Frankie Dettori Doubles On Opening Night Of Dubai World Cup Carnival

The Longines World's Best Jockey Frankie Dettori will be riding in the UAE through March, and recorded victories in the final two of seven races on opening night at the Dubai World Cup Carnival at Meydan Racecourse on Thursday.

Dettori piloted Godolphin's Land of Legends to win the Group 2 Al Fahidi Fort for trainer Saeed bin Suroor, and Equilateral to win the listed Dubai Dash for trainer Charlie Hills.

“I've been watching this horse for the last three years,” Dettori said of Equilateral. “What he likes is a very fast, slick, five furlong track. Sometimes the English tracks are too demanding for him, but this is tailor-made for him.”

“I'm really enjoying my time here, maybe because I'm running out of years but I'm trying to taking it all in.  Most people are locked in their houses doing nothing, and at least I get to do what I love. I am going to stay here in the united Arab Emirates until Super Saturday.”

Thursday's highlight was the Group 2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round 1. Won in inspired fashion by Nasir Askar's Musabbeh Al Mheiri-trained Military Law in a perfectly executed stalk-and-pounce trip, the 1600m (one mile) test set the stage for what could be an exciting season for middle-distance dirt racing in the region.

Piloted by Antonio Fresu, the son of Dubawi broke alertly and settled well on the rail behind favourite Capezzano, who set strong fractions under Mickael Barzalona. Waiting patiently for that rival to show any signs of resignation, the bay 6-year-old pounced on the opportunity when it presented itself at the top of the lane, asserted and then held off late-closing Dubai Creek Mile (Listed) winner Thegreatcollection, as well as Burj Nahaar (G3) winner Salute the Soldier to win by 1 1/4 lengths in a time of 1:36.42. The same margin separated second and third, with Capezzano capsizing into seventh of 11 starters.

An invitee to the subsequently cancelled 2020 Dubai World Cup (G1), Military Law won for the fifth time in 11 starts and landed his second stakes after The Entisar (Listed) 13 months ago. Bred in England, he is a half-brother to the dam of G1 winner French King and was in the care of John Gosden until mid-2019, winning half his first six starts for breeder Qatar Racing. He was sold to Askar at Tattersalls July 2019 for $144,641.

“He has been training really well in the morning and I got a very good feeling in the last couple of gallops,” Fresu said. “Today he travelled really well, probably because he is fresh, so he travelled very well into the race and when I asked him to go, he really picked up well. Now we need to see after this. He has an entry into Saudi and otherwise the option is going to be (the Al) Maktoum Challenge Round 2 and (Round) 3 and then Dubai World Cup.”

One race prior, the first of three Group 2 races took place in the nine-furlong Singspiel (G2) on turf, named for the only horse to win both the Japan Cup (G1) and Dubai World Cup (G1) and won the past three years by owner Godolphin and trainer Saeed bin Suroor. This year, the team started favourite Military March, who had the services of Frankie Dettori, but said charge never appeared to get involved (finishing eighth) as late-running Lord Glitters trounced foes with a rush under Adrie de Vries.

Breaking slowly and sitting near the tail of the field, the veteran Group 1 winner closed resolutely between horses in the lane for trainer David O'Meara, winning going away by three lengths at the end and leaving a sea of Godolphin blue in his wake. Charlie Appleby's 2020 Zabeel Mile (G2) winner Zakouski closed well to be second 1 1/2 lengths ahead of Bin Suroor-trained Dream Castle, winner of this in 2019. The final time was a spritely 1:46.82 for the same nine furlongs over which the Lord Glitters was third to the great Almond Eye in the 2019 Dubai Turf (G1).

The globetrotting 8-year-old winner was victorious for the eighth time in 33 starts and in his third country. A Royal Ascot winner of the Queen Anne (G1) in 2019, the big grey son of Whipper has competed in top company in France, England, America, Canada, Dubai and Bahrain.

“He missed the kick a bit, but I didn't want to push any buttons early, he can be very keen,” De Vries said. “The pace was good enough just to leave him there. He did things so quickly, I thought I had a long way to make up, but half way through the straight I was sure to win. They ran at a good pace, which helped me a lot. After this, I can't see any reason not to go back (to the Dubai Turf) and he is a bit older now and with a little sun on his back, he should return to his old form.”

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‘If It’s Meant To Be, It’s Meant To Be’: Zayas Looking Forward To Pegasus Chances

Edgard Zayas is hardly a stranger to the Gulfstream Park winner's circle, where he has celebrated the vast majority of his 1,720 career victories while amassing numerous spring and summer riding titles since launching his career in 2012, as well as holding his own during the annual Championship Meet.

The 27-year-old Zayas, however, is doing much more than just holding his own while enjoying break-out success during the 2020-2021 Championship Meet.

After winning 18 and 29 races during the past two injury-interrupted seasons, Zayas has already ridden 42 winners, ranking fourth in the standings, just eight winners less than two-time defending Championship Meet titlist Irad Ortiz Jr.

“I have been blessed. I've been getting a lot of opportunities this meet. It's worked out perfect. Thankfully, I've been healthy the whole year, that's the main part of it,” Zayas said. “It's been 2, 2 ½ years since I've ridden this whole meet because of injuries. I've been getting a lot of support from owners, trainers and my agent.”

Zayas' greater opportunities include mounts in both the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) and the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) Saturday at Gulfstream Park. He has the call on Grade 1 winner Math Wizard in the Pegasus and 2020 Del Mar Derby (G2) winner Pixelate in the Pegasus Turf.

“The Pegasus, riding here year-round, is a race I've been really wanting to ride in,” Zayas said. “I've been blessed this year, riding in both – both on horses with a very good shot. I'm just hoping for the best.”

Although still young, Zayas has benefited from nearly a decade of riding since leaving his home in Puerto Rico for South Florida in 2012.

“I think I've grown a lot through the years after all the ups and downs and injuries. Things that happened in my career I've learned a lot from,” Zayas said. “I've always said, 'If it's meant to be, it's meant to be.' I've been riding with a lot of confidence, not getting the horses out of their pace, riding the way the race comes up, and trying to be smarter.”

Zayas left Puerto Rico's Esquela Vocational Hipica riding school two months before graduation to get the jump on his classmates to start his career and moved directly to South Florida. Hall of Fame jockey Angel Cordero took him under his wing and worked with him every day of the 2012-2013 Championship Meet. He continues to learn the art of riding Thoroughbreds from Hall of Famer Edgar Prado.

“As a bug boy, Angel really helped me out that first year. Now, I have Edgar Prado in my corner every day. He's not riding as much now, but he has the experience of being a Hall of Fame rider and winning so many races,” Zayas said. “To this day, it doesn't matter if I win race, he'll tell me what I did wrong. That really helps a lot. Every time I'm riding a race, he's always watching. I'll text him and ask, 'What do you think of this race?' He always tells me his opinion.”

Prado, who is riding year-round in South Florida, has been only too happy to impart his knowledge on Zayas.

“He's a good rider and a good kid, and he's willing to learn,” Prado said. “I'm willing to help anyone who listens. I concentrate on the ones who want to learn. We've changed some things, and he's applied them, and it's working out.”

Zayas also credits the years riding alongside the best riders in the country during past Championship Meets with helping him refine his riding style.

“Watching them, how they ride and how patient they ride. Watching them ride and how they get there and how they make their horses run, has definitely made a big difference,” he said. “Every day you learn, no matter how many years you've been riding.”

Zayas has been enjoying success while balancing his career and his family life. He and wife, Ashley, the proud parents of soon-to-be-4 Lilly, recently welcomed little sister Lilah to the family.

“I'll come home from the races, and I'll sit there at dinner and I'm on my iPad watching the races. Ashley will tell me, 'Put that down,'” Zayas said with a chuckle. “It's hard to balance. On my off days, I try to get away from horse racing and dedicate my time to them. When it's racing time, it's business time. They're a big part of my life and have really helped me mature.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has placed pressure on his career as well as his family life.

“This year has been very challenging for everyone. Not working horses has been a little challenging, especially when the 2-year-old season started. You don't know what kind of horses you're riding. You only know what the trainer tells you,” said Zayas, referring to the protocols that restrict jockeys from entering the backstretch. “It's been challenging, but we've been very blessed at Gulfstream. They've done a very good job of keeping us running year-round without stopping. We've had no problems.”

No matter how many races he wins in the future, Zayas' resume will always have a nagging void until he can call himself a winning jockey in Puerto Rico.

“I left the jockey school two months earlier and came straight here to Florida, so I never got to ride in Puerto Rico. I went back one day and rode a couple races there, but I still haven't won a race there,” he said. “It bothers me a little bit. Eventually, I'll get back there and win a race someday. It's something that you grew up around and you need it.”

For now, Zayas will keep his focus on continuing his success during the Championship Meet in Saturday's Pegasus and Pegasus Turf.

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Request to Escrow $4.9M in ‘Recaptured’ Arlington Purses Again Shot Down By State

For the second time in four months, the Illinois Racing Board (IRB) Jan. 21 declined a request by the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (ITHA) to put $4.9 million of “recaptured” purse funds in escrow so that money can only be collected by Arlington Park if the track runs its entire slate of 68 dates in 2021.

During Thursday's IRB meeting, the ITHA restated the same argument it articulated back on Sept. 16, when the 2021 dates were initially granted: that the Illinois racing community doesn't have faith that Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), the gaming corporation that owns Arlington, will follow through on running a race meet in its entirety, so ITHA wants the statutorily legal recapture funds conditionally withheld by the IRB as a cudgel of compliance.

The litany of distrust between the ITHA and Arlington is based on three recent incidents: 1) A stunning 2019 decision by CDI to intentionally miss a deadline to apply for racino licensure at Arlington after working for more than a decade with the ITHA to get a gaming law passed; 2) An acrimonious eight-month battle over race-meet contracts for 2020 and 2021 that included numerous blown deadlines and required IRB mediation; and 3) Comments made last July 30 by Bill Carstanjen, CDI's chief executive officer, that CDI will honor its 2021 race meet contract with the ITHA “if we elect to do so” and that the Arlington property “will have a higher and better purpose for something else at some point.”

Recapture has been a controversial entity unique to Illinois racing for 25 years. It's based on a 1995 law that states that if in any given year, total Illinois handle falls below 75% of the state's 1994 benchmark, any track whose handle also falls below its own 1994 individual benchmark is entitled to deduct 2% of the difference from its horsemen's purse account.

To give a long-view example of how much money that law has cost Illinois purse accounts since its implementation, David McCaffrey, the ITHA's executive director, testified Thursday that Thoroughbred and harness tracks statewide over the decades have reaped $298 million in recaptured funds, with Arlington alone raking back $98 million in money that had been earned for purses.

ITHA President Michael Campbell added that recapture “is harmful. It is what has caused the almost total erosion of the industry in Illinois.”

But although they have a problem with the recapture law itself, McCaffrey and Campbell both admitted that Arlington is not doing anything illegal in taking the recapture money according to the Illinois statute.

“It's their legislative right,” Campbell said. “But at the same time, it doesn't mean that it's a good law.”

Campbell noted that Hawthorne Race Course, the other stop on the two-track Chicago circuit, is deferring any collection of its recapture funds until more money is generated for purses when the Hawthorne racino gets up and operational.

Yet Arlington president Tony Petrillo testified that his track already does work with the ITHA to the extent that, “Arlington, prior to this year, has voluntarily capped or put a ceiling on recapture of $4.5 million.”

Petrillo added: “Regarding the [escrow] payment schedule that the ITHA is seeking, first I would say Arlington should not be treated differently than any other racetrack in those terms…. We cannot control the results of the pandemic…. We have accepted 68 days of racing [and] fully intend to run those 68 days of racing…. I don't think [escrowing the recapture funds] would be in the best interest of racing and to set that type of precedent.”

Back in September, when the ITHA first asked the IRB to hold back 2021 recapture funds until Arlington's 68-date season was completed, the IRB's attorney said that statutory provisions didn't allow the attachment of such a stipulation to dates orders. Based on that advice, board members at that time voted 6-0 to grant Arlington's schedule with no escrow strings attached.

But it was noted at that same meeting that the ITHA could bring up the subject again in January, when the IRB had to vote upon setting the 2021 recapture payment schedule.

Yet on Thursday, after hearing from both the ITHA and Arlington for 25 minutes on the topic, no IRB members stepped forward to attach the ITHA's escrow request to the motion listed on the agenda to certify the recapture amounts.

In fact, the IRB didn't even discuss the issue prior to voting 6-0 to release the recapture payments as requested by the tracks.

For Illinois' three Thoroughbred tracks, the approved recapture amounts this year will be: Arlington ($4,948,020), Hawthorne ($2,879,530) and Fairmount Park ($1,934,464).

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Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale Adds 70 Supplemental Entries

Fasig-Tipton has cataloged an additional 70 supplemental entries to its 2021 Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale.

These entries are cataloged as hips 581-650 and may now be viewed online.  Print versions of the supplemental catalogue will be available on the sales grounds at sale time.

These latest entries include:

  • Shieldmaiden (Hip 589): Daughter of Smart Strike is the dam of Fair Maiden, recent winner of the Grade 1 La Brea Stakes at Santa Anita. She is from the immediate family of Grade 1 winners Secret Status, Private Status, and Dunbar Road. Offered in foal to Passion for Action, she is consigned by South Point Sales Agency, agent.
  • Julia's Ready (Hip 594): Daughter of M0re Than Ready is a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Tom's d'Etat. A winner at two and an earner of $191,000, she is consigned as racing/broodmare prospect by Hermitage Farm, agent.
  • Mo See Cal (Hip 605): Daughter of Uncle Mo is a stakes winner of $348,258. Consigned as a broodmare prospect by Paramount Sales, agent.
  • Educating (Hip 610):  Young daughter of Elusive Quality is a half-sister to graded stakes winners Diversy Harbor, Keertana, and Snow Top Mountain. In foal to Hard Spun, she is consigned by Hill 'n' Dale Sales Agency, agent.
  • Whoa Nellie (Hip 625): Multiple stakes winner and multiple graded stakes-placed earner of $353,830.  Immediate family of Grade 1 winners Awesome Humor, Emcee, and Constitution. Consigned as a broodmare prospect by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent for Fox Hill Farms, Inc.
  • Playful Love (Hip 630): Stakes-placed daughter of Tapit, offered in foal to Twirling Candy. Consigned by Lane's End, agent.
  • Fiftyshays of Green (Hip 640): Stakes-placed daughter of leading broodmare sire Bernardini, from the family of Grade 1 winner Composure.
  • Dame Commander (Hip 642): Three-year-old daughter of War Front is a half-sister to European group stakes winner and U.S. Grade 1 placed Long Island Sound, and out of half-sister to Grade 1 winners Zenyatta and Balance. Consigned as a racing/broodmare prospect by Four Star Sales, agent.
  • Not In Jeopardy (Hip 646): Multiple stakes-placed daughter of The Factor is out of a stakes winning half-sister to Grade 1 winners Justin Phillip and Greenpointcrusader, and graded stakes winners Successful Mission and Algorithms. Consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.

Also included are yearlings by Bolt d'Oro, Practical Joke, Good Magic, Frosted, Ghostzapper, and Munnings.

There are also several entries form the Estate of Daniel Kessler (K.C. Garrett Farm LLC).

Fasig-Tipton will continue to accept approved supplemental entries through Monday, January 26.

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