Not Enough Jockeys For ‘Quality Racing Product’ Causes Del Mar Cancellation

On Wednesday, when Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (DMTC) announced the cancellation of this weekend’s three days of racing in the aftermath of 15 asymptomatic jockeys there testing positive for COVID-19, the chief reason listed in the track’s press release was “to help ensure the safety of all workers at Del Mar and our surrounding community.”

But in a Thursday teleconference organized by the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) that featured Del Mar executives explaining their decision not to race, the focal point centered not so much on preventing the spread of the disease, but on whether or not there would have been enough qualified replacements to take the mounts vacated by the quarantined jockeys.

“We felt it was the prudent thing to do,” said Josh Rubinstein, the president of Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, at the outset of the call. “We just wouldn’t have enough riders to put on a quality racing product that you as owners are used to in California and that our customers are used to wagering on.”

A few minutes later, when the teleconference was opened up to questions from the 141 participants listening in, the very first query was from owner Billy Koch, who asked Rubinstein to clarify whether the primary reason for the cancellation “wasn’t that we couldn’t find other jockeys, it was that we were more concerned with how it would actually look.”

Rubinstein’s reply was “That’s partially accurate. We debated several scenarios [like] bringing in northern California riders. That was challenging, as they had been named on horses up north.”

Rubinstein also explained that after the 15 positive tests, the Del Mar pool of regular riders was down to about 12. And when track management announced on July 15 that a new health protocol will prohibit jockeys from entering the backstretch to exercise horses, three of those “not big-name riders” opted to keep working as per-diem exercise riders in the mornings rather than accept mounts as in the afternoons.

“So that took the number down from 12 to about nine, so it would have been very challenging to try to put together a card with jockeys of the quality that you owners need and what our players need to wager on.”

Several subsequent teleconference participants wanted to know why other racing jurisdictions haven’t had jockeys testing positive en masse for the coronavirus and why Del Mar only began testing riders after the outbreak was detected.

“We’re very confident of the protocols that we have in place,” Rubinstein said, alluding to “some challenges” that occurred before riders got to Del Mar.

Greg Avioli, the president and chief executive officer the Thoroughbred Owners of California, interjected with a more pointed response.

“Let me be more direct,” Avioli said. “What Josh is not saying is a number of these jockeys showed up at Del Mar having almost certainly picked up this virus when they were at Los Alamitos. So it didn’t really matter what the Del Mar protocols were at that point [because] asymptomatic jockeys showed up with the virus. I think this should be a one-time issue.”

Avioli was referencing a cluster of five jockeys who all rode at Los Alamitos Race Course on July 4 then subsequently tested positive for the virus. Those riders have been publicly acknowledged as Luis Saez, Martin Garcia, Victor Espinoza, Flavien Prat and Eduard Rojas Fernandez. Of the 15 jockey positives from the July 14 testing at Del Mar, 14 of them have been contact-traced to Los Alamitos.

“The good news is they are all currently asymptomatic,” Rubinstein said of the 15 positive-test jockeys, whom Del Mar is not naming out of respect to privacy rights.

“And based on our conversations with the county and with [the San Diego health care provider] Scripps Health, as long as they remain asymptomatic, and we’ve had contact with all 14 of the [Los Al] jockeys, they will be able to quarantine for 10 days and they will be able to ride when we resume racing next Friday, July 24.”

The starting gate crew and pony riders who accompany Thoroughbreds to the gate are scheduled to undergo COVID-19 testing on Friday, Rubinstein added. Exercise riders are not currently scheduled for testing.

When pressed by another call participant about why Del Mar did not plan for testing jockeys prior to the meet, Rubinstein explained it this way:

“We received guidance from both the county and Scripps Health. And their guidance to us [was] that there are challenges with asymptomatic testing. And their recommendation to us was to allocate resources to other things we’re doing with facial coverings, sanitizing, reconfiguring the jockeys’ room. But obviously, if somebody [shows] symptoms, you get them tested right away. That thinking changed [when] five jockeys tested positive from Los Alamitos. Then we immediately tested the riders on Tuesday.”

When a member of the media inquired as to whether the valets, who work in close quarters with the jockeys, were also tested and if any of those results came back positive, Avioli, who was moderating the teleconference, was quick to say that “this isn’t really a media call.” But he said he would “make an exception” if the DMTC executives wanted to answer the question.

A woman who did not identify herself prior to speaking then answered that all of jockeys’ room personnel were tested on Tuesday along with the riders. But she did not answer the part of the query that dealt with the results of those tests, and Avioli quickly called for the next question.

In addition to the list of new health protocols Del Mar announced on July 15 (read them here), Rubinstein said that out-of-state jockeys will not be allowed to enter the Del Mar riding colony this meet. And if they leave Del Mar to ride elsewhere, they won’t be allowed back.

With one notable exception.

“It starts when the colony is back together next week,” Rubinstein said. “So the question that you may be asking is ‘[What about] Mike Smith?'”

Smith, the in-demand Hall-of-Fame jockey, is booked to ride five graded stakes mounts Saturday at Monmouth Park, including heavily favored Authentic (Into Mischief) in the GI Haskell S. for trainer Bob Baffert.

“We had actually had conversations with Mike,” Rubinstein explained. “Mike is riding Saturday in New Jersey. If we were to [have had races] this weekend, we had Mike scheduled for a quick test at Scripps on Sunday. He would be isolated until we got the results of that test. If it was clean, then he [would have been] able to ride on Sunday. So we’re doing the same thing with Mike [but] we’re just moving it a week forward. So when Mike gets back from New Jersey we will set up a test for him at Scripps. Hopefully, it’s negative, and he will be a part of the colony.”

Other jockeys won’t have that privilege.

“They can leave, they just can’t come back–[like in the song by the Eagles] Hotel California,” Rubinstein said.

“In reverse,” quipped someone on the call more familiar with the haunting lyrics that warn, “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.”

Because of the July 17-19 cancellations, Rubinstein said Del Mar has a request pending with the California Horse Racing Board to allow the track to add a race date on Monday, July 27. In addition, Del Mar will seek to card additional races on some Fridays and Sundays.

“We don’t think it will be an issue to get approval, but we want to let folks know…that we intend to do our best to make up for the races that were lost from this weekend,” Rubinstein said.

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Tradition Remains on Unusual Saratoga Opening Day

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.–Just like always, the bell in the winner’s circle was rung 17 minutes before every race at the Spa Thursday afternoon.

Of course. Exactly 17 minutes.

Even on the most unusual of opening days at Saratoga Race Course, tradition was served. It is Saratoga after all. Phil Linguiti did the honors, yanking the strap that moved the clapper to produce the sound. Linguiti, a former jockey and longtime white cap in the clubhouse, is a familiar figure at Saratoga. Since this 152nd season is racing in Saratoga Springs is being conducted without spectators due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Linguiti wasn’t needed in the empty box seats and became the masked bell man for the day.

The bell is a relic to a bygone era at a track that knows bygone well. Legend has it that the bell was used as a signal to trainers to bring their horses from the barns on the backstretch to be saddled under the trees behind the clubhouse. Trainers no longer have to rely on the bell for guidance, but the bell remains. Though the winner’s circle is no longer just simply a circle of chalk on the dirt racing surface near the finish line and huge video screens in the infield provide the tote information, fortunately some things don’t change at Saratoga.

Linguiti and the bell were a link to the past on a day that a link was welcome. Under overcast skies with a consistent light breeze there was very little connection to even the most low-key racing day at Saratoga in the past 40 or 50 years, certainly not the always-festive opener of the season. With only a small collection of horsemen and essential staff permitted on the grounds, it was eerily quiet aside from the in-house feed of public address announcer John Imbriale. Aside from the time that the horses were on the track, it was easy to forget that the season was officially in session.

While we are accustomed to seeing thousands of empty seats at Aqueduct and Belmont Park and at other major tracks, the sight of a completely empty Saratoga was, at the very least, odd. It’s not accurate to call it shocking because we have known for weeks that it had to be spectator-free to be open at all, but it was different. Still, historic Saratoga is open, giving owners and horsemen the opportunity to stay in business and compete. Even though there were no fans in the seats at the track and no action at the windows, the New York Racing Association has a wildly popular simulcast brand that will produce millions of dollars in betting handle during the 40-day meet. It did $19.1 million Thursday.

After Drawing Away Stable’s Grit and Glory (Malibu Moon) won the first race, veteran Linda Rice, still the only woman to capture a Saratoga training title, provided some perspective: “It’s very strange, but winning is still the same. Whether it’s Belmont or Saratoga, it’s exciting to win a race. The horsemen, like myself and my peers, are so happy to be back racing. We just need to support the industry. But we really miss the fans. It’s just not the same without them, and I sure hope when we come here next year that they are here with us.”

Grit and Glory was ridden by 23-year-old apprentice jockey Luis Cardenas, who for a while had a perfect record at Saratoga Race Course. Winning his Spa debut was akin to hitting a home run in his first at bat in the majors and the smiling Cardenas relished the moment: “This is a dream come true,” he said. “It another check off on the bucket list.”

Cardenas is a native of Peru and has lived in the U.S. for a about a decade. He worked as an exercise rider for a number of years and launched his career as a jockey in December. He said he was injured last summer and spent his recovery time watching races from Saratoga.

“It’s exciting. It’s my first year here and to win the first race at Saratoga it means a lot to me,” he said. “This is my first time at Saratoga. Even driving here, my heart was pumping really fast.”

Ohio-based trainer Tim Hamm picked up his first Saratoga stakes victory in the GIII Schuylerville S. when Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) cruised to a six-length victory and paid $41.60.

“It’s great. Couldn’t be better,” Hamm said. “I wish there were 100,000 people here to enjoy it with, but it’s awesome.”

Hamm said the absence of fans in the stands did not diminish the victory for him.

“We’re so grateful as horsemen, and I’m sure everyone in the industry is, just to be here and able to race,” he said. “It doesn’t take anything out of it for me. There would probably be a bigger party downtown tonight if it was full of people, but other than that it’s great.”

Jockey Junior Alvarado picked up the mount on Dayoutoftheoffice and made the most of the opportunity. He said the empty stands made him appreciate Saratoga even more.

“When you come to Saratoga there are two things you are looking for,” Alvarado said. “One of the main things is to get horses like this, 2-year-olds, nice horses to keep going and win the big races. The second thing is the fans. There is nothing like the fans here in Saratoga. Even when you don’t win a race, you come back and people congratulate you still. They give you high fives. They keep your spirit up. That one of the things we are missing and hopefully we won’t take it for granted anymore.”

Three-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown is a native of Mechanicville, about 17 miles south of Saratoga, and spent many days in his youth with his family at the track. In 2008, he hit one out of the park, winning with the very first horse he saddled at his home track. Now one of the premier horsemen in the world, he has secured three of the last four Spa training titles. After Country Grammer (Tonalist) gave him a victory in the GIII Peter Pan S., Brown talked about this summer at Saratoga.

“It’s really nice to win this race but definitely a bittersweet day when this beautiful place is empty where I grew up,” he said. “We’ll try to get through the meet and hold out hope that maybe it will open more during the meet, but there’s no guarantees about that. We’ll do the best we can and we’re grateful they’re running here. Hopefully, this is the only year we have to do this.”

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Limited Number Of Owners To Be Permitted At Saratoga On Race Day

Following updated guidance issued by the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) on Wednesday afternoon, the New York Racing Association (NYRA) announced that beginning on Friday, July 17, a limited number of licensed owners will be permitted at Saratoga Race Course on the day that their horse is entered to race.

In order to reduce density and adhere to social distancing guidelines, the size of the ownership group will be restricted to eight individuals in possession of a NYSGC license per horse. With the exception of Friday's card, the application must be received 24 hours in advance of race day.

No same-day applications will be accepted. All owners within the group must be in possession of a valid NYSGC license. Horses with identical ownership will be limited to 8 total admissions regardless of number of horses running that day.

To align with required health and safety measures implemented in New York to mitigate risk and combat the spread of COVID-19, owners will be subjected to health screening prior to entry, including a temperature check. In addition, owners will be required to practice social distancing and to wear a facial covering at all times while on the Saratoga property.

“Health and safety are our primary focus as we continue to work with New York state officials to determine the potential for broader spectator access during the 2020 summer meet,” said NYRA President & CEO Dave O'Rourke. “To be able to allow the participation of a limited number of owners reflects the progress made in New York to reduce the rate of COVID-19 infection.”

A limited number of licensed owners will be permitted within the barn area at Saratoga Race Course during the 2020 summer meet. In order to secure access to the barn area, owners must provide NYRA with a negative COVID-19 test result taken within 7 days of the request. Owners are not permitted to watch live racing from the barn area and owner access ends at 11:20 a.m. Prior approval is required to enter the barn area.

Owners approved to enter the barn area will be required to practice social distancing and to wear a facial covering at all times.

Owners planning travel to New York from any of the states currently listed on the New York Travel Advisory are subject to a mandatory 14-day quarantine. For additional information, visit https://coronavirus.health.ny.gov/covid-19-travel-advisory.

Owner applications for admission to Saratoga Race Course are to be sent to NYRA's Horsemen's Relations Associate, via email at horsemensrelations@nyrainc.com or by phone at 516-488-6008. NYRA will confirm all reservations via email. NYRA cannot consider or accept same day applications.

The NYRA Office of Horsemen's Relations will begin processing applications on Thursday, July 16 at 9 a.m.

Per NYSGC guidance, owners are not permitted within any indoor areas at Saratoga Race Course, including the clubhouse and grandstand and all hospitality areas. As such, owners will be provided a socially-distanced outdoor seating area and will be permitted to view races from the apron. Hours of access on race days will begin at 12 p.m. Eastern and owners must enter via the Clubhouse Entrance.

For additional information regarding protocols, please visit https://bit.ly/32iJ0wN.

The 2020 summer meet at Saratoga Race Course will begin on Thursday, July 16 and run through Labor Day, Monday, September 7. Following the four-day opening weekend, live racing will be conducted five days a week, Wednesdays through Sundays. The summer meet will conclude on Labor Day, Monday, September 7.

Under current New York State guidelines, Saratoga Race Course will open without spectators in attendance. The 40-day meet will be highlighted by the 151st renewal of the Grade 1, $1 million Runhappy Travers on Saturday, August 8 and the Grade 1, $750,000 Whitney on Saturday, August 1.

For more information about Saratoga Race Course, visit NYRA.com/Saratoga.

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Not This Time Back On Top at OBS

by Christie DeBernardis & Jessica Martini

A filly by freshman sire Not This Time topped the last auction in Ocala, the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s Spring Sale, last month and the young stallion was back on top again at OBS Wednesday with one of his daughters (Hip 640) topping the day’s trade at $270,000. Consigned by de Meric Sales, Hip 640 was purchased by Mike Mulligan’s Emerald Sales on behalf of owner Tobey Morton.

A total of 155 juveniles changed hands Wednesday for a gross of $3,869,800 with an average of $24,966 and median of $13,000. The RNA increased from 17.3% to 27.2%. During last year’s equivalent session, 225 horses brought $7,719,700 with an average of $34,310 and median of $17,000.

Throughout the first two days of selling, 309 Thoroughbreds summoned $8,834,600 with an average of $28,591 and median of $13,000. The cumulative RNA rate also rose from 20% last year to 28.3%. At this point last term, 429 2-year-olds grossed $133,89,200 with an average of $32,259 and a median of $17,000.

“It’s a bizarre market,” said Dennis O’Neill, who picked up the day’s top colt, a $185,000 son of Half Ours (Hip 383). “When I got here, I was the only one here and I was joking when I was looking at horses, I said, ‘Guys, I can’t buy every horse in the sale.’ It was really bizarre how few people were here Monday and then by Tuesday it had picked up.”

He continued, “It was really hit or miss. If you didn’t have anybody on the horse you liked, it was very, very easy to buy. But, I got shut out on two horses which I couldn’t believe because there weren’t many people there. At this sale, I haven’t seen any New York people or California people, so there aren’t a lot of people who traveled out here, which I can understand with the quarantine and everything going on.”

Mulligan said he also felt the lack of representation from certain regions impacted the marketplace.

“There is virtually no demand for the lower or middle market horses,” Mulligan said. “Without influences from people taking horses out of the country–the Korean buyers have not been here–so the lower market is really getting hit hard. The top 5% or 10% of the horses here are fine. If the horse is worth $75,000 to $150,000, that horse is fine. Horses that are $150,000 and up to whatever the sale topper will be here, I think those horses are in really good order. But underneath that, it’s tough. There is pretty solid demand. I got outrun on a couple of horses today. And so it’s not like we are coming in here and buying everything.”

Horseman Randy Bradshaw is typically a seller at OBS, but this week he adapted to the unconventional times by trying his hand at buying to help those unable to make it to Ocala due to COVID-19 related travel restrictions. That meant the horseman was able to provide a market perspective from both sides of the fence.

“At this sale, it is definitely a buyers’ market,” Bradshaw said. “You can definitely buy a nice horse for 50 cents on the dollar. Everyone is thinking about going back to the yearling market pretty soon. If you were buying, I think it was good, but if you were selling, I think it was not very good at all. It is tough to see people struggling, but hopefully the world will get back to normal and we can get back to work and do what we do.”

Filly Proves Right on Time for Avila

Silvestre Avila and his brother-in-law Chalino Lopez had tried to enter their Not This Time filly (hip 640), purchased for $19,000 at last year’s OBS October Yearling Sale, at previous juvenile auctions this season, but the chestnut didn’t make it into any catalogue until the July sale. She made the most of the opportunity with a bullet :9 4/5 furlong work last week and rewarded the two men when selling for $270,000 through the de Meric Sales consignment in Ocala Wednesday. Mike Mulligan’s Emerald Sales made the winning bid on behalf of owner Tobey Morton.

“We had entered her in some earlier OBS sales and unfortunately she couldn’t get in,” Avila said through an interpreter Wednesday. “I was thinking of going to Maryland, but with the COVID scare, I didn’t know if the sale would go on. This was the last chance to sell her. She got in and did her thing.”

Avila, who has been a vital member of the de Meric team for the past eight years, purchased the filly before Not This Time’s hot start on the track and in the sales ring this spring.

“In my mind, I am always trying to double or triple the purchase price. I do this to make a profit and that’s what I am hoping for,” he said.

The only yearling Avila purchased last year, the filly impressed him right from the start.

“When I started getting her ready, she was very smart and super sound and never did one thing wrong,” Avila said. “I started noticing that she was doing everything really well and then, as God would have it, Not This Time started getting hotter and hotter. Fortune and good luck was on our side with that. Those are the things you can’t control, but it favored us this time.”

Avila and Lopez had success pinhooking last year, selling a filly by Daredevil purchased for $5,000 at OBS October for $155,000 at OBS March, but Wednesday’s result was their biggest sale to date.

“It is the biggest pinhook score that I’ve ever made,” Avila confirmed. “I am just humbled and grateful for the opportunity to do this.”

As for his plans for the upcoming yearling sales, Avila said, “If everything goes all right, with the way things are in the world, if there is a way for us to buy yearlings this coming fall, we will.”

A New York-bred filly, hip 640 is out of Exotic Design (A.P. Indy), a daughter of multiple Grade I winner Exotic Wood (Rahy).

She will be joining the New York stable of John Kimmel, Mulligan confirmed Wednesday.

“She is going to Saratoga to John Kimmel tomorrow or the next day,” Mulligan said.

Of the filly’s appeal, Mulligan said, “When we watched the breeze show and after being in Maryland [for the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale] and seeing the top of the market being so strong, we felt like the top 30 or 40 horses here would be hard to obtain because quality horses are still in demand. That’s the bottom line. We elected to go after that filly because she checked all of the boxes. She has amazing physical ability. She worked awesome, galloped out awesome. We thought she was one of the best fillies in the sale and the New York-bred was just a bonus for us.”

Mulligan has now made three purchases on behalf of Morton at OBS, going to $85,000 for a filly by Anchor Down (hip 199) and to $70,000 for a colt by Uncaptured (hip 582).

Bradshaw Gets New Perspective at OBS

Randy Bradshaw is usually selling at the OBS sales, but, in keeping with the unconventional nature of 2020, the horseman found himself on the buying side at this week’s July Sale.

“I told some of my clients this is a great opportunity because horses are really going to be discounted,” Bradshaw said. “We knew New York people couldn’t come down because of the quarantine situation. We are all in this together. Hopefully, I can help people out a little and get them through tough times, so when we can do that, that is what we need to do. We are probably going to put a partnership together.”

Bradshaw’s first purchase of the sale was a colt from the first crop of Air Force Blue, who he secured for $100,000 Tuesday. The :21 flat breezer was purchased by consignor Brick City Thoroughbreds for $30,000 at Keeneland September. Hip 120 was bred in Louisiana at Summerhill Farm, which purchased her unraced dam Savviest (El Corredor) for $43,000 with this colt in utero at the 2017 KEENOV sale. Savviest is also the dam of SP Take Ten (Uncle Mo) and is a half-sister to GISW Tactical Cat (Storm Cat).

“I’ve liked the Air Force Blues all year,” Bradshaw said. “I have been a big fan from what I’ve seen. We were looking to buy a horse for Dallas Stewart and one of his clients and one of my clients. We do partner together. This colt is a May foal, so he looks like he is still growing, though he is plenty big enough now. He worked well, went out well and I decided to take a shot. Luckily we got him bought.”

During Wednesday’s second session, Bradshaw picked up a daughter of Uncle Mo for $150,000 from the Gayle Woods consignment. Bred by Carhue Investments, Chelsea Bloodstock and Paget Bloodstock, the $45,000 KEESEP RNA is out of a half-sister to GISW Funny Moon (Malibu Moon). Hip 427 was clocked in :34 2/5 after bolting during her breeze.

“I loved her breeze,” Bradshaw said. “Turning for home, she bolted. She saw something on the inside and bolted to the outside. I counted the seconds and she lost two or three seconds before the rider got her straightened out and leveled off. We probably would have had to pay a lot more money for her if she worked straight. She had a nice pedigree and I am an Uncle Mo fan also. We got lucky and got her bought at the right price.” –@CDeBernardisTDN

Half Ours Colt to Reddam

Dennis O’Neill has had success prioritizing individual over pedigree when buying such standouts as GI Kentucky Derby winner I’ll Have Another (Flower Alley) on behalf of California owner Paul Reddam and the bloodstock agent will be hoping the formula works again after purchasing a colt by Louisiana stallion Half Ours (hip 383) for $185,000 Wednesday in Ocala. Consigned by Sergio Centeno’s Blue River Bloodstock, the bay colt blazed a quarter-mile in a bullet :20 1/5 during last week’s under-tack show.

“This was a horse who fits our M.O.,” O’Neill said. “His breeding was a little sketchy to say the least, but we just loved his breeze. Usually you see these horses who breeze pretty fast and then you look at them and they are Quarter Horse-looking, really fast-looking horses. When I saw this horse, I called Paul and said, ‘Man, he’s really, really nice looking.’ He has some length to him and some size. He just doesn’t look like a horse that would go in :20 1/5. I told Paul, ‘He is just the perfect horse for us. He’s not going to be a million dollars because of his pedigree, but he looks like a running son of a gun.”

In addition to 2012 Derby winner I’ll Have Another, Reddam has had graded-stakes success with other horses with less-than-fashionable pedigrees like Mistical Plan (Game Plan) and Great Hunter (Aptitude).

“We’ve had success in the past buying horses who had ability and looked good, vetted good, breezed good and weren’t necessarily the best-bred horses in the world,” O’Neill said. “And Paul is a gambler. It didn’t take a lot of convincing. When I called him, I thought I was going to have a heck of a time convincing him to do this. But as soon as I finished my sales pitch, he said, ‘Get it done.'”

Hip 383, purchased by Jaime Centeno for $8,000 at last year’s OBS October Yearling Sale, was the second horse of the sales season to work in :20 1/5. A filly by Not This Time (hip 1254) put in her :20 1/5 work before selling for a sale-topping $1.35 million at the OBS Spring sale last month.

“I know they payed $1.35 million for a horse in that last sale that worked in :20 1/5,” O’Neill said. “To me, I thought this horse’s breeze was just as good as that one. And this horse looked as good as that one. It was just obviously pedigree-wise a little bit different. I try to find individuals and the last thing I look at is the page. If you can get over that, we’ve been really successful buying the best horses of a certain sire. I think Half Ours is due to have a really good horse. Hopefully, we got the best Half Ours. That’s our plan.” @JessMartiniTDN

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