‘I Hope It Rains On Derby Day’: Rivelli Plans To Train Two Phil’s At Hawthorne Before Shipping To Churchill

Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) winner Two Phil's will spend the next several weeks at Hawthorne before returning to Churchill to make his bid for the 2023 Kentucky Derby, trainer Larry Rivelli told the Daily Racing Form. Rivelli plans to ship back to Louisville in time to get one work over the main track, as well as paddock schooling opportunities.

The 3-year-old son of Hard Spun won the Jeff Ruby by 5 1/4 lengths under jockey Jareth Loveberry.

Two Phil's has run well on dirt in the past, winning the Grade 3 Street Sense Stakes over a sloppy main track at Churchill last fall. He followed up that effort with a second in the G3 Lecomte and a third in the G2 Risen Star, after which Rivelli pointed the colt back to the Tapeta.

“I think he probably prefers [Turfway's Tapeta] better than he does the dirt, but I guess you can't change Churchill Downs,” Rivelli told DRF. “When he won in the Street Sense, I thought, 'I hope it rains on Derby Day again!'”

Bred in Kentucky by co-owner Phillip Sagan, Two Phil's is out of the multiple stakes winning, graded stakes-placed General Quarters mare Mia Torri. After failing to achieve his reserve as a yearling at the Keeneland September sale, Two Phil's won at second asking and took the Shakopee Juvenile Stakes in his third career start. Overall, the colt's record stands at 4-1-1 from eight starts, with earnings of $683,450.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Finger Lakes Adds ‘North Warning’ Claiming Distance Series For 2023

Officials have released the first condition book for the 62nd consecutive year of live Thoroughbred racing at Finger Lakes Gaming & Racetrack, which kicks off on Monday, April 24 with a 1:15 pm first post. The 90-day season runs through Wednesday, Nov. 22. Stall Applications are still being accepted.  

Racing Secretary Jerry Richards, in his second year at Finger Lakes, has added a claiming distance series to the 2023 condition book. The series is named after North Warning, the current track record holder at one mile and five-eighths. Action kicks off on June 19 and features three legs and a final, with the distance increasing with each leg.  

“We're very exciting about the upcoming racing season and the North Warning series,” Racing Secretary Jerry Richards said. “Finger Lakes Gaming and Racetrack has a long-time history of distance racing and I'm very happy to bring back some semblance from the past.” 

Leg one, to be run at one mile and seventy yards, carries a purse of $12,600 added per division, and will be run as a $5,000 claimer. The claiming price increases to $6,250 for leg two and the purse amount moves to $15,000 added. Leg two, scheduled for July 31, is to be run at one mile and an eighth. The claiming price increases again to $8,000 for leg three and will be run at the classic distance of mile and a quarter on Sept. 11. The purse(s) will grow to $20,000 for that event. The series finale is set for Oct. 23 at one mile and five and a half furlongs and will be run under starter ($8,000 or less) conditions. The purse in the finals is guaranteed at $25,000. 

There is a one-time $250 nomination fee, which is due by June 7. All nomination fees will be added to the purse for legs one and two. Supplemental fees will be accepted between June 8 through July 19 and will be added to leg 3. The cost to supplement to the series is $1,000. 

Horses earn their way into the final by earning points throughout the preliminary legs with four points for a win, three points for a second, two points for a third and one point for fourth. The top 12-point earners from the preliminary legs make the finals. In the event of a claim the points follow the horse. 

For more information about the North Warning series, or the first 2023 Condition Book, please contact the Finger Lakes race office at 585-924-3232, ext. 271. The full first condition book can be found at: https://www.equibase.com/premium/eqbHorsemenAreaDownloadAction.cfm?sn=CB-FL-20230424-20230524D  

About Finger Lakes Gaming & Racetrack: In operation since 1962, the facility added gaming to its offering in 2004 and  expanded again in 2013. FLGR is highlighted by over 1,100 gaming machines, the 448-seat Buffet, Remedy Bar &  Lounge, as well as live and simulcast thoroughbred racing. Gaming doors open at 8 a.m. and racing doors open at 11:30  a.m. daily. Home of the $200,000 (estimated) New York Breeders' Futurity and $150,000 (added) New York Derby. For  more information, visit www.fingerlakesgaming.com

About North Warning: The Northern Jove gelding made 43 Finger Lakes starts and captured 13 wins, 7 seconds and 8  thirds in his career and currently holds the track record at one mile and five-eighths. Bred by Mrs. Henry D. Paxson, North  Warning was trained by both Dan Conway, Jr. and Stephen Ubbink and won both at sprinting and running long. He broke  out in 1994 when he was a seven-time winner at Finger Lakes all over a route of ground. 

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HIWU Testing Protocols in Place for Listed, Graded Races in HISA Jurisdictions

The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, which founded and manages the American Graded Stakes Committee, will accept the testing protocols and criteria administered by the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit for graded and listed stakes races conducted in jurisdictions governed by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority. HIWU will assign TCO2 and Post-Race testing for these races at quantities and rates specific to each race.

Racetracks will not be at risk of losing graded or listed status for their races if the HIWU testing protocols for these races differ from the American Graded Stakes Committee's requirements.

Racetracks operating in states that are not under the jurisdiction of HISA will remain subject to the American Graded Stakes Committee Drug Testing Protocols in regard to maintaining graded and listed statuses of their races.

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HISA, TOBA Working Together To Satisfy Testing Requirements For American Graded Stakes

As per the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act of 2020, the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU), the independent enforcement agency of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's (HISA) Anti-Doping and Medication (ADMC) Program, maintains the authority to direct all testing in HISA-governed jurisdictions upon implementation of the ADMC Program, which began March 27, 2023.

For graded and listed stakes races in the United States to preserve their respective statuses each year, one of the requirements is that testing in relation to these races satisfies the American Graded Stakes Committee Drug Testing Protocol for TCO2 and Post-Race Testing.

In recognition of the authority granted to HIWU by the Act, the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, which founded and manages the American Graded Stakes Committee, will accept the testing protocols and criteria administered by HIWU for graded and listed stakes races conducted in HISA-governed jurisdictions. HIWU will assign TCO2 and Post-Race testing for these races at quantities and rates specific to each race.

Thus, a racetrack is not at risk of losing graded or listed status for its races if the HIWU testing protocols for these races differ from the American Graded Stakes Committee's requirements.

Racetracks operating in states that are not under the jurisdiction of HISA will remain subject to the American Graded Stakes Committee Drug Testing Protocols in regard to maintaining graded and listed statuses of their races.

The Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit (HIWU) was established in 2022 by Drug Free Sport International to administer the rules and enforcement mechanisms of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's (HISA) Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) Program. The ADMC Program establishes a centralized testing and results management process that applies uniform penalties for violations efficiently and consistently across all American Thoroughbred racing jurisdictions that HISA governs. HIWU oversees testing, educating stakeholders on the program, laboratory accreditation, investigation of potential violations, and prosecution of any such violations. For more information, please visit hiwu.org.

The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (TOBA), based in Lexington, Ky., was formed in 1961 and is a national trade organization of leading Thoroughbred owners and breeders. TOBA's mission is to improve the economics, integrity and pleasure of the sport on behalf of Thoroughbred owners and breeders. Projects managed by TOBA include the American Graded Stakes Committee, Claiming Crown, Educational Seminars, OwnerView, Owners Concierge, US-Bred and the Sales Integrity Program. TOBA provides international representation for U.S. owners and breeders on the International Grading and Race Planning Advisory Committee, International Cataloguing Standards Committee and International Thoroughbred Breeders' Federation. Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) is the charitable arm of TOBA. TOBA Media Properties, a subsidiary of TOBA, is the co-owner of BloodHorse LLC.

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