Graded Stakes Sunday Pits Clairiere Versus Nest In Shuvee

After a rousing Saturday lineup, the stakes weekend isn't complete yet, as Saratoga, Woodbine and Del Mar present graded offerings.

The marquee match on Sunday is the GII Shuvee S. at Saratoga, which honors the 1970 and 1971 champion older female by Nashua who was the second filly to win the Triple Tiara. The Virginia bred is also the only filly to ever defeat colts in the Jockey Club Gold Cup. And she did that twice.

Though only four are entered here, the race includes the defending champion from last year in Clairiere (Curlin), who comes in after a pair of Grade I victories in the Apple Blossom H. at Oaklawn Park and the Ogden Phipps S. at Belmont Park.

The veteran mare trained by Steve Asmussen will take on last year's champion 3-year-old filly Nest (Curlin), who is making her first start of the year for trainer Todd Pletcher. The bay filly collected a pair of Grade I wins last summer at Saratoga when she won the Coaching Club of America Oaks and the Alabama S.

Shifting to Woodbine, they card a pair of graded races on Sunday starting with the GIII Trillium S. for 3-year-old fillies and up over the Tapeta, which has Souper Hoity Toity (Uncle Mo) as the 2-1 morning-line leader. The $550,000 OBSMAR purchase won the GIII Belle Mahone S. by a neck and the Mark Casse trainee will face many of the same competitors once again in this spot. Switching to the grass, the other graded event in Toronto is the GII Connaught Cup S., which includes veteran turf traveler Bound for Nowhere (The Factor). The 9-year-old will face the winner of the GII Highlander S., Lucky Score (Lookin At Lucky) and Churchtown (Air Force Blue), who just missed last time out in the Opening Verse S. at Churchill Downs.

Finally, the weekend graded action wraps up at the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club with the annual renewal of the 12-furlong GIII Cougar II S. over the dirt. The class edge goes to Kiss Today Goodbye (Cairo Prince), who ran third May 29 in the Gold Cup at Santa Anita and Azul Coast (Super Saver) who hasn't been seen since he ran second last November at Del Mar in the GIII Native Diver S. Bye Bye Bobby (Quality Road), an $870,000 KEESEP buy, ships in from New Mexico.

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Keeneland Sales To Sponsor Major Filly Stakes From Coast To Coast

Keeneland Sales has become the presenting sponsor of the GI Alabama S. at Saratoga Race Course, and Keeneland November will present the GII Jessamine S. on opening day of the 2023 Fall Meet, the organization said in a release Thursday. This comes on the heels of last week's news that the sales division would lend its name to the GIII Sorrento S. at Del Mar.

“Keeneland is excited to team with NYRA and Del Mar in sponsoring these prestigious summer stakes, and for Keeneland November to sponsor our Jessamine Stakes in the fall,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “This initiative supports our mission to better the industry and aligns our globally important September Yearling Sale and November Breeding Stock Sale with these world-class race tracks.”

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Del Mar Partners With Keeneland Sales

Del Mar Thoroughbred Club will officially partner over multiple seasons with Keeneland Sales beginning with their summer meet on July 21, the track said in a release Friday afternoon.

As part of the orchestration around the partnership, Keeneland Sales will become the presenting sponsor for the GIII Sorrento S. on Saturday, Aug. 12.

“We're delighted to be partners once again with the folks at Keeneland,” said Tom Robbins, Del Mar's executive vice president of racing. “The name Keeneland resounds throughout our industry and Del Mar and Keeneland are a perfect pairing.”

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Hollendorfer, Del Mar Reach Settlement in Lawsuit

Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer and the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (DMTC) have reached an agreement in a lawsuit stemming from events during the summer of 2019 when the track temporarily barred the trainer from its grounds, according to a notice of settlement recently filed in the San Diego Superior Court.

The notice included no specifics.

“The terms of the settlement are to remain confidential,” explained Hollendorfer's attorney, Drew Couto.

DMTC president, Josh Rubinstein, confirmed the settlement in an emailed statement.

“The resolution of this litigation does not reflect the merit of or any acceptance of liability by any party,” Rubinstein wrote.

The 22nd District Agricultural Association, which manages and operates the Del Mar Fairgrounds, is also a defendant in the suit.     This resolution is the latest domino to fall in a sprawling series of cases filed by Hollendorfer after The Stronach Group (TSG) barred the trainer from its facilities in June of 2019. The company took the action after four of the trainer's horses were irreparably injured during Santa Anita's ill-fated 2018-2019 winter/spring meet.

This was a time when the track experienced a well-publicized spike in equine fatalities during an unusually wet spell. Hollendorfer has faced no formal regulatory sanctions for events that occurred during the meet.

Del Mar followed TSG's lead in barring Hollendorfer from its grounds, but the trainer successfully overturned the track's ban in court in July of that year.

Events from the summer of 2019 spawned a handful of different lawsuits, most of which are now resolved.

Last June, Hollendorfer and TSG-controlled subsidiary owners of Santa Anita Park and Golden Gate Fields reached a settlement, the details of which were similarly undisclosed. Hollendorfer has not started a runner at any TSG-owned facility since that original 2019 ban.

Last month, the Blood Horse reported that a San Diego Superior Court judge had dismissed Hollendorfer's case against the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB).

According to Couto, Hollendorfer intends to appeal that ruling.

“The court is aware that Mr. Hollendorfer will be appealing the decision in that case,” he said.

Hollendorfer has been an annual face at Del Mar since the summer of 2019, but at a significantly diminished presence compared to the halcyon years of his numerical dominance which led him to multiple leading trainer titles. Last summer at the track, he trained one winner from just 15 starts.

Filings with the San Diego Superior Court show that Hollendorfer has claimed several causes of action against the DMTC, mainly focused on the impacts from DMTC's actions on his business.

Among them, Hollendorfer argued that the DMTC's actions deliberately interfered with existing “contractual obligations” with several of his clients, and that it was done in part to protect the track's own bottom line.

Hollendorfer also claimed in court filings that the DMTC “conspired” with five other key California-focused industry organizations, including TSG and the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC), “to enact a group boycott that prevented Plaintiff from racing and stabling” horses in his care.

“The conspiring parties did so in order to prosper economically by avoiding responsibility and shift blame to Plaintiff for dangerous and inherent conditions at their racetracks. Primary objectives of the group boycott included the manipulation of public perception and deflection or misdirection public attention, scrutiny, and inquiries,” filings show.

Court documents show the DMTC pushing back against Hollendorfer's claims the track intentionally harmed his business, in part to protect its own economic interests. For example, the DMTC argues the trainer failed to prove the track had adequate prior knowledge of the trainer's “contractual relations” with his owners prior to banning him, including specific contractual details.

Court documents also show the DTSC countering Hollenderfer's claims the alleged group “boycott” was done to benefit the groups' members.

“There are no facts showing how DMTC or the District benefitted from the alleged group boycott,” filings state.

Hollendorfer sought to recover damages from DMTC for economic and reputational harm, filings show.

Hollendorfer's training operations have seen marked declines since TSG's ban was enacted in 2019. In 2018, he won 176 races and accrued over $7 million in earnings, according to Equibase. So far this year, he has won 14 races and won just under $670,000.

Over the weekend, a Monmouth Park press release detailed how the trainer had transferred 29 of his horses stabled at the track to long-time assistant Dan Ward, with a view to scaling back his operations to California only.

“I just want to concentrate on what I'm doing here in California,” Hollendorfer is quoted in the press release. “Dan and I have discussed for a while that he wanted a chance to go out on his own. Now seems like a pretty good time to do that.”

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