Six-Day Los Al Meet Starts Friday

The six-day winter Thoroughbred meet at Los Alamitos will begin Friday, Dec. 9. Racing will be conducted Friday-Sunday both weeks with a 12:30 p.m. post time. The meet will be highlighted by the GI Starlet S. Dec. 10, offering 10 points towards the GI Kentucky Oaks, and GII Los Alamitos Futurity S. Dec. 17, with 10 points towards the GI Kentucky Derby.

Completing the stakes program are a pair of one-mile races for 2-year-olds bred or sired in California, the $100,000 Soviet Problem S. for fillies Dec. 11 and the $100,000 King Glorious S. Dec. 18.

There will also be a handicapping contest Saturday, Dec. 17 and the Los Alamitos Racing Association will offer a cash prize and a pair of berths to the 2023 National Thoroughbred Racing Association Handicapping Championship in Las Vegas. Cost to enter is $500. Of that amount, $100 will be placed in the contest prize pool with the remaining $400 going towards a live money wagering card.

Tournament races will include the entire card at Los Alamitos. Permitted wagers include win, place, show, exactas, trifectas and daily doubles. Each entry must wager at least $50 on a minimum of five races that day, but there is no wagering limit. The player with the highest bankroll at the end of the day will be declared the winner and the second highest bankroll will be the runner-up. The winner will receive 50% of the prize pool. The remaining payoffs: 20% (2nd place), 15% (3rd place, 7.5% (4th place) and 7.5% (Most Money Wagered).

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Juvenile Events Highlight Los Al Stakes Schedule

The Dec. 10 GI Starlet S. for juvenile fillies and Dec. 17 GII Los Alamitos Futurity highlight Los Alamito's Racecourse's upcoming six-day Winter Thoroughbred Meet, with racing scheduled for Friday-Sunday the weeks of Dec. 9 and Dec. 16. Also on the schedule are the Dec. 11 Soviet Problem S. for Cal-bred or sired juvenile fillies and the corresponding King Glorious S. for males Dec. 18.

The post Juvenile Events Highlight Los Al Stakes Schedule appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Bloodlines Presented By Iowa Thoroughbred Breeders And Owners Association: Slow Down Andy Keeps Young Sire Nyquist On The Fast Track

After his victory in the Dec. 11 Los Alamitos Futurity, Slow Down Andy certainly has helped to speed up the consolidation of stallion prestige for the second-crop sire Nyquist (by Uncle Mo), who was a champion juvenile colt in 2015 and winner of the next year's Kentucky Derby.

A year ago at this time, Nyquist was cantering under the wire as the leading freshman sire of a good-looking group that included two other successful sons of Uncle Mo. That freshman sire title was made much easier by the successes of Vequist, the champion juvenile filly of 2020, whose $1.2 million in earnings represented about half of her sire's freshman crop earnings last year.

Nearly all of Vequist's haul accrued over a 60-day period from Vequist's maiden victory in the Grade 1 Spinaway Stakes at Saratoga on Sept. 6 to her title-winning victory in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies on Nov. 6 last season. The mass of her earnings propelled Nyquist to a clear leadership among freshmen sires with a margin of $864,335 over Laoban (Uncle Mo) and Not This Time (Giant's Causeway), who were separated by $2,610.

This year, however, Vequist made only one start, finishing ninth as the odds-on favorite in her seasonal debut, the G2 Davona Dale at Gulfstream. The filly was bumped at the start, made no progress on the turn, and was eased to the wire but walked off after the finish. Vequist worked through the summer but did not start and was sold at the Fasig-Tipton November sale for $3.4 million to Spendthrift Farm.

In the absence of the champion, the Nyquist 3-year-olds struggled for a bit but then picked up tempo. In particular, Gretzky the Great won the Greenwood Stakes at Woodbine in August, Team Merchants won the Let It Ride at Del Mar in November, and Willful Woman finished second in the G2 Black-Eyed Susan at Pimlico back in May.

Once again, however, the juveniles were the source of power for the Nyquist engine. Four 2-year-olds by the sire have now won stakes, and six are stakes-placed, with three having graded stakes placings. In addition to Slow Down Andy, there is the sire's leading earner Tunerloose (winner of the rich Juvenile Fillies Stakes at Kentucky Downs), Lemieux (Juvenile Fillies Stakes at Gulfstream), and Curly Girl (Lady Finger Stakes at Finger Lakes). The six stakes-placed juveniles include Sequist (third in the G1 Alcibiades), American Xperiment (third in the G1 Del Mar Futurity), and Credibility (third in the G2 Bourbon Stakes).

The depth of the stallion's second crop holds much of the promise for his potential to carry forward this momentum into next season. Should a classic colt, in particular, develop from of this group, Nyquist would be settled in an enviable position among other young, upwardly mobile sires.

Slow Down Andy might just be the ticket for the classic hopes held for his sire. Both the winner and the highly regarded second-place finisher in the Los Alamitos Futurity, Bob Hope Stakes winner Messier (Empire Maker), drew away from their competition in the stretch of the Futurity, finishing nine lengths ahead of third-place Barossa (Into Mischief).

Bred in California by owner Reddam Racing, Slow Down Andy is the third foal and third winner from the Square Eddie mare Edwina E, who did not win in a pair of starts, but has been a star producer. Her second and third foals are both by Nyquist and are the stakes winners Team Merchants and Slow Down Andy. Edwina E is a full sister to a pair of stakes-placed performers, as well as two other racers who earned six figures.

All are by Square Eddie, a son of Smart Strike who more than earned his stripes as a sire in California. Winner of the G1 Breeders' Futurity in his first American start in 2008, Square Eddie was next out second in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile and looked like one of the stars of the division for the next season's classics.

Although the colt placed second in the 2009 G3 San Rafael and third in the G2 Lexington Stakes, the hopes for the colt went to pieces thereafter. Off six months, Square Eddie returned to race for owner Paul Reddam and trainer Doug O'Neill, but the good-looking horse never won another important race. Sent to Vessels Stallion Station in 2010, Square Eddie returned to race the following year. Although the owner persevered with Square Eddie through 2011, the horse never even placed in another stakes.

By that time, his commercial appeal had waned, and Reddam stood the horse in California at Ocean Breeze Ranch, where he was pensioned in 2020. The horse sired 17 stakes winners, including Grade 1 winner Ralis, and has total progeny earnings of more than $16 million.

Reddam bred and raced nearly all the good stock by Square Eddie, including the five siblings mentioned above, and in Slow Down Andy, Reddam may have the colt who makes the wait worthwhile.

The post Bloodlines Presented By Iowa Thoroughbred Breeders And Owners Association: Slow Down Andy Keeps Young Sire Nyquist On The Fast Track appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Slow Down Andy, Art Sherman Among Highlights For Los Alamitos Winter Meet

An upset by Slow Down Andy in the $300,000 Grade 2 Los Alamitos Futurity, a fifth consecutive win in the G1 Starlet for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, and a retirement ceremony for trainer Art Sherman were among the highlights of the seven-day Winter Thoroughbred meet, which concluded Sunday at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, Calif.

A homebred son of 2016 Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist owned by J. Paul Reddam and trained by Doug O'Neill, Slow Down Andy surprised 1-2 favorite the Baffert-trained Messier Dec. 11, ending Baffert's streak of seven wins in a row in the Futurity.

In the Starlet, Eda, the 11-10 favorite, prevailed, continuing a run for Baffert that has seen him win the prestigious race for 2-year-old fillies five of the eight years it has been offered at Los Alamitos.

Baffert also won the meet's other graded race, capturing the $100,500 G3 Bayakoa with favored As Time Goes By for Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor, and Derrick Smith.

The two other stakes were for 2-year-olds bred or sired in California. Professors' Pride went gate-to-wire in the $101,500 Soviet Problem for Larry and Carolyn Samovar's Academic Farms and trainer Eddie Truman while 2-1 second choice Straight Up G led throughout to take the $102,000 King Glorious for owner-breeder Jim Rome's Jungle Racing LLC and trainer Richard Baltas.

Sherman, 84, was honored Dec. 10 minutes after he saddled his last career starter – Chasing Alchemy, who finished seventh in a $50,000 maiden claimer for 2-year-olds. The popular trainer, who has been involved in racing for more than 65 years, finished his career with 2,261 wins. His most famous pupil was two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Kentucky Derby winner California Chrome, who was based at Los Alamitos for most of his career.

Baffert topped the trainer standings with five victories, one more than Lorenzo Ruiz. It was the 13th meet he has either led or shared the title since daytime thoroughbred racing returned to Los Alamitos in 2014.

Baffert had the most wins (13) for the year at Los Alamitos, combining the Winter meet with the Summer Thoroughbred Festival (June 25-July 5) and the Los Angeles County Fair season (Sept. 10-26). Peter Miller and Steve Miyadi tied for second with 11.

A closing day triple-double enabled Abel Cedillo to win the jockey title, his second in a row locally after taking the LACF meet. The 32-year-old native of Guatemala finished with nine wins, three more than Tyler Baze, apprentices Ricardo Ramirez and Diego Herrera, and Kyle Frey.

For the year at Los Alamitos, Cedillo totaled 35 wins, 14 more than closest pursuer Juan Hernandez. Frey and Herrera shared third with 16.

All sources handle for the Winter meet was up 11% on a comparative basis over 2019, which was also a seven-day season.

Handle at California satellite locations declined 23%, but advance deposit wagering in Southern California increased 61%. “We're pleased with how things went for the days we raced, but disappointed we aren't able to run next week,'' said F. Jack Liebau, vice president of the Los Alamitos Racing Association.

Daytime thoroughbred racing will return to Los Alamitos in 2022. The first of three meets is scheduled to begin Friday, June 24, and will continue through Sunday, July 10.

The post Slow Down Andy, Art Sherman Among Highlights For Los Alamitos Winter Meet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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