Friday’s Gulfstream Park West 20-Cent Rainbow 6 Pool Guaranteed At $275,000

The Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $275,000 Friday at Gulfstream Park West.

The popular multi-race wager went unsolved for the 12th consecutive racing day Thursday, when multiple tickets with all six winners were each worth $25,356.44.

The jackpot pool is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Friday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 4-9.

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Hot Blooded Looking To Heat Up Again In Juvenile Turf At Gulfstream Park West

Palm Beach Racing Partnership's stakes winner Hot Blooded, once under consideration for the Breeders' Cup, ends a 12-week gap between starts when he makes his return in Saturday's $60,000 Juvenile Turf at Gulfstream Park West.

By Declaration of War, Hot Blooded has raced exclusively at Gulfstream Park in three starts. He debuted running fourth against fellow Florida-breds June 24 after bobbling and having to steady at the start, returning four weeks later to graduate in a seven-furlong maiden special weight that was rained off the grass.

Hot Blooded was then stepped up into stakes company in the one-mile Proud Man Aug. 29. Under Emisael Jaramillo, who rides back from outside Post 10, Hot Blooded settled off the early pace before tipping outside to take a short lead into the stretch, drawing clear to win by 2 1/4 lengths.

Trainer Carlos David said the connections thought enough of Hot Blooded to plot out a course to the Breeders' Cup that included a start in the Oct. 4 Grade 2 Bourbon Stakes, which offered the winner automatic entry to the Nov. 6 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf, both races at Keeneland.

A minor mishap at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County where David is based, nixed the idea.

“We had a little hiccup with him,” David said. “He needed to go to Keeneland the first week of October and he got loose and just got scraped and banged up a little bit so we had to pass on the Breeders' Cup. Obviously, the Bourbon was a 'Win and You're In' but, unfortunately, we couldn't do it. We decided to just stay here and train him toward this race. He's doing really good, really good.”

Hot Blooded has worked twice at Palm Meadows since overcoming his setback, half-mile breezes in 49.80 second Oct. 24 and 49.30 seconds Nov. 1.

“Since he got loose and got banged up just days before he would have gone out [to Kentucky], we had to just take it easy with him and try to get him back to his form,” David said. “He's had a couple of good workouts. This seems like a logical spot. It's a good race for him to come back.”

Stonehedge's Seazan is entered to make his turf debut after finishing third in the final two legs of the Florida Sire Stakes, the Aug. 29 Affirmed and the Sept. 26 In Reality. The son of Khozan has yet to finish worse than third in four starts, including a maiden special weight triumph Aug. 1 and more than $118,000 in purse earnings.

Jerry Campbell's Castle King is also multiple stakes-placed, having run third in the Proud Man behind Hot Blooded and seven-furlong Armed Forces Sept. 26. Most recently, the Verrazano gelding was second in an optional claiming allowance Oct. 26 over the Gulfstream West turf.

Armed Forces runner-up Fulmini, Catching Fish, Chess's Dream, El Sicario, Light Us Up and Toretto complete the field. Big Thorn is entered for main track only.

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Picara Seeks Third Straight Millions Filly And Mare Turf Preview Score

P & G Stables Picara, yet to register her first victory of the year, looks to regain her winning form in a familiar spot as she goes for her third straight triumph in the $60,000 Millions Filly and Mare Turf Preview Saturday at Gulfstream Park West.

The 7 1/2-furlong Filly and Mare Turf Preview for females three and older is one of two stakes for Florida-breds on the nine-race program, along with the $60,000 Juvenile Turf for 2-year-olds going one mile. First race post time is 12:35 p.m.

Picara, a 5-year-old, won the Filly and Mare Turf Preview for the first time in November 2018 to cap her sophomore season for previous trainer Todd Pletcher. The Turbo Compressor mare returned from a five-month break last August with Gulfstream West-based Jorge Delgado to rally from off the pace to defend her title by three-quarters of a length at odds of 28-1.

“She has been training very good, she's fresh, and she seems to love this track,” Delgado said. “She seems to love the grass here, I don't know why. Maybe it's hard and she likes that. She loves the surface.

“She has won this stakes twice and this will be the third time that she can win it. She won it last time at [big odds], and she's doing better this year,” he added. “She is more mature and more focused and having a good time right now.”

Picara has four wins from six lifetime starts at Gulfstream West, and was second after setting the pace in a seven-furlong optional claiming allowance Oct. 23, an off-the-turf race in what was her first start since finishing off the board in the one-mile In the Breeze Stakes July 5 at Gulfstream Park.

Starting with last year's Filly and Mare Turf Preview Picara had run in seven consecutive stakes, three coming at Gulfstream's Championship Meet last winter. She was third in the 1 1/16-mile Ginger Punch June 6.

“She has been running over her head a little bit. The stakes she ran in the beginning of the year were too tough for her, but she still showed up and she ran good. She had a break and when she came back and she had to run in the slop, and she ran a good second,” Delgado said. “We wanted to give her a preparation for this race and she couldn't run on the grass that day, but it still worked out pretty good for us because she ran good.

“She came back fresh, she gained weight and she was a different horse when she came back,” he added. “She's eating better, doing everything better and she has been training really, really well.”

Joe Bravo is named to ride Picara, who will be looking to surpass $200,000 in purse earnings, from Post 2 in an overflow field of 16 that includes main-track-only entrants Crumb Bun, R Prerogative, Sayonara Baby and Thisismytime.

CJ Thoroughbreds' Bienville Street was one of the favorites in last year's Filly and Mare Turf Preview, finishing fourth, beaten 3 1/2 lengths. The 5-year-old mare also has yet to win in 2020, coming with a neck of capturing the Monroe Stakes Sept. 7 at Gulfstream. She hasn't raced since running third in a one-mile optional claiming allowance Sept. 27.

First on the also-eligible list, Hallmarc Racing's homebred filly Centsless Drama is looking to break a string of three consecutive runner-up finishes, the last two in one-mile optional claiming allowance company Aug. 20 and Sept. 27 at Gulfstream.

Last out, Centsless Drama was 1 3/4 lengths behind Mo of the West, who also shows up in the Filly and Mare Turf Preview, and 3 1/4 lengths ahead of beaten favorite Dynatown in fifth. Both horses are trained by U.S. and Canadian Hall of Famer Mark Casse, who won his 3,000th career race Thursday at Gulfstream West.

“She's been second, second, second in really tough races. I ran her in an open allowance last time against two of Mark Casse's very nice, well-bred fillies,” trainer Carlos David said. “She's all right, and I think this definitely suits her running style. Every time she goes a mile and a sixteenth she gets beat because she's a front-runner, and she's very hard to rate. She just kind of takes the lead and she doesn't want to give it up.

“When she goes past a mile is when she struggles a little bit, but she should be able to handle the ground,” he added. “I think the distance is going to help, although there's a couple horses, sprinters, in there that are probably going to chase me around there which is not ideal, but I think she can do a good job.”

David won two stakes last weekend at Gulfstream West – the Millions Sprint Preview with Legal Deal and Juvenile Fillies Sprint with Shea D Summer.

“It was good,” he said. “I'm really happy when the horses run well for everybody. It's been kind of challenging with the weather and everything else this year.”

Hear My Prayer, winner of the Melody of Colors sprinting five furlongs on the Gulfstream turf March 21; multiple stakes-placed Starship Nala; Aizu, Amadora, High On Gin, Lookinlikeaqueen, Lovely Luvy and Sweet Hitch Hiker are also entered.

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‘You’re Always Busy With The Horses’: The Road To 3,000 Wins For Mark Casse Had Many Stops

In the aftermath of the text he received from one of Thoroughbred racing's most prominent owners, the dual Hall of Fame trainer, the one with plenty to look forward to, took a look back in time.

Can talk now if you like. Nothing much happening here except a tropical storm. 

It's a typical text – inviting, sprinkled with a tinge of dry humor – from Mark Casse, who continues to be one of Thoroughbred racing's top conditioners.  

Seated comfortably in his training centre office in Ocala, Fla., the man on a cusp of a major career milestone is enjoying a rare unfettered morning, one that has allowed him a few more moments to think of what it means to have 3,000 Canadian and U.S. lifetime wins to his name. 

“I didn't really realize I was so close,” started Casse. “[Owner] Gary Barber sent me a message [last] Wednesday night and told me I was only three away. I didn't know that.” 

The exchange with Barber, a longtime supporter of Casse's, prompted reminiscences of how it all began for the native of Indianapolis, the countless highlights along the way, and win No. 3,000, courtesy of Souper Watson on Thursday at Gulfstream Park West. 

Taking out his trainer's license in Massachusetts at the age of 17, Casse saddled his first winner at Keeneland with Joe's Coming, his first starter, in April of 1979. A success story on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, he's won the Sovereign Award for outstanding trainer in Canada a record 12 times and was inducted into the Canadian Racing Hall of Fame in 2016. This year, he was inducted in the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame. He won two-thirds of the American Triple Crown in 2019 when War of Will won the Preakness and Sir Winston prevailed in the Belmont. 

He's campaigned Eclipse Award winners Classic Empire, Shamrock Rose, Tepin, and World Approval, as well as Canadian Horse of the Year honourees Catch a Glimpse, Lexie Lou, Sealy Hill, Uncaptured, and Wonder Gadot. He has recorded a total of seven scores in the Canadian Triple Crown series (the Prince of Wales four times, the Queen's Plate twice, and the Breeders' Stakes once), won five Breeders' Cup races (the Mile twice, as well as the Filly and Mare Sprint, Juvenile, and Juvenile Fillies Turf), and the Queen Anne Stakes at Royal Ascot with Tepin. His leading trainer titles have come at Woodbine (11 times), Turfway (four times), Keeneland (three times), and Churchill Downs (twice). 

A trip in a horse van with his father, the late Norman Casse, to see Secretariat win the 1973 Kentucky Derby hooked him on racing. His father had a successful breeding operation in Indiana before moving his family to Ocala, where he established Cardinal Hill Farm. The elder Casse retired as chairman of the board of the Ocala Breeders' Sales in 2006 after more than 40 years involvement in the industry. 

“I was thinking about it [his own career] on that Wednesday night,” said Casse. “How it all started, a lot of it thinking about my dad. He was the driving force. He always helped me along the way. There are just so many people who have helped me.” 

He mentions his wife, Tina, as a major contributor to his numerous successes. 

“I would say in the last 20 years, Tina would be No. 1 for that. I wouldn't be winning 3,000 races without her. She handles all of the financial parts and business parts, which allows me to go and concentrate on the horses. She also inspires me to continue to try and be successful. I wouldn't have wanted to do it without her. The ups and downs, the losses – when you're having a bad day, or you're not as pleasant or as happy as you should be – your entire family feels that. We don't have the vacations. Even if you slip away for a few days, it never ends. You're always busy with the horses.” 

Casse also acknowledges the impact owners, and his racing team, have had on his career. 

“Even if we don't go over all the owners – the Gary Barbers and the John Oxleys – there are so many people I am grateful to. I could tell you lots of owners and people who have played a huge part in reaching this number. In the first 20 years of my career, I would say the most influential person would be my dad, and in second 20 years it would be in Tina. There's also [assistant trainer] David Adams, [Casse's son and fellow trainer] Norm, and [head of Casse's Florida operation] Mitch Downs, he's been with me 40 years, Robbie Hofher, Cindy Black… there are a lot of people where not everyone sees their names. You eliminate any of these people out of the equation and I wouldn't be looking at 3,000 wins.” 

How does Casse feel about the pursuit of 4,000 wins?  

For now, he'll focus on the short term. 

“I remember thinking when we won our 1,000th race [on August 9, 2008, with Laragh, at Woodbine] that we wouldn't get to 2,000. Then, when we did that [on May 14, 2016, with Reimburse, at Gulfstream], I thought, 'Well, it won't be 3,000.' But I was wrong. I don't know about 4,000. I'm not sure if I have the energy to get there. When you get to 3,000, you realize how many times you have to lose to get that number.” 

Thankfully, the hard-luck losses have been offset by an abundance of accomplishments, accolades and awards. 

Yet despite those lofty numbers, there is no ego to match. 

What there is, however, is a passionate pursuit of winning.  

“With all assets, there are liabilities. I've always said that. It's interesting – going back a long time ago when we won our first Sovereign Award – I thought about the New York Yankees and them winning the World Series year after year. I thought, 'What drives them once you win it to do it again?' The answer to that is you don't want to lose it. Once you've won it, you don't want to lose it.  

“That's what keeps you going. Everything we do as an operation is to get to the winner's circle.”   

It's a familiar spot, whether it happens to be at Woodbine, Churchill, Gulfstream Park, or elsewhere, for a conditioner still very much in his prime. 

Long days, tough beats, and the odd tropical storm are hardly enough to dampen Casse's love of racing.      

“Believe me, I'm not complaining about any of this life. It's the life I chose. The good news is that we always have something to look forward to. Some days, when I get up and we don't have horses running, on some occasions that's a good day if it means that the day is a little more peaceful. But when I wake up and we have a lot of horses running, it excites me for the day.” 

He now has 3,000 reasons and counting to feel that way.  

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