Breeders’ Cup Announces New ‘Classic Pick ‘Em’ Contest

The Breeders' Cup has announced the creation of a new “Classic Pick 'Em” Contest in which fans will have a chance to compete for a $10,000 grand prize by selecting their pick to win the 2022 Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) on Saturday, Nov. 5.

The contest will allow fans to select one horse to win the Classic, with the winner of the $10,000 cash prize to be randomly selected from among those who choose the correct horse. Additional winners will be selected for a $5,000 and $2,500 prize.

“We're always looking to engage our fans in innovative ways and to bring the fun and passion of racing to new audiences,” said Breeders' Cup Chief Marketing Officer Justin McDonald. “This new contest will provide another element of excitement and raise the stakes for fans ahead of the 2022 Longines Breeders' Cup Classic.”

The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic is the premier Thoroughbred horse race of the year, featuring the best horses, jockeys, and trainers from around the world competing for $6 million in purse money.

Fans will be able to select their entry for the “Classic Pick 'Em” starting now until post-time for the Breeders' Cup Classic at 5:40 p.m. ET on Saturday, Nov. 5. For more information, and to make a pick, visit BreedersCup.com/Contest.

The 39th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships on Nov. 4 and 5 will be televised live across NBC, Peacock, USA Network and FanDuel TV.

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NBC Sports, Peacock Will Present Nine Hours Live Coverage Of 2022 Breeders’ Cup

NBC Sports and Peacock present nine hours of live coverage of the 2022 Breeders' Cup World Championships this weekend — the richest two days in horse racing — with a total of $31 million in prize money at stake in 14 races. Headlining the weekend's coverage is the $6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic this Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock live from Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky.

Highlighting Saturday's star-studded Breeders' Cup Classic field is:

  • Flightline: undefeated in five starts by a combined margin of 62 ¾ lengths, including a 19 ¼ length victory in the Grade 1 Pacific Classic, his most recent race;
  • Epicenter: runner-up in the first two legs of this year's Triple Crown who won the Grade 1 Travers in his most recent race and has finished second-or-better in every race since his debut 10 starts ago;
  • Rich Strike: this year's 80-1 longshot Kentucky Derby winner who is trained by Eric Reed and ridden by jockey Sonny Leon;
  • Taiba: three-year-old who is a two-time Grade 1 winner and is trained by four-time Breeders' Cup Classic winner Bob Baffert;
  • Life is Good: four-time Grade 1 winner who was victorious in last year's Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile.

Live racing coverage of the 39th Breeders' Cup World Championships begins this Friday featuring the Juveniles in action at 2 p.m. ET on USA Network. Five hours of live coverage on Saturday begins at 1 p.m. ET on USA Network and continues on NBC and Peacock at 3:30 p.m. ET. The Breeders' Cup Classic has a post time of 5:40 p.m. ET. In addition to the Classic, the Breeders' Cup Distaff (3:55 p.m. ET post time) and Breeders' Cup Turf (4:40 p.m. ET post time) will be presented live Saturday on NBC and Peacock.

COMMENTATORS: Ahmed Fareed hosts coverage on Friday and Saturday alongside analyst and Hall of Fame jockey Jerry Bailey, who owns 15 Breeders' Cup wins; analyst Randy Moss; reporters Britney Eurton, Kenny Rice, and Nick Luck; handicappers Eddie Olczyk and Matt Bernier; insights analyst Steve Kornacki; and Donna Brothers, who will report on horseback. Larry Collmus will call all of the Breeders' Cup races.

NBC Sports' handicapping “Betting the Breeders' Cup” series previewing each of the 14 World Championship races will be presented across NBC Sports digital platforms beginning on Thursday. Eurton, Luck, Olczyk, Bernier, and Kornacki will be featured in the digital series.

NBC Sports' weekend presentation will also feature:

  • Breeders' Cup “Contender Cam” footage. Each Breeders' Cup horse will have a camera following them from the paddock out onto the track to allow viewers unique, one-of-a-kind access. Comprehensive coverage will be available to stream here
  • A pair of jockey cam systems with audio
  • A megalodon camera to share live-action footage of the fashion and flavors surrounding the Breeders' Cup World Championships
  • An outrider camera capturing intimate moments with the winning jockey immediately following races
  • Backstretch cam on the Keeneland track
  • An essay narrated by Tim Layden on the uniqueness surrounding Flightline and his relatively unheralded historic success throughout 2022
  • A feature on Dirt Mile morning-line favorite Cody's Wish and the story between human and horse connections
  • Britney Eurton interviewing Lisa Lazarus, the CEO of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority
  • Celebrities making their Breeders' Cup Classic picks
  • Access to approximately 75 video sources, including cameras and feeds

NBC Sports' coverage of the Breeders' Cup World Championships is produced by Lindsay Schanzer on Saturday, Billy Matthews on Friday, and directed by Kaare Numme. Executive producer and president, NBC Sports Production is Sam Flood.

Date Event Platform Time (ET)
Fri., Nov. 4 Breeders' Cup World Championships USA Network 2 p.m.
Sat., Nov. 5 Breeders' Cup World Championships USA Network 1 p.m.
Breeders' Cup Classic NBC, Peacock 3:30 p.m.

The Breeders' Cup Classic is part of NBCUniversal's “Big Event Weekend” featuring numerous high-profile events across NBC and Peacock this Saturday and Sunday (programming details below). For more on “Big Event Weekend,” click here.

Date Event Platform Time (ET)
Sat., Nov. 5 Breeders' Cup Classic NBC, Peacock 3:30 p.m.
No. 5 Clemson vs. Notre Dame NBC, Peacock 7:30 p.m.
Saturday Night Live NBC, Peacock 11:30 p.m.
Sun., Nov. 6 NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race NBC, Peacock 3 p.m.
Sunday Night Football: Titans vs. Chiefs NBC, Peacock 8:20 p.m.

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Spendthrift Unveils B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center

Lexington, KY – Spendthrift Farm opened the doors to its new B. Wayne Hughes Visitors Center on Tuesday, Nov. 1 as part of the lead-up to the Breeders' Cup World Championships.

Named in honor of the farm's late founder, the 7,000 square-foot, two story facility will serve as the home for Spendthrift's tourism. The building is located between the farm's stallion complex and main office and features a trophy room, which showcases Spendthrift's collection of trophies, artifacts and racing memorabilia, as well as a gift shop.

 

Spendthrift owners Eric and Tammy Gustavson led the grand opening and credited Tammy's father Hughes for his vision behind the facility.

“He loved this farm, he loved the horse industry, and he grew to love the idea of tourism,” Eric Gustavson said. “He recognized its value and its ability to draw in fans and potential owners. He was always trying to grow the game. Tammy and I are honored to name the visitors center after him and to have this be a small part of Wayne's legacy and his impact on our industry.”

During the ribbon-cutting ceremony, the Gustavsons were joined by VisitLex President Mary Quinn Ramer and Lexington Mayor Linda Gorton.

“In the Thoroughbred business, Spendthrift has made history over and over again,” said Gorton. “Some of the best have roamed these fields…Today we're dedicating this beautiful new visitors center, a place that will welcome tourists. It is places like this that make Lexington special and unique. This reminds us how important it is to protect our Bluegrass countryside.”

Senator Damon Thayer and Congressman Andy Barr were also present for the event.

The newly-unveiled Malibu Moon memorial statue stands in front of the visitors center and portrays the farm's foundation sire facing his old paddock. Read more about the making of the bronze sculpture from the artist himself, Douwe Blumberg, here.

“Malibu Moon was vitally important to this farm,” Gustavson said. “Wayne had a tendency to speak very simply, and very simply he said that Malibu Moon started Spendthrift Farm. And it's true. We were a fledgling farm and Malibu Moon was a perennial leading sire. He put us on the map and gave us legitimacy. It was the start of something that became what we are now.”

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‘So Much Luck Involved’: So Far, So Good As Golden Pal Aims For Breeders’ Cup Three-Peat

Trainer Wesley Ward is leaving nothing to chance this week as he prepares Golden Pal for his career finale in Saturday's Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint with what could be a record-tying third victory in the World Championships. Rather than getting him out of the track at Keeneland as soon as it opens in morning, Ward is committed to having him take to the track for his daily exercise at the very end of training hours.

“I like to gallop him really, really late when no one's on the track,” Ward said Tuesday. “He's very, very relaxed when no one's out there when he's got the track to himself, as most horses are. You take him up there when horses are breezing and lots of gallopers, he kind of wants to go. In the next few days we're going to take him real, real late when essentially he'll be the only one galloping out there.”

Ward has often described the 4-year-old son of Uncle Mo as the best horse he has trained. Golden Pal, owned by the Coolmore partnership of Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith, Mrs. John Magnier and Westerberg, is 8-2-0 in 12 career starts. He snagged his first Breeders' Cup victory in the 2020 Juvenile Turf Sprint at Keeneland. Last year, he added the Turf Sprint to his resume. Should he repeat Saturday, he will join Hall of Famers Goldikova and Beholder as the only horses with three victories in the World Championships.

Breeders' Cup week started well for Ward when Golden Pal and jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. drew post eight in the field of 14 going 5 ½ furlongs.

“I was very happy with his post,” Ward said. “Post eight, we're out there a ways to where he can break and this way Irad will get a sense of what he wants to do. If he breaks as sharp as he usually does, he can kind of ease over to the rail. Or, if somebody catches a flyer and breaks like him Irad will be able to ride his race from there. I was really happy with his post.”

Golden Pal has raced at six tracks during his career and is unbeaten in four starts at Keeneland, where Ward's stable is based. Ward said Golden Pal is doing well.

“We're ready to roll,” Ward said. “He's been pointing for this since last year's race. This is a race that I asked Michael Tabor right after the horse crossed the finish line, we're heading to the winner's circle, if we could get one more year. Before we got on camera, I kind of wanted to pin him down a little bit. He didn't see why not. So here we are today.”

Golden Pal has won five of his last six starts. The only blemish this year was in June in the King's Stand at Royal Ascot. Typically, quick out of the gate, Golden Pal missed the break because Ortiz was distracted by a horse acting up behind the gate. It left him 0-for-3 tries in high-profile stakes in England, where Ward has a strong record of success.

“Just bad luck. It just goes to show you that in racing there's so much luck involved that everything has to go right,” Ward said. “Unfortunately, this year when we went and that was going to be very big for him as a stallion, is if he could do it at Ascot in front of all the European breeders. I've never had anything like that happen to me and all these 30-plus years of training, Irad and I walked the course with Steve Cauthen. Steve gave him all the insights of Ascot Racecourse and The King's Stand and everything that happens being a rider that this was brand new to him running there.

“I told him, 'Look, you've got to be ready, almost like the Kentucky Derby. Like when those horses are in the gate the starter just pushes it, no matter if it's a horse rearing up.' What I've seen so many times that I've been over. It wouldn't happen in the States, the way that the starter runs the course over there. So there was an unruly 99-1 shot in the back of the gate and Irad was looking back. What he did not know is that, the starter, at any time, can deem the horse out and just push the button and go. As Irad was looking completely back the starter pushed the button, ruled the horse as scratched. All the other riders know the rules and they were ready and Irad wasn't. He almost fell off the horse, we broke dead last and that was it.”

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