This Side Up: Plus Ca Change….

At a time when so many people seem to be allowing a duty of vigilance to crumble into morbid defeatism, it seems a little unfair that our sport should be going through such a hard time even as we approach the 50th anniversary of the most luminous tour de force in the story of the modern breed.

Of course, as some powerful evocations of the time have lately reminded us, Secretariat arrived as a sunbeam into a wider world darkened by Vietnam and civic unrest. And nor should we deceive ourselves that even our own, notoriously insular community was back then immune to some of the things that vex us in 2023.

For instance, without reprising what have doubtless become tiresomely familiar objections to tinkering with the Classic schedule, let's not forget that Secretariat faced down a Triple Crown drought stretching to Citation in 1948. Obviously a still longer wait followed Seattle Slew and Affirmed, but we've found two horses equal to the task in the last eight years. Even so, the trainers are somehow trying to bully us into reconciling the paradox that they want more time between the races and therefore (assuming this indeed renders those races more competitive) to extend the intervals between precisely those Triple Crown winners that supposedly represent our best route to wider engagement.

Well, the world moves on. And it's not as though the Thoroughbred has ever permitted hard and fast rules anyway.

On the one hand, it's pretty unarguable that the old school, by exposing their horses more, helped the public to develop a rooting interest. If Flightline (Tapit) was perhaps as talented as we've seen since Secretariat, in making just six starts he barely scratched the surfaced of national attention.
And I do like to think there were other, incidental gains in the aggressive campaigning of horses, whether in terms of educating the animal or showcasing the type of genes that breeders should wish to replicate. But if Mage (Good Magic) is only the latest proof that modern trainers can prepare a raw horse even for a challenge as notoriously exacting as the Kentucky Derby, then let's roll back to that summer of '73.

Okay, so Secretariat himself had made nine juvenile starts from July 4. But if you would presume experience to be an asset at Churchill on the first Saturday in May, then how much more crucial should it be for the template itself, the most venerable race of all: the Derby at Epsom, that crazy rollercoaster with its twisting hill? Yet half a century ago, in a field of 25, the race was won on only his second career start by Morston (GB).

He was bred for Classic stamina, at any rate: by St Leger winner Ragusa (Ire) out of an Oaks runner-up (herself by a St Leger runner-up) who had already produced the 1969 Derby winner Blakeney (GB). Ragusa, incidentally, was out of a mare imported from a very old American family that had earlier produced Hard Tack, the sire of Seabiscuit. The St Leger, remember, is run over 14 furlongs. As the Japanese have reminded us, the lifeblood of the Thoroughbred is not brute speed but class: the ability not just to go fast, but to keep going fast.

That is certainly the hallmark of Galileo (Ire), whose legacy saturates the 244th running of the Derby on Saturday. With 93 juveniles and just a dozen yearlings still to come, he is represented by a single son, Artistic Star (Ire), unbeaten for one of the outstanding trainers in Europe yet available at tempting odds. Of the remaining 13 starters, eight are by sons of Galileo (including two by principal heir Frankel {GB}); two are out of his daughters; and one is out of a mare by another of his sons. That leaves just two runners to have bobbed to the surface of a European bloodstock industry that squanders mares, by the thousand, on stallions that cannot remotely satisfy the definition of class given above.

But, yes, the world moves on. Sometimes it just moves on in the wrong direction. It's a pretty dismal reflection on where our sport stands today that its greatest race has been shoehorned into the middle of lunch to avoid the F.A. Cup Final. Because what American readers may not realize is that this particular soccer match, in its heyday, also once brought England to a standstill—but has in recent years, even as the game has boomed, also lost much of its popular traction. With many managers resting star players for this tournament, you might even say that the F.A. Cup has shared the same decline in popular culture as the Derby (for which Parliament itself used to take the day off).

Fixed television schedules are also a thing of the past, with the young especially expecting to do most of their viewing “on demand.” That puts live events at a premium. In Britain, however, broadcasting rights for the most prestigious sporting events—including both the F.A. Cup Final and the Derby—are ringfenced for free channels. (Which obviously invites the paradox that the most coveted events, with no competition from channels with subscription revenue, are least likely to achieve their true market value.) Unusually, the F.A. Cup Final is broadcast simultaneously by both the BBC and ITV. And since the latter also has the rights to the Derby, racing has been unceremoniously shown its place.

By an unmissable irony, the match that has elbowed the Derby aside is being contested by Manchester City and Manchester United. As such, it is what the soccer world knows as a “derby” match between local rivals. The origin of this usage is tenuous, but some have ascribed it to the Epsom race. Horseracing, after all, long precedes football (in all its variations) in popular culture.
Yet now we find the Jockey Club taking out injunctions in anticipation of animal rights protests, even for a race in such innocuous contrast to, for instance, the Grand National. And that is without the current traumas of Churchill Downs having remotely penetrated wider consciousness on that side of the pond.

But let's resist adding another “basso profundo” to the prevailing chorus of miserabilism. Let's hope for another infectiously exciting chapter in the Epsom epic: maybe a final Derby for Dettori, who has already won two of three British Classics on his farewell tour; or perhaps one more for another old master, Sir Michael Stoute.

His runner hadn't even seen a racetrack before Apr. 20. Put that in your pipe and smoke it, Mage! Passenger (Ulysses {Ire}) is actually out of a War Front mare. Fifty years on from Morston, then, perhaps Passenger would be an apt reminder that the more the world changes, the more it stays the same.

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Trainer Nick Dilodovico: ‘There’s Still So Much To Learn’

Standing in the winner's circle at historic Pimlico Race Course, late in the afternoon on a sunny Memorial Day holiday program, the significance of the moment was not lost on Nick Dilodovico.

Dilodovico, the 32-year-old son of Laurel Park-based trainer Damon Dilodovico, had just saddled 2021 Maryland Million Sprint winner Air Token to a runaway victory for Norman 'Lynn' Cash's Built Wright Stables.

The younger Dilodovico has been working for the past month as Cash's assistant, running the Kentucky-based trainer's Laurel string, which numbers between 20 and 30 horses. Since late May, Dilodovico has been the trainer of record.

Dilodovico has posed in the winner's circle often at Pimlico and Laurel with his father, working as his assistant since graduating from college in 2013, but this meant something different for the Cobb Island, Md. native.

“It's super great to be able to run here and participate here, where they've been running for more than 100 years,” Dilodovico said. “It's even better to be a Maryland-bred, win with a Maryland-bred and then have the horses just run for you when you seem to put them in the right spots.”

The final weekend of Pimlico's Preakness Meet starts Friday, and Dilodovico has one horse entered, Cypres Station, in the opener of an eight-race program, a six-furlong claiming event for 3-year-olds. Post time is 12:25 p.m.

Saturday at Pimlico, Dilodovico will send out 4-year-old gelding Succeed in Race 5, a claiming event for maidens age 3, 4 and 5 going 1 1/16 miles. He also has horses entered at Churchill Downs Thursday and Thistledown June 5 with one of his Kentucky horses, Hidewright Away, cross-entered in Friday's $150,000 Penn Oaks at Penn National.

“Eventually it'll be something that'll be a more permanent situation. Right now, I'm kind of doing private for Built Wright Stables. That probably is only going to be a short stint,” Dilodovico said. “You'll definitely start to see me in the Form a little bit more, but it's something that I've always been conscientious of since I started.

“In this country, people are so keyed in on win percentage. I've been asked a lot to train horses and condition horses and I never really took the bait because I always felt that I had a lot to learn from my dad,” he added. “You can always learn on other people's mistakes and good fortune and the decisions that they make. I'm only 32 so there's still so much to learn.”

So far, Dilodovico shows four wins, two seconds and a third from nine starters, winning with each of his first two – Hippodrome May 22 at Thistledown and Miss Chamita May 24 at Parx, the latter claimed out of her race for $7,500. He also won with Maximum Impact May 26 at Churchill. Air Token was his first win in Maryland.

“They were in really good spots. Hippodrome performed really well at Churchill. We found him a nice spot. The other filly that ran at Parx, I was super happy with her. She had run second and she's kind of a plodder, but to see her accelerate late in the lane was great. I was almost upset to lose her to be honest, but it's fine.

“As far as the whole training gig, I've had the benefit of learning from my father and being under his tutelage. I worked for Tom Morley a little bit and I worked for Kent Sweezey, so I've been able to just kind of be a sponge and figure stuff out.”

Damon Dilodovico, a winner of 835 career races including the 2020 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G3) with Laki, has watched proudly as his son not only chose to follow in his footsteps training horses but been rewarded with early success.

“It's exciting. My wife, Christine, appreciates the fact that he's seeing that side of it instead of being an assistant for us for so many years. I would not say he took things for granted, but it's definitely different when you're the head of it or you're an assistant,” Dilodovico said. “We're excited that he's kind of seeing it as the lead. There is a big difference.

“He was an assistant to Tom Morley for a season when he shipped to Maryland and then again for Kent Sweezey the following year. That all seemed to go well,” he added. “I don't know how much of the day-to-day training he was in charge of, [but] he's in charge of that now. He's in charge of everything now. He scours the condition book. He's finding spots. He's not afraid to run.”

Though no longer in the shedrow, Nick Dilodovico knows he can always turn to his father for counsel and guidance. Bob Klesaris, a winner of more than 2,300 races who returned to training in 2019 after working as agent for Hall of Fame jockey Edgar Prado, has also been a source of support.

“If you listen to those kinds of guys they have a lot of experience, just things to think about and take and move forward. I'm just not super eager to jump in and, for lack of a better word, be a loser,” Dilodovico said. “You see some of the people out there that don't have the family tie to it, those people are incredibly brave to go out on their own. It's really hard. It's a very stressful job. It's hard to afford racehorses. It's very hard to keep really good help around you and surround yourself with people that are passionate about the sport.

“You can have a ton of success early on, and you can very easily run into a streak where you start to doubt yourself and doubt your program and doubt your methods,” he added. “I've always felt truly that my dad was an excellent trainer. He does a really good job, especially with the stock that he gets. He's not force-fed really nice horses. I've always felt that it was my duty as his son and his assistant to just make sure that he can achieve what he wants to achieve in his life. He's not too far away from a thousand wins and he deserves it. I'm not super eager to 100 percent leave him, but Mr. Cash made me an offer, to quote The Godfather, that I couldn't refuse.”

Dilodovico also draws inspiration from his time playing soccer at Randolph College in Lynchburg, Va. under coach Bryan Waggoner.

“Really good coach. Super, incredibly organized, always two steps ahead in a lot of different ways,” Dilodovico said. “[Training] is a business, for sure, but if you run it like a team then you kind of get the most out of people. Despite being incredibly hard on us, he always got a lot out of us. We were like 18 to 21 or 22 years old, which is actually not that different from a 3-year-old colt or filly. You're starting to get the spot where you're an adult, but you're mentally immature. It's kind of an interesting parallel.”

While largely influenced by his father, Dilodovico said he has taken something from everyone he has worked for to customize his own training style.

“Somebody said something to me a long time ago. I was asking him how he learned how to do something and he was like, 'A dead drunk taught me in 1991 how to do this, and that's a lesson to you that you can learn from anybody,'” he said. “So I've kind of actually internalized that lot. I watch what people do and I pay attention and I ask questions without being too nosy.”

Six of Dilodovico's first nine starters have come at Pimlico. One race after Air Token's victory, he ran second and third with stakes winners Galerio and Double Crown in a stakes-quality optional claiming allowance for 3-year-olds and up.

“You're always going to run into a better horse almost no matter what, unless you're Todd [Pletcher] or Steve Asmussen. They tend to have the better stock,” he said. “You just try to make sure things fall in place and do the best you can and, not to be cliché, but just treat the horses with respect and make sure they're happy and healthy.”

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Sunday’s Cross Country Pick 5 Features Racing From Four Racetracks

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Sunday featuring racing from Belmont Park and stakes from Monmouth Park, Woodbine and Churchill Downs.

The Cross Country Pick 5 requires bettors to pick the winner of five select races from tracks across the country. The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country with each week featuring a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5, boasting a low 15 percent takeout, offers sequences with races from Belmont Park and partner tracks across the country.

The sequence, which features five races from four tracks in less than one hour, begins at 4:08 p.m. Eastern in Race 7 at Belmont, a nine-furlong inner turf starter allowance for 3-year-olds and up. Conditioner Carlos Martin sends out two contenders in last-out winner Penner Ash, who wheels back first off the claim on nine day's rest, and More Than Work, who finished fifth in this condition on May 21. The Linda Rice-trained Pioneering Spirit is in search of his first victory against winners after graduating for a $40,000 tag on May 11 over the local going.

The action heads south to the Jersey Shore for Race 9 [4:22 p.m.] at Monmouth, the one-mile Smart N Classy Handicap for New Jersey-bred fillies and mares aged 3-years-old and up. Trainer Butch Reid, Jr. sends out the formidable multiple stakes-winner Girl Trouble on the heels of a dominant four-length allowance coup sprinting six furlongs on May 13 at Monmouth. The Fast Anna filly has won two stakes, including the Parx Futurity in January. The Farrel Mann trainee Beach Daze arrives from a string of runner-up efforts spanning four starts and dating to an optional claimer in February at Parx Racing. The daughter of Blofeld was last seen finishing a closing second sprinting six furlongs in the May 20 Spruce Fir Handicap over the Monmouth main track.

The middle leg will see action return to Belmont in Race 8 [4:40 p.m.], a seven-furlong Widener turf $40,000 claiming event for older horses. Five-time winner Scilly Cay takes a drop in class in his turf debut for conditioner Pat Reynolds after failing to hit the board in his last three outings. He won the Rego Park in January 2020 when in the care of trainer Linda Rice. The consistent Chuck Willis also takes a drop in class for Hall of Fame conditioner Mark Casse in his second start of the year, while the multiple stakes-placed Street Copper makes his seasonal bow for trainer Michael Trombetta.

The penultimate leg features graded action from north of the border as a field of 11 take on the Grade 2, $175,000 Eclipse [Race 8, 4:48 p.m.] for older horses traveling 1 1/16 miles on the synthetic. Graded stakes-winner Artie's Storm makes his 5-year-old debut and is in search of his first win since winning this event last year for trainer Paul Buttigieg. The son of We Miss Artie has placed in four stakes in six starts since, including a last-out third in the Steady Growth in December going the Eclipse distance over the Woodbine Tapeta.

The Martin Drexler-trained Carrothers has shown a great improvement in form since he was haltered for $35,000 out of a winning effort on February 23 at Gulfstream Park. He has won his last three races, led by his most recent triumph going one-mile and 70 yards over the Gulfstream synthetic in an April 9 starter allowance. The field also includes the Jonathan Thomas-trained multiple graded stakes-placed Wolfie's Dynaghost, who is undefeated in three starts over synthetic, as well as graded stakes-winners Rondure and War Bomber. Tyson, a 4-year-old Tapit colt trained by Josie Carroll, is undefeated in two lifetime outings, both over synthetic surfaces. Tyson's second dam, Teeming, is also the second dam of Grade 3 Peter Pan winner and Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets contender Arcangelo.

The curtain drops on the sequence in Race 9 [4:55 p.m.] at Churchill, the Grade 3 Mint Julep for older fillies and mares at 1 1/16 miles on the turf. Leading the field of eight is Gainesway Stable's White Frost, who enters from a game third-place finish to In Italian in the Grade 1 Jenny Wiley on April 15 at Keeneland. The Candy Ride dark bay came up a neck shy of her first graded victory two starts back when second in the Grade 3 Honey Fox in March at Gulfstream.

Steep opposition will be provided by the Cherie DeVaux-trained Gam's Mission, who won this event last year; Sweet Dani Girl, a last-out second to Didia in the Grade 3 Modesty for trainer Carlo Vaccarezza; and New Year's Eve, the Brendan Walsh-trained third-place finisher from the Modesty.

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

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the spring/summer meet at Belmont Park on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

Cross Country Pick 5 – Sunday, June 4

Leg A: Belmont Park, Race 7 – starter allowance (4:08 p.m. Eastern)

Leg B: Monmouth Park, Race 9 – Smart N Classy H. (4:22 p.m.)

Leg C: Belmont Park, Race 8 – $40K claiming (4:40 p.m.)

Leg D: Woodbine, Race 8 – G2 Eclipse (4:48 p.m.)

Leg E: Churchill Downs, Race 9 – G3 Mint Julep (4:55 p.m.)

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Schnell Meister Requires Very Best For Yasuda Kinen

Having gone excruciatingly close in the last two renewals of the G1 Yasuda Kinen, Sunday Racing's Schnell Meister (Ger) (Kingman {GB}) takes a third crack at Japan's premier spring mile event, a 'Win and You're In' challenge race for the GI FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile at Santa Anita in early November.

The bay, one of 10 elite-level winner in the field, defeated Songline (Jpn) (Kizuna {Jpn}) in the age-restricted G1 NHK Mile Cup over this course and distance two years ago and was narrowly beaten by champion Gran Alegria (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) in this race his next start. He found Songline just a neck too good 12 months ago and was well below par for the remainder of his 4-year-old campaign, but he hinted at a return to form with a close fourth in the G2 Nakayama Kinen over 1800 metres Feb. 26 and most recently cut back to the mile for a victory in the G2 Yomiuri Milers Cup Apr. 23, with Gaia Force (Jpn) (Kitasan Black {Jpn}) and Soul Rush (Jpn) not far away in second and third. Christophe Lemaire, who took the 2018 Yasuda Kinen aboard Mozu Ascot (Frankel {GB}), will need to work out a trip from barrier 14.

“As a 5-year-old, he's more mature now,” said trainer Takahisa Tezuka. “He runs well at Tokyo, so returning to the track this time makes conditions good for him and he has a chance to win. Things to consider will be the ground and the weather before the race and on the day, as I would like him to run on good ground.”

The Milers Cup also-rans figure to be well-fancied here as well, as Gaia Force was trying the mile for the first time, while Soul Rush has shown he can hold his own at this level.

 

 

 

Songline also carries the Sunday Racing colours and will need to overcome gate 18 if she is to become the first Yasuda Kinen repeater since Vodka (Jpn) (Tamino Gimlet {Jpn}) in 2008-2009. She's raced only sparingly since, finishing fifth to Meikei Yell (Jpn) (Mikki Isle {Jpn}) in the G2 Centaur S. (1200m) last September and 10th to compatriot Bathrat Leon (Jpn) (Kizuna {Jpn}) in defence of her title in the G3 1351 Turf Sprint in Saudi Arabia in February. She bounced back last time to just touch off fan favourite Sodashi (Jpn) (Kurofune) in the G1 Victoria Mile over track and trip May 14.

“She has not only kept her condition since her last race, but she also seems to have improved for it,” trainer Toru Hayashi said of Songline. “It's the same concept as last year with these two races, and we're seeing the real Songline. With another strong field this time, and even after winning the Victoria Mile, I still think she's a challenger again here. I'm hoping she can run another strong race.”

Serifos (Jpn) (Daiwa Major {Jpn}) ran home strongly to be fourth while facing his elders here last June and closed the season with a smart 1 1/4-length success in the G1 Mile Championship. The chestnut has one run under his belt this season, a meritorious fourth behind the three-peating Lord North (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G1 Dubai Turf over a nine-furlong trip that might be a bit longer than optimal. Derby-winning jockey Damian Lane retains the call.

Jack d'Or (Jpn) (Maurice {Jpn}), whose sire won this in 2015, is the likely leader from gate three for Yutaka Take. The flashy chestnut, who has raced exclusively over the 2000 metres to this point in his career, took a thrilling running of the G2 Sapporo Kinen over Panthalassa (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}) last August and was at his front-running best when landing the G1 Osaka Hai on his seasonal return Apr. 2

 

 

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