NSA: Busy Week Ahead For Jumpers At Colonial, Saratoga

As the summer steeplechase season winds down, four races are on tap this week at Colonial Downs in Virginia and Saratoga in upstate New York. It's a busier week than usual as a result of the rescheduling of the $75,000 Michael G. Walsh novice stakes at the Spa, which was postponed by heavy overnight rain on Aug. 23 and recarded for Thursday Sept. 1.

First up, however, are a pair of maiden hurdles at 2 ¼ miles at Colonial on Monday. The opener, with a 12:15 p.m. post time, is a $40,000 maiden special weights contest for 4-year-olds and up that has drawn a prospective field of nine.

The second race, at 12:50 p.m, is a $30,000 starter race for horses who have been entered for a claiming tag of $25,000 or less, either on the flat or over jumps. The race has drawn 10 entries.

For full entries, click here: https://nationalsteeplechase.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Colonial-August29-WedEntries.pdf. You can watch the races via live stream from the National Steeplechase Association home page, www.nationalsteeplechase.com.

On Wednesday at Saratoga, eight horses are expected to go postward in a $70,000 allowance hurdle at 2 ⅜ miles for non-winners of two, or those who haven't won a race other than a maiden, claiming, or ratings handicap of 115 or less. Post time for jump races at Saratoga is 1:05 p.m. Click here for the entries: https://nationalsteeplechase.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/NYRA-Saratoga-August31-Overnight.pdf

The final stakes race of the Saratoga season is the Walsh at 2 ⅜ miles on Thursday. Here's a rundown of the field:

Leading the list of contenders are Irv Naylor's Scorpion's Revenge and Holwood Stable's Decisive Triumph. In his brief, five-race career Scorpion's Revenge, trained by Cyril Murphy, has three victories. He became a stakes winner in his first try, the Green Pastures novice hurdle at Iroquois in May, his most recent start. In that race, at the slightly shorter distance of 2 ¼ miles, Scorpion's Revenge ran down Decisive Triumph for a 3 ¼-length victory.

Unlike lightly raced Scorpion's Revenge, Decisive Triumph is a hard-knocking seasoned veteran, who has earned more than a quarter-million dollars on the flat and over jumps. While he's still looking for his first stakes score, the nine-year-old son of Kitten's Joy, trained by Mark Beecher, has come oh-so-close, with three seconds and a third in novice company. Earlier this month he was second to Howyabud, beaten less than two lengths, in the Jonathan Kiser novice stakes at the Spa.

Leading NSA trainer Leslie Young saddles Leipers Fork Steeplechasers' Perfect Tapatino and Fast Vision, and Maranto Manor's newcomer Lydford. Perfect Tapatino, an eight-time winner of $162,000, was in the hunt for the first mile and a half of the Kiser before tiring. He also hit the board in two allowance races at the Spa last year. British-bred five-year-old Lydford, who made his U.S. debut in the Kiser, wasn't a factor. Fast Vision is coming off a career-best effort, a 7 ¼-length romp in a handicap for horses rated at 115 or less at Iroquois.

Keri Brion saddles a pair. Atlantic Friends Racing's Theocrat exits a length-and-a-half victory in a 115 handicap at Colonial Downs on July 18. Upland Flats Racing's Freddy Flintshire, a four-year-old son of Flintshire, is two for three this year, and turned heads at Saratoga earlier in the meet with a come-from-behind 4 ¾-length tally in a non-winners of two allowance. This is his first stakes try.

Since the Walsh was postponed and redrawn, one additional competitor has been added to the field: South Branch Equine's Who's Counting. Trained and ridden by Sean McDermott, the Maryland-bred is a winner on the flat and over jumps in 2022. Following a maiden claiming score at the Middleburg Spring Races, he finished second twice, beaten a length, in both the $50,000 Sport of Kings hurdle stakes for four-year-olds at Great Meadow, and a turf allowance on the flat at Laurel. The gelding continued to show his versatility, winning a starter allowance on the turf and a handicap hurdle, for horses rated at 115 or less, at Colonial Downs this summer.

Here are the complete entries: https://nationalsteeplechase.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/NYRA-Saratoga-Overnight-Sept1.pdf

NYRA races are broadcast live on Fox2 TV, with replays available on NYRA website, https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/replays. You can also live stream the races from Colonial and the Spa via the NSA website, www.nationalsteeplechase.com.

The season concludes on Sept. 5 at Colonial Downs.

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Barn Buddies Presented By Dapple Up: A Different Form Of Rodent Control

With horses comes grain. With grain comes mice and rats. It's a universal truth battled by horsemen in many ways through the years, from sturdy bins to cats to a Jack Russell Terrier named George. 

Trainer Amira Chichakly has a different solution. They require an oversized plastic cage, and often confuse her toddler's toys for theirs.

Their names are Jagger and Slim Jim, and they are ferrets.

“I had a ferret when I was a kid briefly,” said Chichakly. “And I knew they would go after mice, and that even the smell of them would drive away mice. Actually the first time I brought them to Belmont, the rats cleared out. They didn't disappear, but they stopped coming into the barn. Then they got used to it a little bit, they came back, and then I started letting [the ferrets] loose in the shed.”

When Chichakly first acquired them from a pet store near Belmont a few months ago, they were too young and too unfamiliar with a stable setting to roam freely around the barn. About the time they got big enough to do some serious hunting, it was time for Saratoga, where there isn't a rodent problem. While she doesn't have a lot of data to go on, she suspects they're going to earn their keep as rat-catchers when they return to Belmont.

“I'm excited to let them loose at Belmont to let them hunt for a few hours instead of just 30 minutes a day,” she said. “People apparently sell ferret-soaked papers and bedding to get rid of mice, so you don't even really need the ferret. But my guess is the genetically-modified pseudo rats we have at Belmont wouldn't care so much. They'd figure it out.”

Jagger and Jim are both leash-trained and (sometimes) come when called. They're also faster than you may expect of a creature with such short legs, darting around and disappearing into holes they've made under the barn office or storage shed. They spend training hours in their cage in the shade outside Chichakly's barn and hop around the yard after horses are put away for the morning. Chichakly will sometimes leave one in the cage while the other plays to keep them from getting bold and wandering too far, but they mostly seem, like a barn cat or dog, to know their territory and stay nearby on their own. They showed some initial interest in the horses, but have learned decorum at the ripe age of five months.

Saskia (the dog) comes face to face with Jagger and Jim

“They seem to have no understanding of their own mortality,” she said. “When I first got them, Jimmy, day one, goes into the stalls, bites a horse on the foot. Looks at it, sniffs it, bites. Now that they're a little older, they now know the foot is attached to a whole horse and you don't do that.”

At the time, the three-month-old ferret's teeth weren't much to write home about and didn't even leave a mark on the horse's pastern. Rather, the filly snorted at the ferret in surprise, and he evidently rethought his priorities.

Ferrets are odd creatures for those unfamiliar with them. Chichakly says they have the attitude of a puppy with the fluid spine of a snake. If you pick one up, they feel much like a furry Slinky toy, wriggling and wobbling in all directions without a care.

That's assuming you can catch one. Jim and Jagger spent a recent morning darting from one side of Chichakly's storage shed to another, trying to make off with a bath sponge, and ignoring a bag of their own feed while trying to climb into a bag of the horses' grain.

They've gotten used to being carried or slung over the shoulder of Chichakly's daughter Kriya, who enjoys carting them around. Although they're not given to sit still long enough to request pats from humans in the same way a dog or cat would, they are social.

Chichakly's daughter, Kriya, frequently carries the ferrets from place to place, which they don't seem to mind.

“They're unlike anything and they're both terrifyingly creepy and adorable,” she said. “They want to be a part of our family. They'll search us out.”

Despite their quirks, Chichakly said the mischievous pair have a certain charm to them.

“They're very loyal animals,” she said. “And I'd say they're a lot smarter than your average Labrador. You'll see them figure things out. You have to watch the latches [on the cage] and double latch them because they'll figure that out from the inside. They come in the feed room all the time, and they know where they left things. You'll see them plan things. It probably serves them well when it comes to hunting rats and mice.”

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Real Rider Cup Returns To Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show

The Real Rider Cup, a charity show jumping event created by Anita Motion to benefit Thoroughbred aftercare, is once again bringing the racing and equestrian worlds together in Fair Hill, Md. Following a record-breaking inaugural run in Lexington in July, the Maryland leg of the event returns to its home at the Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show on Friday evening, Sept. 16. A talented lineup of familiar faces mounted on some real horsepower will take center stage!

Past winner Penelope Miller returns for her fifth Real Rider Cup, riding once again for Team Racing Media. Past top fundraiser Keira Nygaard, whose parents Erik and Pavla own and operate Thor-Bred Stables, was among the leaders in Kentucky and comes now to Maryland with her eyes on the top prize. Paddock analyst and host for America's Day at the Races and Saratoga Live, Maggie Wolfendale Morley, returns for her second Real Rider Cup. 1/ST Racing once again maintains a strong presence with Maryland Jockey Club's marketing & events manager Brittlan Wall and analyst/broadcaster Kali Francois, among others. MidAtlantic Equine Medical Center also steps to support, furnishing a team of its own. And don't count out the kids: Team Racing Kids is back with a strong lineup!

No one does horse racing like Maryland, and some of the state's best racehorses will be demonstrating their talent in a new career. Two-time winner of the Maryland Million Turf, multiple stakes winner and earner of $434,801 Phlash Phelps will be in attendance with Sabrina Morris. Multiple stakes placed warhorse Grandiflora, winner of $357,334 will also compete with junior rider Jaidyn Shore in the tack. From outside of Maryland, Maggie Morley will be riding multiple stakes winner Ninety One Assault, who earned $440,283.

There's plenty of time to get involved to show your support: while the roster of riders is closed, title sponsorships are still available for the Maryland event and riders are actively fundraising to meet their pledges. Spectators are encouraged and there is no cost for admission. Come for the thrilling competition and stay for the lively afterparty! Refreshments will be on hand courtesy of Wesley's and Spring House Spirits with live music by Release. Learn more and donate today at therealridercup.com!

All proceeds benefit the Retired Racehorse Project, New Vocations Thoroughbred Adoption and the Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show.

Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show is a 501c3 organization supporting riders of Thoroughbreds by providing affordable show fees, scholarships, stakes classes and prizes in every division. By supporting their riders, we are helping more OTTBs find second careers.

The Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) is a 501(c)3 charitable organization working to increase demand for off-track Thoroughbreds in the equestrian world. In addition to producing the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium the world's largest and most lucrative retraining competition for recently-retired racehorses, the organization also publishes Off-Track Thoroughbred Magazine, produces the Master Class retraining clinic series, and presents programming at major horse expos and events around the country. The RRP maintains an educational library of content to empower more equestrians to ride a Thoroughbred.

Founded in 1992, New Vocations has grown into the largest racehorse adoption program in the country. Its mission to rehabilitate, retrain and rehome retired Thoroughbred and Standardbred racehorse has led to the placement of over 7,000 individuals, with 500 retirees entering the program each year. With facilities in Kentucky, Louisiana, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania, New Vocations serves over 40 racetracks, working directly with owners and trainers in need of aftercare options.

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Dale Day: The Passionate and Prepared Voice of Remington Park

On opening night at Remington Park in August, Dale Day sits atop his Oklahoma perch. That’s a nest that can be a lonely spot, as Day peers through the binoculars from the announcer’s booth. But Day has his share of company; there are equine athletes hearing his call over the loudspeakers, and every now and then, humans listen as well. Day speaks with an even tone, whether it is one on one or to the multitude. If he needs exhilaration for a stretch run, it’s at the ready.

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