Caramel Swirl, Maryquitecontrary Among Dozen Princess Rooney Invitees

Graded stakes winners Caramel Swirl and Maryquitecontrary as well as four-time Florida stakes winner R Adios Jersey, top a dozen horses on the main list for the $200,000 Princess Rooney Invitational (G3) Oct. 7 at Gulfstream Park.

The seven-furlong Princess Rooney for fillies and mares is a “Win and You're In” qualifier for the $1-million Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) Nov. 4 at Santa Anita.

Godolphin homebred Caramel Swirl, trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, won the 6 ½-furlong Vagrancy (G3) May 14 at Belmont Park in just her second start in nearly nine months. The 5-year-old Union Rags mare won the Raven Run (G2) in 2021 and was second to champion Goodnight Olive in the Ballerina (G1) last summer, a race where she had her most recent start, finishing fourth behind another champion in Echo Zulu Aug. 26.

Rodney Lundock's Florida homebred Maryquitecontrary, seventh in the Ballerina, has been right at home at Gulfstream with six wins and a second from seven career tries. The 4-year-old First Dude filly put together a five-race win streak starting last summer that included wins in the one-mile Rampart on the final day of 2022 and the seven-furlong Inside Information (G2) Jan. 28. Her streak was snapped when she ran second to Goodnight Olive in the April 8 Madison (G1) at Keeneland.

Averill Racing, ATM Racing and Jayson Werth's R Adios Jersey, also bred in Florida, exits a front-running 6 ½-length triumph in the seven-furlong Sheer Drama Aug. 19 at Gulfstream, where she has a record of 4-2-2 from 10 starts. Fourth in the Inside Information, the 5-year-old Adios Charlie mare has also registered three state-bred stakes wins at Tampa Bay Downs, the most recent coming in the seven-furlong FTBOA City of Ocala last December.

Also among the main invitees are Beth's Dream, winner of the one-mile Heavenly Cause April 15 at Laurel Park that is 4-for-7 lifetime at Gulfstream; Flakes, winner of Gulfstream's 6 ½-furlong Game Face June 17; stakes winner Funny How, second in the April 7 Distaff Handicap (G2) at Aqueduct; Last Leaf, a four-time stakes winner at Gulfstream that is twice Grade 3-placed; and Chilean Group 2 winner Yuki.

Four horses are on the reserve list of invitations including Flag Woman and Into Happiness, both riding three-race win streaks, and Miss New York, winner of the July 2 Boiling Springs at Monmouth Park.

The Princess Rooney was won the past two years by Ce Ce, who used her 2021 victory as a springboard to victory in the Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint and the Eclipse Award as champion female sprinter.

Run at Calder Race Course from 1983 to 2013 before being relocated to Gulfstream, the Princess Rooney honors the 1984 champion older female and 1991 inductee into the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame that won 17 of 21 career starts and more than $1.3 million in purses from 1982-84. Five of her wins came in Grade 1 stakes – the 1982 Frizette, 1983 Kentucky Oaks and 1984 Vanity, Spinster and Breeders' Cup Distaff.

$200,000 Princess Rooney Invitational (G3) List

Beth's Dream

Bluefield

Caramel Swirl

Dr B

Flakes

Funny How

Last Leaf

Maryquitecontrary

Olivia Darling

Poiema

R Adios Jersey

Yuki (CHI)

Reserve Invitees in Alphabetical Order

Flag Woman

Into Happiness

Miss New York

Three Witches

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‘Hoping To Go To The Breeders’ Cup’: Nobody Listens Takes Turf Monster On Front End

Nobody Listens, a 5-year-old Indiana-bred gelding, won his second consecutive turf race when he captured Saturday's $250,000 Turf Monster Stakes (G3) over a yielding course at Parx Racing.

Ridden by Tyler Gaffalione, Nobody Listens went to the front from the start of the five-furlong turf stakes and was never headed.

Trained by Tim Eggleston, who is based at Horseshoe Indianapolis, Nobody Listens improved his record to three wins in seven career starts on grass. The Turf Monster was his second straight win on the Parx lawn after taking the Parx Dash at five furlongs Aug. 22.

The son of Conveyance has 14 wins in 26 career starts. He is owned by Matt Kwiatkowski, Jason Kaylor, and Roger Browning.

Gaffalione gunned Nobody Listens out of the gate and carved out fractions of :23.80 and :48.46. He was pursued down the backstretch by 24-1 longshot Smooth B, trained by Butch Reid Jr. and ridden by Mychel Sanchez. Gaffalione let Nobody Listens out a notch as the field came into the stretch and he responded, spurting away to win by three lengths. The 3-1 second choice in the field of 10 won in 1:01.40 and paid $8.20.

Smooth B held second, two lengths ahead of Roses for Debra, one of two fillies in the field and the 3-5 favorite.

Five Dreams, Alexis S, Determined Kingdom, Surprise Boss, Just Jeremy, All That Magic (the other filly in the race) and Patriarch Artie completed the order of finish.

Nobody Listens was bred by Southern Chase Farm Inc., Karen Dodd, and Greg Dodd. His dam is the Chapel Royal mare Royalesque. Kwiatkowski landed him for $40,000 at the 2020 OBS Spring Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, where Southern Chase Farm consigned him.

Turf Monster Quotes:

Winning jockey Tyler Gafflione: “He broke alertly, just go from the one hole just let my horse around and just let him run his race.”

Winning co-owner Roger Browning: On going to the lead: “That was the plan. Get on it and go. Tyler (Gaffalione) had never ridden him before but he did his homework and he came to us and told us what he wanted to do and we let him do it. Just go. He's tough. He's an Indiana-bred we bought at the Ocala Breeders' Sales as a 2-year-old in training. Ever since, he's just been amazing. We knew we had a nice speed horse. We just brought him to Indiana and let him win a couple of stakes there. And when he developed, we started him out on the trail.”

On a possible start on the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint: “We planned it out to avoid all the big boys for right now. And now we're here and we're hoping to go to the Breeders' Cup.”

Winning co-owner Matt Kwiatkowski: “Pretty lucky to have an Indiana-bred that can run like this. We have a great trainer. We had a great jockey with Tyler today, who picked up the mount with Luis (Saez) down (with an injury). He did a great job, had a plan to be aggressive and took it to them and ran a great race. He loved it obviously.”

Any concerns about the soft turf? “I was nervous. He's never really run on soft turf and you never really know until they do it. Ran great.”

Would this win make you think about the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint? “You never know. After that race we'll see what the number is and what comes next. He's in good form and doing great right now.”

Was it the plan to go to the front? “That was Tyler's plan and he's a great rider so I'm not going to tell him to do anything different.”

Trainer Butch Reid (Smooth B, second): “He ran really great. He's a tough old bird. It looks like he'll run over anything, and it seems he likes the soft turf, too. We're real happy with his effort.”

Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. (3-5 favorite Roses for Debra, third): “The ground didn't help her, for sure. It's hard to make up ground on that turf course the way it is. It's been raining a lot. I know my filly and she was going comfortably. When I asked, it was impossible to make up ground. She can pick it up, she's trying, but it was too much.”

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Arcangelo ‘Maintaining Bottom Line Fitness’ For Breeders’ Cup Classic

Blue Rose Farm's dual Grade 1-winner Arcangelo breezed five-eighths Friday over the Oklahoma training track at Saratoga Race Course in preparation for the Grade 1, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic on November 4 at Santa Anita Park.

Trained by Jena Antonucci and piloted through the breeze by Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, the Arrogate grey worked solo at 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

“Lovely 5/8 maintenance breeze today for #Arcangelo on the Oklahoma track in Saratoga. 103.25 with a gallop out in a smooth 117.13,” noted Antonucci on X [the website formerly known as Twitter].

A maiden winner at third asking in March at Gulfstream Park, Arcangelo won his stakes debut in the nine-furlong Grade 3 Peter Pan in May at Belmont before taking the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets on June 10 as Antonucci became the first female trainer to win a Triple Crown race. The 1 1/2-length score over the reigning Champion 2-Year-Old Colt Forte provided Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano with a first win in the “Test of the Champion.”

Arcangelo trained up to Grade 1, $1.25 million Travers on August 26 at Saratoga Race Course and 11 weeks after his Belmont coup he cemented his place atop the 3-year-old division with a one-length score over Disarm. The victory marked a record-extending seventh Travers score for Castellano following victories with Bernardini [2006], Afleet Express [2010], Stay Thirsty [2011], V.E. Day [2014], Keen Ice [2015] and Catholic Boy [2018].

Antonucci, who is currently in Florida where she has a number of horses entered at Gulfstream Park, watched video of the breeze which was the second for Arcangelo following his Travers score having worked a half-mile in 47.62 seconds on September 12 over the Spa main track under exercise rider Robert Mallari.

“Everything was good. It was what we were looking for – it was just a maintenance work today. It's too soon for serious stuff,” Antonucci said. “He had one previous breeze after the race and this one is just maintaining bottom line fitness for him.”

Antonucci said she was pleased that Castellano made the trip to Saratoga for the breeze as Arcangelo is slated to ship to California on Wednesday.

“I think it was important for Javier as well knowing our next move is out to California and that will make it harder for him,” Antonucci said. “He and Robert have a very good relationship and can communicate very well about how the horse is doing and feeling. I think it was good for everybody to let Javier get a good feel of him after the Travers and make sure he was happy with where everything is.”

Arcangelo, a $35,000 purchase at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, has banked in excess of $1.7 million through a record of 6-4-1-0.

Antonucci said the sizable ridgling has exited his Travers score in good order.

“He does continue to mature and take his work very seriously,” Antonucci said. “I think he's enjoying it and having a lot of fun with everything. Our focus is that he maintains that mindset and is thriving in what we're asking of him.

“He's a tall drink of water and you can physically see he continues to put more body on and hasn't lost weight with the races,” Antonucci added. “So, he'll just continue to mature out as he's supposed to do.”

Bred in Kentucky by Don Alberto Corporation, Arcangelo is out of the Tapit mare Modeling, whose second dam, Better Than Honour, produced Belmont Stakes winners Jazil [2006] and Rags to Riches [2007].

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Breeders’ Cup Launches 40 Days Of Giving Fundraising Campaign

Breeders' Cup Limited today announced the launch of 40 Days of Giving, a fundraising program that puts key Thoroughbred industry charities in the spotlight as the countdown continues to the 40th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships Nov. 3-4 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California.

Designed to raise funds for a variety of important causes within the Thoroughbred industry, Breeders' Cup Charities' 40 Days of Giving campaign highlights the vital work of nonprofits in the following areas: aftercare, jockey health and wellness, backstretch and industry workers, equine services, diversity and education, and research.

Throughout the program, designated charities and their selected donors – who will show support for each cause by offering a match of up to $1,000 on their dedicated day – will be featured at Breederscup.com/Giving. Funds raised on each of the beneficiaries' dedicated days will go directly to the designated charity.

Breeders' Cup will match up to $20,000 on the 40th day of the program, Oct. 30, with the intention of raising $40,000 in honor of the Breeders' Cup's 40th running. Funds raised on the 40th day will be distributed evenly to all 40 Days of Giving charities. The donation pages will remain open through the Breeders' Cup World Championships.

“Since our founding, Breeders' Cup has worked to find innovative ways to give back to the industry,” said Drew Fleming, President and CEO of Breeders' Cup Limited. “It couldn't be more appropriate to celebrate our 40th running with this important initiative. We thank the donors who have stepped up to support this program and we look forward to the public joining in support of these vital industry charities.”

Donors scheduled to participate include Bob Babbage, Barbara Banke, Bluewater Sales, Brook Ledge, Brookside Nursery, Stuart Brown II DVM, Javier Castellano, CJ Thoroughbreds, Alan Cooper, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Double L Racing, Steve Duncker, Gainesway Farm, Tyler Gaffalione, Hallway Feeds, Lawrence Herring, Juan Hernandez, Fred Hertrich III, Hronis Racing, Lane's End, Patrick Masson, Nathan McCauley, Old Smoke Clothing Co., Rancho Temescal, Stephen Reed DVM, Thomas Riddle DVM & Margaret Riddle, Gino Roncelli, Jaime Roth, Saratoga Spring Water, Mike Smith, Spendthrift Farm, Sterling Thompson Equine Insurance, John Velazquez, Elliott & Rebecca Walden, West Point Thoroughbreds, and WinStar Farm.

For official guidelines and to donate, visit http://www.breederscup.com/Giving.

From its ground-breaking debut of multi-million-dollar races in 1984 to record-setting triumphs in the modern era, the rich heritage of the Breeders' Cup is woven into horse racing's history. The 40th running campaign, marked by the slogan “It Runs Deep,” highlights 39 years of international competition and resulting champions via innovative fan and participant engagement opportunities across multiple platforms and on-site at Santa Anita Park. For more information, fans can visit BreedersCup.com/40.

40 Days of Giving Selected Charity Partners

California Thoroughbred Horsemen's Foundation

The California Thoroughbred Horsemen's Foundation (“CTHF”) is a 501c-3 registered charitable trust. Since 1984, CTHF has provided for the healthcare needs of backstretch workers, and their families, at California racetracks and training centers, with on-site clinics, offering primary healthcare at most venues. Our mission is “to improve the quality of lives for backstretch workers.”  We accomplish this, not only through our healthcare programs, but by offering and/or financially supporting programs and activities to better balance the lives of these hard-working individuals. www.cthfcares.org

Ed Brown Society

The mission of the Ed Brown Society (EBS) is to celebrate the rich history of African-Americans in the equine industry and to create opportunities for young people of color to gain industry exposure, training and experience. EBS offers scholarships and internships to students who demonstrate interest, skills and commitment to become trainers, farm managers, equine veterinarians, bloodstock agents and business professionals in all aspects of the thoroughbred industry. www.Edbrownsociety.org

Edwin J. Gregson Foundation

The Edwin J. Gregson Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization established to develop programs to benefit and enhance the quality of life of California thoroughbred horse racing's backstretch workers and their family members. Named in memory of veteran trainer Edwin J. Gregson, who was the initial driving force in its establishment, the Foundation has been in existence since 2000. The major focus of the Foundation is to provide scholarship grants to college-bound individuals, as well as supports other important programs for backstretch workers, such as English as a Second Language and literacy classes, and recreation, sports, and social activities. For more information visit www.gregsonfoundation.com  or follow on X @calgregson.

The Foundation for the Horse

For 29 years, providing care and compassion through Veterinary Scholarships, Equine Research, Disaster Relief, and Equitarian Projects. The Foundation seeks a world in which every horse, everywhere, has a healthy and productive life. www.foundationforthehorse.org

Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation

Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation is traditionally the nation's leading source of private funding for equine medical research that benefits all breeds of horses. Since 1940, the foundation has provided more than $40 million to fund more than 426 projects at 45 universities in North America and overseas. Additional information about the foundation is available at grayson-jockeyclub.org.

National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame

Established in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in 1950, the mission of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame is to preserve and promote the history of Thoroughbred racing in America and honor the sport's most accomplished participants in the Official National Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame. www.racingmuseum.org

Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund

The PDJF is a 501(c)(3) charity providing financial assistance to approximately 60 former jockeys who have suffered catastrophic on-track injuries. Founded in 2006, the PDJF has disbursed over $13 million dollars to permanently disabled jockeys, most of whom have sustained paralysis or traumatic brain injuries. The Fund is a cooperative effort among racetracks, jockeys, horsemen, owners, and racing fans. Visit www.pdjf.org for further information.

Race Track Chaplaincy of America

From the backside to the boardroom, the Race Track Chaplaincy of America (RTCA) exponentially improves the lives of the 400,000+ individuals of the horse racing industry through the love of Christ.  As an evangelical Christian ministry, RTCA Chaplains, Councils, and volunteers accomplish this vision by teaching, preaching, and meeting the spiritual, emotional, physical, social, and educational needs of everyone involved in horse racing.  For more information about RTCA, go to www.rtcanational.org.

The Jockey Club Safety Net Foundation

The Jockey Club Safety Net Foundation is a charitable trust that provides, on a confidential basis, financial relief to needy members of the Thoroughbred industry and their families. Recipients of the Safety Net Foundation's support represent virtually every facet of the Thoroughbred industry, from jockeys, trainers, exercise riders, and grooms to office personnel and other employees of racetracks, racing organizations, and breeding farms. Assistance can come in any number of forms, including financial aid for basic living expenses such as rent and household bills, and for medication, surgical, and hospital costs. Since 1985, The Jockey Club Safety Net Foundation has provided more than $16 million in assistance. www.tjcfoundation.org

Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance & CARMA

Based in Lexington, KY, Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that accredits, inspects, and awards grants to approved aftercare organizations to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbreds using industry-wide funding. Along with continued funding from its original partners Breeders' Cup, The Jockey Club, and Keeneland Association, Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is supported by owners, trainers, breeders, racetracks, aftercare professionals, and other industry members. Since inception in 2012, Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance has granted more than $28.1 million to accredited aftercare organizations. Currently 81 aftercare organizations comprised of approximately 180 facilities across North America have been granted accreditation. To learn more about Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, visit ThoroughbredAftercare.org.

CARMA (California Retirement Management Account) is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to assisting Thoroughbred rehabilitation and retirement organizations. CARMA provides essential support to ensure the care and retraining of racehorses who have concluded their careers in California. By managing and disbursing funds to qualified retirement facilities, CARMA enables retired racehorses to enjoy fulfilling second careers and secure futures.

Winners Foundation

Winners Foundation is an employee assistance program (EAP) serving the California horse racing industry. An employee assistance program helps employees with personal problems that may impact their job performance, health, and mental and emotional well-being. We provide a variety of services for all employees licensed with the California Horse Racing Board and any family members of the licensee. Our team is dedicated to assuring that each employee and/or family member is comfortable and safe. We are bound by strict confidentiality guidelines in providing services. www.winnersfoundation.org

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