Dec. 5 Insights

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WELL-BRED FILLIES DEBUT IN FLORIDA
3rd-GP, $60K, Msw, 2yo, f, 1mT, 12:58 p.m.
Stonestreet Stables' BLYTHE SPIRIT (Ghostzapper) makes her career bow in this event. The $550,000 KEENOV purchase is a half to SW & GSP Telekinesis (Ghostzapper). Their second dam is MGSW Gold Mover (Gold Fever), who produced SW Giant Mover (Giant's Causeway), dam of MGSW & GISP Family Tree (Smart Strike) and GSW & GISP Liora (Candy Ride {Arg}). Glen Hill Farm homebred Influencing (Tapit) also debuts here. She is the latest foal out of dual Grade I winner and multi-millionaire Marketing Mix (Medaglia d'Oro), who is also responsible for SP Global Brand (War Front). TJCIS PPs

ASMUSSEN UNVEILS PRICEY CONNECT
7th-AQU, $70K, Msw, 2yo, (S), 6 1/2f, 2:43 p.m.
Steve Asmussen saddles an expensive first timer for Stonestreet Stables in RELATE (Connect). A $100,000 FTNMIX weanling buy, he RNA'd for $70,000 as an FTKSEL yearling, but summoned $685,000 from Stonestreet at OBS April after breezing in :20 3/5.The dark bay's dam is unraced, but his second dam is SW Unbridled Danz (Unbridled's Song). TJCIS PPs

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View From The Eighth Pole: Irad Ortiz Jr.’s Reckless Ride A Litmus Test For Stewards

Ten years from now, when Irad Ortiz Jr. is inducted into the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., his ride aboard Gran Casique in Friday's eighth race at Aqueduct will not make the highlight reel.

As the Equibase chartcaller put it, “Gran Casique angled in with reckless abandon at the five-eighths and bumped Ragtime Blues hard which caused that foe to lose his rider…”

The victim of Ortiz's reckless act, the aforementioned Ragtime Blues, was ridden by Omar Hernandez Moreno, a seven-pound apprentice jockey who began his career racing in New York in May against the country's deepest jockey colony and has recorded five wins from 106 career starts.

But it was Ortiz – despite his 3,047 wins from 15,575 career starts and three Eclipse Awards as outstanding jockey – who looked like a rookie rider in the 6 ½-furlong sprint. Ortiz put Hernandez Moreno and the other riders in danger with a completely unnecessary move to the rail in the opening furlongs of the race. Fortunately, Hernandez Moreno was not injured and outriders caught the riderless Ragtime Blues.

Stewards at New York Racing Association tracks appear to be either uninterested or incapable of controlling the actions of that circuit's jockey colony. There have been countless examples of “herding” that exceed strategic race riding and have gone unpunished. This is about New York, but the same can be said of stewards at other tracks around the country. Too much careless or reckless riding is being permitted.

The actions by Ortiz will be a litmus test for the stewards.

In 1942, future Hall of Famer Eddie Arcaro was aboard a horse named Occupation in the Cowdin Stakes at Aqueduct and engaged in a confrontation with fellow rider Vincent Nodarse aboard Breezing Home. Arcaro felt Nodarse had cut him off at the start and spent the rest of the race trying to retaliate. After a series of bumps, Arcaro knocked  Nodarse off his horse, a move that landed him in a meeting with the stewards.

When confronted by them about what he had been trying to do, an unfiltered Arcaro responded, “I was trying to kill the S.O.B.” He was given an indefinite suspension.

The time away from the racetrack was a struggle for Arcaro, who worked as an exercise rider in Aiken, S.C., galloping horses for Mrs. Payne Whitney's Greentree Stable to make ends meet for his growing family. After Arcaro was away from the track for nearly a year, Whitney wrote a letter to William Woodward Sr., chairman of The Jockey Club that ran the New York tracks at the time. Whitney pleaded with Woodward to let Arcaro ride again.

“He let me and it changed my whole life,” Arcaro would later tell Sports Illustrated's William Leggett. “It made me obey the rules, and it made me realize what being nice to people means.”

I'm not suggesting Ortiz made a purposeful move to cut off Ragtime Blues and eject Hernandez Moreno from the saddle. I am saying that it's time for the stewards to try and curtail such reckless riding in the future by giving Ortiz a suspension that is immediate and lengthy enough to give him time to think about how his actions can endanger his fellow riders and the horses they are aboard.

Because of designated race rules and the appeals process, jockey suspensions, in New York and elsewhere, have become a joke. There was nothing funny about this future Hall of Famer's ride at Aqueduct, one that could have had serious consequences. New York stewards must act accordingly.

That's my view from the eighth pole.

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Trio Of Longshots Trigger $729,611 Triple Pick 6 Carryover Into Saturday’s Cigar Mile Card

Saturday's Cigar Mile Day card will be bolstered by a triple Pick 6 carryover of $729,611 as the multi-race wager went unsolved on Friday at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The $1 Pick 6 returned $2,938 to bettors who selected 5-of-6 winners correctly.

Friday's sequence kicked off in Race 5 with Sweet Mission [No. 12, $45.80] posting a 21-1 upset in a 1 1/16-mile inner turf claiming tilt for fillies and mares. Jose Ortiz piloted the winner for Mark Hennig.

Lost My Sock [No.1, $104.50], sent to post at odds of 51-1 under Raul Mena for trainer Derek Ryan, wore down Glitter Up in deep stretch to win Race 6, a six-furlong outer turf sprint for maiden juvenile fillies.

The streak of longshots continued in Race 7, a six-furlong optional-claiming sprint for state-bred 3-year-olds and up, with Saratoga Pal [No. 4, $40.40] rallying wide down the lane to win at odds of 19-1 as the longest shot in the seven-horse field. Eric Cancel guided the winner for Chris Englehart.

Crea's Bklyn Law [No. 8, $8.10] rallied down the center of the track to capture Race 8 with Kendrick Carmouche up for Michael Miceli in the 6 1/2-furlong sprint for 3-year-olds and up on the main track.

Off at odds of 4-1, Summer to Remember [No. 2, $12.20] took charge into the final turn and staved off a late charge from Smile Bryan to win Race 9, a 1 1/16-mile inner turf claiming tilt for 3-year-olds and up. Ortiz engineered the score for trainer Rudy Rodriguez.

With the carryover already confirmed, the Christophe Clement-conditioned She's the One [No. 3, $3.30] prevailed as the odds-on choice under Irad Ortiz, Jr. in Race 10, a six-furlong outer turf sprint for New York-bred fillies and mares 3-years-old and up.

Saturday's Pick 6 kicks off in Race 5 at 1:45 p.m. Eastern and includes the Grade 1, $750,000 Cigar Mile, the Grade 2, $250,000 Remsen, the Grade 2, $250,000 Demoiselle, and the Grade 3, $250,000 Go for Wand. First post on the 10-race card is 11:50 a.m.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct, and the best way to bet every race of the fall meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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Hungry For Success: Full Brothers Chowda, Lobsta Entered In Sunday’s New York-Bred Stakes

Eddie Fazzone, managing partner of Eddie F's Racing and proprietor of the popular Saratoga Springs restaurant Eddie F's Eatery, will look to satisfy his hunger for another stakes win by sending out full-brothers Chowda and Lobsta in Sunday's $150,000 NYSSS Thunder Rumble at the Big A.

The Gary Sciacca-trained duo, by Emcee and out of the Chief Seattle mare Salty Little Sis, were both bred in the Empire State by John Jayko's Fedwell Farm. Last year, the now 4-year-old Chowda won the Gander at Aqueduct to provide the partnership their first stakes win. Lobsta rolled into this year's edition of the Gander from a 5 3/4-length maiden romp but had to settle for second in a race won by Nicky the Vest.

Fazzone said the partnership, which includes Ross Lackey and Fazzone's brother-in-law Don Wilock, have been overwhelmed by the brother's success.

“It's pretty amazing. When you go into this as a small group, you don't expect to be winning stakes races,” Fazzone said. “It was a big thrill to win the Gander with Chowda and then for his brother to come back and run second in the same race the following year was big too. These two guys have been a joy for us.”

The brothers were both purchased privately from the breeder and Fazzone said Eddie F's Racing will soon have another appetizing racing prospect from the talented family.

“We also have a half-brother named Oysta, who will be two in January,” Fazzone added. “He's on a farm in Virginia so you'll see him next year. He's by Micromanage.”

Fazzone, who lamented missing out on Salty Heir, a 2-year-old full brother to Oysta also trained by Sciacca, campaigns another pair of half-siblings bred in New York by Fedwell Farm in the 3-year-old gelding Dreampoint, by Point of Entry, and 2-year-old filly Dream Central, by Central Banker, who are out of the Deputy Wild Cat mare Dreamed to Dream.

Dream Central is entered in Race 2 on Saturday at the Big A, a 1 1/16-mile maiden special weight for New York-bred fillies to be contested over the outer turf.

But while Dream Central is a 30-1 longshot in search of a first win, Chowda and Lobsta have established strong form as they prepare to square off in Sunday's seven-furlong sprint for eligible state-sired 3-year-olds and up on Closing Day of the Big A fall meet.

Chowda has won 3-of-4 starts at Aqueduct and enters from a strong third in an open 1 1/16-mile allowance tilt on October 24 at Belmont that was won by subsequent Discovery winner Miles D for trainer Chad Brown.

Lobsta has posted six starts in his sophomore campaign for a record of 2-1-2, including a score in a one-mile state-bred optional-claimer in March at the Big A.

He enters from third-place finishes in the seven-furlong Mike Lee in May at Belmont and the 1 1/16-mile New York Derby in July at Finger Lakes, which was won by Americanrevolution who will contest Saturday's Grade 1 Cigar Mile presented by NYRA Bets for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher.

“These two run hard every time. Lobsta ran third in the New York Derby against that monster of Todd's that's running tomorrow in the Cigar Mile,” Fazzone said. “He's been off since then and is training really well. It's his first race back and we're hoping for the best with him.

“Chowda ran a great race in an allowance on October 24 against Chad's horse who ran third in the Travers and came back and won a stake last week,” Fazzone continued. “Chowda is training great and we're hoping they both run really big on Sunday.”

Both horses posted bullet half-mile works over the Belmont dirt training track in their most recent preparations with Chowda breezing in 48.70 seconds on December 1 and Lobsta working in 47 flat on November 27.

“They always train well. They just like to go. If you go back and look at all their works, they're always right around the bullet work for the day. They're both doing well right now,” Fazzone said.

Fazzone credits Sciacca, who recently secured his 1000th career win, with keeping both horses at the top of their game.

“He's done a great job for me and my partnership and he's a great horseman,” Fazzone said. “He's really one of the last real true New York trainers around. Going back to the early 80s, there's not many guys left that are born and bred New York guys. Gary is one of those guys and he's been training with the best of them. He does an incredible job.”

Fazzone said that Chowda and Lobsta have generated a lot of attention for his restaurant and even piqued the interest of some of his patrons to join the ownership ranks.

“I try to keep to keep the partnerships small,” Fazzone said. “I buy a majority and then piece them off so people have an opportunity. On Chowda, it's me, Ross and Don. With Lobsta, it's just Ross and I alone. I have some horses that have seven partners – just customers that come to the restaurant and want to come in.”

While the restaurant will be closed on Sunday with the team already en route to the city to attend the race, Fazzone said he knows there will be a large cheering section upstate watching Chowda and Lobsta mix it up in the Thunder Rumble.

“When Saratoga starts up and people start coming to town that's when I get really busy. We've got big support from the locals. They love to watch the horses and cheer them on,” Fazzone said. “It's been a lot of fun. Hopefully, these guys run a big race for us on Sunday.”

And should Chowda or Lobsta happen to win, there's still one week left to celebrate the experience at Eddie F's Eatery before it closes for the season.

“Next Saturday is my last day and then we close down until February 16 when we re-open and get ready for another great season,” Fazzone said. “It's grown every year and gotten more popular. We had a great summer and spring.”

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