Beverly Park Wins His 14th Race of 2022

Beverly Park, the hardest-working horse in horse racing, came through again Monday, winning the fourth race at Mahoning Valley Race Course. Making his 29th start on the year, he won for the 14th time in 2022.

Beverly Park leads all horse in terms of wins on the year. Five horses are tied for second with eight wins each. His 29 starts also lead in that category with the runner-up, Pretty Loud (Boisterous), having started 27 times.

Sent off at 1-5 in the $17,600 starter allowance race for horses which have started for a claiming price of $5,000 or less in 2021-2022, Beverly Park broke sharply before dueling down the backstretch with Diamonds Enjoy (Kitten's Joy). He shook free approaching the turn and opened up on the field. But Flat Fun (Flat Out) closed strongly in the stretch to make the race close.

Beverly Park won by a diminishing neck. He paid $2.40. Apprentice Yan Aviles was aboard for the win. The running time for the six furlongs over a track listed as good was 1:13.

“He ran well,” owner-trainer Lynn Cash said. “The jockey might have gotten a little lackadaisical coming down the stretch. The jockey looked back two or three times. He looked back under each arm. I think the jockey got a little scare. If he had messed around and gotten beat that would have been really bad. But he dug back in and held that other horse off. The time wasn't that fast, but the track was slow. He broke sharper than he has in his last few races.”

There are just 19 days left on the year, but Cash said he will scour his collection of condition books and try to get another start into Beverly Park before 2022 concludes.

“I'll hope to get a race for him to go,” Cash said. “It comes down to that. He probably has one more start in him this year.”

Once 2023 begins, it will be harder for Cash to find races for his iron horse. Before he was claimed by Cash, Beverly Park ran in a $5,000 claiming race July 8, 2021. That race made him eligible at all tracks that card starter allowances for horses who have run at the $5,000 level in 2021 and 2022. At many tracks, with the start of the new year the conditions for the same races will be for horses that have started for $5,000 in 2022 and 2023. Cash said some tracks write starter races where horses are eligible if they have run for a certain price within two calendar years. That means he will be eligible for starter races at those tracks up until July of next year.

“When we run out of starter races for him, he's still eligible for two-other than allowances,” Cash said. “We'll probably start running in 'two other thans,' but those are tough races. We'll try to find spots for him.”

Cash said he will not run Beverly Park in claiming races, that the horse means too much to him to risk losing him to another stable.

“He'll probably run for another year and a half or so,” he said. “I don't have many mares, but at the very least I'll stand him at stud at my farm. His durability and his bullet-proofness, that's half the battle. His mother was a graded stakes winner and if he was six feet faster, he'd definitely be a sire. I'll never put him in a claiming race. I love this horse so much. Beverly Park is a part of Built Wright Stables. If I hadn't claimed him, nobody would know who I was.”

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‘I Wouldn’t Trade The Experience For Anything’: Jill Byrne Leaving Colonial Post

After a four-year tenure at Virginia's Colonial Downs, vice president of racing operations Jill Byrne will step aside after the company's sale to Churchill Downs, Inc., reports The Racing Biz. Though CDI offered Byrne a chance to stay on, she ultimately decided to take a different path.

“It was four years of what we did to get to this point to make Colonial Downs and Virginia racing so valuable to Churchill Downs,” Byrne told The Racing Biz. “It was exhausting and rewarding at the same time when you're the one person responsible for the entire racing part of it — the safety and everything that goes with it. I wouldn't trade the experience for anything.”

Byrne joined Colonial Downs from Breeders' Cup Limited where she served two years as senior director of Industry Relations focusing on the promotion and coordination of the Breeders' Cup Challenge series connecting owners, trainers and horses to the Breeders' Cup World Championships and with industry constituents and fans. She additionally produced the Player's Show, the official Breeders' Cup World Championships simulcast signal along with the Morning Works show. Prior to Breeders' Cup, Byrne was the director of Broadcast and Programing at Churchill Downs Racetrack for nearly a decade, overseeing broadcast and production of Churchill Downs race product including the Kentucky Oaks & Derby.

Prior to working at Churchill Downs, Byrne was a host, racing analyst and reporter for TVG. Growing up in a Virginia horse family, she spent countless hours in the stable area galloping and caring for Thoroughbreds trained by her father Pete Howe, who conditioned Eclipse Award winners Soothesayer and Proud Delta. These are the beginnings of her passion for horseracing, launching an era working with then husband Patrick Byrne, trainer of 1997 Horse of the Year and Eclipse Award winners Favorite Trick and Countess Diana as well as 1998 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Awesome Again.

Despite the loss of her father in September, Byrne plans to remain active in the horse racing industry.

“I look forward to continue to make a positive impact in the horse racing industry that has literally been my life from the day I was born,” she said.

Read more at The Racing Biz.

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2000 Winners for Luke Morris

Jockey Luke Morris, best known for his winning ride aboard Kirsten Rausing's Alpinista (GB) (Frankel {GB}) in this year's G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, registered the 2000th victory of his career when guiding Recuerdame (The Factor) to a half-length success Monday at Lingfield.

Though he currently sits on 94 winners for the year, Morris has brought up better than 100 each year since 2011.

Eight of Morris's nine career Group 1 winners has come for Alpinista's trainer Sir Mark Prescott, who told Sporting Life: “Its a great tribute to his professionalism, reliability and work ethic. The eight Group 1 winners he has ridden for me show how good he is on the big day as well. However, both he and I have somewhere to go before we reach the 700-plus winners George Duffield rode for me!”

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Rodolphe Brisset No Longer Training Privately For WinStar

Trainer Rodolphe Brisset is no longer a private trainer for WinStar Farm, reports the Daily Racing Form. According to WinStar president and CEO Elliott Walden, Neal McLaughlin and Terry Arnold will now oversee WinStar's training center.

“We are still working together – just going back to the way things were before,” Brisset told DRF. “I have 20 stalls at Keeneland and 20 at Oaklawn Park for now, many for WinStar and their clients. I just want to put the word out that I'm not private any more.”

A longtime assistant for Bill Mott, the French-born Brisset went out on his own in 2017, developing a relationship with WinStar in which he provided early racetrack training for many of the farm's young horses, including Triple Crown winner Justify. Brisset was announced as having taken over WinStar's training center in June of 2022.

“It just wasn't working the way we wanted it,” Brisset told DRF.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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