HISA’s Changing Regs Around Hind Toes Caused Big Headaches For Farriers This Summer

How did the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority come to write a rule calling for a hind horseshoe that didn't exist?

That was the question farriers, horseshoe manufacturers, trainers, and stakeholders have spent much of this summer asking each other. The answer is a complicated one, and gives insight into the rule-making process for the nascent organization.

The first task for the Authority after its creation was to create a set of rules addressing track safety, which was a broad category that ultimately covered everything from concussion screening to whip use to veterinary exams for horses. Part of the 2000 rule series (which you can view here) also dealt with shoeing requirements.

For several years now, horseshoes have been part of the puzzle researchers have looked at in sweeping academic studies on fatality risk. Dr. Sue Stover, professor of surgical and radiological science at the University of California-Davis, has long been one of the foremost researchers into catastrophic injuries in racing, bolstered by years of data gathered by the California Horse Racing Board. She's also the chair of the Authority's racetrack safety standing committee.

As the committee considered rules for horseshoes, Stover drew upon her experience and that of others.

“The research that's been performed and information in the literature [suggests] that toe grabs have been associated with increased risk for, predominantly, fetlock injuries, suspensory apparatus breakdown, and lateral condylar fractures, and those are the major causes for fatality in our jurisdiction,” said Stover. “It seemed appropriate to limit the use of toe grabs on horse shoes with the goal of reducing fatalities.

“We also recognize that toe grabs are not allowed in several international racing jurisdictions that have much lower fatality rates than the United States, jurisdictions that have less than a third or a half of the fatalities we have in the United States.”

Toe grabs are small, rectangular plates protruding downward from the toe of a shoe and are designed to help a horse dig into a soft surface better. They come in all different heights, with the conventional toe being about 5.5 millimeters from shoe surface to the end that touches the ground. Veterinarians and farriers believe that the reason toe grabs are associated with higher rates of injury is that they're changing the angle of the horse's foot. When the foot is placed on the ground, especially paved or packed surfaces that are common on many backstretches, the toe grab rocks the foot back at an uneven height from front to back. This could place extra stress on the soft tissues on the back of the leg.

A farrier shows a pair of shoes with a standard, 5.5-millimeter toe grab

Dr. Shawn Morrell, podiatrist at Rood and Riddle Saratoga, said the grabs may exacerbate other hoof problems.

“There's a lot of factors that go into a potential injury,” he said. “It's not just toe grabs, but there's a good possibility they can cause injury if they're applied to a horse who has a certain type of conformation whether that's very low or crushed heels.”

The long toe/low heel combination is particularly common on the racetrack, sometimes due to intentional trimming but often due to crushed heels and hoof capsule distortion.

(Read more about the long toe/low heel issue in our previous reporting here.)

A horse with long toe and low heel is already putting more strain on the backs of its legs than one with a properly conformed foot. Add a toe grab to that, and the issue can be compounded.

The problem, Morrell and others said, is that almost all of the academic research about the association between toe grabs and racing injury focused on toe grabs on the front feet, not the hinds, and much of it looked at multiple factors, not just toe grabs.

Still, drawing upon the research that was available, the committee penned Rule 2276, which originally stated that “traction devices” (like toe grabs) were prohibited on front and hind limbs, with the exception of full rims measuring 2 millimeters. (Rims are similar in shape to toe grabs but go all the way around the outer edge of the shoe, meaning the horse has some traction but the foot is not being elevated in just one spot.)

Farriers said they didn't have much issue with letting go of toe grabs on front feet. Some told the Paulick Report many of their clients had stopped using them through the years, as more and more studies identified them as potential risk factors for injury. But the hind feet were a different matter. Shoe manufacturers make different shoes for front versus hind feet, since they tend to be slightly different shapes. When HISA's rules became official and the July 1 implementation deadline ticked nearer, farriers say there was no hind aluminum shoe with a 2-millimeter rim being manufactured for use in racing across the four primary race plate manufacturers.

Pat Broaddus is a Kentucky-based farrier who also works for Victory Racing Plate Company, one of the two domestic manufacturers of racing shoes. He says the company invested six figures into making a new shoe that would comply with the regulation.

“I switched most of my practice to a 2-millimeter wear plate in the last five years,” said Broaddus. “I counted up one time this winter I had probably over 600 head of horses on the books and I probably had three with toe grabs on.”

[Farriers refer to very small toe grabs as 'wear plates' since at the 2-millimeter size, they're too small to function as meaningful traction devices, but they do reduce the amount of wear on the toe of the shoe, which tends to get shoved forward with each step and takes more friction.]

With the new rule though, a 2-millimeter toe grab would no longer be allowed; only a 2-millimeter full rim. So, Victory and others got to work creating hind shoes with 2-millimeter rims. Initially, there was a delay in implementation of the shoe rule, which the Authority attributed to a lack of preparedness among shoe manufacturers.

Broaddus says this isn't accurate, that Victory and Thoroughbred Race Plates, the two domestic shoe makers, were prepared to go forward with their new 2-millimeter rimmed hind shoes on July 1. Still, a grace period is a grace period. Broaddus began talking to people who were using the 2-millimeter rims and some of them didn't think it was going well.

Some farriers who were using the new shoe were finding the aluminum sides of the 2-millimeter rim were wearing down faster than the steel toe. This meant that toward the end of a trimming cycle, when the shoe had suffered most of its wear, the sides of the rim were gone but the toe still remained – creating a soon-to-be-illegal toe grab.

Then, Broaddus said, everyone was blindsided.

On July 29, the Authority released the following statement, printed here in part:

“In the last week, the Racetrack Safety Committee (“the Committee”) was made aware through communications from elected officials on Capitol Hill and from horsepersons of widespread concerns that the traction provided by full outer rim shoes and toe grabs for the hindlimbs is essential for the safety of horses in certain circumstances. These circumstances include breaking from the gate and track conditions that are impacted by ambient temperature or precipitation (including maintenance procedures such as watering the track). The concerns are that reduced traction will result in horses either slipping, falling, or otherwise being unable to firmly grip the track surface, with resulting injury to horses and their riders.

“After full consideration of the matter, the Committee strongly recommended the use of full outer rim shoes for hindlimb traction because these shoes provide traction while enabling the hoof to land flatly on the track surface, whereas toe grabs accentuate stressors on bone and soft tissues, such as tendons and ligaments, which contributes to injury. Moreover, the only study investigating the association of hindlimb toe grabs with injury revealed that injuries to the suspensory apparatus were more likely to occur to horses shod with hindlimb toe grabs. In contrast, there is no evidence indicating that toe grabs protect horses or riders. However, given the concerns expressed, the Committee recommended to HISA that Rule 2276 shall not be enforced for horses racing on dirt surfaces that are shod on the hindlimbs with traction devices in the form of either a full outer rim shoe (up to 4 mm in height) or a toe grab (up to 4 mm in height).”

So what happened?

“The racetrack safety committee came out with this rule quite some time ago, and during the public comment period there was actually very little feedback specifically on the rule,” said Lisa Lazarus, CEO of the Authority. “There were some who didn't like it, there were some who were saying, 'finally, the U.S. is going to come up to international standard,' and there were some questions about enforcement, but there was not a groundswell of public engagement during those two comment periods.

“In June and then post-July 1, we started to hear some concerns and pushback from horsemen, and also from senators, particularly Sen. Grassley … trying to be the intermediary between the committee in our stakeholder groups, I kept asking, come back to me with what's wrong with the rule and some sort of rationale of what you think would make it better. If you do that, if anybody does that, I will present it to the racetrack safety committee.

“The THA group, led by Alan Foreman, came to us with a proposal. I thought their proposal was reasonable and the committee needed to hear it. The majority of people who care about equine welfare seem to agree that front toe grabs are off the table. And most of the research Sue has alluded to is focused on the front.

“The proposal from the THA was limited to the hind and it was to increase the allowance to four millimeters. The four-millimeter suggestion on the hind was not something that came organically from the committee. It was a proposal from horsemen that the committee considered. The group was formed of a farrier, a couple of well-known trainers and owners, a group that had a good reputation generally.”

The problem many farriers see with that language is that many racetrackers are going to want the maximum of whatever tool they're being allowed. If they can have a 4-millimeter rim or a 4-millimeter toe grab on a hind foot, they're going to want that.

The trouble is, shoe makers don't manufacture a 4-millimeter hind toe grab, either. They do make a conventional toe grab, which is about 5.5 millimeters.

“What we found subsequently is the four millimeters is a very standard shoe on the front, and I think that's where horsemen came up with that,” said Lazarus. “We didn't learn until after that discussion that there wasn't currently a 4-millimeter shoe on the hind available. Just to be frank, we took this group at their word; we probably should have gone back and checked that, but the proposal had been quite heavily vetted and discussed. That didn't occur to us.”

Farriers are modifying the conventional 5.5-millimeter hind toe grabs they have in an attempt to comply with the rule.

“We get home from work and are grinding literally a couple hundred shoes trying to make them legal,” said farrier Gary Gullo.

Meanwhile, farriers like Broaddus who stocked up on the 2-millimeters are out of luck.

“I have a lot of horses on the books,” he said. “I buy tons of bulk. I've put out $41,000 of my own money on shoes that were legal up until two days before they were not. I mean, they're still legal, it's just no one's going to want to use them if you can use a toe grab. So now I have this huge inventory here.”

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For farriers who have, on average, an 18 to 25% profit margin, buying in bulk is a primary part of the business plan

Gullo said he feels lucky, because he only bought 40 pairs of the new shoes, preferring to stick to the flat Queen's Plate shoe on hind feet as he waited to see how things would shake out.

The opinion of farriers seems to vary on whether hind feet actually need traction. The group of horsemen who presented to the committee believed this was crucial to avoid horses slipping. Broaddus is less sure.

“Everybody talks about how it's a new rule. It's a new rule in the U.S.,” he said. “Most of the world does not use toe grabs. I talk to farriers all over the world all the time and they see no concern with it. Seeing as I'd already switched for the last four or five years, I saw no concerns either.

“How many grass races have you seen where a horse just falls down? Because toe grabs haven't been allowed on the grass in years, and grass is slicker than dirt.”

Gullo said he's always used toe grabs on hind feet. He shod several Derby runners this year. Two of them – Summer Is Tomorrow and Crown Pride – shipped from overseas, where toe grabs are prohibited altogether, and ran with flat hind shoes. They set some of the fastest early fractions in Derby history.

“I'm not even sure what to think,” he said. “Everybody acts like you've got to have toe grabs.

“I don't know how much data there is for rear end toe grabs. I understand the front end; I don't really have that much problem with the front end [toe grabs being eliminated]. But in the back, people like having a little bit of something.”

Now, shoe manufacturers are in a tight spot. Do they change course and forge a new shoe again? During the Saratoga meet this year, several farriers were hearing rumors the rule may change yet again to allow standard-sized grabs on hinds. Lazarus says this is not true, and the committee does not plan to make further changes unless they see data indicating there's a safety problem. If they don't, their competitors may outpace them. If they do, they're going to have to pass that cost along somewhere.

Farriers will, too. The nice part about the original rule, Broaddus said, is it would have allowed horses to stay in the same shoes between dirt and turf racing, reducing the number of changes for horses and charges to owners and trainers.

Lazarus also said enforcement of the rule is going to be tricky.

“When it comes down to a half-millimeter, a millimeter, I imagine that's very difficult to enforce,” she said. “I don't think the committee has an issue with that because we recognize there's a transition period, especially if the majority of the grabs are 5.5 and they're grinding down, we recognize it's not going to be perfect during this period of time while we're waiting for the new four-millimeter grabs to become available.”

Ultimately, from Lazarus' perspective, the evolution of the rule is a victory. It showed that the Authority is willing to listen and respond to the industry – a message she has been trying to convey since the group began its work.

“We're learned a lot at the Authority and the committee through this process and trying to get it right,” said Lazarus. “We have strategies and procedures now for engaging more with all of the stakeholders, including farriers and manufacturers. I think that's definitely something we want to do better at going forward.”

Trainer Mark Casse, when asked about the back and forth, preferred to look at the big picture.

“It's a work in progress and any time you make big changes there's a lot of things that can happen,” he said last month. “I look at it as a positive. They're not set in their rules. They're trying to do what's best.

“Did we need to make changes to the shoeing? Yes. There was too much going on. It wasn't fair. It's all about the safety of the horse and a level playing field.

“I'm sorry to the blacksmiths, but they're just trying to figure it out.”

Gullo agrees that once there is some stability in the rule, most people will probably adapt.

“After 90, 100 days, people will get used to this,” he said.

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Co-Breeders Costello, Caldara Farm Helped Give Prince Of Wales Winner Duke Of Love His Starting Point

Pat Costello, Callan Strouss, and Darcia Fantucchio had just finished up day two at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale on Tuesday, and they'd found a corner of the patio bar behind the pavilion's back ring just quiet enough to catch a race on one of their phones.

By the time Duke of Love kicked away from Ironstone down the muddy Fort Erie stretch to secure the Prince of Wales Stakes, the second leg of Canada's Triple Crown, that corner of the patio wasn't too quiet anymore.

Costello, along with the husband/wife team of Strouss and Fantucchio doing business as Caldara Farm, were half of the partnership of breeders that brought the Prince of Wales winner into the world, joining David Whitford and Tom Zwiesler, who both have ties to legendary Canadian operation Sam-Son Farm.

“We were cheering and yelling,” Strouss said. “It was great. That track was sloppy as it could be. I knew when they were whipping the leader (Ironstone), and I saw our horse, and he hadn't even asked him, I said, 'We might be okay.'”

The partnership between Duke of Love's breeders is the result of several other professional partnerships amongst each other and the companies they work for.

Whitford is Sam-Son Farm's former general manager, and Zwiesler is the operation's current racing manager. Sam-Son boarded its mares at Lane's End's Oak Tree division, which Strouss manages. The Canadian operation also boarded mares at Costello's former Drumkenny Farm operation, and he consigned horses for Sam-Son under his Paramount Sales shingle.

Costello, Strouss, and Fantucchio have known each other professionally for decades, but they became neighbors about 10 years ago.

“Our working relationship is going to lunch together every Saturday, and having the odd beverage,” Costello said. “We're just great friends.”

All of those connections intertwined with Tell the Duchess, a Sam-Son homebred filly who never made the races, and wasn't deeply entrenched in any taproot Sam-Son bloodlines for farm president Rick Balaz to merit keeping around to join the broodmare band.

However, that didn't mean the mare didn't have broodmare value. The daughter of Smart Strike has a female family deep in black type in North America and Europe, led by winner Humble Eight, winner of the Grade 3 Honeybee Stakes.

Tell the Duchess was offered as a broodmare prospect through the Paramount Sales consignment at the 2017 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale, and she finished under her reserve with a final bid of $14,000.

After the sale, Whitford and Zwiesler approached Costello and the Caldara duo to let them know Tell the Duchess was available for, in Costello's words, “little money.” The four parties bought in, and kept the mare in Canada to produce Ontario-breds.

Commercial breeders will often send unproven young broodmares to first-year stallions for the built-in marketing point the ensuing foals will have at the sales. Many stallions will never cover more mares than they do during their rookie season because breeders know that buyers hold the potential of a new stallion at a premium.

Tell the Duchess wasn't a standout based on her race record or her pedigree, and her new owners represented some of the industry's most prominent breeders and consignors. If the mare's foals were going to attract attention early on, the sire was going to have to do the heavy lifting.

The group sent Tell the Duchess to young shuttle stallion Vancouver for her first mating. The ensuing foal, a colt named Voyant, left the Paramount consignment as a weanling for the minimum bid of $1,000, and he earned his first win in a maiden claiming race at Delta Downs. Voyant is currently competing in the allowance ranks at Fort Erie.

Tell the Duchess visited first-year stallion Cupid for her second mating, which produced Duke of Love.

The colt was offered as a weanling by Paramount Sales at the 2019 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale, and he finished under his reserve in the ring. The colt later sold privately to War Horse Place for $15,000 – less than his initial hammer price.

War Horse Place then turned him around for $40,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale. Pinhook buyer Julie Davies secured the colt at that auction, and sold him to current owner MyRacehorse for $85,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale.

With the benefit of hindsight, Costello admitted he might have let Duke of Love go a little too easily.

“We always knew he'd do this, actually,” the consignor said, his tongue firmly in-cheek. “Obviously, we undersold him.

“I remember saying we were kind of disappointed with the price, because he was a lovely balanced foal,” Costello continued “He was straightforward. It was a bad price at the time for him, we thought, but we were sellers.”

Duke of Love went to the barn of trainer Josie Carroll, and he broke his maiden on debut as a 2-year-old at Woodbine. He returned to Woodbine two starts later to win his 3-year-old bow in May.

It was the last race Duke of Love would win prior to the Prince of Wales. He jumped up to stakes competition at Woodbine after winning his seasonal debut, but despite often putting himself in contention when the chips were down, he couldn't finish the job. His best effort was a runner-up finish to Rondure in the G3 Marine Stakes at Woodbine.

Duke of Love finished fourth in the Plate Trial Stakes, then never found his stride in the Queen's Plate en route to an eighth-place finish.

In the Prince of Wales, Duke of Love tracked post-time favorite Ironstone throughout the 1 3/16-mile race, took command in the stretch, and held off his rival, who refused to go away. Duke of Love crossed the wire three-quarters of a length ahead of Ironstone, who was himself six lengths ahead of third-place Ice Road.

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“He got into so much traffic in the Queen's Plate, and today was such a clean race,” Fantucchio said. “He finds a gear. If you go back and watch his race where he was second to Rondure, he found another gear and got up and got second.”

A Canadian classic victory would be a fine update for any young broodmare with something to prove, but the breeders behind Duke of Love won't be able to benefit from it. They sold the mare privately shortly after Duke of Love went through the ring, and she is now producing foals in Ontario for Krasauskaite Racing Stable.

Since leaving the quartet of breeders that produced Duke of Love, Tell the Duchess has had one foal: Achluophile, a yearling Danish Dynaformer colt. The mare failed to produce a foal in 2022 after being bred to Shaman Ghost and Silent Name, and she was bred back to Shaman Ghost for the 2023 foaling season.

That doesn't mean the band won't get back together to try it again with a different mare, though, whether it's working toward a Canadian classic winner, one in the U.S., or elsewhere on the map.

“We will soon,” Strouss said with certainty. “All four of us will soon.”

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Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers Club Names Matthew Koch As Ted Bates Farm Manager Of The Year

Matthew Koch of Shawhan Place has been named the 2022 Ted Bates Farm Manager of the Year by the Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers Club. Koch is a second generation hardboot following in the footsteps of his father, Gus Koch, who was awarded the Farm Manager of the Year title in 2004.  They join B.G. Hughes and Scooter Hughes as the only father/son recipients of this prestigious annual award, bestowed upon a farm manager who has demonstrated quality and success in their management role; service to the community; involvement in the KTFMC; and industry leadership and dedication.

Koch is a graduate of both the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, Food and Environment and the Kentucky Horseshoeing School. He paid his way through college shoeing horses. After college Koch joined the United States Marine Corps where he served his country in Afghanistan and Kosovo, rising to the rank of Captain. Upon discharge from the Marines in 2004, he established a Thoroughbred operation at his parents' Mt. Carmel Farm, while continuing to work full time as a farrier. In 2006, neighbor Teddy Kuster, KTFMC FMOY 1986, proposed a partnership and the duo formed Shawhan Place.

“I am thrilled to hear Matthew has won this prestigious award,” said Kuster. “The club has meant a lot to Matt's entire family and all of us at Shawhan Place. Matt is a wonderful individual who wears many hats. He's a farm manager working in the trenches and has given back to his community by serving on several boards. He serves as State Representative for 72nd District (Bourbon, Nicholas, and Fleming Counties) and was instrumental in passing HHR for the industry. He and I started Shawhan Place in 2006 with six mares and he has grown it into a successful business that has raised many graded stakes winners including G1 winners Hilda's Passion and Mucho Gusto. The farm now breeds around 100 mares each year. Even more important than raising horses, Matthew raises the next generation of young horsemen and women. He is a mentor to many and regularly hosts interns from both KEMI and the University of Kentucky.”

Longtime client Marette Farrell added, “We are so lucky in this horse business to have access to a man with the credentials of Matt Koch. Firstly, a Marine, now a successful businessman, he is a wonderful father and family man. He will go to the mat to uphold the principles he was raised on, in the mold of his father, Gus Koch. But, most significantly, in light of the many recent and future changes in the horse business, he has selflessly stepped into the political arena to represent his constituents and our fragile horse world with integrity and foresight. Without him the HHR would not have passed. I am proud to call him a friend and tell him we are indebted to him for his leadership and boots on the ground approach, which is so needed at this time. The committee chose a very deserving recipient for this year's FMOY award.”

While Koch has been involved in many leadership positions and served on many boards, industry insiders are most familiar with his roles on the KEMI board, CBA, KTA, and of course, the KTFMC where he served as Director, Treasurer, VP, and President in 2009. Koch currently resides in Bourbon County with his wife, Kristen, and their three children, Taylor, Jack, and Nate. The kids are carrying on the family tradition by helping on the farm regularly.

The Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers Club will be hosting its annual Dinner Dance to honor Matthew Koch at The Carrick House in Lexington on Dec. 2, 2022. A silent auction will be held with all proceeds benefitting The Horse Farm Workers' Educational Assistance Fund. Tickets and sponsorships for the event will be available for purchase through the club website at www.ktfmc.org later this month.

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McKulick Returns To Turf Triple In Jockey Club Oaks

Klaravich Stables' McKulick will strive for victory in two-thirds of the filly division of the Caesars Turf Triple when taking on five others in the third running of Saturday's Grade 3, $700,000 Jockey Club Oaks Invitational for 3-year-old fillies traveling 11 furlongs over the inner turf at the Belmont at the Big A fall meet.

Trained by Chad Brown, McKulick captured the first leg of the Turf Triple in the Grade 1 Belmont Oaks Invitational on July 9 at Belmont Park en route to a runner-up finish in the second leg – the Grade 1 Saratoga Oaks Invitational on August 7. The daughter of Frankel has never finished out of the money in six lifetime starts, while boasting a 2-3-1 record and earnings of $713,650.

After finishing a late closing second against graded stakes company at Churchill Downs in her first two starts of the year, McKulick handled a stretch out in distance with flying colors in the 10-furlong Belmont Oaks. She tracked in fifth down the backstretch before launching a three-wide move around the far turn and collaring With The Moonlight in the final furlong to win by 1 3/4 lengths. McKulick came up short of victory by the same margin in the Saratoga Oaks, which was won by With The Moonlight.

McKulick demonstrated staying capabilities in her Belmont Oaks score, and Brown said the extra eighth of a mile should be within reach for his talented bay.

“She's starting to give me that feeling that she might be able to do it,” said Brown, who trained last year's winner Shantisara. “She ran into a really nice filly that turned the table on us after the Belmont Oaks. I thought she ran really well. We'll try to complete the triple and run in all three legs. She's been very consistent. I'm very proud of her.”

Irad Ortiz, Jr. will retain the mount from post 1.

Australian Bloodstock's German-based Toskana Belle adds international flavor to the field, entering off a victory in the Group 1 German Oaks on August 7 at Dusseldorf for trainer Andreas Wohler.

The French-bred daughter of Italian Group 1 winner Shamalgan sprung a 16-1 upset when defeating a dozen other sophomore fillies in the German Oaks, run at the Jockey Club Oaks distance.

Internationally acclaimed rider Frankie Dettori is sure to give Toskana Belle his signature flying dismount should she win the Jockey Club Oaks, breaking from post 4.

Trainer Christophe Clement will send out Canisy following a troubled sixth in the restricted Riskaverse on August 25 at Saratoga. Owned by Marc Holliday's Blue Devil Racing Stable, Canisy made her stakes debut in the one-mile Riskaverse, where she broke inward into a rival, skimmed the rail in fifth down the backstretch before making her bid in upper stretch, bumping with another rival at the sixteenths-pole and finished 2 1/4 lengths in arrears of upset winner Gina Romantica.

The lightly-raced Canisy began her campaign on a winning note over Belmont's inner turf on May 1, running down next out winner Contemporary Art to win by a neck. She defeated winners in wire-to-wire fashion two starts later over the inner turf at Saratoga on July 14.

“She needs a bit of a smoother trip,” said Clement assistant Christophe Lorieul. “She's a big filly and I don't think you want to stop her too much and take back and go. She had to do that twice last time in the stretch. She needs something a bit smoother. The distance I don't think will be a problem, she's by Point of Entry and she can go on any ground.”

Hall of Famer Javier Castellano will retain the mount from post 3.

Michael Tabor's Beside Herself enters off a triumph against elders, defeating graded stakes placed Rocky Sky by 3 1/4 lengths in a 12-furlong allowance optional claimer on August 25 at the Spa.

The daughter of Uncle Mo, trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, earned her two other trips to the winner's circle in similar frontrunning fashion when breaking her maiden at third asking in January at Gulfstream and defeating winners in April at Keeneland. She earned graded stakes black type when third in the Grade 3 Regret on June 4 at Churchill Downs.

Flavien Prat, who piloted last year's winner Shantisara and inaugural winner Edisa [2019], will seek to keep his perfect record in the Jockey Club Oaks afloat when guiding Beside Herself from post 6.

Trainer Ian Wilkes will send out Margaret Long and Keith Long's Miss Yearwood following a triumphant turf debut on August 7 at Ellis Park.

The daughter of Will Take Charge broke her maiden travelling 10 furlongs on April 30 at Churchill Downs before finishing a distant seventh in her stakes debut in the Grade 2 Black-Eyed Susan on May 20 at Pimlico Race Course. She rebounded in the next out Monomoy Girl on June 18 at Churchill Downs, finishing a close second.

Chris Landeros will ship up to ride Miss Yearwood, who breaks from post 5.

Completing the field is Godolphin's Nostalgic, who will once again experiment with turf, entering off a distant sixth in the Grade 1 Alabama on August 20 over the Saratoga main track.

The Medaglia d'Oro filly made her sophomore debut in the Grade 3 Sweetest Chant in February over the Gulfstream Park turf, finishing a distant ninth in her lone start on grass for Hall of Famer Bill Mott. A next out allowance optional claiming winner on the Florida oval's main track, she made the grade in the Grade 3 Gazelle on April 9 at Aqueduct.

Nostalgic has trained extensively over the Oklahoma training turf at Saratoga, recording an easy half-mile breeze in 50.92 on Monday.

Luis Saez will ride Nostalgic from post 2.

The Jockey Club Oaks Invitational is carded as Race 7 on the Belmont at the Big A's 11-race program, which also features the Grade 1, $1 million Caesars Jockey Club Derby Invitational for sophomores going 12 furlongs in Race 10. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present live coverage and analysis of every day of Belmont at the Big A on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Belmont at the Big A, and the best way to bet every race of the fall meet. Available to horse players nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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