Real Rider Cup Registration Open

Registration is now open for the 2023 Real Rider Cup, a charity show jumping event featuring members of the racing industry competing on off-track Thoroughbreds. Proceeds from the event will once again benefit the Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show, New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program, and the Retired Racehorse Project.

The Real Rider Cup offers two legs of competition, the first leg at Mereworth Farm in Lexington, KY, on Jul. 8 and the second durin the Fair Hill Thoroughbred Show in Elkton, MD, on Sep. 15. Riders will compete both individually and as part of a team formed to represent a particular farm, stable, organization or branch of the industry. All riders pledge to raise a minimum of $1,000, either through donations or sponsorships. Participation will be capped at 30 riders per event.

Each rider will navigate a 2'6″ jumps course at either location, or they can choose to compete at both. The leading riders from each leg will compete head-to-head in a virtual event with online voting to determine the Real Rider Cup Champion. Awards will also be given for top teams and top fund raisers at each leg.

“We are incredibly grateful to all the participants, volunteers and those that have donated and sponsored over the last five years,” Real Rider Cup founder Anita Motion said. “After our record-breaking Real Rider Cup in 2022, we're looking forward to another year of fun competition and fund raising for Thoroughbred aftercare.”

For more information or to register, visit the Real Rider Cup website.

The post Real Rider Cup Registration Open appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Frankie Dettori Heads To Final Epsom Derby With ‘Great Chance’ Aboard Arrest

Jockey Frankie Dettori believes he is going into his final Betfred Derby with a “great chance” aboard Arrest, who will be his mount in the 244th running of the premier Classic over a mile and a half at Epsom Downs on Saturday, June 3.

The 52 year old Italian, who has announced that 2023 will be his final year in the saddle, partnered Juddmonte's homebred son of Frankel over just short of a mile at The Derby Festival Gallops Morning at Epsom Downs on Monday.

Arrest scored twice in 2022 and made a winning reappearance in a leading Betfred Derby trial, the Group Three Chester Vase, on May 10.

Speaking after the workout, Dettori said: “It's all about getting used to the course and the most crucial part is Tattenham Corner, where horses can really win or lose a race. He went round there fine. In the straight, it took him a furlong to get organized but he's a big horse. He then went very straight and I was very happy with him.

“He is growing up and getting stronger. The ground is an issue but Andrew (Cooper, Clerk of the Course at Epsom Downs) always does a great job and I haven't ridden in a very fast Derby for a long time – it has always been good or good to soft and, fingers crossed, the rain will continue.

“Every week, horses improve and we still have two weeks to go. I would expect this horse after the gallop today to go on a bit and it's very hard to assess one year to the next. But I am very pleased with him – he looks great and has done well in the gallop this morning.

“We always thought a bit of him last year but he was all frame and no muscle. He did well over the winter and Chester was great. In the other trials Passenger (third in the Dante Stakes) impressed me most – he's not in the Derby at the moment but I expect he will be (supplemented).”

Dettori has ridden in the Betfred Derby 27 times, winning twice aboard Authorized (2007) and Golden Horn (2015).

He continued: “I have been fortunate enough to win The Derby twice and it is still the most famous race in the world for us. When I started my career as a jockey, first of all you want to get a ride in it and then try to win it. I've had over 20 rides in it and this is my last go. At least I am going into my last Derby with a great chance.

“This year is a lot of lasts. I went to Rome yesterday and it was my last Derby there. I saw the vice Prime Minister and he gave me a plaque congratulating me on my career. Now it's my last Derby here and I have a live chance, which is good.

“It looks a wide-open Derby and I haven't seen any horse really dominating any of the trials – they all won, but nobody won by a really wide margin so it looks a competitive and open Derby.”

Frankie Dettori's 27 Derby rides
1992-16 Pollen Count
1993-8 Wolf Prince
1994-10 Linney Head
1995-2 Tamure
1996-3 Shantou
1997-9 Bold Demand
1998-9 Cape Verdi
1999-9 Dubai Millennium
2001-3 Tobougg
2002-7 Naheef
2003-8 Graikos
2004-7 Snow Ridge
2005-3 Dubawi
2006-9 Linda's Lad
2007-1 AUTHORIZED
2008-7 Rio De La Plata
2009-9 Kite Wood
2010-3 Rewilding
2011-11 Ocean War
2015-1 GOLDEN HORN
2016-4 Wings Of Desire
2017-3 Cracksman
2018-5 Hazapour
2019-6 Circus Maximus
2020-5 English King
2021-9 John Leeper
2022-12 Piz Badile

Trainer John Gosden added: “This horse can change gears, absolutely. He's a big boy and he proved he stayed the other day (in the Chester Vase) when he handled the conditions. He doesn't need it to be like that.

“He's a big boy and they always say that when they're leggy like that the track is trickier for them here, but Frankie said he got himself organized and came nicely on the bit down Tattenham Corner onto the straight – so he was pleased enough with him.

“I think it's all about getting a feel for the track and not actually about finding out how fast they can go around the track today. I tend to save that for the following weekend. We clearly were pulling up at the half furlong marker, we weren't going to the finish line and then rolling off down the hill, so it was very much an exercise gallop and not a test of ability.

“He was touched off in the Group One over a mile and a quarter at Saint-Cloud last year, so he was in the Derby then and he was the only one I had that was likely to come to the Derby and put up a bold show. You're always lucky if you've got more than one to look at.

“In a way it's about 4-1 or 5-1 the field and to that extent he belongs right up there with them.

“He's got the stamina, to do what he did at Chester in ground like that shows he's got the stamina, no problem.

“Stamina is a requirement in this race, the same for the Kentucky Derby going a mile and a quarter for the Americans, they see it as a marathon.

“Stamina wise you never really know until you go the mile and a half, you really don't. Everybody thinks this is a downhill track, but it's uphill, it rises 150 feet before you start going downhill, then you have a last section which climbs before the finish and it can catch a lot out on stamina.”

Arrest is currently a 13-2 chance with the sponsor for the Betfred Derby.

On his likely Betfred Oaks ride Soul Sister, the impressive winner of the Group Three Musidora Stakes at York last week, Frankie Dettori added: “John (Gosden) kept believing in her and at the time (when last in the Fred Darling Stakes at Newbury last month), his horses were not running that well. Then at York she took me by surprise as she quickened twice, travelled and clocked a very good time. I was impressed,

“She has to go an extra two furlongs in the Oaks but the signs are good. Obviously the O'Brien filly (Savethelastdance) won by 22 lengths at Chester and is going to be hard to beat but we'll give it a go.”

Betfred make Soul Sister an 11-4 chance for glory in the Betfred Oaks on Friday, June 2.

Dettori has ridden six Betfred Oaks heroines and is the most successful current jockey in the premier Fillies' Classic.

Frankie Dettori's 26 Oaks rides
1991-2 Shamshir
1993-3 Oakmead
1994-1 BALANCHINE
1995-1 MOONSHELL
1996-2 Pricket
1997-11 Siyadah
1998-2 Bahr
1999-3 Zahrat Dubai
2001-13 Najah
2002-1 KAZZIA
2003-5 Hi Dubai
2004-3 Punctilious
2005-12 Fen Shui
2006-6 Time On
2007-13 Measured Tempo
2008-4 Clowance
2010-14 Sajjhaa
2011-4 Blue Bunting
2014-17 Amazing Maria
2015-5 Jazzi Top
2016-2 Architecture
2017-1 ENABLE
2019-1 ANAPURNA
2020-3 Frankly Darling
2021-1 SNOWFALL
2022-2 Emily Upjohn

The post Frankie Dettori Heads To Final Epsom Derby With ‘Great Chance’ Aboard Arrest appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Unbeaten Sol Oriens Among 18 Expected For Japanese Derby

The big action continues at Tokyo Racecourse with the running of the Tokyo Yushun – more commonly known as the Derby, the Japanese Derby – taking place on Sunday, May 28. It is the second race in the series of three known as the Triple Crown. And with Sol Oriens, the winner of the Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000 Guineas), the series' first race, expected to be in the gate Sunday, the second jewel in his crown is on the line.

This year marks the 90th year of the Japanese Derby. Held over what is called the “classic distance” of 2,400 meters, the Derby is the pinnacle for 3-year-old colts and fillies. Of the thousands of thoroughbreds born each year (over 7,700 were born in 2020, the birth year of this year's Derby hopefuls), only 18 will have a chance at this once-in-a-lifetime event. Nineteen colts have been nominated to participate for a share of the purse of nearly 650 million yen and a shot at the first-place prize of 300 million yen. Eighteen of those colts should enter the gate at 15:40 on Sunday and test their mettle against many others they will compete against for the first time.

Racehorses participating in JRA events must be stabled (at least for a period prior to a race) at either one of the two training centers, Ritto in Shiga Prefecture in the west and Miho in Ibaraki Prefecture in the east. The past five Japanese Derby winners have all hailed from Ritto. This year, for the first time in 34 years, Miho horses outnumber those from Ritto. And, more noteworthy, three of the four expected to be the top choices – Sol Oriens, Skilfing, Phantom Thief, and Tastiera – hail from the Miho Training Center.

Tokyo Racecourse, located in western Tokyo's town of Fuchu, is considered to be one of the fairest, yet the toughest of the JRA tracks. The Tokyo 2,400, which ends after a grueling upward slope down the longest homestretch in Japan, is above all, a true test of overall ability. To land the Derby you have to be fast and you have to be good. And, as all Japanese horsemen will tell you, you also have to be lucky.

Here's a look at some of the expected popular Derby choices.

Sol Oriens: With only three starts to his name, Sol Oriens, a son of seven-time G1 champion Kitasan Black, remains unbeaten. After a debut over the Tokyo 1,800 meters, he leapt to a Grade 3 win over the Nakayama 2,000 meters, then claimed the Satsuki Sho at the same venue and distance. In the latter, he also prevailed despite the heavy going. A versatile runner, Sol Oriens, which is Latin for “Rising Sun,” has been successful racing close to the pace, as well as far off it. If he can win on Sunday, he will become the 20th horse in the Derby's history to do so unbeaten. Expected up will be Takeshi Yokoyama, who has ridden Sol Oriens' last two starts. The youngest of the three Yokoyamas expected to have rides in the Derby (father Norihiro on Top Knife, brother Kazuo on Bellagio Opera), the 23-year-old Takeshi will have his second chance to pilot an unbeaten Satsuki Sho champion in the Derby. In 2021, he failed to bring the unbeaten Efforia home a winner, missing first place by a mere nose. There is something more than a Derby win on the line for trainer Takahisa Tezuka as well. If he can win the Derby, a feat that has eluded him in his previous three attempts, Tezuka will become the fifth trainer in Japanese racing history and the first in 61 years to capture the five competitions for 3-year-olds known as the “classic races.”

Skilfing: Being seen as perhaps the biggest threat to Sol Oriens is Skilfing, whose name hails from Norse mythology. Another name for the powerful god Odin, Skilfing means “the shaker” and this colt shares with Sol Oriens, Kitasan Black as his sire. Hailing from the Miho barn of Tetsuya Kimura, Skilfing has only been raced at Tokyo. Second in his debut, he is on a three-way winning streak, his most recent race the Derby trial Aoba Sho, a Grade 2 run this year on April 29 and Skilfing's second win over the Tokyo 2,400. Chronically slow away, his late speed has stood him well. Most likely the heaviest colt in the lineup on raceday, Skilfing's weight has remained a steady 524kg for all his starts. The big question is whether he can shake off the jinx that “no Aoba Sho winner has ever won the Derby.”

Tastiera: Runnerup in the Satsuki Sho, this son of new stallion Satono Crown (third in the 2015 Derby) has only missed the top three once in his four starts to date. From a winning debut at Tokyo, Tastiera stepped into graded competition to finish fourth in the Grade 3 Kyodo News Hai (Tokyo, 1,800m), followed by a tight turnaround and a win of the Grade 2 Yayoi Sho (Nakayama, 2,000m). The following month he finished 1 1/4 lengths in second behind Sol Oriens in the Satsuki Sho over the Nakayama 2,000m. Hailing from the Miho stable of Noriyuki Hori, Tastiera will have the home advantage and his keen racing sense should serve him over the extra distance (his longest by 2 furlongs). If he can win it, Tastiera will become the first first-crop runner in 14 years (since Logi Universe) to win the Derby. Despite already having had three different riders in four starts, Tastiera is looking at yet another new partner – Damian Lane. Lane has been riding morning work, and though it's not due to difficulty as much as it is the changing nature of Japanese racing, if he were to win, Lane would become only the first jockey in 69 years to ride a new partner to the Derby winner's circle.

Metal Speed: Though he has yet to win a graded race, the Silver State-sired Metal Speed won a berth in the Satsuki Sho with this third-place finish in the Spring Stakes (Grade 2, Nakayama 1,800m). Despite the definite disadvantage of a No. 17 gate and the heavy going in the Satsuki Sho, Metal Speed finished in fourth place, half a second behind winner Sol Oriens. Metal Speed has experience at Tokyo, albeit only a third over the mile, the only distance he has won at. However, the stamina the colt displayed in nearly catching Tastiera in the Satsuki Sho following an outside run for most of the race has won Metal Speed points in many a racing fan's books.

Phantom Thief: Third in the Satsuki Sho despite having lost a shoe in the backstretch, and fourth in the Hopeful Stakes, Phantom Thief has proven himself a steady racer, one that has finished only once in his five starts to date out of the top three. He is new to the distance but familiar with Tokyo, having won the Kyodo News Hai (1,800, Grade 3). A big horse with a big stride, Tokyo suits, and being the son of English champion Harbinger, who excelled over 2,400 meters, the extra distance raises no concerns. Aboard should be new partner Yutaka Take, who won last year aboard Do Deuce. If Take could win again this year, he'd be the first jockey to score a double twice. And, “Take” could be the key. Phantom Thief is bred by the Urakawa farm Tanikawa Stud, which last won the Derby with one of their own 50 years ago in 1973 with a colt named Take Hope.

Satono Glanz: A son of the 2016 Derby runnerup Satono Diamond, Satono Glanz finished eighth in his debut, but from there has risen steadily and in similar manner to Skilfing. Satono Glanz notched a second followed by three straight wins, the most recent the Grade 2 Kyoto Shimbun Hai (back in its usual place over the Kyoto 2,200m), the race that gave him his ticket to the Derby. Unlike Skilfing, Satono Glanz has only one win over the Derby distance and not at Tokyo, but at Hanshin. As a 2-year-old, he weathered the long haul to Tokyo well from his recent base without losing weight, and he has shown he can adjust to new surroundings well. Trainer Yasuo Tomomichi, whose Do Deuce won the Derby last year, is gunning to become the first trainer to win the classic twice in a row. With already three Derby wins to his name, a fourth win would also move Tomomichi into second place for most Derby wins ever. Owner business magnate Hajime Satomi, now 81 years old, fields his ninth Derby runner. Though he has come close with two seconds, Satomi has yet to win the prestigious and highly coveted event.

Others of interest:

Hearts Concerto, a son of 2004 Derby runnerup Heart's Cry, is fresh off his first test over 2,400 meters, a second by half a length to Skilfing in the Aoba Stakes. He has a third, second at Tokyo and possesses a powerful late kick that may bring him into the money.

In the Satsuki Sho, Shonan Bashitto came from far off the front up the badly torn inside on heavy ground to claim fifth place, his first time out of the top three. Proven up to 2,200m, the extra distance should not pose a problem.

Hrimfaxi went to the Satsuki Sho gate with four wins and a second but heavy ground prevented him from getting the forward position he prefers. A 10-furlong specialist, the extra distance may not be a plus, but he is not to be written off.

Hopeful Stakes winner Dura Erede returns from a second in his first race over dirt, the Grade 2 UAE Derby at Meydan on March 25. With early speed, but only proven up to 2,000m, the power of this big colt may be enough to put him on a winning ticket.

The Ritto-based Top Knife has proven consistent. He was second in the Hopeful Stakes by a nose and seventh in the Satsuki Sho. He takes on Tokyo for his first time but has had good results racing to the left at Chukyo. The distance will also be two furlongs longer than he has had to date, but a little more ground may be just what he is looking for.

The post Unbeaten Sol Oriens Among 18 Expected For Japanese Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Pettigrew Returning to Sam Houston, Retama

Horse racing veteran Bryan Pettigrew will return to Texas and oversee horse racing operations at Sam Houston Race Park in Houston and at Retama Park in Selma, PENN Entertainment announced Tuesday. Pettigrew previously was head of marketing at Sam Houston Race Park in the mid-1990s before joining the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) and later the Breeders' Cup in Lexington, where he was the Chief Marketing Officer until 2019.

“I was excited when I got the call to join the PENN Entertainment team and head up their Texas operations,” Pettigrew said. “When I was previously at Sam Houston, I was able to grow handle and attendance, while educating businesses and a newer fan base about the fun, excitement, and economic impact of horse racing in Texas. I'm hoping to bring many of those same principles back and work with our talented management teams to grow our racing businesses in the Lone Star state,” he added.

Dwight Berube served as Vice President and General Manager of the property and its subsidiaries since 2017 and will be retiring in early June. Pettigrew will officially join PENN Entertainment on Jun. 5, pending customary regulatory approvals.

“I'm thrilled to have Bryan leading our Texas racing properties,” Christopher McErlean, Vice President of Racing for PENN Entertainment, said. “Horse racing in Texas has plenty of challenges but Bryan has a strong understanding of the horse racing business with his previous high-profile marketing and sponsorship roles within the industry and has maintained strong connections to many Texas racing stakeholders. He also brings a wide array of experience from outside of racing in professional sports management and special events which should positively impact our properties.

The post Pettigrew Returning to Sam Houston, Retama appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights