Gulfstream Park: Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Guaranteed At $600,000 Sunday

The Rainbow 6 went unsolved at Gulfstream Park Saturday for the 12th racing day in a row following a single-ticket jackpot hit for $533,783.63.

Sunday's Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $600,000.

The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Sunday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 5-10, featuring back-to-back optional claiming allowance events in Races 8 and 9.

In Race 8, a $86,000 race at five furlongs on turf for older horses, Todd Pletcher-trained Meetmeinkingston will seek to improve on a second-place finish under the same conditions Dec. 22.

Patrick Biancone-trained Diamond Wow is scheduled to make her first start on dirt since finishing fourth in last season's Forward Gal (G3). Grade 2 stakes-placed on turf, the daughter of Lookin At Lucky won the Our Dear Peggy over Gulfstream Park's main track as a 2-year-old.

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Alvarado Hits Career Milestone 2,000 Wins At Gulfstream

Jockey Junior Alvarado rode Broadway Force ($7.80) to victory in Saturday's Race 5 at Gulfstream Park to reach the 2,000-win career milestone.

“It hasn't come easy for me – I've had a lot of injuries – but that's what makes every win worth it,” Alvarado said following a winner's circle celebration for his career riding feat. “A Grade 1 or a claiming race, I'm grateful for each win. I don't take anything for granted.”

Alvarado's achievement followed Tyler Gaffalione's 2,000th career victory on Friday afternoon at Gulfstream.

“It seems like a whole year since winning a race. I wanted it so bad. It seems like I was riding against 10 horses for each horse I was riding,” said Alvarado, who had gone winless in his 10 starts since winning his 1,999th race Jan. 18. “Maybe I was over-trying. Today, I had a mindset to take it race by race, take it easy and not overdo anything.”

The 36-year-old journeyman is scheduled to ride Art Collector in next Saturday's $3-million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, who has been one of his most loyal supporters for many years.

Alvarado won No. 2,001 for Mott in Saturday's Race 9 aboard Candy Man Rocket ($4.80), who was coming off an 11-month layoff since winning a Feb. 22 optional claiming allowance at Gulfstream.

Alvarado is coming off a memorable and successful 2022 racing season, during which he rode Mott-trained Olympiad to four graded-stakes victories, including a win in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1). He finished second on Olympiad in the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) behind Flightline but found the Keeneland winner's circle aboard Mott-trained Cody's Wish, who scored a feel-good triumph in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1).

Alvarado, who rode his first career winner at La Rinconada in 2005, rode his first U.S. winner [Rodolfo Garcia-trained Satira] at Gulfstream Feb. 17, 2007, 15 days after making his U.S. debut at the Hallandale Beach track.

Alvarado has notched 17 Grade 1 victories while riding the winners off nearly $119 million in purses.

Alvarado moved on to the Chicago circuit in 2008 and steadily established himself as a force at both Arlington Park and Hawthorne. He began riding at Aqueduct during the winter months in 2012 and moved to ride fulltime on the New York circuit in 2012. For the past several winters, Alvarado has been riding at Gulfstream during the Championship Meet.

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‘She Was The Best Filly In The Race’: Betsy Blue Tops Interborough Exacta For Rice

Cloud Nine Stable's graded-stakes placed New York-bred Betsy Blue picked up her second straight open-company stakes score in Saturday's $100,000 Interborough, a seven-furlong sprint for older fillies and mares at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Linda Rice and piloted by Jose Lezcano, the 5-year-old Tonalist mare rallied stoutly to overtake her stablemate Piece of My Heart and the stubborn pacesetter Miss T Too to score by one length for her 10th career win.

Betsy Blue was claimed for $50,000 in March 2021 out of a winning effort at third asking at the Big A and has now won eight races for her current connections, including the 2021 Bouwerie against fellow state-breds at Belmont Park.

She finished a distant third in the one-mile Go for Wand (G3) over a sloppy and sealed main track  on Dec. 3 at Aqueduct but returned one week later to take the six-furlong Garland of Roses versus open company.

“She's a great filly to have in the barn for almost two years now. I was impressed with her first two races before claiming her,” said Rice, who missed out on haltering Betsy Blue for $25,000 in her second-out graduation. “I actually was out-shook on her and then we doubled up on her. There was a seven-way shake on her the first time and the second time it was just us. We had to reach a little harder.”

Miss T Too was hustled out of the gate by Eric Cancel to set the Interborough pace with Flight to Shanghai and Self Isolation tracking her early foot through a quarter-mile in :23.54 over the fast main track. Flight to Shanghai pressed the pace down the backstretch with Self Isolation angling off the rail in attempt to split the front pair as Betsy Blue watched from last-of-5 through a half-mile in :47.20.

The Kendrick Carmouche-piloted Piece of My Heart rushed up the rail through the turn as Betsy Blue began to steadily make up ground from her outside perch with a five-wide rally with Miss T Too clinging to a precarious lead turning for home. The pacesetter dug in gamely but she was no match for Betsy Blue, who powered by inside the final sixteenth to secure the win in a final time of 1:25.94.

Piece of My Heart persevered through the final strides to complete the exacta by one length over a game Miss T Too with Self Isolation and Flight to Shanghai rounding out the order of finish. Easy to Bless was scratched.

Lezcano, who won three races on the card, said he wanted to engineer a clean trip for Betsy Blue.

“I saw the three horses go head-to-head there [on the lead] and I kept her in the clear,” Lezcano said. “In the middle of the turn, the one horse [Flight to Shanghai] kind of went out a little, but she was the best filly in the race and she showed it.

“She's so good,” added Lezcano. “She keeps holding her form and in every race, she keeps running better and better. She's a nice horse and there's nothing more I could ask for.”

Carmouche said Piece of My Heart performed admirably against her stellar stablemate.

“I had a perfect trip and I rode the race to win, because I knew Lezcano would have to go around,” Carmouche said. “I figured I would see if I could get a short way home and she ran good, she was just second best. You've got to run almost a 110 Beyer to beat that filly. It's tough.”

Rice said Betsy Blue could target the seven-furlong $250,000 Barbara Fritchie (G3) on February 18 at Laurel Park with an eye towards the seven-furlong $150,000 Distaff Handicap (G3) on April 7 at the Big A.

“She might be better at six to 6 1/2 [furlongs], closing into faster fractions. I'm not sure seven-eighths to a mile is her best distance, but she's pretty versatile,” Rice said.

Bred in the Empire State by Blue Devil Racing Stable, Betsy Blue, out of the stakes-placed Yonaguska mare Honest to Betsy, banked $55,000 in victory while improving her record to 10-7-2 from 21 career starts. She returned $2.60 for a $2 win wager.

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Trainer Howie Tesher Passes Away

Howard (Howie) Tesher, a winner of 1,302 races, including several Grade I events, and a popular figure around the New York racetracks for decades, passed away Friday. He was 87.

According to his niece, Jodie David, Tesher passed away at the Majestic Memory Care Center in Hollywood, Florida, and had been there for about five years dealing with dementia. David said the cause of death was pneumonia.

“He was happy right up to the end,” David said. “There was no patient there like him. He was always grabbing the girls and giving them hugs. When he passed, there was a stream of employees coming by to kiss him goodbye.”

Tesher was born in 1935 in Miami and was a journalism major in college at the University of Miami. Out of college, he worked in his brothers' dental clinic, but soon discovered that he preferred to spend his time around horses, even though he was allergic to them.

Tesher ran his first horse at the old Tropical Park in 1961 and won his first race in 1962 with Weeper's Boy at Suffolk Downs. He trained for such prominent owners as Joseph Allen, Telly Savalas and George Steinbrenner.

“I got my assistant's license with Howie after I left Pat Byrne,” said trainer Steve Margolis. “He treated me like a son. I went through a divorce while I worked for him and that was hard on me because I was young. He was always really helpful and was a really personable person. I worked for him for seven, eight years and it was a great job and I learned a lot from him. He was a kind man and a friend to a lot of people.”

“Howie was one of the nicest people I ever met on the track,” said former jockey agent turned lawyer Drew Mollica. “He had a great sense of humor and was a guy who knew how to train a horse. Racing and the human race will miss him. He was a great stand-up guy in a game with far too many not stand-up guys. I'm proud to say he was my good friend.  Rest his soul.”

According to Equibase, Tesher had career earnings of $31,247,483. In terms of earnings, his top horse was Bolshoi Boy, who made $1,039,702 and won the GII Cornhusker H. and the GII Razorback H. in 1987. He also won the 1986 GIII Illinois Derby in 1986.

Tesher won the 1997 GI Man o'War S. and the GI Caesar's International H. in 1997 with Influent. He won the 1986 GI Washington D.C. International with Lieutenant's Lark and the 1993 GI Florida Derby with Bull Inthe Heather. He took over the training of 1982 GI Kentucky Derby winner Gato Del Sol after the horse was transferred from the Ed Gregson barn. Tesher's Champagneforashley won the 1990 Tampa Bay Derby and then finished third as the favorite in the GI Wood Memorial, which was his last career start. Champagneforashley was being pointed for the GI Preakness S., but suffered a career-ending injury two days before the race.

According to equineline.com statistics, which go back only to 1976, Tesher had 51 graded stakes winners. He started his last horse on May 2, 2014 at Gulfstream.

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