Stable Area Now Open At Colonial Downs; Meet Begins On July 13

Horse vans began arriving in earnest as the stable area at Colonial Downs opened June 19 in advance of the New Kent, Va., racetrack's 2023 season. The meet which spans 27 days from Thursday, July 13 through Saturday, September 9.

A record $5.25 million in stakes purses and an average daily purse distribution of $700,000 ensures the 2023 meet will offer some of the best Thoroughbred racing ever seen in the Commonwealth, topped by the G1 Arlington Million, G1 $500,000 Beverly D., and G2 $500,000 Secretariat Stakes on Saturday, August 12, plus the G3 $500,000 Virginia Derby and $250,000 Virginia Oaks which will highlight the Saturday, September 9 card.

Weekend racing returns for the first time since 2019 with live racing scheduled every Thursday, Friday and Saturday with a first post time of 1:30 p.m.

Colonial Downs again will have a full complement of 850 horses on its backstretch. Among the first horses to arrive were those from the barn of Kelsey Danner, shipping in from Kentucky; Virginia mainstay Karen Godsey; and Angel Rodriguez, arriving from his Florida home base.

“People remember when I was 16 and hotwalking, learning the ropes around here. The quality from what used to be here compared to what is here now is unreal. It is so nice to see bigger outfits, nice quality horses and big stakes race days in New Kent,” said Godsey.

“I have a lot of turf horses and the purses there are great,” added Mark Casse, a member of both the Canadian and American Halls of Fame, who will have a full contingent here for time. “Seeing the opportunities there, it just made sense.”

Casse mentioned that he is considering the G1 Arlington Million for Strong Quality who was fifth in the G1 Manhattan at Belmont on June 10.

Other trainers expected for the 2023 meet include Hall of Fame conditioner Steve Asmussen; Graham Motion, winner of both the 2019 and 2021 editions of the G3 Virginia Derby; last year's leading trainer Mike Stidham; Jonathan Thomas; Mike Trombetta; and Michelle Lovell.

Colonial has added an Early 50-cent Pick 5 with a fan-friendly 12% takeout to the wagering menu covering the first five flat races daily and a $1 Pick 6 with a 15% takeout which covers the final six races each day.

All races from Colonial Downs can be seen daily on either FanDuel TV or FanDuel Racing. In house, Jason Beem returns for his fifth season at the mic while Kaitlin Free joins the broadcast team as racing analyst and paddock host.

About Colonial Downs

Colonial Downs Racetrack, in New Kent, Va., hosts live Thoroughbred racing on two nationally renowned surfaces – the Secretariat Turf Course, the widest turf course in North America at 180 feet wide, and on a 1 1/4-mile dirt track, second in length to only the world-famous Belmont Park.

The Colonial Downs Group, which is owned by Churchill Downs Incorporated (NASDAQ Global Select Market: CHDN), also operates Rosie's Gaming Emporiums® in Richmond, Hampton, New Kent, Vinton, and Dumfries which offer innovative historic horseracing (HHR) gaming technology and full card simulcasting as well as Rosie's Game Room in Collinsville, which features a limited selection of some of their best HHR titles plus full card simulcasting. The 2023 live racing season, which consists of 27 days from July 13 through September 9, is highlighted by the Grade 1 Arlington Million, Grade 1 Beverly D. and Grade 2 Secretariat Stakes on August 12 and the Grade 3 New Kent County Virginia Derby on September 9. The Beverly D. is a Breeders' Cup Challenge “Win & You're In” race.

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Talking Points: Life After Frankie Won’t Be Bleak With Magical Murphy Around

I don't know about you, but I can't seem to remember a better big-race ride in recent times than what Oisin Murphy produced in winning the G1 Commonwealth Cup aboard Julie Camacho's Shaquille (GB) (Charm Spirit {Ire}).

It would be hard enough to win a middle-of-the-road handicap after blowing the start like Shaquille did. A Group 1 at Ascot? You must be having a laugh. 

The in-running punters agreed and quickly laid Shaquille at odds all the way up to 90 on the exchanges. Ouch. But even when Shaquille got to the quarters of Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never), the layers must still have fancied the heavy favourite to fight back given the ground Murphy's mount had to make up to get into a winning position. 

That's what made the ride a brilliant one. It was Murphy's reaction to the poor start that ultimately made the difference. While other riders would have panicked and tried to make up that ground lost in the early stages, Murphy kept calm, and never put Shaquille on his head. 

It would be doing Shaquille and Murphy a disservice by saying that the leaders went too quick up front which resulted in a burn up. The early indications on times would suggest that that wasn't the case at all. 

It's best to chalk this down as a top-notch performance from a sprinter on the up and an even better ride from Murphy. 

As for the runner-up, Little Big Bear, one could draw comparisons between him and the former Ballydoyle-trained Ten Sovereigns (Ire), another talented son of No Nay Never

Returning to Newmarket during high summer for the July Cup could see Little Big Bear in a better light, as it did Ten Sovereigns, who also tasted defeat in the Commonwealth Cup before scorching to that memorable success at Newmarket. 

Always Leave Them Wanting More

Call me a miserable fart [I've been called worse], but is it not getting a bit repetitive for television presenters to be willing Frankie Dettori to ride on for another year every time he bags a winner on the big stage?

One well-respected pundit even commented that, 'John Gosden will be tearing his hair out' as he tries to find a replacement for the legendary jockey. 

Okay, we get it, Frankie is box office and is arguably riding as well this year as he has for a long time but is this a narrative that will continue up until his intended retirement at either the Breeders' Cup or the Melbourne Cup? I certainly hope not. 

Britain is in a good place in terms of the talent in the weighroom, as Oisin Murphy demonstrated aboard Shaquille and as the reigning champion William Buick has proved time and time again, season after season. 

There are few professions where the lines between success and failure are more blurred than race-riding. Such a statement was summed up in commercial fashion by amateur jockey David Maxwell after he won the Champion Hunter Chase on his own horse Bob And Co at Punchestown a couple of years back. 

Maxwell said of his riding endeavours, “some days you are the dog, and then others you are the lampost.”

Frankie has been the top dog of the weighing room for the majority of his career. He made his decision to exit the stage while still operating at the top of his game.

They say all great sports stars should leave their fans wanting more and Frankie is clearly doing that at Ascot this week but it would be a shame to see him relegated to the lampost by staying on longer than he feels his body will permit him to. 

Big Bloodstock Agents Bolster Their Reputation 

It can be easy to roll your eyes and scoff at the role bloodstock agents play in this industry. Touring the world spending other people's money, you say? Where do I sign up?

The reality is that the fickleness of this game that we often hear afflicting trainers and riders also applies to bloodstock agents. This is a results-based business and the big agents need to pull the big-race riches out of the bag the same as everybody else. 

That's what made the exploits of Billy Jackson-Stops, Richard Brown, Mark McStay and others noteworthy this week. 

It has been well-documented that Jackson-Stops bought G2 Duke Of Cambridge S. winner Rogue Millennium (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) for just 35,000gns at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale. 

Brown has inherited a major client in Wathnan Racing and his strike-rate has been nothing short of phenomenal with two Royal Ascot winners Gregory (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}) and Courage Mon Ami (GB) (Frankel {GB}) for the new ownership vehicle, the latter going down as an inspired buy after winning the Gold Cup on just his fourth start.

McStay's fingerprints were all over the G3 Albany S. winner Porta Fortuna (Ire) after he recommended Donnacha O'Brien's Caravaggio filly to American owners after she won her maiden on debut at the Curragh. 

The top agents have certainly earned their fee this week. 

Job Done For Tahiyra – And She's Much Better Than She Showed 

The fewer the runners in a race, the more tactical it becomes. We saw that in the Group 1 feature on Friday with Chris Hayes doing his best to keep things simple on the heavy favourite Tahiyra (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}).

The Irish 1,000 Guineas winner may have only won by a length in the finish and had to overcome a stewards' inquiry after she caused what appeared to be minimal interference to the runner-up Remarquee (GB) (Kingman {GB}), but there are many reasons why she can be deemed much better than what she showed at Ascot. 

Tahiyra's main asset is an explosive burst of speed and she did not get to utilise that in the Coronation S. The stronger the pace, the better Dermot Weld's charge will be, and she rates a hugely-exciting miler to follow for the rest of the season. 

With Paddington (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}) likely to step up in trip and Chaldean (GB) (Frankel {GB}) proving that he is in fact beatable, there could be an opening in that division, and it would be fascinating if she were to take on the colts at some stage in the campaign. She looks the real deal.

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Grade 1 Winner Max Player Retired, Stud Plans Pending

Max Player, a Grade 1 winner who competed in all three legs of the out-of-order 2020 Triple Crown series has been retired from racing, with his future at stud to be determined.

The 6-year-old son of Honor Code finished his career with four wins in 16 starts, earning $1,551,266 for Annestes Racing and majority owner George Hall, who confirmed the horse's retirement to the Paulick Report on Friday.

“He gave us a very exciting 3-year-old campaign, being in all the Triple Crown races, as well as being third in the Belmont and the Travers, so we're really proud of him for his 3-year-old career,” Hall said. “He had a very good 4-year-old season, winning the Suburban and the Jockey Club Gold Cup, and we were very proud of him.

“We ran him a few times as a 5-year-old and it didn't work out for him, so we've retired him, but I still have a lot of faith in the horse, a lot of faith in his physical attributes and capability, and we're going to now try to generate some interest in him as a sire,” he continued.

Bred in Kentucky by K & G Stables, out of the stakes-winning Not For Love mare Fools in Love, Max Player began his on-track career with trainer Linda Rice, for whom he broke his maiden at Parx Racing in his second career start as a 2-year-old. He then established himself as a contender on the Kentucky Derby trail with a 3 1/4-length score in the Grade 3 Withers Stakes.

Max Player's Withers score came just weeks before the racing calendar was turned upside down due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and his next start came in the Belmont Stakes, which was rescheduled and shortened to 1 1/8 miles. He finished third to Tiz the Law in the Belmont, and he finished third again to the same horse in the G1 Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course.

The colt was moved to trainer Steve Asmussen ahead of his start in the Kentucky Derby, rescheduled to September, where he finished fifth. He finished fifth again in the Preakness Stakes, held in October.

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After a winter sojourn overseas to contest the G1 Saudi Cup in his 4-year-old bow, Max Player got back on the winning track in the summer, catching Dubai World Cup winner Mystic Guide by a neck in the G2 Suburban Stakes at Belmont Park. He followed up with a dominant four-length triumph in the G1 Jockey Club Gold Cup Stakes in Saratoga.

“The race that really got me excited was the Suburban,” Hall said. “He had a few less-than-stellar races, and then he came into the Suburban and that led him to the Jockey Club Gold Cup and he won that to show the Suburban wasn't a fluke. Those two races were probably the most memorable for me.”

After a seven-month layoff, Max Player made his lone start of 2023 on Feb. 25 in an Oaklawn Park allowance optional claiming race, where he lost action and was vanned off in what would be his final race.

The horse was sent to Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Ky., after the race, where he was treated for an infection. He then spent time at Spy Coast Farm in Lexington for rehabilitation, and Hall said Max Player has since made a full recovery.

In the weeks to come, Max Player will ship to one of Hall's farms in Kentucky or New Jersey, both called Annestes Farm, while long-term plans are made for his stud career.

“I have a little time,” Hall said. “I think we'll probably sponsor it, our group and myself, whether we do it at my farm in Kentucky or whether we get an offer from another stud farm is still up in the air, but if we don't get a good offer from somebody else, I'll just effectively do it with my partners. We're excited about the prospects, and we'll spend the next few months trying to get organized and finalize the road map.”

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