Welder Wins Record-Setting 16th Race At Remington Park

The screams from the crowd and Welder's connections reverberated throughout Remington Park as the Oklahoma-bred gelding charged down the stretch Friday on his way to making local racing history.

More than 25,000 horses have raced here since the track opened and before tonight, no horse had ever won 16 races. Welder has now ascended to that throne and it could be a crown he wears for a while. The last time a horse other than Welder won for the 15th time was Highland Ice on Feb. 4, 2000. Welder was tied with Highland Ice and Elegant Exxactsy at 15 wins, until Friday.

Welder, an 8-year-old gelded son of The Visualiser, out of the Tiznow mare Dance Softly, broke out of the gate like a rocket and when he disposed of Gold Speed Go at the top of the stretch, jockey David Cabrera looked back between his legs twice to see if anyone was coming. He was that confident that the record was going to fall. In fact, as Cabrera left the paddock with Welder, he pointed at a fan, winked and said, “We're going to do it.”

The 6-5 post-time favorite from Steve Asmussen's barn, Nitrous, made a late run but he never got closer than 1-3/4 lengths, the final margin. It was the fifth win in a row for Welder at Remington Park.

No one looked happier than trainer Teri Luneack who stood on the edge of the track, applauding with hands held high over her head for the millionaire racehorse that she has conditioned to historic heights. She had waited for this moment for more than eight months since he won here in December.

“This is a huge monkey off my back,” she said after the race. “I really wanted to set this record for Clayton (Rash, owner of Ra-Max Farms in Claremore, Okla.) and Toni (Clayton's wife) and Welder. I'm just glad it's over.”

Welder now adds the accolade of all-time winningest horse at Remington to a list as long as his number of wins, 27 in his career. He also owns these achievements:

Only thoroughbred in Oklahoma horse racing history to win All-Breeds Oklahoma Horse of the Year three years in a row. He has won the past three, a reward from Thoroughbred Racing Association of Oklahoma, presented by the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission.

Was voted Horse of the Meet at Remington Park for a third year in a row (2018-2020). No other thoroughbred has won that award more than once. Welder has swept all four Champion categories he's been in those three years – Horse of the Meet, Okie-bred, Sprinter and Older Male.

Only horse in Remington Park history to win four stakes races in one season (2018)

Set track record for six furlongs in 1:08.13, winning the David M. Vance Stakes on Sept. 29, 2019.

Eleven consecutive stakes wins at Remington Park, a record that is still live. Those 11 stakes wins is also a record for overall stakes wins here. Okie Ride had 10. Welder has won four Silver Goblins, three Oklahoma Classics Sprints, two David M. Vance Stakes, and two Remington Park Turf Sprints (one was taken off the grass and run on a sloppy track).

Where does this record fit for Luneack, who took a minute to do some campaigning.

“I think it would fit right in there with four Horse of the Meets in a row,” she said with a laugh.

Rash had tears in his eyes as he described how much this horse has meant to him. He purchased him for $6,750 as a yearling from Mighty Acres Ranch in Pryor, Okla. Welder earned $27,329 from the purse of the six-furlongs allowance race that carried a value of $42,831.

“Teri and I both liked Welder from the moment we picked him out,” said Rash. “I told her on the way back to the barn (after buying him), 'We're going to name this one Welder.' He was special from his first win.”

Welder ran his record to 42 starts, 27 wins, five seconds and six thirds for $1,246,231 earned. He is one of only eight Oklahoma-breds to have earned more than $1 million in their careers. That list is led by Kip Deville at $3,325,489, followed by 1986 national Horse of the Year Lady's Secret at $3,021,325; Shotgun Kowboy, $1,548,684; Clever Trevor, $1,388,841; Welder; She's All In, $1,102,489; Mr. Ross, $1,091,046, and Silver Goblin, $1,083,895.

Despite all the awards, honors and his legendary status at Remington Park, Welder still was not made the favorite in Friday's race. He went off at 8-5 odds. It was the first time he was not sent off as the favorite at Remington Park since he won the David M. Vance Stakes on Sept. 30, 2018 when he was 7-2. It was somewhat understandable, however, with Welder not winning in three tries in 2021 and facing Nitrous, a horse that had won the $125,000 Thanksgiving Classic at Fair Grounds in New Orleans last November, lost by only a head in the Grade 3, $200,000 Frank DeFrancis Memorial Dash Stakes on Oct. 3, and back in 2019 came close to winning the Grade 1 Woody Stephens Stakes.

“This was a salty race,” said Luneack. “I looked at the overnight and said, 'Oh, boy, we have our hands full.' He broke really well and once I saw how he was into the race, I thought, 'We're going to be Ok.' When he turned for home, I said, 'They're not going to pass him tonight.' “

Welder set fractions of :22.91 seconds for the first quarter-mile, :46.05 for the half-mile and :58.03 for five-eighths of a mile, completing the six furlongs in 1:10.47 over the fast track.

“Welder is just a phenom,” said Luneack. “He's just a very, very special horse and I don't do anything special.”

He paid $5.40 to win, $3 to place and $2.10 to show across the board. Nitrous was another half-length ahead of third-place finisher It Makes Sense (13-1).

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Welder Chasing All-Time Win Record At Remington Park On Friday

Oklahoma-bred millionaire Welder makes his late summer debut at Remington Park on Friday night and in the process could set a record as no other horse in the history of the track has ever won 16 races here.

Welder is currently tied for the most all-time wins with 15, deadlocked with Highland Ice and Elegant Exxactsy. Welder, a gray 8-year-old gelded son of The Visualiser, out of the Tiznow mare Dance Softly, has been made the slight 6-5 favorite over Fair Grounds stakes winner Nitrous (7-5 odds). All-time winningest trainer in racing history, Steve Asmussen, conditions Nitrous.

Welder is owned by Ra-Max Farms (Clayton Rash) of Claremore, Okla., trained by Teri Luneack and will once again be ridden by three-time defending champion jockey at Remington Park, David Cabrera. The streak of lightning gray has earned $1,218,902 in his career, racing 41 times, winning 26, running second five times and third another six. He is one of only eight Oklahoma-breds that have ever earned more than $1 million on the racetrack. That list is led by Kip Deville at $3,325,489, followed by 1986 national Horse of the Year Lady's Secret at $3,021,325; Shotgun Kowboy, $1,548,684; Clever Trevor, $1,388,841; Welder; She's All In, $1,102,489; Mr. Ross, $1,091,046, and Silver Goblin, $1,083,895.

Welder tied the record of 15 wins at Remington Park on Dec. 19, 2020 when he won an open allowance race by three-quarters of a length over Share the Upside, a horse that had beaten Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Whitmore at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark. Welder's overall record at Remington Park is 20 starts with 15 wins.

“He's already done everything I've ever asked him to do,” said Luneack. “If he sets more records, that's great for him. If he doesn't, that's great for him, too. I don't feel like the horse owes me or us anything. I don't feel he has anything more to prove. Welder never disappoints me. I love him.”

Here's a list of milestones Welder already has notched in his racing belt:

  • Only thoroughbred in Oklahoma horse racing history to win All-Breeds Oklahoma Horse of the Year three years in a row. He has won the past three, a reward from Thoroughbred Racing Association of Oklahoma, presented by the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission.
  • Was voted Horse of the Meet at Remington Park for third year in a row. No other thoroughbred has won that award more than once. Welder has swept all four Champion categories he's been in those three years – Horse of the Meet, Okie-bred, Sprinter and Older Male.
  • Only horse in Remington Park history to win four stakes races in one season (2018)
  • Set track record for six furlongs in 1:08.13, winning the David M. Vance Stakes on Sept. 29, 2019.
  • Eleven consecutive stakes wins at Remington Park, a record that is still live. Those 11 stakes wins is also a record for overall stakes wins here. Okie Ride had 10. Welder has won four Silver Goblins, three Oklahoma Classics Sprints, two David M. Vance Stakes, and two Remington Park Turf Sprints (one was taken off the grass and run on a sloppy track).

This could be Welder's toughest race at Remington Park since he won the Remington Park Turf Sprint by a neck on Sept. 25 last year. This allowance race has horses that certainly are stakes caliber, if not now, in the past.

Nitrous, a 5-year-old son of Tapit, out of the City Zip mare Speedinthruthecity, won the $125,000 Thanksgiving Classic at Fair Grounds in New Orleans in 2020. In October, he lost by only a head in the Grade 3, $200,000 Frank DeFrancis Memorial Dash Stakes at Pimlico in Baltimore. Back in 2019, Nitrous came close to winning a Grade 1 Stakes, running second by a neck at Belmont in the Woody Stephens Stakes. Welder has won 18-of-31 races at six furlongs; Nitrous is 2-for-6.

Another two that could upset for the gold are Gold Street and Gold Speed Go. Gold Street was actually on the Kentucky Derby-trail last year, winning the $150,000 Smarty Jones Stakes at Oaklawn by 2-3/4 lengths. He finished more than 23 lengths back in the subsequent Grade 3 Southwest Stakes, however. Gold Speed Go has won two of his last three starts and is 4-for-6 in the winner's circle here.

The allowance race with post position, horse, jockey, trainer, odds:

  1. Gold Street, Ramon Vazquez, Frank Lucarelli, 8-1
  2. Gold Speed Go, Lane Luzzi, Danny Pish, 10-1
  3. United Patriot, Luis Quinonez, Larry Frazee, 20-1
  4. Warrior's Map, Reylu Gutierrez, Karl Broberg, 10-1
  5. Nitrous, Stewart Elliott, Steve Asmussen, 7-5
  6. Welder, David Cabrera, Teri Luneack, 6-5
  7. It Makes Sense, Jose Alvarez, Shawn Davis, 15-1

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Plainsman Tabbed Morning-Line Favorite In Remington’s Opening Night $175,000 Governor’s Cup

The country's second-ranked trainer by horses' earnings this year, Brad Cox, entered Plainsman Friday morning in the $175,000 Governor's Cup. The first stakes race of the season headlines the opening night program for Remington Park racing on Aug. 20.

Remington Park morning-line maker Jerry Shottenkirk has established Plainsman the 2-1 favorite for a competitive field of 10 horses top to bottom. The Governor's Cup will go as the eighth race on a nine-race card that begins at 7:07 p.m. next Friday. Post time for the 1-1/8th mile race on the dirt has been set for approximately 10:23 p.m.-central.

Plainsman, a 6-year-old by Flatter, out of the Street Sense mare S S Pinafore, is owned by Shortleaf Stable of Hot Springs, Ark. and he will be ridden by Francisco Arrieta. Arrieta took over the duties on Plainsman three races back at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, and has not lost on him since he was given a leg up by Cox. Plainsman won an allowance race on April 15 at Oaklawn, followed by victories in the $50,000 Jim Rasmussen, an overnight stakes at Prairie Meadows in Altoona, Iowa on June 4, and the $85,000 Michael G. Schaefer Stakes at Indiana Grand in Shelbyville, Ind. Arrieta has most recently been riding at Ellis Park in Henderson, Ky. Plainsman's record is 23 starts, seven wins, five seconds and three starts for $515,407 in earnings.

Despite the win streak, Plainsman has been beaten by a couple of horses in this race, including defending champion Hunka Burning Love in the 2020 Jeffrey A. Hawk Memorial at Remington Park. Hunka Burning Love won the Governor's Cup last year by 6-1/2 lengths and has been made an 8-1 slight outsider to repeat because of his recent dull form. Trainer Karl Broberg sends out this 7-year-old gelded son of Into Mischief, out of the Thunder Gulch mare Touch of Fire, for owner End Zone Athletics of Mansfield, Tex. He will be ridden by Remington Park newcomer Reylu Gutierrez.

Hunka Burning Love has never lost in three tries around two turns at Remington Park. Three-time defending champion jockey David Cabrera has ridden him in two of those wins and Ramon Vazquez was aboard for the other. Both of them have other mounts in the Governor's Cup. Hunka Burning Love has had a third and two fourth-place finishes in his last three starts. He was fourth in the $400,000 Steve Sexton Mile at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Tex. All of three of his recent losses came over a sloppy or muddy track, however.

Vazquez will ride Rated R Superstar, who was supplemented for $5,260 at time of entry by Remington Park's all-time leading owner Danny Caldwell of Poteau, Okla. (371 wins). The 8-year-old gelded son of Kodiak Kowboy, out of the Gold Case mare Wicked Wish, was made the 9-2 second choice in the morning-line in this spot. He is one of two millionaires in the field. Rated R Superstar, trained by Federico Villafranco, has earned $1,068,014 in 54 starts with eight wins. He finished a neck back of Plainsman in the Rasmussen, but hasn't won in stakes company the past two years.

The other millionaire is Tenfold, the top money-earner in the field with $1,179,745 in 25 starts. The 6-year-old by Curlin, out of the Tapit mare Temptress, appears to be the class of the field, having run against graded stakes horses in nine of his last 13 races.

Asmussen, the new all-time leading trainer by wins in racing, also has Tapit Wise representing the barn at 10-1 morning-line odds.

Another horse entered on a win streak is Guided Missile, going for his third straight win. At 8-1 odds, trainer Boyd Caster sends out this 4-year-old colt by Tapit from the Tiznow mare Pussyfoot. He has won two in a row in allowance events at Prairie Meadows.

This will be the 30th Governor's Cup at Remington Park, contested at 1-1/8 miles since 2011. The race was originally called the Remington Cup from 1988-1994. Asmussen has won the race six times (2007, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2017 and 2018) while Broberg has one win, last year with Hunka Burning Love.

Jockey David Cabrera is the lone rider in the field to have a score in the Governor's Cup, winning aboard Hunka Burning Love last year.

Here's a look at the field from inside to outside with jockey, trainer and morning line odds:

  1. Tenfold, Stewart Elliott, Steve Asmussen, 5-1
  2. Guided Missile, Curtis Kimes, Boyd Caster, 8-1
  3. Trident Hit, David Cabrera, Ron Moquett, 6-1
  4. Box Seat, Iram Diego, Boyd Caster, 20-1
  5. Rated R Superstar, Ramon Vazquez, Federico Villafranco, 9-2
  6. Baozun, Weston Hamilton, Juan Gomez Jr., 30-1
  7. Plainsman, Francisco Arrieta, Brad Cox, 2-1
  8. Popularity, Richard Eramia, Joe Offolter, 15-1
  9. Tapit Wise, Leandro Goncalves, Steve Asmussen, 10-1
  10. Hunka Burning Love, Reylu Gutierrez, Karl Broberg, 8-1

Tracked by more than 167,000 fans on Facebook and 10,400 Twitter followers, Remington Park has provided more than $269 Million to the State of Oklahoma general education fund since the opening of the casino in 2005. Located at the junction of Interstates 35 & 44, in the heart of the Oklahoma City Adventure District, Remington Park features live and simulcast horse racing, and the casino is always open! The 2021 Thoroughbred Season begins Aug. 20. Visit remingtonpark.com for more information.

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Jockey Benny Landeros Continues To Climb Longevity Lists At Remington Park

Journeyman jockey Benny Landeros is in his 33rd year of riding racehorses and returns to Remington Park for this fall meet. He is the highest rider on the all-time wins list here that is not in the Oklahoma Horse Racing Hall of Fame.

Landeros sits sixth on the all-time Remington Park wins list with 691 in 8,701 mounts in Oklahoma City. That's the third-most horses ridden all time here, behind only Cliff Berry (12,936 mounts) and Luis Quinonez (9,704). Berry (2,125 wins) and Quinonez (1,416) are first and third on the all-time wins list with Don Pettinger (1,419) sandwiched between them in second, followed by Tim Doocy (796) and the late, great Pat Steinberg in fifth (727). Those top five riders are all Oklahoma Horse Racing Hall of Famers.

Landeros needs 36 more wins at Remington Park to tie Steinberg, whose career was cut short when he was killed in a car wreck on his way to Omaha, Neb., following the Remington Park meet in May 1993. Steinberg had won nine riding titles at the Oklahoma City track in his career.

Landeros has no delusions of grandeur in passing one of his favorite riders ever, Steinberg.

“Wow, I'm in sixth behind him?” Landeros said. “At Remington Park? I had no idea. I knew I was up there somewhere. That's pretty good. Me and Pat were great together. He's one guy that I never had words with. He was a real professional, along with Don Pettinger and R.D. Williams.”

At 52 years old, Landeros, despite finishing third in the most recent Fair Meadows jockey standings this summer with 22 wins, admits his career at Remington Park is winding down. He finished tied for 21st in the 2020 thoroughbred standings in Oklahoma City with five wins from 90 mounts.

“Sometimes I feel like I'm 20 and sometimes I feel like I'm 60,” he said. “I'm very healthy. I'm not going to ride many horses at Remington this year. I'm over here helping (trainer) Mindy Willis (who has 40 stalls this meet). I really don't care to ride many horses now. I always say my prayers in the morning and if the good Lord lets me keep being healthy and gives me another three to five years of riding…whatever he gives me, whenever he tells me it's time to let go, I'll let go.”

Born in Querrdaro, Mexico, Landeros became a naturalized American citizen in 2008. He passed the 2,000 wins mark this year and now sits at 2,014 overall, riding Thoroughbreds, American Quarter Horses, Paints, Appaloosas and Arabians. He has come a long way from when he experienced a bit of a fiasco on the first horse he galloped in California when he was in his teens.

“An ex-rider named R.J. Garcia took me to Pomona and found me an Appaloosa to gallop,” said Landeros. “That rascal, he ran off with me about three times. That was a no-no and the outrider didn't like it.”

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Soon thereafter, he gained some riding knowledge from one of the top riders to ever come out of California, seven-time Breeders' Cup race winner and Kentucky Derby winner aboard Sunday Silence, Patrick Valenzuela.

“I used to just study him when he rode and do all the things he would do with the reins and one day he told me, 'if you get your license to ride, you let the horse tell you what to do. You'll start to feel the horse and start to read the horse's mind.' All through the years, he's been right. The horses will tell you. I've been on some that have loved their job and I've been on some that have hated their job.”

Garcia took Landeros to Blue Ribbon Downs in Sallisaw, Okla., when he was 19 and he started his official riding career there in 1989. His first year, Landeros went 0-for-22.

“I still didn't have any doubts,” he said. “I liked my job so much. I still do. I love my horses.”

On April 15, 1990, he made it to the winner's circle for the first time aboard Sea Bird Sonny at BRD. He gives a lot of the credit to the comradery of fellow jockey Troy Crissup.

“Troy came up to me and said, 'Look, this ol' boy is going to put you on this horse. Don't fall off the horse because he's very fast.' I said, 'Really? Then why aren't you riding him?' He said, 'because I like you.'”

His first win at Remington Park came on Dec. 7, 1991, with Ultimate Problem. One of his favorite horses of all time was Strategic Leader, who he won with in the $137,800 Oklahoma Classics Turf on Oct. 22, 2010.

“He was so fun to ride,” said Landeros. “But he would worry you a lot, too. You never knew when he was going to fire or not. That was one of those nights when I didn't know if he was going to pick up the bit. But he finally did and it was really exciting.”

Strategic Leader won by 2-1/2 lengths after breaking 11th from the gate and running ninth down the backstretch.

“I had some of the owners say, 'Man, you had us sweating.'” Landeros said. “I said, 'Yeah, I know. I was sweating, too.'”

His check for the ride was more than $8,000 for that win. Did he do anything extravagant with his small pot of gold?

“Nah, just paid the bills,” he said. “Maybe took my wife out to dinner.”

That's all he really cares about these days. Not the wins. Not the ladder of success. He loves his wife, Lisa, his grown daughter Leiha with her two kids and his 11-year-old boy Levi.

“They make me happy,” he said.

Everything else is just icing on the cake.

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