Far Hills: Stage Is Set For Steeplechasing’s ‘Grand National’ Day

Steeplechase racing's seminal day features an all-stakes seven-race card and $675,000 in prize money. The races will be broadcast nationally on America's Day at the Races on Fox Sports. First race post time is 12:50 p.m.

They don't call the Far Hills Races steeplechasing's championship day for nothing, and this year there's little doubt that titles will be won or lost on Saturday at Moorland Farm in the bucolic borough in Somerset County, N.J. And that includes the biggest prize of all: the Eclipse Award.

The Grade 1 $250,000 American Grand National at 2 ⅝ miles, centerpiece of Saturday's event and the sixth race on the program, has drawn a prospective field of eight. Unlike three of the other four Grade 1s that have been contested this year, the Grand National is not a handicap; it will be run at level weights, so it's a fair fight to the finish. All starters carry 156 pounds.

Only one of the previous 2023 Grade 1 winners is in the field, Hurricana Farm's lightly raced Merry Maker, who captured the Lonesome Glory at Aqueduct last month.

As for the other G1 winners, the European connections of Iroquois star, Scaramanga, who denied Bruton Street-US' Snap Decision a three-peat in the event, had contemplated a return to the States, but the horse had only one start since his trip to Nashville in May, finishing 13th in a handicap at Galway in July. Irv Naylor's Belfast Banter, 17-1 upset winner of the AP Smithwick at Saratoga, suffered an injury; and Riverdee Stable and Ten Strike Racing's Awakened, who remains eligible to compete in novice competition, has opted to go in the $100,000 Foxbrook Champion Hurdle, which has drawn a small field of five.

Another Irish star, Shark Hanlon's Hewick, the defending Grand National winner, won't make the trip across the Atlantic either, and instead will point toward a start in December as a prep for the world's most prestigious jump race, the Cheltenham Gold Cup in England in March. Hewick earned the 2022 Eclipse Award off of his blowout victory in that single U.S. effort.

Despite the defections, Saturday's Grand National, with its substantial purse and title implications, has attracted the attention of accomplished hurdlers, up-and-coming hopefuls, and classy European jumpers.

The Euros include Galaxy Horse Racing Syndicate's 10-year-old two-time Cheltenham winner Seddon, trained by John McConnell and ridden by Ben Harvey, who makes his first National Steeplechase Association appearance. Also returning is McConnell's fellow Irish conditioner Gordon Elliott, always a major player at Far Hills, who has shipped over four runners including William and Aisling Hurley's Salvador Ziggy for the Grand National. Elliott stable jockey Jack Kennedy has the mount. Kennedy, a 10-time winner at Cheltenham, has two victories in two previous appearances at Far Hills. This is his first time back since 2018.

Trainer McConnell told the UK's RacingTV earlier this week that Seddon has been the syndicate's “horse of a lifetime.”

“He jumps very well whether it is hurdles and fences so I don't think that will be a problem and nice ground and the trip will be OK. I suppose it all depends on how he settles in but we're very hopeful…Ben rides him and he's looking forward to it. He has never ridden over there before but he's a good judge of pace and we wouldn't have anyone else on him at this stage.”

Salvador Ziggy, 7, would be Elliott's second Grand National winner; he took the 2018 edition with Jury Duty. The Irish Field reports that Salvador Ziggy has a “strong chance of success” following a solid second a month ago in the Kerry National at Listowel in Ireland. Before that, the El Salvador gelding reeled off three straight wins.

“Salvador Ziggy ran a great race in Listowel and I think this race could really suit him,” Elliott told the Irish Field. “He is an easy going sort of horse and he'll handle the ground. He has enough pace to drop back to the trip and we'd be very hopeful of a big run.”

For Snap Decision, this will be the Hard Spun gelding's third attempt to win the Grand National. With a victory, the Phipps-bred star would surpass the million-dollar mark in total career earnings. Compared to last year, trainer Jack Fisher has taken a

less-arduous path with the nine-year-old, running just three times so he'd be fresh for the Grand National, where he ran poorly in 2022 following a hard campaign in which he frequently gave away 20 pounds or more to his rivals. After winning the Temple Gwathmey in Middleburg and finishing second in the Iroquois in the spring, Fisher gave Snap Decision the summer off. He returned in the Lonesome Glory, a handicap at 2 ½ miles. After leading for most of the way, he faded at the top of the stretch to fourth while carrying 20 fewer pounds than upstart Merry Maker. Graham Watters rides.

Merry Maker's score in the Lonesome Glory was his second in four outings this year – and first in a stake – for trainer Arch Kingsley. In two previous stakes tries, he closed from 10th to third in the Jonathan Kiser novice, and finished fourth in the G1 Jonathan Sheppard, both at Saratoga. Parker Hendriks will be aboard.

The only other NSA Grade 1 winner in the field is Keystone Thoroughbreds' Noah and the Ark, who upset Snap Decision at 41-1 in the 2022 Lonesome Glory, but hasn't shown that spark since. In three G1 starts this year he has yet to hit the board. Harry Beswick rides for trainer Todd McKenna.

For the rest of the field, the Grand National will be an ambitious step up.

Madaket Stables and Paul and Molly Willis' Jimmy P, trained by Keri Brion, turned heads with a dazzling 10 ½-length romp in a 120 handicap at the Iroquois Races, then followed it up with a sharp second to Awakened in the Jonathan Sheppard, where he briefly took the lead before drifting out in the upper stretch, and still battled on to be beaten just a length. Danny Mullins, who came over from Europe to ride Jimmy P in both of those past two starts, returns. Mullins has had great success at Far Hills, taking the Grand National aboard Gill Johnston's Mr. Hot Stuff in 2017.

Johnston also has a horse in this year's Grand National, Mortlach, trained by Willie Dowling and ridden by Jamie Bargary. The eight-year-old was a six time hurdle and steeplechase winner in Europe, and made his one and only U.S. start in the Iroquois, where he led the over the first two fences, settled in third, before tiring to finish seventh in the field of eight.

Though Smithwick winner Belfast Banter is on the sidelines, the Irv Naylor stable and trainer Cyril Murphy have entered Scorpion's Revenge to carry the colors of the NSA's leading owner. A winner of three of his first five starts – including the 2022 Green Pastures novice stakes at Iroquois – the Irish-bred seven-year-old son of Aidan O'Brien-trained millionaire Scorpion has run twice this season. In the Daniel Van Clief stakes at Foxfield, he was beaten a nose in his first effort in seven months, followed by a closing third in the Iroquois, 3 ¾ lengths behind runner up Snap Decision.

The rest of the card contains powerhouse fields as well. Click here for full entries: https://nationalsteeplechase.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Far-Hills.pdf

Here's the race schedule:

1st race: 12:50 p.m. $50,000 Gladstone Sport of Kings 3-year-old hurdle stakes at 2 ⅛ miles.

2nd race: 1:33 p.m. $50,000 Harry E. Harris Sport of Kings 4-year-old hurdle stakes at 2

⅛ miles.

3rd race: 2:16 p.m. $100,000 Foxbrook Champion novice hurdle stakes, 4-year-olds and up, at 2 ½ miles.

4th race: 3:01 p.m. $75,000 Peapack Sport of Kings filly & mare handicap hurdle stakes, 4-year-olds and up, at 2 ⅛ miles.

5th race: 3:44 p.m. $50,000 Appleton Sport of Kings 130 ratings handicap, 4-year-olds and up, at 2 ⅝ miles.

7th race: 4:32 p.m. $250,000 Grand National Sport of Kings hurdle stakes (Grade 1), 4-year-olds and up, at 2 ⅝ miles.

8th race: 5:17 p.m. $100,000 John Forbes Memorial Flat Stakes, 4-year-olds and up, at 2 miles.

How to watch

The Grand National will be broadcast live on America's Day at the Races, produced by the New York Racing Association in partnership with Fox Sports. Coverage begins at 12:30 p.m.

As always, you can watch Saturday's races via live stream from the link on the NSA homepage, www.nationalsteeplechase.com. The stream is sponsored by Brown Advisory.

How to wager

Fans have two ways to bet on their favorites, both via phone. Pari-mutuel wagering is available through 4NJBets. To sign up, deposit, and wager, you'll need to download the 4NJBets app or visit https://4njbets.com/200farhills.

If you are physically present in New Jersey, you can also place wagers through the MonmouthBets app. MonmouthBets offers fixed-bet wagering, meaning the odds in place when you make your bet is the price you get if you're a winner. For information and a link to download the app, click here: https://farhillsrace.org/fixed-odds-betting/

The post Far Hills: Stage Is Set For Steeplechasing’s ‘Grand National’ Day appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

FSS: Stakes Winner Mattingly Will Make Dirt Debut In Saturday’s Affirmed

Trainer Joe Orseno had options for rising star Mattingly, including a trip to New York to run on turf in the Nov. 4 Atlantic Beach at Aqueduct or a cross-country flight to sunny Southern California to run in the $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint (G1) at Santa Anita.

Instead, the stakes-winning son of Bucchero has been entered to make his dirt debut in Saturday's $200,000 Affirmed, the seven-furlong second leg of the 2023 FTBOA Sire Stakes series, at Gulfstream Park.

Gulfstream-based Mattingly has run once on turf – a second-place finish in the Royal Palm Juvenile in his career debut at Gulfstream – and three times on Tapeta – a stakes victory last time out in the Hollywood Beach at Gulfstream, a runner-up finish in a Woodbine stakes, as well as a maiden score at Gulfstream.

“Over the last couple weeks in New York, I've had two horses aiming to try to run [on turf]. Beauty of the Sea's race [Glen Cove] was moved to [Thursday] and Eamonn ended up running in the slop, which was ridiculous,” Orseno said. “Why ship him up to New York for a six-furlong turf race Nov. 4 that probably will not be on the turf?”

It never rains in Southern California, but …

“We talked about putting the money up and paying the $100,000 to supplement him into the Breeders' Cup. How many chances do you get? And we think he deserved the shot,” Orseno said. “It's still $100,000 and another $40,000 to enter and $15,000 to get him there. You're talking about $155,000 before you even get in the entries to be 20-1, to be realistic. He wouldn't be one of the favorites.”

Being a son of Bucchero, Mattingly is eligible for the Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds sired by accredited Florida stallions, which prompted Orseno, Ironhorse Racing Stable LLC and Harlow Stables LLC's Mattingly to consider Saturday's Affirmed.

Mattingly breezed a half-mile in 50.78 seconds Saturday at Gulfstream with an eye on the Affirmed.

“He worked fantastic. I know it says he worked in 50, but the fraction were 27 and then 23,” Orseno said. “I wanted 27 to make sure he was getting over it OK and I told my exercise rider, 'If he likes it, we're going to chirp to him at the quarter-pole and we're going to let him run the last quarter.' He responded real well.”

Bucchero, who stands at Pleasant Acres Farm in Morriston, FL, was a multiple stakes-winner on dirt before becoming a multiple graded-stakes winner on turf.

“We're big advocates of Bucchero, the stallion. We think he does throw dirt horses, though he hasn't had a lot of chances, except the one Derek Ryan has in New Jersey, Book'em Danno – who has never been on Tapeta or turf and he's undefeated,” Orseno said.

Ryan-trained Book'em Danno, a New Jersey-bred son of Bucchero, has gone undefeated while winning three dirt races in a row, is coming off an 8 ½-length triumph in the off-the-turf Futurity at Aqueduct.

Mattingly's dam, Battingstar, has produced a son of Yes It's True, True Valor, who won six races on dirt during his career on the West Coast.

Mattingly, who has never raced beyond 5 ½ furlongs, will be tested by the distance as well as the dirt in the Affirmed.

“I think he'll handle it. We've been saying that we think he'll stretch out, so I think he'll handle the distance fine,” Orseno said. “And we get to stay home.”

Mattingly has found no soft spot for his dirt debut, in which he will clash with Bentornato, who is undefeated in three starts on dirt, including a 7 ½-furlong romp in the $100,000 Dr. Fager, the six-furlong first leg of the Florida Sire Stakes series Sept. 9. The Jose D'Angelo-trained son of Valiant Minister is rated as the 9-5 morning-line favorite in a field of 12. Christophe Clement-trained Hurricane Nelson, a son of Khozan who has finished second in both of his career starts in New York, is rated second at 5-2. Mattingly is rated third at 6-1 for his dirt debut.

The post FSS: Stakes Winner Mattingly Will Make Dirt Debut In Saturday’s Affirmed appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Five Fast Facts About the Far Hills Steeplechase Race Meet

One of the biggest live horse racing events on the annual calendar is right around the corner. The 2023 Far Hills races will be run as a one-day event on Saturday, Oct. 21. The race day has become an official part of the annual New Jersey Thoroughbred racing calendar as New Jersey racing shines the spotlight solely on the steeplechase races at Far Hills this weekend.

Read More...

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights