Johnny Trotter Becomes Sole Owner Of Ruidoso Downs

Approval has been granted to Johnny Trotter by the New Mexico Racing Commission for the ownership transfer of All American Ruidoso Downs, LLC; All American Ruidoso Horse Sales, LLC; and Billy the Kid Casino. Trotter previously had partners sharing ownership of the property and affiliated businesses.

In 1959, Ruidoso Downs became home to the All American Futurity, which has evolved into the world's richest race for American Quarter Horses at $3 million. Since 1962, Ruidoso has been the home of what is arguably the nation's No. 1 American Quarter Horse Yearling Sale.

A Texas businessman, cowboy and horseman, Trotter said: “Horses have been an important part of my life. Jana and I have enjoyed racing, buying and selling horses here for over 20 years. Ruidoso Downs is important to us. I am excited to be the sole owner, and I look forward to maintaining Ruidoso Downs and the horse sales as the pinnacle of horse racing. Nominations for 2023 futurities and derbies are strong, and we anticipate the yearling sales to continue as strong as ever.”

Trotter expects more great things to come for the property, its team and its events.

“We have a great management team in place, and several improvements to the property and our programs currently are under consideration,” he said. “We are the home of the nation's best racing and sales, both Ruidoso Select Yearling and New Mexico-Bred Quarter Horses and Thoroughbreds. We have the nation's best Racetrack Chaplaincy programs; and the nation's best locations for racing, casino gaming and family fun. We look forward to providing a great venue for everybody at Ruidoso Downs.”

Trotter is actively involved in farming, ranching, cattle feeding, banking, automobile dealerships, real estate and other businesses. He is a former president of the American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA) and an AQHA Hall of Fame member, as well as the Tri-State Western Heritage Hall of Fame, the Cattle Feeders Hall of Fame, the Texas Horse Racing Hall of Fame and the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame.

Trotter ranks among the Quarter Horse breed's all-time owners and breeders, having raced several Grade 1 qualifiers, five AQHA Champions and 2018 AQHA World Champion Bodacious Eagle. His wife, Jana, was one of the group of women known as “The Girls” who campaigned Devons Signature in the 2004 All American Futurity, and now enjoys racing Thoroughbreds.

The final approval for the transfer is pending the approval of the New Mexico Gaming Control Board.

The post Johnny Trotter Becomes Sole Owner Of Ruidoso Downs appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Owner Al Gold’s Horse Of A Lifetime: Cyberknife Brings Cancer Awareness To Pegasus World Cup

About the time Al Gold was faced with potentially life-threatening cancer, a horse of a lifetime came into his racing operation.

Gold, a horse owner for 50 years, named the young colt Cyberknife in recognition of the medical device used to successfully treat his prostate cancer. As Cyberknife began fulfilling expectations created by his pre-racetrack training, Gold hoped the horse and its name could raise awareness about prostate cancer, the importance of screening for the disease and the technology that improved his own quality of life during treatment.

More than $2 million in purse earnings and two Grade 1 victories later, Cyberknife will carry those banners along with jockey Florent Geroux and Gold's black and gold silks for the last time in Saturday's $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) presented by Baccarat at Gulfstream Park.

Trained by Brad Cox, Cyberknife will break from post 10 as the 5-2 program favorite in a capacity field of 12 older horses, plus an also-eligible. Post time is 5:40 p.m. with live coverage on NBC from 4:30 to 6 p.m. EST.

Gold clearly handicapped well in picking out the horse to name Cyberknife.

“I'd never had a Grade 1 winner before,” Gold said. “I'd had a Grade 2, a couple of Grade 3s in partnership with people. But this was far more outstanding than anything else I'd ever had. My next biggest winner won $399,000, so this is $1.6 million more.”

Gold paid $400,000 for Cyberknife, a son of 2017 Horse of the Year and 2018 Pegasus winner Gun Runner, at Fasig-Tipton Kentucky's 2020 Selected Yearlings Showcase. Not long afterward, Gold's cancer was diagnosed. His research and close friends led him to the non-invasive Accuray CyberKnife System that uses robotics and artificial intelligence to pinpoint radiation directly to hard-to-get tumors, sparing a lot of healthy tissue. Gold says he had five 18-minute treatments that allowed him to continue his normal life.

“I wasn't there when the horse was picked out,” said Gold, who races as Gold Square LLC. “[Racing manager] Joe Hardoon and Chad Summers were there. They really loved the horse. When we got him to Ocala to be broken, Susan Montayne, who owns a farm there, said this horse was special. All three liked the horse a lot, so we gave him that name.”

Sixteen months after the cancer diagnosis, Gold won his first Grade 1 with the Brad Cox-trained Cyberknife taking Oaklawn's Arkansas Derby. A month later he was at Churchill Downs, with his first Kentucky Derby (G1) starter. In Kentucky, he met other cancer survivors treated with CyberKnife, including a woman who had brain cancer.

“It brought a lot of exposure to CyberKnife,” Gold said of the device.

Cyberknife finished 18th in the Kentucky Derby. The colt subsequently gave Gold another Grade 1 victory in Monmouth Park's Haskell Invitational, New Jersey's signature race at the track Gold lived near for 30 years and his state residence for more than 60. Now the 4-year-old colt will close out his career at the owner's new hometown track, with Gold living in Delray Beach about 45 minutes from Gulfstream Park.

It's a long way from Cyberknife's racing debut at Churchill Downs in 2021. He finished first that day but ran greenly and was disqualified for interference.

“There were ups and downs with this horse in the beginning,” Gold said. “His third race to break his maiden, he was just hanging on. He just wasn't trying, pulling himself up. The Lecomte [his stakes debut a year ago], he went wide, looked like he was going to blow the field away and just stopped. There was always good and bad with him until he got himself together.”

In his last race, Cyberknife finished second by a head behind favored Cody's Wish in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) at Keeneland. The narrow defeat probably cost him being a finalist for the Eclipse Award as leading 3-year-old champion.

“If he had to get beat in the Breeders' Cup, that was the horse you wanted to win, because that was a better story than anything, that Cody's Wish,” Gold said of the horse named for a young man born with Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome.

It was suggested that trying to win a $3 million race the week of the Eclipse is a nice alternative.

“We'll have to settle for that,” he laughed. “It's a great race for us because it fits perfectly with our schedule. He goes to stud next month, so this will be his last hurrah.”

Then it's on to Kentucky where Cyberknife will join Spendthrift Farm's stallion roster. The stud deal struck after Cyberknife won the Arkansas Derby stipulated that the colt would be retired before the breeding season begins in mid-February.

“It's a very enjoyable experience for the two years I've had him,” Gold said. “It's bittersweet now that he's going to stud. I'll miss all the fun, the enjoyment I had with him but he's off to a second career.

“I would have loved to have raced him as a 4-year-old for the whole year. But at the time I made the decision, right after the Arkansas Derby, I was very happy. I got a few offers. The best offer I got was Spendthrift, and I was very happy to go through with it. And I still am. I bought some broodmares and I'm looking forward to breeding to him.”

Cox said that Cyberknife is the epitome of a plan coming together, that racing is full of horses who didn't pan out after being named for a person or something meaningful.

“Most of the time it doesn't work out that way,” he said. “It's obviously a very meaningful name to Al. With the Kentucky Derby, it was well-documented tying his name to promote prostate cancer awareness. It's been a positive in that regard. Hopefully he does well in the Pegasus and continues to spread the word as a stallion.”

The post Owner Al Gold’s Horse Of A Lifetime: Cyberknife Brings Cancer Awareness To Pegasus World Cup appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘A Big Relief’: Florent Geroux Celebrates 2,000th Career Win At Fair Grounds

Jockey Florent Geroux rode his 2,000th career North American winner Thursday at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots, piloting Twin Creeks Racing Stables' Warrant (1-5 favorite) to the victory in race 5.

The 36-year-old native of Argentan, France, had closed to within one victory of the milestone in Saturday's first race aboard New Destiny before reaching the mark aboard the Brad Cox-trainee on Thursday. Geroux has been the first call for Cox barn on many of their top horses recently, including Mandaloun and Monomoy Girl. Geroux will pilot Cyberknife for that stable in Saturday's $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes (G1) at Gulfstream Park.

“It feels great,” Geroux said. “It's a big relief to be honest. Especially before this weekend with a big day like the Pegasus and being on the favorite, Cyberknife. I can go there and enjoy every moment.”

Geroux's first win came in 2004 at Longchamp on Chopyluz. A graduate of the French riding Academy, Afasec, in 2007 Geroux had a false start in the United States after falling and suffering a broken wrist and two broken vertebrae on opening day at Keeneland. He returned to the U.S. in 2008, making Chicago his home base.

“I would like to thank my family and close friends for their support,” Geroux said. “It is important to have people behind you especially with all the ups and downs in this business, and they have always been cheering for me. Also, all the trainers and owners who gave me the opportunity to reach this number. Brad (trainer Brad Cox) definitely helped. He has been my go-to guy the past few years. Thanks to my agent John Panagot right now, and of course (former agent) Doug Bredar who put me on almost all of those winners. Thanks to them. I love you guys.”

Having joined the local colony in 2013, 540 of his 2,000 wins have come at Fair Grounds, where he holds two riding titles (2015-2016 & 2016-2017). His first crown was earned in 2011 at Hawthorne.

Geroux's father, Dominique Geroux, was a jockey and later a trainer in France.

Having won many of the sport's top races, Geroux scored his first Breeders' Cup victory in the 2014 Sprint aboard Work All Week and has gone on to win six more, including two Distaffs astride Monomoy Girl and the 2017 Classic with Gun Runner.. In 2021 he rode Mandaloun across the line second in the Kentucky Derby, but he was later named the adjudicated winner following the disqualification of Medina Spirit.

On Friday in race 7 at Fair Grounds, Geroux will look to score win number 2,001 aboard the Cox-trainee Strobe.

The post ‘A Big Relief’: Florent Geroux Celebrates 2,000th Career Win At Fair Grounds appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Kelly Cathey Named Director Of Racing At Remington Park

When 2023 racing begins at Remington Park, it will start with new guidance in the racing department. Kelly Cathey has accepted the director of racing position and will oversee the operation for all breeds competing at the Oklahoma City facility.

The American Quarter Horse, Paint and Appaloosa Season will begin March 9. The 2023 Thoroughbred Season will get underway in late August.

Cathey brings more than 30 years of experience in horse racing to Remington Park. He first worked with horses in the late 1980s as a teenager, assisting his father who was a trainer. He has also served as a groom, pony person, assistant trainer, valet and assistant starter.

Cathey moved into track management in 1998 at Retama Park in Selma, Texas. He has also worked for Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas; Sam Houston Race Park in Houston and Will Rogers Downs in Claremore, Okla. He has held nearly every position associated with racing, pari-mutuel wagering and simulcast operations throughout his career.

Since 2013 Cathey has worked for the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission as a state steward (2013-2015), advancing to the role of executive director of the commission in 2015. He will leave that post to become the director of racing at Remington Park.

“Remington Park and Global Gaming are excited to have Kelly Cathey join our racing team,” said Matt Vance, executive vice president of racing operations at Remington Park. “Kelly has a resume reflective of more than 30 years in the sport, working as a racing executive and regulator. His extensive experience with both Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses and their respective organizations throughout the region makes him uniquely qualified to lead our racing department at Remington Park.”

Horsemen will bring horses onto the grounds at Remington Park beginning Feb. 6 with the initial morning of training set for Tuesday, Feb. 7. The first night of the spring season falls on Thursday, March 9 and the 50-date schedule continues through Saturday, June 3.

Tracked by more than 172,000 fans on Facebook and 10,700 Twitter followers, Remington Park has provided more than $314 Million to the State of Oklahoma general education fund since the opening of the casino in 2005. Located at the junction of Interstates 35 & 44, in the heart of the Oklahoma City Adventure District, Remington Park live racing returns March 9 with the start of the 2023 American Quarter Horse, Paint and Appaloosa season. Remington Park presents simulcast racing daily and non-stop casino gaming. Visit remingtonpark.com for more information.

The post Kelly Cathey Named Director Of Racing At Remington Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights