Hall Of Fame Trainer Mark Casse Approaching 3,000-Win Milestone

Trainer Mark Casse's next chance to notch career win No. 3,000 is scheduled to come Thursday at Gulfstream Park West in Miami Gardens, Fla.

Following the cancellation of Sunday's program at Woodbine, where he had seven horses entered, Casse's milestone win could be reached with Live Oak Plantation's Souper Watson in Thursday's Race 3 at Gulfstream Park West. The 3-year-old Ghostzapper gelding is scheduled to make his first start since April 25 in the 7 ½-furlong maiden special weight race on turf.

Casse, who was elected to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame this year, also has entered What a Beaut in Thursday's Race 6, a 7 ½-furlong turf allowance for Florida-bred fillies and mares, at Gulfstream Park West. However, his second shot at No. 3000 – should Souper Watson come up short in Race 3 – is likely to come in Churchill Downs' Race 5, which has a scheduled post time a few minutes earlier than Race 6 at Gulfstream Park West, according to Equibase.

Gary Barber's What a Beaut, a 4-year-old daughter of Beau Choix, finished second in a Nov. 2 optional claiming allowance at Gulfstream Park West n her first start since May.

Casse has an additional entry at Churchill and two entries at Woodbine following Gulfstream Park West's Race 6 on Thursday.

A native of Indiana, Casse took out his trainer's license at the age of 17 in Massachusetts. He saddled his first career winner Joe's Coming in 1979 and his first graded stakes winner in 1984 when winning the Jamaica (G3) at Belmont Park with Raja's Shark. A 12-time Sovereign Award winner, Casse is ranked sixth in North America this year in wins (171) and purse earnings ($10.777). Just a few of Casse's many highlights include saddling winners in the 2019 Preakness (War of Will) and 2019 Belmont (Sir Winston) and training two-time champion Tepin, winner of the Queen Anne Stakes (G1) at Royal Ascot.

Casse has won training titles at Woodbine, Keeneland, Churchill and Turfway. He will become the 34th horsemen to win 3000 races.

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Trainer Guadalupe Preciado Celebrates 2,000th Win At Parx

When Chub Wagon, a 3-year-old filly making her career debut, came romping home to thoroughly convincing 7 1/2 length win in the fourth race Monday afternoon at Parx, trainer Guadalupe Preciado celebrated the 2,000th win on his career.

A native of Mexico, Preciado came to the U.S. and began training horses in 1989. A chance meeting with owner Jack Mondel (Hidden Lane Farms) jump-started his career in the early '90's, led by multiple graded stakes winner Mr. Nasty (G3 Gravesend Handicap
– 1990 and G2 Tom Fool – 1991). He also won the G2 Demoiselle for Mondel in 1990 with Debutante's Halo.

Inducted into the Parx Hall of Fame in 2013, Preciado also trained multiple graded stakes winners Favorite Tale (G3 Gallant Bob – 2014 and G2 Smile Sprint – 2015) and Caught in the Rain (G2 Mrs. Revere – 2002 and G3 Athenia – 2003). Favorite Tale was honored as Pennsylvania Horse of the Year in 2014.

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Baffert-Trained 2-Year-Olds Rate Most Attention In Weekend Stakes At Del Mar

Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert is scheduled to send out 9-5 morning line favorite Private Mission and two other 2-year-old fillies in a field of eight for Saturday's $100,000 Desi Arnaz Stakes and 6-5 favorite Spielberg to face five 2-year-old male rivals in Sunday's Grade III, $100,000 Bob Hope this weekend at Del Mar.

Baffert increased his Breeders' Cup victory total to 17 last Saturday with the wins by Gamine in the $1 million Filly & Mare Sprint and the 1-2 finish of Authentic and Improbable in the $6 million Classic at Keeneland. He then spent a day or two saying good bye to Authentic, Improbable and Pacific Classic winner Maximum Security – fifth in the Breeders' Cup Classic – as they went off to Lexington, KY., area farms where they'll stand stud.

Authentic went to Spendthrift, Improbable to Winstar and Maximum Security to Ashford Stud.

Three's a crowd, even for Baffert, but seeing horses of great accomplishment off to second careers is a part of racing's annual cycle.

“You don't want to see them go, but we have more good horses around. I have great clients (who provide),” Baffert said this morning from Santa Anita. “You can't think about the past too much, you look ahead.”

Baffert has older horses like Mucho Gusto and Roadster to look forward to campaigning in 2021 and it will be no surprise to anyone who has followed racing to any degree recently if a heretofore unknown soon-to-be 3-year-old emerges from the shedrow as a major Kentucky Derby contender. (Especially if the Derby is held on the first Saturday in May again).

Of immediate concern to Baffert, however, are the upcoming stakes here. Having returned from Kentucky and undergone 72 hours of isolation before returning to work at Santa Anita, he'll be making his first Crosby season appearance here on Saturday.

In addition to Private Mission, an Into Mischief filly, Baffert has Varda (6-1) and Heels Up (8-1) to look after in the Desi Arnaz. Private Mission and Varda were both $750,000 auction purchases. Heels Up sold for $350,000.

“They're all winners, and it's not easy to win races out here,” Baffert said. “They're all training well, but it could be a tough race. Looks like Richard Mandella (Astute, 3-1) and John Sadler (Queengol, 4-1) have some good ones in there.”

Speilberg, a $1 million purchase a year ago, will be coming back two weeks after breaking his maiden in his fourth career start – two of them against Grade I competition. Baffert has saddled the winner four times in six runnings of the Hope, the initial graded stakes of the Crosby meeting. Spielberg, a son of Union Rags, will be shortened to seven furlongs and put on the same course where he finished second, 1 ¾ lengths behind Dr. Schivel, in the Del Mar Futurity on September 7.

“He came out of the last one very well and the seven-eighths should be OK for him,” Baffert said. “And he runs well at Del Mar.”

Spielberg has the maiden win and two runner-up finishes last summer on his record here.

The field from the rail for Saturday's Desi Arnaz: Plum Sexy (Heriberto Figueroa, 12-1); Private Mission (Drayden Van Dyke); Canoodling (Umberto Rispoli, 12-1); Varda (Abel Cedillo); Queengol (Juan Hernandez); Miss Costa Rica (Flavien Prat, 10-1); Astute (Mike Smith), and Heels Up (Victor Espinoza).

The field from the rail for Sunday's Bob Hope: Ambivalent (Mario Gutierrez, 7-2); Spielberg (Cedillo, 6-5); Weston (Van Dyke, 3-1); Coastal Kid (Tyler Baze, 15-1); Red Flag (Espinoza, 6-1), and Uncle Boogie (Prat, 5-1).

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Trainer Marc Stott Fighting For Career After ‘Very Harsh’ Four-Year Ban In Denmark

Leading Scandinavian trainer Marc Stott is fighting to save his career after being hit with a four-year ban.

Stott, older brother of Royal Ascot-winning jockey Kevin Stott, had to cease training with immediate effect and disband his stable over offences involving the use of Duphalyte, a combination of vitamins and electrolytes. While not a banned substance, Duphalyte is not allowed on raceday.

Stott has admitted administering the substance to two horses within the recommended 96-hour withdrawal time by mistake. However, the Scandinavian Doping Committee ruled these were “repeated and systematic” offences and recommended a four-year exclusion which was duly imposed last month by the Danish regulator, Dansk Galop.

Neither of the horses involved, both of whom are no longer in training, tested positive in a case that dates back to 2018.

“I was very stunned and upset when I found out about this,” said Stott, 34. “I didn't understand why and how they came to this decision.

“I think what they have done is very harsh,” he went on. “I made a mistake but the doping committee reckoned it was something I would do all the time and it wasn't a mistake, which is not the case.

“I thought I would get a fine. I am going to appeal the case and somehow try to change this. It's harsh that I have had to pay such a price.”

Stott's English father Ken Stott rode all over Europe as a jockey before settling in Denmark, where Marc has become one of the most successful trainers in the country from a base in Aarhus. He has won many of the Classics staged in Denmark, Sweden and Norway; he also trained a G3 winner in Germany last year.

Marc Stott believes the case against him was brought using veterinary bills provided by a disgruntled former owner. It was not heard by Dansk Galop but instead put before the Scandinavian Doping Committee, which sits in Sweden.

In a press release the Danish Jockey Club said the committee had found the case proven.

“The offences consist of repeated and systematic violations of the applicable waiting period for treatment with Duphalyte (liquid with vitamins and electrolytes given as drops), where the waiting time is 96 hours,” it said.

In a second statement, the Jockey Club added: “The case concerns partly illegal medication and partly violations of the current waiting period for treatment.

“Furthermore, there are repeated offences. Everyone in the sport regrets this unfortunate case, which we hope will be proof that we in every way must work on having a completely clean sport.”

Stott said: “A lot of people think this is about doping, but it's not. Duphalyte is vitamins and the systematic part of it is not true. I haven't had one horse ever test positive for anything since I started training in 2013.

“Apparently they had a bill from the owner that he handed in to the Jockey Club where it says the horses had this, and when they got it,” he added. “Some of it is a mistake and some is not, because it has been used while factoring in the 96 hours.

“That's why I am going to appeal and hope they understand that that is not the way I work.”

Stott claimed news of the ban had come virtually out of the blue. “Dansk Galop approached me in the middle of the summer and had a chat with me, and then I didn't hear anymore,” he claimed.

“Then five months later I got a call on a Friday night and they told me I had a suspension. I had nobody to represent me. I was told the verdict and that was it.

“I can only say I am sorry,” Stott added. “They were a couple of juvenile mistakes but the other things aren't true. It's very harsh; I've never been in any trouble before. The horses have been tested regularly and they've never found anything.

“I just hope people will understand my side of things so it won't have any effect on my future career because I love what I'm doing. Horses are my life and I am good at it.”

Dansk Galop chairman Nick Elsass said: “The Danish Jockey Club CEO has come up with this verdict and now Marc is appealing. Within two weeks he has to tell the Jockey Club whether he wants to appeal and he has confirmed he is going to.

“Then he has another 30 days to explain why he is appealing, for what reasons and what it is he is contesting. Then the appeal court will be set. Marc can have legal representation and call witnesses. We have advised Marc to bring someone who can present his case.

“It is a very professionally done procedure. There will be at least four people in the appeal court, one of which will be someone with formal legal training.”

Elsass added: “We are very sad about this story because Marc has now been punished and Marc is a very gifted horseman. You don't train horses like he has trained to win Derbys and other big races in Scandinavia if you're not. Therefore it's double harsh that we will lose him at least for a number of years because of this.”

This story was originally published on Horse Racing Planet and is reprinted here with permission. Find more content like this at HorseRacingPlanet.com.

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