Tom’s Ready Arrives at Old Friends

Tom’s Ready (More Than Ready), a three-time graded-stakes winner around one turn, has been added to the roster at Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement Center in Georgetown, Kentucky.

The 7-year-old, trained by Dallas Stewart for Gayle and Tom Benson’s GMB Racing, was runner-up in the GIII Lecomte S. and GII Louisiana Derby in 2015, but cut back to one turn to win the GII Woody Stephens S. over seven furlongs and the GIII Ack Ack S. going a mile that season. Winner of the GIII Bold Ruler H. in 2016, the Pennsylvania-bred originally entered stud at Spendthrift and was later relocated to Red River Farms in Louisiana.

“It gives us great pleasure to have our wonderful Tom’s Ready retire to Old Friends,” Gayle Benson said. “He was our first purchase, he is a Grade II winner, and he raced in the Kentucky Derby and the Breeders’ Cup, so we are very proud of him and he is deserving of the great care that Old Friends will provide.”

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Battered By Hurricane Laura, Delta Downs Is Back in Business

Take a quick glance at the opening day card at Delta Downs and it might seem like nothing has changed. The fields for Tuesday’s races are full, perennial leading trainer Karl Broberg has seven entered and the feature is a $60,000 stakes for Louisiana-breds that has attracted horses from the stables of Tom Amoss and Steve Asmussen.

But this will be a meet unlike any other at the track that sits just a few miles east of the Texas-Louisiana border. Delta Downs was directly in the path of Hurricane Laura, a Category 4 storm with winds reaching 150 miles per hour that all but tore the place apart when it hit land on Aug. 27. Since then, there’s been a full-court press to get the track ready for a delayed opening day of a meet that will be conducted during the day.

“There has been a lot of last-minute stuff being done, almost 24 hours a day. There’s been a rush to get ready to race,” said the track’s announcer Don Stevens.

In the days before Hurricane Laura hit Louisiana, Delta Downs was finishing up its Quarter Horse meet, which ended Aug. 22. That gave the track six weeks to prepare for a Thoroughbred meet set to begin Oct. 3. But Laura hit the area with such severity that it was clear the meet could not open on time.

“There’s just a lot of damage and it’s everywhere,” Delta’s Director of Racing Operations Chris Warren said the day after the hurricane hit.

While the barns held up well during the storm, ensuring that the horses still on the grounds stayed safe, the rest of the facility didn’t fare nearly as well. The tote board was demolished, the starting gates were turned over and so severely damaged they had to be replaced and the outside rail was torn apart. The patrol towers were also badly damaged and also had to be replaced. The wiring for the track’s lights was wrecked.

“The light towers were wired above the ground,” Stevens said. “There are wires from pole to pole and they were built in 1973. It destroyed so much of infrastructure. We couldn’t repair them, they were prehistoric. We just pulled them out of the ground and said we will race during the day.”

It could have been worse. Laura was one of five hurricanes to hit Louisiana this year, but the only one that produced significant damage to the track.

The daytime cards will be the biggest change for a track that liked to call itself “America’s Favorite Nighttime Track.” The handle figures weren’t huge, but Delta had a following and it, more often that not, outhandled the competition it ran up against when racing Wednesday through Saturday nights.

With lights unavailable, management had to figure out a way to maximize handle. Rather than trying to compete against the simulcast signals from racing’s top tracks, they settled on a new format, racing Mondays through Thursdays with a 12:55 CT first post. The new schedule will go into effect next week. It is a spot on the calendar where there will not be much competition for the wagering dollar.

“The Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays should be good,” Warren said. “On Thursdays there is a lot of competition. It will probably be so-so on that day. If we can do as well as last year I’ll be happy. I’m hoping we won’t be down any, but really don’t know what to expect.”

“I have talked to a lot of the jockeys and they are alle excited,” Stevens said. “They say the track is in great shape. Most of them, 80 or 90%, are excited about day racing because now they can get to sleep at night. Racing during the day will really be strange and so will the Mondays through Thursdays. I’ve never worked at a racetrack and had weekends off.”

Delta has not set a timetable for when it will repair the lights and return to nighttime racing, but could do so for its summer Quarter Horse meet, run at a time where temperatures soar during the day.

With horses that race on the Delta-Evangeline Downs circuit having nowhere to run since Evangeline ended its meet Aug. 29, the first few Delta cards will consist of nearly all full fields. Ninety-six horses have been entered for opening day and  98 for the following day.

All the dates will be made up. The 84-day meet, originally scheduled to conclude Feb. 27, has been extended to Apr. 16.

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Santa Anita To Introduce ‘Sunshine Bonus’

In an effort to attract out-of-state horses to run at its winter/spring meet, officials at Santa Anita have announced the introduction of the ‘Sunshine Bonus.’ The bonus offers $3,000 of guaranteed money paid to the owners of eligible horses making their first starts at Santa Anita, excluding stakes races and debuting horses.

“Along with the 10% raise in our average daily purse distribution–which now totals  $533,000–we’re hopeful this new Sunshine Bonus program will help to attract horses that have not run in California over the past 12 months,” said Chris Merz, Santa Anita’s Director of Racing. “This is a very significant enticement to train and race at what we believe is a magnificent year-round facility.”

Merz added that sizeable bonuses will also be paid to those same horses depending on where they finish in their first starts at Santa Anita.

“Excluding stakes and first-time starters, the Sunshine Bonus will also offer a 35% bonus to the owners of those horses finishing first through fifth in their first starts here,” Merz explained. “So for instance, if a horse ships in and wins a $61,000 maiden special weight race, the owner will not only receive the standard winner’s share of $36,600, [they will] get the first time Santa Anita starter bonus of $3,000 as well as the 35%.

“This adds up to total money-won of $52,410 in a $61,000 race. The numbers speak for themselves and we’re hoping horsemen nationwide will take this into account when they consider sending horses here this winter and spring.”

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Churchill Downs To Install New Turf Course

A new $10-million turf course that will widen the running surface and increase durability to allow for an increased number of races will be installed at Churchill Downs following the Spring 2021 meet at the historic Louisville oval. Officials expect that the new course will be ready for use in the Spring of 2022, but did not rule out the possibility that turf racing could resume in November 2021.

The current Matt Winn Turf Course is a seven-eighths mile oval situated inside the dirt track and has been in use since the introduction of turf racing in 1985. It is comprised of four-inch high Kentucky 31 Fescue (90%) and Bluegrass (10%) grown in a three-inch topsoil layer over a 13-inch course masonry sand base.

The new and more robust turf course will be a similar blend of fescue and bluegrass and will have a redesigned subsurface. The growing medium will contain a six-inch upper root zone layer created with a blended mix of topsoil and grit sand which will sit on a six-inch lower sand layer constructed with masonry sand. Churchill Downs planted several test plots in the spring of 2019 and selected the best for use in the new turf course.

A state-of-the-art irrigation and drainage system and will be widened to 85 feet. The new course will allow for a variety of rail positions from 0 to 36 feet and will accommodate a field size of up to 14 horses.

Because of the project, there will be no stabling at Churchill in July and August 2021 and no racing will take place in September 2021 so as to allow for the turf course to take hold.

Of the 700 races staged annually at Churchill, approximately 25% are written for the grass. In 2019, there were 169 races carded for the turf, but 43 of those were transferred to the main track due to weather and/or sub-optimal turf conditions. Officials at Churchill were forced to cancel turf racing for the final two weeks of the current meeting.

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