Magee, Concepcion Capture Laurel Titles

Veteran trainer Kieron Magee and five-pound apprentice jockey Axel Concepcion claimed their respective meet titles as Laurel Park closed its spring meet Sunday.

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.

“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 Pimlico Race Course. It was his first meet title since Pimlico's 2018 spring stand.

Concepcion, who turned 18 Mar. 16, entered Sunday with 12 wins, one behind co-leaders Jevian Toledo and Jeiron Barbosa. Concepcion won the opener on I Have Courage to make it a three-way tie before riding Fancee Grace C  to victory in the fifth race to 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 Apr. 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.

“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.”

The post Magee, Concepcion Capture Laurel Titles appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Marketsegmentation Cruises Clear For Beaugay Victory

Klaravich Stables' Marketsegmentation made the grade for four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown in Sunday's $175,000 Beaugay (G3), a 1 1/16-mile Widener turf test for older fillies and mares, at Belmont Park.

Brown, who also saddled runner-up Consumer Spending and fourth-place Veronica Greene, earned his sixth Beaugay triumph after Marketsegmentation stalked close to the pace set by Evvie Jets and pounced to the lead at the stretch call, driving home strongly under Irad Ortiz Jr. to land the 2 1/2-length victory.

“I'm really proud of this filly,” said Brown of the 4-year-old American Pharoah filly. “She's really come around and I wasn't sure exactly what way she was going in the winter. She just continued to get better and my team deserves a lot of credit. They've been working with this horse and it has been a little bit of a challenge to get there and keep her healthy and mentally put together. They deserve all the credit here. They have her in great form right now. As she's raced more, she's put herself in better position in her races.”

Away cleanly from post 3, Marketsegmentation was coaxed by Ortiz to stay close to pacesetter Evvie Jets, who broke sharply from the inside post and was sent to the front of the seven-horse field to mark an opening quarter-mile in :24.06 over the firm footing. Ortiz remained patient aboard Marketsegmentation after a half-mile in :48.43 before giving his cue approaching the turn and overtaking the lead from a tiring Evvie Jets after three-quarters elapsed in 1:11.99.

Marketsegmentation gained a three-length advantage at the stretch call and powered home under urging from Ortiz while her Manny Franco-piloted stablemate Consumer Spending gave a late run down the lane after stalking in fourth. Marketsegmentation arrived at the wire first in a final time of 1:41.25 with Consumer Spending holding onto place honors by a neck over fellow closer Surprisingly.

The Brown-trained Veronica Greene rounded out the superfecta with Contemporary Art, Evvie Jets, and Finest Work completing the order of finish. Kalifornia Queen was scratched.

Brown praised the ride by Ortiz, who brought the filly up closer to the pace than in her last effort when she closed from seventh-of-9 to win Gulfstream Park's Sand Springs on April 1.

“I thought Irad used good judgement to get some good forward position in a race that might have lacked some pace,” said Brown.

Ortiz, who has ridden Marketsegmentation in 5-of-6 lifetime starts, said a good break was key to his mount finding graded success.

“Last time, she missed the break and she was uncomfortable the whole way in-between horses and checking back and forth, but she still got the job done,” said Ortiz. “So, I just wanted to make her life a little easier today. I didn't want to give her too much to do. I helped her at the break and she gave me the first jump, so I go for it and I sat second in stalking position, biding my time and waiting for the time to go. She was there for me.”

Brown spoke highly of the seasonal debut from graded stakes-winner Consumer Spending, who had not raced since a fourth-place finish in the Grade 2 Lake Placid in August at Saratoga Race Course.

“It was a great first run back and I liked the trip she got quite a bit – saving all the ground and finishing off really good,” said Brown. “She was able to hold on for second over a really nice filly. I think she'll move forward off this race and I feel like she needed this race fitness wise.”

Jockey Manny Franco, who returned to Belmont Park Sunday after finishing a well-executed fifth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby aboard Hit Show Saturday, said Consumer Spending will benefit from more seasoning.

“She ran very well,” said Franco. “The other one had been running at Gulfstream and my filly had been out for a little bit, so I think my filly will step up for the next one.”

Marketsegmentation, bred in Kentucky by Marcus Stables from the Medaglia d'Oro mare Lonelily, finished a close third in the Grade 3 Endeavor in February at Tampa Bay Downs in her graded debut. She improved her lifetime record to 6-4-1-1 with her Beaugay win and banked $96,250 in victory, boosting her total career earnings to $308,730 and returning $5 for a $2 win ticket.

Brown said it will be a big decision to choose between the one-mile Grade 1 Just a Game on June 10 or the 1 1/4-mile Grade 1 New York on June 9 as a potential next target for any of his Beaugay finishers.

“I'm not really sure as far as the New York goes,” said Brown. “It seems like the Grand Canyon between distances between the Just a Game and the New York, and you don't want to pick wrong. I'm going to think about it and see how they come out of their races. It's a nice dilemma to have.”

Brown added that Marketsegmentation's Beaugay performance shows she may handle added ground.

“She might stretch out; she was sharp enough to be prominent, but also she's a big, powerful horse that seems to motor through the wire in her works and her races right on out. It wouldn't surprise me if she could get a mile and a quarter,” said Brown. “We'll just have to think about it.”

The post Marketsegmentation Cruises Clear For Beaugay Victory appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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The Week in Review: Sure, the Derby Had Its Moments, but this was a Really Bad Day

In our insular world, the story Saturday evening was that Mage (Good Magic) won the 149th GI Kentucky Derby. There were some feel-good storylines, particularly the one about well-liked 45-year-old jockey Javier Castellano winning his first Derby. Handle set a record. Attendance was up from last year. Plenty of A-list celebrities were in attendance. As always, the playing of “My Old Kentucky Home” could bring a tear to your eye.

To many in racing those were the stories, but only because there are not enough of us who are worried sick about this sport's future because of its problems with animal rights issues and the growing belief among the general public that the sport is cruel to the animal. Because seven horses died in the lead-up to the Derby, including two on Derby day itself, this was a horrible day for the sport. It was as bad as anything that happened at Santa Anita in 2019, and still another wake-up call that everything that can be done to protect these animals needs to be done.

On the Sunday morning that followed, very few Americans could have told you Mage is, who Castellano is, what the running time was. But just about everyone of them knew that seven horses died at Churchill Downs.

How could they not? The racing publications, the Thoroughbred Daily News among them, trod lightly when it came to reporting the news that Chloe's Dream (Honor Code) and Freezing Point (Frosted) suffered life-ending injuries on the Derby card. The mainstream media did not. The public was inundated with bad news.

Many of the stories were similar to the one that run in USA Today under the headline “Mage's magical Kentucky Derby win overshadowed by specter of death.” They all kind of went like this: “Seven horses have died at Churchill Downs and, oh, by the way, a horse named Mage won the Kentucky Derby.”

“Unfortunately, it is not the image that America is going to take away from the 149th Kentucky Derby,” writer Dan Wolken wrote in reference to the picture the sport likes to paint when it comes to the Derby, its pomp and circumstance, its majesty, the fancy hats, etc. “Instead, it is going to be the specter of animal death that hangs over this sport and the unwillingness of anyone in a position of authority in horse racing to either explain it or own it.”

Here's what Joe Drape in the New York Times had to say in his post-race coverage that had the headline “Mage Captures the Derby After an Agonizing Week at Churchill Downs.”

“The best thing you can say about the 149th running of the Kentucky Derby is that the 18 horses who made it to the starting gate on Saturday survived. That came as a relief after at least seven horses died at Churchill Downs in the past week, two of them on Saturday in races leading up to America's most famous race.

“By the time the horses edged into the starting gate for what is an annual Thoroughbred celebration on the first Saturday in May, all anyone who loves the sport was thinking–no, praying–was that these ethereal creatures and their riders get around the mile and a quarter race safely.

“Could you blame them?”

He didn't mention Mage until the 11th paragraph of his story.

I find myself disagreeing with Drape more often than not, but he wasn't wrong. It was very hard to enjoy watching the running of the race when you knew that the possibility, as slim as it might have been, existed that still one more horse would die.

The Wall Street Journal ran the story “Mage Wins the Kentucky Derby Amid String of Horse Deaths at Churchill Downs.” The lede paragraph read: “Mage won the 149th running of the Kentucky Derby on a day when an abnormal string of horse deaths continued earlier in the day, casting a long shadow over racing's marquee event.”

In a column he wrote titled “Stench of death overwhelms Kentucky Derby,” Associated Press writer Paul Newberry wrote “Horse racing needs to demonstrate once and for all that it truly cares about the athletes at the heart of its sport.”

I could go on. There are dozens more stories like that out there. But you get the point.

So on the one day when the public is actually paying attention to racing and the sport has an opportunity to showcase all that is right with it, it blows up in our face. We invited the public in, asked them to watch, learn and enjoy and what we wound up giving them was a nightmare that put racing in the worst possible light. Where does this end and when does the American public say “we've had enough?”

This all comes amid the sport heading in the right direction. The fatality numbers go down every year and some racetrack owners and regulators have put new protocols in place that have clearly worked. Del Mar and Santa Anita both have made great strides of late when it comes to safety. This new mentality  was on display at Churchill. The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission ordered that all horses trained by Saffie Joseph Jr. be scratched after two horses he trained died of unknown causes. That probably wouldn't have happened 10 years ago. The racing commission vet also scratched Derby favorite Forte (Violence) over a bruised foot even though it appeared that trainer Todd Pletcher wanted to run the horse. That probably wouldn't have happened 10 years ago either.

But the awful fact remains that a lot of horses still die each year. Based on figures from The Jockey Club's Equine Injury Data Base, about 350 horses died in races alone last year. So this is what we have left to tell the public, “we don't kill as many horses as we used to.” That's never going to work.

The sobering part of this is that there are no magic bullets. Yes, we are doing better, but we're never going to see a day when race horses just don't die anymore. The Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act is a step in the right direction and those who are standing in its way are doing a great disservice to the sport. But HISA is not a panacea.

We are left to soldier on, vow to do our very best to keep these horses safe and, well, keep our fingers crossed. Efforts to end the sport picked up a lot of momentum Saturday, and that's a very scary thing.

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