Franco Leads Aqueduct Meet, Year-End NYRA Jockey Standings; Rice Closes Career-Best Year On Top

Manny Franco paced all riders at the Aqueduct fall meet to not only claim the riding title at the 31-day meeting with 37 wins, but also cement his place atop the yearly jockey standings at the New York Racing Association Inc. for the third time with 238 wins across the circuit's six race meets.

Franco, 29, celebrated five stakes scores at the Big A fall meet in the Grade 3 Pebbles [Implicated], the Grade 3 Comely [Raging Sea], the Tepin [Memorialize], the NYSSS Great White Way [Antonio of Venice] and the Alex M. Robb [Dr Ardito]. In all, Franco, who is represented by agent John Panagot, posted a 198-37-32-31 record with $2,699,549 in earnings at the fall meet, good for an 18.69 win percentage and in-the-money rate of 50.51 percent.

Franco expressed his gratitude for trainer Chad Brown, who trains three of Franco's five stakes winners at the meet.

“He's been a great help for me all year,” Franco said. “For the past five or six years, he's helped me a lot. I want to say thanks to him and to his owners for giving me the opportunity to ride those kinds of horses.”

Among Franco's favorite wins at the meet was the Alex M. Robb aboard the Brown-trained Dr Ardito, whom he has ridden in all but one of his 14 starts.

“He means a lot. He's always going to be in my heart and I ride him in almost all his races,” Franco said. “He's part of my career and I'm happy to be on him.”

Jose Lezcano finished second with 24 wins at the meet while Kendrick Carmouche took third with 23 wins.

Franco's Big A fall meet victory adds to a stellar season for the native of Carolina, Puerto Rico, who completed his year with a NYRA record of 1,219-238-196-180 and earnings of $17,329,576. Franco, who was also NYRA's year-end leading rider in 2018-19, was the leading rider at three other NYRA meetings this year, claiming the Aqueduct winter [63], Aqueduct spring [37] and Belmont at the Big A fall [34].

Among Franco's 28 NYRA stakes wins were Grade 2 scores in the Sheepshead Bay [Higher Truth], Bowling Green [Channel Maker], and Mohegan Sun Ballston Spa [Evvie Jets]; and Grade 3 triumphs in the Withers [Hit Show], Bold Ruler [Durante] and the aforementioned Pebbles and Comely.

Franco also demonstrated his commitment to his mounts when notching multiple stakes victories on the year with horses like Dr Ardito [Haynesfield, Evan Shipman Handicap, Alex M. Robb], Law Professor [Queens County, Excelsior] and Spirit of St Louis [Ashley T. Cole, Mohawk].

“I feel great and I feel blessed,” said Franco. “It's not easy to do this in this kind of colony of great riders, and I'm just thankful for all the support of the trainers and owners, my agent. And, I'm proud of myself.”

Franco added his successes are thanks in great part to Panagot.

“We'll just keep with the same mind in the new year and work hard with my agent,” said Franco. “I think that's key – to have a lot of communication. I think that helps it a lot, and to be here day in and day out.”

Irad Ortiz Jr. claimed second in the year-end standings with 168 wins while Jose Ortiz finished third with 154 wins.

Linda Rice won Sunday's second race with George's Vice to earn a record 165th training win on the NYRA circuit for 2023. She captured her first year-end title with a record of 705-165-122-107, adding to a banner year that saw her finish as leading trainer at 5-of-6 NYRA meetings, including Aqueduct winter [37], spring [17] and fall [20 wins]; Belmont spring/summer [34], and Saratoga, where she closed a five-win deficit on the final two days to tie Chad Brown for top honors with 35 wins each. She completed the year with $10,375,322 in earnings at NYRA.

“I was really excited about winning the Belmont meet this year. I tied Todd [Pletcher] for the Belmont meet in 2011, but to win it outright was really special, because that's the very marquee meet,” said Rice. “And then to come back and tie at Saratoga, that was probably the most exciting meet of my career. To be five down and pull it off and get the tie, that was amazing. What are we going to do for fun next?”

Rice, 59, sent out 11 horses to stakes scores on the NYRA circuit this season, including graded wins with Joey Freshwater [G3 Bay Shore] and Mommasgottarun [G3 Distaff Handicap] along with stakes winners Amanda's Folly [Ticonderoga], Betsy Blue [Interborough], Downtown Mischief [Bouwerie, Cicada], El Grande O [Bertram F. Bongard, Sleepy Hollow], Hot Fudge [Garland of Roses], Ichiban [Fleet Indian], Les Bon Temps [NYSSS Park Avenue], Pioneering Spirit [Bernard Baruch, Knickerbocker], and Runaway Rumour [John F. Hettinger].

“I run a lot of horses in allowance races, claiming races, maiden races, some stakes – we're always hoping to cut off the bottom end and improve the top end, and I think over the course of the last maybe eight years, we've done that,” Rice said.

Chad Brown [132] and Todd Pletcher [82] finished second and third, respectively, in the NYRA year-end trainer standings.

Rice closed out her career-best year with one more training title at NYRA, posting 20 wins to finish on top at the Big A fall meet over Chad Brown [17 wins] and Rudy Rodriguez [16 wins]. Highlights of the meet for Rice included a stakes victory with Hot Fudge in the $120,000 Garland of Roses, as well as a pair of allowance-level wins with the in-form Ain't Broke. She completed the meeting with a record of 112-20-18-14 and earnings of $1,157,905, good for a win rate of 17.86 percent and in-the-money rate of 46.43 percent.

As an owner, Rice tied with Klaravich Stables for leading owner at the fall meet with seven wins each. Rice's victories include a pair of scores with Kunshan Bridge in a December 1 starter allowance and a December 29 claiming tilt. Rice posted a record of 23-7-3-4 with $236,026 in earnings.

Sanford Goldfarb finished third in the fall meet owners' standings with six wins.

Seth Klarman's Klaravich Stables finished the year as NYRA's leading owner for a fifth consecutive time, completing the season with a record of 235-62-39-33 and total purse earnings of $6,408,466. Their tremendous season included 15 stakes wins at NYRA, led by Grade 1 triumphs at Belmont Park with Marketsegmentation in the New York and at Saratoga with Program Trading in the Saratoga Derby Invitational and Randomized in the Alabama presented by Keeneland Sales.

Klaravich Stables' additional stakes victories came in the Grade 2 Glens Falls [McKulick], Grade 2 Beldame [Randomized], Grade 3 Beaugay [Marketsegmentation], Grade 3 Lake George [Surge Capacity], and Grade 3 Waya [McKulick]; as well as the Ruthless [Interpolate], Gander [Neural Network], Wilton [Randomized], De La Rose [Technical Analysis], Noble Damsel [Gerrymander], Athenia [Technical Analysis] and Awad [Move to Gold].

Michael Dubb landed second in the year-end standings with 33 wins while Rice finished third with 31 wins.

At the Big A fall meet, Klaravich Stables' tie with Rice gave them their 25th owners' title at a NYRA meeting and fifth this year when posting seven wins [31-7-2-2] with $427,273 in earnings. Their wins included a strong allowance triumph with the Brown-trained and Franco-piloted Aggregation in November, and maiden scores with promising juvenile fillies Dynamic Pricing and Regulatory Risk.

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‘He’s Always Had The Fight In Him’: Crupi Prevails In Queens County Thriller

St. Elias Stable and Repole Stable's Crupi outfinished a trio of rivals in a thrilling blanket finish to take the final New York stakes of 2023 in Sunday's $150,000 Queens County, a listed 1 1/8-mile test for 3-year-olds and up at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Todd Pletcher, Crupi notched back-to-back stakes scores after a 1 1/4-length victory last out in the Discovery going the same distance under returning rider Kendrick Carmouche. The talented sophomore son of Curlin has now won four of his last five outings, including an eighth-out graduation in July at Monmouth Park and an allowance score against elders in August at Saratoga Race Course.

Away a step slow from post 4, Crupi settled near the rear of the eight-horse field after checking behind the Manny Franco-piloted Quality Chic and King Kumbalay in a scramble for early position. Crupi's ambitious stablemate Lost Ark was sent strongly by Trevor McCarthy along the inside to take charge from a pressing Kinetic Sky through the first turn and mark an opening quarter-mile in :24.15 over the fast main track.

“We got in a little jam [in the first turn] because I was wanting to be forward and Manny was making it tight on everybody,” Carmouche said. “I just had to squeeze back and let everything develop again. After that, he got back underneath me and I was in the perfect spot the whole race.”

Kinetic Sky made a swift move and challenged for the lead down the backstretch, but a determined Lost Ark would not relinquish his advantage and held steady at the front as a three-wide Quality Chic vied for third position with the rail-skimming Constitutionlawyer. Crupi patiently awaited his cue while racing in sixth approaching the turn and was asked for his best with a sweeping four-wide bid after a half-mile in :48.59.

Post-time favorite Signator, who was away slowly from post 5, followed the run of Crupi midway through the turn and ranged up widest of all for his bid towards a resolute Kinetic Sky, who overtook the lead from a retreating Lost Ark at the top of the stretch while under pressure from Quality Chic through three-quarters in 1:13.04.

Kinetic Sky, who was racing on just three days' rest after winning a local allowance on Thursday, dug in at the sixteenth pole in tandem with Kinetic Sky as Signator and Crupi ranged up on the outside to make it four horses across the track. It appeared to be anyone's race in the final strides with each horse giving their all, but Crupi had the superior momentum to reach the wire first by a neck over Quality Chic and complete the course in 1:50.13.

Quality Chic put his nose in front of Kinetic Sky for place honors while Signator finished another neck back in fourth. King Kumbalay, Constitutionlawyer, Lost Ark, and Forewarned, who trailed throughout, completed the order of finish.

Carmouche, who rode Crupi in the last-out Discovery, expressed his delight in seeing the chestnut colt show maturity.

“The last eighth of a mile, he's the one who won the race. Crupi won the race the last eighth of a mile,” said Carmouche. “He just took the bit out of my hand and accelerated the last sixteenth. I'm so glad this horse is improving with age. I look forward to see where we go from here.”

Amelia Green, Pletcher's Belmont Park-based assistant, shared a similar sentiment about Crupi's progression.

“He's really matured, mentally. Even as a 2-year-old, he was so immature and as a 3-year-old still,” said Green. “Now, finally, he's maturing turning four. I feel he's always had the fight in him, he was just so immature in the mind and the gate was his problem – he broke pretty good today, minus the first turn with all that drama. I think he's starting to figure it out and learn he likes to run and enjoy it.”

Bred in Kentucky by Claiborne Farm, Crupi was produced by the Malibu Moon mare Don'tforgetaboutme. Offered by his breeder at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, Crupi sold for $275,000. With Sunday's win, he brought his record to 12-4-2-3 and banked $82,500 in victory, boosting his total purse earnings to $372,750.

Crupi returned $14.80 on a $2 win ticket.

Javier Castellano said the Shug McGaughey-trained Signator, who had scratched from Saturday's Grade 3 Harlan's Holiday at Gulfstream Park in favor of this spot, would have benefitted from swifter fractions.

“For those type of horse, they went :24 and change and :48 and [1:13] I'm very satisfied with the horse — he finished,” said Castellano. “When I stepped him outside, he finished. But those horses, they didn't come back to me. They all carried their speed all the way to the wire. I don't have nothing to complain about the horse – he ran a huge race and made a great effort, and I'm very satisfied the way he did it today.”

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Inveigled To Step On Road To Florida Derby In Gulfstream’s Mucho Macho Man

The manner in which Mark Grier's Inveigled dominated an optional claiming allowance for 2-year-olds at Gulfstream Park Dec. 9, trainer Jane Cibelli had reason to dream big for the gelded son of Enticed.

Inveigled is scheduled to embark on the road to the $1-million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) in Monday's $150,000 Mucho Macho Man Monday's New Year's Day program at Gulfstream Park.

“I don't particularly like coming back in three weeks, but I also don't want to go right into graded company,” said Cibelli about opting a somewhat conservative route with Inveigled. “So, I thought this was a good start. If he runs well or wins, we could look at graded races.”

The Mucho Macho Man, a mile stakes for newly turned 3-year-olds that will co-headline Monday's program with the $150,000 Cash Run for 3-year-old fillies, will be followed on the road to the March 30 Florida Derby, by the $250,000 Holy Bull (G3) Feb. 3, and the $400,000 Fountain of Youth (G2) March 2.

“We'll take one race at a time. I just didn't want to throw him into graded company right off the bat. I would like a bit more time, but I felt like in the last race, he did it so easily,” Cibelli said. “There's no reason not to run. We pulled his blood, and his blood is as good as blood gets. We scoped him. I've given him every reason to not run, but he's been just great.”

Inveigled has been installed as the 9-5 morning-line favorite in a field of eight 2-year-olds following his eye-catching score at a mile three weeks ago. The Indiana-bred gelding stalked the early pace before making a three-wide move to the lead and drawing clear to win going away by 4¾ lengths under Irad Ortiz Jr.

“The way Irad rode him last time, it was faultless,” Cibelli said. “I had a feeling he might go to the lead, going short to long, because he showed speed going short. Irad is just brilliant. He drops his hands, drops them off the pace. He's just a fantastic rider.”

Inveigled debuted with a troubled third in his Sept. 15 debut at Pimlico before graduating by eight lengths in a 5 ½-furlong maiden special weight race at Laurel Park while equipped with blinkers for the first time.

“This first time he ran, I was a little disappointed, but the blinkers really made a difference,” said Cibelli, who has awarded the return mount Ortiz, the defending Championship Meet titlist.

In his race prior to his Gulfstream score, Inveigled was involved in a protracted duel while racing on the inside in six-furlong James F. Lewis III Stakes at Laurel, holding on gamely to finish second by a neck.

WinStar Farm LLC and Siena Farm LLC's Otello is rated second on the morning line at 3-1 on the basis of a promising debut score at Aqueduct Nov. 4. The Christophe Clement-trained son of Curlin rallied from fifth to get up by a neck while going a one-turn mile.

Luis Saez is scheduled to ride Otello for the first time Monday.

Qatar Racing LLC and Hunter Valley Farm's First World War will make his stakes debut on dirt, following a strong runner-up finish in an optional claiming allowance over Churchill Downs main track Nov. 9. The Brendan Walsh-trained colt had run twice previously on turf, winning his debut at Kentucky Downs Sept. 13 and finishing a close-up fourth in the Bourbon (G2) at Keeneland.

Tyler Gaffalione has the return call on the son of War Front, who is rated third at 7-2 on the morning line.

AMO Racing USA's Boy Magic, undefeated in two starts, is slated to make his stakes debut in the Mucho Macho Man. The son of Good Magic won at first asking by 4 ¼ lengths in a six-furlong maiden special weight race at Delaware Park Aug. 24 before coming back a month later at Pimlico to win an optional claiming allowance over Catahoula Moon, who won the Maryland Million Nursery in his next start.

Paco Lopez, who was aboard for the first two starts, has the return mount on the Jorge Delgado-trained Kentucky-bred colt.

Morplay Racing's No More Time enters the Mucho Macho Man off an impressive debut victory at the one-turn distance at Gulfstream Oct. 23. The Jose D'Angelo-trained son of Not This Time, who finished second in his debut, attended the pace on the backstretch before pulling away to a 6 ¾-length victory.

Jose Ortiz is scheduled to ride No More Time for the first time Monday.

Holly Crest Farm's Sea Streak, who was a beaten-favorite second behind Inveigled Dec. 9, returns in the Mucho Macho Man. Prior to his Gulfstream debut, the Eddie Owens Jr.-trained son of Sea Wizard scored a 4 ¾-length maiden special weight victory at Aqueduct.

Luca Panici has the call on the New Jersey-bred colt.

Anne-33 LLC's Orb Alpha and Donald Ming's Everdoit round out the field.

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