OTBO Stallion Season Auction Set for Dec. 14-15

The annual Select Stallion Season Auction hosted by the Ohio Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners (OTBO) will be held Thursday, Dec. 14 and Friday, Dec. 15 with previews Dec. 12 and 13. The OTBO has selected a group of stallions from around the country, including major farms in Kentucky and New York, for the auction. A preliminary list of offerings is available at otbo.com with more information and a catalogue to be forthcoming Dec. 12 at 1 a.m. EST at equiring.com/sale/291/OTBO2024. The OTBO also has access to additional seasons for sale.

For more information, please contact the OTBO at (330) 356-8350 or visit otbo.com.

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NYRA Circuit Veteran, Near-Millionaire Warhorse Eye Luv Lulu Preparing For New Career

The tenacious gelding Eye Luv Lulu, a regular on the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) circuit from 2013-20, is readying for the next chapter of his career at Second Chance Thoroughbreds in Spencer, N.Y. thanks to his breeder Donald Newman's son, Richard Newman, and the hard work of the non-profit retraining facility.

Eye Luv Lulu's retirement came after a 61-start career that saw him win 11 races and $931,174 in total purse earnings. The now 12-year-old son of Pollard's Vision scored in the 2018 Affirmed Success at Belmont Park, and followed with a game third-place finish in the Grade 2 Belmont Sprint Championship.

After racing in allowance and stakes races for most of his career, Eye Luv Lulu ran in claiming races for his last three starts, and was haltered by Newman for $12,500 out of a close third-place finish in his last race in December 2020 for the sole purpose of retiring the veteran competitor just shy of him turning 10.

Once retired, Eye Luv Lulu laid up at Newman's farm until it was decided a new job would suit him and he was sent to Second Chance Thoroughbreds, a 10-acre 501(c)3 non-profit farm accredited by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA).

“The Newmans kept him for three years after he retired and had him turned out. The barn he was boarded at went up for sale, so they donated him here to start a second career,” said Collette Duddy, Director of Second Chance Thoroughbreds. “Since he's been here, he's been ridden a few times and he acts like he just came off the track. He's out with a 29-year-old mare, so he's learning herd hierarchy. He's sound and has a great personality. He'll find a home, but he needs an experienced rider.”

Eye Luv Lulu, who has been nicknamed “Charm,” is one of dozens of Thoroughbreds who have gone through Second Chance Thoroughbreds' program since being founded in 2012. While many of their retirees come directly off the track at Finger Lakes Racetrack in Farmington, New York, the organization accepts Thoroughbreds of all backgrounds and ages.

Duddy said she was inspired to fill a need in her community when she saw that horses were searching for second homes and careers at the Central New York oval.

“This is our 11th year and it started after I went to Finger Lakes Racetrack,” said Duddy, who added more than 15 horses have been adopted by Second Chance Thoroughbreds this year. “There were horses coming off the track that needed help, so it made me turn over from a lesson barn to a non-profit. We do groundwork with them and we get riders on them to tell you what they can do and what level of rider should adopt them.”

Duddy cited competitions like the Retired Racehorse Project as great examples to potential adopters of what off-track Thoroughbreds can do.

“The Retired Racehorse Project has changed things and there's a demand for Thoroughbreds off the track,” said Duddy. “They're so easily adaptable to any discipline, whether it's jumping, foxhunting, western, freestyle – they're incredible athletes and so easily trainable. It's kind of a fallacy that they're crazy and only want to run. They're well-trained to begin with, and we just further their training when they come off the track.”

With several possibilities for a second career, Eye Luv Lulu is one retiree that needs some time to sort out exactly what will be best for him going forward. Duddy praised the gelding's spirit and heart, and said he is ready to make someone a best friend and companion.

“He's not a hunter type, but he's more of a jumper or dressage type. He needs work just standing at the mounting block, and that's what we're working on now,” Duddy said, with a laugh. “He's level-headed and forward, but he's very smart and he learns. He'd like to have one person working and bonding with him.”

Duddy said it is thanks to organizations like the TAA and the New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc. that organizations like hers can make a difference for Thoroughbreds.

“There has been a lot more awareness for retirement over the past 10 years and the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance gives great support, along with Thoroughbred Charities of America and the New York Thoroughbred Breeders,” said Duddy. “We wouldn't be here without them.”

Collectively, NYRA, the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association and New York's horsemen contribute more than $1 million annually to various aftercare programs and initiatives.

Through the efforts of accredited organizations like Second Chance Thoroughbreds, Eye Luv Lulu is one of many Thoroughbreds who have a bright future to look forward to beyond the racetrack.

“He loves to be tacked up and to be brushed. He loves human attention as much as equine attention,” said Duddy. “He was a successful racehorse and retired in time, and he certainly has 15 or 20 more years in him and is full of life.”

Second Chance Thoroughbreds provides off-track Thoroughbreds and pensioned broodmares a soft landing and rehab and retraining towards a second career while educating the public on the abilities of Thoroughbreds. For more information about adopting Eye Luv Lulu or any other horses in their program, visit secondchancethoroughbreds.org.

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‘His Next Win, He Goes By Me’: Keith Asmussen Chasing Hall Of Fame Father’s Riding Milestone

Hall of Fame trainer and North American all-time wins leader Steve Asmussen will be chasing more milestones during the 2023-2024 Oaklawn meeting that opens Friday.

Asmussen is also being chased by his son.

Jockey Keith Asmussen has 63 career victories, matching his father's career riding total in 1982-1984, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

The passing of the whip could come quickly since Keith Asmussen is named on 13 horses Friday and Saturday at Oaklawn, including 10, fittingly, trained by his father.

“That's funny as hell,” Steve Asmussen said. “We're tied. His next win, he goes by me.”

Steve Asmussen turned to training after he became too heavy to ride. Keith Asmussen, 25, launched his full-time riding career in late 2022 after earning a master's degree in professional accounting earlier in the year from the University of Texas' McCombs School of Business.

Keith Asmussen has 56 victories this year. He rode six winners in 2020 and one in 2022 before his breakout performance last season at Oaklawn. Asmussen rode 25 winners to finish ninth in the standings and now looks to one up the man who has strongly supported his riding career.

“I'll pass him,” Keith Asmussen said with a laugh.

Keith Asmussen's post-Oaklawn highlights included a November to remember. He rode Private Creed for the first time and guided the millionaire turf standout to a Nov. 9 allowance victory at Churchill Downs and recorded his biggest career victory aboard Ryvit in the $300,000 Steel Valley Sprint Stakes Nov. 20 at Mahoning Valley. Both horses are trained by Steve Asmussen.

“(Private Creed) is by far the best horse I've ever been on and I had been around the horse since he was a 2-year-old, when I was still galloping, before I was even riding,” Keith Asmussen said.

Keith Asmussen won three races last season at Oaklawn aboard Ryvit, including the $150,000 Bachelor Stakes, and is scheduled to ride him in Saturday's $150,000 Ring the Bell Stakes.

“Obviously, very excited,” Keith Asmussen said. “I think the horse is doing very well. Looking forward to the opportunity.”

The Bachelor was Keith Asmussen's first career Oaklawn stakes victory.

During the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting, Steve Asmussen became the first trainer to reach 10,000 career North American victories and surpassed the late Bob Holthus to become Oaklawn's all-time winningest trainer. Steve Asmussen (995) is now poised to reach 1,000 career victories as a trainer and owner at Oaklawn. He has 876 victories as a trainer and 119 as an owner.

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Steve Asmussen-Trained Otto The Conqueror Favored Over Eight Rivals For Springboard Mile

The $300,000 Springboard Mile, Remington Park's top stakes event for 2-year-olds, drew a field of nine. A trio of runners are barely separated for morning-line favoritism in the headliner on Friday, Dec. 15.

The Springboard Mile is a qualifying points race for the 2024 Kentucky Derby and headlines a 10-race program with five other stakes races. The Dec. 15 card will start at 5pm-Central.

Otto The Conqueror is the slight morning-line favorite at 5-2 odds from the barn of horse racing's all-time leading trainer, Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen. The 2-year-old colt by Street Sense from the Shackleford mare Dream It Is has won two consecutive races at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Both wins came at seven furlongs with the last over a sloppy surface on Oct. 29. In that allowance event, Otto The Conqueror defeated Honor Marie by four lengths. Honor Marie went on to win the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill on Nov. 25.

Owned by Three Chimneys Farm of Midway, Ky., Otto The Conqueror will be ridden by Tyler Gaffalione who was up in the Oct. 29 allowance triumph.

Raging Torrent will ship to Remington Park from Southern California and is expected to arrive on Monday, Dec. 11. Trainer Doug O'Neill has already won the Kentucky Derby twice – with Nyquist in 2016 and with I'll Have Another in 2012. Raging Torrent is the second-choice in the morning-line odds at 3-1 and has been entered to go with a blinkers off equipment change.

Owned by Great Friends Stables and Mark Davis, Raging Torrent broke his maiden at first asking in July at Del Mar near San Diego. O'Neill immediately entered him in his first graded stakes race, the Grade 3, $200,000 Best Pal Stakes, in which he finished third, beaten 8-3/4 lengths. That didn't deter O'Neill's and his owners' confidence in the colt. Raging Torrent came back to race in two Grade 1s – the $300,000 Del Mar Futurity and the American Pharoah. He finished fourth in both of those, adding blinkers in the latter race. Jockey Antonio Fresu is the only rider to handle Raging Torrent to this point and will come in to ride him in the Springboard as well.

Glengarry will travel to Oklahoma City from Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark. to make his Springboard attempt. He is the third-choice in the morning-line at 7-2 odds. Undefeated through three starts, Glengarry is owned by Iowa residents Aaron Kennedy and Toby Joseph and trainer Doug Anderson. He broke his maiden by 5-3/4 lengths at first asking on Aug. 28 at Prairie Meadows in Altoona, Iowa. Glengarry followed up the first race with an even more impressive victory by 12-3/4 lengths on Sept. 30 in the $100,000 Iowa Cradle Stakes.

Jockey Ken Tohill was in the saddle for the first two wins. His third trip to the winner's circle was only by a half-length but may have been his most impressive thus far. It came at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky., against open company in the $200,000 Bowman Mill Stakes with jockey Luis Saez taking over for Tohill. In three starts, Glengarry has earned $177,501 from his three wins, both tops in the Springboard field. Saez will keep the mount on Glengarry.

Magic Grant is the top local stakes winner in the Springboard by virtue of his score in the $75,000 Clever Trevor Stakes at Remington Park on Oct. 27. Trained by Eddie Milligan, Jr., the colt broke his maiden in winning the Clever Trevor. Richard Eramia keeps the mount on Magic Grant who is 8-1 in the morning-line.

The Springboard Mile field, by post position and program order, with trainer, jockey and morning-line odds:

  1. Fidget: Brad Cox, Marcelino Pedroza, Jr., 8-1
  2. My Buddy Mel: Danny Pish, Jermaine Bridgmohan, 20-1
  3. Gettysburg Address: Brad Cox, Flavien Prat, 6-1
  4. Magic Grant: Eddie Milligan, Jr., Richard Eramia, 8-1
  5. Glengarry: Doug Anderson, Luis Saez, 7-2
  6. Raging Torrent: Doug O'Neill, Antonio Fresu, 3-1
  7. Rhino Runner: Sean Williams, Stewart Elliott, 20-1
  8. Otto The Conqueror: Steve Asmussen, Tyler Gaffalione, 5-2
  9. Third Street: Shawn Davis, Jose Alvarez, 20-1

The Springboard Mile is the 10th and final race on the Dec. 15 card that has stakes races for the final six events. Stakes action prior to the Springboard Mile includes:

Race 5 – $50,000 Useeit Stakes, 3-year-old fillies, 1 mile, OK-breds.

Race 6 – $50,000 Jim Thorpe Stakes, 3-year-olds, 1 mile, OK-breds.

Race 7 – $75,000 Trapeze Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 1 mile.

Race 8 – $75,000 She's All In Stakes, fillies and mare, 3 and older, 1 mile-70 yards

Race 9 – 475,000 Jeffrey Hawk Memorial, 3 and older, 1 mile-70 yards.

Remington Park racing continues this week, Thursday through Saturday, Dec. 7-9, with the first race at 7:07pm-Central.

Remington Park has provided more than $340 Million to the State of Oklahoma general education fund since the opening of the casino in 2005. Located at the junction of Interstates 35 & 44, in the heart of the Oklahoma City Adventure District, Remington Park is home to the Springboard Mile, a Kentucky Derby points-qualifying race, on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023. Remington Park presents simulcast racing daily and non-stop casino gaming. Parking and admission are always free. Must be 18 or older to wager on horse racing or enter the casino gaming floor. Visit remingtonpark.com for more information.

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