Woodbine: Frosted Over An Easy Winner Of Friday’s Dominion Day

Frosted Over, under leading rider Kazushi Kimura, drew away from his foes with ease to take the Grade 3 $156,600 Dominion Day Stakes, on Canada Day Friday at Woodbine.

During post parade, Frosted Over was on his toes, looking ready to put in a top performance. Down the lane in the 1 1/8-mile main track feature for four-year-olds and up, he ran his rivals off their feet.

It was Mighty Heart, Canada's Horse of the Year in 2020 and 2021, who grabbed the early lead in the Dominion Day, as Frosted Over sat second to his outside, with Skywire and War Bomber tussling for third spot through a quarter in :24.45.

Mighty Heart continued to call the shots on the front end with Kimura maintaining a patient hand on Frosted Over, who was a length behind the pacesetter after a half timed in :49.44.

As the seven-horse field (Primo Touch and Avoman were scratched) made their way into the final turn, Kimura gave Frosted Over his cue, and the son of Frosted-Candy Crush responded with an impressive turn of foot, striking front and then quickly skipping away from his rivals.

Ahead by three lengths at the stretch call, Frosted Over crossed the line an easy 4 ¾-length winner. Artie's Storm, riding a three-race win streak coming into the Dominion Day, bested Mighty Heart, who won last year's race, by a half-length for second. Special Forces rounded out the top four.

The final time was 1:49.46.

“Today, when the got outside [post], I wasn't going to do anything special,” said Kimura. “He was able to stay close easily, just beside Mighty Heart. I just asked him from the three-eighths, and he just nailed it.”

Owned by Gary Barber and trained by Mark Casse, the 4-year-old colt came into the Dominion Day off a second-place finish to Artie's Storm in the Grade 2 Eclipse on May 29.

With the victory, the ultra-consistent bay, bred in Kentucky by G. Watts Humphrey, Jr., now has four wins, two seconds and a third from 10 career starts.

“Last time was a smaller field and easier for the behind runners,” said Kimura. “My horse just always stayed close and was comfortable. That's a good thing for him.”

Frosted Over returned $8.20, $4.00 and $2.40, combining with Artie's Storm ($3.60, $2.30) for a $23.70 exactor. Mighty Heart ($2.70) rounded out a $56.40 triactor. Special Forces completed a $1 superfecta worth $125.30.

Live racing continues Saturday with an 11-race card that includes four graded stakes. First post is 1:10 p.m.

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Los Alamitos Moves Up Post Time On Monday, July 4

There will be a post time adjustment for the special holiday program Monday, July 4.

Post time for the sixth day of the Los Angeles County Fair meet will be 1 p.m. instead of the normal 2 p.m.

The 4th of July card will include the Grade 2, $200,000-guaranteed Great Lady M. for fillies and mares (3-year-olds & up) as well as a handicapping contest in which two berths to the 2023 National Handicapping Championship in Las Vegas are on the line.

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Annapolis Will Look To Rebound In Monday’s Manila

Bass Racing's homebred Annapolis will try for his first win of the year in Monday's $100,000 Manila, a one-mile Widener turf test for sophomores at Belmont Park.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, Annapolis enters from a troubled runner-up effort over soft going in the Grade 2 Penn Mile on June 3 at Penn National. The War Front bay broke alertly and settled in second position before Wow Whata Summer rushed up the inside to move Annapolis into third for the trip down the backstretch. Irad Ortiz, Jr. angled Annapolis four-wide in the turn, but he spun his wheels over the soggy ground and could not reel in upset winner Wow Whata Summer.

The Penn Mile was the first start off an eight-month layoff for Annapolis, who closed out his juvenile campaign in October with a gritty head victory in the Grade 2 Pilgrim over firm Belmont turf going 1 1/16 miles. The win came on the heels of a runaway debut maiden score going the same distance at Saratoga Race Course that September.

Pletcher said he had considered sending Annapolis to the 1 1/4-mile Grade 1, $1 million Caesars Belmont Derby Invitational on July 9.

“He's only had the one race off the layoff so we were trying to decide if the mile and a quarter is what he wants to do now or if we should get another shorter race into him before Saratoga,” said Pletcher.

Pletcher said Annapolis has grown from two-to-three and continues to train forwardly.

“Physically, he's done great. He looks super and he's always been a very professional horse to train,” said Pletcher. “It was tough to gauge the race at Penn. It was bottomless ground and I thought despite that, he tried hard.”

Annapolis worked a sharp five-eighths in 59.81 seconds over Belmont's inner turf course on June 24, the third bullet from his last four works.

Ortiz, Jr. retains the mount from post 2.

Pletcher will also be represented by multiple stakes-placed Chanceux, who was third last-out in the Paradise Creek sprinting seven furlongs at Belmont. Owned by Harrell Ventures, Chanceux began the year with an off-the-board finish in the Texas Turf Mile in January at Sam Houston and followed with a two-length first-level allowance victory in March at Gulfstream. His other start this year was a close third in the Woodhaven going 1 1/16 miles over firm Aqueduct turf in April.

Flavien Prat will ride again from the inside post.

D.J. Stable and breeders Chester and Mary Broman will hope to see the New York-bred Coinage return to winning ways after a disappointing trip to Churchill Downs on Kentucky Derby Day.

Coinage, a chestnut Tapit colt out of Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint winner Bar of Gold, enters from a distant eighth-place finish in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 American Turf at Churchill where he tracked in third under Florent Geroux and faltered at the stretch call to finish well behind the victorious Stolen Base.

Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse said that Coinage was bothered by the commotion of the large crowd in attendance that day.

“I'm just throwing that race out. That was not any indication of his true ability. I don't know what got into him. He was terrible in the paddock and in the gate and people could hear him kicking on TV,” Casse said.

Coinage was a graded stakes winner in his turf debut after making his first three outings on dirt, putting together a professional performance in the Grade 3 With Anticipation in September at Saratoga Race Course. He followed with a third-place finish in the Nownownow in September at Monmouth and an uncharacteristic ninth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf to finish out his 2-year-old campaign in November at Del Mar.

The Manila will be Coinage's first time racing at one mile since a neck win in the Palm Beach in March at Gulfstream Park, something Casse said won't be a problem for the consistent colt.

“The cutback isn't going to bother him. It was a very good effort in the Palm Beach. I would expect [another] good effort,” said Casse. “He creates some of his own problems, and he just needs things to go a little more his way.”

Coinage has earned two graded placings this year with a pair of thirds in the Grade 3 Kitten's Joy in February at Gulfstream and Grade 3 Transylvania in April at Keeneland. Luis Saez, who was aboard for the With Anticipation and Palm Beach, gets the call from post 4.

Impressive debut maiden winner Boston Tea Party will make the step up to stakes company for trainer Tony Dutrow and owners Paul Braverman, Gold Square, Timothy Pinch and Chevaux Racing.

An Ontario-bred son of American Pharoah, Boston Tea Party made it look easy when he took down a six-furlong maiden special weight on May 29 over firm Belmont turf. He tracked in third under patient handling from Eric Cancel and traveled comfortably as Codys Express set a quick tempo in front.

Cancel swung Boston Tea Party three-wide in the turn and gave a strong ride as his mount ate up ground and easily put away his rivals, powering home a three-length winner in a final time of 1:08.31.

Dutrow said he was impressed with the effort Boston Tea Party gave.

“He's doing great. He's making a big step up. Eric told me he was relaxed, but that race was six furlongs and they went really fast,” said Dutrow. “So, although it might have seemed he was relaxed, he was still going plenty fast. But we'll see if he'll settle and listen to the rider stretching out to the mile. He was good that day and it was impressive.”

Out of the multiple stakes-winning Speightstown mare Pirate's Trove, Boston Tea Party took some time to mature, but has been worth the wait.

“In dealing with this boy, I wouldn't have thought in the first month we had him that he would turn into a decent kind of horse,” Dutrow said. “He was a handful to train and he was nervous and upset. He was really working against himself. But he just has been getting a little better in all those aspects. He's good and that's why we're going in this race. I don't see any downside to trying.”

Boston Tea Party will emerge from post 5 with Cancel in the irons again.

Donegal Racing's Ready to Purrform was beaten a neck last time out by Joe in the James W. Murphy on May 21 at Pimlico Race Course. Trained by Brad Cox, the son of Kitten's Joy won the 1 1/16-mile Laurel Futurity in October and finished seventh in the Qatar Golden Mile in November at Del Mar to close out the year. He kept on gamely in the James W. Murphy after taking command at the stretch call under Florent Geroux and was just nailed at the wire.

Joel Rosario picks up the mount from post 3.

Completing the field are dual stakes-placed Smokin' T [post 6, John Velazquez] for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey, the Rusty Arnold-trained maiden winner Double Clutch [post 7, Manny Franco] and stakes-placed Ohtwoohthreefive [post 8, Kendrick Carmouche] for conditioner George Weaver.

The Manila is slated as Race 9 on Monday's 10-race Independence Day card. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the spring/summer meet at Belmont Park on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

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Study: Inbreeding, Specific Genetic Marker May Decrease A Thoroughbred’s Likelihood To Race

Scientists at the University College Dublin, the University of Edinburgh, and the Irish equine genetic testing company Plusvital conducted a study to determine the relationship between inbreeding and the likelihood of a Thoroughbred to make it to the races. The study, titled “Inbreeding depression and the probability of racing in the Thoroughbred horse,” was published June 29, 2022 in the peer-reviewed scientific journal “Proceedings of the Royal Society B.”

The study looked at the genomes of 6,000 Thoroughbreds across Europe and Australia, and demonstrated that for every 10 percent increase in inbreeding, there was a 44 percent lower chance that the horse would make it to the races.

In addition, the study pointed to a specific genetic marker which was related to a significant decrease in the likelihood that that horse would make it to the races.

According to the study, that genetic marker (EFNA5) is responsible for encoding the ephrin ligand, which is broadly expressed during tissue development and repair. Among its roles are: neonatal muscle development and regeneration, regulation of cardiomyocytes, skeletal development, fracture repair, and cartilage repair.

Of the horses studied, only 64 were homozygous for that genetic marker. Those horses had a 32 percent lower predicted probability of making it to the races. In addition, those that did make it to the races had an average of 13.3 races, compared to the sample average of 16.3 races.

“The known biological functions of EFNA5 and the haplotype association with the probability of racing that we report here lead to the hypothesis that it may play a role in musculoskeletal injury risk; however, this must be tested in a population of horses with well-defined phenotypes,” the authors wrote. “While the nature of the hypothesized causative mutation on THR14 is not known, we provide here strong evidence for the presence of a mutation with a negative effect on racing located within this haplotype that has not previously been described.”

The scientists involved in the study included a conflict of interest declaration in the published materials. Dr. Emmeline Hill is the co-founder of Plusvital and is a shareholder; Dr. Beatrice McGivney is an employee of Plusvital; and David MacHugh is a shareholder in Plusvital. The University of Edinburgh (Drs. Martin Stoffel and Josephine Pemberton) was contracted by Plusvital Ltd to perform some aspects of the analyses. Other than the authors, the funders played no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. A patent application has been filed (patent pending; European Application no. 22176585.2), which relates to contents of the manuscript.

The full study is available here: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2022.0487#d28984323e1

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