‘I’ll Probably Be Back By Friday’: Rispoli Says He’s Nearing Return To Riding

Suffering a hard spill and getting stepped on by a horse didn't stop jockey Umberto Rispoli from making his rounds a few days later.

The 35-year-old was out in the barn area Sunday morning talking with trainers and schmoozing with fellow riders, three days after suffering a spill that led to Rispoli getting carted off the turf course on a stretcher, lifted into an ambulance, and transported to the hospital.

While he didn't break any bones, he was body sore, especially on his thigh where a trailing horse got him as he rolled on the grass and scrambled to get out of the way.

Rispoli initially thought he'd be back in the saddle by Saturday to ride his mounts on the lucrative Pacific Classic Day card. But he woke up Saturday and determined he couldn't go and took off his mounts for the entire weekend.

“I tried to comeback, but the impact (of the spill) was too much,” Rispoli said. “It was sad to be on the sideline, but I only think it was fair to the people I ride for that if I don't feel 100%, I can't ride their horses.”

Only one of Rispoli's would-be mounts won Saturday: Motorious took the Green Flash (G3). Two more mounts Rispoli took off on Sunday found the winner's circle.

It's the aches and pains of being a jockey, which Rispoli knows all too well.

“I fractured my collarbone on a Friday and I was back riding the next Saturday,” Rispoli said. “I tore my ACL and I was back in nine weeks, so I've done something crazy before.”

Rispoli is now pointing to a return to racing by closing week at Del Mar.

“I'll probably be back by Friday,” Rispoli said. “I will do everything to try and get back by then. If I feel fine I will. If I don't, I'll take my time and take it easy. No point to press.”

Rispoli currently sits fourth in the Del Mar jockey standings with 20 wins.

The post ‘I’ll Probably Be Back By Friday’: Rispoli Says He’s Nearing Return To Riding appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

With Anticipation Victress Filly Gala Brand ‘Pride And Joy’ Of Arnmore Thoroughbreds

Megan Jones, managing partner of Arnmore Thoroughbreds, cannot help but speak blessings of newly minted graded stakes winner Gala Brand, who defeated males in Thursday's With Anticipation (G3) for juveniles going 1 1/16 miles over the inner turf at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and owned by Arnmore Thoroughbreds in partnership with Even Keel Thoroughbreds, Gala Brand was a sharp debut winner on August 3 going 5 1/2 furlongs on the Mellon turf. The Violence filly was cross-entered in both the With Anticipation as well as the previous day's $150,000 P.G. Johnson against fellow fillies, opting for the former when the latter race was taken off the turf.

In the With Anticipation, Gala Brand took to the rear of the field with Market Street setting a moderate tempo on the front end. She advanced to a close fourth in the stretch call and outbattled a game Carson's Run to her inside to win by a half-length and produce a 71 Beyer Speed Figure.

Gala Brand is a fan favorite in the making with her eye-catching color pattern that features white splotches on her underside and tall white markings on all four legs.

“She's very special to me just as a horse because of the way that she is. She's the type of horse that you want to be around every single day,” Jones said. “She kind of pulls you in and draws you to her. She's my pride and joy. She has a lot of leg to her. She's a tall, stretchy horse. She has that internal quality that all the good fillies seem to have. We go buy fillies that we hope will be good broodmare prospects down the line to build our broodmare band.

“As long as you like the horse as an individual, you're in a good spot and anything they do on the track is just icing on the cake,” Jones continued. “To come here and win first out on debut and then come back and do what she did against the boys in the Grade 3 was everything we needed.”

Gala Brand, who was bred by Desmond Ryan and Martin Schwartz, was acquired by Jones for $30,000 at the 2022 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where St. George Sales consigned her. She is out of the graded/group stakes-winning Lord of England mare Olorda, who captured the The Very One going 1 3/16 miles at Gulfstream Park and Bewitch going 1 1/2 miles at Keeneland in 2016 – both Grade 3 events.

Jones said she expected Gala Brand to be an eventual two-turn horse given her pedigree.

“She's always shown a great deal of talent in the morning,” Jones said. “I know it was kind of a softer group in the maiden race going 5 1/2 furlongs but the way she's built, that should have been her toughest task and I think she'll enjoy stretching out. I would have thought that 5 1/2 [furlongs] would have been her only impediment, but obviously she did that easily enough.”

Earlier this summer, Arnmore Thoroughbreds Poppy Flower, bred by Jones and Brenda Harding, secured graded stakes honors in the Grade 3 Intercontinental on June 9 at Belmont Park for Mott.

“As far as how special it was, it ranks right up there with anything,” Jones said. “When Poppy Flower won the graded stake in June, we bred her and raced the mother and she was an RNA that nobody wanted at the sale, that was pretty gratifying too. She's also pretty special to me. I would say Gala's right up there with her. That meant the world to us because I bought [Gala Brand] on my own account.”

Jones said she and Mott will let the dust settle before deciding on a next target for Gala Brand. Other graded stakes events for 2-year-old fillies on turf include the Grade 2, $200,000 Miss Grillo on October 2 at Belmont at the Big A and the Grade 2 Jessamine on October 6 at Keeneland. Both races boast “Win And You're In” status for the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf on November 3 at Santa Anita.

“We'll basically nominate around and wait until she tells us she's ready,” Jones said.

The post With Anticipation Victress Filly Gala Brand ‘Pride And Joy’ Of Arnmore Thoroughbreds appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

NTWAB To Honor Team Cody’s Wish, Gregson Foundation, Kane, Rice

Team Cody's Wish – led by Cody Dorman and his multiple Grade 1-winning namesake – will be honored along with the Edwin J. Gregson Foundation, Turf writer Mike Kane, and broadcaster Kenny Rice during the National Turf Writers And Broadcasters' 63rd annual Awards Dinner on  Nov. 1 in Arcadia, California.

The NTWAB Awards Dinner is the organization's only fund-raiser, and a portion of the proceeds of the event will fund Thoroughbred industry charities and internships for prospective racing journalists. The 2023 NTWAB Awards Dinner will be held at The Woolf Den by The Derby near Santa Anita Park.

Team Cody's Wish, which also includes the Dorman family, owner-breeder Godolphin, trainer Bill Mott and his team, and jockey Junior Alvarado, will be honored with the Mr. Fitz Award for typifying the spirit of racing. The Cody's Wish story began at Godolphin's Gainsborough Farm in October 2018 when Cody Dorman, 13 at the time, was introduced to a five-month-old weanling by Curlin. There was an immediate connection between the horse and Cody, who was born with Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome, a rare genetic disease that causes serious and often fatal physical issues. Godolphin staff that witnessed that first meeting were so impacted they decided to name the horse for Cody. The Cody's Wish story has resonated with people inside and outside of racing.

The Gregson Foundation, a nonprofit foundation developed to benefit California Thoroughbred racing's backstretch workers and their families, will be honored with the Joe Palmer Award for meritorious service to racing. Named for the late trainer and past California Thoroughbred Trainers President Eddie Gregson, the foundation provides financial resources for children of backstretch workers to attend college. In 2022, the foundation issued five new scholarships with $23,000 in grants, which coupled with 19 past recipients' applications approved, resulted in a $187,000 overall grant total for the year. The foundation has provided well over $1.3 million in scholarship grands over the past two decades.

Mike Kane, an NTWAB member since 1996 who served as president and five-time vice-president, has covered racing in print, radio, television and online since 1980, will be honored with the Walter Haight Award for career excellence in Turf writing. Kane's early newspaper work led the Schenectady Gazette from enhanced coverage of the Saratoga meetings to national coverage of Thoroughbred racing. With that, he won the Red Smith Kentucky Derby Writing Contest for five consecutive years. Still active, Kane is a longtime New York correspondent for BloodHorse and covers Saratoga and New York racing for Thoroughbred Daily News. His work has appeared in Daily Racing Form, Thoroughbred Racing Commentary, the Louisville Courier-Journal, New York Times, New York Daily News, Albany Times Union, USA Today, and Saratoga Living.

Kenny Rice, one of the most recognized and respected racing broadcasters who rose to national prominence on NBC's coverage of the Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup starting in 1999, will be honored with the Jim McKay Award for career excellence in broadcasting. Rice earned an Eclipse Award for outstanding local television achievement in 1996, the same year he became the youngest winner of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association's Charles W. Engelhard Award for lifetime contributions to the Kentucky Thoroughbred industry. He has also been honored with a John Hervey Award for outstanding television reporting of the Standardbred racing industry.

Tickets for the NTWAB Awards Dinner, which can be purchased through the NTWAB website, are $85 for NTWAB members and Breeders' Cup credentialed media and $110 for non-members and guests. Invitations will be mailed to NTWAB members, and non-members can request an invitation by contacting Jennifer Kelly at thesirbarton@gmail.com.

The post NTWAB To Honor Team Cody’s Wish, Gregson Foundation, Kane, Rice appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Maryland Owner Gene Gilhooly Passes At Age 94

Eugene E. 'Gene' Gilhooly, who was part-owner of Schoolyard Stable and was a regular at Maryland racetracks for many years, passed away Aug. 17 after a bout with pneumonia. He was 94.

Gilhooly and his wife, Inez, raised two daughters after moving to Annapolis. He was an elementary school principal for more than 30 years at schools in nearby Linthicum, Tyler Heights, and Davidsonville. His students adored him and he kept in touch with many throughout his life.

Schoolyard Stable over the years partnered with other people and entities, including Jim Leary and Sola Dei Gloria Stable (trainer Hugh McMahon), in racehorse ownership. McMahon trained for Schoolyard Stable in recent years, and Gilhooly was often at Laurel Park in to watch his horses compete. He also enjoyed handicapping races and playing 10-cent superfecta boxes.

Gilhooly is survived by his daughters, Brenda Gilhooly of Lakeland, Fla., and Nancy Purdy of Annapolis; his brother Ray; grandchildren Julie, Tim, Christopher and Cara; great-grandson Lincoln; his dear friend Marilyn Roberts; as well as many cousins, nieces and nephews. He is predeceased by his wife and his older brother, John.

Gilhooly, who regularly stopped by the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association offices to chat, will always be remembered as a vibrant, energetic, and outgoing man who frequently referred to himself as “the happiest man on Earth.”

In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the Alzheimer's Association. A celebration of life will be announced at a later date through John M. Taylor Funeral Home in Annapolis.

The post Maryland Owner Gene Gilhooly Passes At Age 94 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights