In New Role As Keeneland President, Safety Will Be A Central Focus For Arvin

The guard at Keeneland will soon be changing, as Shannon Bishop Arvin has been named as the successor to retiring Keeneland President and CEO Bill Thomason. Arvin will serve as President-elect starting Sept. 1 and will take over the role officially on Jan. 1. Arvin comes to the position with a long history with the racetrack, having served as corporate counsel to Keeneland since 2008 and secretary and advisory member of the board of directors since 2015. Arvin is a partner at Stoll Keenon Ogden and has served on numerous industry boards, including the University of Kentucky's Gluck Equine Research Center, secretary of Horse Country, Director of Kentucky Bank and Director of The Lexington School; is Chair and Director of Bluegrass Care Navigators (formerly Hospice of the Bluegrass) and is Past President of the Thoroughbred Club of America.

Arvin will also be carrying on family tradition — her grandfather W.T. “Bish” Bishop was the track's first general manager, and her father grew up in an apartment next to the track's clubhouse. She is the first woman in Keeneland's history to serve as its president.

We sat down with Arvin to find out more about her outlook on her new role. 

PR: Was your new position as president of Keeneland something you've always aspired to, or did it just sort of evolve organically?

SA: I have been working as a lawyer in the Thoroughbred industry for 18 years and have been lucky to work with a lot of great clients. My relationships at Keeneland have kept me close throughout my time there. I don't know that I can say it was my aspiration, but it's more of, 'I wake up every day and do the best I can for this institution, for which I have so much passion.' I couldn't be more excited to have ended up in this spot.

You obviously have a long family tradition of working in racing, going back a couple of generations. What made you want to stay in the racing business yourself?

SA: My dad and I were very close, but it's funny – I think he would have been just as happy if I'd been a school teacher or a chef as he was for me to be a lawyer and practice with him. He just wanted me to do the kind of work that made me happy. In fact, when I started practicing law, he suggested estate planning, because he knew I wanted a family at some point and that might be a nice area of the law where you could be a little more flexible. I did in fact pursue that as well, but the relationships just kept taking me back to the equine business. That's such a relationship business. My friends have been my clients, and my clients have been my friends, so my personal and professional worlds have always collided in such a way it has kept me really close to the industry.

Your grandfather was the first general manager of Keeneland; does the family association with Keeneland place a unique kind of pressure on you in this new role?

SA: I think it makes me excited more than anything. My dad was always careful not to apply that pressure to me. Of course I remember my grandfather, but I was pretty young when he passed away and it was before I recognized his professional contributions.

My dad was always careful to make sure I was doing what I was doing because I was passionate about it and it's what I wanted to do. He passed away from cancer, which is a horrible illness, but one of the benefits of it is you have a little foresight and the ability to plan. So I have all these letters from my dad which I'll keep forever, and one of them said, 'If this is ever too much for you or not what you want to do, please don't feel any pressure from me or anybody else to continue.' That's helped me a lot since 2008, to be sure I'm doing what I am because I feel confident about my contributions and happy.

Of course, you're the first woman to have held this position. How do you feel about being the very first?

SA: You know, I have sat in a lot of boardrooms with a lot of men over the years and I don't feel uncomfortable at all in that position. I feel like I haven't let that get in my way, and I've been fortunate to work with people through the years who haven't let it get in the way either. I think that leading for men or women is similar in that you set a vision, you have goals and strategies, you have a great team and you have to make tough calls.

It's not lost on me and I hope it does let women know that if you just get up every day and keep after it and be persistent, anything is possible. I have two young daughters who are nine and ten, and that's been a really fun part of this too, watching their minds work. When I told them I was taking this job they said, 'Mom, you already work at Keeneland.' But as time has gone on, I think it's evolved, especially for my 10-year-old, that this is a big deal. And I'm excited about that.

What are your long and short term visions for what you want to do in this position?

SA: Short term, we have got to operate in a way that protects the health of the industry during a global pandemic and that means working as hard as we can and doing all things possible to have safe sales this fall, a safe race meet, a safe Breeders' Cup. We need to protect the health of our athletes and our industry participants.

Keeneland is such a unique organization because we've had the same mission for 80 plus years. We're a model racetrack, a leading auction company, and we're guided by the best of the traditions of our sport. I think a really important part of that that will be a challenge is maintaining the best of those traditions and innovating in a way that enhances safety and integrity and attracts new owners and fans.

What areas of racing and sales do you think Keeneland has done really well to this point, and where are the areas of improvement you're hoping to work on?

SA: On the racing side, it's hard to think of anything more important than safety and integrity. I think Keeneland has done a great job of being a leader on that front, as a founding member of the Thoroughbred Safety Coalition, and even before that. We put so many resources into making this the absolute safest track that it can be. Certainly, as you've seen, we haven't done that perfectly. There's room for improvement on that and we'll continue to do that.

Sales, there are some silver linings of the pandemic and one of them is speeding up some projects that we already had underway, in terms of permitting online bidding promoting digital sales. We've got areas of bidding for those who are physically on the grounds so they can be socially distanced and safe. We've working on that innovation in the sales arena.

Hospitality has been such an important part of the way Keeneland has advanced in the last few years and I think that's going to look different, too. We're not going to be having big parties for a while, we're going to be having smaller, more intimate get-togethers and find creative ways to let people feel a part of what we have here and be energized by that.

Do you have a vision for how to attract new owners once we get beyond COVID?

SA: I think it's conducting our sport well, and that goes back to innovation. I don't have the magic answer that's going to attract new fans, but I think we can do things that will make our sport more attractive to the general public – have broadcasting conducted in a way that shows the inside of the business. Horse Country, I think, has been a great advancement in terms of letting people see the horse at an early age. There's no animal more majestic than the horse and I'm sure you feel the same way. Working to find ways to connect owners better with the horse. If you're in Ireland and you're sitting in a pub, it feels like everyone owns the leg of a racehorse. That's a great way to expose people to the excitement of our sport, let them catch the fever and have the fun of owning a leg or an ear of a horse in a way that shows them it's not just for the uber wealthy. There are all kinds of ways to be involved in our sport and I think we have to do a better job of bringing people to that.

Even if they just own a whisker and aren't in a position to be an owner for a period of time, we still want them to be fans.

How do you plan to address the ethical environment at sales? We hear sometimes about kickbacks and other arrangements that take place at the sales grounds; how do you envision addressing those kinds of things?

SA: I think it's education. I think sometimes in the horse business we've seen situations where really successful people come into the business and they don't necessarily do the same due diligence in the horse business that they have in their other businesses. I think it's education and getting to know the people they're doing business with and making sure they're comfortable with them. I'm a lawyer by training and I know horsemen and horsewomen tend not to like agreements but here are ways you can have agreements that are short and concise and don't bog down a transaction and still protects people.

Diversity has been a big topic in racing, and something Keeneland has committed itself to improving. Do you have an idea of how you will go about improving the diversity of your company?

SA: I think not just our industry, but our world, and particularly our country, are struggling right now to find a better balance. I think a silver lining in some of the strife we're seeing is that people are more cognizant and working harder to achieve better diversity. We all have work to do; our company has work to do, our community has work to do, and we're committed to doing that. And that's the first step.

We're going to do an assessment of where we are and where we need to go. I've been involved in hiring for a number of years too, and I've learned that to improve diversity it's not enough to say, 'Well the candidates aren't there.' You need to do outreach and work with the community to find diverse candidates, and work to attract diverse candidates to our company and to our industry. We're definitely committed to doing that.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘What Kind Of A Person Am I?’

It may have been “just” a West Virginia-bred maiden race at Charles Town on July 16, but there was a time that 54-year-old owner Bill Goodman considered it a win just that Eternal Heart was still alive.

The filly, a 3-year-old daughter of First Samurai, has already endured and overcome more adversity than most horses face in a lifetime. As a yearling, Eternal Heart's nervous system was attacked by a parasite, Sarcocystis neurona, the culprit behind the debilitating and often deadly disease Equine Protozoal Myeloencephalitis (EPM).

Her recovery is a story about perseverance, about faith, and, above all, about the people who work incredibly hard to do right by the animals with whose lives they are entrusted.

“This business gets a really bad rap, but I've seen some people do some amazing things,” Goodman said, his voice wavering as the emotion overwhelmed him. “They get this horse, this West Virginia-bred with these issues, and just treated her like she was Ruffian or something. That's just the kind of people who are in this business. People like this need to be known. And the little guys don't get the chance for these good horses, and they should, because she would never be where she is if she had been in any other barn.”

Like any good blockbuster film, the journey began with a midlife crisis.

In 2011, Goodman was managing an Irish pub for a friend in Miami, Fla., and had never worked around horses. He loved the races, however, and spent many an afternoon playing the ponies at Gulfstream Park.

“One morning at like six a.m., as I was putting the night deposit in the bank, I just had this thought, 'I don't want to be here, I don't want to do this anymore,'” Goodman explained. “I said to myself, 'I think I'll go to Gulfstream Park, and I'm gonna get a license, and I'm gonna get a job there. So I walked through the back gate, having never walked a horse in my life.”

Goodman was told no at almost every barn, but trainer Peter Gulyas saw him walking the backside and quickly agreed to show Goodman the ropes. That lasted for several months, but when Gulyas got down to just four horses, he had to let Goodman go.

Ever the pragmatist, Goodman called the phone number on trainer Todd Pletcher's website, and got connected with assistant Whit Beckman at Keeneland. Beckman hired him to hot-walk over the phone, and Goodman drove up to Lexington that very night, arriving at Keeneland at three in the morning.

“I worked for Todd for just three weeks, and then I got to go to the Derby at Churchill with Gemologist,” Goodman said. “I was just in heaven. We went from there to Saratoga, and I started asking about learning how to groom. By the time we went to Florida, I had my first four horses.”

Goodman cared for some top horses for Pletcher, attending three Kentucky Derbies and three Breeders' Cups with his charges. Among his favorites were We Miss Artie, My Miss Sophia, Competitive Edge and Ectot.

“I learned a lot from Todd,” said Goodman. “I was very lucky.”

Tragedy struck in 2017 when Goodman's father died. Pletcher told the groom to take as much time off as he needed, that he would always have a job when he was ready to come back.

Goodman had been thinking about shifting into the bloodstock business anyway, and his father's passing allowed him to step back and start working toward that goal. In 2018, he started looking for his first horse, and he finally found her at the October Fasig-Tipton Midlantic yearling sale at Timonium.

Under the banner WJG Legacy Equine (his father's initials), Goodman purchased Eternal Heart for $50,000. He'd gone a bit above his budget, but he just felt there was something special about the compact chestnut filly.

Eternal Heart was sent to Susan Montanye's farm in Florida for her early education, and everything proceeded according to schedule for the first several weeks.

On Oct. 28, Goodman got the call.

“I remember it like it was yesterday,” Goodman said. “It was 11:31 in the morning, and the phone rang and it was Susan. I knew right away something was wrong. I remember picking up the phone, and I just said, 'Uh oh.' And she said, 'Yeah, Uh-oh.'”

Eternal Heart's right ear was at a 90-degree angle to her head, her right eye wasn't blinking, and the skin was sagging on the right side of her face.

“She looked like she'd had a stroke, basically,” said Goodman.

Veterinarians quickly diagnosed the filly as neurologic, and started treating her intensely right away. She regained the blinking in her right eye after 24 hours, but two weeks later Goodman got another call.

The parasite, which had originally attached to the filly's brain stem, had migrated to her spinal cord after the aggressive treatment. Now, Eternal Heart was losing control of her hind end, and the prognosis wasn't good.

Goodman was told that euthanasia was the best remaining option, and his insurance company called to offer him a full payout for the filly's $50,000 value.

“I couldn't make the decision, and the vet said she wasn't in pain,” Goodman said. “So I put my head in the sand like an ostrich and said, 'Keep treating her.'”

Montanye suggested that it might not be a bad idea to have Nieke Mailfat, an Eastern medicine specialist, take a look at the filly. Goodman agreed.

“Nieke looked at the filly and she told me, 'I can't make her a racehorse, but I think I can make her a horse,'” Goodman remembered. “Right then it was like, what do I do now? If I put her down now, what kind of a person am I? Yeah, I could get my money back, but how am I gonna live with that?

“I thought I was prepared for it, but you're now in charge of this life. I knew right away when they told me, I knew it was going to be a moral decision.”

Prior to treatment, Eternal Heart registered about a 4.5 on the neurologic scale, which runs from 1 to 5 with 5 being the worst. Mailfat told Goodman that if there was no improvement in three weeks, the filly would never get better.

In just four days, though, Eternal Heart was showing marked improvements. She'd moved to about a 3.5 on the neurologic scale, and after two weeks she was able to go out in a little round pen.

“She was wobbly but she never fell, and she was just happy to be out,” Goodman said. “I was down there constantly, and she didn't look like the same filly. She's always been a good keeper, though. She'll eat you out of house and home, so that probably saved her.”

In January 2019, Montanye called to say the filly was doing so much better that she wanted to put a saddle on her and tack walk her. Taking small steps forward, Eternal Heart progressed to walking around with a rider on, lunging in the round pen, then jogging on the track by mid-February. In March, they started to let her gallop a bit.

“She was still a little bit unsteady, but she never tripped or stumbled, she just continued to get better,” Goodman said. “Still, the thought process was, 'She can one day be a horse.'”

By May, Eternal Heart told her caretakers that she was ready to stretch her legs in her first “breeze.” By July, the filly showed off her improvement with a work in company, going a quarter in 25 ½ seconds.

“Now the thought process changes to, 'Wow, maybe she can race,'” said Goodman. “Susan said it was time for her to move on, and I decided to send her to Caio Caramori.”

The son of trainer Eduardo Caramori, Caio operates out of the Thoroughbred Training Center in Lexington. The two met because Goodman had become friends with Pletcher assistant Byron Hughes. Hughes and Caio Caramori were childhood friends, and Hughes brokered the introduction shortly after Goodman started working for Pletcher.

Goodman and Caramori started playing golf together and talking horses. Eventually, their friendship progressed to the point that Goodman would stay on Caramori's parents' farm whenever Pletcher's string was based in Lexington, and Goodman even lived there for a while after his father died.

“Sending her to Caio was unquestionably the best decision I've made, because she would never be where she is today without him and his wife, Emma,” Goodman said. “They're just good people.”

Emma Caramori and baby Cora visit Eternal Heart

Eternal Heart arrived in Lexington on July 17, and Caramori quickly suggested treating her for EPM once again. The trainer warned Goodman that treating the filly might cause her to regress in the short term, but he felt strongly that it was the best thing for her moving forward.

She did regress, but after a week Eternal Heart started going the right way again. Caramori was almost ready to start looking for a race for her in December, but since she'd missed out on so much early training, Eternal Heart just hadn't had the physical preparation to be ready to race at two.

Caramori turned her out for 90 days over the winter in Florida, then started to bring her back again. She'd jog one day, then be turned out the next day for nearly a month before Caramori resumed full training with her in April.

“Caio just treated her like she was his own horse,” Goodman said. “I was in the stall a lot, but when I had to leave Florida to go work for Dermot (Magner), I knew she was in good hands.”

When Eternal Heart was ready, Caramori set up a breeze with company, a filly who had won at first asking. Working from the gate, Eternal Heart was a couple steps slow at the start and got out-breezed.

“Caio called me and said, 'Don't be disappointed,'” remembered Goodman. “It was hard not to be, but the next week he called again and said, 'Eternal Heart told me she wants a rematch.'”

In their next matchup, Eternal Heart blew the doors off her rival. It was time to enter her in a race.

Goodman drove down to West Virginia on July 16 to watch Eternal Heart win at first asking, racing without Lasix and topping her nearest rival by three-quarters of a length to earn $16,125.

“I'll never forget when she turned into the paddock at Charles Town, she had this look on her face like 'I'm not in Kansas anymore,'” said Goodman. “In the race, she split horses and then she just never let anybody get by her. The jockey, J.D. Acosta, told me after the race, 'Man, she is so green but she has so much talent.' His agent called the next day and said he wants to keep riding her!”

Future plans for Eternal Heart call for the filly to stay in West Virginia, where there are multiple conditions she can run through.

“Even if she never wins again, just that she did what she did, it's so impressive,” said Goodman. “She's already paid me back, big-time. … She's just got this something about her, she just doesn't want to lose. It's pretty humbling, actually. For two years, she has consumed every moment of my thoughts.”

Working with horses has filled a place in Goodman's life he hadn't known was empty, and the journey with Eternal Heart has reemphasized just how important it is to find the right people and to never give up.

“Caio and Susan and everybody, they've made her into a racehorse,” Goodman said. “They've protected her and they've protected me, and they've put up with me. I've been fortunate to make good decisions, and those good decisions were a product of how I was raised and the people who raised me. Just hanging around people who are good people, and who are going to do the right thing.”

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Collusion Illusion Noses Out Lexitonian In ‘Win And You’re In’ Bing Crosby

Rider Flavien Prat took advantage of a serious speed battle up front, dove for the rail in the stretch and pulled off a nose victory with the 3-year-old Collusion Illusion in Saturday's 75th running of the Grade I Bing Crosby Stakes at Del Mar near San Diego, Calif.

The colt by Twirling Candy just nosed out Calumet Farm's Lexitonian and rider Drayden Van Dyke who lagged far behind early, looped the field on the turn for home and fired in the lane to just miss in the six-furlong headliner. Final time for the dash was 1:10.41 after early splits of  :21.58 and :44.73.

Prat was winning his sixth stakes of the nine-day old meet and his second victory of the day to assume command in the local jockeys' race with 16 firsts. He now has 50 stakes wins at Del Mar. For Collusion Illusion's trainer, Mark Glatt, it was his first Grade I stakes victory.

Lexitonian's trainer, Jack Sisterson, won his first G1 earlier in the day at Saratoga when Vexatious upset champion Midnight Bisou in the Personal Ensign Stakes.

“It set up nicely for me,” said Prat. “They were going fast up front; I could feel it. My horse was handling the dirt well today, too. Better than he usually does. When we turned for home I had horses in front of me and I was aware the inside was playing fast today so I went down there. I got through and at the eighth pole I thought I was going to be an easy winner. Then I saw that horse on the outside (Lexitonian) coming and I wasn't so sure. But we got there.”

Collusion Illusion is owned by a quartet of Washington State partners — Dan Agnew, Jerry Schneider, John Xitco and Dr. Rodney Orr.

Running third in the $250,000 Crosby was Law Abidin Citizen, who races for the same group that owns Collusion Illusion and also is trained by Glatt.

As the favorite, the Florida-bred winner paid $5.80, $3.60 and $2.80. He earned a check for $150,000 and moved his bankroll up to $398,751. He now has won five of his six lifetime starts. Collusion Illusion was bred by Don Dizney.

“We thought, looking on paper, they were going to go pretty fast,” said Glatt. “I didn't think my other horse (Law Abidin Citizen, 3rd) would be that close (early) but he hung in there very tough. He's a bit of an overachiever and I'm almost as proud of him as I am of Collusion Illusion. (Collusion Illusion) doesn't like dirt in his face and the way it set up he was going to have to go extremely wide to stay away from it. But the past couple days the rail has been getting better as a place to be and when he darted to the rail I knew he was going to be coming. I got a little worried if he was going to find a place to go, but he was able to and came through in the end.”

The Crosby was a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” Challenge Race meaning Collusion Illusion has won a guaranteed starting spot – with all fees paid – to the 2020 Breeders' Cup Sprint, which will be held at Keeneland in Lexington, KY, on Saturday, November 7.

Earlier on the card, the 2-year-old Governor Goteven scampered to a three and one-half length victory in the $100,000 CTBA Stakes for California-bred juvenile fillies.

She was ridden by Tiago Pereira and trained by Lisa Bernard, who was winning her first stakes race, as well as first race at Del Mar. Late last year the conditioner took over the horses of now-retired trainer Walther Solis and trains out of San Luis Rey Training Center.

The homebred daughter of Governor Charlie covered five and one half furlongs in 1:05.55 and earned a first prize of $57,000 to increase her earnings to $87,000 for her two wins in two starts. She paid $8.80, $3.00 and $2.20 across the board. Final time for the five and one-half furlong test was 1:05.55.

The winner is owned by her breeder – Templeton Horses – which is the nom du course of Linda Templeton of Warner Srpings, CA.

Finishing second was LeucadiaLand Stable's race favorite Big Andy and third went to C T R Stables Reign of Fire.

Prior to that race, Thousand Words beat favored Honor A.P. in the $100,000 Shared Belief Stakes, thus earning himself a starting spot in the Kentucky Derby if his connection choose to go.

Racing at Del Mar returns tomorrow with a first post of 2 p.m. PT

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Echo Town Puts It All Together In H. Allen Jerkens

L and N Racing's Echo Town, a tough-luck runner-up against a familiar cast of rivals last time out, swept to the lead on the far outside and powered down the center of the track to earn his first career stakes triumph in Saturday's Grade 1, $300,000 H. Allen Jerkens presented by Runhappy at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

The 36th running of the seven-furlong Jerkens for 3-year-olds was the third of five stakes, three of them Grade 1, worth $2 million in purses on a spectacular 12-race Whitney Day program highlighted by Improbable's victory over Tom's d'Etat in the 93rd renewal of the historic Grade 1, $750,000 Whitney for 3-year-olds and up, a “Win and You're In” qualifier for the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Also on Saturday's card were the Grade 1, $500,000 Personal Ensign presented by NYRA Bets for older females, a “Win and You're In” qualifier for the Breeders' Cup Distaff where champion Midnight Bisou was upset as the 1-5 favorite by Calumet Farm's Vexatious; the Grade 2, $250,000 Bowling Green for older turf horses; and the $200,000 Caress for older female turf sprinters.

Echo Town's drama-free triumph in 1:22.53 over a fast main track under jockey Ricardo Santana Jr. for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen came three hours after the same duo finished ran second with Midnight Bisou and had the outcome confirmed by a steward's inquiry following the jockey's objection.

A bay son of champion sprinter Speightstown that went unraced at 2, Echo Town had alternated wins and losses through his first six starts this year, capturing his January 18 debut at Fair Grounds and a March 13 open allowance at Oaklawn Park. Second by a head in the six-furlong Bachelor in April, he stretched out to seven-eighths for the first time last out, the Grade 1 Woody Stephens on June 20 at Belmont Park, where he overcame some early trouble to be second behind No Parole, the Jerkens' 2-1 favorite.

“It was great to see him put it all together when it matters so much on this stage. He ran solidly here. He ran really well into the Woody Stephens, but I thought the timing of this race was better,” Asmussen said. “He's run hard all year. He's run consistently all year. Now, he will be noticed.”

No Parole, seeking his third consecutive victory, found himself in familiar front-running fashion pressed by Grade 1 winner Eight Rings through a quarter-mile in 22.67 seconds and two-time Grade 3 winner Mischevious Alex after a half in 45.31. Tap It to Win, last seen running fifth behind Tiz the Law in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes on June 20, moved up into a contending position with the leaders on the turn from his far outside post while Echo Town remained unhurried in fifth.

“He broke really sharp today and when the dirt started hitting him in the face, he was jumping a little bit but he was really comfortable,” Santana said. “I took him outside and he gave me a nice kick at the end. He was traveling really well. I knew there was plenty of speed today and I just wanted to sit behind the speed. I'm really happy with the horse.”

The top three turned for home together when No Parole along the rail began to drop back, leaving Mischevious Alex and Tap It to Win in a duel. Santana put Echo Town in a drive midway around the far turn, tipped furthest outside once in the straight and came with a steady run to catch the leaders and surge past for a 3 1/2-length victory. Tap It to Win, with Hall of Famer John Velazquez up, held off Echo Town's late-running stablemate Shoplifted by a half-length for second.

“I had a perfect trip. I broke on the outside and let him get his position going into the turn. I gave him his head but the other horse passed him easily. He put in a good run,” Velazquez said. “I think he's probably best going a flat mile. Today, he ran a really good race but because we had such a bad post, I had to let him burn a little bit so we could save a little ground into the turn.”

It was 1 1/2 lengths back to 28-1 long shot Captain Bombastic in fourth, followed by Sonneman, Mischevious Alex, Eight Rings, Hopeful Treasure, No Parole, Three Technique and Liam's Pride.

In giving both Asmussen and Santana their first career Jerkens victory, Echo Town returned $16.40 for a $2 win bet.

Purchased for $100,000 at Keeneland's 2018 September Yearling Sale, Kentucky-bred Echo Town earned $165,000 for the victory to push his career bankroll to $375,320.

Live racing returns Sunday to Saratoga to wrap up the second full week of the summer meet with a 10-race program featuring the $100,000 Birdstone for 4-year-olds and up going 1 ¾ miles in Race 9 at 5:46 p.m. First post is 1:10 p.m.

 

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