Hall Of Famer D. Wayne Lukas Still ‘Sore’ After Broken Ribs, But Returns To The Saddle At Oaklawn

Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas returned to his normal routine during training hours Thursday morning at Oaklawn, atop a stable pony and escorting his horses to and from the track. Lukas, 87, was working, at least in this capacity, for the first time since breaking five ribs after he was bucked off a stable pony during training hours in early December at Oaklawn.

“I'm sore,” Lukas said Thursday morning in his barn office. “I'm OK if I don't move.”

Lukas said the injury occurred at his barn when he climbed aboard a different pony, and it was spooked.

“I thought I was John Wayne,” Lukas said. “He jumped forward and when he jumped forward, I had spurs on, so I gripped him with my legs, obviously, trying to stay on him. I spurred him and then the wreck was on. I spurred him every jump after that. It happened right out in front of here. Everybody's standing there watching.”

Moving from his training chart to a rib chart, Lukas said he “broke” 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 and “cracked” 9, 10 and 11. Lukas said he was sent to the emergency room at nearby CHI St. Vincent Hot Springs for treatment. Lukas joked about the experience and shunning hospitalization.

“They were going to keep me, but I walked out,” Lukas said. “They had 40, 50 people in emergency. I sat there four hours. The doctor said they (ribs) were pretty badly broken, the ones that were broken. He said it would take about 30 minutes to get a bed ready. I said, 'You don't need to get a bed ready for me, you've got people out here dying right here in front of you.' I said, 'Why don't you go out there and get one of those 40 that have been there for two days camping out and give them the bed.' I said, 'You give them my bed.' ”

Lukas' accident occurred a little less than a year after he was hospitalized at CHI St. Vincent for internal bleeding.

“I'm wondering if Arkansas is for me,” Lukas said. “I love it here, but I don't like to get banged up when I get here. Internal bleeding was a little worse. I don't know, though. Boy, I was a sore son of a b**** for the first couple of days (after breaking five ribs). I still am.”

Notorious for dedication to his craft, Lukas returned to ponying horses last season at Oaklawn after being hospitalized. He said it was more business as usual this December.

“I didn't miss any days working,” Lukas said. “I drove over to the front side and trained from there, drove back and forth.”

Lukas, who annually winters in Hot Springs, is the ninth-winningest trainer in Oaklawn history with 337 victories entering Friday. He was Oaklawn's leading trainer in 1987 and 2011.

Lukas 40-horse stable in 2022-2023 boasts more quality and quantity than past years. It is headed by multiple Oaklawn stakes winner and 2022 Kentucky Oaks champion Secret Oath. She is scheduled to make her 2023 debut in the $350,000 Azeri Stakes (G2) March 11 at Oaklawn, Lukas said. The Azeri is for older fillies and mares at 1 1/16 miles.

The post Hall Of Famer D. Wayne Lukas Still ‘Sore’ After Broken Ribs, But Returns To The Saddle At Oaklawn appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Trainer Nicholas Palmer Celebrates First Winner With Family Homebred

Nicholas Palmer celebrated the first victory of his training career Friday at Gulfstream Park after saddling Bad Henry for a 5 ¼ length romp in Race 2.

The 30-year-old Jupiter, Fla.-native achieved his career milestone with a horse bred and owned by his parents, Teresa and David Palmer, long-time prominent owners in South Florida.

“It feels amazing. It's really special. I'm happy it was with a homebred,” Palmer said.

Bad Henry ($29.40), a 2-year-old son of Good Samaritan, won for the first time in four career starts in the mile maiden claiming race as the longest price in the six-horse field.

Although he grew up in Thoroughbred racing, Palmer didn't always have a goal to become a trainer.

“It's not really what I always wanted to do. I had another job in film, doing lighting. I took a hiatus and went to the farm and saw a 2-year-olds-in-training sale and it piqued my interest more than racing did when I was a kid,” said Palmer, who lived and worked on an Ocala farm for eight years. “I just loved it and never left the farm. I didn't go back to my job.”

Palmer left the farm to work for some a few prominent trainers before taking out his license earlier this year.

“I worked as a foreman for Danny Gargan three years ago just for the Saratoga meet. Following that I was working for Saffie Joseph as a foreman and then an assistant at Palm Meadows,” Palmer said. “I also worked for Armando De La Cerda for a while, as well.”

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Suspended NYRA Clocker Denied Stay, Claims Absence Will ‘Harm’ Horsemen

Richie Gazer, the longtime NYRA head clocker who is set to begin a 30-day suspension and pay a $2,500 fine for “altering a published work of a horse to make the horse eligible to race,” has been denied a stay of his penalties by the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) while he seeks to elevate the case to the state court level.

Gazer's attorney, Karen Murphy, confirmed the NYSGC's denial to TDN on Friday afternoon, shortly after the commission emailed her the decision stating the stay would not be granted. She said at this point, Gazer has exhausted all his commission-level appeals.

“This is a purely vindictive response. I am actually shocked by the whole thing,” Murphy said.

In making the case for a stay to be granted, Murphy had written to the commission that Gazer's “absence from his duties as the Head Clocker for the significant suspension imposed will be harmful to all NY horsemen and horsewomen whose horses rely on his daily services.”

On Dec. 12, the NYSGC voted unanimously to uphold Gazer's commission-level appeal of penalties by rejecting a hearing officer's recommendation that the case be dismissed.

Instead, the commissioners imposed the original penalties that had been handed down earlier in the year by Braulio Baeza, Jr., the NYSGC state steward at the three New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks.

Gazer's penalty stems from a May 19, 2022, stewards' ruling in which he changed a published five-furlong work by subsequently substituting the correct four-furlong split from within that longer work.

The purpose of providing the half-mile timing was to make a horse eligible to come off NYRA's “poor performance” list, which is governed by a seldom-triggered rule that does not allow for a workout farther than four furlongs.

“The decision to issue the penalty [is] without precedent and lacking strong basis to affirm the decision…” hearing officer Dayrel Sewell wrote in his Oct. 21 report that recommended vacating Gazer's penalty. “Respondent has a spotless 40-year track record, and there is no evidence of corruption or favoritism towards a trainer(s) during his employment as head clocker.

“Although there is no regulation [specific to what Gazer was accused of doing], the Stewards have discretion on how to handle this, but the discretion must be proportionate to the harm and there must be boundaries to the practice of discretion,” the hearing officer summed up.

The commissioners' outright rejection of the hearing officer's months of work in conducting the hearing and writing up the report is somewhat unusual. But in most state jurisdictions, racing commissioners are not bound to accept the opinions of the hearing officers, who are often attorneys, that they hire to hear appeals.

An exasperated Gazer has called the entire ordeal “a joke.” On Dec. 18, TDN's Bill Finley editorialized that the decision by the NYSGC to penalize the clocker was a “disgrace” that bucked common sense.

Murphy told TDN on Dec. 30 that Gazer is still clocking horses, and that he has yet to be informed when his suspension is supposed to start.

“He's at work and he'll be able work until [Baeza] sets the [dates for the] suspension down,” Murphy said. “But am I going to be able to get into court and get an injunction to stop that suspension? I think that's probably a hope that is beyond our reach at this point.”

Murphy explained that Gazer's court appeal involves a type of filing known as Article 78, which is a New York law by which a petitioner asks a court to review a decision or action of a state official or administrative agency to determine whether such action was unlawful.

Murphy added though, that petitioners have to weigh whether going through the courts is worth it, because Article 78 cases are expensive to litigate and often languish in the court system for months or even years.

TDN asked Patrick McKenna, NYRA's vice president of communications, if there was anything trainers needed to know about the morning clocking routine given Gazer's pending suspension and the in-limbo court appeal.

“Richie Gazer is a deeply experienced professional whose presence and skills as a clocker would absolutely be missed at Belmont Park should the NYSGC suspension take effect,” McKenna wrote in an email. “That said, NYRA does have the necessary staff in place to adequately cover his duties.”

Back on Dec. 12, NYSGC chairman Brian O'Dwyer said during the meeting that, “The commission reviewed the entire record [and] established the violation as a matter of fact…. And in particular, found that the conduct was improper in relation to commission rule 4042.1(f).”

That rule prohibits “improper, corrupt or fraudulent” acts or practices in relation to racing or conspiring or assisting others in such acts or practices.

Along with O'Dwyer, NYSGC commissioners John Crotty, Peter Moschetti, Jr., Christopher Riano, Marissa Shorenstein and Jerry Skurnik all voted in favor of rejecting the hearing officer's recommendations not to penalize Gazer.

The outcome of their vote, which had taken place at some point prior to the open, public meeting, was simply read into the record, and the commissioners did not debate any specifics or discuss findings during the Dec. 12 meeting itself.

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Pegasus Prep for Colonel Liam in Fort Lauderdale

Robert and Lawana Low's Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) will line up in Saturday's GII Fort Lauderdale S. at Gulfstream Park as the lone prep for his attempt at a third consecutive victory in the $1-million GI Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational. The gray was last seen finishing ninth in the G1 Dubai Turf at Meydan Mar. 26.

“Ideally, we wanted a little bit more time between races back to the Pegasus, but it is what it is,” trainer Todd Pletcher said. “He runs well off the layoff so, hopefully, he runs well there and moves forward for the big one.”

Colonel Liam is drawn widest of all in post 12 with Irad Ortiz, Jr. aboard.

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