Arcangelo Trainer Jena Antonucci’s Memorable Year

Edited Press Release

Trainer Jena Antonucci sat down with the NYRA Press Office to discuss her accomplishments, MGISW Arcangelo (Arrogate) and the memorable moments that happened to her this year.

NYRA: What did it mean to you personally to win the GI Belmont S. and GI Travers S.?
Antonucci: “It opened the window for people to see what we've been doing. I've chuckled a little bit at the people who say, 'Oh, she's only ever had one horse.' No, we've actually had a lot, and have won stakes beforehand. Yes, these are our first Grade 1s, but our goal is to continue doing us. If it has afforded us to have a better quality of horses, then we will just continue to do all of that the best possible way we can. We'll just continue to be true to who we are.

“It's honestly most gratifying watching the team. When you take those little moments during an event and look at a team member's face and see how proud they are–to watch that and to see the people accomplish career and lifetime goals and dreams, it's literally the most gratifying part.

“I will forever be grateful for the horse and what he gave us, and him believing in us, but to watch your team check boxes in a way that maybe they never thought would happen and to potentially make that happen for them is by far and above the most rewarding and gratifying.”

NYRA: You've said before that you would need some time to think about exactly what this means for women in this sport. How have your thoughts come together with time?
Antonucci: “I think it's resonated more hearing it from other people and what it means to them. Hearing how it made women who have watched the journey feel and to make people excited about our sport and what we have accomplished is such a gift.

“Recently, I was able to speak to an all-girls school from fifth graders to seniors, and did a talk with the group of almost 700 young ladies. To see where their questions fell and what they got excited about, and to be able to speak about what we've accomplished in our sport, it definitely resonates. To be able to look at young girls and say, 'This hadn't happened in 155 years,' and to see how they receive that is special.

“You watch other women accomplish things in other sports and careers, but to watch it from the front row is very interesting and a gift that I will absolutely carry with much regard for a very long time to make sure it is meaningful and we can push the ball forward to encourage a young girl to rock on and to do her.”

NYRA: One of your most repeated and applauded comments about your accomplishments was your metaphor of making your own seat at the table. What does it mean to you that it resonated so well with so many?
Antonucci: “There was a space that was missing something, and that filled that space for people. I like to be behind the scenes making things happen, and we have created what we did because of what we've built. Being able to organize that into something that was short and concise for people is flattering. I hope it helps anybody, any gender or any age, fulfill something and understand that sometimes you've got to do it a different way.”

NYRA: Patience and working on the horse's schedule were always central to your plans with Arcangelo and each of your trainees. How does your training program revolve around that model?
Antonucci: “Fiona [Goodwin, assistant] and I talk non-stop about every single horse. It's just making sure we are doing our best to tend to each individual horse specifically. If it's a colt or filly that needs a little more time, or something that we need to be a little tighter on and they need to be on a more stringent schedule–we just really try to give the breathing room to each horse.

“I greatly understand owners get a little impatient, so I just try to be respectful and mindful of, 'Yes, we need to be running, but here are these things and here is why.' Allowing the owner to be part of the process instead of just, 'No, we're not ready.' I've found over my career that trying to explain it to them and allowing them to be part of the 'whys' is important.”

NYRA: After winning two of racing's most prestigious events, what are some other goals you hope to achieve?
Antonucci: “We're just going to stay present. We have a handful we really like in the barn and the ones we are hopefully getting as 2-year-olds for the coming season, and we're going to let them tell their story like we let Arcangelo tell his. To put a burden on anyone in the team–as far as expectations–I don't think is fair. We'll let them run their races and tell their story.”

NYRA: With Arcangelo now retired, what will you remember most about him and his career?
Antonucci: “His personality. He's such a cool guy, and his personality was bigger than the stall or the barn. We were able to get him to focus for the two minutes of his races and put that big personality to work. His desire to win and to want to be a Champion is something that you can't bottle.

“He still has a ton of personality. I keep in touch with the farm [Lane's End], and the stallion manager and I have some chuckles. His personality is in full effect. He's doing awesome and they're very much enjoying having him there. It will be wild and cool to train some of the kiddos one day.”

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Former Vet Chan Asks For Revision To 30-Month Doping Conspiracy Sentence

The former New York-based veterinarian Alexander Chan has filed a hand-written plea from prison asking for a reduction to his 30-month sentence that was handed down in May as punishment for his role in the wide-ranging 2020 racehorse doping conspiracy case.

In December 2022, Chan had cut a deal with prosecutors that involved pleading guilty to a single felony charge of drug adulteration and misbranding in exchange for two other felony counts against him being dropped.

Chan's filing with the court on Monday was submitted without an attorney acting on his behalf.

But the 10-page motion laid out a cogent case for reconsideration based on an amendment recently adopted by the United States Sentencing Commission that allows for downward revisions of sentencing levels for petitioners who have zero criminal history points on their records.

According to Chan's filing, the new sentencing commission guidelines allow, in certain cases, for retroactive recalculation of the “offense levels” that are used to determine prison terms, so long as the offenses didn't involve things like violent behavior, the use of weapons, sex crimes, or hate crimes.

Chan is arguing that a recalculated offense level in his instance would reduce his sentence to a 24-to-30 month prison term, and he is asking the court to revise his imprisonment to the lowest end of that tier because of his record of good behavior while jailed at Fort Dix, a low-security federal correctional institution in New Jersey.

Chan wrote in his motion that he has “pursued [computer] programming to a greater degree than any other similarly situated inmate and has been free from disciplinary actions.”

Chan was arrested in March 2020 as part of a series of coordinated law enforcement sweeps in the years-long federal investigation of a network of more than 30 horsemen, veterinarians, and equine pharmaceutical suppliers who ended up facing charges.

Jason Servis | The Jockey Club of Saudi Arabia

In the lead-up to sentencing, federal prosecutors had described Chan in court documents as “a former veterinarian for the New York Racing Association (NYRA), and a practicing veterinarian for over 15 years [who] abdicated his duty of responsibility to the horses under his care.”

The feds' portrayal of Chan continued: “After spending three years as a traveling veterinarian for NYRA, the defendant worked under convicted co-defendant Kristian Rhein at Empire Veterinary Group and soon after began providing and/or administering adulterated and misbranded drugs without valid prescriptions, knowing that their use violated New York's racing rules, medical ethics, and the law.”

Chan's own presentence report filed by his legal team had stated that, “Dr. Chan's sterling career and the beautiful young family it supported have since been destroyed because-at the direction of his boss and the owner of the veterinary practice in which he worked, Dr. Kristian Rhein-Dr. Chan participated in the distribution of misbranded substances for use on Thoroughbred racehorses.”

According to a trove of wiretap evidence, plus implicating testimony from plea-bargaining defendants, Klein and Chan's client list included the now-imprisoned former trainer Jason Servis, whom the feds alleged doped almost all the horses under his control in early 2019.

The post Former Vet Chan Asks For Revision To 30-Month Doping Conspiracy Sentence appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Watch: American Homebred Bucchero Colt In Training For Royal Ascot At Newmarket

Great British Racing International (GBRI) and Ascot Racecourse have released the fourth episode of An American Dream: The Return to Royal Ascot, a series following US syndicate manager Harlan Malter's ambitious quest to return to Royal Ascot with a horse sired by his 2018 Group 1 King's Stand Stakes runner, Bucchero.

In this latest episode, GBRI join Malter as he visits his first horse in training in Britain, a colt by Bucchero named CYCLONITE who has recently joined the yard of Group 1 winning trainer James Ferguson in Newmarket.

Cyclonite is a homebred yearling out of Malter's winning mare Compact Powder (Street Cry). Having arrived in the UK in October, Cyclonite was pre-trained by Matthew Mackley and joined Ferguson at the beginning of December.

Having seen Cyclonite for the first time in the UK, Malter commented:

“To have had the dream of standing Bucchero as a stallion after running at Royal Ascot and thinking it would be great to have a yearling here, to see him [Cyclonite] here and to be a homebred is even cooler.

“It is super exciting to see him under James's watchful eye. He looks like he fits right in, and I am excited to see how he can compete with the horses here.”

Ferguson echoed the enthusiasm of the US-based owner:

“It is the first time we've had a horse with this sort of pedigree in our yard. It is not something that is done very often by English trainers but it's great to see what the stallion [Bucchero] has done over in America and it would be wonderful if we can reciprocate that over here in the UK.”

Watch the video here:

The complete series of An American Dream: The Return to Royal Ascot can be found on GBRI's YouTube channel.

The post Watch: American Homebred Bucchero Colt In Training For Royal Ascot At Newmarket appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘Hard-Knocking War Horse’: 9-Year-Old Greeley And Ben To Defend His Title In Saturday’s Dave’s Friend

Daryl Abramowitz's Grade 3 winning-sprinter Greeley and Ben, still going strong at the age of 9, chases a second straight victory and 25th overall against 11 rivals in Saturday's $100,000 Dave's Friend at Laurel Park.

The six-furlong Dave's Friend for 3-year-olds and up is the second of four $100,000 stakes on the final pre-Christmas program at Laurel, preceded by the 6 ½-furlong Willa On the Move and followed by the 1 1/8-mile Carousel, both for fillies and mares 3 and older, and 1 1/16-mile Robert T. Manfuso for 3-year-olds and up.

Post time for the first of nine races is 12:25 p.m.

Greeley and Ben won stakes at Remington Park, Delta Downs, Sam Houston and was third in Oaklawn Park's Whitmore (G3) in 2021-22 before breaking through with his first graded triumph in the six-furlong Fall Highweight (G3) last November at Aqueduct.

It took nearly a year and a switch to trainer Horacio DePaz before Greeley and Ben ran again, finishing sixth in a 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance on a muddy Laurel track Nov. 10. He came back Dec. 2 to run down Johnyz From Albany and win a similar spot by a nose sprinting six furlongs.

Laurel is one of 15 venues where Greeley and Ben has raced since his October 2016 debut, in Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma and Texas

“He's doing good. He's an old, hard-knocking war horse. Just a very cool horse,” DePaz said. “He's had quite the career and basically run at every racetrack. He came back in good form. We figured that first race he was going to need it and I was encouraged by the way he ran. Going into the next one it looked like he got a lot more fitness out of it and he showed up. It was good to see.”

Claimed three times over the years, most recently for $40,000 last September out of a front-running win at Saratoga, Greeley and Ben joined DePaz over the summer. The gelded son of Greeley's Conquest is 24-for-41 overall with $921,138 in purse earnings.

“With his back class you always hope that horses can come back and continue on, especially after winning the Fall Highweight last year. As trainers, we're always optimistic that we're going to be able to get back to that form,” DePaz said. “When we first started bringing him back we didn't know what kind of form he'd come back in, but it was good to be able to get in those two races and, date-wise, it was good this one came up.”

Greeley and Ben drew Post 10 of 12 and will be ridden by Jevian Toledo, up for both his races this year.

“The owner gave him some time off and let him do some R and R and brought him back slowly. It worked out to be a decent claim,” DePaz said. “He's a really cool horse [with a] really good personality to him.”

Just to the outside of Greeley and Ben is Michael Scheffres' Factor It In, the defending Dave's Friend champion that beat Greeley and Ben in his comeback race last month. The 7-year-old Factor It In is 3-for-6 this year including a win in the 6 ½-furlong Fire Plug Jan. 21 as well as his last-out triumph.

James Wolf's Dollarization has run fourth in back-to-back starts at Parx and Laurel after capturing historic Pimlico Race Course's six-furlong Lite the Fuse Sept. 16. Isabelle de Tomaso and Hope Jones' No Cents won a pair of 2-year-old stakes at Laurel in 2020 but has won just one of 10 starts since, finishing third in his most recent effort Sept. 30 behind Sir Alfred James, who also returns in the Dave's Friend along with Built Wright Stables' stablemate Cowan.

Completing the field are 2022 Phoenix (G2) winner Manny Wah; multiple stakes winners Stage Left and Threes Over Deuces; He'smyhoneybadger, Mystic O'Shaunesie and Nico.

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