Cumberland Run Harness Track Opens Sunday; Kentucky’s Newest Track To Race 12 Days In 2023

Cumberland Run opens this Sunday, bringing live horse racing to southeastern Kentucky for the first time and giving the state a third standardbred track.

Cumberland Run staged its harness meet the past two years at The Red Mile in Lexington while the five-eighths of a mile track was being built. The Mint Gaming Hall Cumberland Run — the part of the property that offers year-round electronic gaming, simulcast wagering on other horse tracks and now sports betting — opened in late July.

Kentucky's newest horse track will race 12 days: Sundays, Mondays and Tuesdays from Oct. 15 through Nov. 7, with a first post of 1 p.m. Eastern.

“We're excited to bring live racing to southeastern Kentucky,” said Ted Nicholson, Vice President of Racing for The Mint Gaming properties. “We look forward to our purses increasing each year and building Cumberland Run into a harness-racing gem while continuing to build back the standardbred industry in Kentucky.”

Said Mike Tanner, CEO of the United States Trotting Association: “The opening of Cumberland Run strengths an increasingly resurgent state standardbred industry that will attract horsemen, both local and out-of-state, to breed and race horses in Kentucky. Together with The Red Mile and Oak Grove, Cumberland Run will comprise a circuit that makes a lucrative, compelling, year-round reason to be part of Kentucky harness racing. The sport's future is very bright in the Commonwealth, and I'm looking forward to being in Corbin on Sunday to see it for myself.”

Cumberland Run is celebrating its opener Sunday with a one-day carnival featuring games and rides for kids between noon and 6:30 p.m. Eastern. Admission and parking. While the indoor gaming facility is restricted to those at least 21 years old, the outdoor area overlooking the racetrack is open to all ages.

“I hope everybody comes out for opening day with our carnival event, bringing their families and friends,” said Henry Graffeo, Vice President and General Manager of Cumberland Run and The Mint Gaming Hall Cumberland in Prestonsburg. “We really want to make it an experience for everyone.”

There has not been horse racing in the eastern part of Kentucky since Thunder Ridge harness track 114 miles away in Prestonsburg closed in 2018. In addition to The Red Mile, there is harness racing in Oak Grove near Hopkinsville in southwestern Kentucky.

“The opening of Cumberland Run in Corbin will be the final piece of the puzzle in the new, vibrant standardbred racing circuit here in Kentucky,” said Kentucky Senate Majority Floor Leader Damon Thayer, adding of Cumberland Run's co-managing partners, “Ron Winchell and Marc Falcone have made a significant financial commitment to both the thoroughbred and the standardbred side. We've seen what they've done at Kentucky Downs. I'm excited to see what they do at Cumberland Run. The standardbred industry is really going through a revival here in Kentucky. Cumberland Run will be a big part of that.”

Daily purses for overnight (non-stakes) races will average $110,000 a day, a substantial increase over the Corbin meets staged at The Red Mile. The minimum purse will be $8,000, topping at $20,000, better than or competitive with other Midwestern harness tracks.

“The overnight purses will be significant, and as a result I think we'll have a lot of horses wanting to race there,” said Jim Avritt Jr., president of the Kentucky Harness Horsemen's Association. “It gives folks a reason to stay in Kentucky for another four weeks.”

Horses eligible for the Kentucky Sires Stakes program will compete for considerably more. The meet will include Kentucky sires stakes legs and finals for 2, 3 and 4-year-olds with races categorized by gait (trotters and pacers) and sex. The preliminary legs will be worth $30,000 for 2- and 3-year-olds and $35,000 for 4-year-olds. Each final will carry a $70,000 purse.

For trainer-driver Randy Jerrell from Kevil in far western Kentucky, the additional race dates are even more critical than the enhanced purses.

“The best thing for the Kentucky circuit is that it is giving us more days to race,” he said. “We've had such a short period of racing before Cumberland Run came around.”

“A small person like me, it gives me more chance to make money,” echoed owner-trainer Jackie Gray of Lebanon. “It's very critical. For a track starting out, those are really good purses. And they should go up, and people get more attracted to harness racing then. That will help us, too. There will be more investments in harness racing. Once they see it, I think people will say, 'This is nice. Let's have fun doing this.'”

Cumberland Run, just off the Corbin Bypass, is halfway between Lexington, Ky., and Knoxville, Tenn. The track is located just a few miles off Interstate 75's Exit 29 coming south from Richmond and Lexington and from I-75 Exit 25 heading north from Williamsburg and Tennessee.

“We're getting into a part of the state that has never had harness racing,” Avritt said. “Hopefully the folks in that part of the state and perhaps northern Tennessee will get a chance to experience it. It's all about growing the sport. We hope to attract new interest and new fans. We hope folks will come out and see it.”

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Bad Weather Forces Cancellation Of Saturday’s All-Turf Monmouth-At-Meadowlands Card

The all-turf Monmouth-at-Meadowlands card scheduled for Saturday night has been canceled due to inclement weather, track officials announced.

The final two live racing days of the abbreviated meet will take place next Friday and Saturday (Oct. 13 and 14).

First race post time both nights is 7 p.m. (ET)  for the six-race cards.

When racing does resume on Friday, there will be a single jackpot Pick 6 carryover of $21,920. If there is not a single ticket winner that night there will be a mandatory payout for Saturday's closing day program.

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Australia: Everest Carnival Riches Continue At Rosehill Friday

The Everest Carnival enters its fourth week, with five stakes races worth AU$4.55 million this Friday night at Sydney's Rosehill Racecourse. A staggering total of AU$87 million will be distributed over the nine weekends of The Everest Carnival. The $20 million showpiece event will take place next week, as elite sprinters contest the world's richest race on turf. The Everest card on October 13 will also feature the inaugural King Charles III Stakes, worth $5 million.

The Everest Carnival continues through the Nov. running of the $10-million Golden Eagle, restricted to 4-year-olds.  The first of 10 Rosehill races this Friday is at 9:40 p.m. Eastern / 6:40 p.m. Pacific and will be broadcast live by FanDuel TV and Sky Racing World.

Get the Cash with Nash

One of Sydney's hottest jockeys is Nash Rawiller. The 48-year-old is a three-time winner of Sydney's riding title, but has not worn that crown since 2012. Results during The Everest Carnival suggest that Rawiller is in career-best form: he went within a head of upsetting the G2 Premiere Stakes last week on 8-1 shot Hawaii Five Oh, after having ridden a triple (including a stakes double) on each of the two previous Friday nights. Five of Rawiller's seven mounts this Friday night are either favorite or second choice in early wagering. He is booked for #2 Peace Officer (5-2) in Race 2; #4 Way To The Stars (5-1) in Race 4; #2 Barber (8-1) in Race 5, the Roman Consul Stakes; #11 Montefilia (3-1) in Race 7, the $2 million Hill Stakes; #1 Cepheus (6-1) in Race 8, the Alan Brown Stakes; #5 Magic Time (3-1) in Race 9, the Nivison Stakes; and #4 Diamond Dealer (10-1) in Race 10.

Race Callers Honored

One of Friday night's stakes races holds special significance for me, having been named for retired Sydney race calling legends John Tapp and Ian Craig. “Tappy” was offered the Hollywood Park job in 1990, came for a working vacation with his family, and brought a 24-year-old race caller from Brisbane with him to finish off the meeting and potentially stay on. Thirty-three years later, yours truly has stayed like a mother-in-law. On a visit to Australia earlier this year, I had the enormous pleasure of visiting the Tapps, who invited Ian Craig around for a barbecue.

The second running of the $500,000 Tapp-Craig Stakes (Race 6), for 3-year-olds at seven furlongs, is headed by the rapidly improving Encap (6-5). After breaking his maiden in a Group 3, Encap went within a nose of beating Militarize in the G1 Golden Rose. This led to connections having a brief flirtation with a slot offer for The Everest, before settling on this more realistic spot.

Countdown to The Everest

The world's richest race on turf, staged under a slot-holder format, is now just a week away on Friday night, Oct. 13 (U.S. time).

  • Hawaii Five Oh's slashing second in last week's G2 Premiere Stakes earned the hulking sprinter a slot.
  • Mazu, who was a late scratch from the Premiere, proved his fitness with a good second on Tuesday morning in a star-studded “barrier trial” (training race). Four other candidates for The Everest contested the five-furlong trial, in which Overpass led throughout.
  • Shinzo, winner of the Golden Slipper (world's richest 2-year-old race) who disappointed off a layoff in the seven-furlong Golden Rose, has earned a slot after a satisfactory third-place finish in the aforementioned trial/training race. Jockey Kerrin McEvoy, three-time winner of The Everest in the young race's six-year history, has been booked.
  • Espiona, last-start winner of a G2 Filly and Mare race at seven furlongs, has earned a slot. Hugh Bowman, now based in Hong Kong and leading the jockey standings for the current season, will return to ride Espiona for trainer Chris Waller, reviving the partnership made famous by the great Winx.
  • Australian Zac Purton, reigning champion jockey in Hong Kong, has been engaged for Godolphin mare In Secret (who finished fourth in the same Tuesday trial/training race).
  • The final available slot will likely go to imported mare Alcohol Free, who finished fourth last week in the Premiere Stakes off a layoff.

The Rosehill card will be broadcast live on FanDuel TV this Friday night (First Post: 9:40 p.m. ET / 6:40 p.m. PT) alongside cards from Eagle Farm, Kembla Grange and Kalgoorlie. All races will be live-streamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, FanDuel and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to live-streaming, past performances, and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com.

A native of Brisbane, Australia, Michael Wrona has called races in six countries. Michael's vast U.S. experience includes; race calling at Los Alamitos, Hollywood Park, Arlington and Santa Anita, calling the 2000 Preakness on a national radio network and the 2016 Breeders' Cup on the International simulcast network. Michael also performed a race call voiceover for a Seinfeld episode called The Subway.

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‘Can’t-Miss Sequence’: Santa Anita, Keeneland Team To Present Breeders’ Cup Challenge Pick 6

Santa Anita Park, which will host this year's Breeders' Cup World Championships for a record 11th time Nov. 3 & 4 and storied Keeneland Racecourse, site of last year's Breeders' Cup, have announced that both tracks will combine to present the Keeneland/Santa Anita Breeders' Cup Challenge Pick 6 to players nationwide on Saturday, Oct. 7.

A traditional $1 Pick 6 with a player-friendly 15 percent takeout, the Keeneland/Santa Anita Breeders' Cup Challenge Pick 6 will include the following Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifiers and be offered in this order: Thoroughbred Club of America (KEE); Coolmore Turf (KEE); Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (KEE); American Pharoah Stakes (SAP); Chandelier Stakes (SAP) and the Rodeo Drive Stakes (SAP).

“We are excited to offer a compelling bet for the horseplayer,” said Nate Newby, Santa Anita Senior Vice President and General Manager. “It's going to be a can't-miss sequence combining Breeders' Cup Challenge Races at both Keeneland and Santa Anita with a player-friendly 15 percent takeout.”

With first post time from Keeneland at 4:12 ET (1:12 PT), the first three races in the sequence will be run there, with the final three races at Santa Anita.

Players are advised that the Keeneland/Santa Anita Breeders' Cup Challenge Pick 6 will be listed as a separate wager/track on all tote and ADW platforms as: Keeneland Santa Anita Pick 6 (KEE/SAP Pick 6).

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