Friday Insights: Juddmonte Blueblood Hopes Second Time’s a Charm

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency
JUDDMONTE BLUEBLOOD HOPES SECOND TIME'S A CHARM
1st-BEL, $90K, Msw, 3yo/up, 1m, 12:50 p.m.
Blueblooded Juddmonte homebred ARTORIUS (Arrogate) ran a huge race on debut at Keeneland Apr. 16, producing an eye-catching rally from well back to be second behind a 'TDN Rising Star' performance from Under Oath (Speightstown). The son of MGISW Paulassilverlining (Ghostzapper), who was recently profiled in Steve Sherack's “Second Chances” column, gets that second chance Friday in the Belmont opener.
He faces a pair of well-related colts also making their second start in Shreveport (Tapit) and Exact Estimate (Into Mischief). The former, a Godolphin homebred, is a son of MGISW Seventh Street (Street Cry {Ire}) and a full-brother to GSW & GISP Lake Avenue. The gray made a four-wide move to be third in his even-panel unveiling at this oval May 5. Exact Estimate, a $375,000 FTKSEL buy, is a half to MGSW & GISP Tizamagician (Tiznow). The Chad Brown pupil was a well-beaten second at Keeneland in his Apr. 24 career bow. TJCIS PPs

 
PRICEY TAPIT JUVENILE DEBUTS FOR CASSE
3rd-CD, $120K, Msw, 2yo, f, 5f, 1:43 p.m.
Tracy Farmer went to $500,000 for PERSONAL PURSUIT (Tapit) at KEESEP and she debuts in this spot for trainer Mark Casse. The juvenile is a half-sister to MGSW Sneaking Out (Indian Evening), GSW Grecian Fire (Unusual Heat) and stakes winners Been Studying Her (Fast Anna) and Smuggler's Run (Straight Fire). Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas unveils Naughty Gal (Into Mischief), a $350,000 OBSMAR purchase after breezing in :20 4/5. She hails from the family of MGISW Miss Temple City (Temple City). TJCIS PPs

The post Friday Insights: Juddmonte Blueblood Hopes Second Time’s a Charm appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Op/Ed: The Triple Crown Woes…Maybe It’s the Purses?

Though not a proponent of “fixing” the Triple Crown by spacing the races further apart, I can't deny that the series has a problem. GI Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike (Keen Ice) passed the GI Preakness S. Preakness winner Early Voting (Gun Runner) won't be running in the GI Belmont S. this Saturday and not a single horse will contest all three Triple Crown races this year. The Triple Crown ends with a race that is good but could be a lot better. Lining up the best horses possible for as many Triple Crown races as possible has become immensely difficult.

But maybe the biggest problem isn't the spacing of the races but that the purses for the races, especially the Preakness and the Belmont, are not what they should be and haven't kept up with the times. If you want your races to always get the best horses and to be considered to be among the most important, most prestigious races on the calendar you're going to have to pay for the privilege. The Triple Crown tracks haven't bought into that premise.

The purse of the Kentucky Derby is $3 million. The Preakness and Belmont are worth $1.5 million each. While that may seem like a lot of money, in a sport where purses have exploded over the last 15 years or so, it's not. There are nine U.S. races that have a larger purse than the Preakness and Belmont, eight of them Breeders' Cup races and the other the $3-million GI Pegasus World Cup. That's not to mention the riches thrown around in Saudi Arabia and Dubai. Or that the Preakness and Belmont are worth only $500,000 more than four Kentucky Derby preps, the GI Blue Grass S., the GII Louisiana Derby, the GI Florida Derby, and the GII Rebel S., and just $250,000 more than the GI Arkansas Derby.

The Triple Crown races, as important as they are, should be the richest races run in the U.S. or at least the equal of any other race. To make that happen, they should all be worth $6 million, the equal of the GI Breeders' Cup Classic. It can be done. Let me explain.

With $6 million total now paid out in the three races, the Triple Crown tracks would have to come up with an additional $12 million to be able to pay out $6 million in each race. That probably wouldn't be much of a problem for Churchill Downs or NYRA, but, at Pimlico, it would be a lot to ask for them to come up with that kind of money. Simply asking the tracks to increase the purses on their own isn't going to happen.

So, why not copy what the Breeders' Cup has done?

One of the reasons why they can give away so much money at the Breeders' Cup is that, in order for a horse to be eligible to run, their sire must be nominated and they must also be nominated as foals. If not, the owners must pay a hefty fee to supplement them into a Breeders' Cup race. It costs $400 to nominate a foal. To make the progeny of a North American-based stallion eligible, a payment equal to 50% of the horse's published stud fee is required.

In the fiscal year that ended on Jan. 31, 2021, the Breeders' Cup took in $8.4 million from domestic stallion nomination fees and $2.7 million in fees for foreign stallions. Foal nomination fees added up to $4.1 million with 9,822 nominated foals. That adds up to $15.2 million.

The Triple Crown is not going to equal those numbers. There would be little incentive to nominate fillies or foreign stallions. But could asking owners and breeders to pay fees similar to what they pay to make their horses and stallions eligible to run in the Breeders' Cup yield $10 million or so? Probably. Finding another $2 million out of the track's pockets to bolster the purses and get to the $12 million figure wouldn't be asking that much.

There's also the matter of what it currently costs to make a horse eligible for the Triple Crown, a payment now due in late January of a horse's 3-year-old year. Not only would that payment still be required under this proposal, but it should be increased. It currently costs just $600 to nominate a horse to the Triple Crown. There were 312 noms this year, which adds up to only $187,200. You could raise another $500,000 or so by upping the fee to $2,500, which doesn't seem unreasonable.

The days of owners being sportsmen is long gone. The owners who dominate the top levels of the sport are businessmen and businesswomen and no matter what they may say, their decisions ultimately come down to money. The end goal is to maximize their profit on their horses and the way to do that is to create a stallion who can command a large stud fee. It is not to win as many races as possible. To get there, you need only have to have a horse with a strong pedigree who has won, perhaps, a single Grade I race. Trainers believe that the best way to have a horse primed to win a major race is to have plenty of time between starts.

A Kentucky Derby win is important, but not the be all and end all. Wins in the Preakness and Belmont are less important.

But there has to be a tipping point somewhere, where the purses are so large that the right business decision becomes running in, and not passing on, the Triple Crown races. Put up $18 million for the series and $6 million per race and people will run, even if the three races take place over a five-week span. That's how you can fix the Triple Crown.

The post Op/Ed: The Triple Crown Woes…Maybe It’s the Purses? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Belmont Jockey Colony Autograph Signing Friday to Benefit PDJF

Members of the Belmont Park jockey colony will participate in an autograph signing Friday to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockey Fund (PDJF).

The special meet and greet and autograph session featuring riders from the Belmont jockey colony with a suggested donation to PDJF will take place from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Friday on the first floor grandstand.

Benefits from the signing will go directly to the PDJF.

The PDJF is an independent charitable organization that provides financial assistance to jockeys who have suffered catastrophic on-track injuries. For more information about the PDJF, please visit: https://pdjf.org/.

The post Belmont Jockey Colony Autograph Signing Friday to Benefit PDJF appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

After Battling Substance Abuse Issues, Belmont Winner Jeremy Rose Launches a Comeback

Back in 2005, when he won the GI Preakness S. and the GI Belmont S. with Afleet Alex (Northern Afleet), Jeremy Rose was convinced that the run he was on would never end. He was just 26, had already won more than 950 races and had won an Eclipse Award in 2001 as the nation's top apprentice. Rose was well established as one of the top riders in the Mid-Atlantic region, was earning in the mid-six figures every year and his best years seemed yet to come.

“It may sound arrogant, but I thought there was no stopping me,” Rose said. “I was on a roll. Alex put me on a pedestal, allowed me to go to a place few jockeys get to go. I was winning a lot of races, making good money. I was being flown all over the country to ride for people like Graham Motion. I couldn't do anything wrong. It was awesome.”

Seventeen years after Afleet Alex won the Belmont, Rose will not be riding at Belmont Park this Saturday but some 150 miles to the south, down the road to Delaware Park. He's 43 now and has ridden just two winners on the year. But he's not feeling sorry for himself. After all that he's been through, the addiction to opiods, the battle with alcohol, some 2 1/2 years away from the track, he's just happy to be back.

“I really let things get out of control,” he said.

Afleet Alex ran well in the GI Kentucky Derby, but finished third behind Giacomo (Holy Bull). It was in the Preakness that he showed his talent and his athleticism. Afleet Alex was making what looked like a winning move coming out of the far turn when Scrappy T (Fit to Fight) bore out in front of him, causing Afleet Alex to clip heels with his rival. For an instant, it appeared that Afleet Alex was going to go down in what could have been a horrific spill, but he somehow righted himself and carried Rose to a 4 3/4-length victory.

Come Belmont time, there was little doubt who the best 3-year-old in training was. Afleet Alex, in what would be his last-ever start, blew the field away, winning by seven lengths.

“I thought Jeremy rode a tremendous race,” winning trainer Tim Ritchey said afterward.

Rose finished the year with 178 wins and had 221 in 2006 and 288 in 2007.

Afleet Alex nearly goes down in the Preakness | Horsephotos

He may have thought there was nothing that could stop him, but that was proven wrong in 2008. In a race at Delaware Park, Rose struck his mount, Appeal to the City (Appealing Skier), with his whip in the eye, causing the eye to hemorrhage. He said he did not mean to injure the horse, but the Delaware Park stewards took no mercy. They initially suspended him for six months, a penalty that was reduced to 90 days on appeal. The incident happened shortly after Eight Belles (Unbridled's Song) had broken down in the Derby, and animal rights activists were not in a forgiving mood and pointed their slings and arrows at Rose, who was the target of death threats.

“Mentally, it took me a long time to bounce back from that, if I ever did bounce all the way back,” Rose said. “That was something I didn't let go of. They sent emails to commissions that they were going to kill me. They said they were coming in to take my dogs away from me. I got crucified.”

Rose was eventually able to put the incident behind him, but he was about to face a problem much more debilitating. As happens with most every jockey, riding started to take a toll on him. In constant pain, he thought he was doing the right thing when he went to a doctor for help. He was prescribed OxyContin.

“I can't remember exactly when I started,” he said. “I had all kinds of old fractures. My neck was hurting. My back was hurting. If you're a jockey and you're not racing, unless you have disability insurance, no money is coming in. You have to keep riding and you have to win races.”

When the drugs were first given to him, he had no idea how dangerous they were.

“I was driving to New York with an agent friend of mine and I had either Oxy or Percocet in the cup holder and he saw them and said to me, 'Do you know those pills are just like heroin?' I said, 'How can that be, a doctor prescribed them to me,'” Rose said. “Up until the time I was prescribed OxyContin, I literally had never taken a drug. At most, I was a social drinker. I would have a couple of beers and that was it. So when I got prescribed pain pills, I thought it was like getting ibuprofen. I had no idea it was even a narcotic.”

As is so often the case with opiods, they took over Rose's life. Desperate for the drug, he started buying them on the street and said he was taking as much as 300 milligrams a day.

For the most part, he was able to hide the addiction from trainers and owners, but anyone paying attention to his numbers could have told that there was something wrong. He won just 78 races in 2012 and 59 in 2013. He said that he was in and out of rehab over the next couple of years and was able to finally stay clear of the pills in 2014. But that wasn't the end of his problems.

He replaced one addiction with another. Alcohol became his next issue.

“The pills are easier to stay away from than alcohol,” he said. “You have to buy them on the street corner or go to a doctor to get them. Alcohol is on every corner. I can be sitting in a parking lot and see three liquor stores right in front of me. I could get alcohol any time I wanted and it was, for the most part, socially acceptable. I went from one thing to another and let things get out of control with alcohol. One thing about alcoholics, we like having instant gratification. That's why you like alcohol and drugs. You get that right away. For a jockey, it's the same thing when you win a race–instant gratification.”

In 2019, a year after he got married, he was in the midst of another miserable year in which he would win just 35 races. So, he walked away. His last mount that year came at Parx on Dec. 7. He knew it was time to focus on his mental health and his substance issues and, at least for a while, forget about being a jockey. He spent much of his time working at his family's pizza shop in Lewistown, Pa. and faced his demons head on. He said he has been sober for more than two years.

Rose with Afleet Alex | Horsephotos

For a while, he didn't know if he was going to come back or not, but he never strayed too far from the sport. A few times a week, he would travel from his home in Pennsylvania to work horses for trainer Anthony Pecoraro.

“When you go away one of two things can happen,” he said. “You either forget about it completely or you start getting the itch to come back. I kept coming in and worked horses for Pecoraro. That kept me in the game a little bit. The more I did it the more I got that itch to ride again.”

He made his return on May 12 at Penn National, finishing fifth in a starter optional claimer aboard Special Beam (Divining Rod) for Pecoraro. Thirteen days later, he had his first winner since coming back, guiding Our Sweet Pea (Micromanage) to a win in a $12,500 claimer. He won again on June 1, again for Pecoraro. He entered Wednesday's card at Delaware with a record of 2-for-9 on the year.

He knows that the days of his vying for leading rider at Delaware are probably in the past.

“Do I have the ability and do I still think I can ride a smart race? Yes,” he said. “And I'm as fit as I've ever been. I don't feel like I've really aged. I'm still solid and I'm as light as I've been in years. I left the room today at 114 pounds and it's been all natural. It's not like I've been killing myself to cut weight. I think I can ride at that level. Am I going to get those horses? That is the issue. To be realistic, probably not. You have these guys at Delaware, younger riders who are good, like Jaime Rodriguez. Now that I've ridden against him a few times I can see that he is a very natural, very gifted rider. The trainers are going to go with someone like him. That's just the way it is. There are trainers I have a background with and they might give me a shot. If I'm in the top five in the standings, to me, that will be a good meet.”

After the 2005 Belmont, he never got another chance on Afleet Alex, who came down with a hairline fracture in his left front cannon bone and was retired. He knows it's highly unlikely that he'll ever get a mount like that again. But there's no point in fixating on his past, the good or the bad. He'll watch the Belmont on television Saturday and try to win some races at Delaware Park. There will be no complaints.

The post After Battling Substance Abuse Issues, Belmont Winner Jeremy Rose Launches a Comeback appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights