Maryland Jockey Club Unveils Fall Schedule Of 33 Stakes Worth $3.525 Million

The Maryland Jockey Club announced Friday a fall schedule of 33 stakes worth $3.525 million in purses for Laurel Park led by the $200,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G3) and 36th edition of the Jim McKay Maryland Million.

The fall meet begins Thursday, Sept. 9 and run through Saturday, Dec. 31.

The six-furlong De Francis for 3-year-olds and up will help kick off the fall stakes schedule as one of four stakes worth $500,000 in purses Saturday, Sept. 18. Named for the late president and chairman of both Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course, its illustrious roster of winners includes Hall of Famer Housebuster, fellow sprint champions Cherokee Run, Smoke Glacken, Thor's Echo and Benny the Bull, and Lite the Fuse, the race's only two-time winner.

Also on Sept. 18 are the $100,000 Weathervane for fillies and mares 3 and older sprinting six furlongs and a pair of one-mile events for 3-year-olds and up, the $100,000 Twixt for females and $100,000 Polynesian.

Saturday, Oct. 2 will feature five stakes, all on turf, worth $600,000 in purses highlighted by the $150,000 Laurel Futurity for 2-year-olds and $150,000 Selima for 2-year-old fillies, both going 1 1/16 miles. They are joined by the $100,000 Laurel Dash sprinting six furlongs and a pair of listed stakes, the $100,000 Japan Turf Cup at 1 ½ miles and $100,000 All Along for fillies and mares at 1 1/8 miles.

The ground-breaking Maryland Million, which debuted in 1986 and inspired copycat programs throughout the U.S. and Canada, returns Saturday, Oct. 23 with eight stakes anchored by the $150,000 Classic for 3-year-olds and up at 1 1/8 miles. Juveniles are in the spotlight in the $100,000 Nursery and $100,000 Lassie for females, both at six furlongs.

Maryland Million will also serve up the $100,000 Sprint (3-year-olds and up, six furlongs), $100,000 Distaff (fillies and mares 3 and up, seven furlongs), $100,000 Turf (3-year-olds and up, 1 1/8 miles), $100,000 Ladies (fillies and mares 3 and up, 1 1/8 miles), and $75,000 Turf Sprint (3-year-olds and up, 5 ½ furlongs).

Juveniles will take center stage again Saturday, Nov. 13 in the $100,000 James F. Lewis III and $100,000 Smart Halo, the latter for fillies, both at six furlongs. The card will also include the $100,000 Thirty Eight Go Go at 1 1/16 miles for fillies and mares 3 and up.

Thanksgiving weekend will feature five stakes worth $450,000 in purses spread over two days. Maryland-bred/sired horses are featured Friday, Nov. 26 with the seven-furlong, $75,000 Howard and Sondra Bender Memorial for 3-year-olds and up and six-furlong, $75,000 Politely for fillies and mares 3 and older.

Saturday, Nov. 27 offers the last stakes races in Maryland for straight 3-year-olds, the $100,000 Safely Kept for fillies and $100,000 City of Laurel, both sprinting seven furlongs. In addition, horses aged 3 and up will travel 1 1/8 miles in the $100,000 Richard W. Small.

The final month of the calendar year will feature eight stakes worth $850,000 in purses, launched by the $100,000 Maryland Juvenile Futurity for 2-year-olds and $100,000 Maryland Juvenile Filly Championship, each at seven furlongs, Saturday, Dec. 4.

Christmastide Day Stakes return Saturday, Dec. 26 with six stakes worth $650,000 in purses including the $100,000 Heft for 2-year-olds and $100,000 Gin Talking for 2-year-old fillies sprinting seven furlongs, $100,000 Dave's Friend for 3-year-olds and up and $100,000 Willa On the Move for females 3 and older, each at 6 ½ furlongs.

New to the stakes calendar are the $150,000 Robert T. Manfuso for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/16 miles and $100,000 Carousel at 1 1/8 miles for fillies and mares 3 and older. The Carousel, which carried Grade 3 status from 1988 through 1997, was last run in 2002 at Laurel.

Manfuso passed away March 19, 2020 at the age of 82. A former owner of both Laurel and Pimlico and longtime partner of trainer Katy Voss, Manfuso was instrumental in revitalizing Thoroughbred racing in Maryland. An owner and breeder who established Chanceland Farm with Voss in 1987, Manfuso bred 2016 Kentucky Oaks (G1) winner Cathryn Sophia and was named Maryland's Breeder of the Year with his filly earning Maryland-bred Horse of the Year honors.

The extended Preakness Meet at Pimlico runs through Sunday, Aug. 22. Live racing shifts to the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium from Aug. 26 through Labor Day, Sept. 6.

Fall Stakes Schedule: https://www.laurelpark.com/sites/www.laurelpark.com/files/PDF/2021-FINAL-Fall-stakes-schedule.pdf

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Saturday Insights: Dance to the Music Looks To Validate Price Tag

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

7th-DMR, $70K, Msw, 2yo, f, 5 1/2f, post time: 8:06 p.m. ET
DANCE TO THE MUSIC (Maclean's Music) was a work in progress when Walnut Stream Enterprises, a partnership led by 2-year-old consignor Paul Sharp, snapped her up for a mere $40,000 at Keeneland September last fall. Seven months later, the long-striding chestnut was hammered down to Red Baron's Barn and Rancho Temescal for $575,000 at OBS this past April after breezing in a bullet :10 flat. “We were looking for horses with nice physicals and she developed very well,” Sharp told the TDN's Christie DeBernardis. “Every month she got better and she peaked at the right time.” The April foal is out of an unraced Congrats half-sister to GSW turfer Makeup Artist (Dynaformer). Mirasol (Arrogate) is the latest produce from MGSW & GISP Justwhistledixie (Dixie Union), whose other offspring include MGSW and freshman sire Mohaymen (Tapit), GISW New Year's Day (Street Cry {Ire}), GSW & GISP Enforceable (Tapit) and GSW Kingly (Tapit). The Cleary family also bred the ill-fated MGISW Arrogate. LNF Foxwoods' Honor It (Tapit) is the second foal out of With Honors (War Front), winner of the Juvenile Fillies Turf over the local grass in 2016 and subsequently Grade I-placed on dirt in the GI Chandelier S. The filly's champion third dam Dreaming of Anna (Rahy) is responsible for LNJ Foxwoods' Grade III-winning turf sprinter Dreamologist (Tapit) as well as the late GISP Fast Anna (Medaglia d'Oro) and SP Big Dreaming (Declaration of War). TJCIS PPs

Honor Code Homebred Drawn Wide at Spa…

6th-SAR, $100K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, post time: 3:55 p.m. ET
IRISH SEA (Honor Code) gets gate nine in a field of 10 for his debut. By an eye-popping first-out winner at Saratoga, earning the 'TDN Rising Star' distinction in the process, the dark bay is the second foal out of debut romper Irish Jasper (First Defense), who won the GIII Miss Preakness S. and GIII Victory Ride S. for owner/trainer Derek Ryan in 2015 before being purchased by Will Farish and David Mackie. Trained by Chad Brown in the latter half of her 3-year-old season and throughout her 4-year-old campaign, Irish Jasper was a Spa allowance winner in 2016 before landing that year's GII TCA S. at Keeneland en route to an apperance in the GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint. Watasha (Into Mischief) cost owner Peter Brant $450,000 at KEESEP last fall. The half-sister to SW Our Caravan (Daaher) is out of an unraced daughter of GI Acorn S./Mother Goose S./Test S. winner Jersey Girl (Belong to Me), the dam of GISW sire Jersey Town (Speightstown). TJCIS PPs

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Level Playing Field For Eddie Read

Saturday's GI Eddie Read S. at Del Mar brings together arguably the Southern California circuit's best middle-distance horse in the form of LNJ Foxwoods' United (Giant's Causeway) and Cannon Thoroughbreds' Smooth Like Strait (Midnight Lute), clearly best at a mile, but who has run with merit over the nine-furlong trip as well.

United, runner-up in the 2019 GI Breeders' Cup Turf over a mile and a half, made last year's Eddie Read the third of a three-race winning streak and he added a victory in the 10-furlong GI John Henry Turf Championship ahead of an eighth in the Breeders' Cup Turf. The chestnut returned to action with a pace-pressing defeat of the re-opposing Say the Word (More Than Ready) in the 12-panel GIII San Luis Rey S. Mar. 20, but was a head-scratching third at 30 cents on the dollar behind Award Winner (Ghostzapper) in the GII Charles Whittingham S. when dropped back down to a mile and a quarter May 29.

Smooth Like Strait missed by a head to Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) in last year's GI Hollywood Derby over this course and distance, but atoned for that defeat in the GII Mathis Brothers Mile a month later. Run down in the shades of the post by Hit the Road (More Than Ready) in the GI Kilroe Mile in March, the bay was a neck behind the dead-heating Domestic Spending and Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) in the 1 1/8-mile GI Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic May 1 and exits a 1 1/2-length score over Say the Word–with Restrainedvengeance (Hold Me Back) third–in the GI Shoemaker Mile at Santa Anita May 31.

Count Again (Awesome Again), winner of this track's GII Seabiscuit H. in his first run for trainer Phil D'Amato last November, and outsider Vintage Print (Curlin) round out the field of seven.

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No Summertime Blues For Del Mar’s Intern Quartet

They are four students representing three universities – Syracuse in the East, Wisconsin in the Midwest and Arizona in the Southwest.

Like all their peers, they've endured an academic-year-plus under the unique circumstances predicated by the COVID-19 pandemic. But now, they're out in the Southern California sunshine as the 45th group of Del Mar Thoroughbred Club summer interns since the program was started in 1977. They're the group that re-starts a program that was, like many others, discontinued in 2020 due to COVID restrictions.

Let's go by school, from East to West, and learn a little more about them.

Whit Ellis, 20, from Petaluma, and Joey Bottini, 20, from Phoenix are headed into their senior and junior years, respectively, at Syracuse. They're fraternity brothers at Delta Kappa Epsilon. Ellis is majoring in sports business management, Bottini is in the Newhouse School of Communication with studies encompassing TV, radio and management and technology. They're the first Orangemen to intern at Del Mar, making Syracuse the 32nd university to be represented.

They both spent a lot of time at the castle-like DKE house off campus during the COVID situation and have mixed feelings about the experience.

“School had us pretty much locked down, but it was better off campus than on,” Bottini said. “They were really strict in the dorms, but at least we were able to see our friends and have some fun. It felt like it took away a year from us with no sports or games to go to – which are a huge part of school pride – and not being able to be on our really beautiful campus.”

Ellis' plans to study abroad for his junior year were scuttled, as was the 2020 internship that was in the works here. When Bottini heard that Ellis' internship was reinstated for this summer — at an elite, sports-related place – he took a “shot in the dark” and started networking. He was informed in mid-June of a late opening that he filled.

Ellis' family and the one of Craig Dado, DMTC vice president, marketing and chief marketing officer, are longtime neighbors and acquaintances in Petaluma in the Bay Area, but Whit's previous exposure to racing consisted mainly of once-a-year trips to the Sonoma County Fair.

Del Mar's a little different.

“This place is massive, it's like a maze,” Ellis said, a few days into the internship. “And there's something going on everywhere. I'm well aware it's a unique opportunity. Most people don't get an opportunity to do something like this and learn the ins and outs of a place like this.”

Jake Rome, 20, from Irvine, is headed for his junior year at Wisconsin, a journalism and communication arts major. Wisconsin thus becomes the 33rd school to produce a Del Mar intern.

Rome spent most of 2020 in a Madison apartment with roommates and described the routine as: “Schoolwork during the day, maybe a few friends we felt safe with over at night.

“It wasn't the worst thing in the world, not the most negative. I had a lot of time with myself and I had to grow up a little bit quicker. I'd rather not sit in front of my laptop for 12 hours a day and learn by computer. I don't think it's the most effective way for me or a lot of other people to learn.

“But I understand it's what we needed to do.”

Now it's time to listen up “Clones.”

Jake is the son of nationally renowned radion and TV sports talk show host Jim Rome. The senior Rome had Thoroughbred ownership success with two-time Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner Mizdirection, as well as Shared Belief, an Eclipse Award winner as 2-year-old male champion in 2013 and the $1 million TVG Pacific Classic in 2014. Jim Rome is a member of the DMTC Board of Directors.

Jake was in more than few winner's circle pictures after big races from the early elementary to junior high school years, but the memories – even of the Pacific Classic – are not vivid.

“I knew it was a big race, he was a great horse and my dad got to hold up a big trophy,” Jake said. “But I was a little too young to fully process everything and back then I didn't like horse racing as much as I do now.”

Jake might following in his father's footsteps, but possibly along a different path.

“I'm interested in working in TV, but not necessarily in sports, which always comes as a bit of a shock to people,” he said. “I'm more into news and pop culture … but I think I can transfer whatever I learn here to whatever I do later on.

“I didn't expect too much coming in. I knew I had landed a phenomenal gig, but I didn't think I'd fall in love with the track and all the people around it as much as I have.”

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Diego Diaz-Colwell, 21, from Phoenix, will be a junior at the University of Arizona. His school-in-the-time-of-COVID experience was similar to the others with one exception.

“I had COVID in the month of September,” he said. “It hit me pretty hard. But now I'm fully vaccinated and looking to move on, so I can't complain.”

For Diaz-Colwell, the internship figures to be part of a transition from basketball, which he played well, to a career that may or may not touch on the world of sports.

A point guard, Diaz-Colwell was on the varsity roster at Corona Del Sol High in Tempe, Arizona for 2 ½ years during a 2012-2015 run during which the school won four straight state championships, was Top-10 ranked nationally and sent a dozen or so players on to the NCAA Division I ranks.

There, and at subsequent stops at a prep school and Pima Community College, Diaz-Colwell played with, as back-up to, or against NBA-bound Marvin Bagley (Sacramento Kings) and Saben Lee (Detroit Pistons) among others.

“It was a nice journey, but it's over for now,” he said. “I still play basketball, but just for fun. I'm a business major and I probably will go for something in sports, but for now (the focus) is on business and marketing in general.”

Horse racing is, for Diaz-Colwell, a whole new ballgame.

“I love sports, but I've been so wrapped up in playing that I didn't develop a wide interest outside of basketball,” he said. “(Horse racing) is new for me, like it is for a lot of the younger generation, but from what I've seen here so far, I like it.”

The strongest connection to horse racing for Diaz-Colwell before now can be found a few branches up on the maternal side of his family tree. He is the great grandson of acclaimed actor Anthony Quinn and Katherine DeMille.

Which makes him a second cousin to DMTC CEO Joe Harper, the grandson of legendary director and producer Cecil B. DeMille.

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