Cooke Creek, Buff Hello Lead List of James F. Lewis III Nominees

Undefeated stakes winners Cooke Creek and Run to Daylight, and the top six finishers from the Maryland Million Nursery led by winner Buff Hello, are among 30 horses nominated to the $100,000 James F. Lewis III for 2-year-olds Saturday, Nov. 13 at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

The Lewis and $100,000 Smart Halo for 2-year-old fillies, both sprinting six furlongs, are joined on the Nov. 13 program by the $100,000 Thirty Eight Go Go for fillies and mares 3 and up going 1 1/16 miles, which is part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series.

Cheyenne Stables' Cooke Creek is 2-0 for Laurel-based trainer Jeremiah O'Dwyer. The son of 2010 champion juvenile male Uncle Mo earned both his victories at Delaware Park in Wilmington, Del., including the one-mile Rocky Run Oct. 16 over Affable Monarch and No Sabe Nada, also Lewis nominees.

David Raim's Run to Daylight, by 2015 champion sprinter Runhappy, has won each of his three starts at Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races in Charlestown, W. Va., for trainer Jeff Runco, with back-to-back stakes triumphs in the 4 ½-furlong Henry Murcer Memorial Sept. 18 and 6 ½-furlong West Virginia Vincent Moscarelli Memorial Breeders' Classic Oct. 9.

Joseph Besecker's Buff Hello, from the barn of Maryland's four-time leading trainer Claudio Gonzalez, rolled to a front-running two-length score in the six-furlong Nursery Oct. 23 at Laurel, his second win from five career starts. Coastal Mission, Local Motive, Shady Munni, Mr. Mox, and Timonium Juvenile winner Cynergy's Star respectively ran second through sixth and are also nominated, though Mr. Mox is entered Nov. 4 at Laurel.

Other Lewis nominees include Oct. 11 Fitz Dixon Jr. Memorial Juvenile winner Longshadow; Sept. 25 First State Dash winner No Sabe Nada; stakes-placed Amidships, Practical Coach, Slaats, and Wow Whata Summer; and last out winners Barber Road, Beast Or Famine, Captain Chazz, Defend, Kenner, Radical Right, Tops the Chart, Trust Daddy, and Uncle Irish.

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Bird Mobberley's Buff My Boots, half-length winner of the Maryland Million Lassie Oct. 23 at Laurel, is prominent among 25 nominees to the Smart Halo. The Buffum filly owns three wins from five starts for Laurel-based trainer John Salzman Jr. Sparkle Sprinkle and Luna Belle, respectively third and fourth in the Lassie, are also nominated.

Other nominees include James McIngvale homebred Runup, a winner of two straight including the one-mile Sorority Sept. 6 at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J., before finishing ninth in the Oct. 8 Grade 1 Alcibiades at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky.; stakes-placed Advocate Harbor, Morning Matcha, and Whiteknuckleflyer; and last out winners Beneath the Stars, Buy the Best, Click to Confirm, Disco Ebo, Intrepid Daydream, Louella Street, Preparefortakeoff, and Trade Secret.

Chilean Group 2 winner Cheetara and Grade 1-placed Off Topic are among 21 nominees to the Thirty Eight Go Go. Stud Los Leones' Cheetara won the Haras de Chile Marcel Zarour Atanacio (G2) last December and exits a Keeneland allowance victory Oct. 24. D Hatman Thoroughbreds' Off Topic was third in the Grade 2 Gazelle and Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks as a 3-year-old in 2019 for previous trainer Todd Pletcher. Now with Phil Schoenthal, she made her comeback off an 11-month layoff Sept. 18 at Laurel.

Multiple stakes winners Artful Splatter, Kiss the Girl, and Mrs. Orb; and stakes winners Ask Bailey, Josie, Malibu Beauty, Miss Leslie, Trolley Ride, and Sweet Willemina, who has reeled off six straight wins since being claimed by trainer Scott Lake June 17, are also nominated.

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Buff Hello Wins Maryland Million Nursery At Laurel

In a crowded race loaded with speed, no one could catch Buff Hello.

Joseph Besecker's Buff Hello ($13) broke running from his inside draw and never looked back, sprinting clear to a two-length triumph in Saturday's $100,000 Maryland Million Nursery at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

The Nursery for 2-year-olds and Lassie for 2-year-old fillies, each contested at six furlongs, were among eight stakes and four starter stakes on the 36th Jim McKay Maryland Million program, 'Maryland's Day at the Races' celebrating the progeny of stallions standing in the state.

It was the sixth career Maryland Million win for trainer Claudio Gonzalez and second of the day for 18-year-old jockey Charlie Marquez, who also captured the Turf Starter Handicap to kick off the Maryland Million program. The winning time for the Nursery was 1:10.51 over a fast main track.

“It was not an easy race, especially with the [post] position we had today. The [rail] position is really hard, especially with [14] horses and a lot of horses that have speed,” Gonzalez said. “The good thing about Charlie is, he listens. He warmed up the horse really good, he broke and rushed up and took the lead, and he did the right thing. He stayed on the rail and he won the race.”

A maiden special weight winner July 31 at historic Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md., where he also led from start to finish, Buff Hello entered the Nursery off a sixth-place finish in the one-mile Sapling Sept. 5 at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J. Marquez wasted no time getting the Buffum colt involved, hustling to the front and posting fractions of :22.12 and :45.21 with Hickory Tree winner Local Motive and narrow 7-2 favorite Mr. Mox alternating in second.

Buff Hello remained in command as the field straightened for home and was set down for a drive by Marquez, opening up after going five furlongs in :57.62. Coastal Mission came with a run on the far outside to edge Local Motive by a neck for second, with Buff Hello's stablemate, Shady Munni, another 2 ½ lengths back in fourth.

“He had the blinkers on and I know, watching the replays, he kind of looked like a little lazy of a lazy horse, so we warmed him up good. I sent him out of there and he's the kind of horse you have to keep on going the whole way. He really dug in deep today,” Marquez said. “I got headed at the top of the stretch but I knew that I had a lot of horse, and coming to the wire was a great feeling.”

Buff Hello was purchased for $26,000 as a yearling last fall at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium, Md. He was making his Laurel debut after racing twice each at Monmouth and Pimlico, where he was beaten a neck in a July 11 maiden special weight by Mr. Mox.

“I was really confident with both my horses in here. [Shady Munni got] bumped really hard in the gate and that's why he finished fourth. But, doesn't happen maybe he's there, too,” Gonzalez said. “Buff Hello, all the time he showed he had talent, that's why I gave him a chance in the stake at Monmouth. That day we didn't get lucky, but today he proved he had talent.”

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Claudio Gonzalez Records 1,000th Career Victory

On his way to leading all Maryland trainers in wins for a fifth consecutive year, Claudio Gonzalez earned his 1,000th career victory when MCA Racing Stable's He's a Shooter rolled to his third straight triumph in Thursday's seventh race at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

Ridden by Kevin Gomez, He's a Shooter ($5.60) was sent off as the 9-5 favorite in a field of seven. He ran seven furlongs on a fast main track in 1:23.80 to win the entry-level allowance for 3-year-olds and up by 6 ¼ lengths. It was Gonzalez's only starter of the day.

“It's special. It's not easy to win one race, but to win 1,000 races is something special,” Gonzalez said by phone from his native Chile, where he watched Thursday's race with his parents. “I came last week to celebrate my mother and father and today is my last day here. I was waiting a week for 1,000 and on my last day, we did it.”

Breaking from the far outside, Gomez positioned He's a Shooter, a 3-year-old gelded son of noted Maryland sire Great Notion, in the clear three wide as 18-1 long shot Benandjoe went the opening quarter-mile in 23.30 seconds with Going to the Lead racing third in between the two leaders. He's a Shooter rolled up to challenge and take the lead midway around the turn, straightened for home in front and opened up through the lane.

He's a Shooter has now won three of his four starts since returning from a four-month freshening in August. His win streak has come by 28 ½ combined lengths.

“He needed some time off and once he came back he proved that he's a nice horse,” Gonzalez said. “Kevin did a good job. He got good position on the outside and there wasn't a lot of speed, so he did the right thing and kept him just off the lead and rode him just right.”

Gonzalez, a 44-year-old cancer survivor, has been Maryland's overall leading trainer by wins since he relocated full-time from New Jersey in 2017. He owns or shares 17 training titles between Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course, including both full meets in 2021 – Laurel's winter stand and the extended Preakness Meet at Pimlico.

Based at Laurel, Gonzalez has won stakes this year in Maryland with Harpers First Ride in the Deputed Testamony, Miss Leslie in the Weber City Miss, and Completed Pass in the King T. Leatherbury.

“It's not only me. All my team does a really good job,” Gonzalez said. “We do the right thing with the horses all the time and try every day to get better and better. I want to say thank you to everyone. Everyone sees my name there but there's a lot of people behind me.”

Gonzalez originally aspired to be a jockey until he grew too big. He first came to the U.S. as a teenager in November 1995 and soon found work galloping for countryman Juan Serey, New Jersey's leading trainer at the time, staying until 2002.

Following a short stint under trainer Gary Contessa, Gonzalez landed with another leading New Jersey trainer in Ben Perkins Jr. Among the top horses that came along during their time together were multiple graded-stakes winners Wildcat Heir and Wild Gams, Grade 3 winner Max Forever and popular local 12-time stakes-winning millionaire Joey P.

While with Perkins, Gonzalez missed six months after being diagnosed with testicular cancer in 2008. Following surgery and treatment, he has been in remission since.

According to Equibase statistics, Gonzalez's first career win came at Laurel with Quiet Tiara on Nov. 14, 2012. He went out on his own the following year and scored his first stakes victory with Princess Perfect in the Jersey Girl Handicap Sept. 21, 2013 at Monmouth Park.

Gonzalez has reached the $1 million mark in season purse earnings every year since 2013 with a high of $5.2 million to go along with 154 wins in 2020. He won a career-best 174 races in 2019.

A multiple stakes winner over his career, Gonzalez has three graded victories on his resume – the 2017 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G3) with Chublicious, and the historic Pimlico Special (G3) with Harpers First Ride and Charles Town Oaks (G3) with Fly On Angel, both in 2020.

Other stakes winners for Gonzalez include Afleet Willy, Never Stop Looking, Sweet On Smokey, Completed Pass, Eastern Bay, Lebda, Behemoth, My Magician, Next Best Thing and Miss Leslie.

“When I started, I just wanted to win my first race,” Gonzalez said. “After that, like I say all the time, if you work hard, you're going to win races.”

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Maryland Horsemen Navigate New Corticosteroid Guidelines In Wake Of Lab Switch

At a virtual meeting on Sept. 28, Maryland horsemen tried to understand what the newest change in corticosteroid testing in the state will mean for them. The Maryland Racing Commission last week approved a motion to remove testing thresholds for five different corticosteroids and begin using the laboratory's limit of detection for all five drugs.

While that sounds like a big change, experts on the call said it's mostly intended to bring testing into line with the regulations the commission approved in 2019.

In the wake of the Santa Anita fatality spike of 2018-19, The Stronach Group and the California Horse Racing Board determined that backing out the last acceptable administration for intra-articular corticosteroids and other drugs was beneficial to equine safety, because it reduced the likelihood that the drugs could cloud a veterinarian's assessment of a horse pre-race and also the chance for a horse with an underlying problem to continue running. In 2019, with this background in mind, Maryland adopted Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) model rules backing up the administration of intra-articular corticosteroids including prednisolone, betamethasone, isoflupredone and triamcinolone, from seven days pre-race to 14 days pre-race.

The problem, officials say, is that the testing laboratory contracted at that time — Truesdail Laboratories of Irvine, Calif., — did not change the threshold they used to determine whether a sample was positive for corticosteroids or not. From that regulation change in 2019 until April 2021 when the contract expired, it was illegal to give the drugs in the joint closer than 14 days pre-race, but the only way the commission could have caught someone was through surveillance, or if they turned in a treatment sheet showing an administration in the prohibited timeframe. Testing was only going to pick up an administration within one week.

(This wasn't the first or only issue racing jurisdictions discovered with Truesdail, which in 2015 was the subject of a quality control audit by the Indiana Horse Racing Commission which found that seven positive tests were missed over a 26-day period.)

When Industrial Laboratories of Wheat Ridge, Colo., began testing for Maryland, it implemented a threshold that would catch corticosteroids at 14 days. The lab also implemented thresholds to match the 72-hour withdrawal requirement given for intramuscular or intravenous administration of dexamethasone, which is also a corticosteroid.

That's when there were a handful of high-profile positives, including one from trainer Claudio Gonzalez. Gonzalez and others told the commission they had been giving dexamethasone inside the 72-hour window but at a lower dose and had previously had no trouble with positives.

The trouble with using a threshold, according to Racing Medication and Testing Consortium executive director Dr. Mary Scollay and The Stronach Group's equine medical director Dr. Dionne Benson, is people get focused on the threshold itself. (And some trainers like Gonzalez figure out how to beat thresholds by giving lesser doses closer in to races.) What regulators are hoping trainers will begin doing instead is following withdrawal guidelines.

“It quite frankly is the best and only way to regulate these drugs,” said Alan Foreman, chairman of the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

By removing thresholds, track officials and the commission believe they can more precisely recognize when someone has violated administration rules. Now, these corticosteroids will be tested at the limit of laboratory detection — which the laboratory generally does not want to publish. All the public knows is that limit of detection is greater than 0. British data suggests that the safest timeframe for IV or IM dexamethasone administration in a “limit of detection” scenario is five days. Scollay stressed that it isn't illegal for trainers to give that drug through either IV or IM injection at 72 hours, but that could come with an increased risk of a positive test. It's also true, however, that different labs have different limits of detection, and that should be worrying to horsemen who travel.

“You should not, with confidence, cross state lines and say I was giving it at 72 hours in Maryland and I'm going to be ok in California doing it the same way, because chances are you may not,” she said. “Their limit of detection may be lower … that's where the five-day guidance comes in. It gives you that added safety for labs that may have a lower limit of detection.”

Intra-articular corticosteroid injections are regulated by date of administration, not lab results, though lab results can help regulators catch someone breaking the rules on those.

According to Benson, these changes will go into effect Nov. 2. At that point, the lab will begin reporting whatever corticosteroids it can see in a sample.

“The risk [of a positive test] is no different than it has been,” said veterinarian Dr. Tom Bowman, who chairs the Equine Safety Health and Welfare Advisory Committee of the Maryland Racing Commission. “The level of awareness [is] — you now know that five days out is safer than three days.”

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