Friday’s Insights: Dreaming of Julia Filly Gets Going at Belmont

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4th-BEL, $63K, Msw, 2yo, f, 7f, post time: 2:30 p.m. ET
The product of two of Stonestreet Farm’s best, top and bottom, MALATHAAT (Curlin) gets her career underway for Sheikh Hamdan’s Shadwell Stable and trainer Todd Pletcher. The Mar. 7 foal, a $1.05 million acquisition at Keeneland September last fall, is the first to race out of Dreaming of Julia (A.P. Indy), one of two ‘TDN Rising Stars’ produced by MGISW Dream Rush (Wild Rush), who was acquired by Stonestreet for $3.3 million at the 2007 Fasig-Tipton November sale. Pletcher conditioned Dreaming of Julia to a narrow victory in the 2012 GI Frizette S. en route to a runner-up effort to Beholder (Henny Hughes) in that year’s GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. Malathaat completed her worktab with a bullet half-mile in :49 1/5 (1/10) over the Oklahoma training track at Saratoga Oct. 3.

Sheikh Hamdan’s brother Sheikh Mohammed’s Godolphin is represented by Caramel Swirl (Union Rags), who has trained with purpose for Bill Mott. The filly’s unraced dam Caramel Snap (Smart Strike) is a daughter of GSW Fast Cookie (Deputy Minister), whose son MGISW Frosted (Tapit) is off the a promising start with his first crop of runners this season. Fast Cookie, a half-sister to champion Midshipman (Unbridled’s Song), is also responsible for GSW Indulgent (Bernardini). Caramel Swirl breezed four furlongs in :48 2/5 (3/47) over the Oklahoma track Oct. 2. TJCIS PPs

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COVID-19: Meadowlands Remains Closed To Fans Through Oct. 9

The Meadowlands Racetrack will remain closed to fans on Friday, Oct. 9 for simulcasting, sports wagering and live racing. Winners Bayonne remains open.

The track first closed to patrons on Tuesday, Sept. 29, after a few individuals tested positive for COVID-19 that they acquired either in the workplace or at home. Contact tracing is ongoing.

Out of an abundance of caution the entire facility was shut down for top to bottom sanitization. The Meadowlands Racetrack is committed to providing a safe and healthy grandstand for all employees, patrons and fans.

Live harness racing will take place at 7:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday night. Horsemen are reminded to have the COVID questionnaire completed when arriving at the stable gate for their temperature check. Face masks worn over the mouth and nose are required at all times while in the paddock.

Visit PlayMeadowlands.com for the most up-to-date information.

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TVG Live At Keeneland For Major Stakes Coverage This Weekend

TVG, America's horse racing network and leading ADW platform, will be live at Keeneland for a loaded card this Saturday featuring two graded stakes races including the $500,000 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (GI). In addition to Keeneland, the award-winning network will also be trackside at Santa Anita and Monmouth Park.

At Keeneland, TVG will be live on site all weekend with Todd Schrupp, Scott Hazelton, Caleb Keller, Gabby Gaudet and Caton Bredar bringing behind-the-scenes coverage, selections and interviews to viewers watching from home. Friday's featured event at Keeneland is the $150,000 Buffalo Trace Franklin County Stakes (GIII) which has drawn a field of twelve including Got Stormy, the heavy favorite at odds of 6-5 on the morning line for trainer Mark Casse. The popular five-year-old mare was the runner-up in the TVG Breeders' Cup Mile (GI) in 2019 and was last seen winning the Kentucky Downs Ladies Sprint Stakes (GIII). Tyler Gaffalione will be aboard.

The ten-race card on Saturday will feature a pair of graded stakes races – the $200,000 Hagyard Fayette Stakes (GII) and the $500,000 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (GI). Scheduled to be run at a mile and an eighth on the turf, the race has drawn a contentious field of nine three-year-old fillies including Magic Attitude (GB) and Antoinette, the one-two finishers in the Belmont Oaks Invitational (GI) in September.

The action continues at Monmouth Park and TVG's Tom Cassidy will be live trackside. The featured event of the ten-race card is the $150,000 Monmouth Stakes (GIII) which will be contested at a mile and an eighth on the turf. Trainer Chad Brown will send out two contenders – Serve the King (GB) with Antonio Gallardo in the irons and Almanaar (GB) with jockey Joe Bravo aboard. Almanaar (GB) will be making his first start since winning this race in 2019.

At Santa Anita, the California breeding program will take center stage in the $100,000 California Distaff Handicap featuring California-bred or sired fillies and mares going five and a half furlongs on the turf. TVG will have Christina Blacker, Mike Joyce and Britney Eurton live at the track with analysis, interviews and selections. Simon Bray will be contributing to the broadcast remotely from home.

In addition to racing from Keeneland, Santa Anita and Monmouth Park, TVG will also be showing racing from Gulfstream Park West, Charles Town, Golden Gate and more.

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Lost And Found Presented By LubriSynHA: Cooksey, By Any Name, Is A Racetracker

A name change was a game change for Patricia J. Cooksey. Women were still a bit of a novelty when she launched her jockey career in 1979 so at the suggestion of an associate, she was listed by her initials in the track program to imply she was a man. The rebranding was brilliant and trainers increasingly requested P.J. for their entrants.

Cooksey delights in telling stories about trainers' reactions to meeting her in the saddling paddock. One exclaimed, “Oh my god, you're a girl!” to which she replied something to the effect of, “Yes, I have been all my life.”

Another felt awkward giving her a leg up.

When she closed her career in 2004, she had accumulated 2,137 triumphs primarily on the Kentucky-Ohio-West Virginia circuit and briefly ranked as the top female rider before being overtaken by Julie Krone who holds the title with 3,704 wins.

Those who know her best still call her P.J. or Patti. Professionally she is listed as Patricia “PJ” Cooksey in her role as the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's Assistant Director of the Kentucky Breeders' Inventive Fund. She went to work for the organization three months after becoming restless in retirement. In her current role, she visits farms to ensure that resident broodmares are indeed living in Kentucky so their resulting foals can be registered for bonus state-bred money. She also is called upon to serve as a racing steward and Standardbred judge several times a year including a recent gig for Standardbred racing at county fairs.

“I have the best job in state government,” she said. “But I have never stopped missing race riding.”

Her most memorable moments include winning the 1983 Hollywood Prevue Stakes in Southern California on Kentucky-based So Vague in part because of the congratulatory hugs from idols Bill Shoemaker, Chris McCarron and other members of the extraordinary jockey colony. The following year So Vague became her only Kentucky Derby (G1) mount. In 1985 she became the first woman to ride in the Preakness Stakes (G1) when she piloted Tajawa. She notes that she has bragging rights that she “rode a Kentucky Derby winner” because she guided eventual Derby hero Monarchos in his career debut.

Cooksey at Turfway Park after her 1,203rd win

“The only reason I retired was because of the rod in my leg from my broken femur that was causing a lot of pain when I rode,” Cooksey said. “If I had known I could have gotten the rod removed, I might still be riding. I miss the camaraderie of my fellow riders. We were over-the-top competitive on the racetrack but family back at the jockeys' quarters. We used to have softball teams in the summer and bowling teams during the winter. Everyone would get together after the races for cookouts and drink beer and have a lot of fun back in the early days.”

The native of Youngstown, Ohio occasionally returns to the saddle. She has participated in the team penning fundraiser at the Kentucky Horse Park in which three riders separate designated steers from a small herd and she takes an annual extended trail ride in the Ozark Mountains with girlfriends that include ex-jockeys. She stays connected to other past colleagues in her work with Horses and Hope, an initiative that seeks to increase breast cancer awareness among Kentucky's horse industry.

In reinventing herself when her career concluded, Cooksey served as a racing commentator for Louisville television stations and ESPN on major race days with assignments that included reporting on horseback.

“It takes a lot of work and many hours to prepare for a show and although I thoroughly enjoyed working as a commentator, it just wasn't something I had a real passion for,” she said.

Of all her endeavors and accomplishments, Cooksey is most appreciative of her daughter with former husband John Neal, a longtime track-employed outrider. Despite her heritage, Chelsea Neal found her stride far from the equine world. With a degree in international relations, Chelsea has taught English in Spain, has been instrumental in establishing child-care facilities in Africa and currently works for God's Pantry.

Cooksey pitches in during a therapeutic riding session

“Chelsea was a very good rider and we did a lot of horse shows with her when she was younger, but I guess growing up as a racetrack kid she had enough of horses,” Cooksey said. “I am so proud of her servant's heart to always be striving to help others.”

Although her child found fulfillment elsewhere, Cooksey notes there are vast opportunities for employment in the Thoroughbred industry.

“My advice would be to start working at a farm and learn on the ground, 'in the trenches,'” she said. “There are many satisfying jobs available but it does take hard work, commitment and passion. It's definitely not for lazy people.”

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