‘I Think He’s An Overachiever’: Casse Confident In Sir Winston Ahead Of Pegasus World Cup

Fans of Woodbine racing have a horse to cheer for in the Pegasus World Cup.

Sir Winston, who has contested seven of his 19 career starts at Woodbine, is set to square off against a star-stacked field, including last year's winner Knicks Go, in the Grade 1, $3 million Pegasus World Cup on Jan. 29 at Gulfstream Park.

“Woodbine is what got Sir Winston started,” said dual Hall of Famer trainer Casse, of the 2019 Belmont Stakes champion. “He was struggling as a young horse and we brought him to Woodbine. He got good and then went on and won the Belmont.”

After making his first two career starts south of the border in 2018, the son of Awesome Again made three starts at Woodbine, winning two of three, including a victory in the Display Stakes, in what was the final start of his two-year-old campaign.

“I think he's an overachiever,” said Casse. “I always tell the story where he got beat 20 lengths his first two starts and then went on to win the Belmont. He's always going to be special in my heart for that reason. He tries. He's not an imposing horse. He's an average-looking horse and became much better-looking as he got older.”

Bred and owned by Tracy Farmer, Sir Winston hit his best stride at Woodbine in 2021 after returning from an 11 ½-month hiatus from racing. He was sent to the sidelines near the end of 2020 before he loaded into the starting gate last August where he won an allowance race.

His past four engagements, three of them stakes, have all come at the Toronto oval, yielding two wins and a pair of seconds.

Sir Winston closed out his 5-year-old season with runner-up performances in the Grade 3 Durham Cup and Grade 2 Autumn at Woodbine before a smart score in the Grade 3 Valedictory Stakes, over 1 ½ miles, on Dec. 5.

“The Valedictory, of course,” offered Casse, as to which 2021 win was the most impressive. “For Sir Winston, it was a little frustrating. A couple of times he got a little unlucky and I thought he could have won. The problem with Sir Winston is that a mile and a sixteenth is a little short for him. He would kick-in and everyone would sprint home and he would start kicking and then he's kind of run into traffic. It wasn't the rider's fault. He just doesn't have that quick, responsive acceleration. But he's a hard-trying horse.”

He has also overcome his fair share of adversity.

“We had him in Dubai. He was supposed to run in the 2020 World Cup and then they canceled it. He just didn't come back the same horse from Dubai. It took us a long time to get him back. We had to make a decision as to whether to retire him or give him a long break. So, we sent him back to the Farmer's place and he spent a lot of time there. Kudos to their farm because he came back a better horse.”

After the Valedictory triumph, Sir Winston headed back to south Florida to be with Casse, where he has been working over the dirt at Palm Meadows Training Center. On Jan. 7, he travelled five panels in 1:00.55, the second quickest of 27 moves at the distance.

Sir Winston arrives at the Pegasus with a 6-4-1 mark from 19 starts, with earnings of $1,189,873.

“In 2021, he gave me everything he had every time,” praised Casse.

He's hoping for similar good fortune this year, starting on Jan. 29 in the Sunshine State.

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Handicapping Heavyweight: Kenny Mollicone To Receive First King Of The Turf Championship Belt

Kenny Mollicone established himself as the National Turf Handicapping Champion by winning the King of the Turf Handicapping Challenge last September during the FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs. Now he'll have the belt to prove it.

Mollicone, a 47-year-old real-estate developer from Somerset, Mass., will be presented the Global Tote King of the Turf Championship Belt during Sunday's awards dinner that wraps up the National Horseplayers Championship (NHC) at Bally's Las Vegas. The Global Tote belt was designed to mimic boxing's iconic world championship belts.

“I love it!” Mollicone enthused recently when texted a photo of the Global Tote Championship Belt. “Never had a trophy quite like that. Never had a championship belt. I'm going to put it right in my office. Put it right in a case.”

Asked if he's been getting the proper respect for being King of the Turf, he said with a laugh, “Believe it or not, I've had more than a few people who bet horses stop me and go, 'Hey, King of the Turf!' It's pretty funny.”

Mollicone won the six-day competition based on Kentucky Downs' races with an aggregate bankroll total of $5,783.90 after playing in all three of the individual two-day, live-money contests. That gave him a comfortable $1,163.90 advantage over runner-up Christy Moore of Fishers, Ind. Mollicone also earned $20,000 as the overall winner.

“Like Kentucky Downs, the King of the Turf Handicapping Challenge is one-of-a-kind in American racing,” said Dallas Baker, Head of International Operations for Global Tote's parent company, BetMakers Technology Group. “We wanted our King of the Turf to get a champion's trophy as unique as the tournament format and its venue. It's especially appropriate to use boxing's fabled world-championship belts as our inspiration for an event in Kentucky, which of course gave us Muhammad Ali.”

Eleven competitors earned Kentucky Downs-sponsored berths for the NHC, which runs Jan. 28-30. Moore, who already had earned the maximum two NHC qualifying seats, instead received an entry for the Breeders' Cup Betting Challenge, in which she finished fourth out of 522 entries.

“It's taken just two years for the Kentucky Downs King of the Turf Handicapping Challenge to become one of the most coveted prizes in the world of handicapping contests,” said Brian Skirka, Monmouth Park's marketing manager who has served as the Kentucky Downs' King of the Turf tournament director the past two years. “Andy Muhlada was a great inaugural champion in 2020, and 2021 champ Ken Mollicone – with the introduction of the new Global Tote King of the Turf Championship Belt – will literally carry his title into 2022.

“An unmatched layout and quality of turf racing gives Kentucky Downs such amazing content that serves as the ultimate ingredient with which to concoct a world-class contest series. I'm excited to work with the team to create this year's contest series.”

While the King of the Turf Handicapping Challenge features live money, with players keeping their final bankroll in addition to any prize money, the NHC's format utilizes mythical $2 win and place wagers on a single horse in mandatory and optional races. Competitors must play 18 races each of the first two days, after which the top 10 percent of entries based on mythical bankroll qualify for the third day's semifinals, where players pick their 10 races to play. The subsequent top 10 players advance to the Final Table, featuring seven mandatory races.

Mollicone finished 194th in last year's NHC out of 563 entries, his first time qualifying for the world's most prestigious handicapping competition.

“I had a horse that was 16-1 in the last race at Saratoga and got disqualified,” he said of the COVID-delayed 2021 NHC. “If he hadn't been taken down, I'd have been in the semifinals. I'm still sick about it. Watch the replay.”

Also qualifying for the NHC through Kentucky Downs, with hometowns are Marikate Carter (Saratoga Springs, NY), George Chute (Dedham, MA), Erin Doty-McQuaid (Nicholasville, KY), Gary Gristick (Lebanon, PA), Lawrence Kahlden (St. Petersburg, FL), Chris Larmey (Kennewick, WA), Nick Noce (Rochester, NY), Joseph Regan (Marlboro, MA), David Rink (Bannockburn, IL) and Gary Wright (Staten Island, NY). In addition to Moore, Ed Deicke (Lido Beach, NY) earned a Breeders' Cup Betting Challenge berth at Kentucky Downs after being double-qualified for the NHC.

With Kentucky Downs picking up a seventh racing day for 2022, the format for the King of the Turf Handicapping Challenge has not yet been set. Kentucky Downs will race Sept. 1, 3, 4, 8, 10, 11 and 14. Mollicone says he's participating however it's structured.

“One hundred percent,” he said. “I've got to defend myself. Have to go for another belt.”

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Knicks Go Named Longines World’s Best Racehorse Of 2021

Co-organized by Swiss watch brand Longines and the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA), the ninth edition of the Longines World Racing Awards honoured the top Thoroughbred racehorses, horse race, and jockey of the previous year.

From the National Horse Racing Museum in Newmarket, England, presenter Francesca Cumani revealed that the title of 2021 Longines World's Best Racehorse belonged to Knicks Go, while the 2021 Longines World's Best Horse Race was the Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1) in France. During the ceremony, Ryan Moore was also celebrated as the 2021 Longines World's Best Jockey.

Knicks Go finished 2021 on a rating of 129, which was the highest in the world. He earned that rating in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) in his final start of the year. Knicks Go began his season by taking the Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes (G1) last January, and he added additional victories in the Whitney Stakes (G1), Prairie Meadows Cornhusker Handicap (G3), and Lukas Classic Stakes (G3) before his dominant win at the Breeders' Cup World Championships.

There was a three-way tie for second between Europe's Adayar (IRE), Mishriff (IRE), and St Mark's Basilica (FR), who all finished 2021 on a rating of 127. Adayar earned his rating in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Qipco Stakes (G1); Mishriff achieved that mark with his victory in the Juddmonte International Stakes (G1); and St Mark's Basilica received his rating from having won the Coral-Eclipse (G1).

The Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings are established by international handicappers according to the performance of the horses in top races. In the previous edition, Ghaiyyath (IRE) was awarded the 2020 Longines World's Best Racehorse title.

The Longines World Racing Awards also celebrated the Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1), held at ParisLongchamp in France, as the 2021 Longines World's Best Horse Race with a rating of 124.75. This award recognizes the best-rated race of the highest-rated Group 1 international races as established by a panel of international handicappers. The ratings of the top four finishers in each race serve as basis for the assessment.

This is the fifth time the Arc has won the award, with additional recognition coming in 2015, 2017, 2018, and 2019. America's Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) won in 2016, while England's Juddmonte International Stakes (G1) took the title in 2020.

During the ceremony, Ryan Moore was also honoured as the Longines World's Best Jockey of the year. The awarding of the Longines World's Best Jockey title is based upon performances in the 100 highest-rated Group 1 and Grade 1 races as established for the year by the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Committee. Moore also was named the Longines World's Best Jockey in 2014 and 2016.

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Foal Patrol Presented By National Museum Of Racing And Hall Of Fame: Why Was Speightstown Chosen For Elate?

Foal Patrol, an initiative of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, has partnered with the Paulick Report in Season 5 to bring you closer to featured mares and foals and to ask farm staff questions about their care and management over the course of the season.

In this episode with Elate at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., Paulick Report staff ask Claiborne's Mary Ormsby, “Why was Speightstown chosen for Elate's mating?”

For a chance to have one of your questions asked in an upcoming Foal Patrol episode on the Paulick Report, email your question to foalpatrol@racingmuseum.net. Be sure to let us know if your question is for a specific Season 5 mare.

Since Season 1 in 2018, millions have engaged with Foal Patrol's live webcam series for a behind-the-scenes look at what daily life is like for in-foal mares and foals. Learn more about this season's lineup at www.foalpatrol.com and watch our “Recent Updates” for Foal Patrol announcements and posts about featured mares and foals throughout the season.

Foal Patrol Season 5 education content begins with breeding and reproduction and covers various aspects of the life of a Thoroughbred horse, from foaling through retirement. In partnership with industry collaborators, we will add content to the new Foal Patrol Education Site for viewers of all ages from January through June 2022 at www.foalpatrol.com/education. Check in often to connect and learn.

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