Veteran Drafted Regains Winning Form In Toboggan

Dublin Fjord Stables, Racepoint Stables, Kevin D. Hilbert and Thomas E. O'Keefe's Drafted made a bold move in the turn to capture Saturday's re-scheduled Grade 3, $150,000 Toboggan, a seven-furlong sprint for older horses at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The Toboggan was initially slated for last Saturday's card which was cancelled due to the impact of a powerful winter storm in the New York City metropolitan area.

Trained by David Duggan and expertly piloted by Jose Ortiz, Drafted secured his first win since taking the Group 3 Mahab Al Shimaal in March 2019 at Meydan Racecourse.

Hopeful Treasure broke alertly from post 4 under Trevor McCarthy as Happy Medium, the 1-5 mutuel favorite, was urged to the front by Manny Franco from the outermost post 5 to mark the opening quarter-mile in 23.55 seconds with War Tocsin surging up the rail in an early pace battle.

Happy Medium wrestled away command in front of a stalking trio of War Tocsin, Repo Rocks and Hopeful Treasure through a half-mile in 47.04, but Ortiz and Drafted swooped the field through the turn with an energetic outside brush.

Drafted established a four-length lead at the stretch call and powered home a 4 1/2-length winner in a final time of 1:25.06 over a muddy and harrowed main track. Repo Rocks completed the exacta by six lengths over Happy Medium. Hopeful Treasure and War Tocsin rounded out the order of finish.

Duggan said he was pleased to see the veteran sprinter return to winning ways.

“They went fast enough up front and he got into a lovely rhythm. The speed stopped and I knew the seven-eighths would help him because he's got that patented run if you leave him alone,” Duggan said. “He's been showing up without getting his head in front, so it was nice to get him justified. He's a little hard on himself in the training, so he does a lot of pony work and a lot of lighter training.”

Duggan earned his first graded stakes score since Porte Bonheur captured the 2009 Grade 2 First Flight Handicap at Belmont Park.

“It's been a long time between drinks. I've been in layup for a while but the horses we have, we try to make competitive,” Duggan said.

Ortiz said Drafted touted his own early move.

“I was travelling well and as soon as I put him in the clear he jumped on the bridle and wanted to go,” Ortiz said. “I figured, I might as well go now. It was a small field and I knew the horse on the lead is a good horse. So I passed him early. I was hoping no one was coming from behind. I know it was an early move, but I did it to win.

“It was just a feeling,” Ortiz added. “I felt that it was a good time to pass everyone and I had enough to keep going.”

Drafted was conditioned in his 2016 juvenile campaign by Eoin Harty. He then joined the stable of trainer Doug Watson in Dubai, capturing the 2019 Group 3 Al Shindagha Sprint ahead of his Mahab Al Shimaal score.

The 8-year-old Field Commission gelding made his first start for Duggan in November 2020, finishing fifth in the Grade 3 Fall Highweight at the Big A. He entered the Toboggan from an even third in the six-furlong Gravesend on December 19 at the Big A.

Michelle Nevin said Happy Medium, who entered on a three-race win streak, may have been hampered racing to the inside of rivals.

“The track might not have been the greatest down in there,” Nevin said. “We're just going to have to get him home and make sure everything is okay.”

Bred in Florida by John Foster, Barbara Hooker and Field Commission Partnership, Drafted banked $82,500 in victory while improving his record to 25-7-2-3. He returned $15.80 for a $2 win bet.

Live racing resumes Sunday at the Big A with nine-race card featuring the $100,000 Jimmy Winkfield in Race 4 and the $100,000 Ruthless in Race 8. First post is 12:50 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

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Happy Medium Makes Stakes Debut In Re-Scheduled Toboggan

Jay Em Ess Stable's talented Happy Medium will make his stakes debut in Saturday's re-scheduled 129th running of the Grade 3, $150,000 Toboggan, a seven-furlong sprint for older horses, to kick off graded stakes action in 2022 on the NYRA circuit at Aqueduct Racetrack.
The Toboggan was initially scheduled for last Saturday's card which was cancelled due to the impact of a powerful winter storm in the New York City metropolitan area. Five of the original seven Toboggan contenders have returned with defectors including Chateau and Penguin Power, who finished sixth in last Saturday's Fire Plug at Laurel Park.
Trained by Michelle Nevin, the three-time winning Happy Medium seeks his fourth straight trip to the winner's circle having captured his trio of wins by a combined 21 1/4-lengths.
The 4-year-old son of Runhappy arrives off a triumph in a second-level allowance optional claimer on Dec. 18 at the Big A, defeating next-out winner Wudda U Think Now and stakes-winner Chestertown. Happy Medium led at every point of call last out while extending his advantage throughout the 6 1/2-furlong journey, registering a career-best 104 Beyer Speed Figure for the seven-length romp.
After bursting onto the scene in September at Belmont Park with a maiden special weight victory over four next-out winners by 9 1/4-lengths, Happy Medium handled a sloppy and sealed track with style when defeating winners by five lengths in November at Aqueduct.
“He's a very nice horse and we just have taken the logical steps to go along with him. We've gone from his maiden, a-other-than and two-other-than.” Nevin said. “This step is the next logical one, so we're excited to see him run.”
Happy Medium's maiden score came off a six-month respite. He finished third at 22-1 odds in his career debut in March 2021 at Aqueduct.
“He was a little immature from two into his 3-year-old year and we just wanted to give him some time to develop,” Nevin said.
Happy Medium, bred in Kentucky by Colts Neck Stables, is out of the Coronado's Quest mare Well Spring, who also produced Mendip – a multiple group stakes winner in Dubai. Happy Medium's second dam, Chaposa Springs, captured the 1995 Grade 1 Test and 1996 Grade 1 Ballerina at Saratoga Race Course.
Manny Franco, aboard Happy Medium for all three of his victories, will return to the irons from the outermost post 5. Happy Medium will carry 120 pounds.
Returning to the Big A by way of Parx Racing is Hopeful Treasure, who sprung an 18-1 upset in the six-furlong Grade 3 Fall Highweight last out on November 28. The 5-year-old bay son of Oxbow provided trainer Michael Catalano, Jr. with his first graded stakes victory, fending off a late challenge by graded stakes winner Green Light Go to win by a head.
Owned by Tony Como's Just In Time Racing, Hopeful Treasure was bought for $6,000 by his original trainer Michael Pino, who conditioned the horse through three wins in his first eight career starts.
Transferred to Catalano, Jr., Hopeful Treasure picked up three more victories including a 1 3/4-length allowance score at Parx four weeks prior to the Fall Highweight.
“We thought about running in a stake at Parx at the end of the year and it just seemed like he wasn't back to where he was mentally,” Catalano, Jr. said. “He started to hit his stride in early January and has been just doing better and better each day since then. He's ready to run right now and hopefully he'll show up at one of these places and run really well again.”
Trevor McCarthy, a two-time stakes-winning rider this meet, picks up the mount from post 4 aboard Hopeful Treasure, who was assigned a field high 124 pounds.
Rounding out the field are War Tocsin [post 1, Silvestre Gonzalez], Repo Rocks [post 2, Ruben Silvera] and Drafted [post 3, Jose Ortiz].
The Toboggan is slated as Race 3 while the Withers will go as Race 8 on Saturday's nine-race card. First post is 12:50 p.m. Eastern.
America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.
NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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The Toboggan First Ignited Richard Migliore’s Desire To Become A Jockey

When asking an aspiring jockey what races they dream of winning, marquee events like the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes often top the list. But Brooklyn-native Richard Migliore had his heart set on winning the Toboggan, which will celebrate its 129th renewal on Saturday, at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Migliore, 57, was a multiple Grade 1-winning jockey with 4,450 career victories and earnings in excess of $160 million through a riding career that spanned three decades. Today, he serves as a racing analyst for the NYRA-produced America's Day at the Races.

As a kid, Migliore accompanied his father on frequent trips to Aqueduct where he would admire pictures on the second floor wall of the horses who had won the Wood Memorial.

While trips to the Big A were instrumental in shaping Migliore's dreams of becoming a jockey, it wasn't the Wood Memorial or even any Triple Crown race that encouraged Migliore to pursue his goals – it was the Toboggan.

Migliore's connection with the historic sprint began in 1976 when Harbor View Farm's homebred Due Diligence captured the Toboggan by 4 3/4-lengths under Hall of Famer Jorge Velasquez.

“My father and I would catch the train right off Avenue U in Brooklyn. There was a bakery that had the best Boston cream donuts right by the station,” Migliore recalled. “My father took me to Aqueduct one day in 1976 to watch the Toboggan. On the train ride home, I remember telling my father, 'Pop, I'm going to be a jockey and I'm going to win the Toboggan Handicap one day.'

“I already had it in my head that I wanted to be a jockey,” Migliore continued. “I grew up in Brooklyn maybe nine miles from Aqueduct. I didn't think about the Kentucky Derby, that might as well have been Mars. But Aqueduct was in my backyard pretty much and the Toboggan had meaning to me.”

Migliore proved to be a man of his word. In 1981, the 17-year-old was the leading rider on the NYRA circuit and awarded honors for Outstanding Apprentice Jockey in only his second year of riding.

But it wasn't until 1985 that Migliore achieved his childhood dream of winning the Toboggan, piloting Jerome Moss' Fighting Fit to a narrow victory over regally-bred stakes-winner Entropy for the late Hall of Famer Bobby Frankel.

Migliore expanded on his success at Aqueduct that winter by guiding Eternal Prince to victories in the Gotham and Wood Memorial en route to his first Kentucky Derby mount aboard the son of Majestic Prince, finishing 12th in the first leg of the Triple Crown won by Spend a Buck.

“I can vividly remember being on the train telling my father I was going to win the Toboggan Handicap. It was about nine or ten years after the conversation, but it was definitely on my mind,” Migliore said. “It felt really cool. A couple of months later I won the Wood Memorial. I just remembered being that kid staring at the wall of all the pictures of Wood Memorial winners. I could have told you every trainer, owner, and jockey that had ever won it. Aqueduct has always been meaningful to me and obviously the Toboggan was important because some of my first memories are attached to it, knowing that I wanted my life to go in the direction it went.”

Migliore said winning the Toboggan aboard a Frankel-trained horse was extra special as the Hall of Fame trainer was a first cousin of his former teacher, Joe Rodlitz.

“Fighting Fit was a big deal because Bobby Frankel was shipping a horse from California and tapping me to ride him,” Migliore said. “Ironically enough, my sixth grade social studies teacher Mr. Rodlitz was Bobby Frankel's first cousin. I remember one day he caught me reading a racing form in class and made me stay after class. I thought I was in trouble. But then he told me who his cousin was, which was really cool.”

Migliore went on to win the Toboggan five more times in his 30-year riding career, including back-to-back wins aboard fan favorite Affirmed Success [2002-03] for trainer Rick Schosberg.

“What a cool horse,” Migliore said of the multimillionaire who raced until age 9. “I got him later in his career. In 2002, it was a prep for the Carter and he ended up winning the Carter as an 8-year-old. Winning a Grade 1 as an 8-year-old was just remarkable.”

The following year, Affirmed Success arrived at the Toboggan off a third-place finish as the beaten favorite in an Aqueduct allowance race. Migliore, who said he was critical of his own ride in the allowance effort, was named back on the horse and guided him to a win in the 2003 Toboggan.

The win marked the final career victory for Affirmed Success, who produced triple-digit speed figures in all but 4-of-42 starts.

“Rick Schosberg had been so supportive and gave me confidence,” Migliore said. “People don't realize that when a jockey makes a mistake, they'll never make that mistake again if they're left on the horse – not if they're any kind of a rider. So, him leaving me on the horse and being rewarded with another Toboggan was like redemption for a ride I wish I could have had back the start before.”

Schosberg said Migliore and Affirmed Success developed a strong bond.

“To win the Toboggan twice at eight and nine was really special and the two of them had a really great relationship,” Schosberg recalled. “When we put him on the horse the first time, they really got along. The horse had a tremendous personality, like Richie does. Sometimes, he would be warming up before a race and just stare at an airplane. I told Richie, 'He's trying to figure out how that works'. He was a smart horse. He wasn't just looking at it, he was trying to figure out how something flies while warming up for a Grade 1. The three of us were a little long in the tooth, but it was fun.”

With a total of six Toboggan victories, Migliore is the winningest jockey in the race's rich history. In addition to Fighting Fit and Affirmed Success, Migliore also rode Royal Haven [1997], Wouldn't We All [1999] and Kazoo [2006] to Toboggan wins.

Migliore would usually stay in New York for the winter rather than heading to warmer climates to ride. He attributed his success in the Toboggan to his familiarity with the Big A oval.

“I always liked to stay in New York. First, I'm a native New Yorker. Second, I have kids and when I was riding, I didn't want to move them around too much and disrupt their lives,” Migliore said. “Riding at Aqueduct was great. The purses were great, you're done by 4:30 or 5:00 and you can go home and have dinner with your family. It was the perfect balance of professional and personal life.”

The Toboggan isn't the only race in New York with sentimental value for Migliore. He grew up in the Gravesend area of Brooklyn and won the neighborhood's namesake race at Aqueduct in 1997 aboard Royal Haven in a dead heat with Stalwart Member.

“I won that race which I thought was pretty cool, and then I won the Brooklyn twice and I grew up in Brooklyn,” Migliore said of his Brooklyn Handicap scores with Iron Deputy [2003] and Seattle Fitz [2004]. “Those things are not lost on me. I appreciate them a lot.”

Through Migliore's outstanding riding career, he won the Mike Venezia Award in 2003 and the George Woolf Memorial Award in 2008, the latter the same year he rode Desert Code to victory in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.

Crowned as the leading rider in New York in 1981 and 1985, Migliore also has either won or tied as leading rider at 10 different NYRA meets. But the veteran rider said few races connect to him as closely as his affection for the Toboggan.

“It has personal meaning to me since it was a race that helped fuel or fan the flame that helped me become a rider,” Migliore said. “There's other races in New York that I have the most wins in as well. But personally, the Toboggan means a lot to me.”

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Classy Veterans Pete’s Play Call, Stan The Man Get Rematch In Toboggan

Graded stakes action kicks off at Aqueduct Racetrack for 2021 with a field of five assembling for Saturday's 128th running of the Grade 3, $150,000 Toboggan for 4-year-olds and upward going seven furlongs over the main track.

Trained by Rudy Rodriguez for owner Michael Dubb, the 8-year-old Pete's Play Call was claimed for $62,500 out of a winning effort in an optional-claiming sprint on Nov. 27 at the Big A. He made first start for new connections a winning one when capturing the 6 1/2-furlong Gravesend last out on Jan. 2 at Aqueduct.

Pete's Play Call was hustled out of the gate in the Gravesend by Jorge A. Vargas, Jr. and sat to the outside of pacesetter Happy Farm. After establishing clear command approaching the quarter pole, Pete's Play Call held off a late charge from fellow Toboggan aspirant Stan the Man to win by 2 ½ lengths over the muddy and sealed track.

Pete's Play Call, who has gone 4-1-0 in his last six starts, worked five-eighths in 1:01.58 on January 22 on the Belmont Park dirt training track.

“In his last four or five races, it looks like he's improving a little,” said Rodriguez, who saddled Head Heart Hoof (2013) and Sassicaia (2016) to Toboggan scores. “He's been doing great. We're just trying to keep him happy and keep him fit. He really looks like he's been coming along well and I hope that he stays the way he's been doing. He worked very well the other day. He's full of himself right now.”

The seasoned son of Munnings boasts the most victories in the Toboggan field with a 46-14-9-6 lifetime record and earnings of $648,421.

Bred in Maryland by Mr. and Mrs. Charles McGinnes, Pete's Play Call is out of the 2019 Maryland Broodmare of the Year Taft Lil Queen, who also produced graded stakes winner Kiss to Remember. He comes from the same family as dual Grade 1-winner Spun Sugar.

Vargas, Jr. will return to the saddle from the inside post.

Long Lake Stable's Stan the Man will attempt to turn the tables on Pete's Play Call in search of a third stakes victory and first graded score for trainer John Terranova, who won the 2010 Toboggan with Wall Street Wonder.

The four-times graded stakes-placed Stan the Man arrives at Saturday's event with consistent form, having finished in the money in his last five starts, all of which were at stakes level.

Prior to finishing a late-closing second in the Gravesend, the 7-year-old Broken Vow chestnut was a close second to Toboggan-rival Share the Ride in the Grade 3 Fall Highweight on Nov. 27 at the Big A.

Stan the Man enjoyed a prosperous campaign in 2020, which included a triumph in the seven-furlong Tale of the Cat at Saratoga and three placings against graded stakes company. At the tail end of 2019, Stan the Man notched his first stakes victory when taking the Queens County at Aqueduct going nine furlongs.

“He's been a good horse and a fun horse for us, very consistent. Especially lately, since the summer,” Terranova said. “We're proud of him. He's happy and healthy and this looks like the right spot for him.”

Jockey Eric Cancel will be aboard from post 4.

Silvino Ramirez's Share the Ride vies for his second graded stakes victory for trainer Antonio Arriaga.

The dark bay or brown son of Candy Ride won the Grade 3 Fall Highweight at the Big A two starts back and arrives at the Toboggan off a close runner-up finish to Wendell Fong in the Fire Plug on Jan. 16 at Laurel Park.

Jockey Manny Franco will be aboard from post 3.

Misty Hollow Farm's 7-year-old Drafted will seek to get back to his winning form for trainer David Duggan. After a 2-year-old season with trainer Eoin Harty, the son of Field Commission raced for the barn of Middle East-based Doug Watson, for whom he won two Group 3 events at Meydan Racecourse in the winter of 2019. In his last effort, he finished third beaten 5 ¾ lengths in the Gravesend.

Jockey Dylan Davis rides from post 2.

Rounding out the field is American Power, who attempts a third consecutive victory after besting stakes winner Mihos and next out-winning stable mate Lil Commissioner in a Dec. 11 optional claiming tilt going seven furlongs.

Trained by Rob Atras and owned by Sanford J. Goldfarb and Irwin Goldfarb, the 6-year-old son of Power Broker won three races in a row during his 2019 campaign for trainer Linda Rice.

Big A winter meet leading rider Kendrick Carmouche has the mount from post 5.

The Toboggan is slated as Race 4 on Saturday's nine-race program, which has a first post of 12:20 p.m. Eastern.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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