Woodward, Cigar Mile Among Races Downgraded

The American Graded Stakes Committee released its list of graded stakes for 2023 Friday and it includes five races that were downgraded from Grade I status to Grade II races, including two of NYRA's more prestigious races for older dirt horses, the Woodward and the Cigar Mile H. Also dropping down from the Grade I to the Grade II level were the Clark S. at Churchill Downs, the Starlet S. at Los Alamitos and the Rodeo Drive S. at Santa Anita.

The Woodward was, perhaps, the most surprising inclusion on the list of newly appointed Grade II races. Twenty winners of the race have made their way into the Hall of Fame, including Kelso, Buckpasser, Forego, Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Spectacular Bid and Cigar. But the race has struggled somewhat in recent years as the NYRA racing department tried to figure out where it fit best on the calendar on how to juggle a glut of late summer-early fall races for the handicap division, including the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup. In 2006, the Woodward was moved from Belmont Park to Saratoga. The race was moved back to Belmont in 2021, trading places with the Jockey Club Gold Cup, which was switched to Saratoga. This year's Woodward was won by a top horse in Life Is Good (Into Mischief), but the race drew only four horses and the three challengers to Life Is Good were a fairly weak lot.

The Cigar Mile was inaugurated in 1988 and initially run as the NYRA Mile. Winners include Forty Niner, Cigar, Tonalist (Tapit) and Maximum Security (New Year's Day). This year's race did not come up particularly strong as Mind Control (Stay Thirsty) beat five others.

One race, the Stephen Foster S., was upgraded from Grade II to Grade I status. The race had been a Grade I through 2018 when it was downgraded. This year's winner was Olympiad (Speightstown).

A total of 97 Grade I races will be contested in 2023.

The committee reviewed 901 stakes races and assigned graded status to 440 of them, nine fewer than were graded in 2022.

Three races were upgraded to Grade II's, the Beaumont S., the Franklin S. and the Ladies Sprint S. Seven races were downgraded from Grade II to Grade III status for 2023: the Sorrento S. at Del Mar; Dinner Party S. at Pimlico; Monrovia S., San Carlos S., San Marcos S. and Santa Ynez S. at Santa Anita Park; and Tampa Bay Derby at Tampa Bay Downs. Four races were upgraded to Grade III status for 2023: the Manila S. at Belmont Park; Blame S. and Shawnee S. at Churchill Downs; and Music City S. at Kentucky Downs. Twelve races were downgraded from Grade III to Listed status for 2023.

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Saturday Insights: Pair Of Pricey Pletcher Colts Tackle The Big A

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

6th-AQU, $85K, Msw, 2yo, 1m, 2:10 p.m.

Picked up for $975,000 as a Keeneland September grad, ABSTRACT (Curlin) takes to the track in the afternoon for the first time for Repole Stable and St Elias Stable under the direction of Todd Pletcher. His dam, a half-sister to three stakes horses in Mom'z Laugh (Leroidesanimaux ({Brz}), Cajun Breeze (Congrats), and Peace At Dawn (Peace Rules), took a trio of Florida-bred stakes and ran second in the GIII Delta Downs Princess S.

Looking to improve second-time out after a third-place effort at Aqueduct Nov. 6, Tapit Trice (Tapit) brought a final bid of $1.3 million at the same Keeneland September Sale last year. Out of a half-sister to champion 2-year-old filly Jaywalk (Cross Traffic), Tapit Trice is the second of Pletcher's entries for owners Whisper Hill Farm LLC and Gainesway Stable. TJCIS PPS

8th-OP, $104K, Alw, 3yo/up, 1 1/16m, 4:46 p.m.

A consistent force on the Derby Trail earlier this year, BARBER ROAD (Race Day) returns Saturday for his first race since trailing Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) home in the GI Belmont S. Already at home over the Oaklawn surface, he was second in the Smarty Jones S., GIII Southwest S., and GI Arkansas Derby and third in the GII Rebel S. to earn his slot in the GI Kentucky Derby starting gate. Sixth behind Rich Strike (Keen Ice) at Churchill Downs, Barber Road went to the sidelines after the Belmont and enters off a six-month layoff. He will race with Lasix for the first time for trainer John Ortiz. TJCIS PPS

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NYRA Announces Spring Stakes Schedule

The stakes schedule for the 2023 spring meet at Aqueduct Racetrack, featuring 14 stakes worth nearly $2.8 million in total purses, was released Friday, Dec. 16

The 19-day spring meet will open Mar. 30 and continue through Apr. 30. Live racing will be conducted Thursday-Sunday except for Apr. 9, when live racing and pari-mutuel wagering is prohibited by New York State in observance of Easter Sunday.

The $150,000 GIII Distaff H., a seven-furlong contest for older fillies and mares, will kick off the spring meet graded stakes action Friday, Apr. 7 and a blockbuster Wood Memorial Day card Apr. 8 will feature four graded stakes, topped by the 98th running of the $750,000 GII Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino. The nine-furlong test for 3-year-olds will offer 100-40-30-20-10 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

Wood Memorial Day will also raise the curtain on Grade I racing on the NYRA circuit in 2023 with the $300,000 GI Carter Handicap presented by NYRA Bets, a seven-furlong sprint for older horses as well as include the $250,000 GIII Gazelle S. at nine furlongs for sophomore fillies offering 100-40-30-20-10 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

For the complete Aqueduct spring meet stakes schedule, visit the NYRA website.

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‘All Aqueduct Needs is a Power Wash and a Paint Job’: A Day at the Big A, While It’s Still Here

The writing is on the wall for Aqueduct Racetrack.

There has been no official announcement, but the New York Racing Association has made clear with its plans to 'winterize' Belmont Park that Aqueduct, New York's stalwart winter racing home for decades, is on borrowed time. And while the logic of continuing to operate two racetracks just nine miles apart is undeniably questionable, don't let anyone fool you into thinking that nothing of value will be lost or that no one will mourn when Aqueduct becomes the latest American racing staple to bite the dust.

Opened all the way back in 1894 during a golden era when racetracks were popping up all over New York City, Aqueduct has managed to outlive them all but Belmont. The track was humbly named after a nearby conduit owned by the Brooklyn Water Works that delivered water to New York City from the Hempstead Plain. Over the years, fans have packed the Big A, as it was so nicknamed after its last major renovation project in 1959, to see the great Secretariat's retirement ceremony, the second edition of a fledgling endeavor called the Breeders' Cup, multiple Triple Crown winners, even a Pope, when John Paul II led a 75,000-strong mass on a picture-perfect autumn day in 1995.

Most importantly, though, Aqueduct has long served as New York's blue-collar racetrack. Saratoga is the crown jewel of the state's racing schedule, the party destination for fans where NYRA makes the money to fund the rest of the year's operations. Belmont has the allure of the Belmont Stakes, which, if there is a Triple Crown on the line, provides the most exciting day in our sport. It also has the distinction of housing the country's biggest racetrack and the added benefit of running during the city's most pleasant weather months.

Aqueduct, on the other hand, mostly races in the freezing cold. Situated near Jamaica Bay and John F. Kennedy airport, the winds often make conditions even more brutal. Purse money drops. The throngs of fans and festive summer atmosphere of Saratoga could not be further away, both on the calendar and in the psyche.

But what the Aqueduct meet lacks in glamour, it makes up for in opportunity when it comes to New York's proletarian horsemen. The big barns and more decorated riders all understandably head south, mostly to Gulfstream Park in Florida, for the winter. If you can brave the harsh conditions at Aqueduct, you can compete and win races, certainly much more frequently than when Chad Brown, Todd Pletcher, Irad Ortiz, Jr., et al return north and resume their domination in the spring.

Aqueduct racing is the rough equivalent to the National Football League's practice squad–a bunch of players who rarely get their chance on the big stage, but who can serve a critical role to the greater product and earn a decent paycheck.

“As a lower-level owner, I look forward to the winter racing,” said Aron Yagoda, who races mostly in the claiming game in New York. “It's been a part of my culture and become our winter home. It's actually our longest-running stretch of the circuit that we have in New York, and a part of that is going to go away when Aqueduct goes away. Aqueduct doesn't just have the blue-collar horses, it has the blue-collar workers there and it's more of a die-hard crowd. It's going to be sorely missed, at least for me.”

Though only separated by nine miles as the crow flies, the crowd and vibe at Aqueduct differ from the one at Belmont. The Big A is the city's track, a concrete plant residing in the working-class Queens neighborhood of Ozone Park, accessible via a $2.75 subway ride on the A express train. Belmont more resembles a giant park, lies outside of the city limits and is associated more closely with Long Island, accessible only by car or part-time via the Long Island Rail Road.

“They're the die-hard racing fans [at Aqueduct],” said Yagoda. “It's one of the only tracks in the country you can take a subway to. You'll see a lot of the Belmont fans at Aqueduct, but you don't see a lot of the Aqueduct fans at Belmont.”

Yagoda has been racing horses in New York for over 30 years and has attended Aqueduct since he was a baby. Spending a day at the track has been in his family for generations.

“My grandfather had a box–D17–and I still watch races from that box whenever I run a horse,” he said. “When Aqueduct closes, part of my childhood and some of my great racing memories are going to close with it.”

It's not all bad for fans of the Big A, however. Though the track's story is entering its final chapter, there still is and will be some spectacular racing at Aqueduct for several years to come. The construction project that began this summer at Belmont, which forced its Fall Championship Meet to be moved to Aqueduct and re-branded as Belmont at the Big A, is a major overhaul, and it's unclear whether or not it will be completed by the time racing is supposed to resume at Belmont in late April. If it's not, Aqueduct would be set to have another moment in the sun like it did this fall, hosting more Grade I races than it ever has and attracting bigger crowds in refreshingly favorable weather.

That's the environment that brought me out to the Big A one Saturday this October, shamefully my first pilgrimage on that familiar A-train ride since before the pandemic.

I met up with two of my oldest racetrack friends, Frank Henry, 35, who I went to high school with, and Sean Smith, 40, who I met through Frank dozens of track hangouts ago. As longtime Aqueduct racegoers, we knew we had to take advantage of seeing major Grade I racing at our maligned old light blue-painted friend under clear skies and comfortable fall conditions.

We posted up in our usual spot, at the far end of the second-floor grandstand, just before the clubhouse turn, among a variety of characters, mostly of West Indian and Caribbean descent. I didn't know the majority of them, but the sights, sounds and, yes, smells of the section were as familiar as a warm, increasingly tattered hoodie you bring out of the closet every winter. Slow-swaying reggae music blared from a speaker.

“This is the real Aqueduct,” Henry said.

Without any prompting, the conversation quickly turned to the future of the place where we used to watch simulcasts of Saratoga before we'd ever made it through the gates of the Spa.

“All Aqueduct needs is a power wash and a paint job,” said Smith, who recently moved to Ozone Park. “You have two turf courses, finally have a dirt main track [for the winter], I don't get it. I finally get a track close to my house and they want to take it away from me.”

After watching eventual GI Breeders' Cup Sprint hero Elite Power (Curlin) cruise to a victory in the GII Vosburgh S., next up was the GI Joe Hirsch Turf Invitational S. Seeing those top-class horses run in historic Belmont-held races, I briefly had to remind myself where I was. As the horses came through the stretch for the first time in the three-turn, 1 1/2-mile Hirsch, I quickly remembered, as one particularly loud fan started feverishly rooting for the leader, unaware the field had another lap to go. The crowd had a great laugh at his expense, savoring like a sweet nectar the moment when he realized they were going around again.

Following a stunning 47-1 upset in the GIII Matron S. that killed any multi-race tickets we played, I went down to the first-floor bar to grab consolation beers for the crew. Naturally, there was a stereotypical animated New Yorker bragging through a heavy Brooklyn accent about having the winning horse. True to form, within a few sentences, he was off on another topic and making sure to tell everybody where he's from.

“Go-Go Gomez for [John] Terranova!” he shouted to no one in particular, getting the winning trainer right but the jockey (Eric Cancel) wrong. “Hundred-dollar horse. My boy hit the double. I might go talk to [the jockeys]. I like to go talk to them sometimes because I'm from Brooklyn. I get pictures with [Javier] Castellano. People say, 'What the [expletive] is the matter with you?' I say I'm from New York.”

Before I headed back upstairs, I caught a hopeful glimpse of racing's future. Standing out amongst the hardened Aqueduct regulars was a group of young people, likely in their early 20s, decked out in suits and dresses. The kind of kids you usually only spot at Saratoga, taking in a day of racing at the least glamorous, but most accessible track in the city.

So how much longer does Aqueduct realistically have before downstate racing in New York becomes a one-track circuit, the same way Gulfstream has slowly subsumed the racing at Hialeah and Calder in South Florida?

“I still think we'll be at Aqueduct for at least four or five more years,” said Yagoda, a New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association board member. “They put the second turf course back in, which they used to have until 1976 when they got rid of one of them to put in the inner dirt track. They went back to one main track, so I really think that they're going to have racing at Aqueduct for quite a while longer.”

No, it's not Belmont and it's sure as hell not Saratoga. There are legitimate reasons why Aqueduct is mostly an afterthought. It's outdated, especially when compared to the Resorts World casino next door. It's cold. The racing quality is generally spotty.

But Aqueduct provides a raw, authentic slice of New York City, the kind that the city's ever-increasing gentrification is making harder and harder to find. That alone is worth holding onto. And rest assured, all us die-hards will hold onto it, for however long we can.

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