Gulfstream Schedules Mandatory Payout For Saturday’s Rainbow 6

A mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be held Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where the pool is expected to be approximately $2 million if not hit Friday.

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $425,000 for Friday's Happy Hour program at Gulfstream. First-race post is set for 2:55 p.m. The Rainbow 6 will begin with Race 4, a five-furlong starter optional claimer for 3-year-olds and up on the Tapeta, and end with Race 9, an allowance optional claimer for fillies and mares at a mile and 70 yards on the Tapeta.

Friday's sequence also includes a $50,000 maiden claiming event at six-furlongs for 2-year-olds that drew a field of 11.

The popular multi-race wager has gone unsolved for 13 racing days in a row since a lucky bettor hit the jackpot for a $118,521 payoff Friday, July 8. The Rainbow 6 jackpot is 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.

Saturday's featured event, the $65,000 Benny the Bull at six furlongs on the main track, drew a competitive field of eight, many of them running recently behind the Grade 1-placed Willy Boi, who won the Smile Sprint (G3) and Big Drama before finishing third two weeks ago in the Vanderbilt (G1) at Saratoga.

The field includes 2020 Florida Derby (G1) and Swale (G3) runner-up Shivaree, Pudding and Absolute Grit, second and third, respectively, in the Smile Sprint (G3), and King Cab, second in the Big Drama. Also entered is this year's Swale runner-up Dean Delivers, last year's Gallant Bob (G2) third-place finisher Real Talk, and stakes winner Gatsby.

The Benny the Bull will be part of Gulfstream's mandatory payout of the Rainbow 6.

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Equibase Analysis: Santin, Set Piece Top Win Contenders In Arlington Million

The Grade 1, $1 million Arlington Million Stakes, run in its traditional place during the summer but now run at Churchill Downs and on a special one-day of racing at the storied track this Saturday, still packs a lot of horsepower. Nine turf stars have signed on to run, including two horses who have already earned over $1 million in their career. Six of the other seven will go over the $1 million mark in career earnings if they succeed.

Smooth Like Strait has the highest career bankroll at $1.5 million, with 15 of his 20 career starts having resulted in wins or runner-up finishes including when last seen on May 30 finishing second in the G1 Shoemaker Mile Stakes. Field Pass brings a strong record into the race with $1.1 million earned and nine career wins, the most recent of those in the G2 Seabiscuit Handicap last fall.

Santin has only run seven times to date compared to at least double that for most of his opponents, but he's made the most of those starts with three wins including the nearly identical Turf Classic Stakes run on Kentucky Derby day this spring. Set Piece (GB) won the G2 Wise Dan Stakes in June of last year as one of four wins on the Churchill Downs turf from five starts on the course. He also won the G2 Dinner Party Stakes in May.

Sacred Life (FR) enters the Arlington Million following a win in the G3 Monmouth Stakes and rarely runs a bad race, having finished first or second in 17 of 26 career races on grass. Megacity crossed the wire in front of Field Pass last month in the $300,000 Texas Turf Classic Stakes before being disqualified and placed second for interference.

Admission Office also has credentials to be competitive in this field as he won the G3 Arlington Stakes on the Churchill Downs turf course this past June. Likewise, Cellist won the Grade 3 Louisville Stakes over the course in May.

Cavalry Charge won the Fair Grounds Stakes on turf in February at the distance of the Arlington Million and enters the race off a second-place finish in a stakes behind multiple Grade 1 stakes winner Ivar.

About the top two win contenders – Santin and Set Piece (GB):

Santin is one of only two 4-year-olds in this year's Arlington Million (the other being Cellist), and he has only run badly in one of seven career starts. That was when sixth in his most recent start which came in June in the G1 Manhattan Stakes, possibly because one of his shoes had to be repaired in the paddock just before the race. That poor effort might also have been due to the 10 furlong distance of the race he was running for the first time, or the fact he was racing at Belmont for the first time. Prior to that Santin ran the best race of his career, at the nine furlong distance of the Arlington Million and at Churchill Downs. That effort came in the Turf Classic Stakes in May, where the colt earned a career best 115 ™ Equibase® Speed Figure. In that race Santin battled head-and-head for the entire last three-sixteenths of a mile. That was his first start in blinkers and it really seems to have made a difference. Jockey Tyler Gaffalione was aboard that day and rides back and since shipping from New York back to Churchill Downs Santin put in a very sharp three furlong blowout in the morning to put him on edge for a repeat of his Turf Classic effort in the Arlington Million.

Set Piece (GB) also should bounce back to his best form shipping in from New York to race at Churchill Downs, where he has won four of five on this turf course. The best of those efforts came 14 months ago when rallying from last of 10 to win the Wise Dan Stakes in visually impressive fashion, earning a strong 112 ™ figure. After taking seven months off from September of last year until this April, Set Piece (GB) got back into the winner's circle in his second start on the comeback trail, rallying from next to last to win the Dinner Party Stakes in May. Next, in the Forbidden Apple Stakes last month, Set Piece (GB) moved up from 11th to within just about one length of the leaders when he found himself behind a wall of horses, getting a path to run much too late to have an impact and finishing fifth. Before shipping from New York, Set Piece (GB) put in a fantastic morning drill when running four furlongs in 47.8 seconds, the best of fifty-nine workouts at the distance on the day. As such, it is very reasonable to expect Set Piece (GB) to return to form good enough to win this race.

Regarding one of the likely betting favorites, Smooth Like Strait, there's little doubt he fires nearly every time, having finished first or second in 15 of 20 career starts on grass. He missed by a half-length in the Breeders' Cup Mile last fall, earning a career-best 119 figure. He also finished third in the Maker's Mark Mile this past spring and other than that has been first or second in his last six races, all grade one or grade two stakes. Still, he does his best running at a mile, not this mile and one-eighth trip. The last two times he ran this distance, Smooth Like Strait led with an eighth of a mile to go and although game to the wire was beaten by a neck on the finish line in both of those races.

The rest of the field, with their best ™ Equibase Speed Figures, is Admission Office (114), Cavalry Charge (107), Cellist (109), Field Pass (113), Megacity (109) and Sacred Life (FR) (111).

Top Win Contenders:
Santin
Set Piece (GB)

Arlington Million Stakes – Grade 1
Race 11 at Churchill Downs
Saturday, August 13 – Post Time 6:25 PM E.T.
One Mile and One Eighth on Turf
Three Year Olds and Upward
Purse: $1 Million

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15 Percent Takeout: Churchill, Ellis Park Team For Two-Day, All-Stakes Pick 6

Ellis Park and Churchill Downs are partnering on a two-day, all-stakes wager this weekend that showcases the major racing at both tracks in the Commonwealth.

The Bluegrass Pick 6 is a $1 wager with a low 15-percent takeout and mandatory payout. The bet starts with three stakes from Churchill Downs' special Arlington Million card on Saturday and concludes 130 miles away at Ellis Park with another stakes trio on Sunday's Ellis Park Derby program. Like other Pick 6 bets, handicappers attempt to have the winners of all six races in a single combination on their ticket.

The Churchill Downs stakes are the $200,000 Lady Tak, $500,000 Beverly D. (Grade 1) and $1 million Arlington Million (G1), while Ellis Park's are the $125,000 Groupie Doll, $100,000 RUNHAPPY Audubon Oaks and $200,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Derby. The Bluegrass Pick 6's first leg will be the Beverly D., carded as Churchill Downs' Race 5 with an approximate post time of 2:01 p.m. Central.

“This is just another part of our collaboration among tracks to make Kentucky the best racing circuit in the country,” said Vince Gabbert, Ellis Park's interim director of racing. “By working together, the Commonwealth is going to have the summer's most important turf stakes outside Saratoga on Saturday and then follow that Sunday at Ellis Park with the summer's biggest day of dirt stakes in the Midwest.”

The Arlington Million and its distaff counterpart the Beverly D. are being held at Churchill Downs this year following the closure of Arlington Park in suburban Chicago. Ellis Park relinquished Saturday's racing date to allow Churchill Downs to bring two of the country's most important grass stakes to Kentucky.

Ellis Park will conduct an eight-race card Friday then be open Saturday for the simulcasting of the Million program. Live racing resumes with Sunday's nine-race card featuring five stakes: the $125,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Juvenile, $125,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Debutante, the mile Groupie Doll, seven-furlong Audubon Oaks and mile Ellis Park Derby.

“As Ellis Park celebrates its 100th racing season, it's pretty cool that the Bluegrass Pick 6 interconnects two such historic tracks with a unique wager that we are confident racing fans across the country will embrace,” Gabbert said. “Featuring high-quality stakes racing, we think the Bluegrass Pick 6 will be the weekend's best bet.”

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Ellis Park’s Turf Stakes Pick 4 Pays Record $85,939

When Sunday's all-stakes Pick Four paid a track-record $85,939.92 for a 50-cent bet, you know it wasn't business as usual at the RUNHAPPY Meet at Ellis Park.

For a pair of young female jockeys, it was exceptional business as 26-year-old apprentice Gage Holmes won the $100,000 Centennial Distaff Turf Mile on Henrietta Topham and 27-year-old Mickaelle Michel of France two races later captured the finale on Gray's Fable in the $100,000 Henderson Turf Mile.

The all-turf stakes sequence kicked off with a horse trained by North America's all-time win leader — Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen — paying $47.80 as the second-longest shot in the field nine as the Vincent Cheminaud-ridden All in Sync beat older horses in the $100,000 Twin Spires Turf Sprint.

That was followed by Holmes, who only started riding late last year, earning her first stakes victory aboard Henrietta Topham, the 4-year-old filly paying $21.44 in her third straight win.

Creative Credit ($24.16) and jockey Tommy Pompell subsequently led all the way to take the $100,000 Laguna Distaff Turf Sprint by two lengths over the late-running Grade 2 winner Brooke Marie.

The racing wrapped up with Gray's Fable ($23.54) and Michel holding off favored Mr Dumas by a neck while both horses wore down the front-running Tut's Revenge, who finished another head back in third in the capacity field of 12.

A further look:

Asmussen's goal was to get All in Sync on the turf, a mission thwarted but still successful when the colt beat fellow 3-year-olds in the Dade Park Turf taken off the grass. So with the ultimate objective being Kentucky Downs' $600,000, Grade 2 Franklin-Simpson for 3-year-olds, Asmussen put Ed and Susie Orr's All in Sync in against older horses, getting the same result and finding out that the colt likes the grass just fine.

“We're thrilled for the horse and all involved,” said Marissa Short, who oversees Asmussen's Ellis operation. “He's kind of evolved between the first stakes and this. He's changed into a more mature, confident horse.”

All in Sync beat Charcoal by a neck, with Bad Beat Brian another half-length back in third after nosing out 2019 winner Totally Boss.

As an apprentice jockey who hasn't yet won 50 races (she's at 28 through Sunday), Gage normally would get a seven-pound weight allowance in Kentucky to encourage trainers to use her. But that doesn't apply in stakes races. Trainer Geoff Mulcahy acknowledged thinking about switching to a more experience jockey but concluded, “If it's not the right time to go for a stakes when you're coming off two wins, when is? And Gage was a part of those two wins.”

Said owner-breeder Michael Burns: “We got a lot more than seven pounds, we got a lot of talent.”

Henrietta Topham rallied to out-finish favored Turnerloose by a half-length, with 17-1 pacesetter Touch of Class another neck back in third in the field of nine fillies and mares.

Holmes groomed horses while attending Penn State, where she graduated with degrees in veterinary and biomedical science. After college, she decided she wanted to become a jockey.

“First and foremost, I am just so thankful,” Holmes said. “… I felt like I had a ton of horse underneath me. Turning for home, when everybody started moving, I'm like, 'OK, here's your moment.' … I saw how much the other guys were working around me, and I was just sitting there.”

It also was the first stakes victory for the Lexington-based Mulcahy, though he certainly has been around stakes winners. Mulcahy and his wife, Sandra, oversee the training of 50 horses. But the Mulcahys work with 48 of those for other trainers, either getting them ready for the races or off layoffs. (That includes getting the foundation training into future Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresthedevil.)

Creative Credit, who is trained by Cincinnati-based T.R. Hahn, defeated Elle Z in similar front-running fashion in their last start, Indiana's Clarksville Stakes. But owner-breeder Richard Finucane said he understood Creative Credit's odds, given that the 5-year-old mare had never won a race beyond five-eighths of a mile.

“She just left there in front, and when they tried to get close to her, she reached down a little bit,” Finucane said. “She didn't know she was 11-1.”

Favored Elle Z, who generally is the one in front, put the early pressure on Creative Credit but faded to seventh in the field of 10 fillies and mares running 5 1/2 furlongs.

“I really thought she had a shot in here,” Pompell said of his 2,899th career winner.

Churchill Downs-based trainer Brian Lynch, who had the first or second choice in all four stakes, came into the nightcap with his best finish being a third with Tobys Heart in the Distaff Turf Sprint. The Henderson Turf Mile was Lynch's third start with Gray's Fable since getting the 7-year-old gelding after his victory in Churchill Downs' Opening Verse for Canadian-based trainer Roger Attfield.

“He was in great form, and then he sort of ran two sub-par races,” Lynch said of the gelding owned by Steve Goldfine, Kari Provost and Jeff Zlonis. “But in the interim, he's always trained like a horse that can pull off a race like this. Obviously he gets along with Mickaelle. He's a very quirky horse, so it was nice to see her display her talents. She's certainly someone with a future.

“Look, we ran four in four stakes (Sunday). I was hoping to win one of them. So finally we did.”

The victory was a big boost for Michel, who has ridden in Europe and Japan and now is working to get entrenched in America. Gray's Fable was her second North American victory and first stakes.

“He's a really nice horse,” said Michel, who has been in America 2 1/2 months. “I've won in many different countries, so the United States for me was a big deal. I want to prove I can ride and win everywhere — and female riders can do it. So, yeah, it's a really good winner.” She added with a laugh and big smile: “I hope many trainers now put me on their horse.”

All of the winners will get a serious look at corresponding stakes at Kentucky Downs for their next start, their connections said.

Industry data-keeper Equibase said the Pick 4 payoff of $85,939.92 for a 50-cent wager is the highest at Ellis Park going back to 2002. The 50-cent Pick 5 paid off $18,876.92 for having four of the five winners. The carryover into next Friday's card is $56,630.

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