Fact Or Fiction? Horses Should Not Be Fed Before Exercise

The horse world is filled with “rules” many horse owners and caretakers follow, often without knowing why. One such myth that has been followed for years is that horses should not be fed before exercise, reports The Horse

With updated research, that mindset has shifted: now, scientists suggest that feeding forage before a ride may be beneficial.

Feeding forage before a ride keeps the gastric acid in the horse's stomach from splashing around, Dr. Robert Jacobs of Purina Animal Nutrition told The Horse. This reduces the risk of gastric ulcers and gastric ulceration, he said. 

Jacobs does advise delaying working three to four hours after a horse has had a large grain concentrate meal, however. This relates to the insulin response a horse has after he consumes a grain meal.

Peak insulin response is two to three hours after consuming a meal; insulin returns to a baseline level about four hours after the meal is ingested. This is important as the mobilization of glucose is necessary for the horse to perform well. 

If circulating insulin is high, like after a grain meal, the mobilization of glucose becomes very difficult, which can reduce the horse's athletic performance. 

Read more at The Horse.

The post Fact Or Fiction? Horses Should Not Be Fed Before Exercise appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Tenacious Hot Peppers Makes The Grade In Victory Ride Stakes

Michael Dubb and Michael J. Caruso's Hot Peppers won a three-way speed duel before staving off Half Is Enough down the lane to capture Saturday's Grade 3, $150,000 Victory Ride, a 6 1/2-furlong sprint for sophomore fillies at Belmont Park.

Trained by Rudy Rodriguez and piloted by Luis Saez, the Khozan bay dueled to the outside of graded stakes winner Pretty Birdie and graded stakes-placed Happy Soul through splits of :22.10 and :45.52 over the fast main track before taking command late in the turn.

Half Is Enough, with Irad Ortiz Jr. up, stalked from fourth behind the hotly contested pace and came with a menacing wide run down the lane, but could not reel in a resolute Hot Peppers, who scored by three-quarters of a length in a final time of 1:17.7 for 6 1/2 furlongs.

Half Is Enough completed the exacta by 2 1/2-lengths over Sterling Silver, who closed from last-of-5. Happy Soul and Pretty Birdie rounded out the order of finish. Stand Up Comic and Smash Ticket were scratched.

“She shows a lot of class and that's what you want to see in these kinds of races. I know most of the time there will be a lot of challenges, especially with her speed,” Rodriguez said. “I was kind of worried about the distance a little, but she hung in there and she prevailed. She showed what she can do.”

Saez said he was impressed by the tenacity of Hot Peppers.

“Today, she surprised me a lot because she went pretty fast and challenged the other ones. But she proved she can really run,” Saez said. “She beat some nice fillies and I'm pretty happy with her.

“This filly I've been following for a long time. She's that kind of filly that always fights,” he added. “If she's in a fight, she's pretty tough to get by. She always gives you everything she has and she did that today.”

Ortiz said he was pleased with the effort from Half Is Enough, who went to post as the longest shot in the field at odds of 8-1.

“She ran big,” Ortiz said. “She did everything right, but the winner was really nice. She was tough to get by.”

Hot Peppers won a trio of sprint starts over the winter at Gulfstream Park for trainer Ronald Spatz. She was purchased privately following a distant ninth in the seven-furlong Sophomore Fillies in March at Tampa Bay Downs and sent to Rodriguez in New York.

The talented bay sprinted to a 6 3/4-length score in the six-furlong Jersey Girl on June 12 at Belmont in her first start for new connections ahead of Saturday's graded stakes breakthrough.

“She's been very special. We're just blessed,” Rodriguez said. “We thank Mr. Dubb for giving us the opportunity with this kind of horse. He's one of the first owners that supported us since Day One. She just keeps coming and coming.”

Hot Peppers will now look to add to her ledger and give Rodriguez a repeat victory in the Grade 1, $500,000 Longines Test, a seven-furlong sprint for sophomores fillies on August 6 at Saratoga Race Course.

“She's a 3-year-old and has [given us] all the indications,” said Rodriguez, who won the Test last year with Bella Sofia. “She passed this test, so hopefully we'll look forward to the Test.”

Bred in Florida by Brent Fernung and Crystal Fernung, Hot Peppers banked $82,500 in victory while improving her record to 7-5-1-0. She returned $10.60 for a $2 win bet.

The post Tenacious Hot Peppers Makes The Grade In Victory Ride Stakes appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

McKulick Overhauls With The Moonlight To Take Belmont Oaks Invitational

Klaravich Stables' McKulick had been knocking on the door for her first graded stakes win with three placings in three attempts before breaking through Saturday when overtaking With The Moonlight in the stretch and powering home a 1 3/4-length winner in the $700,000 Belmont Oaks Invitational (G1).

The British-bred McKulick gave trainer Chad Brown his sixth career victory in the Belmont Oaks, at 1 ¼ miles on Belmont Park's inner turf course. The race serves as the first leg of the filly division of the Caesars Turf Triple series for sophomores. McKulick's victory marked Brown's first win in the race since 2017.

The 44th running of the Belmont Oaks will be followed by the Grade 3, $700,000 Saratoga Oaks Invitational at 1 3/16-miles on August 7 and the Grade 3 Jockey Club Oaks Invitational at 11 furlongs during the Belmont fall meet.

Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr., who earned a victory in the first of the four stakes on the Stars and Stripes Festival card at Belmont aboard Dynamic One in the Grade 2, $400,000 Suburban in Race 4, employed a similar patient approach out of the gate. McKulick tracked in fifth position as Cairo Memories led the 10-horse field through the opening three-quarters in 1:13.20 over the firm going.

Out of the final turn, the Charlie Appleby-trained With The Moonlight took brief command of the lead from the outside over Cairo Memories. But McKulick kept up the pressure from the far outside, responding to her rider's left-handed encouragement to gain the edge and hit the wire in a final time of 1:59.62.

With The Moonlight fended off Brown trainee Consumer Spending [also owned by Klaravich] by a head for second. Concert Hall finished fourth, with Cairo Memories, Hot Queen, Know Thyself, New Year's Eve, Haughty and Agartha completing the order of finish.

McKulick won her debut last August at Saratoga Race Course before closing her 2021 with a third-place effort in the Grade 3 Miss Grillo in October at Belmont. Following a seven-month respite, Brown saw her start her 3-year-old year with consecutive runner-up efforts at Churchill in the Grade 2 Edgewood in May and the Grade 3 Regret in June before earning the flower blanket on Saturday.

“She was really born to run a mile and a quarter. We were patiently waiting for a long time to get her to this distance and my whole team did a super job with this horse in all divisions this filly has been in throughout this year,” said Brown, who added to his Belmont Oaks victories that include 2012-15 with Samitar, Alterite, Minorette, and Lady Eli, and New Money Honey in 2017. “She's special and she finally got enough room to fully utilize that closing kick she has.

“Irad rode a beautiful race. He was lined up behind Haughty down the backstretch which I thought was a good decision by him. Haughty at least took them into the stretch, where he could take it from there.”

Fittingly, the daughter of Frankel won on July 9, which is the birthday of the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, for whom Brown served as an assistant before going out on his own. The filly is named after Brown's former bookkeeper, the late Mary McKulick.

“It's an extra special win with it being Bobby Frankel's birthday today. This horse is the first offspring of Frankel that I actually bought,” Brown said. “[Owner] Seth Klarman was nice enough to let me name this filly after my very first employee after I left Frankel, that's why I chose this horse being by Frankel. And wouldn't you know on his birthday she wins a Grade 1. The irony and the importance of it today, his birthday means everything to me personally.”

Ortiz, who was aboard Lady Eli in 2015 for that victory, said he was able to follow the pre-race plan to capitalize on McKulick's strengths.

“I got a beautiful trip. I broke and followed the instructions – tried to save ground and let her get to some position,” Ortiz, Jr. said. “She broke sharp and she put me in a good position right in behind horses. I bided my time and saved some ground. At the three-eighths pole, I started asking her a bit and she just ran really good and nice. She responded really well and took off in the stretch and that was really nice.”

Off at 5-1, McKulick returned $12.80 on a $2 win bet. She improved to 2-2-1 in five starts and increased her career bankroll to $593,650

“I think a mile and a quarter [made the difference]. If you see in her last two races, she came running late past the wire and kept galloping out nicely,” Ortiz said

“That's what I see in the replays. We were very confident in her that she was going to get the mile and a quarter, so I rode her with confidence and she got it done.”

Three-time Champion Jockey Frankie Dettori, a winner of more than 3,000 races in Great Britain who made the trek to the United States from Europe to ride With The Moonlight, said he tried to be aggressive and it paid off with a stellar effort.

“I had a good trip. I forced the issue at the three-eighths because we weren't going very fast and apart from one, she beat all the rest,” Dettori said.

Consumer Spending, who improved from a sixth-place finish in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf in November at Del Mar to win the Memories of Silver in April at Aqueduct and the Grade 2 Wonder Again last month at Belmont, gave Brown two-thirds of the trifecta. Jockey Manny Franco was aboard for the effort in which the More Than Ready filly earned black type for the fourth time in five stakes starts.

“I had a very good trip, she [McKulick] just got the jump on us and that was it,” Franco said. “She felt great. I think she ran her race again and was ready today, too. It just wasn't her day today.”

The Irish-bred Concert Hall, trained by Aidan O'Brien and ridden by fellow decorated European jockey Ryan Moore, was making her North American debut. The O'Brien-Moore duo won last year's edition with Santa Barbara and in 2018 with Athena.

“It might have been quick enough [ground] for her, she was just lugging in down the straight,” Moore said. “They went hard and we had a nice run following the winner – just didn't keep up with them, but she ran respectably.”

The post McKulick Overhauls With The Moonlight To Take Belmont Oaks Invitational appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Miss Leslie Draws Off To Win Delaware Handicap By Stakes Record Margin

BB Horses' Miss Leslie cruised to an easy victory in the $500,125 Delaware Handicap (G2) Saturday at Delaware Park.

With Angel Cruz aboard, the 4-year-old daughter of Paynter won a by a race-setting record margin of 12 lengths. The previous record was held by Hall of Famer Royal Delta who won the Delaware Handicap by 10 ¾ lengths in 2013.

Miss Leslie returned $5.80 as the favorite in the field of seven.

Battle Bling finished second, three-quarters of a length in front of Tonal Vision in third.

Let's Cruise, with Carol Cedeno aboard, set early fractions of :48.49 for the half mile and 1:13.73 for the three-quarters mile before fading to sixth. The final time for the 1 ¼ miles was 2:04.50 over a sloppy track.

This was the third straight victory for Miss Leslie who won the Serena's Song at Monmouth Park on May 8 and she followed with a victory in the Obeah Stakes at Delaware Park on June 8.

Winning trainer Claudio Gonzalez knew the Kentucky-bred filly was ready, and he was pleased the preparations showed with her performance.

“This a good feeling because she won impressive,” Gonzalez said. “She has been doing really good and she showed how well she is doing. When she goes long, she is an even better filly.”

Gonzalez is not sure where he will run Miss Leslie next, but he could consider a Grade 1 especially after her impressive victory.

“We got to think about that but that with way she ran today, but let's see how she comes back and how she is doing,” he said.  “After that, we will decide on what we will do.”

Cruz, who has been aboard Miss Leslie for her last nine outings, knew she was going to be tough, but he was even surprised by her dominating victory.

“It feels awesome,” Cruz said. “Claudio (Gonzalez) has trusted me with this filly the whole time and he really had her ready today. I just cruised along with her.  She just kept going. I only hit her twice and she just galloped.  I looked back and I was home free. It was a nice performance and I did not expect to win like that. She was ready today.”

Since the Obeah Stakes was inaugurated in 1996, four fillies or mares have won the race and followed with a victory in the Delaware Handicap. They were the 2006 champion older female champion Fleet Indian; I'm a Chatterbox, who won the race in 2016;; Miss Marissa, who won last year; and now Miss Leslie.  Two fillies have finished second in the Obeah and won the Delaware Handicap. They were Power Play in 1997 and Unbridled Belle in 2007. Three winners of the Obeah Stakes have followed by running second in the Delaware Handicap. They were Under the Rug in 2001, Your Out in 2002 and the 2011 Horse of the Year Havre de Grace.

Miss Leslie has a 10-3-2 record from 22 career starts and $865,650 in purse earnings. She was bred by Maxis Stable from the Mingun mare Zeenut.

The post Miss Leslie Draws Off To Win Delaware Handicap By Stakes Record Margin appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights