Rodolphe Brisset Will Take Over Training Duties At WinStar; Destin Heath Heads Out On His Own

Rodolphe Brisset has been hired as the new head trainer for WinStar Farm, according to bloodhorse.com. The French native will oversee the horses at the WinStar training center, 20 stalls at Keeneland on Rice Road, and 12 stalls at Saratoga this summer.

Brisset has trained for WinStar since the beginning of his career, helping with the early training of horses like Justify.

“We have had a change in direction for the farm and decided to focus more on Kentucky racing with our horses, so we hired Rodolphe to come to the training center at WinStar Farm,” WinStar president, CEO, and racing manager Elliott Walden told bloodhorse.com. “We will race off the training center, similar to how Graham Motion does at the Fair Hill Training Center and Todd Pletcher at Palm Beach Downs.”

Walden added that WinStar will continue to employ the services of outside trainers, as well.

Meanwhile, eight-year WinStar veteran Destin Heath, who took over the head training job from Richard Budge in October of 2018, will prepare to begin training under his own name.

“It has been a great opportunity to be at WinStar, and I'm very grateful for the people, horses, and the relationships I was able to develop while I was there,” Heath told bloodhorse.com. “It was a steppingstone to give me the confidence to go on and do my own thing, eventually under my own banner.”

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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Allen Poindexter, Stormy Smith To Be Inducted Into Prairie Meadows’ Racing Hall Of Fame

Prairie Meadows Racetrack and Casino will induct two highly accomplished horsemen into its Racing Hall of Fame on Saturday, July 9, 2022. Jockey Stormy Smith, arguably the most successful Quarter Horse rider in the 33-year history of racing at Prairie Meadows, and H. Allen Poindexter, the prominent owner and breeder of multiple stakes-winning horses at Prairie Meadows and other tracks across America, will be inducted in a ceremony on the second day of the 2022 Iowa Festival of Racing. Prairie Meadows will host its Annual Hall of Fame on Saturday, July 9, 2022 beginning at 4:00 p.m.

“I'm honored, Prairie Meadows has been my home away from home for over 20 years now. I've won a lot of races here, been leading rider more than a few times, and experienced both the highs and lows of horse racing at Prairie Meadows,” said jockey Stormy Smith.

When asked to name the best Quarter Horse he's ridden at Prairie Meadows, Stormy didn't hesitate to say, AJs High, the champion gelding owned by Mike Teel and trained by Charlton Hunt who won 15 races in 33 starts and claimed a Bank of America Challenge Championship Stakes victory at Los Alamitos in California six years ago.

“He was always a handful from the time he left his stall to the moment he got back to the barn,” noted Smith. “But he always ran well for me! That night in California he was on top of his game. We beat some pretty good horses in that big race!”

H. Allen Poindexter has been breeding and racing stakes winners at Prairie Meadows for more than two decades.

“I am thrilled and privileged to be inducted into the Prairie Meadows Hall of Fame,” said Poindexter. “Even though I knew my name was in the mix, I still got goose bumps when I received word that I would be part of the Class of 2022.”

His contributions to the Iowa-bred racing program at Prairie Meadows are immeasurable. Many of his homebred's have raced to victory under his familiar maroon and grey silks, while others have been successful for owners who have bought from or partnered with Poindexter, including fellow Hall of Famer Sandra Rasmussen's River Ridge Ranch.

“Even though I don't live in Iowa, I decided long ago to focus my efforts on breeding Iowa-breds to compete at Prairie Meadows and outside of Iowa at some of the biggest tracks in the country,” Poindexter added. “Chanel's Legacy is a perfect example. She's an Iowa-bred who ran well in graded stakes races at tracks like Oaklawn Park and Saratoga. She could have been a champion had injuries not cut her career short.”

Prairie Meadows Racetrack and Casino proudly welcomes the 2022 Racing Hall of Fame class: Quarter Horse jockey Stormy Smith and owner/breeder H. Allen Poindexter.

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‘Stars At The Spa’: Sports, Television Stars Will Meet Fans During 2022 Saratoga Meet

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) will welcome several sports and television celebrities to Saratoga Race Course to meet with fans during the brand-new “Stars at the Spa” entertainment series set to debut during the 2022 summer meet.

The stars scheduled to visit the historic race course in Saratoga Springs include: former New York Knicks power forward Charles Oakley on Sunday, July 24; “Real Housewives of New Jersey” TV personality Teresa Giudice on Sunday, July 31; and former New York Yankees All-Star and World Series champion Bernie Williams on Sunday, September 4.

The “Stars at the Spa” series, presented by Saratoga Living, will include a luncheon from 12 to 2 p.m. in the Paddock Suite, a new hospitality venue for the 2022 season, featuring a climate-controlled bar, lounge and outdoor balcony with sweeping views of the Saratoga paddock. The special event includes admission to the Paddock Suite, a meet-and-greet with the celebrities, food and beverage (beer, wine and soft drinks) and race day program.

Each “Stars at the Spa” event will be limited to 50 guests. Tickets are currently available for $200 per person and may be reserved at NYRA.com.

“We look forward to hosting these celebrities and sports stars to interact with fans at the new Paddock Suite at Saratoga Race Course,” said Kevin Quinn, NYRA Vice President for Sales and Hospitality. “We're excited that fans will get the chance to converse with some of their favorite stars while enjoying a day of world-class thoroughbred racing at the Spa.”

Each star will also participate in a special photo and autograph session from 2 to 3 p.m. at the Jockey Silks Room Porch (separate ticket required). Photo opportunities and autographed photos (no outside memorabilia allowed) will be available for $40 to the first 200 fans. Tickets for the autograph and photo session must be purchased in advance at NYRA.com.

Oakley is a retired National Basketball Association (NBA) player and former New York Knicks power forward known for his outstanding defensive and rebounding capabilities. Oakley spent a decade (1988-1998) of his extensive 19-year career with the Knicks. He also suited up for several other NBA teams, including the Chicago Bulls, Toronto Raptors, Washington Wizards and Houston Rockets.

Giudice is a reality television personality best known as an original cast member of “The Real Housewives of New Jersey” and for her appearance on “The Celebrity Apprentice.” She is a four-time New York Times Best Selling author of several cookbooks and two memoirs. She is an inspirational working mom of four daughters and has become an advocate for children with special needs.

Williams is a retired Major League Baseball (MLB) player and jazz musician who spent his entire 16-year career with the New York Yankees. The five-time All-Star center fielder helped lead the Bronx Bombers to four World Series Championships while earning four Gold Glove awards. In retirement, Williams has shifted his focus to music, and has released two jazz albums and a book that examines the symbiotic relationship between musical artistry and athletic performance, through the eyes of a man who has mastered both.

Highlighted by the 153rd renewal of the Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers on August 27 and the Grade 1, $1 million Whitney on August 6, the 2022 summer meet at historic Saratoga Race Course will open on Thursday, July 14, and continue through Monday, September 5.

Following the four-day opening weekend, racing will be conducted five days a week, Wednesdays through Sundays, apart from the final week, when the meet will conclude on Labor Day.

For more information about Saratoga Race Course visit NYRA.com/Saratoga.

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New Texas Thoroughbred Owner Landon Jordan Goes All In

Landon Jordan describes himself as an “adrenaline type of guy.”

So when he was looking for a new endeavor a couple of years ago to channel that desire for excitement, Jordan jumped into a sport he'd followed casually since he was a teenager: horse racing. Actually, it was a plunge into racehorse ownership.

Jordan — a former professional drag-racing driver who owns several management companies dealing primarily in real estate and healthcare — for years has attended the races at Lone Star Park, the horse track closest to his residence in Mansfield, Texas.

“I can remember being 17, 18, 19 years old when they had a horse track in Weatherford,” he said in a phone interview, referencing the old Trinity Meadows. “I went over there and watched those horses run. That track closed, but then Grand Prairie opened. When Lone Star opened, I got more into coming out and watching the horses race. I always enjoyed it.

“For years I had show dogs, mainly French bulldogs and English bulldogs. I'd kind of done that, had some dogs in Westminster and what not. I thought I'd try something different. I went to Lone Star and started paying attention to the racing program, kind of watched some of the better owners, who they used, that nature.”

Jordan said he learned from his early mistakes in the dog-show world how to find the right trainer. His research led him to two well-known trainers. The first he contacted was Bret Calhoun. They hit it off immediately, and he never called the second.

“Bret explained to me that there are three ways to do this deal,” he said. “You can buy horses of racing age. You can buy (yearlings) at an auction or you can claim — or we can go out and try to buy some horses privately. I think Bret decided for me – and I agreed – that the best option was to purchase them out of the 2-year-old sales and see how they do as 2- and 3-year-olds.”

Jordan buys under the name Mansfield Racing, a shoutout to his hometown just south of Arlington, Tex. Last year he bought a pair of 2-year-old fillies: Lady Got Moves (a $100,000 Ocala Breeders' Sales April purchase) and Jj's American Diva ($55,000 at OBS in June).

“He just wanted to get more and more involved,” Calhoun said. “So we kept looking at horses, the yearling sales and then at the 2-year-old sales again this year. He ended up building quite a stable in a short period of time. We're pretty excited about what he's got in the barn. He's been very patient for a new owner. He's let us bring his horses along at the pace they needed to be. Hopefully in the next couple of months we're going to turn quite a few of them loose.”

Jordan's 2021 2-year-old purchases, Lady Got Moves and Jj's American Diva, became Jordan's first starters at his home track. Though they haven't won, they've run well.

“They're fillies that were kind of late-maturing,” Calhoun said. “They're going to be horses he can go watch run regularly, and they're going to win some races. I think the best is yet to come with this next crop, his 2-year-olds this year. I think there's a lot of upside to what he's got in the barn right now.”

That includes the sales-topper at the April 6 TTA Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, with Jordan paying $200,000 for a Louisiana-bred daughter of Free Drop Billy. Free Drop Maddy debuted June 10 at Churchill Downs, breaking a step slow from the rail then setting a resolute pace only to give way late to finish second behind a filly with a prior start.

The goal for Free Drop Maddy is the $150,000 Texas Thoroughbred Association Futurity July 17 at Lone Star Park.

“We like her a lot,” Calhoun said. “We knew we didn't have her 100 percent the other day. She'd gotten sick about a month and half ago and we missed a couple of works. But she's very, very fast. She's in the Texas Thoroughbred Association Futurity, and that's something that's important to Landon and me as well. So we wanted to get a race under her belt. We knew she could potentially win that day. But she drew the 1 hole and didn't get away as good as we'd have liked. Usually she's really quick from there. End of the day, it set us up very well for the sales futurity at Lone Star Park.”

Jordan also bought the highest-priced colt to sell at the TTA Two-Year-Olds In Training auction, going to $125,000 for a Kentucky-bred son of McCraken. Now named Release McCraken, that colt is training at Lone Star Park.

“We're not in any hurry to get him started, but we've liked everything we've seen from him,” Calhoun said.

Jordan purchased two other colts at that sale, plus a colt apiece at last year's TTA Yearling Sale and at Keeneland's September auction.

“I think he's setting himself up for a lot of success,” Calhoun said. “He seems like he really, really enjoys it. He's like everybody else: He wants the action. I think mid-summer, late summer, he's going to have a lot of action.”

When he embarked on his horse-ownership adventure, Jordan wasn't aware that legislation passed in 2019 was going to greatly enhance Texas purses.

“I was really ready to come in and start playing regardless of that,” he said. “But certainly I was told shortly after that was the case, and I realized it obviously was a good time to do it.”

Calhoun also facilitated Jordan last year buying a piece of the now 3-year-old filly Hidden Connection after her debut victory by 7 1/2 lengths at Colonial Downs and before she won Churchill Downs' Grade 3 Pocahontas by 9 1/4. Hidden Connection finished fourth in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies at Del Mar, then this year lost the Grade 2 Fair Grounds Oaks by a nose to then-unbeaten champion Echo Zulu before finishing off the board in the Kentucky Oaks.

“I got to go to the Breeders' Cup the very first year I was in it,” Jordan said of horse ownership. “And that probably hooked me more than anything. It was a great experience, going out to California and watching the race. It was fantastic.”

Just thinking about racing horses at Lone Star had Jordan's excitement going into overdrive.

“I actually came from the world of race cars,” he said in the spring. “I drove on the North, South Carolina drag-racing circuit. I'm an adrenaline type of guy.”

Jordan said new owners need to do their homework, same as they would in whatever business venture makes it possible for them to own racehorses.

“Before you jump in, do your research and contact somebody who knows what the heck they're doing,” he said. “I learned that from dogs. You went out and bought some dogs, and then you found a trainer. You try to do it that way and you can make some pretty bad decisions. Whereas, the first thing Bret did was meet with me, walked me through the way this was going to work. Shortly after that he got me ahold of (bloodstock agent) Josh Stevens, and Josh buys the horses for me. Because to be quite honest, I wouldn't know a good horse if it ran over the top of me.

“With a little bit of time, you'll get more knowledge. You'll learn. But I would certainly recommend getting involved with somebody who knows what the heck they're doing so you have a good experience, which I have so far.”

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