Ortiz Returns After Friday’s Spill…and Wins Three

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.  – Jockey Jose Ortiz's return to competition at Saratoga Race Course Wednesday was very rewarding with three victories…and taxing.

Ortiz was unseated and fell hard to the ground when his horse clipped heels in the first race of Friday's card. He was sent to Albany Medical Center where he was found to have bruised ribs. Ortiz took off his mounts Saturday and Sunday and was ready to ride again Wednesday, the start of the third week of the meet.

In his comeback, Ortiz won with three of his five mounts. All of the wins were for leading trainer Linda Rice: Ichiban (Street Sense) in the sixth, Amanda's Folly (Mendelssohn) in the eighth and Indian Mischief (Into Mischief) in the 10th. Indian Mischief came out in the stretch and appeared to interfere with runner-up He's a Lucky Guy (Street Boss), but the stewards did not change the order of finish.

Ortiz has 11 victories at Saratoga this summer and has ridden eight of Rice's 13 winners. They were the leading jockey and trainer at the spring meet at Belmont Park.

Ortiz and Ichiban Wednesday | Sarah Andrew

After willing Ichiban to win the sixth race by a head with a hard ride through the stretch, Ortiz took part in the post-race winner's circle photographs, did a television interview and–clearly needing a breather–sat down.

“I feel better,” he said. “This filly made me a little bit tired. I had to ride her a lot, but I'm just glad to be back.”

Ortiz said he got on horses Sunday and Wednesday mornings and was no longer dealing with pain from the injuries.

“I'm pretty good about the ribs,” he said. “Just a little bit winded now. She was very lazy today.”

Ortiz was aboard for Ichiban's maiden-breaking seven-furlong victory on July 15, when she was up on the pace. In the mile and an eighth, two-turn race Wednesday, she was four lengths behind the leader at the top of the stretch and looked beaten. Ortiz pushed her and she responded.

“I was a little bit worried because the other horse opened up on me,” he said, “but I'm just glad we got there first.”

Ortiz came off Same Old Fears (Uncle Mo) near the finish of the program opener Friday. He stayed on the ground for several minutes, was helped to his feet and was able to walk off the course. At that point, it appeared that he might have some serious injuries.

“I was feeling a lot of pain when I left here, so I thought I cracked a rib or something,” he said. “I'm just happy to be back.”

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Mage ‘Looked Pretty Good’ on First Day Over Saratoga’s Oklahoma Track

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Four days after his second-place finish in the GI Haskell S., GI Kentucky Derby winner Mage (Good Magic) took some small, easy steps toward the GI Travers on Aug. 26, jogging Wednesday on the Oklahoma training track.

Mage shipped from Monmouth Park in New Jersey to Saratoga on Monday and was given another day off on Tuesday. He made his first visit to the track on a cool, foggy morning under his regular exercise rider J.J. Delgado. Assistant trainer Gustavo Delgado held the colt while he was bathed, while his father, trainer Gustavo Delgado, watched.

Delagado, Jr. said that Mage has come out of his first race since the GI Preakness on May 20 in good shape.

“We like what we see, especially the eating, the travel and then here,” Delgado, Jr. said. “This morning he looked pretty good.”

Mage wanted to move around during the bath and Delgado, Jr. said he was tough to control at times.

“Tomorrow, I think he will start galloping, the way he looked today, because he needs it,” Delgado, Jr. said. “He will start off galloping here and then probably next week we'll start taking him to the main track.”

Mage's connections set the Travers as the summer goal after he finished third in the Preakness. They gave him 17 days off and embarked on a training program to prepare him for the summer starts. Delgado, Jr. said that even in defeat the Haskell was a success.

“Everything was according to plan,” he said. “Of course, we wanted to win. And we never had a doubt that he was going to be competitive enough. The thing is that previous to the race we missed at least one breeze that was on the schedule. It was raining a lot at the training center so we couldn't get one work in. But his last one, he was ready. 'Let's take him to the Haskell because he might pull it off.'”

Yet to be decided is whether Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano will ride Mage in the Travers. Castellano rode Arcangelo (Arrogate) in the GI Belmont S. and that colt is headed to the Travers, too. Delgado said he and his father had dinner at Castellano's house Tuesday night, watched the Haskell several times, but did not discuss the Travers.

Delgado, Jr. said they hope that Castellano will be aboard for the marquee race of the Saratoga season, which could decide the 3-year-old male title.

“We wouldn't want to try with somebody else, that's for sure,” Delgado, Jr. said. “But at the same time he's an easy horse to ride. He's not that difficult.”

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Rice off to a Fast Start at the Spa

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – After nine days of racing, Linda Rice has already had a Saratoga season most trainers would consider a roaring success.

Rice starts the third week of the meet Wednesday atop the trainers' table with 10 victories, one up on two-time defending champ Chad Brown and two ahead of Todd Pletcher, a 14-time Saratoga titlist. She is winning at a 32% clip and her 31 starters have finished in the top three 22 times, an impressive 70.9 %.

How does it feel to be Linda Rice these days?

“Pretty good,” she said. “Pretty good.”

Adding to the positive vibe, jockey Jose Ortiz, who rode Rice's first five winners of the meet and was named on the last four before he was injured in a spill Friday, will return to competition Wednesday. Ortiz suffered bruised ribs when he fell after his horse clipped heels in the first race, took off his mounts Saturday and Sunday. He is entered in six of the 10 races on the program. Three of them are on Rice horses, all of whom are the morning-line favorites.

While trainers are typically ranked on wins and purse money earned, Rice's in-the-money percentage is noteworthy. Her victories have come for eight different owners.

“We try to put them in a position where they're going to be effective,” she said. “They're not always going to win, but hopefully, they'll pick up a nice check for my clients, pay the bills, keep moving forward.”

Rice's stable had been on a very good roll since last fall. She finished second to Brown at the Belmont-at-Aqueduct meet following Saratoga and has won the last four meets–three of them at Aqueduct–since.

At the Belmont Park spring meet, Rice topped the trainers' standings, while Ortiz edged his brother, Irad, 59-58, for the riding title. According to Equibase, Ortiz rode 25 of Rice's 34 victories at Belmont. Together with 80 starters, they compiled a 25-12-11 record–a 60 % in-the-money strike rate–and earned $1.318 million of the $1.996 million Rice's stable totaled at the meeting. The six races they won during the first week of July helped clinch their championships.

In a preview of what was ahead in the first two weeks at Saratoga, Rice and Ortiz took the first race on opening day with Winning Move Stable's Bustin Bay. They won another on the second day of the meet, two more on the third and their fifth on the fourth day of the season.

Maintaining momentum from one meet to the next is difficult, Rice acknowledged.

“You're always concerned about that,” she said, “that you have used up your stock, and they will have to rebound and take some time to come back together and used up a lot of conditions, you may win at the next meet.

“That happens every meet, if you have a big meet. Obviously, we were running hard at Belmont. I wasn't sure that we would pull it together so quickly at Saratoga. But, frankly, it's gone very well.”

Some 2 1/2 weeks since the end of the Belmont season, Rice said her stable is in the midst of  replenishing its lineup.

“They're coming back into form,” she said. “Some of them need time. Some of them are older, mature and can run back on short rest. But we only do that when it's a good opportunity.”

With 99 wins so far in 2023, Rice has already eclipsed last year's total of 96. Sometime this week, possibly on Wednesday, she will pass last year's purse earnings total of $5,774,619. Her season career bests of 145 wins and $7,258,064 in earnings set in 2019 appear to be within reach.

Rice, who saddled her stable's first starter in 1987, made history in 2009 when she became the first woman to win the Saratoga training title. Even with the great start this summer, she said it would be very difficult to finish in the top spot again. She did not say if she had a win number in mind when the Spa season opened on July 13.

“I was sure we would win some races,” she said. “Last year, we won 14. When I won the meet her in '09 I won 20, but over the course of that last decade, the first and second trainers have had 40 by the end of the meet. That's a tall task. Right now, we're two weeks in and we've got 10 wins, so I'm pretty pleased where we are. I try to set goals that we can reach. I don't want to set the bar too high for me or my staff.

“When I came in here I was thrilled. We had a great winter. Last fall was good. Belmont was terrific. I came in here thinking 'let's just have a good meet.' We're going to win some races. I knew that. But that bar in the last decade with these large outfits has become pretty high.”

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Summer Breezes: July 26, 2023

Some of the most highly anticipated races during the summer racing season are the 'baby' races during the boutique meetings at both Saratoga and Del Mar and at Ellis Park, which attract its fair share of high-priced offspring from a variety of top national outfits.

Summer Breezes highlights debuting 2-year-olds at those meetings that have been sourced at the breeze-up sales earlier in the year, with links to their under-tack previews. To follow are the horses entered for Wednesday at Saratoga:

Wednesday, July 26, 2023
Saratoga 3, $88k, 2yo, f, (S), 5 1/2fT, 2:19 p.m. ET
Horse (Sire), Sale, Price ($), Breeze
Beautiful Thief (Dialed In), FTMMAY, 65,000, see below
C-Wavertree Stables (C Dunne), agt; B-Bona Venture/G Weaver
Dorth's Sol Dancer (Solomini)-AE, OBSAPR, 40,000, click
C-Omar Ramirez Bloodstock, agent; B-SJB Stable Trust
Mel's Angel (Leofric), OBSMAR, 32,000, click
C-Really and Truly Thoroughbreds; B-4K Services LLC

 

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