‘Surprised’ Irad Ortiz Tests Positive For COVID-19, Return To Racing Delayed

Serving a suspension from Sept. 18 through Oct. 3 for a pair of careless riding incidents earlier this year, champion jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. was scheduled to return to the saddle on Sunday. Instead, the Daily Racing Form's David Grening reported Wednesday that Ortiz tested positive for COVID-19 in a test taken Monday, and will be self-isolating for an additional 10 days.

Agent Steve Rushing said Ortiz is displaying no symptoms, and hopes to return by Oct. 8 at Belmont Park.

“He was as surprised as anyone when he found out,” Rushing told drf.com.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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In an Unusual Year, Some Things Stay the Same at Saratoga

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Even without spectators on the grounds, the 152nd summer of racing in Saratoga produced a total betting handle of $702.5 million that was remarkably close to last year’s record figure of $705.3 million.

The daily average handle for the 40-day meet in 2020 was $17.6 million and the daily average handle for the weather-shortened 39-day meet in 2019 was $18.1 million.

The season concluded Monday as quietly as it began July 16, with a program conducted without fans, in compliance with New York State’s COVID-19 protocols for sporting events. Though the atmosphere was unlike any previous year, some things did not change: there was enthusiastic wagering support for the Saratoga product, Todd Pletcher extended his record with a 14th training title, and Irad Ortiz, Jr. nipped his brother Jose for the riding crown, 59-58. Irad Ortiz missed three days of the meet with an arm injury from a gate mishap. It was the sixth-straight year that an Ortiz was the Saratoga champ.

By the time New York permitted racing to resume at Belmont Park June 3, New York Racing Association officials had decided that it made more business sense to run at Saratoga, quite possibly without fans, than to stay in metropolitan New York for the summer. NYRA CEO and president David O’Rourke said the 2020 meet at Saratoga was a success on two levels: operating safely with no Covid-19 positives and the strong handle.

“In terms of the numbers, everyone has been very focused on the handle and the numbers have come in higher than we forecasted,” he said. “Slightly. Maybe about 5%. That’s good because it allows us to maintain the continuity of the racing. There was absolutely no clarity on when or if casinos would open and on what time line. Now that they have announced that they will be open in September, hopefully that can relieve a little bit of pressure as you get through the winter. For us, handle generation, obviously, is seasonal. We’re at the high point right now and with those extra funds, it will help us keep that continuity through next winter. That’s a relief.”

Despite the tote success, O’Rourke said having to operate without spectators cost NYRA approximately $15 million in the profit it makes at Saratoga selling seating, food and beverages.

O’Rourke offered “surreal” as the first way to describe the season without fans at America’s most popular racetrack.

“It was actually a beautiful summer up here,” he said. “It was like operating a racetrack in some sort of Twilight Zone science fiction movie where there is nobody around, but if you looked at it on television, you really sort of can’t tell until you get to the winner’s circle.”

O’Rourke said that running without fans felt like it was some sort of practice session.

“Now that it’s over, it’s kind of just a bizarre year,” he said. “Luckily, we’ve had the television platform, so it was us being inside the bubble in a lot of ways. At times we would sit upstairs and just focus on the TV aspect of it and say, ‘How is everyone else really seeing what’s going on?’ The media coverage has been great and it’s important. It’s really the only way that people are being able to connect with us. But when you watch it and experience it on television, it’s still Saratoga. When you look at in the Form, it’s still Saratoga. The racing has been really good.”

Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz the Law (Constitution) romped to victory in Saratoga’s marquee race, the GI Runhappy Travers S. Aug. 8. He was second to Authentic (Into Mischief) as the favorite in the GI Kentucky Derby Saturday at Churchill Downs. Peter Callahan’s Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) was an easy winner of the GI Alabama S. Aug. 15 and she ended second in the GI Kentucky Oaks Sept. 4. For the second year in a row, Bob Baffert won the GI Whitney S., this time with Improbable (City Zip).

O’Rourke said NYRA’s decision a few years ago to invest in its advance deposit wagering app, NYRA Bets, and the move to daily national television coverage on Fox paid off in a big way when all betting had to be done off track. He said being on a sports channel when racing was the only live sport in America helped expand the customer base in June and carried into Saratoga.

“Maybe there is a slight silver lining in that the pandemic kind of forced a leap-frog effect in terms of people betting on their phones and watching us on television,” he said. “We saw [the growth in interest in ADW apps] coming and that’s why we invested pretty heavily with Fox and pushed toward that platform with NYRA Bets. Because nobody could come to the live track, I think it has accelerated that channel shift. It will be interesting next year when we are here and there are 25,000 people, are people still engaging, at least on the wagering side, on their phone?”

Both the training and jockey titles were decided on the final day of the season. Pletcher, 53, carried a five-win advantage over two-time defending champ Chad Brown into the 14-race card on Labor Day. Brown cut the lead with a victory, but Pletcher, who won his first Saratoga title in 1998, prevailed, earning the H. Allen Jerkens Award with 31 wins.

“It feels great. It’s very rewarding for the whole team,” Pletcher said. “A lot of people put a lot of hard work into it. It’s very satisfying.”

Pletcher said the emergence of his younger horses–he won with four 2-year-olds–helped him secure the title. The Pletcher stable won four stakes: the GI Fourstardave H. with Halladay (War Front); the Alydar S. with Spinoff (Hard Spun); the Summer Colony S. with Nonna Madeline (Candy Ride {Arg}); and the Birdstone S. with Moretti (Medaglia d’Oro).

Though he has won titles at other tracks, Pletcher said that finishing on top at the end of the competitive Saratoga season is very gratifying.

“I think it’s always more special here,” Pletcher said. “I’ve always said that Angel Cordero is the one that made it mean something. He always fought really hard. He’s been texting me the last couple of days. He won 14 and so it was kind of cool to tie him.”

Cordero, 77, presented the award that honors his dominance at Saratoga to Irad Ortiz in the winner’s circle after the final race. Moments later he embraced the Ortiz brothers, who had entered the day tied at 57 wins.

During the Covid-19 lockdown, NYRA officials considered staying downstate this summer. However, O’Rourke said that the turf courses at Belmont Park could not have handled two more months of competition and NYRA likely would have had to go to Aqueduct for a while. A better option, he said, was to commit to open the Oklahoma training track in Saratoga Springs June 4 and follow up about six weeks later with the racing season. Just before the season started, NYRA reacted to Covid-19 positives with jockeys at other tracks by locking down the riding colony. It proved to be a good move.

“The thing about this year, and everyone that has gone through a business, is that you don’t really have a playbook,” O’Rourke said. “I don’t want to say you are making it up, you’re just using the facts you have in front of you and trying to make educated guesses and trying to stay on the conservative side. Sometimes there is a little bit of luck involved if you get it right or not. So, all be told, it worked out.”

O’Rourke said that when the decision was made in late May to race at Saratoga, he thought there was an 80% probability that some spectators would be allowed into the track during the season. At that point, New York was making progress controlling the pandemic.

“We thought, ‘We’ll get through this and by the end of June everything will start to calm down,'” he said. “Then it seemed to turn pretty quick. We asked for fans–we didn’t have high expectations–and the state made the right call, obviously, given where New York is at now.”

As for 2021, O’Rourke said it’s too early to deal with what-ifs questions about protocols and limits on attendance.

“It’s something you don’t even want to think about,” he said. “We want to think about opening up next year with a record crowd on opening day, but if we have to adapt, we will.”

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Mike Smith, Irad Ortiz To Ride At Kentucky Downs For The First Time In 2020

Kentucky Downs' deep jockey colony is getting even deeper for the six-date run of all-grass racing that offers among the richest purses in the world.

The RUNHAPPY Meet at Kentucky Downs kicks off on Labor Day, Sept. 7 and continues on Sept. 9, 10, 12, 13 and 16.

Kentucky Downs leads North America in average field size, and this meet figures to lead 2020 in the number of world-class jockeys riding those horses. The track will be the laser focus of American racing after Saratoga and Del Mar close on Labor Day, with New York's Belmont Park not opening until Sept. 18 and California's Santa Anita Park opening Sept. 19. Averaging $2 million a day in purses, Kentucky Downs is luring the most accomplished riders from New York and California along with the already deep Kentucky colony.

Nine of America's top 10 riders by 2020 purse earnings will be at Kentucky Downs (in order of purse ranking): Irad Ortiz, Joel Rosario, Tyler Gaffalione, Luis Saez, Ricardo Santana, Flavien Prat, Jose Ortiz, Javier Castellano and Florent Geroux. The top seven riders in victories at Saratoga heading into Thursday's racing are all confirmed for at least part of the meet.

“We already had one of the most talented riding colonies in the world, but this year it's going to be absolutely incredible,” said Ted Nicholson, Kentucky Downs' senior vice president and general manager. “It's not only our lucrative purses, but because we have averaged about 11 horses a race in recent years, there are lots of opportunities for riders instead of just a handful of jockeys dominating. At $2 million in average daily purses, you don't even have to win for coming here to be a profitable venture. Plus, jockeys tell me just how much fun it is to ride this course as a change of pace from always turning left around an oval.”

Among the top riders participating at Kentucky Downs for the first time will be Hall of Famer Mike Smith, two-time defending Eclipse Award-winning jockey Irad Ortiz, rising California star Umberto Rispoli and Joe Talamo, who relocated from California to Kentucky this year. In addition, Hall of Famers John Velazquez and Castellano, who between them have ridden only a handful of races at Kentucky Downs, will ride the entire meet after coming to Kentucky for Churchill Downs' rescheduled Derby Week.

After Saratoga's summer meet ends Labor Day, Irad Ortiz, two-time Kentucky Downs defending riding champion Jose Ortiz and Rosario will ride the remaining five days. Jose Ortiz, who will be riding for the fourth year at Kentucky Downs, said during last year's meet that he's been urging his brother Irad to fit Kentucky Downs into his annual circuit.

“He really wants to go,” said Jose Ortiz, who said Irad missed last year's meet because of a suspension for a riding infraction. “He said he'd like to ride the track. I was telling him how it is: Uphill, downhill, long stretch.”

Smith, who will ride at Kentucky Downs for the first time in his Hall of Fame career, is coming in for the Sept. 12 showcase Calumet Farm Day card to ride turf sprint standout Jolie Olimpica in the $500,000, Grade 3 Real Solution Ladies Sprint for trainer Richard Mandella, who likewise is running horses at America's most unique race meet for the first time.

Smith could ride additional days as his business dictates. Nominations to all Kentucky Downs' stakes closed Wednesday, Aug. 26.

“I'm excited about getting the opportunity to ride there,” said Smith, whose only prior visit to Kentucky Downs came in 2018 to sign posters commemorating his Triple Crown victory aboard Justify. “I've never ridden there. I love going over to Europe to ride, and the course at Kentucky Downs is so much of a European racetrack. I thought it was a beautiful track. It was my first time to see it in person and not just on TV. I thought I was back in Ireland or something.”

Rispoli, a two-time champion in his native Italy, started riding full-time in California this year after being based in Hong Kong. He's battling Flavien Prat for leading rider at this Del Mar meet. Prat, Del Mar's reigning summer titlist along with earning Santa Anita's winter-spring crown, will start riding at Kentucky Downs Sept. 9, with Rispoli at the track at least Sept. 12 and 13, their agents said.

Velazquez' only prior experience at Kentucky Downs was a pair of off-the-board finishes in 2018. His new agent, Ron Anderson, plans to change that.

“I'm anticipating winning some races with him — and Joel,” said Anderson, also the agent for Rosario, who rode three of five days at Kentucky Downs last year. “They've got to be on the right horse. If they're not, it's my fault.

“I think I've got action for both riders.”

Castellano rode at Kentucky Downs for the first time last year to great effect, with two wins and two seconds in five starts. “I'm looking forward to it,” he said of riding all six days this year.

As soon as the New York Racing Association announced the delayed start to Belmont's fall meet, Kiaran McLaughlin got to work securing business for Kentucky Downs. McLaughlin left his long-time training career in April to become the agent for Saez. The jockey rode two days at Kentucky Downs in 2018, including winning Dueling Ground Derby with Channel Cat, and one day last year. He'll be riding the final five days this year.

“It just made too much sense to go,” McLaughlin said. “It's an opportunity to ride for some very nice purses, and we're not missing anything at Belmont.”

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Golden Pal To Target Breeders’ Cup After Easy Skidmore Victory

Ranlo Investments' Golden Pal surged to the front and drew away in the stretch, posting an impressive 3 ½-length score in a gate-to-wire victory in Friday's $85,000 Skidmore for juveniles at Saratoga Race Course.

After a runner-up effort by a neck in his turf debut last out in the Group 2 Norfolk on June 19 at England's Royal Ascot, Golden Pal shipped back to the United States and entered the sixth running of the Skidmore off three strong breezes at Saratoga. That momentum carried over into the afternoon, where Golden Pal broke sharp from the outermost post 6 with Irad Ortiz, Jr. aboard, leading the field through an opening quarter-mile in 21.99 seconds and the half in 44.37 on the Mellon turf course labeled firm.

Out of the turn, Golden Pal opened up even more while never seriously challenged, completing 5 ½ furlongs in a final time of 1:00.88 [challenging the track record of 1:00.21 set by Carotari in August 2019].

“He's a really cool horse,” Ortiz, Jr. said. “It's special when you get on horses like that. I'm so happy to be able to get on him. Hopefully he stays sound and healthy and he can keep doing what he did today.”

Golden Pal, the 2-5 favorite, returned $2.90 on a $2 win wager and improved his career earnings to $73,056. Trainer Wesley Ward said the effort could set up the Uncle Mo colt for a spot in the Grade 2, $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint going 5 ½ furlongs on November 6 at Keeneland, where Ward is primarily stabled.

“He's something special, this guy. I think we just got a little peek at it,” Ward said. “From everything we've seen here, they're coming into his homecourt like Michael Jordan in the United Center in the Breeders' Cup this year. He's a very, very nice colt. I'm very thankful for the owner.

Bred in Florida by Randall E. Lowe, who operates under the nom de course Ranlo Investments, Golden Pal made his career debut on April 17 over Gulfstream Park's main track, running second to Gatsby before traveling to the prestigious Royal Ascot meet two months later, where he led the field before The Lir Jet won in the final jumps. He is out of 11-time stakes-winning turf sprinter Lady Shipman, who was also bred and campaigned by Lowe.

“[The owner] afforded me the time that myself and my team has needed, and this horse had some issues and my team has really worked hard on this guy,” Ward said. “He's so fast and he's so gifted. To get him to this point is special.”

Ward trained the exacta, with Fauci finishing four lengths clear of Sky's Not Falling for second. Sunny Isles Beach, also trained by Ward, ran fourth, followed by Kentucky Knight and Baytown Bear.

“My horse broke good but the other horse [Golden Pal] had more speed, so I wasn't going to go up there and battle head and head,” said Fauci jockey Tyler Gaffalione. “He settled nicely and put in a nice run down the lane, but the other horse was much the best today.

“He's [Golden Pal] pretty quick. He's a nice horse,” Gaffalione added. “I rode him in his first start and he's a really fast horse, but it seems like he's starting to get the mental side of it now.”

Live racing resumes Saturday at Saratoga with a 10-race card that includes the Grade 1, $400,000 Fourstardave for 3-years-old and up going one mile on the inner turf in Race 9 at 5:46 p.m. Eastern. First post is 1:10 p.m.

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