Countdown to 9,446: Asmussen Has Five Saratoga Opening Day Entries

Steve Asmussen has five horses entered in Thursday's opening day program at Saratoga racetrack in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., as the Hall of Fame trainer closes in on the all-time win record of 9,445 held by the late Dale Baird.

Going into Thursday's action, Asmussen has won 9,425 North American races from 45,803 starts, 20 wins shy of Baird, who competed primarily at Mountaineer Park in West Virginia, a track previously known as Waterford Park. Baird died in a multi-vehicle accident in 2007 at the age of 72. Unlike Asmussen, who has saddled six North American champions and earned two Eclipse Awards as outstanding trainer, Baird went through his career without winning a graded stakes.

A 55-year-old South Dakota native from a horse racing family, Asmussen started out as a jockey but quickly outgrew that occupation, moving to training in 1986, winning once from 15 starts. His stable grew over the years, with several divisions throughout the country, and Asmussen became the first trainer in history to win more than 500 races in a single year, scoring 555 times in 2004. He owns the single-season win record of 650 victories, set in 2009.

In addition to the five entered Thursday at Saratoga (including Jaxon Traveler in the Grade 3 Quick Calls Stakes and Eagle Express and Velvet Sister in the G3 Schuylerville), Asmussen has one entry at Indiana Grand in Shelbyville, Ind.

Wednesday, July 14: No entries

Thursday, July 15: Five entries

Friday, July 16: Eight entries

Career stats: 45,803 starts – 9,425 wins, 7,641 second, 6,514 third. Career earnings: $360,236,834

The post Countdown to 9,446: Asmussen Has Five Saratoga Opening Day Entries appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Normalcy Returns as Saratoga Meet Opens

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Once again, Saratoga opens its world-renowned race meet with the question: How many?

During the COVID-19 summer of 2020, the issue was whether there might be some loosening on the ban on spectators during the 40-day season. That never happened, though a limited number of owners were allowed to see their horses run, and some of the world's best Thoroughbreds played to a oh-so quiet empty house at America's oldest race track.

With restrictions completely lifted in New York State in time for the 153rd season, the challenge of the week is to predict the size of the crowd that will attend the 10-race card on opening day Thursday. While the range varies, the consensus is: huge.

“I think the place is ready to explode,” said trainer H. James Bond. “Every phone call, every person that I talked to about Saratoga, everybody just can't wait to get here and get going. I think it's going to be a coming-out party like they've never seen before.”

New York Racing Association officials knew that enthusiasm for the 2021 meet was high even before they announced free admission on opening day for people who could prove that they are vaccinated. The free admission offer was announced after New York reached a 70% vaccination level in mid-June.

NYRA president and CEO David O'Rourke chuckled at the suggestion that it might be a Saturday-sized crowd on Thursday.

“That seems it's a really good way of putting it,” he said. “Yeah, I would think 30,000 plus, if I was to put a line on the number of attendance.”

This will be the third season to open on a Thursday since NYRA reworked the Saratoga schedule, moving to five-day weeks– Wednesdays through Sundays–and starting proceedings a week earlier in July. NYRA announced a crowd of 22,591 for the rainy opener in 2019.

Saratoga's opening day has long been a festive occasion at the track on the south side of Union Avenue. This time around, the excitement level is expected to be a few notches above the norm.

“I think it's going to be a little bit of a celebration, right?,” O'Rourke said. “Last year was a strange year, to put it lightly, for everyone and being up there, racing without fans. Now, to be able to welcome everyone back and in one way, celebrate the success we've had in terms of getting through this with the vaccination rates in New York, we figured it was a nice little gesture just to offer free admission as a celebratory kind of nod.”

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown grew up in nearby Mechanicville and embraced racing at Saratoga Race Course. He is anxious to turn the page back to the Saratoga he knew before the pandemic and said he expects a special opening day.

“I've definitely been looking forward to it for a long time now,” Brown said. “I'm so happy everyone's going to be back and full capacity and things are looking pretty lively already.”

Brown said that the 2020 meet was sort of depressing.

“We tried to maintain some positivity because NYRA did offer the nice races up here,” he said. “We had a lot of nice horses to run and we won some big races, but it was so different to go through it with no fans there, no family there. It's just a very empty feeling throughout the meet, I think for everybody. Like I said, at the end of the meet last year, hopefully that's the only time we ever have to do that.”

As has been the case since the mid-1950s, the GIII $150,000 Schuylerville S. for 2-year-old fillies is the headliner of the opening-day program. It will be the 103rd running of the six-furlong race. The Schuylerville will be preceded by the GIII Quick Call S., the 5 1/2-furlong turf sprint for the sophomore set.   Following the four-day opening weekend, Saratoga will have six five-day weeks and will complete its upstate New York run with a six-day week closing on Labor Day, Sept. 6.

The season will include 76 stakes worth a total of $21.5 million. Saratoga is the home to 20 Grade I stakes, the most of any track. The lineup this year includes the $600,000 Flower Bowl and the $1-million Jockey Club Gold Cup, which were moved from Belmont Park and will be contested on Saturday, Sept. 6. The $1-million GI Whitney S. is scheduled for Aug. 7 as the marquee race on a program with five stakes.

The GI $1.25-million Runhappy Travers S., the highest-profile race on the Saratoga calendar every summer, returns to its familiar late-season date on Aug. 28–it was moved ahead a few weeks to be prep for the GI Kentucky Derby in 2020–and will cap a program with six Grade I races. Belmont S.-winning trainer Brad Cox is aiming Godolphin's GI Belmont S. winner Essential Quality (Tapit) for the 152nd Travers, the oldest stakes for 3-year-olds in the U.S.

Essential Quality has been in Saratoga for a couple of weeks and worked four furlongs on :50.44 July 10. He is on course for the local Travers prep, the $600,000 GII Jim Dandy S. July 31.

Standing in front Essential Quality's stall this week, Cox, the 2020 Eclipse Award-winning trainer, acknowledged that it's nice to have a standout 3-year-old colt in the country in his care.

“Well, yeah, It's good,” he said, pausing a second for emphasis,  “if they win.”

Cox said the gray son of Tapit will be on a Saturday work schedule for his Saratoga races.

“My job is to make sure everything's right for him,” Cox said, “and he's prepared, prepared properly and everything's going the way it needs to go and giving him every shot to succeed up here. And, so far, so good.”

On Friday, Aug. 6, Bob Baffert's 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah–who lost in the Travers at the Graveyard of Favorites–will be inducted in the Hall of Fame at the National Museum of Racing. The other members of this year's class are trainers Todd Pletcher, who, like American Pharaoh, was elected in his first year of eligibility, and steeplechase trainer Jack Fisher.

The ceremony could not be held last summer, so the 2020 class will be inducted: racehorses Tom Bowling and Wise Dan; jockey Darrel McHargue; trainer Mark Casse; and Pillars of the Turf the late Alice Headley Chandler, J. Keene Daingerfield, Jr. and George D. Widener, Jr.

Pletcher's unbeaten stable star, Shadwell's 'TDN Rising Star' Malathaat (Curlin), is scheduled to make her first start since winning the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks in the GI Coaching Club American Oaks July 24. Pletcher won his 14th Saratoga training title, but said his current stable does not have the balance to get the job done this year. He said he is looking forward to a typical Saratoga season with thousands of people on the grounds.

“Well, I think it's going to feel normal again,” he said. “I think bigger question is like how strange did last year feel? Saratoga is the one place where we race that has the most electric crowd, the most enthusiastic crowd. The fans are very knowledgeable. It's what you've grown accustomed to your whole career and last year just didn't seem right. At the same time, we were blessed that we're able to continue racing and because of the television product, maybe hopefully we've gained some new fans. Maybe, you know, there was some silver lining to the whole thing, but it'll be nice to get back to normal.”

The post Normalcy Returns as Saratoga Meet Opens appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Catalog Released For 100th Saratoga Sale

A total of 210 yearlings by many of the world's top stallions have been cataloged for the 100th renewal of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale, to be held Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 9 and 10, in Saratoga Springs, NY. Evening sessions begin each night at 6:30 p.m.

The Saratoga Sale is the first major North American yearling sale to be held as many as 100 times. The boutique event was canceled last summer owing to the COVID-19 outbreak, marking the first time since World War II that the sale had not been held.

To commemorate the 100th Saratoga Sale, this year's catalogue includes a fold out timeline that outlines major events in the sale's history, as well as a gallery of the sale's most prominent graduates through the years.

“We are returning to Saratoga in style this year, as we celebrate the sale of a century, the 100th Saratoga Sale,” said Fasig-Tipton President and CEO Boyd Browning, Jr. “For 100 years, Saratoga has produced breed-shapers, champions, classic winners, and international stars.  This year's catalogue is outstanding, offering the type of quality that has drawn buyers to Saratoga in search of the sport's very best for a century.”

Those buyers, who will take a break from racing across Union Avenue, will have the cream of the crop of established stallions from which to choose. The irrepressible Into Mischief has 19 cataloged, including a colt out of of 2016 GI Test S. heroine Paola Queen (Flatter). Among 15 in the catalog for the outstanding Uncle Mo is a May-foaled son of GISW Dame Dorothy (Bernardini), the dam of 'TDN Rising Star' Spice Is Nice (Curlin), while a half-dozen by perennial leading sire Tapit includes a half-sister to the undefeated and stakes-bound Carribean Caper (Speightstown). Other top stallions with yearlings on offer include the young progeny of American Pharoah, Candy Ride (Arg), Curlin, Distorted Humor, Ghostzapper, leading freshman sire Gun Runner, Medaglia d'Oro, Munnings, Nyquist, Practical Joke, Quality Road, Street Sense and War Front.

Approximately a quarter of the Saratoga catalog is comprised of freshman yearling sires, many of which performed well during the New Sire Showcase at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July Sale in Lexington July 13. Triple Crown hero Justify (Scat Daddy) has 14 cataloged, including siblings to fellow freshman sire Tapwrit (Tapit) and 'Rising Star' and recently GSP Inject (Frosted), GI Kentucky Oaks winner Princess of Sylmar (Majestic Warrior), as well as a New York-bred son of GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint upsetter Bar of Gold (Medaglia d'Oro). Bolt d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro) has a baker's dozen set to go through the ring, while other freshmen include Army Mule (Friesan Fire); City of Light (Quality Road); Good Magic (Curlin); Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy); Oscar Performance (Kitten's Joy); and West Coast (Flatter).

“Recent graduates like Grade I winners Known Agenda, Valnaince, Flagstaff and current undefeated 3-year-old colt ['TDN Rising Star'] First Captain are carrying on the century long tradition of Saratoga Sale quality,” continued Browning. “We look forward to welcoming buyers and sellers back to our historic sales grounds this August as we offer the next generation of racing's stars.”

The catalog is now online and may be viewed by clicking here and will also be available in the Equineline sales app. Print catalogs are also available.

The post Catalog Released For 100th Saratoga Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘Happy’ Days are Here Again: Schuylerville Kicks off Saratoga Meet

With a pair of blowout wins already on her resume headed by Belmont's Astoria S. June 3, Happy Soul (Runhappy) sets her sights on Saratoga's opening day co-featured GIII Schuylerville S. She has been working in company with her Wesley Ward-trained 4-year-old stablemate and GISW Kimari (Munnings).

“Visually, Kimari is a better horse, but she's doing it with speed to spare as well,” Ward said. “She has had some nice works underneath her and she's come to handle it quicker than I thought.”

Mainstay (Astern {Aus}), a half-sister to last year's champion 2-year-old filly Vequist (Nyquist), earned her 'TDN Rising Star' badge with a visually impressive romp in the slop on debut at Monmouth June 4.

Velvet Sister (Bernardini), a $500,000 FTFMAR breezer, graduated by 9 3/4 lengths in front-running fashion in a three-horse field for Steve Asmussen in her unveiling at Belmont June 10.

The rail-drawn Pretty Birdie (Bird Song) became the first winner for her expatriated sire with a sharp, wire-to-wire tally first out at Churchill Downs June 18.

The post ‘Happy’ Days are Here Again: Schuylerville Kicks off Saratoga Meet appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights