‘She’s Just Been On Fire This Year’: Longleggedlaverne Honored For Seven-Win Season At Horseshoe Indianapolis

Longleggedlaverne capped off a fantastic season of racing with a win on the closing day card, sealing the deal as the 2022 Leading Thoroughbred Horse at Horseshoe Indianapolis. Guided by Joe Ramos, the lanky 5-year-old mare scored her seventh win of the meet to set a new record for most wins in one meet by a horse in both the Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse category.

Longleggedlaverne's journey has been full of twists and turns for Trainer Tianna Richardville. She claimed the mare at three at Horseshoe Indianapolis in the fall of 2020 and had two wins in four starts before losing her to a claim at Churchill Downs. She went to Fair Grounds with her new connections, but Richardville kept tabs on her. When they dropped her down to a $5,000 claiming price, she once again claimed her back into her barn.

“She was claimed from me for $20,000 and then they dropped her to $5,000 at Fair Grounds,” explained Richardville. “I got her in a seven-way shake and brought her back to Indiana. She is very hard to deal with and very aggressive in the mornings, so that probably played a factor in them dropping her down in price. She has quite a bit of attitude, but I know when she is kicking and squealing in the barn, she's ready to go.”

Since her return to the Richardville Stable, Longleggedlaverne has won eight races with the American Lion mare, including seven wins in her last nine starts. She just returned from the Claiming Crown Glass Slipper where she finished fourth at Churchill Downs before completing her five-year-old campaign with a win in Indiana. Jockey Joe Ramos has been aboard her for all eight of her wins with Richardville, whose Thirstyacres Racing LLC owns.

“She's just been on fire this year,” said Richardville. “I had Leading Horse with Wildcard Prado last year so to get it again this year with 'Laverne' is very special. I'm pretty proud to have had two really nice horses in my barn the past few years.”

Longleggedlaverne now has 14 career wins in 39 career starts. Her bankroll is now just shy of $200,000 lifetime. She is 11 of 12 at Horseshoe Indianapolis. Eric Halstrom, Vice President and General Manager of Racing, made the winner's circle presentation to Richardville and Troy Wage of Thirstyacres Racing along with Joe Ramos, jockey for Longleggedlaverne.

The 20th season of live Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing concludes Wednesday, Nov. 23. Live racing will return for the 21st season in mid-April 2023, pending approval from the Indiana Horse Racing Commission. For more information on live racing at Horseshoe Indianapolis, visit www.caesars.com/horseshoe-indianapolis.

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Consistent Runninsonofagun Headlines Aqueduct’s Fall Highweight

Graded stakes-winner Runninsonofagun has been a consistent competitor throughout his entire career. After breaking through against stakes competition last out, the son of 2017 Horse of the Year Gun Runner will look to notch a second consecutive graded stakes score when he competes in Saturday's Grade 3, $175,000 Fall Highweight for 3-year-olds and up sprinting six furlongs on the Aqueduct Racetrack main track.

Owned by the Estate of Scott Zimmerman, Runninsonofagun is 4-1-5 in 11 career starts, with his lone non-placing coming when sixth in his stakes debut in March at the Big A in the Grade 3 Gotham. Since then, the sophomore gelding has earned black type in six consecutive starts, including a victory by a nose over Eastern Bay last out in the Grade 3 Bold Ruler contested at the Fall Highweight distance on October 29 at Aqueduct.

Conditioner John Toscano, Jr. saw his trainee earn a 97 Beyer Speed Figure for that effort, which came after three straight third-place finishes against high-caliber competition, starting with the 6 1/2-furlong Grade 2 Amsterdam in July at Saratoga Race Course and following with the Grade 1 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial in August [also garnering a 97 Beyer] at the Spa before the Grade 2 Gallant Bob in September at Parx.

“He seems to get better and better with every start,” Toscano, Jr. said. “He has a lot of fight in him. No matter where I place him, he gives us 100 percent. It looks like he enjoys running at Aqueduct, but to be honest, he has performed well at Saratoga and Belmont as well.”

As the post-Thanksgiving Black Friday deals are advertised, Toscano, Jr. said he thinks back to when his barn received a great value when claiming Runninsonofagun for $40,000 on New Year's Eve 2021. Entering the weekend, he has already amassed $341,050 in earnings in 2022 and can still add to that total.

“We got extremely lucky with him; not bad for a $40,000 claimer,” Toscano, Jr. said.

Runninsonofagun, assigned a co-field high 132 pounds, will have rider Kendrick Carmouche in the irons from post 7.

Michael Scheffres' Factor It In [post 6, Irad Ortiz, Jr. 132 pounds] gave Runninsonofagun a strong challenge in the stretch in the Bold Ruler, finishing a half-length off the winner and just a neck behind runner-up Eastern Bay for a strong third-place effort.

That marked the 6-year-old's first graded stakes appearance since 2020 and just his third overall in a career that started in 2018. Trained by Carlos Mancilla, Factor It In has only improved with age, posting a 2-1-1 ledger in four starts this year while finishing in-the-money in all three stakes appearances, placing second in the Chesapeake in August at Colonial Downs and winning the Challedon on October 1 at Laurel Park before returning to the Big A later in the month.

West Point Thoroughbreds and Marvin Delfiner's Jaxon Traveler, a graded-stakes winner after capturing the Grade 3 Maryland Sprint in May at Pimlico, will be competing for the first time since finishing eighth in the Bold Ruler. Trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, the Maryland-bred son of Munnings finished third in the Ben's Cat in July at Laurel and second in the Lite the Fuse in September at Pimlico before returning to graded stakes company.

Jaxon Traveler, assigned 131 pounds, will now get another opportunity against Runninsonofagun, drawing post 2 with Jose Lezcano on the call.

Greeley and Ben [post 1, Manny Franco, 130 pounds], owned by Darryl Abramowitz, was fourth in the Bold Ruler and followed with a 1 3/4-length victory in a six-furlong allowance contest on November 10 at Aqueduct for trainer Faith Wilson.

The 8-year-old veteran, who has a 22-7-2 record in 38 career starts, will look to capitalize on his experience and make his third consecutive start at Aqueduct.

Mahendra Kallap's Bezos has won back-to-back starts at the Big A and will look to notch a third straight victory, drawing post 4 with jockey Omar Hernandez Moreno set to ride for trainer Chandradat Goberdhan. He will carry just 123 pounds.

Rounding out the field is Happy Farm, who has posted two wins and four runner-up efforts in his last six starts, and is trained by Michael Miceli [post 3, Dylan Davis, 128 pounds]; and Synthesis, who bested optional claiming company in a 6 1/2-furlong sprint last out on September 30 at Belmont at the Big A for trainer David Jacobson [post 5, Jose Ortiz, 128 pounds].

The 109th running of the Fall Highweight is carded as Race 8 on Saturday's 10-race program, which also features the Grade 2, $300,000 Red Smith for 3-year-olds and up competing at 1 3/8 miles on the inner turf and the $120,000 Central Park for 2-year-olds going one mile on the turf. First post is 11:50 a.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present live coverage and analysis of the Aqueduct fall meet 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 best way to bet every race of the Aqueduct Racetrack 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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Clement: Soldier Rising Needs ‘Racing Luck’ In Saturday’s Red Smith

Madaket Stables, Michael Dubb, Morris Bailey, and Michael J. Caruso's Soldier Rising has been something of a hard-luck horse since joining the barn of trainer Christophe Clement last summer. But the veteran conditioner is hopeful that fortune will be on his side in a 12-horse field for Saturday's Grade 2, $300,000 Red Smith for 3-year-olds and upward going 11 furlongs on the Aqueduct Racetrack inner turf.

Solider Rising, a 4-year-old Frankel gelding, was a close third in last year's Red Smith, coming from last-of-10 and finishing a half-length in arrears of Serve the King, who was a neck better than Grade 1-winner Channel Cat. That effort followed his first two starts for Clement, which were a pair of runner-up efforts behind international stalwarts in the Turf Triple series. He finished behind State of Rest, a Grade/Group 1 winner in four different countries, in the Grade 1 Saratoga Derby Invitational and eventual Champion Turf Male Yibir in the Jockey Club Derby Invitational.

This year, Soldier Rising earned his first trip to the winner's circle under Clement's tutelage when contesting a second-level allowance optional claimer over a yielding inner turf course at Belmont Park on June 3. He followed with a hard-fought second to 2020 Champion Turf Male Channel Maker in the Grand Couturier on July 8 before victoriously cutting back to 1 3/16 miles in a third-level allowance optional claimer three weeks later at Saratoga Race Course.

Solider Rising proved himself highly competitive amongst some of the best the turf division has to offer in his last two starts, both at Grade 1 level going 12 furlongs. Following a late-closing third behind stablemate Gufo in the Resorts World Casino Sword Dancer on August 27 at Saratoga, he was a troubled fourth in the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic on October 8 at Belmont at the Big A. He made an inside rally in the stretch of the Joe Hirsch poised for a placing, but had to steady passing the chute and finished fourth beaten 3 1/2 lengths by Grade 1-winning turf mare War Like Goddess.

“I thought in his last race, he did not have much racing luck,” said Clement, who saddled Flag Down [1995] and Grassy [2011] to previous Red Smith scores. “He was down on the inside. He had to check at the eighth pole and he's a steady kind of horse with a great turn of foot. If you stop his momentum, it's a bit difficult. The mare was much the best that day and I thought we could have been second with a better trip.”

Clement said he is anxious to get Solider Rising a well-deserved sakes victory.

“He's a nice horse, he's competitive and we're trying to win a stakes with him,” Clement said. “It will be his last race of the year and we'll pull the plug after that and we'll see what happens.”

Solider Rising boasts a reliable 14-4-5-3 record with earnings of $721,211. He began his racing career in France under the care of French champion trainer Andre Fabre for whom he went 4-2-2-0.

Jose Ortiz, the pilot in both of Solider Rising's stateside victories, will ride from post 9.

Trainer Al Stall, Jr. will ship up Reigning Spirit following a narrow second level allowance triumph on October 9 at Keeneland. The Town and Country Racing Kentucky homebred son of War Front, out of three-time winner Upperline, was nearly 10 lengths off the pace and was widest of all in the final turn but had enough momentum to get his nose on the wire first.

“He really ran a good race. He blew up to the lead like he was just going to go on by, but he's still learning things,” Stall, Jr. recalled. “He really idled and finished with a little more in the tank than you'd think. Thank goodness he got his nose down and won. The turn of foot he showed was nice to see.”

A sixth-out graduate going 1 1/16 miles in February 2021 at Fair Grounds Race Course, Reigning Spirit did not return to action until nearly one calendar year later when sixth in an allowance event at the New Orleans oval, but made his second start off the bench a triumphant one at the same racetrack. He launched a breakthrough performance in May when finishing a close second at 62-1 odds in the Grade 3 Louisville on May 21 at Churchill Downs. Following that effort, he finished third in a Saratoga second level allowance optional claimer and a distant sixth at the same level at Kentucky Downs – both with Hall of Famer John Velazquez in the irons.

“We were hunting three turns and that was the only spot there,” Stall, Jr. said of the Louisville. “When the turf went south, the race that we targeted didn't come to pass. He needed the race in Saratoga. He ran a good race with Johnny, positioned well, just not quite punching like we thought he would. He's a big, big horse and he wasn't so balanced over at Kentucky Downs. I think the flat type of courses are better for him.

“It took us a long time but hopefully we found a nice niche with him. We're trying these types of races,” Stall, Jr. continued. “That's our game plan. He's run really well, he's in good form and we're looking forward to running him.”

Junior Alvarado will ride Reigning Spirit for the first time from post 7.

Joe Hirsch Turf Classic alumnus Astronaut will make his first start since finishing third in the 12 furlong test for trainer Tom Albertrani.

The John B. O'Connor-owned 5-year-old son of Quality Road made two starts for his current trainer as a sophomore before shipping to the West Coast with John Shirreffs, capturing the Grade 2 Del Mar Handicap last August at 24-1 odds before finishing 12th in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf last November at Del Mar. Following a distant eighth in the Grade 2 Del Mar Mile in September, he was transferred back to Albertrani and earned his first Grade 1 placing in the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic, where he recorded a career best 100 Beyer Speed Figure.

Kendrick Carmouche will retain the mount from post 4.

Paradise Farms Corp. and David Staudacher's Temple brags field-best earnings of $733,113 as well as a graded-stakes triumph at the Red Smith distance for trainer Mike Maker. The 6-year-old Temple City gelding captured the Grade 2 Mac Diarmida on March 5 at Gulfstream Park in his most recent victory, while earning placings when third in the Grade 1 United Nations in July at Monmouth Park and the last out Grade 3 Sycamore on October 14 at Keeneland, where he finished a length behind Grade 1-winner Highland Chief.

In the money in all three starts over the Big A turf, Temple captured the 2019 Gio Ponti during his sophomore year.

Hall of Famer Javier Castellano will ride Temple from post 8.

Hall of Famer Bill Mott seeks his first Red Smith conquest since saddling turf champion Theatrical to victory in 1987 when sending out Team Valor International's Mooney Love. The 4-year-old Australia bay made his North American debut a winning one in July in a last-out first level allowance going 12 furlongs over the Saratoga inner turf.

Bragging a consistent 12-4-1-3 record, Mooney Love has won races in both Italy and Germany before coming stateside.

Breaking from post 6, Mooney Love will be ridden by Joel Rosario.

Four-time Eclipse Award winner and three-time Red Smith winner Chad Brown will saddle William S. Farish's homebred Highest Honors [post 1, Irad Ortiz, Jr.] and Peter Brant's Balthus [post 3, Manny Franco].

A stakes winner on dirt as a sophomore, the 6-year-old Highest Honors has proven useful as a turf stayer having finished third in the aforementioned Louisville, Grand Couturier and Sycamore.

Balthus will look to give Brown and Brant their second straight Red Smith coup, having collaborated with last year's winner Serve the King. The Irish-bred 4-year-old son of Galileo did not break his maiden until May going 10 furlongs over the Belmont inner turf and followed with two more scores going long distances on the grass. He enters off a fifth-place finish in the Sycamore.

Completing the field are Daunt [post 2, Jalon Samuel] – who looks to become the first 3-year-old to win the Red Smith since Monarch's Maze [1999] – Larry Goichman's graded-stakes placed Shawdyshawdyshawdy [post 5, Jorge Vargas, Jr.] – who arrives off two straight wins – multiple stakes-placed Beacon Hill [post 10, Dylan Davis], stakes-winner Dynadrive [post 11, Eric Cancel] and multiple stakes-placed New York-bred Cold Hard Cash [post 12, Jose Lezcano]. Kinetic Sky and I Am the Law have been entered for main track only.

Known as the Edgemere Handicap until 1981, the Red Smith pays tribute to the late Pulitzer Prize winning author and sportswriter Walter Wellesley “Red” Smith, whose 55-year career in journalism covered a wide array of sports, including horseracing, for the New York Herald Tribune and the New York Times.

The Red Smith is carded as Race 9 on Saturday's 10-race program, which also features the $120,000 Central Park [Race 5, 1:46 p.m.] and the Grade 3, $175,000 Fall Highweight [Race 8, 3:14 p.m.]. First post is 11:50 a.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present live coverage and analysis of the Aqueduct fall meet 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 best way to bet every race of the Aqueduct Racetrack 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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Roger Spiess, Randy Klopp Earn Second Consecutive Leading Owner Title At Horseshoe Indianapolis

It's been another solid season for the partnership of Roger Spiess' Spiess Stable and Randy Klopp. The duo scored 31 wins and brought in purse earnings just shy of the $1 million mark to earn their second consecutive title for Leading Thoroughbred Owner at Horseshoe Indianapolis. The earnings tally of $979,041 for 2022 sets a new record for most purse earnings recorded by an owner of either breed in track history.

Spiess, a retired veterinarian from Swanton, Ohio, and Klopp have had a strong partnership for the past 20 years. The duo has moved their way up into third place on the list of all-time leading owners in the record books with 180 career wins and more than $4 million in purse earnings. Some of the top horses for them in 2022 include Latigo, winner of five races, including the $250,000 Governor's Stakes, Music to my Ears, winner of four races over the 127-day meet, and Ferdan, who scored his third win of the meet during closing week. Spiess, who is hands on in the selection process of purchasing racehorses and yearlings with Klopp, cited Latigo as his favorite horse this year.

“I'd have to say winning the $250,000 stakes (with Latigo) was the highlight of the year for us,” said Spiess, who is a graduate of The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine. “It's been a really great year and Randy and his crew do an outstanding job.”

Klopp also cited the win with Latigo in the Governor's Stakes as the highlight of the meet for him. He noted the great partnership he's had with Spiess for more than two decades. Spiess actually picked Latigo out of the Keeneland January All Ages Sale in 2020 when he had just turned into a yearling, purchasing the Indiana bred Jimmy Creed gelding for $8,000. He now has more than $260,000 on his card.

“Roger spends a lot of money and does a great job picking out horses,” added Klopp. “We currently have between 40 and 50 horses in our barn and have several yearlings to start with.”

Klopp and Spiess already have a lot to look forward to next season. Klopp has 20 yearlings to break and a lot of those are in partnership with Spiess. Klopp owns a farm in nearby Rushville, Ind. and stays at Horseshoe Indianapolis over the winter months, which has proven beneficial for the stable to be ready to go when racing resumes in the spring.

Overall, Klopp and Spiess partnered up for a 19 percent win clip and a top three percentage of 59.

Eric Halstrom, Vice President and General Manager of Racing, and Rachel McLaughlin, On-Air Broadcast Manager, made the winner's circle presentation to Spiess and Klopp and Spiess' wife, Darla, during the final day of racing for 2022 at Horseshoe Indianapolis.

The 20th season of live Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing concludes Wednesday, Nov. 23. Live racing will return for the 21st season in mid-April 2023, pending approval from the Indiana Horse Racing Commission. For more information on live racing at Horseshoe Indianapolis, visit www.caesars.com/horseshoe-indianapolis.

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