopwatchsonny and a length in front of Mejoramiga.

“I kept looking at the right side to make sure nobody else was coming because I wanted to go around the horse in front of me, and after that I knew I had it,” Rodriguez said. “It's very, very exciting. It's been a lot of hard work and a lot of help from all my friends.”

It was the third lifetime race for the Rodriguez, a 24-year-old native of El Salvador who rides with a 10-pound weight allowance and had no racing experience when he sought out Corrales more than two years ago.

“He came one day to the track and he said to me, 'I want to be a jockey.' I asked him what he was doing and he told me he was delivering refrigerators,” Corrales said. “Then I asked him if he had ever walked a horse, and he said no. That's where we started.

“In El Salvador, they don't even have a racetrack there,” he added. “I said you have to know how to walk horses. You have to learn everything, how to muck stalls and brush horses and be here early every day, and he said, 'I'll do whatever it takes.' He worked his way along to where he was jogging horses for me and after that he started galloping horses, and at one time he was galloping all my best horses, my stake horses. When all his paperwork came through, I took him to get his jockey's license. I told him, 'I'm going to make you famous.' ”

Rodriguez made his professional debut June 17 at Laurel, finishing sixth on Manklin Creek, a 4-year-old Bandbox gelding also trained and co-owned by Corrales, in a one-mile claiming event. The next day he ran fifth on Rationalmillennial in a 1 1/16-mile maiden claimer.

Corrales won 1,031 races as a jockey between 1981 and 1993 before becoming a trainer, but has continued to mentor prospective riders such as his nephew, Gerardo Corrales, currently tied for ninth in the standings at Churchill Downs, and David Egan. England's champion apprentice of 2017, Egan registered his first North American victory at age 19 on the Corrales-trained Bobby G March 1, 2019 at Laurel. Two years later, Egan captured both the Saudi Cup (G1) and Dubai Sheema Classic (G1) aboard Mishriff.

“I've been teaching for the last 40 years and that's my passion. That's what I like to do. I love it,” Corrales said. “This kid deserves everything he gets. He learned everything by never giving up. He's a good listener and I'm glad I got him. I think he's going to have great things. He's got a good heart and he takes cares of his grandmother and everything like that. I see a lot of future in this kid.”

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Gulfstream Park: Mandatory Rainbow 6 Payout Set for Thursday’s Card

A mandatory payout of the Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be held at Gulfstream Park Thursday, the final racing day of the fiscal year.

The popular multi-race wager went unsolved Sunday for the seventh racing day since a June 11 mandatory payout, producing a jackpot pool of $131,153 for the start of Thursday's Rainbow 6 wagering.

Thursday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 3-8.

The Rainbow 6 carryover jackpot is usually only 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 usually goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30%is carried over to the jackpot pool. However, on mandatory-payout days, the entire pool is paid out to the bettor or bettors with the most winners in the six-race sequence.

Mandatory payouts are also scheduled for Thursday's Late Pick 5 and the last-race Super Hi-5.

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Mardukas First Winner For Kentucky Derby Victor Always Dreaming

Mardukas rallied strongly along the inner rail, powered through the stretch, and proved a determined winner of a $92,000 maiden special weight going 5 ½ furlongs Sunday at Churchill Downs, becoming the first winner for his sire, 2017 Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Always Dreaming.

Ridden by jockey Corey Lanerie for trainer Jeff Engler, Mardukas raced close to the early pace before taking the lead in early stretch and prevailed by a neck in a long drive to the finish line.

Mardukas owned by Daniel Preiss and Chris Province and was bred in Kentucky by Hubert Vester. A graduate of the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, selling to Preiss out the Mulholland Springs consignment for $20,000, the colt was produced from the Pulpit mare Blue Kisses and descends from the female family of Grade 1 winners Videogenic and Valid Video.

Always Dreaming, also winner of the 2017 Florida Derby (G1), was an earner of $2.4 million on the racetrack for owners Brooklyn Boyz Stables, Teresa Viola Racing Stables, Siena Farm LLC, West Point Thoroughbreds, MeB Racing Stables LLC, and St. Elias Stables.

Trained by Todd Pletcher and bred by Santa Rosa Partners, Always Dreaming broke his maiden by an eye-catching 11 ½ lengths in his 3-year-old debut and captured the Florida Derby by five lengths in the fastest time since Alydar in 1978—1:47.47—faster than Quality Road, Scat Daddy, and Empire Maker. He validated those impressive scores with a valiant victory in the Kentucky Derby, winning by 2 ¾ lengths as the favorite in his first start over an off track.

Hailing from the dominant Unbridled sire line, Always Dreaming is by Bodemeister out of the Grade 1-placed Above Perfection, by In Excess, and is a half Grade 1 winner Hot Dixie Chick, the dam of Pauline's Pearl, winner of this year's La Troienne Stakes (G1).

For more information about Always Dreaming, who stands for $12,500 stands and nurses, visit WinStarFarm.com.

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Grade 1 Winner Ce Ce Pleases In Santa Anita Breeze For Gulfstream’s Princess Rooney

Bo Hirsch's Grade 1 winner Ce Ce is scheduled to ship Wednesday morning from Santa Anita to Gulfstream Park, where she will try for a repeat win in Saturday's $300,000 Princess Rooney Invitational (G2).

The Michael McCarthy-trained 6-year-old mare tuned up for the Breeders' Cup Challenge 'Win and You're In' seven-furlong sprint for fillies and mares with a five-furlong workout in :59.60 Saturday morning.

“Her breeze was excellent,” McCarthy said. “She'll ship on Wednesday.”

Ce Ce ran seven furlongs in a swift 1:21.94 while winning the 2021 Princess Rooney to give McCarthy his second big-race success at Gulfstream, where he saddled City of Light for an impressive victory in the $9 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) in 2019.

After earning a fees-paid berth for last year's Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) with her dominating Princess Rooney triumph, Ce Ce went on to prevail by 2 ½ lengths in the event at Del Mar in the Nov. 6 seven-furlong race, clinching the 2021 Eclipse Award as champion female sprinter.

Ce Ce, a daughter of Elusive Quality, captured the March 12 Azeri (G2) before finishing third behind victorious Letruska in the April 23 Apple Blossom (G1). Both Oaklawn Park appearances were around two turns at 1 1/16 miles.

The Princess Rooney headlines the Summit of Speed card that will also feature the $100,000 Smile Sprint (G3), a six-furlong sprint for 3-year-olds and up.

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