Soumillon Positive For COVID-19; Colin Keane Picks Up Breeders’ Cup Turf Mount On Tarnawa

Leading Irish jockey Colin Keane will pick up the mount on Tarnawa in Saturday's Breeders' Cup Turf at Keeneland, reports At the Races  on Twitter, because regular rider Christophe Soumillon has tested positive for COVID-19.

The Dermot Weld-trained 4-year-old daughter of Shamardal is listed at 6-1 on the morning line off an undefeated season in 2020; she won the G1 Prix Vermeille and the G1 Prix de l'Opera in France this year.

“It complicates things a little,” Weld said. “She takes a bit of knowing and he'd won two Group Ones on her. But that's the way it is.”

Soumillon was also listed to ride Order of Australia in the Mile for trainer Aidan O'Brien. No replacement has yet been named.

The post Soumillon Positive For COVID-19; Colin Keane Picks Up Breeders’ Cup Turf Mount On Tarnawa appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Two-Time Defending Shoemaker Award Winner Irad Ortiz, Jr. Has 10 Breeders’ Cup Mounts

The 18th Bill Shoemaker Award will be given this weekend to the outstanding jockey of the two-day Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland, which kicks off Friday afternoon.

Won the past two years by Irad Ortiz Jr., who has 10 mounts in Championship races this weekend, the Shoemaker Award will go to the jockey who rides the most winners in the 14 Championship races. Should there be a tie among two or more riders with the most victories, the deadlock will be broken on a 10-3-1 point system for second- through fourth-place finishes.

The elder Ortiz brother's Breeders' Cup mounts include: Golden Pal (Juvenile Turf Sprint, Wesley Ward), Public Sector (Juvenile Turf, Chad Brown), Royal Approval (Juvenile Fillies Turf, Wesley Ward), Reinvestment Risk (Juvenile, Chad Brown), Come Dancing (Filly & Mare Sprint, Carlos Martin), Imprimis (Turf Sprint, Joe Orseno), Sharp Samurai (Dirt Mile, Mark Glatt), Nay Lady Nay (Filly & Mare Turf, Chad Brown), Whitmore (Sprint, Ron Moquett), and Improbable (Classic, Bob Baffert).

The Shoemaker Award is named in honor of one of the greatest jockeys in the history of Thoroughbred racing. Shoemaker, who captured the Kentucky Derby four times, won more than 8,800 races in a career that spanned more than 40 years. In 1987, at age 56, Shoemaker won the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) aboard Ferdinand at Hollywood Park.

The post Two-Time Defending Shoemaker Award Winner Irad Ortiz, Jr. Has 10 Breeders’ Cup Mounts appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘I’ve Waited A While For This Moment’: Dylan Davis Ready For First Breeders’ Cup Mount

New York-based jockey Dylan Davis has already guided Bryan Hilliard's Second of July to consecutive upset wins and he will look to complete the hat trick in Friday's Grade 2, $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Keeneland Race Course.

Davis, a native of Manhasset, New York, will turn 26-years-old on November 15 and he is hoping to celebrate early following his first ever Breeders' Cup mount.

“I want to do the best I can do and hopefully win,” said Davis. “A win would be great, but if we could get in the top four, I'd still be ecstatic. But we've come to win and we're riding to win. I want to get the best placing I can for him and the team.”

Trained by the Saratoga-based Phil Gleaves, who seeks his first Breeders' Cup win in his fourth attempt, Second of July posted a 68-1 upset score in his Sept. 20 debut in a six-furlong maiden allowance sprint on the Belmont Park turf.

Davis said he felt no pressure entering Second of July's debut effort.

“As a first timer, Phil just wanted me to teach him the ways of racing and race dynamics and just let him learn,” said Davis. “We got into a position where I thought we could make a good run, got out in the clear, and he responded. There was a horse that came up on his outside, but he was pretty game about it and we were lucky enough to win first time out. It's nice when a horse will do everything you want him to do and still respond willingly to the wire.

“In general, when I'm riding a longshot, I just want to make sure I get a good trip,” added Davis. “I don't feel like there's not as much pressure, you still want to ride your best race. I try to ride every horse to give them an opportunity to win or get their best placing.”

Second of July, a Kentucky homebred named for the owner's son Reed's date of birth, followed with a second consecutive victory at long odds, besting a seven-horse field at 15-1 in the 130th Grade 3, $100,000 Futurity, earning an automatic entry to the Juvenile Turf Sprint.

“He was a lot calmer and he knew what was going on second time out,” said Davis. “He broke OK, not too aggressive, and then we just got involved within the race into the turn and being between horses and letting him settle before making a run like he did first time out. With those two races, being involved with the pack and being able to run through, I think he's ready for tomorrow.”

The Jack Milton chestnut's Futurity score came at the expense of returning-rivals After Five, Momos and County Final, who completed the superfecta last out.

Over the past 13 months, Davis has picked up marquee wins in the 2019 Grade 2 Kelso with Pat On the Back and the Grade 3 Withers with Max Player in February at the Big A.

The up-and-coming rider enters his Breeders' Cup debut off a solid run of form with an impressive rail-skimming effort in the Awad aboard Step Dancer to score a 7-1 upset for trainer Barclay Tagg on Saturday at Belmont.

Davis had guided Step Dancer to a 24-1 maiden win in September on the Saratoga turf and has earned the respect of Tagg's partner and assistant trainer Robin Smullen, who will saddle Breeders' Cup Classic hopeful Tiz the Law on Saturday.

“He rode him beautifully,” said Smullen. “He's learned so much riding in this colony and he certainly looks like he belongs and he's riding like he's right at the top.”

In 2018, Davis guided Tale of Silence to a memorable rail-riding win for Tagg in the Grade 3 Westchester, prevailing by a nose at odds of 12-1 as the distant fourth choice in a five-horse field.

“We've won some good races with Dylan,” said Smullen. “He's had some real good finishes for us. He rode Tale of Silence to his only stakes win and it was a four-horse photo that he won by a nostril.”

Davis said he's been able to grow his skillset exponentially by riding in New York.

“To be able to compete on the NYRA circuit and be involved daily with top riders and Hall of Famers is great,” said Davis. “It's difficult, but you're always learning and striving to be the better you and ride good races. To be on the same track with those guys, you can learn something daily.”

Davis is the son of veteran rider Robbie Davis, who competed in 10 Breeders' Cup events, with a pair of fourth-place finishes his best efforts, including aboard Not Surprising in the 1995 Sprint at Belmont won by Desert Stormer.

He said he talked to his dad on the phone earlier this week and received good advice.

“My dad told me to ride my race, ride smart and know that there's nothing different about this race except the money, so just ride your race and don't put too much pressure on yourself,” said Davis, who also credits retired champion jockey and current America's Day at the Races analyst Richard Migliore, Hall of Fame rider Chris McCarron and Eclipse Award-winning apprentice jockey turned trainer Wesley Ward among his confidantes.

On Friday, Davis will be tasked with negotiating a winning trip from post 13 at a morning-line assessment of 8-1 in a 14-horse field led by the 8-5 Golden Pal.

Gleaves said he is confident in Davis' ability to find a result in the 5 1/2-furlong sprint.

“I imagine he'll be in the second flight. He's a pretty tractable horse,” said Gleaves, whose previous Breeders' Cup starters include Happy Jazz Band [fourth, 1990 Juvenile], Devil on Ice [10th, 1991 Juvenile], and Mambo Meister [fifth, 2009 Dirt Mile]. “Dylan will have to work out a trip from there. The biggest obstacle will be the 14 horses going 5 ½ [furlongs]. It'll be a cavalry charge.”

Davis said he would have preferred a more inside draw, but is already strategizing options.

“I didn't like it at first, but as I've looked through it, I have Golden Pal on my outside and he has a lot of speed,” said Davis. “The 10-horse [Bodenheimer] has a lot of speed and has ran over the course before. Those horses will put a lot of pressure into the early speed, so we might run out with them a little bit and try to get some early position. I don't have the same speed they do, but it should spread the field out a little bit with those horses on the outside. From that post, I might lose some ground, but when the time is right to get some run, I'll be ready to have a clear trip.

“We're battle ready and being in the mix is no problem for him,” added Davis. “Whether he's inside or outside, he does fight to the wire with horses around him. He hasn't won by big margins, but he puts up a fight when horses come up next to him.”

Davis has posted nine wins at Keeneland over the course of his career, the most recent coming in April 2014 aboard Tell All You Know with a prominent performance in a 5 1/2-furlong allowance turf sprint.

“I was here at Keeneland with the bug,” said Davis. “I haven't been here in a while, but I remember the course well and I've been watching the races to see how the course has been playing.”

With no other mounts lined up for Friday's Keeneland card, Davis said he will prepare himself just as he does for his mounts in New York.

“I'll go through my normal routine with a lot of stretching and replay watching,” said Davis. “I only have the one race so I don't have a lot of handicapping to do. I'll get to the jock's room early and watch the races before ours and get a feel of how the turf is playing.

“Before the race, I'll have a bit of a workout to get my body ready,” he added. “It's just one race so I have to make sure that I'm all stretched out and ready to go when the gates open.”

And Davis said he is looking forward to the biggest moment of his career thus far, having put in the hard work day in and day out against the toughest jockey colony on the continent.

“I've learned fast,” said Davis. “A lot of good horses come through New York and I was hoping to find one of my own and now here he is – Second of July – I've waited a while for this moment and I know I'm ready for it.”

The post ‘I’ve Waited A While For This Moment’: Dylan Davis Ready For First Breeders’ Cup Mount appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Five-Win Day Propels Abel Cedillo To Jockey Of The Week Title

Abel Cedillo's five-win day at Del Mar, including a victory in the Let It Ride Stakes aboard Strongconstitution, led to Jockey of the Week honors for Oct. 26 through Nov. 1. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 950 active riders in the United States as well as retired and permanently disabled jockeys.

Abel Cedillo said he was feeling “lucky” when racing began Sunday afternoon at Del Mar. He had a mount in all nine races and when he won the first one, he said his confidence went up. By the time the day was done, the 31-year-old Guatemalan had finished first five times, including a confident ride in the day's feature, the $75,000 Let It Ride Stakes aboard Roadrunner Racing or Sayjay Racing's Strongconstitution.

As the mile grass stakes race for 3-year-olds unfolded, Cedillo was up close along the rail, but heading home the field bunched at the head of the stretch. He looked outside, but quickly wheeled his Constitution colt alongside the fence where there was the smallest of openings. Both rider and horse were game as they dove on through and held off Hronis Racing's Heywoods Beach for the score.

Cedillo's earlier winners on the card were 1st Race – Spielberg ($3.80); 2nd Race – War Path ($8.60); 4th Race – Freedom Lass ($13.00), and 5th Race – Chollima ($5.40).

“Five wins today, wow. I was feeling lucky and when I won a close one with that first one (Spielberg by a neck in the first race), I had lots of confidence,” Cedillo said. “Then I rode with that confidence from there on out. I'd won five races on a single day once before up at Golden Gate Fields, but this is a first down here. My horse (Strongconstitution) ran strong in the stakes. We got through inside and he got it done.”

Cedillo out-polled fellow riders Jose L. Ortiz who won two stakes at Belmont Park, Marcelino Pedroza, Jr. who won two stakes at Indiana Grand, Luis E. Perez who won the most races for the week with nine and Ricardo Santana, Jr. who was third in total purse earnings.

The post Five-Win Day Propels Abel Cedillo To Jockey Of The Week Title appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights