Mandy Lynn Delahoussaye, Daughter of Eddie D, Passes at 47

Mandy Lynn Delahoussaye, daughter of retired Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye and his wife Juanita, succumbed to a series of ailments this past Friday at age 47. Mandy, whose aunt, Rose Ann Delahoussaye, was her primary nanny and “Second Momma,” was known to racegoers at Santa Anita, Hollywood Park and Del Mar, as she often accompanied her family prior to moving to Louisiana from Arcadia in 2014.

“Mandy was an Angel sent from God to show us the world through her precious, innocent eyes,” reads an obituary posted by her family at www.mourning.com. “When asked, 'Mandy, who you betting on?' She would reply, 'Eddie D!' Mandy loved to bowl, Cajun dance, loved country music and chocolate chip cookies. She could have eaten shrimp every which way, every meal, every day. Mandy loved Christmas and Halloween and anything that involved cake. She loved Lucy, Golden Girls, Little House on the Prairie and last but not least, Everybody Loves Raymond. She will be missed by all who knew her and were blessed to see her smile. Rings on her fingers, bells on her toes, she shall have music wherever she goes.”

Mandy Delahoussaye is survived by family that includes her parents, brother Loren and aunt Rose Ann, as well as longtime close friends Dot and Ray Sibille. Memorial services are scheduled for Wednesday at Martin & Castille Funeral Home in Lafayette at 1 p.m. CT.

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Practical Joke’s Devious Stares Scores On Debut At Turfway

5th-Turfway, $68,250, Msw, 1-1, 3yo, f, 6f (AWT), 1:11.30, ft, 5 lengths.

DEVIOUS STARES (f, 3, Practical Joke–Yankee Bright, by Elusive Quality), sent away as the 7-2 third choice behind favored Juddmonte homebred Friction (Into Mischief), endured a wide trip from her outside gate, racing in fifth as Lanetta (Mastery) paced the field through a quarter in :22.64. Ridden hard by jockey Kent Desormeaux into the far turn while four wide, she powered to the front with all the momentum, stormed by late leader and eventual runner up, 21-1 shot Popnfizz (Hard Spun), and drew off nicely to win by five lengths. Out of a half-sister to GSP Isn't He Clever (Smarty Jones), GSW & GISP Adventist (Any Given Saturday), GSW Dijeerr (Danzig), and GSP Sharp Writer (Capote), Devious Stares has a pair of full-siblings–a 2-year-old filly and a yearling colt. Yankee Bright returned to Practical Joke for yet another full-sibling in 2023. Sales History: $170,000 Wlg '20 KEENOV. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $42,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

O/T-Wesley A. Ward; B-George E. Bates Trustee (KY).

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‘She Was There The Whole Way’: Falconet Cruises To First Stakes Victory In Ladies At Aqueduct

WinStar Farm and CHC Inc.'s Falconet notched her first stakes victory, pouncing from off the pace in Sunday's $150,000 Ladies, a 1 1/8-mile race for fillies and mares that is the first stakes of the 2023 winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher and ridden by Jose Lezcano, Falconet improved from a last-out fourth-place finish in the Comely (G3) on November 25 at the Big A where she stumbled at the start and ran on to be defeated just 2 1/2 lengths by Sixtythreecaliber.

Falconet fared much better in the Ladies, breaking well from the outermost post 5 as Exotic West and the Kendrick Carmouche-piloted Battle Bling, who won this event last year, vied for command to her inside. The former put her head in front as the field reached the first turn and marked an opening quarter-mile in 23.47 seconds over the muddy and sealed main track with Falconet stalking in third position.

Lezcano asked Falconet for more down the backstretch, coming to even terms with Battle Bling to her inside after a half-mile in 47.84, well in hand and full of run as Exotic West continued to hold steady in front. Battle Bling came under light urging from Carmouche in the turn as Sweet Willemina and Tonal Vision launched wide bids from the back of the pack, but Falconet came away with the clear advantage as the field reached the top of the stretch through three-quarters in 1:13.52.

Battle Bling, who was swung to the four-path by Carmouche, battled on valiantly down the lane to overtake second position from Tonal Vision and chipped away at her foe's margin, but could not catch a runaway Falconet, who was wrapped up just before the wire to post the two-length score in a final time of 1:52.15.

Battle Bling completed the exacta by three lengths over Sweet Willemina, who ran on well to land show honors 3 1/4 lengths ahead of Tonal Vision. Exotic West faded in the stretch and completed the order of finish in fifth.

Byron Hughes, Pletcher's Belmont Park-based assistant, said he was pleased with the ride from Lezcano.

“I thought he did a good job keeping her in the clear and getting her in a good rhythm,” said Hughes. “She responded to him and was able to kick there coming off the turn and held on.”

Lezcano, who rode Falconet for the first time, said the filly showed her class today.

“She broke good for me and she was there the whole way,” Lezcano said. “When I asked her, she went on and won the race. She did everything right today.”

Falconet, a 4-year-old filly by Uncle Mo and out of Grade 1 winner Birdatthewire, by Summer Bird, entered with two runner-up efforts in stakes company as a sophomore, posting good efforts in the Iowa Oaks (G3) at Prairie Meadows and Seneca Overnight at Churchill Downs. Bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm, she banked $82,500 in victory and improved her record to 3-3-0 from seven career starts. She returned $4.20 for a $2 win ticket.

The Rob Atras-trained Battle Bling took a three-race win streak into the Go for Wand (G3) on December 3 at the Big A where she was bumped at the break and finished eighth. Atras said it was good to see Battle Bling deliver an admirable performance in her first start back despite a tough trip.

“Kendrick said she doesn't really love that track, but she was more herself today,” Atras said. “Kendrick said she warmed up real good and she kept running. I think the traffic didn't help, but I was happy just to get her back.”

Carmouche, who rode the daughter of Vancouver to a graded score two starts back in the Grade 3 Turnback the Alarm Handicap, shared Atras' sentiments.

“I was saving ground and sitting in there the whole race,” said Carmouche. “If I could have got out a little earlier, I probably could have made a race of it but Lezcano had me blocked in the whole way.

“My filly ran a good race,” Carmouche added. “She really don't like the sloppy track, but we got her back to where she was and ran really well. We're really pleased with that.”

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‘We’ve Got A Lot Of Good Young Horses’: McPeek’s Banner Four-Win Day With Oaklawn 2YOs Includes Stakes Double

The terrible twos? Not for trainer Kenny McPeek Saturday at Oaklawn.

McPeek equaled a career high with four victories on the 10-race card – the first in Oaklawn history exclusively for 2-year-olds – highlighted by a sweep of the Renaissance Stakes at six furlongs and the Year's End Stakes for fillies at one mile.

The all-2-year-old format, the brainchild of Oaklawn racing secretary Pat Pope and patterned after Churchill Downs' popular “Stars of Tomorrow” programs, offered purses totaling nearly $1 million.

“We've got a lot of good young horses,” McPeek said during a phone call moments after the Year's End. “Got a lot of good clients that let us do that. When I was young, I had nothing but claimers up there (Oaklawn). At this stage, it's a real luxury to have the kind of horses that we're handling. For it all to come together there in one day, just a whole lot of fun to watch.”

McPeek won the fourth race, a $90,000 maiden special weight at one mile, with favored Sun Thunder ($4.20), Renaissance with Frosted Departure ($21.20), eighth race, a $90,000 maiden special weight for fillies at six furlongs, with Dear Lady ($11) and the Year's End with favored Defining Purpose ($6).

Fittingly, all four of McPeek's winners ran Nov. 26 at Churchill Downs, the second “Stars of Tomorrow” program during its 19-day fall meeting. McPeek also finished fifth in Saturday's second race, a $90,000 maiden special weight for fillies at one mile, with favored Kid's Last Laugh and sixth in the 10th race with Interlock Empire, a first-time starter. The nightcap was a $90,000 maiden special weight at six furlongs.

“Honestly, I haven't had a great month, until today,” McPeek said. “We've actually had kind of a modest month, but I don't typically run a lot during the winter anyway, early December. I just really like this December meet that Pat's put together, too.”

Before eliminating the category in 1975, Oaklawn had run more than 1,000 races for 2-year-olds since opening in 1905. Oaklawn has been able to again card 2-year-old races after shifting its opening, which had traditionally been in January or February, to December in 2021. Oaklawn had never run more than four 2-year-old races on a program since the calendar shift for the 2021-2022 meeting. There were three stakes for 2-year-olds this season after the addition of the Renaissance and Year's End for the 2022-2023 meeting that began Dec. 9. The $150,000 Advent for sprinters marked Oaklawn's first stakes race for 2-year-olds since 1973 when it debuted at the 2021-2022 meeting. Pope, obviously, moved the needle Saturday.

“These are great spots,” McPeek said. “Pat's done a good job with the program there. Get some route horses in spots, some sprinters a spot. It's great.”

McPeek said he already has next-race plans for three of his four winners. Defining Purpose, a dominant 5 ¼-length winner, will be pointed to the $200,000 Martha Washington Stakes for 3-year-old fillies Jan. 28 at Oaklawn. The 1 1/16-mile Martha Washington is Oaklawn's first of three Kentucky Oaks points races.

Sun Thunder, a 6 ½-length winner of his two-turn debut, is headed to the $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) Jan. 28 at Oaklawn. The 1 1/16-mile Southwest is Oaklawn's second of four Kentucky Derby points races. McPeek had two entrants (Ten Days Later and Denington) for its first, Sunday's $250,000 Smarty Jones Stakes at 1 mile. Sun Thunder, a $400,000 purchase in 2020, is by super sire Into Mischief. He finished third in his Nov. 26 career debut at Churchill Downs.

Dear Lady probably goes next in a two-turn entry-level allowance spot, McPeek said, while plans are pending for Frosted Departure, who was making his ninth career start in the Renaissance. McPeek said he does plan to keep Frosted Departure sprinting.

“I'm just trying to enjoy the moment,” McPeek said. “We're not going to worry about that until later.”

McPeek's wife, Sherri, co-owns Dear Lady, Defining Purpose, and Frosted Departure. Dear Lady represented Kenny McPeek's 1,900th career North American victory, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. The trainer only had to wait about 30 minutes for No. 1,901.

“We've always felt she was a really good filly and that filly is going to need to stretch out in her next run as well,” McPeek said, referring to Dear Lady. “I think we're in a great position with these young fillies.”

McPeek previously had won four races on a card twice – Oct. 26, 2008, at Churchill Downs and Nov. 27, 2021, at Churchill Downs. McPeek recorded his first career victory Oct. 27, 1985, at River Downs. Saturday's four-bagger pushed McPeek's career Oaklawn total to 65, the first coming Feb. 19, 1992. His biggest victory to date at Oaklawn came with future Eclipse Award winner Swiss Skydiver in the $400,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) for 3-year-old fillies in 2020. He also won the 2022 Smarty Jones with Dash Attack.

McPeek needed to just one day to match his victory total from the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting, when he had a string of horses in Hot Springs for the first time since 2018.

“It was a great day,” McPeek said.

In McPeek's absence, assistant trainer Ray Bryner saddled Saturday's winners. Bryner oversees McPeek's Oaklawn division. McPeek has 25 stalls for the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting.

David Cabrera rode Sun Thunder, Dear Lady and Defining Purpose. Francisco Arrieta rode Frosted Departure. Cabrera and Arrieta each rode 62 winners to share the 2021-2022 Oaklawn riding title.

Purses Saturday totaled $995,000. In addition to the Renaissance and Year's End, there was a $104,000 entry-level allowance/optional claimer for female sprinters and six maiden special weight events, each worth $90,000. The program attracted 113 entrants.

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