Jockey Devin Magnon ‘Progressing Very Well’ After Jan. 14 Spill At Delta

Jockey Devin Magnon is expected to make a full recovery from a serious fall at Delta Downs in Vinton, La. on Jan. 14, reports the Daily Racing Form. The rider's mount fell on top of him, causing a trio of fractures in his back, 10 broken ribs, a broken collarbone, a fractured pelvis, and a punctured lung.

Magnon underwent surgery and has two rods in his back to stabilize his spine.

“He's progressing very well,” agent Wes Landry told drf.com. “I saw him today. Stopped and checked on him. He looked great, sounded great. He was in real good spirits and anxious to keep going forward.”

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Underpressure Headlines Wednesday’s Louisiana Premier Day Championship

Delta Downs will host its richest race program of the season on Wednesday, Feb. 10, when the track will award $805,000 in total purse throughout 10 stakes races. The event is called Louisiana Premier Day, and for the first time in its 18-year existence it will take place during the daytime hours with first post time set for 12:55 pm.

The featured race on the card will be the $125,000 Louisiana Premier Day Championship for older horses competing at 1-1/16 miles, which will be the ninth race on the program. This year's Championship attracted a field of nine talented runners including last year's winner Underpressure, from the barn of trainer Chris Richard. Underpressure, a 7-year-old gelding, is also the top earner in the field with a bankroll of $763,182 from 39 lifetime starts for owner Mallory Richard. Journeyman jockey Gerard Melancon will pilot Underpressure in the big race.

The Championship field also includes Israel Flores Horses, LLC's Pound for Pound and Gerard Perron's Grand Luwegee. Pound for Pound beat Underpressure by a nose in their most recent showdown, an allowance event at Fair Grounds on January 14. Grand Luwegee won the Championship back in 2019 and scored a big win in the Louisiana Champions Day Classic at Fair Grounds in December of this year.

Fans will also be in for a treat when the $100,00 Louisiana Premier Day Sprint rolls around in the sixth race as grade I winner No Parole makes his second appearance at Delta Downs for owner Maggi Moss and trainer Tom Amoss. The 4-year-old star won last year's Louisiana Premier Day Prince before going on to take the Woody Stephens Stakes (G1) at Belmont Park this past June. Diego Saenz will be at the helm when No Parole goes to the starting gate on Wednesday afternoon.

Another race that will get plenty of attention on the program will be the $100,000 Louisiana Premier Day Starlet featuring Brett Brinkman and P. Dale Ladner's Cilla. The 3-year-old daughter of California Chrome most recently finished third in the Grade 1 Frizette Stakes at Belmont Park. Brinkman trains Cilla and Gerard Melancon will get the mount aboard the likely favorite.

In addition to the many local horsemen taking part in Louisiana Premier Day there are also some nationally prominent trainers who will saddle horses on the program. They include Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, as well as W. Bret Calhoun, Tom Amoss and others.

Delta Downs will offer the DRF Bets $50,000 Guaranteed All Stakes Pick 4 wager on the Louisiana Premier Day program. The special wager will take place on race 7 – 10, which includes the afternoon's richest race, the $125,000 Louisiana Premier Day Championship serving as the penultimate leg.

Delta Downs will also welcome a special guest to its simulcast program during Louisiana Premier Day. Nationally known horse racing analyst and commentator Martha Claussen will join track announcer Don Stevens on the simulcast show as a co-host, handicapper and trackside reporter following the major stakes races.

Listed below are all 10 Louisiana Premier Day stakes races for 2021 in program order.

Race # Purse Stakes Race Distance Age

1 $40,000 LAPD Bon Temps Starter 5 furlongs 4yo & up FM

2 $50,000 LAPD Ladies Starter 1 mile 4yo & up FM

3 $100,000 LAPD Starlet 1 mile 3yo fillies

4 $40,000 LAPD Ragin Cajun Starter 5 furlongs 4yo & up

5 $100,000 LAPD Prince 1 mile 3yo

6 $100,000 LAPD Sprint 5 furlongs 4yo & up

7 $100,000 LAPD Distaff 1 mile 4yo & up FM

8 $100,000 LAPD Matron 5 furlongs 4yo & up FM

9 $125,000 LAPD Championship 1-1/16 miles 4yo & up

10 $50,000 LAPD Gentlemen Starter 1-1/16 miles 4yo & up

The Louisiana Thoroughbred Breeders Association will be awarding two (2) $1,000 college scholarships via a drawing that will take place on Louisiana Premier Day.

Entries for the LTBA drawing will be taken online only this year at www.louisianabred.com. The deadline to enter is noon on Tuesday, February 9. Winners will be announced after the fifth race at the track and the drawing will be shown live on the Louisiana Thoroughbred Association Facebook page. To qualify for the drawing, entrants must be enrolled full time for spring or summer 2021 classes and in good standing with their Louisiana college or university.

For more information about Louisiana Premier Day and the remainder of Delta Downs' current season, which runs through April 16, visit the track's website at www.deltadownsracing.com. Fans can also follow the track on Facebook and Twitter.

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Trainer Shane Wilson Sees Potential In Risen Star Hopeful Rightandjust

On a backstretch with Eclipse Award winners, Hall of Famers, and countess local legends, trainer Shane Wilson is more than holding his own at the Fair Grounds Race Course in New Orleans.

Wilson, a native of Haughton, La., has been working at the race track since he was a teenager and learned his trade under Hall of Famer Jack Van Berg, as well as highly successful veterans Bobby Barnett and Sam David. He went out his own in 1998, won his first race that October at Sam Houston when Fullasatick won the Jiffy Lube Stakes, and also has been a mainstay on the Louisiana circuit ever since. Wherever he's gone, Wilson has never forgotten the one piece of advice that stands out above all the rest.

“I was lucky to learn from a lot of those guys coming up but the thing I really remember, more than anything, is the care of the horses,” Wilson said. “The horse comes first. Everybody that I worked for always said that if they need the time, you stop and give them the time. They can come back later and reward you.”

Wilson isn't new to the Fair Grounds backstretch, as he was prominent here in the early 2000s, winning nine races in 2001-02. Shortly after he shifted his winter base primarily to Delta Downs, while only occasionally shipping in locally. Wilson made small inroads last year, winning two races from 19 starters, but got the full allotment of 44 stalls this year, and has been a daily presence at the entry box from Opening Day.

“We had been going to Delta and I have a lot of clients that like to claim and we decided to come here this year because there is a better quality of horses,” Wilson said. “We've been active in the claiming ranks. We knew we had some horses that didn't fit, so we wanted to upgrade, and that's what we've been doing.”

Wilson made national headlines in 2019 when Mocito Rojo, a horse he claimed for $10,000 for owner Wayne T. Davis out of a debut win at Delta in 2016, won the Steve Sexton Mile (G3) at Lone Star Park and Lukas Classic (G3) at Churchill Downs. The veteran has since won 17 races and over $800,000 for his new connections, who could be on to another big score with Rightandjust, a horse they claimed for $50,000 out of a local maiden-claimer in December. The 3-year-old son of Awesome Again won a salty optional-claimer in convincing fashion for his new connections here Jan. 16 and looms an upset candidate in the Feb. 13 Risen Star (G2), the last prep for the March 20 TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby (G2).

Both Mocito Rojo and Rightandjust fit the profile that Wilson looks for in a young horse at the claiming box.

“With both horses, we were looking for a young horse with a pedigree to stretch out and run long,” Wilson said. “With Rightandjust, we were hoping he was a young horse who could mature and turn into something like Mocito Rojo did. He's still progressing and moving forward and we're looking forward to the Risen Star.”

Horses like Mocito Rojo and Rightandjust have given Wilson a chance to run against some of the best horses and trainers in the sport. With conditioners like Brad Cox, Steve Asmussen, and Tom Amoss, among others, on the backstretch, finding wins in the bigger races isn't easy. Wilson looks forward to the challenge and knows it's a big feather in his cap to be able to run and compete in spots like the Risen Star.

“It feels good for the barn and the clients to feel like we belong against the best here,” Wilson said. “They want to feel like we can run against those barns. You know where you fit and where you don't. And whenever we do have one that we feel can compete in the bigger races, it's fun to go against them.”

Wilson started the meet on a winning note—literally—as he teamed with jockey Jack Gilligan to win the opener on the November 26 card, the first of five races the duo won together locally before the end of the year. Gilligan went down with a broken collarbone January 10 and, without his go-to rider, Wilson has struggled to find the winner's circle. The barn has gone just 1-for-21 since Gilligan has been on the mend, with Rightandjust as the only winner. Needless to say, Wilson is looking forward to Gilligan's return next month.

“It hurt me when I lost Jack,” Wilson said. “He got down here and started working horses for us and that had a lot to do with our fast start. He breezed a lot of those horses and he knew them. He's a super good rider and he'll listen. I lost him at the start of this month and we've had seconds and thirds and a lot of it is guys getting on horses that they had never been on before.”

Gilligan has felt at home riding for Wilson, as the pair have struck a winning partnership. Be it a $5,000 state-bred claimer, or an improving 3-year-old pointing to a grade 2 Kentucky Derby prep, Gilligan has been impressed with Wilson's ability to have a blinkers-on approach to each horse.

“He's able to cater to each horse individually and get every last ounce he can out of each one,” Gilligan said. “That's hard to do with over 40 horses. He doesn't always have the most talented horses but he's done a great job with what he has, getting the best out of them. As a trainer, he's always has the horses feeling great, looking great, and he listens to feedback, which I think is one of my best traits as a rider.”

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C.J. McMahon Alleged to Have Fired Shots into Vehicle at Red Light

Jockey Charles Jantzen (C.J.) McMahon allegedly fired a gun into a stopped vehicle at a red light in his hometown of Lafayette, Louisiana, and then sped off Dec. 27, which led to his arrest on attempted murder charges in that city after a Jan. 2 traffic stop.

These new details of the case were confirmed Tuesday afternoon by Wayne Griffin, a spokesperson for the Lafayette Police Department. McMahon posted an $80,000 bond Sunday that freed him from incarceration on charges that also included illegal use of a dangerous weapon and possession of marijuana.

Griffin told TDN that no one in the vehicle that took the gunfire got hurt. “They’re fine,” he added, explaining he could not discuss how many shots were allegedly fired or what the motive might have been because the case is still under investigation.

“[McMahon] was allegedly involved in an incident where a vehicle was parked at a red light. He pulled up in his own vehicle next to the car. He shot into the car. And then he sped off,” Griffin said. “We were able to locate the vehicle through some investigative means and [by using traffic cameras]. And in turn we were able to locate him and make an arrest.”

TDN could not find a working phone number for McMahon, nor could the Lafayette Parish District Court confirm whether he has an attorney who could comment on his behalf.

McMahon, 26, is a third-generation Louisiana-based horseman whose grandfather trained Quarter Horses. His father, a retired jockey, rode them, with C.J.’s mother booking mounts as his agent.

McMahon broke in as a jockey at age 16 in 2011, and one year ago this week he earned his 1,000th lifetime win. He has ridden regularly at various Louisiana and Texas tracks while often at or near the top of the standings, but his number of mounts and win totals have fluctuated in recent seasons.

In 2013, McMahon was suspended in Indiana for making threatening remarks to a starter prior to a race. And in 2017, he was suspended for 30 days in that state after testing positive for levels of methamphetamine and marijuana.

McMahon most recently rode at Delta Downs Dec. 28 and is next named to ride on the opening day program at Sam Houston Race Park Jan. 8.

TDN asked Robert Elrod, the public information officer for the Texas Racing Commission, if McMahon’s jockey license would be affected by the charges.

“The thing with McMahon is his license remains in good standing with us,” Elrod said. “But my understanding is Sam Houston is not going to let him ride. That’s their call. As long as he doesn’t have a conviction, he’s afforded due process.”

Dwight Berube, Sam Houston’s vice president of operations and general manager, did not return a voicemail query about McMahon’s status prior to deadline for this story.

A spokeswoman for the Lafayette Parish District Attorney told TDN that because of the way Louisiana handles criminal complaints, it could be anywhere from a few days to eight weeks before McMahon is formally arraigned on the charges that police filed.

“We’re a little bit different [in Louisiana],” the spokeswoman explained. “Arraignments are set only once the charges are accepted [by the district attorney]. So basically, he was arrested, he got bonded out, and is no longer incarcerated. The next step will be the [police] report’s going to come here. It will go into review and be assigned to a particular assistant district attorney. And then at that point they can answer any questions that are part of the public record. He’s not even in our system yet.”

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