Surick, Facing 62 Months in Prison, Appeals Doping Conviction

The former Standardbred trainer Nick Surick, who was sentenced to 62 months in federal prison last month for his role as a “doping mentor” in a years-long scheme that eventually resulted in him pleading guilty to two counts of drug adulteration and misbranding and one count of obstruction, lodged an appeal of both his conviction and his sentence Feb. 7.

As TDN's Bill Finley reported from Surick's Jan. 19 sentencing in United States District Court (Southern District of New York), Surick was ordered to serve one of the longer prison terms among those convicted in the 2020 international racehorse doping series of arrests that involved both Standardbred and Thoroughbred trainers based in Florida and the Northeast.

And that harsh sentence was handed down despite Surick's 's efforts to cooperate with prosecutors, who eventually decided that some of the information he offered was not credible and involved false accusations.

“I am truly sorry for the crimes that I have committed,” Surick had said at his sentencing. “I can't blame anybody but myself.”

The post Surick, Facing 62 Months in Prison, Appeals Doping Conviction appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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‘When He’s On The Top Of His Game, He’s Very Tough To Beat’: Carotari Headlines Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint

William Branch's Carotari, a popular and enduring turf sprinter during a career that began nearly five years' ago, is scheduled to seek his first graded-stakes victory in Saturday's $100,000 Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint (G3).

What would be more fitting than the 7-year-old gelding breaking through with his first graded-stakes triumph at Gulfstream Park?

During a 29-race career with 10 victories and $688,113 in purse earnings, Carotari has won three of his six stakes at Gulfstream Park. The 7-year-old gelding, who has won four of six starts and finished second once at Gulfstream, is coming off his only off-the-board finish on the local turf. The Brian Lynch graded stakes-placed trainee came up short in the stretch to finish fourth in the December 24 Janus Stakes.

“He probably needed the race off the layoff, and he was drawn down on the inside,” Lynch said. “He came out of the race well and has trained on well since.”

Carotari was making his final start of the 2022 in the Janus three months after capturing the Sept. 24 Laurel Dash.

“I just think he enjoys what he does. As an individual, he's a big, strong horse,” Lynch said. “He loves to run. He loves to train. When he's on the top of his game, he's very tough to beat.”

Joel Rosario has the call on Carotari, who will need to be at the top of his game to prevail over 9 rivals, including defending winner Yes I Am Free.

Golden Kernel Racing Stable's Yes I Am Free, who captured his first graded-stakes win with a dominating 3 ¼-length score in last year's Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint, came off a seven-month layoff to register a hard-fought optional claiming allowance win at Gulfstream Jan. 19.

The Laura Cazares-trained turf sprinter, like Carotari, is a 7-year-old gelding who has done his best running on Gulfstream's turf course., over which the son of Uncaptured has won seven of 14 starts.

Miguel Vasquez has the call.

Peace Sign Stables' Belgrano enters the Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint with a victory in the Janus, in which he rallied from off the pace to win by a head. The 9-year-old gelding finished third in last year's running of the Turf Sprint.

Paco Lopez has the return mount aboard Belgrano.

Monster Racing Stables' The Critical Way, a graded-stakes winner who is set for his 2023 debut; Paul Mouttet's Rockcrest, who finished second in the Vigil (G3) in his Woodbine finale; TEC Racing's Shekky Shebaz, a multiple graded stakes-placed gelding who finished third in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) in 2019; and trainer Lee Thomas' My Pal Mattie, who shipped from Fair Grounds in search of graded-stakes status following back-to-back five-furlong turf wins at Remington Park; are among the most prominent contenders in Saturday's feature that will co-headline a 12-race program with the $100,000 Ladies Turf Sprint.

JFG Thoroughbreds and Maritza Weston's Classicstateofmind, Ken Copenhaver's County Final and Elizabeth Dobles and Imaginary Stables' Full Disclosure round out a highly competitive field.

The post ‘When He’s On The Top Of His Game, He’s Very Tough To Beat’: Carotari Headlines Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘Everyone Who Is A Jockey Wants To Ride At Oaklawn’: Apprentice Hannah Leahey Makes Hot Springs Debut Friday

In less than a year as a jockey, Hannah Leahey has already ridden in three time zones. It will soon become four when she makes her Oaklawn debut in Friday's first race aboard Spark for trainer Nathaniel Quinonez.

The well-traveled Leahey, 27, was scheduled to ride regularly at Oaklawn when the 2022-2023 meeting began Dec. 9. But during training hours Nov. 30, Leahey was involved in a spill and broke five ribs, her left shoulder and suffered a collapsed lung. Undeterred, Leahey began getting on horses again in early January at Oaklawn with the same goal she had before the accident. She wants to be Oaklawn's leading apprentice rider. Erick Medellin, four victories, tops the apprentice standings through the first 24 days of the scheduled 68-day meeting. Leahey hasn't ridden since Nov. 26.

“I put everything into coming here and it would take a lot more than that (injuries),” Leahey said. “Even if I could only ride here a month, I probably still would. So, I'm definitely behind track from what I originally thought, but anything's possible. I've overcome bigger obstacles.”

A native of Bloomington, Ill., Leahey has 23 victories from 223 starts and purse earnings of $416,254 in her brief career, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

Before the injury, Leahey recorded 10 victories at Penn National in Grantville, Pa. (Eastern time zone), where she was previously based; eight at Turf Paradise in Phoenix (Mountain time zone); four at Arizona Downs in Prescott Valley, Ariz. (Mountain); and one at Delaware Park in Stanton, Del. (Eastern). Leahey has also ridden at two heavyweight venues in Southern California, Santa Anita and Del Mar (Pacific time zone).

Oaklawn will mark the first time Leahey has ridden at a track in the Central time zone. She has a 7-pound apprentice allowance.

“I started riding last March,” Leahey said. “At that time, my goal was to ride at Santa Anita. That wasn't happening, so I had to adjust.”

That gas-guzzling adjustment led Leahey to Turf Paradise, where she won seven races to become champion apprentice at the 2021-2022 meeting that ended in May. Leahey resurfaced at Penn National in late June because of its proximity to several other tracks, but quickly informed her agent there, Tony Kofalt, of her intention to ride at Oaklawn in 2022-2023.

“He knew that the whole five months I was there,” said Leahey, who has also ridden at Parx and Finger Lakes. “That's what I was aiming towards. But I told him the same thing as a I told my friend: 'If I'm not ready to leave here when it (Oaklawn) starts, I'm not going to leave.' I want to be more than ready because this track is no joke.”

That friend, Ricardo Santana Jr., has collected eight Oaklawn riding titles since 2013. Leahey said she reached out to Santana last fall and asked if he believed she was seasoned enough to ride at Oaklawn and recommend an agent.

Leahey received the green light from Santana, along with his endorsement of Jay Fedor, who is enjoying a successful run as the agent for Francisco Arrieta after previously representing high-profile talent like Hall of Famer Gary Stevens and Corey Nakatani at Oaklawn. Arrieta was Oaklawn's co-leading rider in 2021-2022. Now, Fedor is also booking mounts at Oaklawn for Leahey.

“It's the best place to be,” Leahey said. “Everyone who is a jockey wants to ride at Oaklawn.”

Although Leahey got a late start in her riding career, she has an extensive and eye-catching equine background.

Leahey said she started riding at 5 and moved to eventing at 9, hoping to eventually turn professional. After reaching what she termed a “semi-professional level,” Leahey made a career U-turn because “it's a lot of work for a little return.”

Leahey said she was around 20 when she began breaking Thoroughbred yearlings to pay for her event horses and transitioned into an exercise rider about four years ago.

Leahey said she began building her resume at two famed Kentucky farms, Juddmonte and WinStar, and also broke horses in Florida for prominent sales consignors Eddie Woods and Brandon and Ali Rice.

Leahey said the most accomplished horse she broke was Improbable, the flashy chestnut who was crowned the country's champion older dirt male of 2020 after capturing three consecutive Grade 1 events following a runner-up finish in the $150,000 Oaklawn Mile to begin his 4-year-old campaign. WinStar, in partnership, raced Improbable with Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert.

“He's amazing,” Leahey said of Improbable. “He just had so much power and movement under him. There's always a little bit of an eventer that resides inside me, so when I sit on these horses, even here, all these years later that have like that big, floating, nice movement, I'm just like, 'Wow!' That's what you look for in an event horse. All of us knew anything that horse ended up doing, if he didn't make it as a racehorse, which we thought was very unlikely, he would excel at whatever he ended up doing.”

Leahey said she also broke future Grade 3 winner Talk Veuve to Me, who later sold for $1.3 million at the 2019 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

“I've been so lucky,” Leahey said.

After galloping horses in Kentucky for nationally prominent trainers Mike Maker, Joe Sharp and Kenny McPeek, Leahey relocated to Southern California in 2019 and was working as an exercise rider when she decided to take out a jockey's license early last year at Santa Anita.

Unable to generate any business at Santa Anita, Leahey launched her riding career March 9 at Turf Paradise and recorded her first career victory there nine days later. It was her third career mount.

Leahey said she rode Monday-Friday at Turf Paradise, then drove six hours back to Santa Anita in suburban Los Angeles to gallop horses and accept a handful of mounts Saturday and Sunday.

“Those are some long drives,” Leahey said. “I think I put about 30,000 miles on my car in two months. But it was worth it, and I still have a lot of connections in Phoenix and I kept going back there.”

Leahey returned to Turf Paradise Nov. 26 and guided La Castiglione – her last mount – to a one-length victory in the $60,000 Glendale Stakes at 7 ½ furlongs on the turf.

“It was amazing,” Leahey said. “That filly just leaves me speechless. I love her.”

The Glendale marked the most lucrative career victory to date for Leahey and her third career stakes triumph. She also won two stakes aboard La Castiglione last summer at Arizona Downs. Leahey is scheduled to return Saturday to Turf Paradise to ride La Castiglione in the $60,000 Molly P Stakes for older fillies and mares at 1 mile on the turf.

“If I had it my way, I wouldn't have started riding at (26),” Leahey said. “I would have made it at Santa Anita. I wouldn't have had to feel like I've backtracked a little after I had had so much success exercising and breezing horses there to go somewhere I had no legitimate business. But I know that in time everything will work out how it's supposed to. I feel behind right now. There's got to be a reason for it. I still have things I need to work on and once I start perfecting those things, I know the wins will just flood right in.”

Leahey said she hopes to parlay any success at Oaklawn into a return to Kentucky – this time as a jockey. She attended the University of Kentucky for two years before leaving to chase her eventing dream.

“That was home for six years for me,” Leahey said, referring to Lexington. “My parents are there and one of my sisters goes to UK. The older I get, the more I want to be close to family. I've been kind of this gypsy soul my whole life. I would just love to be closer to family and Kentucky's the place to be for racing. Right now, I am still a gypsy. I don't have a home base. That's why I have to get a U-Haul every time I go to a different track. But I'm hoping it'll be Kentucky.”

The post ‘Everyone Who Is A Jockey Wants To Ride At Oaklawn’: Apprentice Hannah Leahey Makes Hot Springs Debut Friday appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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