Vic Padilla Named Full-Time Starter At Remington Park

A life in horse racing has allowed Vic Padilla to work in many capacities at the racetrack. Padilla can now add a new position to his resume as he has become only the third full-time starter in Remington Park history.

A mainstay as an assistant starter at Remington Park since 1998, Padilla has also worked as a valet in the jockeys' quarters, groomed horses, served as a jockey's agent and has also trained horses during his career. Growing up in Phoenix, Ariz., Padilla's parents trained horses at Turf Paradise. As a teenager, Padilla hoped to become a jockey. That plan was dashed by a growth spurt.

“I grew nine inches when I was 16, so that ended. Plus, my parents wanted me to finish high school, something they didn't do. I continued to gallop horses into my 30s before moving to the starting gate.”

Padilla was first an assistant starter, working in the gate with the horses to ensure the best beginning of a race possible, in 1980 at Turf Paradise. He has also worked at Canterbury Park in Minnesota, Oaklawn Park in Arkansas, Sam Houston Race Park in Houston and Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas.

Becoming a starter was something Padilla was ready to accept. He also worked this summer's Lone Star Park season, his first as the full-time person hitting the button to open the starting gate doors.

Padilla, 58, resides in Edmond, Okla. with his wife Jodi.

Remington Park's 2020 Thoroughbred Season continues Friday and Saturday, Aug. 28 & 29, with the first race nightly at 7pm-Central.

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Broberg Says Remington Won’t Give Him Stalls and He Can’t Understand Why

Karl Broberg got off to a quick start at Remington Park, winning the opening night feature, the $75,000 Governor’s Cup S., with Hunka Burning Love (Into Mischief). But Broberg is resigned to the fact that there won’t be many more winners for his stable at the Oklahoma track. A mainstay at Remington throughout his career, Broberg was denied stalls at the meet which opened Friday, and he says he’s yet to get a reasonable explanation as to why.

“I really wish I knew the answer,” Broberg said. “It was what I deem a very bizarre decision on their part and I have had multiple meetings now trying to get a straight answer as to why.”

Broberg is allowed to race at Remington, but said that without stalls he has cut back drastically on his division in Oklahoma and has 16 horses there at a nearby training center when he normally has about 80 based at the track. He is planning on moving most of the horses that would have raced at Remington to Hawthorne.

Broberg made 289 starts last year at Remington and finished second in the standings behind Steve Asmussen with 57 winners. He had hoped to do as well, if not better, this year until he was told he would not be getting stalls. He said the decision was made by Remington Vice President of Operations Matt Vance. At deadline for this story, Vance had not returned a phone call seeking comment.

Broberg said Vance has said little about the decision to deny him stalls, which has left him to guess what the reasons might be. He said one issue is likely comments he has made on social media about Remington and Lone Star Park, tracks owned by the same company, Global Gaming Solutions. Broberg admits he hasn’t mastered the art of political correctness and that his outspoken nature can get him into trouble.

On Aug. 19, he tweeted: “My best friend was wrong when he predicted Twitter would end my career quickly because I lack a filter. So far it has only resulted in losing stalls at a track near and dear to my heart while allowing me to share wisdom, humor, nonsense, and disgustingly self promote.”

On Twitter, he has complained a number of times about Remington’s decision to do away with main track-only entries in turf races, calling it the “Steve Asmussen rule.”

“I confirmed this morning that the no MTO entry rule change is still in place,” he tweeted. “However, I would prefer to reference it as the Steve Asmussen rule since I am focused on being positive about every venue I have the privilege of partaking in.”

He said he will try to be careful when it comes to what he posts on social media platforms.

“I will just worry about running my own barn in the future instead of trying to make the world a better place,” he said of his social media posts.

Another factor, Broberg said, could be his criticism of the local horsemen’s group, the Thoroughbred Racing Association of Oklahoma.

“They have created a culture there at Remington Park where they constantly cave to the horsemen’s organization,” he said. “It’s just strange the way that track is run. They’ve created a culture where the inmates are running the asylum. They have tendency to bow down to the trainers that have an Oklahoma driver’s license.”

Broberg, who led the nation in wins every year from 2014 through 2019, has had his problems at Remington in the past. In 2013 he was banned outright for an entire meet after The Jockey Club denied him the privileges of the American Stud Book, the result of having three or more medication violations over the course of a 365-day period. In 2017, he was fined $20,000 after his stable mixed up the identity of two horses, both of whom raced under the wrong name.

“I’ve made more than my fair share of mistakes in racing,” he said.

After being fined in 2017, Broberg was allowed to stable and race at Remington in 2018 and 2019 and he said he has done nothing since then to warrant losing his stalls.

“I am in a spot where I am the villain and I don’t get it,” he said. “My help is respectful and quiet. We keep to ourselves and do everything right. There’s always been this dark cloud that hangs over us in Oklahoma City and I don’t have that anywhere else that I run.”

Broberg said he is confident the Remington ruling has nothing to do with any medication violations.

“It’s not like we’re (Jorge) Navarro or (Jason) Servis and winning at some phenomenal rate and doing incredible things that you can’t figure out when you look at the Racing Form to see how this horse is running in such a matter,” he said.

While losing stalls at Remington has been a setback for his operation, losing them at Lone Star would hurt even more. Broberg lives in the Dallas area and stabling at Lone Star affords him more time with his children.

“I have been told there won’t be a problem at Lone Star, but I know if I cry about what’s going on at Remington too much, it will be uncertain where this could go,” he said. “To not have stalls at Lone Star would really pain me because that is home to me. It’s my chance to do what I love while being able to stay home with my kids.”

Broberg, who is second in the nation in wins this year behind Asmussen, still has plenty of outlets for his horses. That’s not a problem. He is also currently racing at Louisiana Downs, Canterbury Park, Evangeline Downs and Prairie Meadows. He said he is ready to move on and accept the Remington decision, even if he doesn’t understand it.

The post Broberg Says Remington Won’t Give Him Stalls and He Can’t Understand Why appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Remington: 2020 Stakes Schedule To See Purse Reduction Of $820,000

The 2020 Remington Park Thoroughbred Season is set to begin a 67-date run on Friday, Aug. 21. The 32-race stakes schedule will also start on opening night with the $75,000 Governor's Cup, for older runners at 1-1/8 miles, serving as the feature.

The total purse money for the stakes schedule is $2,880,000, a reduction of $820,000 from the 2019 stakes. The lower structure is due to two-months of inactivity from mid-March to late-May this spring when Remington Park halted simulcast racing and casino gaming for health and safety measures at the height of Covid-19.

Remington Park's lone graded events top the billing for Oklahoma Derby Day on Sunday, Sept. 27. The Grade 3, $200,000 Oklahoma Derby and the Grade 3, $100,000 Remington Park Oaks head the lineup of eight stakes races on one of just two Sunday afternoon programs this season. Won in 2019 by Owendale, the Oklahoma Derby shares richest race honors at Remington Park. The Springboard Mile, the track's top event for 2-year-olds, also carries a $200,000 purse.

The marquee night for state-breds falls on Friday, Oct. 16 with the annual Oklahoma Classics. The series of divisional stakes races, worth more than $1,000,000, for Oklahoma-breds has been contested every year since 1993. The $175,000 Classics Cup tops the night and for the first time since 2016 will be won by a horse not named Shotgun Kowboy. A record-holding four-time winner of the Cup, millionaire Shotgun Kowboy has been retired to the farm of his breeder-owner-trainer, C.R. Trout, in Edmond, Okla.

The Springboard Mile leads a loaded afternoon of stakes racing on the final day of the season, Sunday, Dec. 20. The Springboard carries valuable qualifying points for the 2021 Kentucky Derby and has drawn quality fields, sending runners into the two most recent “Runs for the Roses” in 2018 (Combatant) and 2019 (Long Range Toddy).

The Remington Park turf course will be ready for action from opening night into November. There are seven stakes races slated over the grass with the $60,000 Remington Green and the $60,000 Ricks Memorial as the top open stakes races, both on the undercard on Oklahoma Derby Day. A pair of events on Oklahoma Classics night share the honors for richest turf stakes this season with the OKC Turf Classic and the Classics Distaff Turf both checking in at $130,000.

A total of 16 stakes are slated for Oklahoma-bred runners, beginning with a trio of events for state-breds over turf on Friday, Sept. 25. The Red Earth Stakes, the Bob Barry Memorial and the Remington Park Turf Sprint, all worth $70,000, start the run for Oklahoma-breds. The Jim Thorpe Stakes and Useeit Stakes, also worth $70,000, wrap up the state-bred stakes on the Springboard Mile undercard, Dec. 20.

Following is the complete 2020 Remington Park Thoroughbred Season Stakes Schedule. Races for eligible Oklahoma-breds are denoted by (OK).

  • Aug. 21: $75,000 Governor's Cup, 3 and older, 1-1/8 miles
  • Sep. 11: $50,000 Oklahoma Stallion Stakes, 3-year-old colts/geldings, 7 furlongs
  • Sep. 11: $50,000 Oklahoma Stallion Stakes, 3-year-old fillies, 7 furlongs
  • Sep. 25: $70,000 Remington Park Turf Sprint, 3 and older, 5 furlongs (OK)
  • Sep. 25: $70,000 Red Earth Stakes, 3-year-olds and up, 7-1/2 furlongs (OK) (turf)
  • Sep. 25: $70,000 Bob Barry Memorial, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 7-1/2 furlongs (OK) (turf)
  • Sep. 27: $200,000 Grade 3, Oklahoma Derby, 3-year-olds, 1-1/8 miles
  • Sep. 27: $100,000 Grade 3, Remington Park Oaks, 3-year-old fillies, 1-1/16 miles
  • Sep. 27: $60,000 David Vance Sprint, 3 and older, 6 furlongs
  • Sep. 27: $60,000 Remington Green Stakes, 3 and older, 1-1/8 miles (turf)
  • Sep. 27: $60,000 Kip Deville Stakes, 2-year-olds, 6 furlongs
  • Sep. 27: $60,000 Ricks Memorial Stakes, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 1-1/16 miles (turf)
  • Sep. 27: $50,000 E.L. Gaylord Memorial Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 6-1/2 furlongs
  • Sep. 27: $50,000 Flashy Lady Stakes, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 6 furlongs
  • Oct. 16: $175,000 Oklahoma Classics Cup, 3 and older, 1-1/16 miles (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $145,000 Oklahoma Classics Distaff, fillies/mares, 1 mile-70 yards (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $130,000 Oklahoma Classics Sprint, 3 and older, 6 furlongs (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $130,000 OKC Turf Classic, 3 and older, 1-1/16 miles (turf) (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $130,000 Oklahoma Classics Distaff Turf, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 1-1/16 miles (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $130,000 Oklahoma Classics Distaff Sprint, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 6 furlongs (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $100,000 Oklahoma Classics Juvenile, 2-year-old colts/geldings, 6 furlongs (OK)
  • Oct. 16: $100,000 Oklahoma Classics Lassie, 2-year-old fillies, 6 furlongs (OK)
  • Oct. 30: $60,000 Clever Trevor Stakes, 2-year-olds, 7 furlongs
  • Nov. 13: $75,000 Don McNeill Stakes, 2-year-olds, 1 mile (OK)
  • Nov. 13: $75,000 Slide Show Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 1 mile (OK)
  • Nov. 13: $70,000 Silver Goblin Stakes, 3 and older, 6 furlongs (OK)
  • Dec. 20: $200,000 Springboard Mile, 2-year-olds, 1 mile
  • Dec. 20: $75,000 She's All In Stakes, fillies/mares, 3 and older, 1 mile-70 yards
  • Dec. 20: $60,000 Trapeze Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 1 mile
  • Dec. 20: $60,000 Jeffrey Hawk Memorial, 3 and older, 1 mile-70 yards
  • Dec. 20: $70,000 Jim Thorpe Stakes, 3-year-olds, 1 mile (OK)
  • Dec. 20: $70,000 Useeit Stakes, 3-year-old fillies, 1 mile (OK)

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Citing COVID-19 Concerns, Lone Star Park Halts Live Racing

Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas, abruptly cancelled Sunday's live racing program after the day's first race. An announcement on Twitter gave no indication when racing would resume.

“Due to an abundance of caution, all racing operations at Lone Star Park have been suspended due to COVID-19,” the statement said. “Racing will resume at a date to be determined.”

Officials at Lone Star Park could not be reached for further comment.

Multiple sources told the Paulick Report a positive test for COVID-19 has emerged involving an individual employed at the track who has regular contact with jockeys or their valets. An out-of-town rider who recently rode at Lone Star may also have tested positive after returning to his home track from Lone Star, a source said.

Track officials were said to be consulting with infectious disease specialists brought in by Global Gaming, the entity that owns Lone Star Park and Remington Park in Oklahoma.

Lone Star races on a Sunday through Wednesday schedule. Sources said it is doubtful the July 6 live racing program will be conducted. Entries have been taken for racing through next Sunday, July 12, and horsemen have been told to prepare to enter on Monday morning for the following Monday's racing on July 13.

When jockeys were notified of the cancellation of Sunday's program, they were advised not to exit through the track's grandstand, where simulcast wagering continued. They were not given instructions to self-quarantine.

Lone Star was forced to delay the start of its live meet until May 22. On June 10, Lone Star management was notified by officials that spectators would be permitted on-track as Texas became one of the first states to reopen its economy.

After an alarming spike in COVID-19 positive tests throughout Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott on July 2 issued an order requiring face coverings in public and giving local officials authority to limit the size of gatherings.

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