Turf Will Have To Wait: Kimmel Pointing The Reds Toward Ohio Derby

While The Reds didn't quite knock one out of the park in Saturday's off-the-turf Grade 2, $200,000 Pennine Ridge at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., trainer John Kimmel hopes to give the son of second crop-sire Tonalist a graded stakes win and said he is considering the Grade 3, $500,000 Ohio Derby on June 26 at JACK Thistledown in Ohio.

Owned by Flanagan Racing, The Reds arrived at the nine-furlong Pennine Ridge off a victory, via disqualification, in the Federico Tesio at Pimlico Race Course on April 24. Kimmel said he was hoping Saturday's test would be a prep for the Grade 1, $1 million Belmont Derby Invitational on July 10. But when inclement weather forced the race to the main track, he said that the chestnut colt's turf debut will likely have to wait.

“Had we gotten to test him out on the grass maybe we could have tried the Belmont Derby, but I'm not really sure now,” said Kimmel. “I think running a mile and an eighth on dirt for a half-million against some of the big class citizens might be a better option for him.”

The Reds was a maiden winner at fifth asking on January 31 over the main track at Aqueduct before finishing fifth in the Grade 3 Gotham at the Big A.

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Full-Brothers Fill Out Exacta In Rowland Memorial Handicap At Thistledown

Buckeye Bullet won the Michael F. Rowland Memorial Handicap on Monday at Thistledown for a fourth time, which is remarkable in its own right. Almost as remarkable was the level of family dominance displayed in the order of finish.

Finishing three-quarters of a length behind the 8-year-old Buckeye Bullet was Midnight Mikey, a 6-year-old full-brother to the winner.

Both halves of the exacta are gelded sons of Dark Kestrel, out of the winning Concerto mare Buckler, each racing as Ohio-born homebreds for Louis Ruberto Jr.'s Ruberto Racing Stable. Ruberto also trains both horses.

Buckeye Bullet led at every point of call in the six-furlong race for Ohio-breds, under jockey Erik Barbaran, while Midnight Mikey was second past every pole under Ricardo Feliciano. The two battled within a head of each other for the bulk of the race, and Buckeye Bullet briefly let his stablemate by, but he regained the advantage late and kicked on to prevail.

Dark Kestrel, an 18-year-old son of Stormy Atlantic, stands at Ruberto's farm in Libson, Ohio. The stallion won once in two starts as a juvenile, taking his debut in an Ellis Park maiden special weight by 3 1/2 lengths.

He entered stud in 2005 as a research stallion for the University of Florida, residing at the school's equine centers in Gainesville and Ocala.

While under the University of Florida banner, he sired runners of note including Stormofthecentury, who won the Grade 3 Turf Monster Handicap at Parx Racing under Ruberto's tutelage. The stallion moved to Ohio in 2015, a year after Stormofthecentury's graded stakes triumph.

The dam, Buckler, has had four foals to race, all sired by Dark Kestrel. In addition to the top two in the Rowland Memorial, she has also had stakes-placed Roses for Sharon and Kingofthebuckeye, who won two of five starts.

On her own accord, the Illinois-bred Buckler won 10 of 48 starts over the course of five years, racing primarily in the claiming ranks in Illinois, Florida, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. She was also owned and trained by Ruberto, who bought the mare privately in 2009, and raced her for two more years. Buckler's foals have earned a combined $770,929 on the racetrack.

The Rowland score brings Buckeye Bullet's lifetime record to 11 wins from 24 starts, with earnings of $406,759. Monday's race was the gelding's fourth consecutive victory in the stakes event, after he won the previous renewals in 2017, 2018, and 2020.

In running second, Midnight Mikey improved his lifetime earnings to $296,376, with a record of seven wins in 28 starts. He finished second in the 2019 Rowland Memorial – the one that didn't feature his brother – and he ran sixth to Buckeye Bullet in 2020.

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JACK Thistledown Boosts Purses 10 Percent For Meet Beginning April 26

The excitement of live Thoroughbred racing returns to JACK Thistledown Racino Monday, April 26, opening a 100-day meet that extends through Oct. 14.

JACK Thistledown will card eight races Monday through Thursday with post time at 12:50 p.m. The season will also feature special Saturday race day cards, beginning with live racing on Saturday, May 1 ahead of the famed Kentucky Derby. In addition to the exciting racing action, this year's races will offer a 10 percent increase in the track's purses in hopes of attracting top class competition.

“We are excited to get back to our full slate of racing,” said Director of Racing Patrick Ellsworth. “We worked closely with the Ohio State Racing Commission and the Horsemen's group last season to establish safe protocols that allowed us to race a shortened season. I'm very proud of our trainers, jockeys, and barn area personnel, along with our team here at JACK Thistledown, for doing their part to keep the show going. Now it's time to look ahead to the 2021 season.”

The centerpiece of the meet is the 87th running of the Grade 3 $500,000 Ohio Derby on June 26. The Ohio Derby has the distinction of being the only graded stakes race in the State of Ohio. Coming off the success of last year's participation in the Road to the Kentucky Derby as well as seeing its largest filed since 1999, this year's derby day will feature a total of $1 million in purse money.

Ohio Derby Day will also feature the return of the Lady Jacqueline Stakes, an open race for fillies and mares that boasts a purse of $250,000 and expects to attract the top older fillies & mares in the Country.

“With the return of the Lady Jacqueline, the success of Last year's Ohio Derby and the increase in purses this year, we fully anticipate a banner year for racing at Jack Thistledown Racino,” said Hugh Alan Drexler, racing secretary for JACK Thistledown Racino.

Doors open to the racing floor and track apron at 11:30 a.m. Admission to the races and parking are free. Children are welcome if accompanied by an adult. The minimum age for wagering on horse races in Ohio is 18.

More information is available at jackentertainment.com/thistledown/racing.

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Thistledown to Open with 10% Purse Increases

After a delayed and somewhat abbreviated 2020 meet due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Ohio's JACK Thistledown Racino will open Monday, Apr. 26, for a full 2021 season with a 10% boost in purses. The 100-day meet will feature cards on a Monday through Thursday schedule with special Saturday cards beginning on Derby day May 1. The highlight of the meet is the 87th edition of the GIII Ohio Derby, which is the only graded event in Ohio. It will be worth $500,000 this year and will be run June 26.

“We are excited to get back to our full slate of racing,” said Thistledown's director of racing, Patrick Ellsworth. “We worked closely with the Ohio State Racing Commission and the Horsemen's group last season to establish safe protocols that allowed us to race a shortened season. Now it's time to look ahead to the 2021 season.”

The Thistledown meet will conclude Oct. 14.

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