Belmont Spring/Summer Meet Increases from 2021

The New York Racing Association, Inc. released figures for the recently concluded Belmont Park spring/summer meet which generated $13,437,509 in average daily handle. With this year's 2% increase over 2021, average daily handle at the Belmont Park spring/summer meet has risen 23.1% since 2019. On-track handle for the 2022 spring/summer meet totaled $57,531,001, an increase of 16.6% over the 2021 figure of $49,343,664.

All-sources handle for the 44-day spring/summer meet totaled $591,250,409, compared to $632,208,251 in 2021 when the meet was contested over 48 days. The June 11 Belmont Stakes Day card, highlighted by Mo Donegal's victory in the 154th running of the GI Belmont S., generated all-sources handle of $98,766,906.

Average field size for the 419 races run during the 2022 spring/summer meet was 7.35, a 3.6% decline from the 2021 average of 7.62. The meet saw 233 races on dirt and 186 on the turf. A total of 26 races were forced off the turf due to weather.

For more information, visit www.nyra.com.

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As Saratoga Meeting Looms, Trainers Pletcher and Brown Are Ready to Fight for the Title

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY–For the last dozen or so years, the competition for the training title at Saratoga Race Course has become the Todd and Chad Show.

The next round of the now-annual summer showdown of heavyweights in upstate New York between Todd Pletcher and Chad Brown begins Thursday, the opening day of the 154th season of racing at Saratoga. Pletcher, 55, the all-time leader, will seek his 15th championship, named to honor the late great H. Allen Jerkens. Brown, 43, who just completed a record-smashing Belmont spring/summer season, is seeking his fifth, all since he ended a six-year run by Pletcher in 2016.

Winning the training and riding titles at Saratoga has always been a big deal and great sport at America's most important meet. Finishing atop the standings at the Spa has often helped make careers and provided credentials for Eclipse Awards and later the Hall of Fame.

Pletcher served notice that he was a budding superstar when he won the Saratoga crown in 1998 as a 31-year-old in his third full season as a head trainer. Brown grew up in nearby Mechanicville and embraced racing at the Spa, earned the first of his four-consecutive Eclipse Awards a few months after securing his title at the age of 37.

According to stats provided by Equibase, Pletcher and Brown have finished either first or second in the Saratoga standings since 2011. During that stretch, Pletcher won seven times, but Brown has won four of the last six, including a record 46 in 2018.

Starting in 2008, Brown's first full season as a trainer, Pletcher has won 416 of 1,950 Saratoga starts. He has won 103 stakes, 60 of them graded. Brown has produced some big numbers in recent years, four times finishing with 40 or more. He has 392 victories from 1,600 starts, with a total of 90 stakes wins, 48 of them graded.

Pletcher has found the bulk of his success on the dirt, winning 292 of 1,197 starts. He has 124 wins in 753 races on grass. Brown's stats are in sharp contrast: he has 128 wins from 542 dirt starts while securing 264 victories from 1,058 starts on the turf courses. In stakes, Pletcher has 76 wins on dirt and 27 on turf. Brown has 25 stakes win on dirt and 65 on grass.

Pletcher said that Brown might have the upper hand entering the season and said that he checks the standings that the New York Racing Association publishes during the 40-day meet.

“Oh, yeah. You've got to watch the scoreboard,” he said. “That's part of the fun. If you didn't do that you wouldn't care at all. Chad has built a very, very powerful stable. Saratoga is his hometown and he loves to win there. Looking at the situation right now, he's going to be very difficult to beat, for sure.”

Brown has always acknowledged that his success at Saratoga has been vitally important for his career and has said that winning GI Travers S. would be more personally satisfying for him than a victory in the GI Kentucky Derby. After initially being turned down for stalls in 2008, he won with the first horse he saddled at Saratoga in the first race on opening day. He said the six wins from 18 starts that summer gave him credibility and brought him new clients.

Entering this meet he is second to Steve Asmussen in 2022 earnings with $14.9 million, has GI Preakness S. winner Early Voting (Gun Runner) in his career-best group of 3-year-old colts, a slew of graded stakes winners and comes in from the impressive Belmont Park performance. Long the pursuer of Pletcher at the meet, Brown smiled and agreed that he is now the one being pursued, but said it will be a challenge to repeat after claiming his seventh-straight Belmont crown.

“It's hard to sustain,” he said. “I think you'll see last year we had a big Belmont meet, might not have broke the record, but a big Belmont meet. And then we started off Saratoga a little slow, we won some races, we had some stakes and stuff, but, really, we picked up the second half of the meet and we had a couple of huge days in that last third of the meet. Then we really ended up being strong and in front. I could see similar. I have some nice races marked early in the meet, but it's so hard to sustain this because you have to keep the horses in good form, you have to keep them healthy. When you win this many races, you're moving out of conditions, right? So you're moving up in class. Every horse, that won is going to go up now and the races are going to get harder. When you move up a class, move into a more difficult meet and moving up in class for the first time those races can be difficult for those horses.”

Brown said that while he aims for Saratoga, he did not pump the brakes at Belmont.

“I went all in at Belmont because, the old saying is 'you make hay when the sun shining,'” he said. “And when you're on the turf, and it's firm, and the races are going and the horses are healthy you run because the purses are very good at Belmont. They're not as high as these record purses that are going to be offered at Saratoga in all these conditions. This is amazing. And it's great for all the horsemen and our clients that pay all the bills.”

Since his initial championship 24 years ago, Pletcher has never been worse than third at Saratoga. He has been the runner-up seven times. He arrives at this meet ranked third in the national standings for earnings at $14.4 million. Like Brown, he saddled a Triple Crown series winner, Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), the GI Belmont S. champ, who is injured and won't run at Saratoga. The Hall of Famer, who is the sport's leading career money winner, said he is still interested in winning the Spa meet.

“It's always fun to compete at Saratoga. It certainly means something,” he said. “I wouldn't say it means quite the same as the first one did. That one was extra special and unexpected in a lot of ways. Wouldn't have anticipated that could happen the third year there.

“I've always said, I have a great appreciation for how difficult it is to win at Saratoga. And we don't take anything for granted. As always, a lot of our success will depend on how our 2-year-olds run. I feel like we have a nice group, but I'm not positive that a lot of them are July types, probably more like mid- to late-August or even September, October types. We'll just have to see how they pan out.”

Even with Mo Donegal on the sidelines, Pletcher has a strong bench of stakes runners. In the last two weeks at Belmont he won the GII Suburban with Dynamic One (Union Rags), the GIII Dwyer S. with Charge It (Tapit) the GII John Nerud S. with Life is Good (Into Mischief), the Manila S. with Annapolis (War Front) and the Perfect Sting S. with Jouster (Noble Mission). In addition, he now trains Corniche, last year's 2-year-old champion, who is expected to make his first start for Pletcher at Saratoga.

“I obviously love the way July started out for us,” he said. “It's always good when you have the quality of horses that we ran and we've got some big targets of Saratoga so that that's exciting.”

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Mo Donegal Sidelined With Bone Bruising

Donegal Racing and Repole Stable's Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) exited his GI Belmont S. victory with bone bruising and will be out of training for 60 days, according to a press release distributed by his owners Saturday.

Jerry Crawford, CEO of Donegal Racing, and Mike Repole said that they will share Mo Donegal's progress as he continues to be evaluated.

The GII Remsen S. and GII Wood Memorial S. winner delivered a three-length victory in the final leg of the Triple Crown for trainer Todd Pletcher following a rallying fifth in the GI Kentucky Derby.

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Donegal Racing CEO Jerry Crawford Talks Belmont Score On Writers’ Room

The winner's circle after Saturday's GI Belmont S. surely rivaled any in Triple Crown history in terms of population after Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) crossed the wire three lengths to the good. In addition to Mike Repole and his substantial crew of family and friends, the celebration contained the massive partnership of Donegal Racing, which brings all of its investors along for the ride with every horse it purchases. Tuesday, the CEO of Donegal, Jerry Crawford, sat down with Joe Bianca and Bill Finley of the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss the experience of sharing the Belmont triumph with so many people, how he uses algorithms to shop the sales, Donegal's new initiative to give their winning jockeys future stallion shares and more.

“When we had about 350 people at the Kentucky Derby, I had about had enough of the phone calls saying, 'Hey Jerry, can we get two double beds in our hotel room instead of one king bed?'” Crawford joked. “But I wouldn't trade it for anything. We had over 200 people at the Belmont, I think Mike had 80-something. He's been giving me a hard time, saying he never thought he'd be partners with somebody who brought more people to the races than he did. But the key thing about everybody owning part of every horse is that nobody ever gets disappointed–if we have a big horse in any year, nobody gets left out or feels like they bought the wrong horse.”

Asked about the background of the algorithm that guides him to buy particular sale horses, Crawford said the formula–and Donegal itself–was borne out of frustrations in trying to handicap, not win, the Kentucky Derby.

“About 2003 or so, my son Connor and I were talking about why we always get our asses kicked betting the Derby,” he said. “It seemed like one longshot after another would come along and we would be out of it. So we decided to try and find an algorithm that would help us pick a Derby winner. This is way before Donegal. What we discovered is that we couldn't find an algorithm to pick a winner, we were only able to pick horses that could not win under our algorithm. So I said to my very patient wife Linda, 'I'm going to take $250,000 to Lexington to the [Keeneland September] yearling sale and buy a horse that fits our algorithm', and she was cool with it. This was in 2008, when the stock market crashed, and when the stock market crashes, people stop buying boats and diamonds and racehorses and the rest. I ended up buying eight horses for $405,000 because of the market. One of those horses was eventual stakes winner Paddy O'Prado, who finished third in the Derby and fit our algorithm to a tee. So we proceeded from there. I did worry flying home from that sale that there was going to be hell to pay when I told my wife I bought eight horses, not one, but we got through that, and it's been good since.”

Crawford and Donegal had a unique experience this spring, winning the Belmont and also having a deep connection to the Derby winner. Keen Ice scored the most significant victory of the Donegal partnership's lifetime when upsetting Triple Crown winner American Pharoah in the 2015 GI Travers S. Retired to stud for 2018, the multimillionaire son of Curlin has had mixed early results, but will forever be the sire of a Derby champion after 80-1 Rich Strike upset the Run for the Roses. Crawford was asked if he felt pride in that, even as Mo Donegal ran fifth with a tough trip that day.

“You use the right word, we were very, very proud to have been the people who picked out Keen Ice at the yearling sale,” he said. “Fortunately we weren't second [with Mo Donegal], so I'm glad [Rich Strike] won because it certainly flatters Keen Ice, who was a very special horse. It was a stunning victory when he beat American Pharoah up at Saratoga. I always stop to thank the Zayats in any conversation like this, because they were true sportspeople in running American Pharoah that day. They didn't have to do that. But by being sporting and putting the horse in the race, it gave us a chance for one of the biggest days in the history of horse racing.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, XBTV, West Point Thoroughbreds and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers reacted to all the action from Belmont weekend and analyzed the implications of the Texas Racing Commission killing its simulcasting signals as a way to avoid the purview of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act. Click here to watch the show; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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