Week in Review: Belmont Stakes Shift To Saratoga Ignites Healthy Debate, But Racing World Won’t Tilt Off Its Axis

Last week's announcement that the 2024 GI Belmont S. will be migrating north to Saratoga Race Course for 2024 because of the $455-million extensive renovation of Belmont Park made official a move that the New York Racing Association (NYRA) has been openly discussing for months.

But since the press release from the New York governor's office came out during a slow time of the year for racing news, it rekindled speculation about the ramifications of tinkering with the historical significance of the third jewel of the Triple Crown.

The debate is healthy. It means fans care.

But the racing world isn't about to tilt off its axis because of changes that will probably end up making the best of an unavoidable, temporary transition.

Cutting back the 1 1/2 miles “Test of a Champion” distance of the Belmont S. to 1 1/4 miles generated the most outcry.

The feasibility of moving the four-day (Thursday-Sunday) Belmont S. festival upstate for one long weekend June 6-9 instead of just running it at Aqueduct Racetrack was a distant second in the discussion.

And although it was not specifically addressed in the official release, the expectation is that the Belmont Park construction will extend through 2025, meaning that the site and distance switch figures to be in play for at least the next two runnings of the Belmont S.

The purse of the race will also be getting a boost, from $1.5 million to $2 million.

The last time Belmont Park was closed for a major facelift, from 1963-1967, the Belmont S. got shifted to Aqueduct, which accommodated the 1 1/2 miles distance without incident by starting the race on the far turn at the three-eighths pole.

Since both Saratoga and Aqueduct feature nine-furlong main-track ovals, that would be the start point for any 1 1/2 miles dirt race at either venue (without resorting to an alternate finish line).

It would be an awkward (but not impossible) configuration to attempt, so NYRA has opted for the two-furlong cutback.

To some racing enthusiasts, that's absolute heresy that will sully the Triple Crown with asterisks if a horse manages to sweep the series at the truncated Belmont S. distance.

Others are simply shrugging their shoulders and accepting the short-term trim as a historical aberration, noting that over the past century and a half, there have been a number of tweaks to the distances, order, time spacing, and venues of all the Triple Crown races.

With that in mind, maybe the best outcomes to root for in 2024-25 are close, competitive editions of the Belmont S. with no one horse sweeping the series.

One longer-term concern about the distance switch is that horse owners and trainers might end up liking the 10-furlong Belmont S. so much that they'll push for the change to become permanent under the argument that it better suits modern-day Thoroughbreds who are bred for speed rather than stamina.

If the 1 1/4-mile runnings of the race end up luring large fields, this theory could have some legs.

But it would be difficult to imagine NYRA officials wanting to unveil the brand-new Belmont Park in 2026 by starting its showcase race in another awkward spot, this time on the first turn. That's where the few main-track races carded at 10 furlongs must begin over Belmont's 1 1/2-mile circumference.

As to the wisdom of choosing Saratoga over Aqueduct, the question comes down to location, location, location.

And context.

Yes, the logistics of running the Belmont S. at Aqueduct would be far easier than moving the meet (and a small army of backstretch workers and track employees) upstate for just four days. Remember, after the Belmont-at-Saratoga mini-meet, racing is to return downstate to Aqueduct for another month before then coming back to the Spa July 11 for the traditional 40-day summer season.

You could maybe make a minor case for wanting to give utilitarian Aqueduct a fitting send-off salute by allowing it to host a Triple Crown race for two years before the property likely gets sold and repurposed (all of NYRA's downstate racing and training is envisioned to get consolidated at Belmont Park after the construction project is complete). If it worked in the 1960s, why not the 2020s?

Recall that at the time of the last Belmont Park rehab 60 years ago, Aqueduct had just undergone its own three-year renovation (completed in 1959) and was being hailed as “the world's most modern and luxurious horse plant,” as per the Associated Press.

And in 1963, Saratoga was still a relatively sleepy hamlet that hosted seasonal racing for only a few weeks each summer. So moving the Belmont S. there would have been considered an unlikely (even absurd) proposition the last time this type of venue switch had to be considered.

Now fast-forward six decades: Aqueduct has long since been retrofitted from a primary racing plant to a full-blown racino with not enough seating or trackside amenities to accommodate the 50,000 attendance cap for the Belmont S.

And Saratoga? Its stature and infrastructure have both blossomed in the other direction, with numerous “premium seating” renovations added over the past few years to more readily accommodate the hospitality needs of a special event like a four-day weekend.

Saratoga has undergone numerous renovations and new builds | Sarah Andrew

Plus, simply from a cachet standpoint, the racing-centric, tourism-ready, boutique atmosphere in upstate Saratoga provides an exclamation point that workmanlike Aqueduct in Queens could never match.

Yet the move is not completely without drawbacks. There will be legitimate gripes about another major racing event being pushed farther out of the grasp of the everyday horseplayer who wants to see important stakes in person.

Remember how-for decades-racing used to promote itself as the only sport in America where admissions were kept at the same price point for blockbuster events as they were for regular, run-of-the-mill, weekday afternoons?

That marketing mantra slid of the grid many years ago. If you remember that type of sloganeering at all, you probably also recall how pay telephones were once strictly verboten at tracks (to keep race results out of the hands of bookies), or how the racing industry used to boast that it was the highest-attended spectator sport in the nation.

Mike MacAdam, writing for the Daily Gazette in upstate New York, pointed out in a Friday article how tickets for the Belmont-at-Saratoga meet, which are expected to go on sale in mid-February, will be largely limited to four-day packaged seating options, with early-access first dibs going to box-seat holders from both Belmont and Saratoga, plus Saratoga reserved season ticket holders and past Belmont S. package purchasers.

“So, for the most part, you won't be able to get single-day seating,” MacAdam wrote.

Noting that pricing and policies have yet to be announced publicly, MacAdam also speculated that Saratoga's fan-friendly carry-in cooler rule could change for the Belmont S. weekend.

“NYRA hasn't announced yet whether fans will be allowed to bring in their own food and beverages,” MacAdam wrote in the Daily Gazette. “It's worth noting that they don't allow outside alcohol on Belmont Day.”

Hotel rooms for the June 6-9 period are going, going, gone, according to news reports by several different upstate New York media outlets.

The Daily Gazette reported in a separate story by Shenandoah Briere last Wednesday that Saratoga hotel rooms at Embassy Suites that had been advertised at $285 to $335 a night prior to the governor's announcement about the Belmont S. quickly got bloated by supply and demand to up over $1,100 per night.

On Sunday, a TDN check of lodging availability at the higher-end Adelphi Hotel yielded Friday and Saturday rates listed for as high as $4,022 per night, with a three-night minimum stay in effect.

There is no word yet on how much a spot on someone's spare couch in one of the outlying towns in the Saratoga region might cost you, but we'll keep you posted over the long winter between now and the sure-to-be-unique, first-ever Belmont-at-Spa fest.

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Unbeaten Ascoli Piceno Lowers Stakes Record In Hanshin Juvenile Fillies

Third favorite Ascoli Piceno claimed the $1,071,000 Hanshin Juvenile Fillies (G1) Sunday at Hanshin Racecourse, marking her third win in as many career starts while lowering the stakes record to 1:32.6.

The winning time for the 1,600 meters (about one mile) on turf rated as good to firm was just just 0.3 seconds off the course record.

After breaking her maiden in her debut start at Tokyo in June, the Daiwa Major filly stepped up in class and immediately won her first graded stakes in the Niigata Nisai Stakes (G3) on Aug. 27, then struck at the elite level Sunday for owner Sunday Racing Co. Ltd. and trainer Yoichi Kuroiwa.

The race got underway with Chicago Sting sent to the front, followed by Nanao pressing the pace on her outside while Ascoli Piceno traveled two-wide and in midpack. Still behind a group of horses when entering the straight, Ascoli Piceno switched a path out for clear running and dueled with Corazon Beat down the middle of the stretch.

After finally pinning the pacesetter 100 meters out, Ascoli Piceno shook off the stubborn Corazon Beat and dug in strongly, holding off the late-charging Stellenbosch by a neck.

“The stable staff did a great job and she was in very good condition, so I had every confidence in her,” said winning rider Hiroshi Kitamura. “The filly broke better than in her previous start, was relaxed during the race, and responded well in the stretch. I was a bit worried for a second that we were going to get caught, but she gave her all, all the way to the line.”

Fifth pick Stellenbosch, ridden by Christophe Lemaire, was reserved around 10th right behind the eventual winner and although struggled for room in early stretch, launched the fastest late kick to catch Corazon Beat 100 meters out but was a neck short at the wire and finished second.

Second choice Corazon Beat settled in around sixth, circled wide into the lane and dueled with the winner but lacked the final kick and missed the runner-up seat while securing third another 1 1/4 lengths back.

Race favorite Safira ran on the outside and beside the eventual runner-up in the early stages and lost ground when shifted out wide on the last turn, but she closed strongly picking off her rivals to finish fourth, three lengths behind Corazon Beat in the field of 18.

Ascoli Piceno was bred by Northern Farm from the Danehill Dancer mare Ascolti.

Past winners of the Hanshin Juvenile Fillies include many successful Grade 1 champions, such as 2006 winner and 2008 and 2009 Horse of the Year Vodka; 2008 champion and 2010 Horse of the Year Buena Vista; and last year's victor Liberty Island, who subsequently became the seventh filly to sweep Japan's fillies' Triple Crown and went on to recently mark a respectable runner-up effort against Equinox in the Japan Cup (G1).

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Linda Rice Looks Forward with Hot Fudge, Returning Stakes Horses

Conditioner Linda Rice reports that Garland of Roses victress Hot Fudge (Liam's Map) has come out of her first stakes victory 'feeling great' after taking the listed eight days removed from visiting the winner's circle in an optional claimer. She is unbeaten since her return from a near six-month layoff, and her 2023 campaign has seen the filly take home five wins in seven starts.

“That filly, we've had a few strange things happen with her when she was young, and then she had such a nice winter. We elected to give her this summer off, because I just felt like she needed it,” Rice explained. “She came back really well and of course we wheeled her back on short rest, but once they're older and more mature, it can work out.”

Rice added the next likely target for the daughter of Liam's Map is the $150,000 Interborough S., a seven-panel sprint for fillies and mares, set to run Jan. 20.

Freshwater and Arrogance Back in the Barn

A pair of noteworthy names recently resurfaced on the work tab for the trainer including GSW Joey Freshwater (Jimmy Creed) and SW & MGSP Arctic Arrogance (Frosted). The former posted his first work since failing to hit the board in the Salvatore M DeBunda Sprint S. back in August. The GIII Bay Shore S. winner covered a half-mile over the Belmont training track in :50.40 this past Thursday.

“Joey had three months off and he looks good,” said Rice. “He's fresh. He should be ready sometime in January, not really any target yet. Maybe we'll start him in a 'two-other-than' allowance and go from there. Baby steps.”

A presence to reckon with in the spring on New York's Road to the Kentucky Derby, Arctic Arrogance has not been seen since his fourth-place effort in the GII Wood Memorial in April. He'd previously made a name for himself with three-straight runner-up efforts in the GII Remsen, the listed Jerome, and the GIII Withers S.

The grey returned to the tab Sunday with a half-mile breeze in :52.60, but Rice admits it's going to be a slow process to her him back to the races.

“The breeze was good. He's on the fat side and was always hard to get weight off of, so he's heavy right now. It will take us a little while. We've just got to get him going.”

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Fabre-Trained Junko Powers Last To First In Hong Kong Vase

By Tom Peacock

Andre Fabre's reputation as an international target trainer is unsurpassed and, nine years after his last victory at Sha Tin, the Longines Hong Kong Vase (G1) was the Frenchman's for a third time on Sunday.

A trailblazer at the Breeders' Cup, winner of virtually every European classic, and an eternal champion of his homeland, Fabre had flown slightly under the radar with his runner Junko in what had looked hot competition from around the world in the showdown going 2,400 meters (about 1 1/2 miles).

Fabre, though, insisted afterwards that he had felt confident that there was plenty to come from the strapping 4-year-old Intello gelding, and the positivity was shared by his rider, Maxime Guyon, who had also been in the saddle back in 2014 when the globetrotting Flintshire had struck for the same combination.

It was only a month ago that Junko had made his top-level breakthrough in the Grosser Preis von Bayern (G1) in very different conditions on soft ground against three rivals, but the runner produced by the famed breeding operation of Alain and Gerard Wertheimer eventually scored with similar conviction.

Settled at the rear of a modest pace set by La City Blanche, Guyon had conceded first run to Ryan Moore and Warm Heart as the gallop picked up turning for home.

Junko came wide of rivals on the bend and tore past Warm Heart and Japanese runner Zeffiro with 200 meters remaining. Guyon punched the air in celebration as he crossed the line, a length in hand over Zeffiro with Moore's mount fading to third in the eight-horse field, 2 1/4 lengths in arrears.

“I'm really happy because it's time to win this race (again). Nine years ago, it was Flintshire,” said Guyon.

“We didn't know before the race if he would like this ground or not, because normally he prefers the soft ground, but today in Hong Kong the ground was good. We had a good race, we had not a lot of runners so I'm not too far back and just after the last turn, he has a good turn of foot.

“He's very relaxed and of course the pace is not way fast, but the most important thing with the horse is if he's breathing really good and everything is OK. That's why I relaxed with him because he's very relaxed.”

Guyon quickly offered praise to the trainer who has given him so many fine moments.

“Everybody knows Andre Fabre. He's the best trainer,” he said.

“He has done a really good job with this horse because he has just won a second Group 1 with this horse — he's just won a Group 1 in Germany — and he comes to Hong Kong for a win and it's not easy to do that. I'm really happy for the team.

“It's a really important place; all the jockeys want to come to Hong Kong to finish the year and it's a really good weekend.”

Fabre himself had been on the end of three seconds in the Vase since 2014, with Flintshire again a year later, Talismanic in 2017, and Botanik 12 months ago. His first had been with Borgia (1999), who was another of the sort of accomplished frequent flyers that he feels Junko could become.

“I'm really delighted,” Fabre said. “It was expected because he's improving race after race. He's not had a lot of races, he's only four. He had a setback in Deauville so he couldn't run in the Grand Prix and he had the race in Germany. He didn't run that much. He will be back in Dubai; we kept him for that and for the international races.”

Bred in Great Britain, Junko was produced by the Dynaformer mare Lady Zuzu.

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