The Reputation of Baccarat

Playing at land based casinos is quite different from playing at online casinos or online poker rooms. Although the online gaming industry offers every casino game possible at an easy and colorful platform, the real thing is pretty hard to replace, even impossible.

Some casino games can not reserve there original form at the online casino, no matter how resembles they may be. One of the casino games that answer to this description is the game of baccarat, which is a classic land based casino game.

Baccarat does not have complicated rules or advanced strategies as other games have (like the game of poker for instance) but it has the best element a game needs in order to have good publicity, and that would be questionable reputation.

By questionable reputation I do not mean bad reputation, but I do not mean good either. So what does it leave us with? It is quite simple- it leaves us with a mysteries reputation, unknown but still rising curiosity.

If you have been to a casino before, you probably know that the atmosphere is everything. For those who have not been to a casino, I’ll explain. When you enter a casino, you enter some kind of a personal fairytale where you are rich and famous and as long as you are there, women (or men) will ask for your presence, drinks will constantly be given to you and you will have a variety of games offered to you. Until, of course, you will lose all your money and be forced to leave the magic kingdom.

At this kind of place, where everything is so colorful and the variety is infinite, each game tries to stand out and draw players to his side. Some do it with flashy lights and noisy dealers while others do the exact opposite.

The main reason for why baccarat is considered to be such a prestigious game is hidden inside the baccarat room. The room is covered with big curtains (usually red suede) and is, by that, separated from the other games of the casino. The game usually has a very high minimum so it can only be played by rich and experienced high rollers. The baccarat players can enjoy the presence of a couple of casino girls or more, who are there to serve them drinks and entertain them.

The game itself is very easy to learn and even easier to play, so why is it considered so prestigious? As I already said, each game has its own glamour around it, and the baccarat’s glamour is that not every one can play it.

If you ask me if I think there is more to it then just the atmosphere, I will say definitely not, but for some it is certainly enough.

As for my personal advice, I say go ahead and try every game at the online casinos and land based casinos, as long as you do not forget to do the most important thing of all – have fun!

‘Now I Feel Like We Can Have The Right Type Of Conversation’: Discussions To Continue On Where Cigar Mile Winner Mind Control Will Stand At Stud

Red Oak Stable and Madaket Stables' three-time Grade 1-winning millionaire Mind Control had to overcome adversity to win the final start of his career, but his superiority reigned supreme in Saturday's Grade 1, $750,000 Cigar Mile Handicap at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The 6-year-old by Stay Thirsty with Hall of Famer John Velazquez up, displayed his signature grit when confronted by Grade 1 winner Get Her Number to his outside while also fending off an inside rally from Grade 1 Florida Derby-winner White Abarrio in the stretch drive. With his ears pinned back, Mind Control would not be denied and came out a head on top, completing the one-turn mile in 1:35.53.

The triumph provided Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher with a record-extending sixth Cigar Mile win. Among his previous Cigar Mile heroes are Stay Thirsty, who captured the race in 2012 in the final start of his career. The last father-son duo to win the Cigar Mile were inaugural 1988 winner Forty Niner, who produced 1996 winner Gold Fever.

“I was so proud of him yesterday. That was a phenomenal performance,” Pletcher said. “It's just great to see him have a victory like that in his final career start. He deserved to go out that way.”

Red Oak Stable racing manager Rick Sacco echoed Pletcher's sentiments.

“We're elated, he's such a cool horse to be around and it's such a thrill to be associated with the horse,” Sacco said.

Mind Control was initially trained by Gregg Sacco, capturing Saratoga Race Course's Grade 1 Hopeful during his juvenile season in 2018 and Grade 1 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial the following year. He was transferred to Pletcher's barn last summer and made a winning debut in the Grade 2 John A. Nerud in July 2021 by a head over Belmont Park specialist Firenze Fire.

Last September, he made his first two-turn start in nearly three years in the Parx Dirt Mile, defeating Grade 1 Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan Handicap winner Silver State and registering a career-best 104 Beyer. He matched that figure this year with a hard-fought triumph over Grade 1-winning multimillionaire Hot Rod Charlie in the Grade 3 Salvator Mile at Monmouth Park.

While bittersweet, the sendoff was a fitting one for Mind Control, who had to overcome sloppy and sealed track conditions in his final test. He was soundly beaten in his previous two starts over a track rated “sloppy.”

“It's not only great for him to go out on a win, but for him to do it in the style that defines his character and fight off challenges from the Florida Derby winner on the inside, the American Pharoah winner on the outside,” Pletcher said. “Three Grade 1 winners battling it out across the track. He showed that signature move of his where he puts his head in front and won't be denied.”

Sacco described Mind Control's final career start as, “almost like a movie ending.”

“It's incredible stuff,” Sacco said. “We're very proud of the horse, the team and everything that he means to us. It was fitting and it was awesome that Johnny came in to ride. We're delighted and over the moon. I just want to congratulate Todd and the wonderful job my brother, Gregg, did early on in his career. It was all kind of a fitting end to a really, really cool horse's career.

“Everyone says that. Whether it's Todd, who calls him a warrior, or Amelia Green, who gets on him every day,” Sacco added. “He has a special place in everyone's heart because of what he's done over such a long career.”

With the Cigar Mile now in the rearview mirror, Sacco said discussions will continue on where Mind Control will stand at stud.

“The feedback over the last two months was how good this horse has been doing. I wanted to play this hand and wait until we ran,” Sacco said. “The way it played out was fitting for us, but I wanted to wait until after he ran. That was my gut feeling and that I didn't want to have conversations until after this race. We skipped the Breeders' Cup by design, and we wanted to wait until after this race and now I feel like we can have the right type of conversation that we need to have now.”

Red Oak Stable, owned by Stephen Brunetti, has campaigned talented Grade 1 winners Sweet Return and Unbridled Mo as well as dual stakes winner and New York stallion King for a Day.

“He ranks as Number One,” Sacco said of Mind Control. “He's won graded stakes every year from 2-to-6, three Grade 1s. He's won the most money we've ever had with a horse. He's the best horse we've ever had for sure.”

While not in attendance, the ownership group watched the Cigar Mile on a plane ride from St. Barthelemy to Miami.

“We celebrated Stephen Brunetti's birthday this weekend in St. Barts and we were on a plane flying back to Miami when the race was being run,” Sacco said. “We had a bottle of champagne, and we weren't going to crack it open. But if he won, we were going to do it. Stephen Brunetti was on the plane with one of his college friends and his wife, so it was extraordinary to win on the flight over. And we did open up that bottle of champagne immediately.”

The post ‘Now I Feel Like We Can Have The Right Type Of Conversation’: Discussions To Continue On Where Cigar Mile Winner Mind Control Will Stand At Stud appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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With His Exercise Rider Aboard, Promising Post Time Wins Again

The Week In Review, By Bill Finley

When Eric Camacho retired from riding in 2016, he thought he knew what his future would be. He'd work as an exercise rider in the mornings and step aside in the afternoons and let someone else get all the glory and the big paychecks. Never did he imagine he'd win another race, let alone get the mount on an undefeated 2-year-old who might just be good enough to be pointed toward the GI Kentucky Derby. But after Post Time (Frosted) won Saturday's Maryland Juvenile at Laurel with Camacho aboard, it's beginning to look like anything is possible.

“It's been amazing,” Camacho, 39, said. “Words can't express it.”

Camacho rode regularly from 2004 through 2016 and won 787 races and captured Laurel Park's 2005 winter meet riding title. But he won just 16 races in 2016 and was having a hard time lining up decent mounts.

“I needed to figure out what I was going to do with the rest of my life,” he said.

So he quit riding and took a job galloping horses for trainer Keith Nations. It was his first stop of many before he signed on to work for trainer Brittany Russell in May. That was just about the time that Russell was starting to prepare Post Time for the races. In the son of Frosted, she knew she had a talented prospect but one who was a handful and was immature and quirky. Someone needed to teach him the right way to go about things and she assigned the job to Camacho. The two hit it off.

“He liked to rear up, he liked to play around,” Camacho said. “This horse liked to do things way he liked to do things. I have a lot of experience with younger horses trying to get along with them. We had a bond. Don't get me wrong, we had our bouts. But he came to respect me. He's a very smart horse.”

Post Time's debut was delayed due to a quarter crack, but Russell, whose husband, Sheldon, is a jockey, had him ready to go by early fall. It was around then that Camacho came to her and said whoever would be riding Post Time in the afternoon needed to get on him in the mornings beforehand.

“I told her that if she put somebody on this horse they first need to come by and get on him in the morning,” Camacho said. “I don't want them to afraid of him in the afternoon.”

Russell considered his advice and started to think that maybe the best option was to let Camacho ride Post Time.

“I asked him if maybe he should ride the horse,” she said. “At first, I was kind of just joking around.  But then I thought, you know what, he has a good relationship with the horse's owner, Ellen Charles, and I know he'll get this horse to the starting gate. Whatever tricks this horse might have up his sleeve on race day I know Eric will remain confident in him and will let him run anyway.”

The Maryland-bred debuted Oct. 7, facing off against open company in a 5 1/2-furlong maiden race at Laurel. Camacho, who had one mount in 2017 and another in 2021, had not won a race for nearly six years, since Oct. 20, 2016. Post Time won by two lengths, but it was far from smooth sailing. After making a sweeping move on the turn and gaining the lead in upper stretch, he swerved in and out down the lane.

He returned for an allowance race on Oct. 27 and it was a case of more of the same, a bold move on the turn followed by his ducking in and out down the stretch. He won by 6 3/4 lengths.

The Maryland Juvenile was next. Facing fellow Maryland-breds, this time Post Time closed from last, made an eye-catching move on the turn and drew off to win by 3 3/4 lengths. Though the competition may not have been that strong, it was a very impressive effort. And it was delivered without any antics in the stretch, giving Camacho his third win on the year from just three mounts. He has not ridden anybody else this year.

“This horse really turned a comer in the last two weeks or so,” Camacho said.

With the worst behavior perhaps a thing of the past, maybe now is the time for Russell to go to a different jockey, maybe even her husband, who is one of the top riders on the Maryland circuit.  Russell said she has no plans to do so.

“I don't know where we'll go with him next, but it's kind of hard to pull somebody off a horse that knows him so well and has done nothing wrong on him,” Russell said. “I think this has meant a lot to Eric. And it should. He's done a lot of work with this horse, who has had his good days and his bad days. Yes, he has a lot of talent, but I'm sure there are a lot of days when Eric wakes up and thinks, 'Oh, gosh, I've got to get this sucker to the racetrack this morning.' We gave Eric an opportunity, but he has done a great job.”

It's clear that Post Time is ready for a tougher assignment, but it's hard to tell how good he is. He has been winning easily, but that doesn't mean that he can step up from Maryland-bred competition and be competitive in a prep for the Derby. Then again, Russell isn't ruling it out.

“That's why you're in this business,” she said. “Everybody wants a horse like this in the barn and everybody wants to dream. The Derby or Derby preps? I can't say no, but he has a lot to prove before you can start talking about something like that. He won the Maryland Juvenile against a horse that had just won a restricted race. He's going to have to step up. Ellen is Maryland through and through, so she might like to see him run through the series here in races like the Tesio. But it's not a far ship to New York, so something there might be in the cards.”

Wherever Post Time goes next, it will be with Camacho, his exercise rider aboard.

“People say this horse has so much ability, why do you let the exercise rider ride him in the afternoon?” Russell said. “You have to realize that Eric had to work really hard with the horse to get him to show his talent in the afternoon. I don't know where we'd be without him.”

 

In Appreciation of Mind Control

There have been better horses to run over the last few years than Mind Control (Stay Thirsty), the winner of Saturday's GI Cigar Mile H., but perhaps none tougher or more game. You don't want to get into a dogfight in the stretch with this horse because you will lose. That was the case Saturday when he was passed in the stretch by Get Her Number (Dialed In) only to fight back and win by a head. It was his 11th career stakes win and his third victory in a Grade I event.

In the last four races in which he has crossed the wire first, he has won by a head every time. The chart comments have included the following: “battled back gamely,” “bid stretch, came again,” and “dueled.” Outside of his maiden win, which he won by three lengths, he has never won by more than 1 1/2 lengths and he won both the GI H. Allen Jerkens S. and the GIII Toboggan S. by a nose.

He's also been remarkably durable, winning the GI Hopeful S. as a 2-year-old and the Cigar as a 6-year-old in his last career start.

“If you like horse racing, you've got to love this horse,” said winning trainer Todd Pletcher after the Cigar.

Well said.

The post With His Exercise Rider Aboard, Promising Post Time Wins Again appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Multiple Grade 1 Winner Taiba Targets Malibu Stakes At Santa Anita

Taiba, a two-time Grade 1 winner and one of the top 3-year-old males of his class, will aim to close out his 2022 campaign on a high note in the Malibu Stakes (G1) on Dec. 26 at Santa Anita Park for owner Zedan Racing and trainer Bob Baffert.

The son of Gun Runner has been one of the most consistent horses among this year's sophomores, in the money for five of his six starts, with all but his debut win coming against Grade 1 competition.

He enters the Malibu off a third-place effort in the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) at Keeneland, where he posted a career-best 110 Beyer Speed Figure and outfinished all other 3-year-olds in the field, including Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Rich Strike.

“He's all racehorse,” Baffert said. “He reminds me a lot of his sire, Gun Runner. Very well put together, beautiful conformation, great temperament, a powerful horse, and sort of a smaller version of Justify.

“He broke his maiden very impressively and won the Santa Anita Derby (G1) in just his second start,” the trainer continued. “He was the co-favorite for the Kentucky Derby, but it was just a bit too much, too soon. He ran a great race in the Haskell (G1) and another big race in the Pennsylvania Derby (G1). I thought he was the best 3-year-old all year long. Very proud of his effort in the Breeders' Cup Classic. This horse will get even better with age.”

If Taiba is successful in the Malibu, he will be the only North American-based 3-year-old colt to notch three Grade 1 victories this season.

After breaking his maiden on debut by 7 ½ lengths and posting a 103 Beyer, Taiba stepped up in class to test the Santa Anita Derby, and he passed with flying colors, winning by 2 ¼ lengths ahead of multiple Grade 3 winner Messier, who was himself another 10 lengths ahead of the third-place finisher.

Taiba finished second by a head in the Haskell Invitational Stakes off a track record time, then he shipped east again to topple a stacked field in the Pennsylvania Derby. In that race, he outkicked Grade 1 winner Zandon by three lengths and defeated fellow Grade 1 winners Cyberknife and White Abarrio, all while earning a 108 Beyer.

His efforts in the Pennsylvania Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic give Taiba two of the top three Beyer figures earned by a 3-year-old this season going a distance greater than a mile.

Taiba has been working toward the Malibu at Santa Anita Park, where he most recently turned in a five-furlong breeze in 1:01.80 on Nov. 27.

“We feel he has a lot of improvement left in him,” said Gary Young, Amr Zedan's racing manager. “We have a lot of confidence in this horse. The Malibu provides a good bridge between the Breeders' Cup and next year's Saudi Cup. His recent work this past weekend was very strong and we believe he'll be sharp in the Malibu. The long-term goal is to get him back to the Breeders' Cup Classic at the end of next year.”

Owner Amr Zedan added, “We are very proud of all Taiba has accomplished so far. We fell in love with this colt at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale and were willing to pay a lot of money for him as two-year-old. He's lived up to our expectations and seems to be getting better and better. We would be thrilled and honored if he were to win an Eclipse Award for his tremendous efforts.”

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