Gulfstream Park’s Rainbow 6 Hit For $47,591

Gulfstream Park's 20-cent Rainbow 6 was hit Friday afternoon for $47,591.24.

The popular Rainbow 6 sequence started in Race 4 with a $14.20 winner in Hazardous Humor. The longshot Sixty One won Race 5 and returned $29.80. The final four races were won by Gunesh ($10.60), Septemberten ($5.20), Mr Tito's ($7.20) and Mr Matuschek ($23.80).

The carryover jackpot is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners.

On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Racing continues Saturday with a 12:10 p.m. first race post and two stakes races – the $60,000 Juvenile and $60,000 Juvenile Fillies.

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Baffert Enters Trio Of Juvenile Contenders In Del Mar’s Bob Hope

Not surprisingly when it comes to a 2-year-old race at Del Mar, trainer Bob Baffert has the power hand. Not only is he running the favorite in Sunday's Grade 3, $100,000 Bob Hope Stakes, but he's got the second choice and the third, too. He's got them surrounded.

It'll be little consolation to other trainers with horses in the seven furlong test, but it could have been worse. The Hall of Fame conditioner actually named five of his youngsters to the dash, but only went with three.

His trio are led by Pegram, Watson and Weitman's big colt Havnameltdown, a son of the Florida stallion Uncaptured who won two races at Del Mar this past summer – including the Grade 3 Best Pal Stakes – then ran second in the Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity to Cave Rock, yet another colt trained by Baffert. Havnameltdown has put in a series of sharp works for his first outing in just over two months and has leading rider Juan Hernandez aboard, all of which adds up to his morning line role as the 6/5 favorite.

The other two Bafferts are SF Racing, Starlight Racing or Madaket Stables, et al's Newgate, who gets John Velazquez in the irons and 5/2 in the morning line, and Pegram, Watson and Weitman's Hard to Figure with Flavien Prat named on and a ML price of 3-1.

Three other runners will tackle the Baffert trio, a group led by Amestoy Jr., Amestoy or Beasley's Practical Move (Drayden Van Dyke in the saddle at 5-1); George Todaro's Lloyds Logic (Edwin Maldonado, 12-1), and Calumet Farm's Mixto (Umberto Rispoli, 12-1).

Again, not surprisingly, Baffert has a history in the Bob Hope, which used to be called the Hollywood Prevue Stakes when it was run at the now-closed Hollywood Park. Of the eight previous runnings of the Bob Hope at Del Mar, the white-haired wonder has made a trip to the winner's circle afterwards on five occasions, including last year when his colt Messier took the prize.

Newgate was an $850,000 Keeneland yearling who won a first asking at Del Mar this past July. Subsequently the colt by top sire Into Mischief ran fourth in the Del Mar Futurity and fifth in the Breeders' Futurity at Keeneland, both Grade 1 races.

Hard to Figure finished third in a pair of straight maiden races this summer, then registered his first victory in and overnight stakes at Los Alamitos on September 25. He's by Hard Spun and was a $200,000 purchase at a horses in training sale in Florida this past March.

Practical Move was a winner of his most recent outing via disqualification. That was October 10 at Santa Anita in a straight maiden affair.

The Bob Hope is the eighth of nine races on the Sunday card with a post time of approximately 4 p.m.  First post that afternoon is 12:30.

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Chew On This: Horses Make Eating Motions For A Variety Of Reasons

Horse owners and caretakers are taught that horses may make licking and chewing motions for a variety of reasons, like processing new information or relaxation. Horse Nation attempted to dispel some of the common misconceptions about why horses make licking and chewing motions when they're not eating.

One misconception is that horses lick and chew when they're processing what they're being taught. Horse Nation explained that belief can be either true or false. 

Trainers in every discipline teach their clients that a horse licks and chews when he's learning, and at times this is true, but in others the horse may just be changing his perspective on how the energy around him is changing – from amped up to quiet, for example. A horse may also make the motion when his fight or flight response is alleviated – he licks and chews in relief. 

A horse may also make licking and chewing motions when he has gotten away with something – like dominating his owner. Horses lick and chew as a stress response to training that uses older techniques, Good Horse explained; a horse that licks and chews after training may be expressing that the training techniques are stressful.

Other research reported that the licking and chewing motions are an automatic behavior process to encourage saliva production after a tense situation dissipates. Other research noted that horses lick and chew when they are relaxed, but it was not determined whether horses made the motions because they were relaxed already or in an effort to relax. 

The bottom line: Horses lick and chew for a variety of reasons, so the motion must be taken in context with what the horse is doing and its environment. 

Read more at Horse Nation

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White Abarrio Records Another Sharp Breeze In Advance Of Cigar Mile

C2 Racing Stable LLC and La Milagrosa Stable LLC's White Abarrio produced a “bullet” five-furlong workout at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., on Friday morning in preparation for a planned start in the Dec. 3 Cigar Mile (G1) at Aqueduct in South Ozone Park, N.Y.

The 3-year-old son of Race Day breezed the five furlongs in 59.05 seconds to record his second straight “bullet” for trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. in a series of four workouts since finishing fifth in the Sept. 24 Pennsylvania Derby (G1).

White Abarrio captured the 1 1/16-mile Holy Bull (G3) and the 1 1/8-mile Florida Derby (G1) during Gulfstream's 2021-2022 Championship Meet before finishing far back in the Kentucky Derby. The flashy gray colt is winless in his four starts since his 1 ¼-length victory over Charge It in the Florida Derby, coming up short of negotiating the two turns in each subsequent loss.

“I know he's won going a mile and an eighth but cutting him back in distance is probably going to help him,” Joseph said. “Obviously, he's going to have to go there and prove it, but I feel like it's going to be his strong point because he has enough speed to put himself in the race and he should stay the distance quite well.”

White Abarrio hasn't run around one turn since capturing a mile optional claiming allowance Oct. 29, 2021 at Gulfstream in his first start since being privately purchased by his current connections following a brilliant debut victory.

In the 1 1/8-mile Pennsylvania Derby, White Abarrio showed the way into the stretch before weakening.

“We gave him a little freshening and started him up with the Cigar Mile always being the goal,” Joseph said. “Everything has gone as well as we can ask.”

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