Green Returns To Oaklawn In 2022 To Build On 2021 Success

Trainer Aidan Green is back at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark., to try and build on a breakout 2021 meeting, when her modest stable produced nine victories, seven seconds, and nine thirds from 42 starters and amassed $347,560 in purse earnings.

Green's 2021 Oaklawn meet highlights included her first career victory recognized by Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization, and first career stakes victory when Blame J D captured the $150,000 Rainbow for 3-year-old Arkansas-bred sprinters in the waning days of the live season.

“Kicked back a little after that, but not too much,” said Green, who is raising three small children near Oaklawn with her husband/assistant, Ike. “Breaking babies and we've got broodmares and everything. Got rid of some horses. So, I'll sit around 10 or 12, just like always. I've been dropping like crazy at Churchill. I've got owners wanting to get horses, and new guys coming in, and we just keep getting outshook every time.”

Green said trying to claim horses at Churchill Downs has been fueled, in part, because of her success last season at Oaklawn, adding she's picked up a handful of new owners in advance of opening day, Dec. 3, including Dennis Pohl of St. Louis.

“I've gotten some new people since then, and people that want in, so that's exciting,” Green said. “Dennis has had horses with other trainers. He called and said he wanted someone with a smaller stable, where they get real attention. We've been trying to get some claimed for him.”

Green's best horse to date, Blame J D, was turned out following the 2021 Oaklawn meeting (five starts, including a state-bred maiden special weights sprint) and just resumed preparing for a 2022 campaign, Ike Green said.

The Greens formerly worked as assistants under 2020 Oaklawn training champion Robertino Diodoro. Aidan Green's first official starter recognized by Equibase was Feb. 14, 2020, at Oaklawn. Ike Green has 98 career training victories, the last coming in 2014, according to Equibase. All nine of Aidan Green's career victories recognized by Equibase have come at Oaklawn.

The post Green Returns To Oaklawn In 2022 To Build On 2021 Success appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Aidan Green Celebrates Her First Stakes Winner At Oaklawn Park

Aidan Green has made a name for herself this year at Oaklawn. Emphasis on “her.”

In what has become a running joke, Green noted that some people have praised the trainer for “his” snowballing success during the 51-day meeting that ends May 1. Perhaps, the confusion abated somewhat last Friday when Green saddled her first career stakes winner (Blame J D) in the $150,000 Rainbow for 3-year-old Arkansas-bred sprinters.

“I hope so,” Green, 33, said with a laugh. “That might have been the win to do it.”

The Rainbow marked the eighth career winner for Green – all this year at Oaklawn – and placed her in a tie for 11th in the local standings through Sunday. She also had five seconds and seven thirds from just 31 starters.

Green began the meeting with four horses, but her stable has grown to approximately 10 through claims. Green saddled her first career winner recognized by Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization, Feb. 11 with one-time Triple Crown hopeful Kristo. It was the 21st recognized starter for Green, who saddled her first horse in 2020, according to Equibase.

Green's unquestioned star is Blame J D, a gelded son of champion Blame for local breeder/owner James W. Matheney Jr. Blame J D has a 2-0-1 record in four career starts at the meeting and bankrolled $155,050.

“He's as good as I've had so far,” Green said. “As an Arkie-bred, he hasn't shown any weaknesses, really.”

Blame J D was broken by Green's husband/assistant, Ike Green, who has 98 career training victories, the last coming in 2014, according to Equibase. Green also unearthed and broke multiple Grade 1 winner and 2018 Triple Crown hopeful Bolt d'Oro when working for former business associate Mick Ruis.

Green assisted trainer Robertino Diodoro the last two years at Oaklawn, helping him capture his first local title in 2020 and Diodoro's major client, M and M Racing (Mike and Mickala Sisk), set a single-season Oaklawn record for victories by an owner with 61 in 2019. Green, among other things, also breaks horses for a local pinhooking group and hauls horses for M and M.

Aidan Green's high winning percentage coincides with having three young children, handling administrative issues for Diodoro (licensing, reservations, etc.) and dabbling in professional photography (she's booked four weddings this year).

“Kids and horses, that's all we do,” Ike Green said. “That's it.”

Aidan Green grew up in Canada around Quarter-Horses and draft horses her family owned and was a star volleyball player. She signed with Texas Tech before transferring to Texas-El Paso, where she was a four-year letterman (2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009). Green said she met her future husband in 2010 when he was training at Sunland Park in suburban El Paso. They married in 2013 and have three children – Olivia, 5; Owen, 4; and Oakley, 6 months.

As many races as Aidan Green has won this year at Oaklawn, it might seem like she's raising her kids in the Larry Snyder Winner's Circle. Normally after each victory, Green has her picture taken holding Oakley, with Olivia and Owen standing directly behind her on a platform.

“Our kids are pretty infamous back here, but anybody outside of the backside probably doesn't know or think that I have three,” Green said. “The other day, Olivia and Owen were standing on the edge of the paddock rail and this lady walked up and said, 'Where is your guys' mom?' And they're like, 'In there.' She thought they were on their own.”

If she's not saddling a horse or visiting the winner's circle, you might see Aidan Green, between races, carrying Oakley or pushing him in a stroller. The spirited Olivia and Owen could be racing or playing on the first floor of the grandstand or grandstand apron, often interacting with Diodoro and some of his employees.

“Don't get wrong, they're good kids,” Diodoro said. “But they're wild suckers. They're not the typical kids, get them up early and make them play and then they'll get a nap. They've got energized batteries in them. I've never seen kids like this. They might get a little cranky, but they don't stop. It's just, 'Go. Go. Go.' It's nuts.”

Diodoro calls Ike Green, 41, “a very good horseman” and said his wife possesses the organizational skills of a “computer.” The Greens, in the past few years, have overseen divisions for Diodoro at Churchill Downs and Saratoga before opting to focus more on developing their own stock.

Aidan Green said Team Green is a Team effort.

“It wouldn't really matter either way, if they ran in Ike's name,” Aidan Green said. “He was going to do more the baby side of things on the farm and we didn't want any conflict of interest, Diodoro and Ike, since he was his assistant. We just went this way and I'm loving it. I really am. We always laugh that when I first started dating Ike, I said: 'I hire, I fire and I pay' because you're up at the track all morning and I'm at the barn and they don't listen to me if you pay them. That was our rule. We've come a long way since then.”

Except that part about Aidan being a “she” and not a “he.” Green pointed to a well-known national horse racing podcast as a recent comical example.

“My nephew was laughing at one video because he said they talked like they know you, but then they still call you a guy,” Green said. “One guy said, 'A lot of you don't know this about Aidan Green, but he is young and he is striving.' Somebody commented: 'You know, that's a girl, right?' ”

The Greens keep broodmares on their eight-acre farm about 15 minutes southwest of Oaklawn. Ike Green said they'll likely remain in the Hot Springs area this summer and send a handful of horses to his brother, trainer Greg Green, at Lone Star Park.

The post Aidan Green Celebrates Her First Stakes Winner At Oaklawn Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘Team Deal’: Aidan Green Celebrates First Training Win At Oaklawn Park

Aidan Green was holding her 4-month-old and pushing a stroller through the grandstand early Thursday afternoon at Oaklawn. Less than an hour later, Green was strolling into the Larry Snyder Winner's Circle following her first career training victory recognized by Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

Green achieved her personal milestone with Kristo ($18.20), who won the fifth race, a starter-allowance route, by 3 ¾ lengths under Elvin Gonzalez. Kristo marked the 21st recognized starter for Green, who saddled her first horse in 2020, according to Equibase. Green's husband, Ike, is a former trainer who now assists his wife and Robertino Diodoro, Oaklawn's leading trainer in 2020. Aidan Green said she has seven horses on the track in training.

“Like Ike and I, we've won a lot of races, it's just the first time it's been under my name, so, it doesn't really feel like a first win,” Green said. “But it's cool to have it under my name now. We've always been a team. We've run Cody Autrey's barn in the past and we've run Robertino's in the past.”

Green, 33, grew up in Canada around the Quarter-Horses and draft horses her family owned. A star volleyball player, Green signed with Texas Tech before transferring to Texas-El Paso, where she was a four-year letterman (2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009). Green, also an aspiring photographer, said she met her future husband in 2010 when he was training at Sunland Park in suburban El Paso. They married in 2013 and have three children, 5, 4 and 4 months.

“Team deal, you know,” Aidan Green said. “With three kids and all the horses, Ike and I kind of rotate around, wherever we're both needed. We do it as a team, everything we do. I'm not a full-time photographer. I'd like to be. Full-time mom and then, I guess, second is horse trainer after that.”

Green owns Kristo, a 10-year-old Distorted Humor gelding, with sister-in-law Delinda Green. Ike Green's brother, trainer Greg Green, had claimed Kristo for $8,000 early last year at Sunland Park.

Kristo was exiting a third-place finish in a starter-allowance sprint Jan. 22 at Oaklawn.

“He ran really good his last start,” Green said. “Elvin just gave him a good ride. He kind of picks his certain riders and likes them. He ran really good for Elvin, so we were excited to get in this spot. Thought it was a good one.”

Kristo's victory came roughly seven years after Green said she won a race as an owner/trainer at a weekend fair meet in Fargo, N.D. That victory, Green noted, isn't recognized by Equibase.

“When we were at Canterbury, we shipped over with one that we owned ourselves,” Green said. “They had like tents set up. It was so much fun. This was my first real recognized one, as me as trainer.”

Ike Green unearthed and broke multiple Grade 1 winner and 2018 Triple Crown hopeful Bolt d'Oro when working for former business partner Mick Ruis. Green has 98 career training victories, according to Equibase, the first coming in 2001.

The post ‘Team Deal’: Aidan Green Celebrates First Training Win At Oaklawn Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights