Saratoga Live Returns To FOX Sports This Thursday

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) announced Wednesday the return of Saratoga Live, the critically acclaimed and award-winning television show produced by NYRA in conjunction with FOX Sports. For the eighth consecutive season, Saratoga Live will present fans with daily coverage of the 2023 summer meet at historic Saratoga Race Course.

Presented by America's Best Racing and Claiborne Farm, Saratoga Live will expand its reach yet again in 2023 with 230 hours of live coverage and analysis scheduled to air on the FOX Sports family of networks.

The Saratoga Live broadcast team will include hosts Greg Wolf and Laffit Pincay III, with analysis and handicapping from Maggie Wolfendale, Acacia Courtney, Andy Serling, Paul Lo Duca, Jonathon Kinchen and Sara Elbadwi. Viewers can look forward to commentary and insights from trainer Tom Amoss, Eclipse Award-winning jockey Richard Migliore and Hall of Fame jockey Gary Stevens.

Highlighted by the 154th edition of the Grade 1, $1.25 million Travers on August 26 and the Grade 1, $1 million Whitney on August 5, the 2023 summer meet at historic Saratoga Race Course will open on Thursday, July 13, and continue through Monday, September 4.

Following the four-day opening weekend, racing will be conducted five days a week, Wednesdays through Sundays, apart from closing week, when the meet will conclude on Labor Day.

To view the current 2023 Saratoga Live broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule.

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Jockey Of The Week: Jose Ortiz Scores Belmont Riding Title By One Win

Victory in the Belmont Derby Invitational capped a four-win day for Jose Ortiz on Saturday, but finishing the spring/summer meet on top of the jockey standings on Sunday concluded the weekend and the meet on a very high note.

The panel of racing experts rewarded Ortiz with the honor of Jockey of the Week for July 3 through July 9. The award recognizes jockeys for riding accomplishments and who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher gave Ortiz a leg up on Far Bridge in the Grade 1 Belmont Derby Invitational, one of four graded stakes on Saturday.

Breaking from post position five in the field of 11, Far Bridge raced inside in seventh then sixth. Ortiz angled Far Bridge out in early stretch gaining command in the final sixteenth to win by a length in 2:01.75 for the 1 1/4-mile turf test. Far Bridge won as the second choice over race favorite the European invader, The Foxes, who finished third after a troubled trip.

“I rode him one time (a win in March at Gulfstream) and I think that helped, but every race developed differently,” said Ortiz. “Unfortunately, last time he was in some trouble but the horse doesn't help himself – he lugs in a bit and that can get you in trouble and that's what happened. I cut the corner at the quarter pole – beautiful trip – and when I tip him out, he exploded. It was a nice kick in the end.”

Going into Sunday's card, Ortiz held a four-race lead over his brother Irad Ortiz, Jr.

“I'm taking it one race at time,” said Ortiz on Saturday.

In the end, Ortiz held the lead and prevailed by one win over his brother to secure the leading rider title with 59 wins.

“It was fun – it's great,” said Ortiz, who also won the 2021 Belmont spring/summer title with 59 wins. “I work very hard in the mornings and I receive good opportunities from the owners and trainers and I am very thankful for that.”

It was the fourth leading rider title on the NYRA circuit for Ortiz.

Ortiz will ride the Saratoga meet which begins July 13.

Other nominees for Jockey of the Week were Martin Garcia with two stakes wins at Prairie Meadows including the G3 Prairie Meadows Cornhusker, Marcelino Pedroza, Jr. who won the G3 Indiana Derby, Flavien Prat who won a stakes race at Belmont and posted five wins on the July 4 card at Belmont, and John Velazquez with two graded stakes wins at Belmont Park.

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Kentucky Downs To Host 11 Stakes Worth $1 Million Or More In 2023

Kentucky Downs' Grade 2 Kentucky Turf Cup will be worth $1.7 million in 2023, with the winner earning more than $1 million if bred in Kentucky. Even horses that aren't registered Kentucky-breds will compete for $1.3 million, the winner of the 1 1/2-mile stakes making about $800,000.

In addition, four other stakes are being raised to $1 million to bring the total of seven-figure races to 11 at the all-turf FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs. The most lucrative meet in North America — including the biggest maiden purses in the world at $150,000 for Kentucky-breds — runs Aug. 31 and Sept. 2, 3, 7, 9, 10 and 13.

The Kentucky Turf Cup's $1.7 million purse includes $400,000 from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF), which provides purse supplements to registered Kentucky-breds. The Turf Cup also is a Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race, meaning its winner gets a fees-paid spot in the $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf (G1) at Santa Anita.

Outside the Breeders' Cup, the only turf race in America that could be worth more money also is at Kentucky Downs: the $2 million Mint Millions. As announced earlier, that Grade 3 mile stakes has a base purse of $1 million and another $1 million from the KTDF.

The four new $1 million stakes, each for 3-year-olds over Labor Day weekend, will see their purses boosted from $750,000 to $1 million. Of that, $600,000 will be the base purse for which every horse runs and the remaining $400,000 in KTDF supplements.

Getting those raises are the Grade 3 Music City Stakes for fillies at 6 1/2 furlongs and the Gun Runner at a mile on Saturday Sept. 2 and the Grade 3 Dueling Grounds Derby and the Dueling Grounds Oaks for fillies, both at 1 5/16 miles on Sunday Sept. 3. The hikes give the Sept. 2 card three races worth at least $1 million, highlighted by the Mint Millions.

Also offering $1 million purses are the Turf Sprint (G2), a Breeders' Cup Challenge Series' “Win and You're In” qualifier for the $1 million Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint; Franklin-Simpson (G2), Ladies Sprint (G2), Ladies Turf (G3) and Ladies Marathon (G3). Those stakes join the Kentucky Turf Cup on the showcase Sept. 9 card.

“We want to provide horse owners a shot to where winning and even hitting the board goes a long way on the balance sheet in a challenging industry where the payoff more often is thrills than profit,” said Ron Winchell, co-managing partner of Kentucky Downs and The Mint Gaming Hall properties with Marc Falcone. “Getting these races up to $1 million — and more in a couple of cases — further stamps Kentucky as America's premiere racing circuit. And we know the vast majority of this purse money will be reinvested in the racing and breeding industries in Kentucky.

“This should grab people's attention, and we hope it pushes our four Grade 2 stakes over the finish line to be awarded Grade 1 status for 2024. This is important to us, and we thank our partners with the Kentucky HBPA and the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund for making it possible, along with the wisdom of the General Assembly, whose members understand that investing in such a labor-intensive industry is a huge investment in the state that pays dividends in jobs and economic development.”

Outside serving as a Breeders' Cup host, no track comes close to matching Kentucky Downs' lineup of million-dollar races.

“Think of that: the capability to run nine races worth a million dollars, one that's $1.7 million and another that's $2 million spread over a week and a half,” said Kentucky Downs' Vice President for Racing Ted Nicholson. “All of our nine graded stakes and two others are the most lucrative turf stakes for their respective divisions in the country and among the richest on the planet.

“We also want to attract horses like Aspen Grove, the Belmont Oaks winner, to Kentucky Downs. Irish-bred, such as she is, and all horses outside Kentucky-breds still race for $600,000 in the Dueling Grounds Oaks and the Grade 3 Ladies Marathon, as well as in all of our $1 million races. That by itself is the most any turf filly can race for in America before the Breeders' Cup.”

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Bloodlines: Cross Traffic And Quality In The Dam

If anyone ever was to doubt that the quality of a stallion's book makes a significant difference to his success, just take a look at the results for Cross Traffic (by Unbridled's Song) over the past few years.

From his first crop, the winner of the Grade 1 Whitney Stakes (also second in the G1 Metropolitan Handicap) sired the champion 2-year-old filly Jaywalk, winner in four of her five starts at two in 2018, including the G1 Frizette Stakes and Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies.

In all, Cross Traffic had six stakes winners from his first crop, then three from his second. Back in April, the stallion logged his first stakes winner from the third crop when Here Mi Song won the G3 Commonwealth Stakes at Keeneland. As a 5-year-old.

There are no stakes winners yet from the stallion's fourth crop, and the much lesser representation of stakes winners is no coincidence. The third and fourth crops are the hardest for any stallion manager to fill with quality mares. A shocking proportion of breeders won't use an unproven stallion after his first season.

Period.

They move on to the next crop of retiring stallion prospects and choose one from that group. The reason that essentially no commercial breeder wants a stallion, especially in his third and fourth seasons at stud, is that no one wants to breed a yearling who will come to market once the verdict is in on a new stallion's success at the racetrack.

The bifurcation of the demand for stallions is “first crop or proven,” and it is unforgiving. This situation is self-made by breeders and stallion managers and is the result of practices that have been the norm with popular stallions for nigh on 30 years now: essentially bottomless books for the most popular stallions and an overemphasis on “stallion power.” The result is a flash verdict on stallions when their first foals and yearlings come to auction, resulting in further, mostly negative, pressure on using them in their later seasons.

With the immense crops now produced by stallions, sometimes more than 100 yearlings come through auctions for the whole world to inspect and appraise. Then they go racing with a fleet of prospects, and the verdict comes swiftly and without appeal. It is mostly “no” because the great majority of stallion prospects do not go on to be important stallions.

That's the situation for all entering stallions. That's what Cross Traffic encountered, and to his credit, he became the leading freshman sire of 2018 and is the only son of Unbridled's Song to lead a national sire list.

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When mares came to be booked for 2019, few sires were as popular as Cross Traffic, and his stud fee rose precipitously. Although his second crop did well, there was no second champion. But the foals resulting from those better mares of 2019, resulting in the stallion's crop of 2020, are leaving no doubt that Cross Traffic is a good stallion.

The sire's second G1 winner came in April at Keeneland when Defining Purpose won the Ashland Stakes. The bay filly was then unplaced in the Kentucky Oaks after an eventful trip but returned on July 8 to win the G3 Indiana Oaks by a length and a quarter from Black-Eyed Susan Stakes winner Taxed (Collected).

On the same day, Maple Leaf Mel won the G3 Victory Ride Stakes at Belmont Park, and they are two of four stakes winners to date from Cross Traffic's 2020 crop. All four are fillies, and that may or may not have a bearing on the stallion's capacity to sire a high-quality racer.

One thing is certainly important. Quality in the dam is important. Three of Cross Traffic's 3-year-old stakes winners are out of black-type mares, and the fourth is out of a winner. Here Mi Song is out of a stakes winner, too.

What of Jaywalk? Her dam, the Orientate mare Lady Pewitt, was unplaced in a single start. Even so, Lady Pewitt brought plenty of the right stuff to the mating. She is the dam of two stakes winners, and “other” stakes winner Danzatrice (Dunkirk), is the dam of Tapit Trice, winner of the G1 Blue Grass Stakes and third in the 2023 Belmont Stakes.

Quality in the dam. There's nothing like it.

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