Sunday’s Cross Country Pick 5 Includes Sunland Derby, Racing Action From Aqueduct, Tampa

The New York Racing Association Inc. (NYRA) will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Sunday, featuring action from Aqueduct Racetrack, Tampa Bay Downs and Sunland Park.

Free Equibase past performances for the Cross Country Pick 5 sequence are now available for download at https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/cross-country-wagers.

The sequence begins in Tampa Bay Downs' ninth race [4:32 p.m. Eastern], where a field of nine older horses will line up for the six-furlong $110,000 NYRA Bets Sprint. Lea Farms' Willy Boi, third in last year's Grade 1 Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap at Saratoga Race Course, will seek his first victory since capturing the Grade 3 Smile Sprint in July 2022 at Gulfstream Park for trainer Jorge Delgado. Stablemate Lightening Larry, winner of last year's Grade 3 Chick Lang at Pimlico, enters off a third-place finish in the Gulfstream Park Sprint.

Action shifts to the Big A for the second leg, a six-furlong New York-bred allowance for older fillies and mares [Race 8, 5:00 p.m.] Francis Paolangeli's homebred Royal Currency will try to keep her consistent form afloat for trainer Charlton Baker. The Overanalyze filly has finished on-the-board in her last four starts, including a local maiden win at 11th asking in November. Try It Again will attempt to win second off the claim for trainer Marcelo Arenas. The Bustin Stones filly was a last-out second beaten a neck in an open starter allowance on March 11.

The middle leg will see a field of one dozen, plus one also eligible entrant, assemble for Tampa Bay Downs' $110,000 Distaff Turf [Race 10, 5:04 p.m.]. Trainer Carlo Vaccarezza will send out dual-surface stakes winner Sweet Dani Girl, who captured the Myrtlewood at Keeneland in October 2021 and the Sunshine Filly and Mare Turf in January at Gulfstream two starts back. MyRacehorse and Spendthrift Farms' Frosted Oats makes her stakes debut for Hall of Famer Bill Mott. The two-time winning daughter of Frosted will look to make amends following a fifth-place finish as the favorite against optional-claiming company in February at Gulfstream.

For the final two legs, Sunland Park in New Mexico will host qualifiers for both the Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby, starting with the $300,000 Sunland Park Oaks [Race 8, 5:41 p.m.] The 1 1/16-mile test offers 50-20-15-10-5 qualifying points towards the Oaks to the top-five finishers. Todd Fincher will send out dual stakes winner Flying Connection, who has been tabbed the 9-5 morning line favorite. The Nyquist bay captured the Island Fashion on February 28 at the New Mexico oval in runaway fashion last out, making every pole a winning one to score by 9 1/4 lengths. Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert sends out Doinitthehardway for owners Michael Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman. The Street Sense filly was a nine-length winner of a one-mile March 3 maiden special weight at Santa Anita.

The nine-furlong Grade 3, $600,000 Sunland Derby [Race 10, 6:45 p.m.] offers 50-20-15-10-5 Kentucky Derby points to the top-five finishers and will close the curtain on the sequence. Baffert will send out Michael Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman's Hard to Figure following a hard-fought second in the Grade 3 Robert B. Lewis on February 4 at Santa Anita. Fincher will saddle The Del Mar Group's Henry Q, who was a last out 14 3/4-length winner of the Mine That Bird Derby on February 28 at Sunland.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horse players nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

Cross Country Pick 5 – Sunday, March 26

Leg A: Tampa Bay – Race 9, $110K NYRA Bets Sprint (4:32 p.m. Eastern)

Leg B: Aqueduct Racetrack – Race 8, allowance (5:00 p.m.)

Leg C: Tampa Bay – Race 10, $110K Distaff Turf (5:04 p.m.)

Leg D: Sunland Park – Race 8, $300K Sunland Park Oaks (5:41 p.m.)

Leg E: Sunland Park – Race 10, G3, $600K Sunland Park Derby (6:45 p.m.)

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Maryland-Bred Steeplechase Bonuses Offered In Maryland

With the Spring steeplechase season on its way, the Maryland Horse Breeders Association would like to remind owners and breeders of bonuses available for Maryland-breds in the National Steeplechase Association-sanctioned steeplechase and timber meetings in Maryland. The 2023 events are My Lady's Manor, Grand National, Maryland Hunt Cup, and Shawan Downs.

“We look forward to the Spring racing season and hope it is a showcase for Maryland-bred steeplechase horses again,” said Cricket Goodall, executive director of the Maryland Horse Breeders Association, “Steeplechasing is such an important part of Maryland's horse community we are happy to reward and encourage breeders and owners to show off the quality of their Maryland-breds.”

Registered Maryland-bred horses who finish first, second, or third at these sanctioned Maryland steeplechase meets, in a steeplechase or flat race, will receive a 30 percent owner and breeder bonus. Training flat races are not included in the bonus program.

The Maryland steeplechase season begins on April 15 with the My Lady's Manor races at Monkton, and continues with the Grand National Steeplechase on April 22, the Maryland Hunt Cup on April 29, and the Legacy Chase at Shawan Downs on September 30.

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Earning Their Stripes: Jordan Blair

Last year, we conducted a popular Q and A series called 'Smaller But Still Super,' where we featured veteran trainers who have built a competitive racing stable with relatively small numbers (click here to view the archive). This year, we will highlight trainers who have already cut their teeth as novice trainers, but now have a few years of experience under their belt and are looking to make a name for themselves as they grow their stable. We'll talk about the challenges that come with hanging out your single, advice for trainers setting out on their own, how the incoming class of young trainers differs from previous generations and more.

A native of Lexington, Kentucky, Jordan Blair grew up immersed in the Thoroughbred industry of the Bluegrass, but he didn't find his way onto the racetrack until later on his career. He spent his high school and college days working for various farms and sales consignments, from Pin Oak Stud and Dromoland Farm to Taylor Made. After graduating from the University of Kentucky, he went on to earn a Master's Degree in Agribusiness Management. Soon after, he found his true passion on the racetrack and served as an assistant for eight years, learning from the likes of Kenny McPeek and Mike Maker, before taking out his trainer's license in 2013.

Based in Louisville, Blair has steadily built his operation since and now stables around 20 horses. Last year he reached 100 career wins and celebrated his best year yet in earnings.

Blair normally heads south for the winter, but decided to race out of Turfway this year. It proved to be a lucrative decision, as his stable already has six wins on the year and is winning at a 22% clip.

What was the biggest challenge in those first few years as you were getting started?

A big part of it is financial, just paying the bills and making sure your owners are paying the bills. It's about making sure you have good-quality horses and owners in your barn. I've found that a lot of people will try to take advantage of you early on, wanting to do deals. We went through those people very quickly because I learned those lessons the hard way.

When I was first starting I didn't care if a horse was bred in Kalamazoo, I was just trying to fill stalls. Honestly, we were running horses in spots that they didn't belong in because I didn't want to lose them. Now if I have a horse in the wrong spot, I can promise you that it's not my idea. Now we just want to win and I'm not worried if we lose a horse in the claim box.

Debut winner Midnight Rising runs in Saturday's Rushaway S. At Turfway Park | Coady

What do you think makes your stable or your training style unique?

Training is not rocket science. It's paying attention to details and focusing on the little things. When I was younger, I had to learn about work ethic. One of my old bosses from Pin Oak Stud Clifford Barry told me, as he was kicking my tail end every day, focus on the little things and the big things will take care of themselves. I've kind of lived by that as a trainer as I've grown my business.

As I've evolved as a trainer and rules have changed and the veterinary inspections have gotten more rigorous, I've made a focus on the soundness of the horse. Not that I didn't pay attention to that before, but it's more important now than it has ever been. We're constantly going over the horse and I'm hyper-focused on the details and the health of the horse.

This is your first winter at Turfway. What went into that decision to stay in Kentucky?

Tampa Bay Downs was the first place I went and I went there every winter. I knew it was a good surface, a great turf course and a circuit where I knew I could win races down there. Most owners are just looking at numbers, so I wanted to keep our numbers decent. But then I had a family and leaving them every year was awful.

I really hadn't had the opportunity to stay until this year. The first year that Turfway started to get better and purses went up a bit, my owners were not on board yet. Last year I really wanted to stay but I didn't get any stalls at Turfway. This year the facility we stay at all year, Trackside, stayed open. So it was an easy decision.

It has gone really well. We've won our share of races, purses are significantly better, and I've been able to see my kids every day. We had a relatively mild winter with only a few days of jogging in the shedrow, but overall it's been a delight and we've saved a ton of money not having to ship a stable south.

Is a trainer's success defined more by the quality of the horses they receive or their abilities as a trainer?

If you're a college basketball coach, you can be Rick Pitino and be one of the best coaches in history, but you can't win a national championship at Iona. If you're talking about the top of the game, you need the right type of quality of horses to get you there. You can't make a horse faster than their potential unless you're doing something illegal. You can't get to the top without the right horse.

Who is your favorite horse that you've trained?

I have one in the barn now that could be something for Surfside Stables. Midnight Rising (Mendelssohn) broke his maiden at Turfway impressively. He runs in a stake at Turfway this weekend. His last breeze was just amazing. He acts like he's very special.

One of my first horses was a Donegal horse named Oatfield (Candy Ride {Arg}). I thought he was awesome, but he bowed a tenon at the beginning of his 4-year-old year. At the time he was the best horse I had ever had.

Oceanic gets his first stakes win in the 2022 Woodford Reserve Da Hoss S. | Coady

Do you have a horse that you had to overcome obstacles with that you are most proud of getting to the starting gate?

Oceanic (Constitution) is my first and only stakes winner and he is pretty special. He has been in our care since he was two, but he didn't win a stake until he was five. He had immense potential early on, but he was a thumper. Thumping is an electrolyte imbalance that causes a flutter in their diaphragm when they run. It's almost like a hiccup, so it makes running as fast as you can impossible. Figuring that out was a long process and it was frustrating, but his owners and I were patient and kept on with it. He's that horse that overcame obstacles and we had the patience and wherewithal to figure it out with the help of a lot of people along the way.

If one change was made to racing that would make your life as a trainer easier, what would it be?

I'm not a big fan of HISA, and it's not because it's a governing body. I don't think what they're doing is improving the game because it's putting unnecessary pressure on people who follow the rules. If they really wanted to clean it up, all this money should be put into investigations like those that were done with the Navarro and Servis case. That's what's going to clean up the game. It's not catching guys with a small overage on bute or something like that, it's getting rid of this off-market clenbuterol and all this other crap that people are using to cheat and win. We know who they are now and we knew who they were before they proved it with Servis and Navarro. If I was a governing body of horseracing, I would put my resources into these investigations.

I thought HISA was supposed to make uniform rules across the board, but it does not. Tracks or states can make their own rules as long as they are more stringent than HISA. I thought HISA would make all that the same and it hasn't, which is really frustrating.

If you could spend one afternoon at the track enjoying the day (i.e. not working), which track would you be at and where would we find you hanging out?

It's gotta be Keeneland. It's close between Keeneland and Saratoga. Back in college, we were in row 20 tailgating. They didn't have tailgating on the Hill back then. We would be there at nine in the morning and tailgate until the second or third race. Now I don't think I have a spot because I don't really go unless I'm running.

If you aren't at the racetrack, what can you be found doing?

I would be either with my family or working out. My kids are into sports, gymnastics and horseback riding. My hobby is exercise, so I'd be at the gym or the gym in my garage.

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