Gulfstream Park: Pegasus Preps Next Weekend With Mandatory Rainbow 6

Looking ahead, Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., will reopen for live racing Tuesday, Dec. 26, close Wednesday, and then run Thursday through Sunday.

On Saturday, Dec. 30, Gulfstream will offer four stakes races, three graded, including the $150,000 Harlan's Holiday (G3), a prep for the Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1), and the $200,000 Fort Lauderdale (G3), a prep for the Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1). There will also be a mandatory Rainbow 6 Saturday with the Harlan's Holiday and Fort Lauderdale part of the sequence.

The Harlan's Holiday, contested at 1 1/16 miles, drew a field of 11 including Fayette (G2) winner O'Connor, Remsen (G2) winner Dubyuhnell, and multiple graded stakes placed Ny Traffic.

The Fort Lauderdale, at 1 1/8-mile on the turf, has 10 entered including Calumet Farm's Running Bee, multiple graded stakes placed Grand Sonata, and Stone Age, runner-up in the 2022 Breeders' Cup Turf (G1)

For more information on Pegasus World Cup Day Jan. 27, go to PegasusWorldCup.com.

The post Gulfstream Park: Pegasus Preps Next Weekend With Mandatory Rainbow 6 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Longshot Player Kaminski Wins Tampa Bay Downs’ Festivus Challenge Handicapping Contest

Cindy Kaminski figured she needed a miracle Saturday to grab one of the top two spots in the Tampa Bay Downs' 10 Days of Festivus Challenge Handicapping Contest, an online event.

Truth be told, her situation was more dire than that. She was in 23rd place, and the fields for both of Saturday's Festivus Challenge Races, the sixth and seventh, included top-heavy favorites coming out of high-percentage barns.

But Kaminski, a retired school system paraprofessional from Mays Landing, N.J., stayed firm in the belief that a path to victory existed.

“I knew I had to go with a longshot,” said Kaminski, who settled on The Skipster in the seventh race, the Lambholm South Race of the Week on the turf. “I checked his past performances and they didn't look too bad, and I saw nobody (in the contest) had bet him. My bankroll was $76 at that point and the leader was around $130, so I thought that was my only shot.”

The 5-year-old Arkansas-bred gelding went off at 76-1 (numerology students, take note) in a race in which Conversing, the eventual winner, was 1-2. Under jockey Jose Batista, The Skipster was poised to pull off a shocker before Conversing took over in deep stretch.

The Skipster paid $26.20 to place and $13 to show, making the result as good as a victory for Kaminski. The $39.20 boost to her bankroll rocketed her to $115.20, $10.80 ahead of runner-up Tom Driscoll of Flagler Beach, Fla.

Kaminski receives the first-place Festivus Challenge prize of $1,000 and Driscoll collects $500. There were 1,020 participants, but only 13 remained after nearly everyone ran out of lifelines and was eliminated.

Kaminski had scored with another longshot on the second day of the contest when 4-year-old gelding Bold Medication won and paid $22 to win, $11.20 to place and $6.40 to show.

This was Kaminski's second year playing the Festivus Challenge.

“My husband, Alex, and his friend are big horse racing people, and they encouraged me to play,” she said. “It's amazing. I don't watch the races – it's sort of a superstition, I guess–so my husband lets me know what's happening.”

Alex could barely keep his jaw from hitting the floor as the race unfolded. “I thought (The Skipster) was going to win,” he said.

“It was worth taking a shot. You never know what will happen,” Cindy said, before trying to make sense of things with a dose of Yogi Berra-ese: “When a horse goes off at 70-something-to-1, what are the odds?”

Driscoll, a former Zephyrhills resident who still raves about the lobster panini in the Tampa Bay Downs clubhouse, credits years of experience playing the Festivus Challenge for his second-place performance. “My wife Andrea discovered this contest 10 or 12 years ago, and it was like a Christmas present for me,” Driscoll said. “Every year it's a blast.”

The Driscolls founded the Panda Hugs Learning Center, a child-care center in Tampa, before selling it three years ago. Tom Driscoll is a huge fan of Thoroughbred racing, spending a few days this year at Saratoga.

Driscoll was in fifth place entering Saturday's action, about $30 behind the leader, and like Kaminski knew a longshot was needed to cash in. His choice, 18-1 shot Good Enough for Me in the sixth, finished a non-threatening sixth, but Driscoll aimed his focus on the future.

“I'll definitely be playing again next year, and I'll be going for the win,” he said.

The post Longshot Player Kaminski Wins Tampa Bay Downs’ Festivus Challenge Handicapping Contest appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Weekend Lineup: Holiday Feast Anchored By Santa Anita’s Opening Day

The penultimate weekend of racing for 2023 kicks off on Saturday with a pair of graded stakes at Gulfstream Park, Kentucky Derby and Oaks preps at Fair Grounds, and then continues on Tuesday with Santa Anita's traditional day-after-Christmas opening day featuring six graded stakes, including three Grade 1.

Sprinters are in the spotlight in South Florida, with a wide-open field of fillies and mares contesting the G3 Sugar Swirl at six furlongs, followed by the G3 Mr. Prospector Stakes, where Sibelius defends his title in a field of nine colts and geldings going seven panels. Gulfstream also attracted big fields for the Tropical Park Oaks and Tropical Park Derby scheduled over Gulfstream's new turf course.

There are no standouts in the Untapable Stakes at Fair Grounds, where six 2-year-old fillies will race a mile and 70 yards in quest of qualifying points for the Kentucky Oaks (10-5-3-2-1 to the top five). The 1 1/16-mile Gun Runner Stakes, final event of a 12-race card featuring eight stakes at the New Orleans track on Saturday, attracted eight soon-to-be sophomore colts led by Brad Cox-trained Nash, a son of Medaglia d'Oro coming off a 10 1/4-length winning performance in a Churchill Downs maiden race in November that earned him a 97 Beyer Speed Figure. The top five in the Gun Runner will earn 10-5-3-2-1 points for the Kentucky Derby.

The final three Grade 1 stakes of the year highlight Santa Anita's opening day program, which offers a total of 11 races (including three Grade 2 stakes) and gets under way at 11 a.m. Pacific/2 p.m. Eastern.

Not surprisingly, trainer Bob Baffert holds a strong hand in the G1 Malibu for 3-year-olds going seven furlongs, with G1 Breeders' Cup Sprint pacesetter Speed Boat Beach leading his trio of entries, along with $3,550,000 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-old purchase Hejazi, who returned from a seven-month hiatus to dominate an allowance field Nov. 3. Someone will walk away from the Malibu with G1 credentials to enhance their stallion resume.

The G1 La Brea, the companion race for 3-year-old fillies, looks to be wide open, with a field of 10 that includes just a single previous graded stakes winner, Richard Mandella-trained Ice Dancing, a daughter of Frosted who won the G3 Santa Ynez in January before going to the sidelines. In her comeback race in late October, Ice Dancing came up a half-length short, finishing second as a heavy favorite against older fillies and mares.

Santa Anita's other G1, the American Oaks for 3-year-old fillies going 1 1/4 miles on turf, similarly has just one previous graded winner, Anisette, most impressive last summer winning the G1 Del Mar Oaks. East Coast-based Be Your Best has been knocking on the door against top company for trainer Horacio De Paz, and she'll ship west to take on Anisette once again, having finished second to her at Del Mar.

Saturday

4:06 p.m. – Grade 3 Sugar Swirl Stakes at Gulfstream Park

After crisscrossing the country with stops in Kentucky, California, Oklahoma and Ohio, multiple stakes winner My Destiny is back home for what is expected to be her last race against a field of eight in the $125,000 Sugar Swirl.

Trained by owner Sam Wilensky's father, Herman, 6-year-old My Destiny will begin her new career as a broodmare in 2024, already booked to 2022 champion male sprinter Elite Power. She is enjoying her best season to date with four wins, two in stakes, from eight starts including a career-best performance to capture the six-furlong Flashy Lady Handicap by 5 ¼ lengths Sept. 24 at Remington Park.

Two-time defending Championship Meet leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. wheels Ed Seltzer's 7-year-old homebred mare Bluefield back just two weeks off a determined neck victory in the seven-furlong FTBOA City of Ocala Florida Sire Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs.

Joseph will also send out 4-year-old Intrepid Daydream, a recent private purchase by Miller Racing that has put together four consecutive wins including the six-furlong Shine Again and Politely and seven-furlong Maryland Million Distaff, all at Laurel Park. She arrived at Gulfstream Monday.

Sugar Swirl Entries

4:36 p.m. – Grade 3 Mr. Prospector Stakes at Gulfstream Park

Millionaire gelding Sibelius, who used his win last year as a springboard to Group 1 glory in Dubai, returns to make a title defense against a field of eight rivals in Saturday's $125,000 Mr. Prospector (G3) at Gulfstream Park. Though winless in three tries since returning to North America, running fourth in the June 3 Aristides at Churchill Downs, seventh by 4 ¼ lengths in the July 29 Bing Crosby (G1) at Del Mar and fifth in the Phoenix Oct. 6, Sibelius will be racing at his home track for the first time since a 2 ¼-length triumph in the Mr. Prospector on New Year's Eve 2022.

At the opposite end of the gate is Holly Crest Farm's 3-year-old New Jersey homebred Great Navigator, never worse than third in nine career starts with three wins. He is twice graded-stakes placed, having run second in the 2022 Sanford (G3) at 2 and third in his most recent effort, the Oct. 1 Vosburgh (G2) at Aqueduct. Finishing ahead of him that day were Cody's Wish, back-to-back winner of the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) and a candidate for Horse of the Year, and three-time Grade 2-placed Accretive.

Grade 2 winner Howbeit and fellow multiple stakes-winning stablemate Winfromwithin, who have combined for 12 wins and $767,591 in purse earnings from 52 starts; 2022 Gallant Bob (G2) winner Scaramouche; Hurricane J, a front-running winner sprinting 6 ½ furlongs Nov. 19 at Gulfstream; Dreaming of Kona, promoted winner of Gulfstream's one-mile Mucho Macho Man Jan. 1; Grade 1-placed Gilmore and 2019 Rebel (G2) winner Long Range Toddy complete the field.

Mr. Prospector Entries

6:30 p.m. – Gun Runner Stakes at Fair Grounds

Off a dominant win in his second career start, the Godolphin homebred Nash has been installed as 7-5 morning line favorite against seven rivals in Saturday's $100,000 Gun Runner Stakes. Trained by Brad Cox, the son of Medaglia d'Oro sprinted on debut on October 7 at Keeneland. Nash sat a pocket trip and finished a clear second behind the gate to wire winner Booth. Stretched out to 1 1/16 miles for his follow-up start five weeks later at Churchill Downs, Nash went right to the lead and extended his margin of victory to the wire with every stride, romping up 10 ¼ lengths in front of his closest pursuer.

Catching Freedom, Cox's other Gun Runner entrant, also merits respect. Despite a compromised start and an extremely wide turn for home over a one-turn mile in his career debut at Churchill on October 1, the son of Constitution rolled home to win by 3 ¾ lengths.

Steve Asmussen, who trained Gun Runner for whom the race was named and won the inaugural edition with Epicenter, has two live runners in the race on Saturday.

It took Track Phantom three tries to break his maiden, but after finishing third then second over the one-turn mile at Churchill, he took his game to a new level in his first route try last time out. In a perfect pressing position early on, he took full command late on the backstretch and drew away to a convincing 4 ¾ length win.

Asmussen's other runner, the Gun Runner colt Risk It, is the class of the field. A dominant winner on August 19 at Saratoga first out of the box sprinting, Risk It stretched out to a one-turn mile for the Iroquois (G3) four weeks later at Churchill. Sent off as the 1.35-1 favorite, Risk It enjoyed a clear, stalking trip, but he could only manage second behind the 12-1 longshot West Saratoga. Stretched out to two-turns for the first time in the Kentucky Jockey Club (G2) last out, he was a bit rank early on and was forced to check repeatedly on the backstretch. He found clear sailing on the far turn, but finished a well-beaten fourth behind Honor Marie.

In addition to the $100,000 purse, the Gun Runner will offer 2-year-olds, soon to be three, 10-5-3-2-1 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby 150 presented by Woodford Reserve.

Gun Runner Entries

Tuesday

3:00 p.m. – Grade 2 San Gabriel Stakes at Santa Anita

French-bred Easter, fresh off one of the most impressive turf performances of the year in Southern California for trainer Phil D'Amato, looms a standout versus five rivals at a mile and one eighth on turf.

Turning for home in the G2 Seabiscuit Handicap at 1 1/16 miles over the Del Mar turf Nov. 25, it appeared that D'Amato's top turf runner Hong Kong Harry had the race in-hand, but stablemate Easter pinned his ears under Antonio Fresu and powered to a half length victory while earning a lofty 99 Beyer Speed Figure.

With Fresu set to ride him back, Easter, a 5-year-old gelding who had won three of his nine stateside starts with Maryland-based Graham Motion prior to the Seabiscuit, will be seeking his third consecutive stakes victory on Tuesday.

San Gabriel Entries

4:00 p.m. – Grade 1 American Oaks at Santa Anita

Anisette seeks the biggest win of her career as she heads a field of seven sophomore fillies going 1 1/4 miles on the grass course. Trained by Leonard Powell, Anisette's only previous try at the Oaks distance came two starts back in Santa Anita's G2 Rodeo Drive on Oct. 7, a race in which she finished a close second. With regular rider Umberto Rispoli back aboard, she cut back in distance to one mile on grass Nov. 5, finishing second by 3 ¼ lengths in the G3 Autumn Miss Stakes.

Trainer Horacio De Paz' Be Your Best is another who would prefer to have a fast pace to exploit in Tuesday's Oaks. In her first and only assignment versus male competition, she was last of 13 for most of the trip in the G2 Twilight Derby at a mile and one eighth on turf here Nov. 4 and came rolling on the far outside to finish eighth, beaten just 1 ¾ lengths under Irad Ortiz, Jr., who rides her back.

American Oaks Entries

4:30 p.m. – Grade 2 San Antonio Stakes at Santa Anita

A three-time Group 1 stakes winner and favored in 10 out of his 12 starts in his native Argentina, John Sadler's Subsanador figures prominently as he makes his U.S. debut with Flavien Prat at the controls versus five rivals going 1 1/16 miles on the main track.

Subsanador has been idle since winning a Group 2 stakes in Argentina on July 29, but he enters the San Antonio on the strength of a strong work tab that included four consecutive bullet moves. Subsanador's Argentine resume reads 12-7-1-1 with earning of $149,124.

Richard Mandella-trained Salesman was the runaway 8 ¼-length winner of the G2 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Stakes going the seldom-run distance of a mile and five eighths at Santa Anita on Nov. 4. Salesman, who earned a 92 Beyer Speed Figure that day, seems to have found a new home on dirt as a 6-year-old gelding. Raced nearly exclusively on turf in France, Salesman was well beaten in his first two stateside assignments on grass with Mandella, finishing ninth in the G1 Shoemaker Mile at Santa Anita May 29 and 12th in the restricted Wickerr Stakes July 23 at Del Mar.

Switched to dirt at a mile and one sixteenth in the restricted Los Alamitos Special Sept. 17 he ran a much improved third, followed by his rollicking win on Nov. 4.

San Antonio Entries

5:30 p.m. – Grade 1 Malibu at Santa Anita

A stakes winner on both turf and dirt, versatile Speed Boat Beach heads a powerful three-horse contingent for trainer Bob Baffert. Second, beaten a head two starts back by top sprinter Dr. Schivel in the G2 Santa Anita Sprint Championship on Sept. 30, Speed Boat Beach made all the early running in the G1 Breeders' Cup Sprint on Nov. 4, but tired to finish fourth, beaten three lengths.

Baffert's other two entries are Fort Bragg, fresh off a facile 2 ¼ length allowance score at 4-5 going 6 ½ furlongs on Nov. 17 at Del Mar, and Hejazi, off as the 8-5 favorite in a first condition allowance at six panels here on Nov. 3 and he blew the competition away, winning by 5 ½ lengths.

Always dangerous under any circumstances, eastern-based trainer Brad Cox will send out Giant Mischief, who will be ridden for the first time by Kazushi Kamura, who led all riders at Woodbine's recently concluded meet with 161 winners.

Malibu Entries

6:00 p.m. – Grade 2 Mathis Mile Stakes at Santa Anita

Phil D'Amato's hard-hitting English-bred Almendares retains the services of Flavien Prat and figures to be tough to deny among a field of seven sophomores going a mile on turf.

A 3-year-old gelding with a terrific stretch kick, Almendares rallied from far back to win going away by three quarters of a length in a one mile turf second condition allowance Dec. 3 at Del Mar—earning a career best 95 Beyer Speed Figure in the process.

A hard-charging fifth, beaten one length two starts back at 1 1/8 miles on turf in the G2 Twilight Derby at Santa Anita Nov. 4, Almendares finished well to be third, beaten one length three starts back in the G2 Del Mar Derby on Sept. 3.

An authoritative 2 ¼-length one-mile maiden turf winner in his eighth career start Sept. 9 at Del Mar, the Jeff Mullins-trained Dandy Man Shines rallied for another 2 ¼-length one-mile turf win in the restricted Let It Ride Stakes on Nov. 10 and thus seeks his third win in a row with Umberto Rispoli at the controls on Tuesday.

Mathis Mile Entries

6:30 p.m. – Grade 1 La Brea at Santa Anita

Trainer Michael McCarthy's Clearly Unhinged rates top billing among 10 sophomore fillies going seven furlongs. Most recently sixth at 23-1 in the G1 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint here on Nov. 4, Clearly Unhinged, a Kentucky-bred daughter of Into Mischief, was second two starts back in the G3 Chillingworth Stakes Sept. 29, and in the best race of her career three starts back, she was second, beaten a head going seven panels in the G1 Test at Saratoga on Aug. 5.

Two-time Eclipse Award winning trainer Brad Cox appears well represented by lightly raced Howl, a daughter of Practical Joke who ships in from her Kentucky base unbeaten in two starts, her most recent triumph a one length score going seven furlongs in an ungraded stakes at Laurel Park Nov. 25.

La Brea Entries

The post Weekend Lineup: Holiday Feast Anchored By Santa Anita’s Opening Day appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Gulfstream Park: On Eve Of Mandatory Payout, Rainbow 6 Hit For $324,724

A mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 pool will be held Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where the sequence for the popular multi-race wager will be graced by four stakes races and a $100,000 gross jackpot pool guarantee.

The Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 6-11, including the $125,000 Tropical Park Oaks, $125,000 Sugar Swirl (G3), $125,000 Mr. Prospector (G3) and $125,000 Tropical Park Derby in Races 8-11.

The Rainbow 6 was solved Friday with a single winning ticket in New Jersey that returned $324,724.16.

A mile turf event for $25,000 claimers will kick off Saturday's Rainbow 6 sequence in Race 6. Michael Maker-trained Emboite is rated as the 6-5 morning-line favorite in a field on nine non-winners of two lifetime. The son of No Nay Never, who finished second against better on Tapeta last time out, will be ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr.

A mile race for $6250 claimers in Race 7 drew a field of eight headed by English Bob, the 7-5 morning-line favorite coming off a victory at the same level from which he was claimed by Jose D'Angelo.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher will be represented by Cairo Consort and Alpha Bella, who finished 1-2 in last season's Sweetest Chant (G3) at Gulfstream in the Tropical Park Oaks in Race 8. The 1 1/16-mile turf stakes will also feature the Chad Brown-trained duo of Implicated and Startup Mentality, who finished 1-3 last time out in the Pebbles (G3) at Aqueduct.

An evenly matched field of eight fillies and mares has been assembled for the Sugar Swirl, a six-furlong dash carded as Race 9. Intrepid Dream will bring a four-race winning streak in the Mid-Atlantic into the race while making her first start for trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. Many bettors will opt to 'spread' in this race.

Sibelius, who used a victory in last year's Mr. Prospector as a steppingstone to a triumph in the Dubai Golden Shaheen (G1), will defend his title in Race 10.

Shug McGaughey-trained Ohana Honor, a late-developing colt who is coming off a runner-up finish in the Gio Ponti at Aqueduct, is a slight 3-1 morning-line favorite in a field of 12 (plus two also-eligibles) for the Tropical Park Derby in Race 11. Brian Lynch-trained Anglophile, who won the Dueling Grounds Derby (G3) at Kentucky Downs, and Jose D'Angelo-trained Amstrong, a four-time stakes winner on Tapeta, are among horses that will draw support from the bettors.

Emerging Star Romagna Mia Breezes for Tuesday's Via Borghese

Grade 1 stakes-placed Romagna Mia breezed three-eighths of a mile at Palm Meadows Friday morning in preparation for a start in Tuesday's $125,000 Via Borghese at Gulfstream Park.

Team Valor International LLC's 4-year-old English-bred filly was timed in 39.95 over the turf course at Gulfstream's satellite training facility for her highly anticipated start in the Via Borghese, a 1 3/8-mile turf stakes for fillies and mares.

“She's been doing great,” said trainer Graham Motion, whose Via Borghese favorite has produced a strong string of five workouts at Palm Meadows for her Gulfstream debut.

Romagna Mia is coming off a three-length romp in the Oct. 22 Dowager (G3) at Keeneland in her second U.S. start. The daughter of Mastercraftsman finished third in the Beverly D (G1) at Colonial Downs in her first start in this country.

Note: Picking Up Pennies went gate-to-wire under jockey Edgard Zayas to win Friday's seventh race, an allowance optional claimer at a mile on the main track. Trained by Saffie Joseph Jr., Picking Up Pennies, a 5-year-old son of First Dude, covered the distance in 1:36.54 and finished 1 ½ lengths in front of Black Belt. Favored Grade 2 winner Dynamic One, making his first start since September of 2022, was bumped leaving the gate and broke last and raced wide, finishing fifth in the seven-horse field.

The post Gulfstream Park: On Eve Of Mandatory Payout, Rainbow 6 Hit For $324,724 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights