Gulfstream Park: Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Guaranteed At $250,000 Wednesday

Gulfstream Park's 20-cent Rainbow 6 went unsolved Sunday for fifth racing day following a mandatory payout that yielded multiple payoffs of $40,357 from a total pool of $6 million-plus.

The popular multi-race wager's gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $250,000 on Wednesday's program.

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.

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Pletcher Circles Blue Grass For Tapit Trice, Casse Considering Blue Grass Or Wood For Classic Car Wash

Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby (G3) winner Tapit Trice earned his way into the Kentucky Derby (G1) on Saturday with the type of stretch run rarely seen at any level of Thoroughbred racing.

Hall of Fame member Mark Casse, the trainer of runner-up Classic Car Wash, was among those believing they had witnessed something special.

“We moved up inside of him and went past him (about halfway through the race), and it looked like he was backing up,” said Casse, who was seeking his third Tampa Bay Derby victory. “You're always keeping an eye on the favorite, and I thought he (Tapit Trice) was not going anywhere.

“We had a wide trip too, but the winner overcame a lot. I'm not saying he's a great horse yet, but I've always said the difference between the good ones and the great ones is the good ones win when everything goes right and the great ones win despite things going against them. That horse, to me, was very impressive.”

After barreling past Classic Legacy, who finished a good third, Tapit Trice gobbled up the ground between himself and Classic Car Wash, dashing the upset hopes of Casse and jockey Emisael Jaramillo by two lengths.

Expecting the same kind of “last-to-first” rally in a 20-horse field, as is likely on May 6 in the Kentucky Derby, might be overly optimistic. Tapit Trice's time of 1:43.37 on a fast track was far from spectacular, although it looked a lot better considering how much ground he lost on the far turn after Luis Saez decided to keep him outside and in the clear.

But rather than debate Kentucky Derby scenarios and strategy in mid-March, the connections of Tapit Trice, as well as many in a Tampa Bay Downs crowd of 6,023, preferred to savor the quality of the effort put forth by the winner and Saez to reward another Hall of Fame conditioner, Todd Pletcher, with his record sixth Tampa Bay Derby triumph.

The victory was worth 50 points in the “Road to the Kentucky Derby” standings, moving Tapit Trice into sixth place.

Pletcher, not known for hyperbole, sounded excited about his colt's potential to move forward from Saturday. Tapit Trice likely will have one more start before the Kentucky Derby, with the Toyota Blue Grass (G1) on April 8 at Keeneland the likely locale.

“Before this race, we talked about taking a look at the Blue Grass because the timing works well,” Pletcher told Turf writer Lynne Snierson by telephone. “He's a horse that I think still needs a little more racing experience to completely put everything together.”

The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby was only the fourth of Tapit Trice's career and his first in stakes competition. It's worth noting that Pletcher's two Kentucky Derby winners, Super Saver (2010) and Always Dreaming (2017), competed at Tampa Bay Downs before the Run for the Roses, with Super Saver finishing third in the Tampa Bay Derby in his fifth start and Always Dreaming winning a maiden special weight in January of 2017 in his third start.

“He (Tapit Trice) certainly seems like the farther he goes, the stronger he gets,” Pletcher said. “He's got a big, long stride, and once he got in the clear down the lane he really extended himself and I loved the way he finished up.”

Casse, for now, believes Pletcher's colt Forte is ahead of the pack in the lead-up to Louisville. The FanDuel Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) winner and 2-year-old Eclipse Award champion male began his sophomore campaign on March 4 at Gulfstream with a 4 ½-length victory in the Fountain of Youth Stakes (G2) under Irad Ortiz Jr.

As for Classic Car Wash, who finished third in the  Sam F. Davis Stakes (G3) four weeks ago at Tampa Bay, “He has to improve to play with the big boys. But he gets another try. I was proud of him,” added Casse, saying the Blue Grass or the Wood Memorial Stakes on April 8 at Aqueduct are under consideration.

Casse is the trainer of 3-year-old filly Wonder Wheel, who finished second here to Dreaming of Snow in the Feb. 11 Suncoast Stakes. Wonder Wheel won the NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) last fall en route to earning an Eclipse Award as champion 2-year-old filly.

Casse has her on track for the Longines Kentucky Oaks (G1) on May 5 at Churchill Downs. First is the Ashland Stakes on April 7 at Keeneland. Wonder Wheel is currently at the trainer's Casse Training Center in Ocala, where she breezed five furlongs Friday in 1:00.80.

“I thought her race (in the Suncoast) was pretty good, and she just needs to move a little forward,” Casse said.

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O’Connell Moves Ahead as Winningest Female Trainer

With her victory in the fifth race at Tampa Bay Downs Sunday, Kathleen O'Connell surpassed Kim Hammond to become the winningest female trainer in North America. My Eagle Soars (Khozan) became O'Connell's 2,386th winner when he crossed the line first in the six-furlong maiden claimer.

“It's just been a wonderful ride,” O'Connell said of her training career. “It's not only about the destination, it's the journey getting there.”

O'Connell, who began training on her own in 1981, has twice been the leading trainer at Tampa Bay Downs. She also won a title at Calder. She currently trains about 60 horses between Tampa Bay Downs and Gulfstream Park.

She has won nine graded stakes, three from 1997-2000 by Blazing Sword, as well as the 2011 GII Tampa Bay Derby with Watch Me Go; the 2003 GII Bonnie Miss S. with Ivanavinalot; the 2019 GIII Sam F. Davis S. with Well Defined; and back-to-back runnings of the GII Princess Rooney in 2018 and 2019 with Stormy Embrace.

Hammond, who has yet to win a race in 2023 from 16 starts, will have a chance to go back into a tie with O'Connell when she saddles a runner in the fifth race at Turfway Park Friday.

The post O’Connell Moves Ahead as Winningest Female Trainer appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Sunday At Gulfstream ‘Something Special’ For Joseph’s Lead Exercise Rider Gudiel

Vicente Gudiel has played an important role in trainer Saffie Joseph Jr.'s burgeoning success in recent years while serving as the stable's lead exercise rider.

Gudiel galloped horses as usual Sunday morning, but the day turned out to be anything but routine when the 36-year-old native of Guatemala rode the Joseph-owned and -trained Shake Your Bones, a 4-year-old Dialed In gelding, into the Gulfstream Park winner's circle following Race 2.

“He's so valuable to us. He makes us win so many races. I'm glad to be able to reward that,” Joseph said.

The last-to-first triumph in the 1 1/16-mile maiden claiming event on Tapeta was Gudiel's first winning ride since Nov. 17, 2019. It was only his second ride in two years, the other resulting in a fourth-place finish last Oct. 23 aboard none other than Shake Your Bones.

“He's a great asset to the team. When he rode the horse last year, he thanked me so much that from that day, I said, 'I have to put him on a winner,'” Joseph said. “I told him, 'I'm going to put you on a winner.' Thank God, it worked out today and he won.”

Gudiel has ridden in only 14 races since 2016, his last full season as a jockey that followed a productive 2015 season with 138 victories while riding as an apprentice at Monmouth, Hawthorne, and Arlington.

Gudiel's winning ride aboard the 2-1 second betting choice was celebrated in the winner's circle by his wife, daughter, mother, and father, as well as Joseph, his wife, son and daughter.

“It's something special. I haven't been riding for a few years. I'm so happy to win again,” Gudiel said. “It's my dream to win for Saffie. It's something special to win for him.”

Gudiel will be only too happy to continue galloping and breezing horses for Joseph with no plans to resume a full-time career as a jockey.

“I want to keep working for Saffie, but whatever he puts me on, I'll ride,” he said.

Gudiel was born in Guatemala and grew up in South Florida. He would go on to work for trainers Patricia Farro and Wesley Ward before embarking on a riding career at Gulfstream April 13, 2014. He rode his first winner on Dec. 26, 2014 at Hawthorne.

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