Kentucky Downs ‘Looks Like Home’ To Jockey Umberto Rispoli

Umberto Rispoli spent most of a week at Kentucky Downs last year in order to ride only two races that wound up five days apart. But even as he jogged around the 1 5/16-mile undulating turf course to keep his weight down, he knew he wanted to come back this year.

Rispoli finished 10th in his first start at Kentucky Downs, the Dueling Grounds Oaks, then five days later made the trip from California worth it financially by winning the $400,000 Music City Stakes aboard Lighthouse. The Music City was part of a card that moved from a Sunday to the following Tuesday because of torrential rain.

But Rispoli — who has ridden all over the world including being a champion rider in his native Italy and a Group 1 winner in Hong Kong — had already made up his mind that he wanted to return to the FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs, the richest six days of racing in America and among the most lucrative in the world.

The FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs runs this coming Sunday, Labor Day Monday and Sept. 8, 9, 11 and 12. First post is 12:20 p.m. Central.

Rispoli admits he wasn't happy when some of his anticipated mounts for Kentucky Downs fell through.

“But it was going to be an experience for me, anyway,” he said. “Because I'd never been to Kentucky Downs and I know it's a class track and had a scenery like some of the tracks we have in Europe. So I was excited about it. I just saw some of their races on TV. I didn't know much about the track. I ran around the track to lose some weight, and it was a good time to check out the track. But definitely when you come home with a stakes in your pocket after five days, it was worth it and it was a good experience.

“I hope this time to have more races to ride and more horses with chances…. The agent is going to be very important there. There's a lot of money. They're going to be overfilled in every race probably. But I'm very excited to come back there. This time I hope to bring home some other big winners.”

Veteran jockey agent Scott McClellan said he's got Rispoli riding at Kentucky Downs for the final four days after their Del Mar base closes on Labor Day. His stakes business is expected to include Argentine-bred Belmont Gold Cup runner-up Fantasioso for trainer Ignacio Correas in the $1 million Calumet Turf Cup (G2) and Constantia for John Sadler in the $600,000 The Mint Ladies Sprint.

Rispoli is in his second full year of riding year-round in America. In that short period of time, he has stamped himself among the top few jockeys based in southern California. Rispoli currently ranks 14th in North American purse earnings for 2021 at more than $7 million, including his first and second Grade 1 victories in the United States aboard Smooth Like Strait in the Shoemaker Mile and Rock Your World in the RUNHAPPY Santa Anita Derby.

The jockey says he had no expectations coming into Kentucky Downs last year. The course catches a lot of people by surprise with its undulations, kidney shape and dog-legged stretch rather than American racing's standard flat oval.

“I just knew it was an up-and-down racecourse, which isn't common in the United States,” he said, adding of his close friend and fellow rider Flavien Prat, with whom Rispoli traveled from California last year: “We landed and go to visit the track right away. He turns into the street for the racetrack, and I said, 'Where are we going?' He said, 'This is the track.' I said, 'You're kidding! Well, it's going to be fun.'

“I wasn't disappointed at all. I was laughing. I said, 'OK, it looks like home.' In France sometimes you're driving for hours and you look on the side of the highway and you find the rails and you think, 'Wow, I can't believe there's a racetrack here.' So I wasn't that shocked. But it was funny to approach the track, just watching and seeing it for the first time.”

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Mott-Trained Du Jour Headlines Full Field Of 3-Year-Olds For $750,000 Dueling Grounds Derby

Du Jour, winner of Churchill Downs' Grade 2 American Turf on Kentucky Derby Day, heads a capacity field of twelve 3-year-olds entered for Sunday's $750,000 Big Ass Fans Dueling Grounds Derby on opening day of the FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs.

The Vicki Oliver-trained Core Values, fresh off beating boys in Ellis Park's prep for the Dueling Grounds Derby, goes back in against fillies while putting her three-race win streak on the line in the co-featured $500,000 Exacta Systems Dueling Grounds Oaks. Both stakes are 1 5/16 miles, one lap around Kentucky Downs' undulating, kidney-shaped course.

A total of 145 horses are on the program for Sunday's 11-race card, with an extra race added because of the strong demand. There are 124 horses in the body of the races, with another 21 needing defections in order to run. Seven races attracted at least 12 entries. The Dueling Grounds Oaks' field of nine is the smallest field, with an 11-horse field and a pair of 10-horse fields rounding out the card.

Du Jour most recently was third in Saratoga's $1 million, Grade 1 Saratoga Derby Invitational after finishing fourth in the $1 million, Grade 1 Belmont Derby Invitational in his first two races for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. The colt previously was trained by California-based Bob Baffert, whose wife, Jill, is Du Jour's co-owner. Du Jour's American Turf was part of a huge day at Churchill Downs for Baffert, who finished first with Medina Spirit for what seemed to be his record-breaking seventh Kentucky Derby victory. That victory is in doubt, however, with Medina Spirit facing potential disqualification after subsequently testing positive for a therapeutic medication at more than the permitted level on race day.

Reigning Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox has a strong tandem in the 3-year-old stakes with Royal Prince in the Dueling Grounds Derby and Adventuring in the Dueling Grounds Oaks.

Royal Prince lost Ellis Park's Kentucky Downs TVG Preview Dueling Grounds Derby by a nose to Core Values after garnering a second and third in a pair of $75,000 stakes at the Fair Grounds and Sam Houston earlier in the year. Royal Prince has the distinction of finishing first in his debut at Kentucky Downs a year ago, only to have the race declared a no-contest because of a gate malfunction.

Modern Science gets another crack at Royal Prince after leading all the way in the Ellis Park prep only to get passed late to finish third by a total of a neck.

Among other Dueling Grounds Derby contenders: Kelly Breen ships Delaware's Grade 3 Kent Stakes victor Yes This Time in from Saratoga where the colt's five-race win streak ended with an eighth place in the Saratoga Derby after being pinched off at the start.

The Rusty Arnold-trained Cellist was sixth in the Saratoga Derby and third in the Belmont Derby after defeating Dueling Grounds Derby entrant Palazzi and Royal Prince in Churchill Downs' Audubon Stakes. Arnold also has Grey Streak in the Dueling Grounds Derby, with both colts owned by Calumet Farm.

Adventuring was third, by a total of a half-length, as the favorite in Ellis Park's Kentucky Downs TVG Preview Dueling Grounds Oaks, won by Core Value's stablemate Flippant in a stakes sweep for Oliver. The winner of Turfway Park's Bourbonette, Adventuring worked a half-mile in a sparkling 47 2/5 seconds on Monday – the fastest of the morning — in company with Royal Prince.

Also back from Ellis Park's Preview Dueling Grounds Oaks is fourth-place finisher Oliviaofthedesert. Trainer Kenny McPeek has enjoyed a lot of success in the Dueling Grounds Oaks, winning in 2019 with Princesa Carolina and in 2017 with Daddys Lil Darlin and coming in second in 2018 with Princess Warrior.

Mark Casse, voted into racing's Hall of Fame last year and formally inducted this year after a COVID delay, sends out the entry of Woodbine allowance winner Inthewinnerscircle and Earth Strike in the Dueling Grounds Oaks among his seven horses in on Sunday.

Joel Rosario comes in from Saratoga to ride the opening card and has been named on 10 horses, including Du Jour and Adventuring. Also leaving Saratoga early is defending meet champion Tyler Gaffalione, who likewise is in every race but one.

Mike Maker, Kentucky Downs' all-time win leader who captured his fifth training crown last year, has a relatively calm opening day by the frenetic standards he's set at the entry box for the track. Maker has six horses in the entries, two of which are on the also-eligible list and will need defections to run. Among those assured of being in the race is Hilliard, a $40,000 claim at Saratoga in his last start. Maker will try to make the gelding his latest stakes winner by running him longer distances on turf.

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Global Tote To Produce Morning Line For Kentucky Downs Meet

Who better to make a morning line than the company that processes the bets?

The program odds at Kentucky Downs' elite meet in early September will be the Global Tote Morning Line, produced by BetMakers Technology Group (“BetMakers”). Global Tote, a BetMakers Company, also serves as Kentucky Downs' tote services provider, supplying the terminals, systems and services that allow patrons to wager while visiting Kentucky Downs.

The morning line provides early odds as a reference point for horseplayers. While they don't impact wagering, they reflect the line-maker's opinion of the odds that each horse will go off in actual betting. Horseplayers and casual fans alike use the morning line for insights that include if a horse provides value by being well above the program odds, if a horse who figures among the favorites is not being bet in live action or if a horse that hasn't shown much is getting pounded in wagering.

“Betting odds are Global Tote's and BetMakers' business,” said Ted Nicholson, Kentucky Downs' Vice President for Racing. “I can't think of a better entity to be making our morning line, which is such a fundamental part of handicapping horses.”

Australia-based BetMakers Technology Group provides critical solutions in technology, data and development to the global racing and wagering industry, spanning both fixed odds and pari-mutuel markets with a presence in more than 40 countries and 35 U.S. states.

BetMakers' Global Tote, founded with the June 2021 acquisition of Sportech Racing, is the global leader in tote, creating solutions that propel the racing industry forward.

“We at BetMakers and Global Tote are very excited to support our partner, Kentucky Downs,” said Dallas Baker, Head of International Operations for BetMakers. “Bettors rely on Global Tote technologies to deliver an engaging betting experience whether visiting Kentucky Downs' beautiful September meet or betting off-track on what has been one of the most phenomenal successes in racing anywhere in the last decade. We wish everyone betting on Kentucky Downs an entertaining and winning time and hopefully we can provide some helpful insight for handicapping strategies with the Global Tote morning line from BetMakers.”

Kentucky Downs' 6 1/2-furlong stakes for 2-year-olds on Sept. 9 has been renamed the $500,000 Global Tote Juvenile Sprint.

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Channel Cat Plots Return Trip To Kentucky Downs For Calumet Turf Cup

Trainer Jack Sisterson likes the idea of Calumet Farm homebred Channel Cat taking home the top prize in the Calumet Turf Cup on Sept. 11 at Kentucky Downs.

“It would be pretty cool to win a race like that for the farm,” he said.

After considering the Grade 1, $750,000 Sword Dancer at Saratoga Race Course on Saturday, Sisterson said the 6-year-old chestnut son of Calumet stallion English Channel will wait a few weeks for the $1 million, Grade 2 Calumet Turf Cup. The all-turf FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs, which offers the richest purses in America, runs Sept. 5, 6, 8, 9, 11 and 12.

“He's doing great,” Sisterson, the former University of Louisville soccer player turned private trainer for Calumet Farm, said in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. “He could have run in the Sword Dancer, but I think the most logical spot would be to bring him home. He's won at Kentucky Downs in the past, so he handles that sort of configuration. It might come up a touch lighter than the Sword Dancer and it's a million dollars and it's a 'Win and You're In' for the Breeders' Cup. It makes more sense to us to go down there.”

The winner of the 1 1/2-mile Calumet Turf Cup, which will be broadcast on NBC, gets a fees-paid spot in the $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf at Del Mar near San Diego on Nov. 6.

Channel Cat, then trained by Todd Pletcher, picked up the first stakes win of his career in the 2018 Dueling Grounds Derby. He won the G2 Bowling Green at Saratoga last summer and earned the prized Grade 1 victory in the Man o' War in May at Belmont Park. In his most recent start, he was the beaten favorite, finishing fourth in the Bowling Green.

Sisterson said that Channel Cat, who he has trained since last year, will breeze on Sunday and will ship back to Kentucky on Monday or Tuesday. As usual, Sisterson said Calumet Farm is aiming to run for the big purses offered at Kentucky Downs.

“We'll kind of try to be aggressive in the entry box. If we get in, that's a different question,” he said. “I'm sure multiple guys are doing the same thing. We've still got a lot of 2-year-olds to run down there, horses with conditions. We'll try a couple of stakes races. We will try and support the meet as much as possible.”

Calumet Farm is owned by Brad Kelley, the self-made billionaire from Bowling Green and Franklin, Ky., who owned Kentucky Downs in partnership or outright from 1997 until 2007.

Calumet's American Derby winner Tango Tango Tango is also headed to a Kentucky Downs stakes, the Grade 2, $600,000 Franklin-Simpson — one of five graded stakes on the track's blockbuster Sept. 11 card. In his most recent start, Tango Tango Tango was second in the G1 Bruce D. (formerly the Secretariat) at a mile at Arlington Park.

“I don't think he will get the mile and 5/16ths for the Dueling Grounds Derby, so we're going to cut him back in trip,” Sisterson said. “Sometimes that 6 ½ might lean more towards a mile with the uphill incline finish. We'll give him a shot in the Franklin-Simpson.”

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