Local Jockeys Excited For ‘Home Turf’ Grade 1 Opportunities At Parx

Frankie Pennington is scheduled to ride in 12 of the 13 races on Saturday's betPARX Pennsylvania Derby Day card at Parx Racing. The Texas-born rider's most significant call of the day comes aboard B Dawk in the headlining Grade 1, $1 million Pennsylvania Derby.

The Joseph E Besecker- and West Point Thoroughbreds-owned B Dawk, named after former Philadelphia Eagles Hall of Fame Safety Brian Dawkins, will make a significant jump in class in his first graded stakes test in his ninth start off an allowance victory at Ellis Park.

A proud Dallas Cowboys fan in Philadelphia Eagles country, and currently Parx's second-leading rider, Pennington will ride the Gormley colt for the first time. He also looks to give trainer Doug O Neill back-to-back Pennsylvania Derby wins after he scored with Hot Rod Charlie last year.

“I've looked at the races and I've been on him the past three mornings and he's doing good. He's very happy,” said Pennington. “It's always good to get a feel for the horse and that way you can kind of see what they like. That horse, since he's been in, he's been professional and classy the whole time. Anytime you can ride at your home track and ride in a Grade 1 for a trainer like Doug O'Neill, it's a great feeling.”

Pennington has eight graded stakes victories in his 20-year career. Four of those wins came at Parx, where he's hung his tack since 2004. He won the Grade 3 Parx Dash in 2015 with Tightend Touchdown and in 2018 with Vision Perfect, along with the Grade 3 Dr. James Penny Memorial Stakes in 2019 with Notapradaprice and the Grade 3 Greenwood Cup Stakes in 2021 with Magic Michael.

With 13 races on the day, and 10 being stakes races worth $3.8 million in purses, the competition on the track can be intense. Pennington said the riders leave it on the track, although there is a sense of pride and territory among the local colony.

“We all get along,” Pennington said. “We're all good, there's nothing bad. Obviously anytime you're in your hometown you want to keep the money with you and not let it get out. I imagine that at the other tracks they feel the same way. It's home turf. If we can help it, we want to try and win everything we can.”

A victory in Saturday's Derby would mean a lot to the married father of two who owns 2,871 wins from 15,317 starts and earnings of $83,088,305. When asked what he would do, it didn't take long for his reply.

“I'm going to Disneyland. Yeah, taking the kids to Disneyland, that's for sure,” said Pennington. “It would definitely be something exciting for sure. It is every time you win but to win your first Grade 1, it would be something special. I'd probably take a day off.”

Unlike Pennington, local jockey Adam Bowman has just two mounts Saturday. The Kentucky-born rider will be aboard Tempted to Touch in the $200,000 Imply Stakes for trainer Herold Whylie. He'll then try for his first graded stakes victory aboard the Ferrel Mann-trained Beach Daze in the Grade 1, $1 million Cotillion later in the day.

“I'm really excited,” Bowman said. “We're 30-1, but I'm going to put her out there, and put her in position to win. If we have a shot turning for home, I'm going to lay down on her and give it everything I got. I ride one earlier in the day and hopefully I can just relax. I can feed off of Frankie and the other guys that are in the room and kind of just take it easy.

“I've been riding for 11 years now. I've been pretty much at Parx. I never really won anything big. I rode in the Turf Monster once or twice. I'm just excited to be here.”

Bowman, who has 233 wins from 4,049 career rides, will have a fan club win or lose come Saturday.

“I'm going to just keep cool in my head,” he said. “My mom and dad are coming down from the Poconos, my wife my kids. I'm excited to have my kids out here and my wife. They don't come to the races often, so it will be nice to have everybody here and just relish the moment and enjoy it and we'll see what happens. I'm excited.”

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Hall Of Famer Ron McAnally To Present Trophy For John Henry Turf Championship

History will be revisited on Saturday, Oct. 1 at Santa Anita, as Hall of Fame trainer Ron McAnally will be on-hand to present the trophy for the race named in honor of his superstar pupil, legendary Hall of Fame two-time Horse of the Year John Henry who retired at age nine in 1984 as racing's all-time leading money earner. The Grade 2, $200,000 John Henry Turf Championship, for 3-year-olds and upward, will be contested at a mile and one quarter over Santa Anita's Camino Real Turf Course.

McAnally, one of racing's most beloved figures and a member of racing's Hall of Fame since 1990, will forever be linked to the rugged gelding who came under his care late in his four-year-old year in the fall of 1979 at Santa Anita.

Raced primarily in the east through his first 38 starts, John Henry actually made his Southern California debut at Santa Anita's Oak Tree Meeting in his 28th start, on Oct. 8, 1978. Trained at that time by Robert Donato, John Henry, a diminutive bay with an ornery temperament, ran third beaten a half length as the 2-1 favorite under Chuck Baltazar in the Grade III Volante Handicap at 1 1/8 miles on turf.

McAnally took over as head coach the following year, sending “John” out to a second-place finish under Darrel McHargue in the Grade II Carlton F. Burke Handicap at 1 ¼ miles on turf Oct. 14, 1979.

With two career stakes wins to his credit prior to coming to McAnally, John Henry, who was foaled on March 9, 1975, was by Ole Bob Bowers and was out of the Double Jay mare Once Double. In his second start for McAnally, he would notch the first of what would be an astounding 27 stakes wins in his next 44 starts, as he took a division of the Henry P. Russell Handicap by 3 ¼ lengths as the 3-5 favorite on Nov 5, 1979.

In a nationally televised race for the ages that helped to cement McAnally's status as one of America's top conditioners, John Henry was just up to win the inaugural Grade I Arlington Million Stakes by a nose with Bill Shoemaker on Aug. 30, 1981. The first two-time winner of the Grade I Santa Anita Handicap, taking the Big 'Cap in 1981 and 82, John Henry would be awarded Eclipse Horse of the Year titles under McAnally's steady hand in both 1981 and 1984.

In his career finale, he marched to victory going 1 3/8 miles on turf under Chris McCarron in the Grade I Ballentine's Scotch Handicap at the Meadowlands on Oct. 13, 1984, retiring as racing's all-time leading money earner with $6,597,947 from an overall mark of 83-39-15-9. He would subsequently be voted the first-ever nine-year-old to capture racing's highest single season honor.

In addition to his Horse of the Year titles, John Henry won five additional Eclipse Awards with McAnally, reigning as Champion Turf Horse in 1980, 81, 83 & 84, as well as Champion Older Male in 1984.

McAnally, who frequently visited John Henry at the Kentucky Horse Park until his passing at age 32 on Oct. 8, 2007, was voted America's Eclipse Award Champion Trainer three times, in 1981, 1991 & 92.

With 2,592 career victories, McAnally ranks fourth on Santa Anita's all-time stakes-won list with 113 added money victories and is also fourth all-time at Santa Anita behind fellow Hall of Famers Bobby Frankel, Charlie Whittingham, and Bob Baffert, with 709 races-won.

A winner of the Laffit Pincay, Jr. Award for a lifetime of high integrity and decades-long service to racing this past August at Del Mar, McAnally, who turned 90 on July 11, currently has seven horses in training at The Great Race Place. He will be accompanied in the John Henry Winner's Circle by his wife Debbie along with several close friends and long-time racing associates.

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Hall Of Famer Mike Smith Bids For More Parx Magic With Taiba, Adare Manor

At age 57, Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith has no plans on slowing down.

The California-based rider works as hard as ever, running five to six miles five times a week and daily trips to his local gym. He says he is in the best shape of his life and has been saying that for several straight years.

Smith will be at Parx Racing Saturday to ride Taiba, the 2-1 morning-line favorite in the Grade 1, $1 million betPARX Pennsylvania Derby, and Adare Manor, the 7-2 second choice in the co-featured Grade 1, $1 million Cotillion Stakes.

Smith has ridden the lightly raced Taiba in three of his four starts and was on board when he finished second, beaten a head, by Cyberknife in the Grade 1 Haskell Stakes at Monmouth Park in his last start July 23. Cyberknife is the 3-1 second choice in the Pennsylvania Derby.

“He is about as talented as they come, man,” Smith said. “You know, there is still room for him to grow and get better and we are hoping this is the next step.”

Smith has won the 1 1/8-mile Pennsylvania Derby twice – both for Bob Baffert. He won with West Coast in 2017 and McKinzie in 2018. He has won the 1 1/16-mile Cotillion a record four times, the most recent with Midnight Bisou in 2018. He will ride Adare Manor for the first time in the Cotillion.

Taiba turned heads in his second career start when he won the Grade 1, $750,000 Santa Anita Derby.

“He was asked to do a lot early, wasn't he?” Smith said. “From the Santa Anita Derby he went to the Kentucky Derby. You have to remember that, even though he has run in these high-profile races, he is very lightly raced. He's still learning, He's learning to take dirt in his face and he is maturing. He has just shown so much raw talent. He has run against the best of them.”

Smith said he plans on arriving in Pennsylvania Friday and will have dinner and spend time with his stepmother, Verna, before concentrating on Saturday's big races.

Baffert said his horses shipped in well from California and have been supervised by his longtime assistant, Jimmy Barnes. Baffert, who will stay in California this weekend, has full trust in Barnes and Smith, who has ridden big races for him for years.

“He knows my horses,” Baffert said. “He knows Taiba very well and it's nice when you have a rider that sort of knows the ins and outs of certain horses. He has never ridden the filly, but Mike is very good with fillies. I won't have to say too much. When you have a top rider, you don't need to say too much to them.”

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Jockey Jaime Rodriguez Falls One Win Shy Of U.S. Record For Consecutive Wins

Leading rider Jaime Rodriguez fell a win shy of equaling the United States record for most consecutive winners by a jockey at Delaware Park on Thursday.

Rodriguez ran his consecutive win stretch to eight by winning the first race aboard Celeritas Racing and Rudy Rodriguez's Valenzan Day, but his streak came to an end when he finished second aboard Diane Manning's Lightfoot Miss in the second race.

According to various sources, Albert Adams set the United States record of nine in 1930.  The record was equaled by Anthony Black in 1993 and then again by Travis Dunkelberger in 2009.  The North American record of 14 consecutive wins was set by Tim Moccasin in Canada in 2001.

The consecutive win streak started on Friday, September 16, when he rode the final three winners on the Delaware Park card.  He won aboard Runnymoore Racing's Late Frost in the sixth race, he followed by winning aboard Norman L. Rader's Riveting Spirit in seventh race and then with Gelfenstein Farm's Soupster in the eighth race.

On Saturday, September 17, he rode all of four his mounts to victory at Delaware Park beginning with Charles Blanford and Jagger Inc.'s The Colera Kid in the second race, followed by Bell Gable Stable's Bourbon Over Ice in the fourth race, Team Hanley's The Elle Train in the fifth and Skull Stable's Battle Cry in the sixth race.

Rodriguez notched his first riding title at Delaware Park last year.  The 31-year-old native of Puerto Rico notched his 1,000th winner at Mahoning Valley on February 21, 2018.

Live racing is conducted on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The meet is scheduled to conclude on Breeders' Cup Saturday, November 5th.

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