‘Excited To Get Him On The Turf’: Manny Wah Aims For Rebound In Kenner Memorial

Susan Moulton's Grade 2-winning sprinter Manny Wah enters the $100,000 Duncan F. Kenner Memorial Stakes looking to turn the tables on two who finished ahead of him in December's Richie Scherer. For now, Big Chief Racing, Rocker O Ranch, and Keith Desormeaux's Surveillance and Tamaroak Partners' Bango are hung out on the also-eligible list as an oversubscribed field of eleven entered for the contentious 5 1/2 furlong turf sprint at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.

Slated as race 11 on Saturday's 14-race “Road to the Derby Day” card, post time for the 70th running of the Kenner is 5:00 p.m. CT. The program features the Lecomte (G3) and the Silverbulletday, prep races on the Road to the Kentucky Derby and Oaks which will award 20-8-6-4-2 qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

Saturday's forecast calls for rain in the early evening, which will increase the likelihood that Surveillance and the almost career-millionaire Bango draw in.

A 7-year-old horse by Will Take Charge, Manny Wah has the 9-5 morning-line target painted on his back as he'll try to win his second Kenner after scorching home to take the 2021 edition in his first ever run on the grass. Winner of the Phoenix (G2) this fall at Keeneland, the Wayne Catalano trainee backed that big run up with an impressive fourth in the Breeders' Cup Sprint, just 2 1/2 lengths behind Elite Power.

“He is doing unbelievable,” Wayne Catalano said. “I can't explain that last race. I'm excited to get him on the turf course.”

A fan-favorite at Fair Grounds, the story on how Manny Wah got his name is a good one.

“You know that horse named Man o' War, right?” Catalano said. “When he retired and visitors would come to see him, an old groom who worked on Man o' War's farm would ask them 'who do you want to see, Manny Wah?' The owner read an article about that and named her horse Manny Wah.”

Drawn in post No. 2 with Corey Lanerie named as his rider, with just five of his 36 starts on the turf, Manny Wah will likely run rain or shine.

Keith Desormeaux's Surveillance, winner of the Thanksgiving Classic and Richie Scherer already this meet, sits waiting on the also eligible list needing two horses to scratch to draw in. With all five wins coming at Fair Grounds, including breaking his maiden over the turf course, the barn reports the 6-year-old by Constitution is feeling happy and training as well as ever.

Beyond those two, there are a host of runners who could post the upset in the Kenner.

Here's the field for the Duncan F. Kenner from the rail out (with jockey, trainer, and morning line):

  1. Pyron (Declan Carroll, Al Stall Jr., 10-1);
  2. Manny Wah (Corey Lanerie, Wayne Catalano, 9-5);
  3. Bolder (Tyler Gaffalione, Steve Asmussen, 9-2);
  4. Evan Sing (Colby Hernandez, Al Stall Jr., 6-1);
  5. Angaston (Mitchell Murrill, Lon Wiggins, 3-1);
  6. Sign of War (Emmanuel Nieves, Cesar Govea, 8-1);
  7. Yankee Seven (Aubrie Green, Cesar Govea, 20-1);
  8. Kennesaw (Jareth Loveberry, Eduardo Rodriguez, 15-1);
  9. AE – My Pal Mattie (Gerardo Mora, Lee Thomas, 4-1);
  10. AE – Surveillance (James Graham, Keith Desormeaux, 3-1);
  11. AE – Bango (Tyler Gaffalione, Greg Foley, 7-2).

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Looking Back on Career of Two-Time Pegasus Turf Winner Colonel Liam

Two-Time Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational Stakes winner Colonel Liam was retired from racing Jan. 19, 2023, with a sparkling record of seven wins from 12 starts and career purse earnings of $1,812,565. A talented Thoroughbred racehorse and a fan favorite, Colonel Liam’s five stakes wins also included an unforgettable dead heat with Domestic Spending in the Grade 1 Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic Stakes on the 2021 Kentucky Derby undercard at Churchill Downs.

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New Rider, New Dimension: Two Emmys Could Come From Off The Pace In Col E.R. Bradley Stakes

Winner of the 2022 Muniz Memorial (G2), Wolfe Racing and trainer Hugh Robertson's Two Emmys returns to Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots for Saturday's $100,000 Col E.R. Bradley Stakes. The 7-year-old gelding is scheduled to face seven older rivals (with three also-eligibles) going 1 1/16 miles on the Stall-Wilson turf course.

The portable rail will remain set at 34 feet on the turf course and starters will be limited to eight for each the $100,000 Col E.R. Bradley, the $100,000 Duncan F. Kenner, and the $100,000 Marie G. Krantz.

The 37th running of the Bradley will go as Race 8 of 14 with a post time of 3:30 p.m. CT. The stakes-laden “Road to the Derby Day” program will get underway at noon CT and also features the Lecomte (G3) and the Silverbulletday, prep races on the Road to the Kentucky Derby and Oaks which will award 20-8-6-4-2 qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

Two Emmys has been known to be swift to the lead and then slow the pace up on the front end. That's what the 7-year-old gelded son of English Channel did when winning both his graded stakes, including the Mr. D (G1), but he showed a new dimension last out winning the Outbound Ike Stakes from off the pace at this distance over Hawthorne's turf course. This Hugh Robertson trainee had a new rider in that race, Marcelino Pedroza Jr., who is named to stay on board for the Bradley. The barn reports that Two Emmys continues to improve as he gets older, which can often be the case with English Channel's progeny. Drawing post No. 3, Two Emmys is 5-2 in the morning line.

The Cox barn enters two in the Bradley, and Gaining Ground Racing's Price Talk gets the 3-1 vote of confidence from morning line oddsmaker Mike Diliberto over Donegal Racing's Ready to Purrform, tabbed at 6-1.

Price Talk is certainly proven over the surface as five of the 6-year-old's six wins have been over the turf. Claimed for $80,000 over the summer at Belmont, the son of Kitten's Joy has been in the money in all four starts since joining the Brad Cox barn.

“He's been a good claim,” Cox said. “I like him. He's pretty solid. The guys who own him owned Factor This (twice a graded stakes winner at Fair Grounds), so they have some history down here in stakes races. He just came in from Kentucky, and he's training really well.  He ran last time on the synthetic, but I do think he prefers the turf a little more than the synthetic.”

Drawing post No. 2, Florent Geroux climbs back aboard after piloting him to a winning ride at Remington Park in September's Remington Green Stakes.

Drawing post No. 5 and made 6-1 in the morning line, it will be the newly turned 4-year-old Ready to Purrform's first run against older horses.

Current meet-leading trainer Bret Calhoun enters Gentle Soul. Cross-entered in the Louisiana Stakes (G3), this versatile Tapizar 6-year-old has won on turf and dirt. Drawing post No. 9 he will need a horse to scratch to enter. He will be attempting just his second stakes after finishing fourth in December's off-the-turf Diliberto.

“Ideally we'll run him on the turf, but he'll have to draw in (to the Col E.R. Bradley Stakes),” Calhoun said. “Second best thing would be to run against turf horses on the dirt. That's what it looks like it could be (with the current forecast). Last time out, he ended up on the lead, and that's not him. There was no speed and he just found himself there. It's not the trip we needed.”

Here's the complete field for the Col E.R. Bradley from the rail out (with jockey, trainer, and morning line):

  1. Freedom Factor (Emmanuel Nieves, Cesar Govea, 30-1);
  2. Price Talk (Florent Geroux, Brad Cox, 3-1);
  3. Two Emmys (Marcelino Pedroza Jr., Hugh Robertson, 5-2);
  4. English Tavern (Deshawn Parker, Michelle Lovell, 9-2);
  5. Ready to Purrform (Corey Lanerie, Brad Cox, 6-1);
  6. Sailing Solo (Jareth Loveberry, Louie Roussel III, 10-1);
  7. Greyes Creek (Javier Castellano, Paulo Lobo, 6-1);
  8. Big Agenda (Luis Saez, Joe Sharp, 6-1);
  9. AE – Gentle Soul (Rey Gutierrez, Bret Calhoun, 5-1);
  10. AE – American Hero (James Graham, Bernard Flint, 15-1);
  11. AE – Business Model (Tyler Gaffalione, Brendan Walsh, 6-1).

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Dr. Doug Daniels Joins HISA Horsemen’s Advisory Group

Dr. Doug Daniels has joined HISA's Horsemen's Advisory Group, the body of racing industry participants formed by HISA last year to provide formal feedback to HISA's executive team and Standing Committees on the implementation and evolution of its Racetrack Safety and Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) regulations.

Dr. Daniels is a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, a horse owner, and has owned Virginia Equine PLLC, a private veterinary practice, since 1997 after receiving his undergraduate degree in animal science and Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree from Auburn University in 1993. He is a member of the American Veterinary Medical Association, the North American Association of Racetrack Veterinarians, the American Association of Equine Practitioners and the Virginia Association of Equine Practitioners.

In addition to his prior work as an advisor on the development of medication regulations for the Virginia Horse Racing Commission, Daniels is currently an officer for the Virginia HBPA, and has served since 2021 as President and Chairman of the Board for the National HBPA.

“I'm thrilled to have Dr. Daniels be a part of the Horsemen's Advisory Group, where his decades of hands-on veterinary experience will help inform HISA's work,” said HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus. “As we revise our Racetrack Safety rules and prepare for the implementation of the ADMC Program in the coming months, we look forward to seeing how Dr. Daniels' perspectives can help ensure that our programs benefit all racing participants.”

With the addition of Dr. Daniels, HISA's Horsemen's Advisory Group now has 20 members with a wide variety of diverse viewpoints from across racing. Its membership includes trainers, owners, veterinarians, backstretch employees, farriers and representatives of racing offices and aftercare initiatives.

“My entire career has been dedicated to equine health and wellbeing, and I am committed to advancing efforts to make racing safer for Thoroughbreds nationwide,” said Dr. Daniels. “I'm grateful for the opportunity to formally advise on HISA's rules and look forward to collaborating with fellow Advisory Group members as our industry works to strengthen racing for years to come.”

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