New Mexico-Based Todd Fincher Proving He Belongs At Del Mar

It may not look like it on paper, but trainer Todd Fincher is pleased with how his summer has gone at Del Mar. Sometimes progress is not necessarily measured in victories. Going into Saturday's racing, Fincher has one winner out of eleven starts with a second and two thirds.

“It's been okay,” Fincher says. “My numbers aren't the best but a lot of the horses have run good. We've brought some good horses and we're not running in claiming races so we're going up against the best. A couple have not run to expectations but we're getting a feel for them.”

Not quite what he's used to in New Mexico and in the Midwest at Lone Star Park and Remington Park, where Fincher has made many a trip to the winner's circle. He's compiled over $1 million in earnings every year since 2009.

Fincher has brought six horses to Del Mar this year. Senor Buscador ran third in the G2 Pat O'Brien Saturday and Slammed won an allowance by five lengths at Del Mar last month.

“I've been coming (to Del Mar) for years,” Fincher says. “The first time I came here with horses was 2018 and I just didn't bring the right type of horses. Live and learn through the years. Obviously, I wouldn't come here unless I have the quality. We have a Grade 2 and Grade 3 (this weekend), hopefully they'll run good because they're very nice horses.”

Fincher is all too familiar with how to play the game. He grew up in the racing business.

“My dad was a jockey and he rode for 25-to-30 years,” Fincher says, “and my mom trained so I grew up in it. When I was 16, I was a jockey for 10 years. I won over 900 races on Quarter Horses and Thoroughbreds but I couldn't keep my weight down anymore. I did it as long as I could and I was blessed to do it.”

He approaches the task of training the same way he did riding, and the results have been encouraging.

“We've built our business from the ground up,” Fincher says. “We're doing great in New Mexico and we're expanding and getting better quality Kentucky-breds. We're going to Remington and Lone Star, Texas and Oklahoma.”

The New Mexico circuit has been very good to Fincher. He scored his first and only graded stakes race with Runaway Ghost in the 2018 Sunland Derby at Sunland Park. The son of Ghostzapper would win six of his eight races at Sunland, all stakes, and eventually compile $783,509 in earnings.

But with all of the success Fincher has enjoyed in New Mexico, Del Mar remains a summer destination.

“Obviously, if we got good enough horses we want to come here,” Fincher says. “Everybody loves it. The horses love it, I love it, the owners love it. If you got the quality you want to come out here and run against the best.“

The post New Mexico-Based Todd Fincher Proving He Belongs At Del Mar appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Kentucky Downs: Grade 1 Winner In Love Tops Overflow Field For Opening Day Tapit Stakes

If Thursday's $400,000 FanDuel Tapit Stakes is an indication, Kentucky Downs is in for a tremendous meet. The Tapit, at a mile and 70 yards, is restricted to horses that haven't won a stakes in 2022. But that doesn't mean the horses aren't accomplished.

The 15 horses entered Saturday for the Tapit include the winners of last year's Grade 1 Keeneland Turf Mile (In Love, who won a division of the Tapit in the prior race); Grade 2 Santa Anita Mathis Mile winner (Law Professor); $750,000 Big Ass Fans Dueling Grounds Derby (Accredit, making his first start in a year); and Grade 3 Jeff Ruby Steaks (Like the King).

The Brazilian-bred In Love, who drew post 12, is trained by Paulo Lobo for owner Bonne Chance Farm, which also teamed to win last year's $1 million Calumet Turf Cup (G2) at Kentucky Downs with Imperador. In Love finished a respectable seventh, beaten a total of 3 1/2 lengths, in last fall's Breeders' Cup Mile at Del Mar. He was eighth in his two starts this year, both Grade 1 races.

Also in the Tapit:

  • Megacity finished first in the Texas Turf Classic in his last start but was disqualified to second behind his stablemate Field Pass
  • Peace Achieved, trying to regain his form that saw him win the Kentucky Downs Juvenile Mile and Keeneland's Grade 3 Bourbon in 2019
  • 2020 Tapit winner Ramsey Solution, who romped in his only start this year
  • Woodbine allowance winner Souper Dormy, in his first stakes since finishing a very close third at 47-1 in Kentucky Downs' 2019 Franklin-Simpson
  • multiple graded stakes-placed and 11-time winner Shadow Sphinx, making his first start for California trainer Kristin Mulhall after being claimed for $50,000. The 7-year-old Shadow Sphinx would be in his first stakes in his 29th start and after earning $341,152.

Twelve horses can start in the Tapit, with Spanish Kingdom, Bakers Bay and Newsworthy on the also-eligible list and requiring defections by 9 a.m. CT on race day to run.

The Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund accounts for $200,000 of the purse, for which only registered Kentucky-breds are eligible.

Eight of the 10 races are Thursday's card drew at least 12 horses.

The post Kentucky Downs: Grade 1 Winner In Love Tops Overflow Field For Opening Day Tapit Stakes appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Flying Start Grad Lindsay Schultz off to a Flying Start

Lindsay Schultz checked a lot of boxes. She is a graduate of the University of Louisville's Equine Industry Program, moved on to the prestigious Godolphin Flying Start program, managed Glen Hill Farm in Florida and worked as an assistant to Tom Proctor and Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey. Yet, she admits to being nervous and not knowing what to expect when she decided last fall to go out on her own as a trainer. Maybe she shouldn't have been.

Less than a year after opening her stable, Schultz, 34, is making a name for herself at Monmouth Park, where she has six winners from 22 starters for a winning rate of 22%. Overall in her brief career, she is 11 for 61, good for 18%.

“This is definitely beyond my expectations,” she said. “I have exceeded my goals.”

Schultz rode hunter-jumpers while growing up in Connecticut and enrolled in the racing program at the University of Louisville. It was not, however, until she entered the Godolphin program that she decided she wanted to be a trainer.

“I knew I wanted to be in the industry, but didn't know exactly what,” she said. “When I went into the Flying Start program I got to see every aspect of the industry and decided I wanted to focus on the racing part. Once I started working for Tom Proctor as his assistant, I thought maybe I could do this myself and do a good job.”

Along the way, she caught the attention of Marshall Gramm, who runs the Ten Strike Racing Partnership. Schultz and bloodstock advisor Liz Crow are close friends and Crow has had a long and fruitful business relationship with Ten Strike. Gramm has helped a number of young trainers kick off their careers and, in Schultz, he saw someone he was happy to take a chance on.

“I was talking to her around this time last year and it was clear she was at a stage where she was about to go out on her own,” Gramm said. “We had discussions about it last summer and I told her that if she was going to do it she should come to Oaklawn Park and that I could use her there. I told her that it would be a good place to start and I thought I could really help here there. It's a track I want to win at.”

“That I had the backing of Ten Strike and Marshall was huge,” Schultz said. “It's a good feeling to have someone who is so intelligent put his faith in me and helped me get started. It really meant a lot. The opportunity that he gave me was the biggest reason why I thought it was a good time to try this.”

Gramm didn't exactly hand her the keys to a 50-horse stable filled with stakes horses. Schultz told him she thought she could get by if Ten Strike gave her six to seven horses and she was fine with taking on claimers. Her first winner came with a $10,000 claimer at Oaklawn, Capture the Glory (Scat Daddy). Another winner at Oaklawn came with Tiger Moon (Upstart). Schultz talked Gramm into claiming him for $10,000 out of a maiden claiming race. She bumped him up to a $40,000 maiden claimer for his next start and he won at 29-1. (Gramm, an astute and enthusiastic horseplayer said he did not have a bet that day on Tiger Moon).

What Gramm did give her was the chance to prove that she could make the most of an opportunity.

It was Gramm who suggested that Schultz head to Monmouth after the Oaklawn meet ended.

“She has really blossomed at Monmouth,” Gramm said. “The competition is little bit easier there. We realized we could take some horses who were average horses at Oaklawn who would be be successful at Monmouth. She's really hit her stride there and it's exciting to watch. She works really hard and knows her stuff. I've been very pleased and impressed and I am excited to be part of her burgeoning career.”

Schultz has 14 horses at Monmouth, seven of them for Ten Strike. The stable includes five 2-year-olds, none of whom have started yet this year.

While happy to have accomplished so much so early in her career, Schultz makes no secrets of her aspirations to take things to the next level.

“I'd like to get up to maybe 40 horses to be able to have two strings,” she said. “It would be nice to be able to utilize two different circuits. I'd like to keep improving the quality. Obviously, to get to there you need the horses and you need the owners. All I'm trying to do is to do a good job, go to the sales and go to big race meets, meet people, talk to people. I am not a big self-promoter, but I hope if I keep doing a good job and keep looking for new opportunities they will come my way.”

Can it happen? Gramm believes that it can.

“Lindsay is going to need to find some other owners willing to take a chance on her and she's going to need to get some good 2-year-olds in her barn,” Gramm said. “Claiming is a way to get noticed and get your first set of owners, but, ultimately, you need to show you can develop some nice horses and win some stakes races. That's what gets you more and more noticed. Each year is a baby step. She's gone from five horses to 14 and has some 2-year-olds in her barn. That's a great place to be after a year. Hopefully, she can keep the momentum going and pick up some more owners. She has such a great background and I'm excited for her considering where she's at at such an early stage in her career.”

The post Flying Start Grad Lindsay Schultz off to a Flying Start appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘More And More Popular Every Year’: Kentucky Downs’ 2022 Turf Meet Begins Sept. 1

Rising from novelty to niche to national leader, Kentucky Downs begins its 31st race meet Thursday, Sept. 1, at the all-grass track hard on the Tennessee border, 20 minutes south of Bowling Green, Ky., and a half-hour north of Nashville.

The FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs runs Sept. 1, 3, 4, 8, 10, 11 and 14, the most dates since the track also ran seven in 2003. Post time for the first race is 12:25 p.m. Central (1:25 p.m. Eastern) every day except for the 11:30 a.m. CT/12:30 p.m. ET start for the Saturday Sept. 10's showcase card.

“We look for the race meet to be largely more of the same,” said Ted Nicholson, Kentucky Downs' vice president for racing. “In the case of Kentucky Downs, that's become a very good thing: record purses, full fields, low takeout, the best jockeys and trainers in the country and the best extended turf racing outside of Europe.

“Still, we do have new features: a Spanish-language broadcast and web content in partnership with Daily Racing Form, two new barns and wifi throughout the facility. And we're always working to enhance our video product.”

For horse and sports enthusiasts, as well as those seeking an outdoor entertainment option, Kentucky Downs' slice-of-Americana atmosphere offers unique experiences from the free admission in front of the Mint Gaming Hall and tailgating at the top of the stretch to the ticketed open-air Finish Line Pavilion.

Reserved seating in the Finish Line Pavilion remains available for online purchase every day but Sept. 10, which is sold out. Tickets are sold in tables of eight or groups of four at kentuckydowns.ticketspice.com/tickets. New this year: Individual tickets will be sold both online and at the track on race day as inventory permits.

The jockeys and trainers expected to compete at Kentucky Downs are a Who's Who of horse racing, including at least seven Eclipse Award-winners, nine winners of Triple Crown races and 13 winners of Breeders' Cup races. Those include past meet leaders Tyler Gaffalione, Florent Geroux and Julien Leparoux, who will ride all seven days at the meet, while New York-based stars Joel Rosario, Jose Ortiz and Irad Ortiz will ride after Saratoga closes on Labor Day.

“It's gotten more and more popular every year — more people going, not just running,” said trainer Rusty Arnold, whose 26 career wins at Kentucky Downs rank fifth all-time. “I love the place. It's just unique. I grew up in Kentucky. I like the atmosphere. It's a little more relaxed; it's not stuffy. I kind of compare it to tailgating before a football game.”

At 1 5/16-miles, Kentucky Downs' kidney-shaped course matches Belmont Park's Widener Turf Course as the largest grass track in North America. Kentucky Downs, however, has dips and rises and an expansive far turn that starts as right-handed before sweeping to the left and ultimately taking the horses into the long dog-legged stretch.

The track opened in 1990 as Dueling Grounds, a steeplechase course literally dropped down in a field. After several ownership changes and years of struggle – including shutting down in the mid-1990s — the track gained stability and championed a game-changer by instituting historical horse racing in 2011. Kentucky Downs' growth has skyrocketed under the ownership group headed by Ron Winchell and Marc Falcone, who bought the track in 2019 and rebranded its historical horse racing operation as The Mint Gaming Hall at Kentucky Downs.

Horses this meet will compete for more than $18 million, including purse supplements for registered Kentucky-breds from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF). Maiden races for Kentucky-breds will go for $150,000, highest in the world, with allowance races $160,000 and $170,000.

“To a small guy who might only have one or two horses in training, that makes his year if he can win one of those races,” said trainer Tommy Drury.

Said jockey Rafael Bejarano: “Even if you finish second or third, the purse of the races are so high, they're huge. It's one of the best meets in the United States. Everybody gets excited.”

There will be 17 stakes races worth more than $10 million, including eight graded stakes. Three races will be worth $1 million: The Grade 2 Kentucky Turf Cup at 1 1/2 miles and Grade 2 FanDuel Turf Sprint at six furlongs, both on Sept. 10, and the Grade 3 WinStar Mint Million at a mile that headlines the Sept. 3 card.

The Turf Cup and Turf Sprint are Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” Challenge Series races, with their winners receiving a fees-paid spot in the corresponding races in the Breeders' Cup World Championships Nov. 5 at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington. NBC Sports will broadcast both races.

Three other stakes set for Sept. 10 will see their purse rise to $1 million if a Grade 1 winner competes in the race. They are the $750,000 Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf (G3) at a mile, $600,000 The Mint Ladies Sprint (G3) at 6 1/2 furlongs and $600,000 Franklin-Simpson (G2) for 3-year-olds at 6 1/2 furlongs.

The post ‘More And More Popular Every Year’: Kentucky Downs’ 2022 Turf Meet Begins Sept. 1 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights