Late-Running Harvey Wallbanger Needs The Right Pace Setup In Sea Of Tranquility Stakes

Trainer Kenny McPeek, who made a year-round commitment to South Florida racing when he purchased Summerfield Training Center in Marion County last year, will be represented by graded-stakes winner Harvey Wallbanger in Saturday's $60,000 Sea of Tranquility Stakes at Gulfstream Park.

McPeek, who put the finishing touches on a productive 2019-2020 Championship Meet by saddling Swiss Skydiver for a 3 ¾-length victory in the $200,000 Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2), is maintaining a stable at Gulfstream Park during the Spring/Summer Meet for the first time.

“We've got a significant number of young horses that are based at Summerfield now. We're able to rest and rehab older horses and younger horses, there, and then rotate them. If some need to come north [to Kentucky] or if they need to go back to Gulfstream, we have those options,” said McPeek, who has saddled Swiss Skydiver for subsequent victories in the Fantasy (G3) at Oaklawn Park and Santa Anita Oaks (G2) and a second-place finish against the boys in the Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland. “I think, logistically, it's a pretty good setup. I think we're going to be even more successful than we were this year.”

It makes perfect sense that Harvey Wallbanger was one of the older horses McPeek opted to keep at Gulfstream for the Spring/Summer Meet. The 4-year-old son of Congrats has been his most productive while running at Gulfstream during his career. After breaking his maiden at Churchill Downs in November 2018, Harvey Wallbanger pulled off a 29-1 upset victory in the 2019 Holy Bull (G2) at Gulfstream with a stunning last-to-first performance.

The Kentucky-bred colt subsequently hit somewhat of a rough patch during an eight-race losing streak that included an off-the-board finish in the Korea Cup at Seoul Racecourse. He returned to winning form during the past Championship Meet in dramatic fashion, again closing from last to score by more than five lengths in a Feb. 29 optional claiming allowance.

“He's a set-up horse. When things go his way and unfold in front of him, he can make his run and be right there,” said McPeek, who co-owns the stretch-running veteran with Harold Lerner LLC, AWC Stables, Nehoc Stables, Scott Akman, Paul Braverman and David Bernsen LLC.

Harvey Wallbanger will be looking to rebound from an off-the-board finish in the March 28 Hal's Hope (G3).

“He's doing fine. I think it's a good first start back for him. He likes the track at Gulfstream. He's had some successes there,” McPeek said. “Our expectations are pretty high. I don't think it's an easy race by any means, but he fits.”

Hall of Famer Edgar Prado has the call on Harvey Wallbanger, who is scheduled to meet six rivals in the 1 1/16-mile overnight stakes for 3-year-olds and up.

St. George Stable LLC's Kukulkan, also a horse that has shown a fondness for the Gulfstream track, is scheduled to make a return off a six-month layoff since an off-the-board finish in the Louisiana (G3) at Fair Grounds. The Fausto Gutierrez-trained 5-year-old son of Point Determined first ventured to Gulfstream for the Clasico del Caribe in December 2018. The 2018 Mexican Triple Crown champion with an undefeated record captured the prestigious race for 3-year-olds by 10 ½ lengths.

After incurring his first loss in the Pegasus World Cup (G1) seven weeks later, Kukulkan captured an allowance race at Churchill Downs off a four-month layoff. He became graded stakes-placed two starts later while finishing second, beaten a half-length by Silver Dust, in the West Virginia Governor's Cup (G3). He went to the sidelines after finishing off the board in the Lukas Classic (G3) at Churchill last September.

The Mexican-bred Kukulkan again came off a layoff impressively, scoring by a dominating six lengths in the Copa Confraternidad del Caribe on the Dec. 8 Clasico International del Caribe program at Gulfstream.

“He is training very good. This is a good race for him,” said Gutierrez, who has enjoyed considerable success at Gulfstream this year since transferring his stable from Mexico to Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training center in Palm Beach County. “He likes the track at Gulfstream.”

Miguel Vasquez, who ranks second in the Spring/Summer Meet standings, is scheduled to ride Kukulkan for the first time Saturday.

Gelfenstein Farm LLC's Identifier will be looking to rebound off a 12th-place finish in the May 2 Oaklawn Handicap (G2) Saturday. The Oscar Gonzalez-trained 4-year-old son of Creative Cause previously pulled off a 60-1 upset victory in the Hal's Hope, in which Harvey Wallbanger finished well back.

Marcos Meneses, who was aboard for the Hal's Hope, has the call.

Trainer Steve Budhoo's Eye of a Jedi, who won the Sea of Tranquility last year, captured the June 13 Coaltown Handicap over multiple graded-stakes winner Diamond Oops at 17-1. He rallied under Meneses to win by 1 ¼ lengths while being in receipt of seven pounds from Diamond Oops.

Hector Berrios is scheduled to ride Eye of a Jedi for the first time Saturday.

Harold Queen's Noble Drama, a multiple-stakes winner trained by David Fawkes, will seek to rebound from a sixth-place finish in the Coaltown Handicap. The 5-year-old son of Gone Astray will be reunited with Emisael Jaramillo, who scored back-to-back wins aboard the homebred gelding in an optional claiming allowance and the Sunshine Millions Sprint during the Championship Meet.

IAB Stables and Walter Fralick's Quenane and Equine Authority Inc.'s Red Crescent, a pair of rugged veteran stakes performers, round out the field. Cristian Torres is named to ride Quenane, whom he guided to an optional claiming win last time out. Samy Camacho, who rode Red Crescent to a third-place finish in the Coaltown Handicap, has the return call Saturday.

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Friday’s Stronach 5 Features Large Fields, $100,000 Guaranteed Pool

The Stronach 5 will feature large, competitive fields, three races on the turf, and a $100,000 guaranteed pool when it kicks off Friday with 10 maidens going a mile on the Bowl Game Turf Course at Laurel Park.

Featuring races from Laurel and Gulfstream Park and an industry-low 12-percent takeout, the Stronach 5 begins at 3:23 p.m.

The sequence also includes a field of 11 allowance optional claimers going 5 furlongs on the turf at Gulfstream, and a field of 12 restricted allowance runners going 5 ½ furlongs on Laurel's Exceller Turf Course.

Friday's races and sequence

· Leg One – Laurel Park 6th Race: (10 entries, 1 mile turf) 3:23 ET, 12:23 PT

· Leg Two –Gulfstream Park 8th Race: 11 entries, 5 furlongs turf) 3:40 ET, 12:40 PT

· Leg Three –Laurel Park 7th Race: (9 entries, 6 furlongs) 3:59 ET, 12:59 PT

· Leg Four –Gulfstream Park 9th Race: (12 entries, 1 mile) 4:13 ET, 1:13 PT

· Leg Five –Laurel Park 8th race: (11 entries, 5 ½ furlongs turf) 4:33 ET, 1:33 PT

All-Star Ticket: https://www.xbtv.com/video/jason-blewitt/stronach-5-all-star-ticket-for-july-17th-2020/

Fans can watch and wager on the action at 1/ST.COM/BET as well as stream all the action in English and Spanish at LaurelPark.com, SantaAnita.com, GulfstreamPark.com, and GoldenGateFields.com.

The Stronach 5 In the Money podcast, hosted by Jonathan Kinchen and Peter Thomas Fornatale, will be posted by 2 p.m. Thursday at InTheMoneyPodcast.com and will be available on iTunes and other major podcast distributors

The minimum wager on the multi-race, multi-track Stronach 5 is $1. If there are no tickets with five winners, the entire pool will be carried over to the next Friday.

If a change in racing surface is made after the wagering closes, each selection on any ticket will be considered a winning selection. If a betting interest is scratched, that selection will be substituted with the favorite in the win pool when wagering closes.

The Maryland Jockey Club serves as host of the Stronach 5.

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Surge in Jockey Virus Positives Met with Slew of New Restrictions

A surge in positive Coronavirus tests among jockeys was met on Tuesday with a flurry of new movement-related restrictions at Thoroughbred tracks from coast to coast in an effort to keep the pandemic from spreading further.

For the industry in general, any sizable spike in COVID-19 positives among participants will almost certainly trigger another wave of racetrack shutdowns. But for jockeys specifically, the balance of maintaining safety under pandemic precautions often comes down to treading a fine line between protecting one’s health versus protecting one’s livelihood.

Since the end of June, jockeys Luis Saez, Martin Garcia, Victor Espinoza, Flavien Prat, Gerard Melancon and Eduard Rojas Fernandez have all been added to the fast-growing list of North American riders who have publicly acknowledged positive tests for COVID-19.

On Tuesday morning those reinsmen were joined by Florent Geroux, who posted on Twitter and subsequently told TDN he got a positive Coronavirus test on July 13 and is symptom-free, but now self-quarantining at home.

Los Alamitos Race Course, which raced from June 26 through July 5, was a common-denominator site among at least five of those positives, including Saez, Garcia, Espinoza and Prat, who all rode at the southern California track July 4.

Some of those virus-positive jockeys then collectively went on to ride at Belmont Park, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Keeneland Race Course, Indiana Grand and Prairie Meadows before learning of their positive tests.

The New York Racing Association (NYRA), which is scheduled to open the Saratoga Race Course meet on Thursday, weighed in on Tuesday with the most prominent change in protocols in response to the COVID-19 uptick.

In a press release, NYRA announced that “Until further notice, Saratoga Race Course will be closed to out-of-town jockeys. In addition, any member of the regular NYRA jockey colony who travels to ride at any other racetrack will not be permitted to return to Saratoga Race Course.”

On the opposite coast, at Del Mar, most of the local jockey colony underwent newly required COVID-19 testing on Tuesday morning, according to Darrell Haire, the western regional manager of the Jockeys’ Guild.

Haire told TDN there are ongoing “heavy discussions” between jockeys and track management about additional protocol adjustments that could be put in place before the next day of racing July 17.

Also Tuesday, updated health precautions and jockey movement restrictions were unveiled by the Maryland Jockey Club, the Ohio State Racing Commission, and Ellis Park.

“It’s so fluid right now,” Terence Meyocks, the president and chief executive officer of the Jockeys’ Guild, told TDN. “Not only in New York, but the rest of the country with what’s developed in the last 72 hours. We thought we had protocols in place, but then there were more positives.”

Meyocks said that the non-uniform handling of Coronavirus protocols from track to track is yet another example of how the industry’s fragmented, state-by-state regulatory structure complicates an already complex and dangerous situation.

“As I’ve said before, our industry doesn’t work well together,” Meyocks said. “And this is one case where [protocols] need to work and we’ve all got to be on the same page. It’s not only the jocks, but the backside, the grooms, the horsemen, and everybody back there. It’s very difficult with people close together.

“As we’re finding out, jocks are very essential,” Meyocks said. “And at some tracks, they don’t think so. Again, there’s no leadership in our industry to say you’ve got to do X, Y, and Z. That’s a shame, and that’s why we’re at where we’re at today.

“We need minimal standards,” Meyocks said. “It doesn’t have to be the extent that Santa Anita went through [with jockeys mandated to live on-site in trailers during racing days]. But there have to be minimum standards. We’ve been working on this since March. I don’t know if people just got lax or just didn’t think it was needed.

“Nobody should be allowed in the jocks’ room [without having passed standardized protocols],” Meyocks said. “Not only for jockeys, but the clerk of scales, the assistant clerk of scales, the [silks] person. Everybody in the jocks’ room should be tested and [kept] spread apart. At Gulfstream, they had seven different places [for personnel]. Keeneland had six the other day.”

Meyocks continued: “We talk about social distancing. Spread out the room–no steam room, no sauna. And tracks haven’t done it. I’m not going to name names [of non-compliant tracks], but you just can’t do it that way. There have to be minimum standards if they want to continue racing.”

Haire said that on the SoCal circuit, where the riders have shifted from Santa Anita to Los Al to Del Mar over the course of about a month, the protocols for riders and testing were not standardized.

Haire said at Santa Anita, jockeys were mandated to be tested every Wednesday. There was no testing at the Los Al meet, he said, just required masking and social distancing. At Del Mar, Haire said Coronavirus testing for jockeys just began several days ago after the meet had already started July 10 without that requirement.

“As we speak, the riders were just tested at Del Mar, so they’re taking the precautions now because of what happened,” Haire said Tuesday. “And right now, the riders, for the last two mornings, haven’t been getting on horses at Del Mar. That was a policy from Del Mar, and we’ve been back and forth working closely with them to make it as safe as possible for the riders.”

In New York, the Saratoga restrictions are aimed at proactively warding off virus penetration into the riding colony before the meet begins.

“Out-of-town jockeys that are not currently riding at another racetrack may be considered for inclusion in the regular NYRA jockey colony provided the jockey does not ride at another racetrack beginning on Thursday, July 16,” the NYRA release stated.

“Any jockey that rides at a racetrack outside of Saratoga beginning Thursday, July 16, will be considered an out-of-town jockey and will not be permitted at Saratoga Race Course,” the release explained.

“These measures prioritize the health and safety of the jockeys competing in New York, and are designed to combat the spread of COVID-19,” NYRA president and CEO Dave O’Rourke said. “Unfortunately, the restrictive travel policies implemented today have become necessary as cases continue to rise in states across the country.”

According to the release, the 22 active jockeys currently listed in the first condition book constitute the “regular NYRA jockey colony” that form the basis of the restrictions (read the list here).

In determining return-to-ride protocols, the release stated “NYRA will follow current Centers for Disease Control and New York State Health Department guidance when determining the return of a jockey who has tested positive for COVID-19. This process will include a period of quarantine determined by the severity of the individual case followed by a series of diagnostic tests to rule out ongoing infection. NYRA will consider allowing a jockey to resume racing or training activities on NYRA property only when his or her physician has provided clearance to do so.”

In response to the new Saratoga protocols, Meyocks told TDN, “I wouldn’t say we totally endorsed it, but at the same time we accepted that it was something that needed to be done. We had a conversation [with NYRA on Monday] night, and under the current circumstances we accept it.”

The NYRA release stated that the Saratoga jockeys’ quarters “have been substantially altered to provide maximum social distancing and reduce density” and that all common areas “have been closed and will remain closed through the end of the meet.

“Jockeys and valets are not permitted access to the barn area. In order to work a horse in the morning, the jockey must meet the horse in the paddock and can then proceed to the main track,” the release continued.

With regard to steeplechase races at Saratoga, NYRA explained that the separate colony of jump riders “will be completely isolated from the regular NYRA jockey colony in a physically separate location. Following that day’s steeplechase race, which will be carded as race one, the steeplechase jockeys will depart the property.”

In addition to the protocols specific to jockeys, the NYRA release stated that “All personnel working at Saratoga Race Course in any capacity are required by NYRA to produce a negative COVID-19 test in order to access the property. This policy is inclusive of jockeys, valets, NYRA employees, trainers and their staff, outside vendors and credentialed media.”

Beyond the immediate health aspects of the NYRA restrictions, there will be some near-term disruptions to the business of booking mounts.

For example, Irad Ortiz Jr., currently based in New York, was scheduled to ride GI Belmont S. runner-up Dr Post (Quality Road) in Saturday’s GI Haskell S. at Monmouth Park. The showcase day of racing in New Jersey annually lures top New York riders for the afternoon.

Ortiz’s agent, Steve Rushing, told TDN that his in-demand rider would instead remain at Saratoga.

“It’s very disappointing that we’re not going to be able to go out of town to ride a very nice and promising 3-year-old,” Rushing said. “But unfortunately, we can’t miss the entire Saratoga meet [to do so]. I think to protect our business, but more importantly, the health of all the jockeys, I think every track should take the same precautions and protocols and do the same thing. It’s wise that if you have one jockey colony with a few positives, at least it will be contained to that one jockey colony. It’s not going to spread over multiple tracks. So I think [NYRA’s policy] is absolutely the right thing to do to try and contain this.”

If the sport soon defaults to a “pick your track and stay there” mandate for jockeys, the question of who gets to ride which lucrative mounts in the Sep. 5 GI Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs becomes the burning question.

“The way this pandemic is going, it changes every hour, so to try to predict what’s going to happen in seven weeks is obviously impossible,” Rushing said. “We’ll just have to deal with whatever decision they come up with. But I think it’s very possible that [jockeys getting shut out of Derby mounts] could happen.”

Meyocks said the pandemic situation is too slippery to try and grasp what might happen with Derby riding privileges.

“To be determined,” Meyocks said when asked what an early-September scenario might look like. “That will be revisited. [Plans like the one at Saratoga] are to get us through right now.”

The post Surge in Jockey Virus Positives Met with Slew of New Restrictions appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Gulfstream’s Rainbow 6 Pool Guaranteed At $500,000 Wednesday

Gulfstream Park's 20-cent Rainbow 6 will have a guaranteed pool of $500,000 when racing resumes Wednesday.

First race post is noon.

The Rainbow 6 will begin with the fifth race, a 5 furlong maiden special weight event for 3-year-olds and up at 5 furlongs on the turf. The race drew a field of seven including American Phenom, a $340,000 yearling purchase who was claimed for $50,000 out of his racing debut by trainer Rohan Crichton for Daniel Walters. American Phenom finished fourth March 5 in his debut. Also entered is first-time starter R Private Jet, an $82,000 purchase as a yearling in 2018 who enters the race with a bullet half-mile work for trainer Georgina Baxter.

There will be three turf races in the sequence, including the 10th and final race, a maiden claiming event at 1 1/16 mile.

This will be the last Wednesday program at Gulfstream. The track will move to a Thursday through Sunday program beginning July 23.

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