Johan Rosado Starts New Year With Four-Win Day At Laurel Park

Jockey Johan Rosado celebrated the new year in style by sweeping the early daily double and finishing with four winners on Friday's nine-race program that opened the 41-day winter meet at Laurel Park in Maryland.

The 22-year-old piloted Natty Beau ($23) to victory in the opener, a six-furlong claimer for 3-year-olds, and cruised to the wire first aboard Italian Dressing ($9.40) in Race 2, a 5 ½-furlong maiden claimer for 3-year-old fillies.

Rosado then guided Youngest of Five ($12) to a front-running victory in Race 4, a two-turn allowance for older Maryland-bred/sired horses going about 1 1/16 miles, and rode Makin' Out ($10.40) to a neck triumph over favored Nana's Shoes in Race 6, a one-mile starter optional claimer for older females.

Rosado's winners came for trainers Richard Sillaman, Hamilton Smith, Hugh McMahon and Henry Walters.

“I'm just lucky I got on the right horses today and had a good day,” Rosado said. “[I'm] just thankful for every horseman and their staff. If the opportunity comes you just try to take advantage of them and you can have big days like this.”

Rosado rode 15 winners at Laurel's 2020 winter meet which ended Dec. 31. He is the son of Roberto Rosado, a native of Puerto Rico who shared the 1997 Eclipse Award as champion apprentice with Phil Teator.

Johan Rosado won with his first career mount, Tripocha, Sept. 11, 2017 at Parx in a race where his father finished sixth. He finished with 15 wins at the Laurel winter meet that ended Dec. 31 and owns 180 career victories and more than $5.5 million in purse earnings.

Seven Maidens Seeking Diploma in Laurel Opener Saturday
Seven newly turned 3-year-olds will sprint seven furlongs in a wide-open maiden special weight that kicks off Saturday's nine-race program at Laurel Park.

First race post time is 12:25 p.m.

Ten Strike Racing's Arrio is the narrow 5-2 program favorite in his career debut. The gelded bay son of Grade 1 winner Paynter has been working steadily since mid-September at Laurel for trainer Brittany Russell, who won with eight of 23 first-time starters in 2020 (35 percent) and finished in the top three at a 70 percent clip (16-23).

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, William Freeman and Michael Valdes' Excursion, a son of two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Hall of Famer Curlin who fetched $325,000 as a yearling in 2019, is listed at 3-1 on the morning line. The bay colt went winless in three off-the-turf starts in 2020 for trainer Graham Motion, who also entered Wertheimer and Frere's homebred Pitaman.

Oliver Fortune's Rippolino will cut back and add blinkers after respectively running third and second in a pair of fall maiden special weight events at Laurel going one and 1 1/16 miles. He is listed at 7-2 in the program along with Kathryn Nikkel, Pegasus Stud and trainer Kelly Rubley's Flight Map, a son of Liam's Map that ran third in each of his three 2020 starts.

Race 8 is a second-level optional claiming allowance for 4-year-olds and up going 6 ½ furlongs where Run To Win Stable and Jagger, Inc.'s Thundershook, a five-time winner from 10 starts last year, is favored at 5-2 on the morning line from outside Post 7. Also in the field are Great Camanoe, fourth in the Bert Allen on turf last fall at Laurel, and 2019 Maryland Juvenile Futurity runner-up Stone Courageous.

Factor It In Makes Successful Return in Laurel Friday Feature
Michael Scheffres' Factor It In, in his first start in more than five months, made a successful return to the races by sweeping to the front on the far turn and opening up down the lane for a 4 ¾-length victory in Friday's featured seventh race.

Ridden by Jevian Toledo for trainer Carlos Mancilla, Factor It In ($11.40) ran seven furlongs in 1:24.34 over a fast main track in the third-level optional claiming allowance for 4-year-olds and up. It was the sixth career win for the 5-year-old son of multiple Grade 1 winner The Factor, who ran sixth in the 2020 General George (G3).

Multiple stakes-placed Tybalt closed to be second with 2020 Private Terms runner-up My Friends Beer third. Grade 2 winner Still Having Fun, favored at 2-1, ran last of six.

Larry Rebold's Youngest of Five ($12) led from start to finish, putting away 6-5 favorite The Poser and holding off a late challenge from Toy to win Race 4, a two-turn allowance for Maryland-bred/sired 4-year-olds and up. The winning time for about 1 1/16 miles was 1:46.43. Mine Not Mine, second in the Miracle Wood and third in the Private Terms last winter, ran third in his first start in seven months.

Maxis Stable's Kewpie Doll ($5.80) took the lead on the far outside and powered through the stretch under jockey Lauralea Glaser to capture Race 5, an entry-level optional claiming allowance for newly turned 3-year-old fillies. Sent off as the 9-5 favorite against seven rivals, Kewpie Doll ran 6 ½ furlongs in 1:20.68 to earn her second career win and first since a maiden special weight triumph last August at Laurel.

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Laurel Park: Apprentice John Hiraldo Scores First Career Win With 33-1 Longshot

Top Notch Racing's Flat Rate emerged from a three-way photo finish a neck ahead of Proud Enough to spring a 33-1 upset of Laurel Park's sixth race and give 10-pound apprentice jockey John Hiraldo his first career victory.

Flat Rate ($69.80), a 4-year-old Violence gelding, ran 5 ½ furlongs in 1:05.90 over a fast main track in the beaten claimer for 3-year-olds and up to earn his fourth career victory and first since joining trainer Michael Jones Jr.

“It's something very special, unbelievable really. I can't believe it,” Hiraldo said. “I'm very happy. I have to thank God for always watching over me and all the other riders. I'm just very happy. I've worked so hard for this moment and I've dreamed about it since I was a little kid. It's something very special for me.”

Hiraldo, 19, is a native of Puerto Rico who galloped horses for trainer Brittany Russell before making his professional debut running fourth on Maximo Strong Dec. 10 at Laurel. Hiraldo had gone winless in his first 18 mounts including a third on Frontier Woman in Thursday's third race.

“My cousin, Angel Cruz, he has been a big part of my short career. Xavier [Perez], Sheldon [Russell]. Sheldon is one of the best ones in there. He's a great guy on and off the racetrack and he's been a good mentor for me,” Hiraldo said.

Angel Cruz is member of the Maryland track's riding colony who won with Dance and Dance ($16.60) Thursday and finished sixth in the fall meet standings with 20 wins. Hiraldo's father, Joel, won 200 races between 2001 and 2011, the last coming at Charles Town.

“When I was growing up, my dad was a jockey so he was the person I would always look up to. I would go to school and always think about riding. I didn't care about the grades, I just wanted to go to be a jockey when I grew up,” Hiraldo said. “When I grew up I went to the farm and started learning as much as I could. I came back and was here for a couple months working for Brittany Russell. I have to thank her for all her help. I just felt like it was the right time to do it.”

Flat Rate and Hiraldo posing for pictures

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Jevian Toledo Seizes The Day With Four Winners At Laurel Park

Robert L. Cole's Seize the Day went all the way on the lead to cap a four-win afternoon for jockey Jevian Toledo Sunday at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

Seize the Day ($3.60), trained by Ben Feliciano Jr., was a pickup mount for Toledo in Sunday's ninth-race finale, replacing Julian Pimentel in the seven-furlong claimer for 3-year-olds and up.

Toledo also won twice Sunday for trainer Anthony Farrior aboard Lectric Choke ($10) in Race 2 and Union Song ($14.60) in Race 4. Toledo's other win came with Carlos Mancilla-trained Catch the Sky ($4.80) in Race 7.

“It was a really nice day. I looked at the program and my horses, a couple of them were favorites but the other ones weren't but they had some chance. Thank God we had some really nice trips,” Toledo said. “A few of them, I could go to the rail and it opened up for me and that was the key. When you have a good horse with a nice trip, you're going to win races.”

Union Song, a 4-year-old daughter of Belmont Stakes (G1) winner Union Rags, was being ridden for the third straight race by Toledo. Two starts back she was beaten a neck when second in a one-mile claimer Nov. 8, and last out she reared at the break and raced wide when fourth in an optional claimer going the same distance Dec. 3.

“They were schooling her for this race,” Toledo said. “The last time she kind of broke bad and they worked with her for this race. Anthony did a really good job with her and we got some room on the rail and she went through perfect.”

Represented by agent Marty Leonard, Toledo is second with 33 wins at Laurel's fall meet which wraps up Dec. 27. He trails Leonard's other client, Sheldon Russell, by nine wins with two days remaining.

“We're having a really good meet. I have to thank God and all the trainers and owners and my agent for doing a really good job,” Toledo said. “They've been helping me a lot and we've been doing good.”

Notes: Five-pound apprentice Alexander Crispin visited the winner's circle twice Sunday with Bananas On Fire ($4) in Race 3 and Oxide ($7) in Race 8 … There will be a $9,551.29 jackpot carryover in the 20-cent Rainbow 6 when live racing returns to Laurel Park Saturday, Dec. 26. Multiple tickets with all six winners Sunday each returned $704.98 … There will be no live racing at Laurel on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day. The Christmastide Day program Dec. 26 will feature eight stakes worth $850,000 in purses led by the $150,000 Allaire du Pont (G3).

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Japanese-Trained Normcore Upstages Magical In Hong Kong Cup

Zac Purton has crowned a week of stellar milestones by becoming the first rider in history to partner nine Hong Kong International Races winners after Japanese mare Normcore upstaged Win Bright and Magical in the HK$28 million G1 Longines Hong Kong Cup (2000m) at Sha Tin.

Purton, 37, gained the ride on the grey after Christophe Soumillon was forced to forfeit the mount after failing to secure an unconditional release from quarantine following a COVID test on Thursday.

On Wednesday at Happy Valley, Purton became only the second jockey after Douglas Whyte to ride 1,200 winners in Hong Kong.

The reigning jockey champion, Purton was jubilant after breaking the Hong Kong International Races' tie he had shared with Frenchman Gerard Mosse after Normcore outsprinted fellow Japan's Win Bright and Ireland's Magical.

“It's something I'm very proud of, it's a great achievement,” he said.

“To also now be the only jockey to win the full set of international races twice is also for myself somewhat rewarding.

“Hopefully, I can just can continue to have luck at this meeting going forward.

“It's been a great week, I'm very thankful that I get these opportunities.”

Purton was grateful to regain the ride on Normcore, whose previous G1 triumph came in the Victoria Mile when partnered by another Australian, Damian Lane, in May 2019.

“Initially we sort of confirmed the ride and then when it was announced Christophe was coming, they changed their mind. They're entitled to do that,” Purton said.

“It was what it was, I just had to accept that. Thankfully, it came back.”

Purton has been synonymous with Hong Kong International Races success with eight previous triumphs on the jurisdiction's most prestigious day.

The New South Welshman savored Vase glory with Dominant (2013) and Exultant (2018), the Mile with Ambitious Dragon (2012), Beauty Only (2016) and Beauty Generation (2018), Sprint with Aerovelocity (2014 and 2016) and the Cup with Time Warp in 2017.

Purton stalked the 2019 Cup winner Win Bright in the run before peeling widest in a riveting global contest.

Japan's three runners finished in the top four, with Danon Premium trailing Magical to the line.

“She (Normcore) had to fight for it, Win Bright gave a really sharp kick and his love for Sha Tin was starting to show through,” Purton said.

“But she was determined and inch by inch, she just kept putting herself in the frame.”

Trained by Kiyoshi Hagiwara, Normcore ran fourth to Admire Mars in last year's Hong Kong Mile.

Hagiwara has handled several topliners since taking out a trainers' licence in 1996, including Logi Universe, Le Vent Se Leve and Obruchev.

Ryan Moore said a slackening mid-race tempo wrecked Magical's chances of becoming the first horse trained by Aidan O'Brien to snare eight G1s.

“There was a lack of pace so therefore I couldn't go where I wanted to go,” Moore said.

“She ran well.”

Normcore is the first filly or mare to win a HKIR since Ed Dunlop's champion Snow Fairy took the Cup in 2010.

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