Larry Collmus To Move Into Expanded Role With TVG; International Expert Adam McGrath Joins Roster

After joining the TVG broadcast team for select days this summer, Larry Collmus will move into an expanded role at America's horse racing network. Best known as the voice of the Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup on NBC, Collmus will be covering the races from Gulfstream Park this winter as well as joining in on additional broadcasts.

“I have really enjoyed working with the great folks at TVG and doing something new besides race calling has been a fun experience,” said Collmus. “I'm looking forward to expanding this relationship and also returning to Gulfstream where I called races for ten years. It'll be a fun – and warm – winter!”

In addition to his time at Gulfstream Park from 2006 through 2017, Collmus has been the track announcer at major tracks across the country including the NYRA circuit, Monmouth Park and Del Mar, and has worked as the race caller for NBC Sports' coverage of the Triple Crown since 2011 and the Breeders' Cup since 2012. He will be reprising his role as the announcer for the Breeders' Cup which will be held at Del Mar November 5-6.

International expert Adam McGrath, formerly a host at Racing.com with years of experience in Australia, has also joined the TVG talent roster and will be adding his expert insights into coverage of international racing. McGrath currently resides in Ohio but will be relocating to Los Angeles in the new year.

“We are thrilled to continue to bring world class talent to expand our roster,” said Kevin Grigsby, TVG Executive Producer. “Larry brought so much to our coverage this summer at Monmouth Park and I am looking forward to watching his insights from Gulfstream Park and Andrew's global expertise in our coverage of international racing.”

Headquartered in Los Angeles, TVG, a FanDuel Group company, is one of the largest legal online gaming services in the US, processing more than $2 billion in horse racing wagers annually from residents of 34 US states. TVG network airs races from more than 150 racetracks worldwide and is among the most widely distributed horseracing networks in the world, operating TVG and TVG2 in more than 50 million US homes and in HD on Spectrum and DirecTV. The company has demonstrated its commitment to the racing industry, its horse owners, tracks and fans through sponsorship of several prominent races including the TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile, the FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile, the TVG.com Haskell Invitational and the TVG Pacific Classic. For more information about TVG, visit: tvg.com.

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Chris Husbands, Julie Mathes Take Leading Rider, Trainer Titles At Fort Erie Race Track

The falling rain could not keep the fans away on closing day of the 2021 racing season at Fort Erie Race Track. However, for the safety of both horses and riders, the 39th and final day of the meet was cut short due to inclement weather.

“Unfortunately, due to the continuous rainfall throughout the day we could not carry out the remainder of the card,” said Drew Cady, the general manager for the Fort Erie Live Racing Consortium (FELRC). “Despite our shortened card today, we still had a tremendous season, one in which we were able to welcome back fans who missed out on the 2020 racing season due to COVID-19 restrictions.”

The leading rider at this year's meet, Chris Husbands scored 52 wins during the 124th racing season at the border oval. Some of those victories included back-to-back wins with Fort fan-favourite Pepperoni (Jul. 26 /Aug. 31) as well as Wheat King (Jun. 22/29). Husbands also rode Red Equinox to victory in the Rondeau Bay Stakes on Prince of Wales Day, Sept. 14.

“I had a really good start and I just continued on that momentum. I was blessed to ride good horses. The owners and trainers gave me good horses, which I really appreciated. Thanks to all the owners and trainers who gave me a shot and the opportunity,” said Husbands.

Trainer Julie Mathes secured the title of leading trainer for a second year in a row. During the 2021 season, Mathes won 23 races. On yesterday's card she secured a victory with Team Win (in race nine) with jockey Omar Moreno aboard. In 2020, Mathes secured 29 wins. Bruno Schickedanz secured 16 wins, giving him the title of top owner at the border oval this year.

While yesterday's ten-race card saw over a million in wagering, the shortened card on Tuesday saw close to $400,000 in wagering. In total, Fort Erie had $28.6 million in wagering for 2021.

With this racing season in the books, the border oval looks ahead to next year's meet and has applied for 40 race days, operating on mostly Mondays and Tuesdays, beginning May 31 through to October 18.

For more information about Fort Erie Race Track, visit www.forterieracing.com.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Gyarmati Riding The Waves With Sail By

In the 16 years since trainer Leah Gyarmati and owner Jeff Treadway of Treadway Racing Stable first began their working partnership, the pair have experienced all the highs and lows that the business has to offer.

Among those highs were a handful that carried the Treadway banner to the Breeders' Cup World Championships. But if everything goes according to plan on Nov. 5, that number could rise by one thanks to a new budding talent — and Treadway homebred — named Sail By.

A daughter of Australian stallion Astern (AUS), Sail By punched her ticket to this year's Breeders' Cup at Del Mar when she ran to her name Oct. 2 in the Grade 3 Miss Grillo Stakes at Belmont Park. The victory was the first stakes win for Sail By, who has never been off the board in her four career starts.

“It was a race that obviously had some good horses in there with very good numbers and speed numbers, but I felt confident with my filly because she tries every time and she's versatile,” said Gyarmati. “She can close and I told [jockey] Junior [Alvarado] to play the break and I think obviously he did a great job with that. She's a really honest horse and she will do what you ask her to do.

“She's not one of those horses that has to be one thing or the other. When they start going really fast, she'll settle and run at the end. She has a great burst of speed. I was surprised with the speed she's shown. When the pace is slow, she'll get up there and be right there.”

A native of Forest Hills, N.Y., Gyarmati got her start at the racetrack when she was a teenager, working a summer job as an exercise rider for Hall of Fame trainer Allen Jerkens. She would eventually go on to work for Jerkens and his son, Jimmy, before taking a break to pursue a brief career as a jockey in the mid-1990s.

Photo courtesy Leah Gyarmati

Breaking out on her own on the training circuit in 1998, Gyarmati sent out her first winner one year later in the form of Flippy Diane, who took the 1999 Maryland Million Distaff at Laurel Park. Her relationship with Treadway would follow years later through the help of a mutual friend, who introduced the two.

“I met Jeff through a friend who is an owner in New Jersey,” said Gyarmati. “Jeff had a piece of a horse there and he wanted to race in New York, so she introduced us. We started feeling it out and he's a super smart guy who follows the whole industry and really studies it.”

Gyarmati bought her first 2-year-old for Treadway at the 2009 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale for $90,000. Named Thunder Chief, the New York-bred son of Thunder Gulch was a consistent runner throughout his career and remains a central part of Gyarmati's barn to this day as her working stable pony.

Through the years the pair have shared several successes, mainly with fillies. Their best performer to date was Sweet Reason (by Street Sense), who won the G1 Spinaway Stakes, G1 Acorn Stakes, and G1 Test Stakes, and placed fourth in the 2014 G1 Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint. Consigned to the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale in 2015, the mare commanded $2.7 million from Katsumi Yoshida, and has gone on to an equally strong career as a broodmare.

Gyarmati credits the mare's racing career as one of the catalysts to Darley bringing stallion Street Sense back to stand in the United States.

“She was the best horse I've had for Jeff,” said Gyarmati. “She won the Test, the Acorn, and the Spinaway. She was the best filly I ever claimed, and she was actually responsible for Street Sense coming back to the United States. They wanted him back, but they needed one really good horse to jump start it and when she won the Spinaway, Darley jumped on it, and it really worked out.”

Sweet Reason's successes aside, Treadway and Gyarmati are no strangers to the pressures of the Breeders' Cup. The pair hit the board in the World Championships in 2014 with Wonder Gal, who ran third in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies and again in 2016 when Coasted ran second in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf.

“We've had some really great horses like Noble Moon and Strike Midnight and Sweet Reason who were all stakes winners,” said Gyarmati. “We've done very, very well through the years. We've had good success together which I'm thankful for because Jeff is very sharp about buying and breeding horses. It's a learning process so when you move from one part of the business to another it can be tricky. He's been a great friend.”

Part of the Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” Challenge Series, the Miss Grillo offers Sail By, Treadway, and Gyarmati a paid berth to this year's renewal of the Juvenile Fillies Turf. While her filly has yet to make a trip to the West Coast, Gyarmati has wasted no time booking her filly on an upcoming flight.

“That is the plan — God willing,” said Gyarmati. “Of course, man plans, and God laughs. That's how that works. We've got plane reservations so we will see how it goes. I'm hoping she will ship well but she's never been on a plane. She's done well so far, and I think she handles everything that we've thrown at her very well. She's super cool and I think that demeanor is an advantage. She's very intelligent so I think we're good.”

At the moment, Sail By is the only horse in Gyarmati's barn to carry the Treadway banner. The trainer said that likely won't change until next year, when another daughter of Astern will arrive after being turned out for the season. For now, their hopes hang on Sail By and the promise of another shot at a world title.

“It's an up and down business for pretty much everybody,” said Gyarmati. “You have great years and some not-so-great years, but you keep plugging away and something good happens and you're on the right track again. You just have to keep at it and never give up, and most importantly pay attention.”

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Fort Erie Track Announcer Frank Salive Retiring

Frank Salive, Fort Erie's track announcer, is retiring from his commanding post in the announcer's booth at the border oval on Tuesday. Salive has been the voice of horse racing for over three decades, calling races at several thoroughbred and harness tracks including Fort Erie Race Track, Woodbine, Western Fair, and Pompano Park.

In the mid-70s, the Leamington native was a star junior goalie for the Peterborough Petes. After hanging up his skates, he seamlessly transitioned into the world of mainstream sports broadcasting, working for various networks including CTV, CBC as well as TSN. In 1976, at the age of 21, Salive's first network assignment was covering five events a day at the Montreal Summer Olympics for CTV.

In 1990 he stepped into the world of horse racing at Woodbine Racetrack. Salive worked at Woodbine for a decade and a half before heading west to London, Ontario to call races at Western Fair for four years from 2005 to 2009. His next venture would be Pompano Park in Florida where his voiced filled the atmosphere and racing apron until 2012. As he developed his craft calling races, Salive credits several announcers that impacted his career in the announcer's booth.

“I would say Stan Bergstein was a foundation announcer that I really patterned myself after for harness racing. Certainly, Dan Loiselle (thoroughbred racing) helped me a lot in my years at Woodbine. I went a lot by his example – to transform a race from just the look of horses going on an oval into a little bit of a story,” said Salive.

In 2016, the venerable track announcer landed his feet at Fort Erie Race Track. He's called the border oval home for the last six racing seasons.

Narrating a fleet of horses as they move from gate to wire jockeying for top spot might seem like a fairly straightforward task, but Salive knows there's a lot more to it than that.

“You really don't know how your body and mind are going to react, but its kind counterintuitive to the crowd. The crowd is excited, and they are all cheering, and you have to be exactly the opposite. Before The Prince of Wales – a live national tv broadcast, you challenge yourself on how far you can slow down your heart rate and breathing because you can't be out of control with excitement from gate to wire. You have to build it up to the finish. So, it's different than being in the crowd as a race fan, you have to go the opposite direction and stay calm.”

Asked to recall career highlights at the border oval, the track announcer is quick to respond.

“I came from a strong Standardbred past so to get to cross over and do six of the Canadian Triple Crown races in my tenure here.”

To date, Salive has called close to 200,000 races during his illustrious career. Salive will call his last card at Fort Erie Race Track this afternoon.

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