Magee, Concepcion Take Laurel Park Spring Meet Titles

Veteran trainer Kieron Magee secured Laurel Park's spring meet trainer title, and five-pound apprentice Axel Concepcion earned the jockey title when he rode two winners Sunday before the track capped the meet later in the day.

Magee, 62, entered the eight-race, closing day program without a starter but an 11-8 lead over Jamie Ness in the trainer standings. Hugh McMahon won twice Sunday to pass Ness for second, while Brittany Russell wound up fourth with seven wins.

For the meet, which began April 1, Magee won at a 42 percent clip (11-for-42) while also registering five wins and four seconds to finish with a 77 percent in-the-money success rate. His horses banked $299,085 in purse earnings with three of his winners – Oxide, Aristocat and Honor the Fleet – being claimed.

“It feels great because I'm down to 25 horses. To pull off a training title with 25 horses, that takes some doing,” Magee said. “I lost a bunch of them but they won on the way out. Everybody that got claimed won. I was thrilled to win it with such few starts. To have a high percentage is fantastic.”

A native of Ireland who worked as an exercise rider for recently retired trainer Dale Capuano after coming to the U.S., Magee led all Maryland trainers in wins from 2014-2016 and now owns or shares a total of 10 meet titles at Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course. It was his first meet title since Pimlico's 2018 spring stand.

Magee registered at least one win on 10 of 16 racing days, including a double April 15. He won with three straight starters April 15-16 and registered a stakes win in the off-the-turf Henry S. Clark April 29 with Classier, a Grade 3 winner for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert in 2021 that has won both his starts since being claimed out of a March 19 win at Laurel.

“We claimed him for 40 and he came back and won the optional two and then we won a hundred grander with him,” Magee said. “He's doing great. The phone's been ringing. People want to buy him, but I don't think it's going to happen. My partner said, 'Let's not sell him. Let's have some fun.'”

Magee is based year-round at Pimlico, where live racing in Maryland moves for the 15-day Preakness Meet starting Thursday, May 11 and running through Sunday, June 4. The 148th Preakness Stakes (G1), middle jewel of the Triple Crown, will be run May 20 with the 99th Black-Eyed Susan (G2) for 3-year-old fillies contested on Preakness eve, May 19.

“I always love being back at Pimlico. It's home for me,” Magee said. “Hopefully we can keep it going.”

Concepcion, who turned 18 March 16, entered Sunday with 12 wins, one behind co-leaders Jevian Toledo and Jeiron Barbosa. Concepcion won the opener on I Have Courage ($5.40) to make it a three-way tie before riding Fancee Grace C ($5.20) to victory in Race 5 and earn his first riding title.

A native of Puerto Rico, where he won 21 races after attending the Escuela Vocacional Hipica jockey school and turning pro Jan. 1, Concepcion registered wins on nine of 16 racing days with doubles April 1, 13, 14 and 29 prior to Sunday.

Represented by agent Tom Stift, Concepcion made his Maryland debut Feb. 24 and picked up his first winner, Shinelikeadiamond, the next day at Laurel in his fifth U.S. mount. He follows in the footsteps of Barbosa, who won three riding titles last year in Maryland and was a finalist for the Eclipse Award as champion apprentice.

Prior to Barbosa, the only apprentices in the past decade to win a meet title at Laurel were Yomar Ortiz (winter 2013) and Julio Correa (summer 2019). Correa was also an Eclipse finalist.

“I'm very confident for my work and the job Tom does for me. I don't have pressure. The wins are coming and thank God for two wins today,” Concepcion said. “I ride all my horses with confidence. Thanks to all the owners and trainers that help me. In the morning I work very hard for this, my first meet that I win. I'm very grateful. Thanks to everyone for giving me the opportunity. I'm ready for Pimlico.”

Toledo, Maryland's four-time leading rider including 2021 and 2022, led all jockeys at the spring meet with $632,615 in purse earnings. Toledo, who did not ride Saturday or Sunday at Laurel, won four races April 29 including three stakes – the Clark with Classier, Native Dancer on Nimitz Class and Primonetta aboard Princess Kokachin. He also won the Weber City Miss April 15 with 3-year-old filly Cats Inthe Timber.

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Mandella: Beholder’s Daughter Teena Ella Could Try Longer Distances Later This Year

Trainer Richard Mandella reported all appeared well with Spendthrift Farm's homebred Teena Ella the day after she became the first offspring of Hall of Famer Beholder to win a stakes race.

In Saturday's Senorita (G3) on Santa Anita's hillside turf course, Teena Ella seized the lead near the eighth pole under Edwin Maldonado and gamely held off a late charge from 21-1 longshot Tom's Regret to win by a neck.

“She showed a lot of courage,” Mandella said Sunday morning. “That horse that ran second ran a hell of a race, but she held on.”

By War Front, Teena Ella has now won two of three starts since being switched to the turf. Her lone defeat came in her prior start on March 26 in the Angels Flight down the hill. In that race, Teena Ella lost ground when veering out at the dirt crossing and was beaten just a half-length by Fast and Shiny. They met again on Saturday, with Fast and Shiny flashing her customary early speed as the 2-1 favorite, but this time she faded to fifth in a six-horse field.

All five of Teena Ella's starts have come sprints. Mandella said he expects she will try longer distances later this year.

“By Del Mar we'll stretch her out,” said the Hall of Fame trainer.

Teena Ella is the third foal out of Beholder, a four-time champion who last year was elected to the Racing Hall of Fame. Her first two foals, Karin With an I and Q B One, were a combined 0-for-6 while with Mandella at Santa Anita.

Beholder's fourth foal, an unnamed 2-year-old filly by Spendthrift Farm sire Bolt d'Oro, arrived at Mandella's barn on Saturday, the trainer said.

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Gulfstream Park: Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Guaranteed At $475,000 Thursday

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $475,000 Thursday at Gulfstream Park after the popular multi-race wager went unsolved Sunday for the 17th consecutive racing day following a jackpot hit.

The Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 3-8, highlighted by an extremely competitive mile optional claiming allowance on the main track in Race 7.

Todd Pletcher-trained Cuvier, a debut winner at Gulfstream during the Championship Meet, will make his return off a third-place optional claiming allowance at Tampa Bay Downs, won by stablemate Kingsbarns, who went on to win the Louisiana Derby (G2) and run in Saturday's Kentucky Derby (G1). Il Miracolo is slated to make his first start since finishing sixth in the Curlin Florida Derby (G1), in which Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mage finished second behind Forte.

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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‘Showed What He Could Do’: Apprentice Alsagoor Notches Three-Win Day At Santa Anita

Apprentice jockey Abdul Alsagoor, a 22-year-old native of Saudi Arabia, had his first three-win day Saturday at Santa Anita.

Alsagoor won the fourth race above Blue Cheese Olive ($8.60) for trainer Peter Miller, the fifth on Leisurewear ($5.00) for trainer Phil D'Amato, and the eighth with Sawasdee ($7.00) for trainer Ron Ellis.

Alsagoor, 22, began race-riding in the fall of 2021. His first winner came in his 18th mount on January 23, 20222 at Santa Anita. He is represented by longtime agent Vincent DeGregory, who turned 90 last August.

“I like his personality and his attitude. He handles my criticism,” DeGregory said from Clocker's Corner Sunday. “He rode some good horses Saturday and showed what he could do.”

Alsaggor has now won with four of 17 mounts at the Hollywood Meet, a 24 percent win rate. At the Classic Meet that ended April 9, Alsagoor was 9-for-59 (15 percent). As an apprentice, Alsagoor receives a seven-pound weight allowance. DeGregory said he is scheduled to lose his “bug” on June 28.

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