Steve Asmussen Plans Appeal Of KHRC’s 30-Day Suspension Over 2018 Ace Positives

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen plans to appeal the 30-day suspension handed down last week by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, attorney Clark Brewster told the Daily Racing Form this week.

Brewster said Asmussen will file a petition in Franklin Circuit Court in Kentucky, arguing that he followed well-known standards for oral administration of the sedative Acepromazine and that the original hearing officer applied the “wrong burden of proof” in the case.

“There are a number of issues here that I think are important to the industry and horsemen in general,” Brewster told DRF.

The case dates back to 2018, when two Asmussen trainees showed post-race positives for metabolites of the sedative Acepromazine: Thousand Percent after winning the second race at Churchill Downs on June 28, 2018; and Boldor after winning the sixth race at Keeneland on Oct. 25, 2018.

In late 2019, following a formal hearing before the stewards, the KHRC issued Asmussen a 30-day suspension and total $3,500 fine. An additional 30 days were stayed due to mitigating circumstances (number of violations due to overall record), pending no further violations for 365 days. Asmussen subsequently appealed.

A hearing on that appeal was conducted in August last year by hearing officer Jim Howard, who left the Public Protection Cabinet before making a recommendation. Hearing officer Eden Davis Stephens succeeded Howard, and based on the existing record she recommended a 30-day suspension for Asmussen in October of 2022.

Last week's KHRC decision to approve the hearing officer's recommendation did not come with a set date for Asmussen to serve the 30 days; the KHRC order did note that the action could be appealed in civil court.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Home, Sweet Woodbine Home: Jockey Jose Campos Planning To Bring Family From Mexico For 2023 Meet

Jose Campos has good reasons, four of them, to be exact, to believe he can make the 2023 Woodbine Thoroughbred season a special one.

Nearly 4,000 kilometres currently separates the 31-year-old jockey from the racetrack he will saddle up at this year, the trifecta-track oval where he rode in 192 races in 2022.

For now, Campos is in Mexico City, spending quality time with his wife Giovanna and their three children, daughter Selenia, and sons, Jose Luis, and Thiago, ahead of his return to Toronto in late March.

When talk turns to his second season and first full campaign at Woodbine, Campos, one of Mexico's leading jockeys, sports a wide smile, what he views as a game changer for his riding career in Canada.

“I'm going to try and bring them in April so that we can be together. It's going to be better for me. My family means everything. My wife, she has always helped me a lot. When you are without your family, it is not easy. When they are here, I think it's going to be better for me. It's going to be good.”

While home is the capital city of Mexico, Campos has found another place of comfort in the form of Woodbine.

He made his Toronto oval debut on Oct. 9, finishing ninth aboard 63-1 longshot Grand Gizmo in a 1 1/16-mile Inner Turf race.

Not a Hollywood ending by any stretch, but a moment that reinforced what Campos was thinking about his move to Canada.

“I had tried to come to Woodbine two or three years ago, but I couldn't because of the pandemic. So, when I came to Toronto, I was so happy. It was a good opportunity for me, and I wanted to make the most of it. The first race, I knew this was the place I wanted to be. I remember being on the track before the race and looking around and smiling. I was thinking about the feeling I would have when I won my first race.”

On Oct. 20, in race six, Campos experienced just that, teaming with Ima Daredevil, a 5-year-old daughter of Daredevil, to win the 6 ½-furlong claiming race for fillies and mares, 3-year-olds and up, by 6 ½ lengths.

“It was like a dream had come true. I was so happy. It was one of the best days in my career. To be in the winner's circle after three years of trying to get to Woodbine, I said, 'Yes! This is what I want.'”

By season's end, he made 16 trips to the winner's circle, accompanied by 69 top-three finishes and $743,933 in purse earnings.

Campos rode in seven stakes races, his best finish a second with Norseman Racing Stable 2-year-old One Bay Hemingway in the Grade 3 Grey.

His final win of 2022 came aboard Bold Reload, a Florida-bred son of Reload, on closing day of the Woodbine Thoroughbred meet.

“The racetrack is amazing. The main track is great. The E.P. Taylor is one of the best turf courses in the world, and we are lucky to have another nice turf course too. I love it. Woodbine is one of the best racetracks for sure.”

Support, from fellow riders, was immediate.

“Everyone came to me and said that if I needed anything to let them know. Emma [Jayne-Wilson], Patrick [Husbands], Luis [Contreras], Rafael [Hernandez], and a lot of others made me feel comfortable. There are so many good riders here. We have a good colony. It's not easy to be out of your country without your family.”

Campos' agent, former Woodbine rider Gerry Olguin, provided him with more than just riding opportunities.

The lifetime winner of 2,000 races, who was born in California, but raised in Mexico, did his best to make Campos feel at ease away from the racetrack.

“Jose has excellent qualities for a jockey, and he is a really hard worker,” praised Olguin. He's also a natural lightweight, which is a huge plus.”

Campos is grateful for Olguin's efforts to make the transition to Woodbine a smooth one.

“He's a good friend. I lived in his house the last two months of the season. It was really good for me. His wife [Robin] and son [Kai] are very nice people too.”

Soon enough, Campos will have more familiar faces around.

A win-win scenario for a rider with an ambitious goal for 2023, one he believes is within his grasp when the season gets out of the gates on April 22.

“I'm going to try and be in the top five. I know it's not easy because I'm new and I have to work hard, but that is what I want to do this year. I feel good in every way. I feel good in front, off the pace, whatever the situation is. Wherever I am in the race, I'm going to try to win. So, I want to try and be in the top five here.”

A place that has already felt like home and will even more in a few months.

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Imperial Hint’s Trainer Luis Carvajal, Jr. Disbands Stable, Takes Racing Office Position

Trainer Luis Carvajal, Jr. has disbanded his racing stable and taken a position in the Gulfstream Park racing office, reports the Daily Racing Form.

“It was getting difficult to get clients,” Carvajal told DRF. “I had a slow summer at Monmouth Park and came to Tampa with about 15 horses. The stress and the bills and everything else was really mounting.”

Carvajal began training in the United States in 2006, and won a total of 192 races for earnings of $7,105,430.

The 50-year-old native of Chile is best known as the trainer of Imperial Hint, the “Little Rocket.” The small-of-stature horse had an enormous heart and incredible speed, setting a track record for six furlongs at Saratoga when he won the G1 Vanderbilt in 2019 in a final time of 1:07.92.

Imperial Hint would have been a fourth generation homebred for owner Raymond Mamone, but that he gave the colt's dam, Royal Hint, to the facility that houses his breeding stock, Shade Tree Thoroughbreds, when she failed to produce much in her first several years. He later saw Imperial Hint as a 2-year-old at the farm, and paid $17,500 for the eye-catching youngster.

Imperial Hint would go on to compete on the international stage and in two editions of the Breeders' Cup, retiring with a record of 14 wins from 25 starts and earnings of $2.2 million. Mamone sold him privately to stand at stud in Louisiana, and the owner passed away in 2021.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Forward Gal Stakes: Florida-Bred Atomically ‘Regrouping’ After Breeders’ Cup Seventh

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Michael Bernard's Atomically, three months since making her graded-stakes debut in the Breeders' Cup, returns to South Florida in an effort to rediscover her winning ways in Saturday's $125,000 Forward Gal (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

The seven-furlong Forward Gal for fillies is among five graded-stakes for 3-year-olds on a 12-race program headlined by the $250,000 Holy Bull (G3), the next step on Gulfstream's road to the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) April 1.

Post time is 11:50 a.m.

Bred in Florida by Bernard and Tracy Pinchin and trained by Pinchin's husband, Jose, Atomically ran third in her debut last summer before notching back-to-back wins capped by a 6 ¾-length triumph in the FSS My Dear Girl in October.

The bay daughter of Grade 1-winning millionaire Girvin was sold privately to Eclipse's Aron Wellman after the My Dear Girl, moved to Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher and pointed to the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) at Keeneland. Her first time facing open company, she raced with the forward group never more than 3 ½ lengths from the lead before tiring to be seventh.

“I thought it was OK,” Pletcher said of the Breeders' Cup. “Obviously that was against the best 2-year-old fillies in the country in a big field going two turns and all that, but she tried hard. Now we're looking forward to regrouping and getting her going again.”

Atomically has been breezing steadily since late November for her return, which Pletcher had hoped would come in the one-mile Cash Run on New Year's Day at Gulfstream until being sidelined with a minor illness.

“She's doing good,” Pletcher said. “We were planning on running her in the one before this and she had a little temperature, so it knocked us off course a little bit. We got a little delayed getting her started but she's been training nicely. She's had some success over the track, so I look forward to getting her started here.”

Jose Ortiz will be aboard for the first time from Post 3 in a field of 10.

Also looking to get back on track in the Forward Gal is Arindel homebred Lynx, who rallied to be third, beaten 2 ½ lengths by Infinite Diamond, in the Cash Run. Lynx won the FSS Desert Vixen and Susan's Girl last summer at Gulfstream before finishing second as the favorite to Atomically in the My Dear Girl.

“We're trying to get her back into her old form now as a 3-year-old,” trainer Carlos David said. “Hopefully she can cross the wire first, but if not she'll have it under her belt for the next race and will be a lot more comfortable.”

Gulfstream's series for 3-year-old fillies continues with the one-mile Davona Dale (G2) March 4 and concludes with the 1 1/16-mile Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2) April 2. Lynx is undefeated sprinting, winning at five, six and seven furlongs by 7 ¾ combined lengths.

Jockey Joel Rosario, up for the first time in the Cash Run, rides back from Post 6.

“The next race is a month from now and that one is a mile, so this will be a good prep. We're trying to get her back in the game,” David said. “It's not that she can't get the seven-eighths. She's a little better going the distance, but she had a nice workout [Sunday] morning in 47 and change. She's feeling good and Joel is back on her, so we'll see what happens. I feel good about her.”

Ashbrook Farm and Upland Flats Racing's Red Carpet Ready, trained by Rusty Arnold, will be making her sophomore debut in the Forward Gal after going unbeaten in two starts at 2. She broke her maiden by 10 lengths sprinting six furlongs before registering a 3 ¼-length victory in the 6 ½-furlong Fern Creek, both at Churchill Downs.

Godolphin homebred Twice as Sweet was a 6 ¼-length winner of the six-furlong Smart Halo last fall at Laurel Park in her stakes debut for trainer Brendan Walsh. Last time out the Candy Ride filly ran fourth by three lengths in the Dec. 26 Letellier Memorial at Fair Grounds, also going six furlongs.

Completing the field are last out maiden winners Adeliese's Smile, Apropos, Flakes, Positano Sunset and Undervalued Sunset, the latter by 8 ¼ lengths last November at Aqueduct in her lone start; and Arella Star, fourth in the Cash Run.

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