Delta Downs To Lower Takeout To 12 Percent On All Pick 4, Pick 5 Bets

Delta Downs Racetrack Casino & Hotel in Vinton, La., announced that it will lower the takeout rate on all Pick 4 and Pick 5 waging pools from 25% to 12% beginning Wednesday, Dec. 13. The new rate will be in effect through the end of the season, Saturday, Feb. 24.

The lower takeout rate will mean more money returned to racing fans that hold winning tickets each night. The track offers a pair of Pick 4's and Pick 5's on each live program. The Early Pick 5 begins on the first race each night, and the Late Pick 5 takes place on the final five races. The Early Pick 4 starts on the second race and the Late Pick 4 covers the final four races on the card.

Live racing takes place this season each Wednesday through Saturday night beginning at 5:05 p.m. CT through Dec. 30, with the exception of Monday, Dec. 18 through Thursday, Dec. 21. During that week the track will host daytime race programs starting 12:55 p.m. before the Christmas holiday.

For more information about racing at Delta Downs, including a detailed schedule, post times, and stakes dates, visit the track's website at www.deltadownsracing.com. Fans can also get information throughout the season with our social media accounts. The Facebook page is found at 'Delta Downs Racing', and the track's Twitter (X) handle is @deltaracing.

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Pick 4 and Pick 5 Takeout at Delta Downs Drops to 12%

Delta Downs Racetrack Casino & Hotel will lower the takeout rate on all Pick 4 and Pick 5 wagering pools from 25% to 12% beginning Wednesday, Dec. 13, according to a press release from the track. The new rate will be in effect through Feb. 24, when the season ends.

The track offers an Early Pick 5 beginning with the first race each night and a Late Pick 5, which covers the final five races. The Early Pick 4 starts on the second race and the Late Pick 4 covers the final four races on the card.

For more information about live racing at Delta Downs, click to visit the track's website at deltadowns.boydgaming.com.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Louisville Native Whit Beckman Is Derby Dreaming

Most native Kentuckians find themselves enthralled by the Kentucky Derby, whether it be the pomp and circumstance, the festive atmosphere, or the races themselves. Attending is almost a right of passage, and finding a way to be personally involved is an item on many bucket lists.

That wasn't the case, however, for Whit Beckman, despite being raised in the Derby City itself. Instead, it was a series of quiet mornings in his early 20's, spent cleaning stalls and grooming his mother's show horses, that convinced Beckman to invest his future in the Thoroughbred industry.

The son of an equine veterinarian, Beckman didn't show any interest in his father's career during his formative years, preferring soccer and skateboarding to the horses. After college, though, he found himself unsure what to do with his life.

Beckman spent many a morning heading out to the farm to help his mother, doing basic care and chores, before he realized that his calling had been right there all along.

“You can go out in search of everything you're looking for, all over the world, but if you just look around you, you had it the whole time,” he said. “I realized I enjoyed working with the horse, the individual; switching off from the regular working world and doing the actual labor lets you get out of your own mind and into that communication that exists without any sort of words.”

Twenty some years later, 41-year-old Beckman has crafted a career path for himself that may just bring him to that pinnacle of sport on the first Saturday in May: the trainer saddled his first graded stakes winner last weekend, sending out 2-year-old Honor Marie to win the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs.

The win earned the son of Honor Code 10 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby.

“With all horses, you have an idea of how good they might be, and I was always thinking two turns with the horse, so I'm just glad he confirmed what we all kind of assumed,” Beckman said. “I know that it's only November, but I'm fortunate enough to have been on the Derby trail before, and it's still pretty cool that at the end of the day, we're all dreaming about this!”

Beckman's previous Derby seasoning occurred during his tenure with Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, for whom he served as an assistant from 2007 through 2013. 

Yet his first racetrack job came courtesy of “Louisville guy” Walter Binder, and Beckman also spent time working at Upson Downs Farm on the outskirts of Louisville, before deciding to pursue a job in New York.

“Back in those days, Churchill was not giving away the same kind of money that they are now, so there were not as many top-name trainers basing themselves there,” Beckman explained. “Charlie Bowden – I bounced a lot off him early – he told me that if I really wanted to get into this business and learn, then I needed to think about the New York and Florida circuit, because those were the biggest venues. 

“Todd called me back while I was on vacation in Florida, and he told me to be in Saratoga as soon as I could get there!”

After six years with Pletcher, Beckman took a job as head trainer in Saudi Arabia for a year, then returned stateside to work for Eoin Harty in Chicago and Tampa for a spell. He returned to Saudi Arabia, but the second trip was much shorter: his daughter was born, and Beckman realized he needed to be closer to home.

“When it was time to go back, I made it all the way to New York with my passport in hand before I realized I really didn't want to go,” he said. “So I turned around and came home, and I got lucky to get a job for Chad Brown a few months later.”

Beckman headed up a string at Churchill for Brown for several years, gaining even more high-level experience.

“I sometimes look back in disbelief that I've been able to work with such high-profile horses and be in such well-respected positions for as long as I have been,” Beckman said. “There are a lot of things that are very similar in both of those stables, especially in terms of consistency and patterns, attention to detail, going above and beyond to take the best possible care of the horse.”

After going out on his own in 2021, Beckman had a bit of a slow start under his own banner. The focus has always been on quality, not quantity: Honor Marie's victory was the 23rd under his own name.

“You know, it was such a transient lifestyle, and I just wanted to be more present for my daughter, who's now seven years old,” he said. “Things are just continuing to improve, and now I'm trying to figure out how to best navigate the winters; I have 12 at Trackside, and eight at Fair Grounds this year, so I'm trying to split my time appropriately.”

Among the connections he made while working for Pletcher was with Kristian Villante, one of the founding four members of Legion Bloodstock. The growing company has supported Beckman since his first days on his own, and their selection of Honor Marie for $40,000 at the 2022 Keeneland September sale is proving to be quite the bargain.

The colt broke his maiden at first asking, after which co-owners Alan and Carrie Ribble bought out their other partners. Honor Marie is named in part for their daughter, Marie, as well as after his sire and dam (Honor Code and Dame Marie).

He finished second in a sloppy allowance race in his second outing, then stepped up to two turns for the Kentucky Jockey Club. Honor Marie cruised from last-to-first and won by two lengths at odds of 8-1, stamping himself as a potential horse to be reckoned with in 2024.

“He's done everything right to this point,” said Beckman. “He's a young horse, a May foal. Early on, he just had some maturity things and we needed a little bit more time to get him going. But now that he's starting to kind of figure things out on the mental side, we've always known the physical side was there. At this point, the way he won, the way the gallop-out went, he could go on to be a very legitimate horse.”

Honor Code colt Honor Marie, ridden by Rafael Bejarano, scores in the Kentucky Jockey Club (G2(

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Undefeated Glengarry Could Target Springboard Mile: ‘We Have To See Whether He Can Go That Far’

The undefeated and stakes-winning 2-year-old gray colt Glengarry is expected to make his next start in the $300,000 Springboard Mile at Remington Park. The track's marquee stakes event for 2-year-olds takes place on the final night of the season, Friday, Dec. 15.

The Springboard Mile is the cornerstone race for 2-year-olds at this meeting where juveniles can earn Kentucky Derby qualifying points for finishing first through fifth. The winner gets 10 Kentucky Derby points with the progression going five points for second, three for third, two for fourth and one for fifth.

Robert Yates, who does barn notes for Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark., spoke to Glengarry's trainer, 68-year-old Doug Anderson, and he confirmed Remington Park was a strong possibility for the colt's next stop. Glengarry recorded a bullet workout Saturday, Nov. 25 at Oaklawn, covering five furlongs, breezing in 1:00.10, the fastest of 29 horses that went that distance that morning.

Glengarry, a juvenile son of Maximus Mischief (Into Mischief), out of the Tizway mare L.A. Way, is three-for-three to start his career, including two stakes wins.

“We have to see whether he can go that far (one mile) or not,” Anderson said. “I think that's a good spot (Remington Park).”

Glengarry, a $150,000 private purchase by an ownership group that includes Anderson, and Iowa residents Aaron Kennedy and Toby Joseph, broke his maiden by 5-3/4 lengths at first asking on Aug. 28 at Prairie Meadows in Altoona, Iowa. The gray colt was bred in Iowa by Highpoint Bloodstock. 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. All three of the colt's wins have come at six furlongs. He went gate-to-wire in his first two tries and then sat second off the early pace in the Bowman Mill. Glengarry went off as the prohibitive favorite in his career debut at 1-5 and then was 7-5 in his second effort, his first stakes win. When he moved to Keeneland he was sent off at 5-2 odds, the second favorite.

Anderson and Kennedy have joined forces in the past with another stellar horse – Sugar Shock, a Candy Ride (ARG) filly that won the Grade 3, 2014 Fantasy Stakes at Oaklawn.

As far as pedigree goes, there is evidence that Glengarry may indeed like a move around two turns. His sire, Maximus Mischief, won the Grade 2 Remsen Stakes at Aqueduct in New York at 1-1/8th miles by 2-1/4 lengths in 2018. Maximus Mischief, a son of prominent sire Into Mischief, raced just four times but he won three of those for $225,700 in earnings.

Even though Glengarry's dam (mother), L.A. Way, only raced twice in her career with two fourth-place finishes, her sire, Tizway, was well-versed at a route of ground. Tizway, a son of two-time Horse of the Year Tiznow, won two Grade 1 races to conclude his career – the $750,000 Whitney Invitational Handicap at Saratoga in upstate New York in 2011 at 1-1/8th miles and the Met Mile Handicap at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., that same year.

Anderson, a Hot Springs resident, began training in 1991 and is considering retirement. He has made 3,158 starts in his career, winning 475 races, running second 437 times and another 435 thirds for horses' earnings of more than $13.5 million.

The official nominations for the Springboard Mile close tonight and are expected to be released on Friday, Dec. 1.

The Springboard headlines a stakes-laden final program of the season on Dec. 14, also including the $75,000 Tapeze Stakes, the $75,000 She's All In Stakes, the $75,000 Jeffrey Hawk Memorial and a pair of races for Oklahoma-bred 3-year-olds, the $50,000 Jim Thorpe Stakes and the $50,000 Useeit Stakes.

Remington Park has provided more than $337 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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