‘Pimlico Plus’ Concerns: Roving Preakness, Future Of Turf Racing, Synthetic Readiness

'The Week in Review', by T.D. Thornton

A few items that stand out after sifting through Friday's “Pimlico Plus” report issued by the Maryland Thoroughbred Racetrack Operating Authority (MTROA). The ambitious $400-million plan, which is subject to legislative approval, re-imagines the state's racing consolidated at one publicly funded track in Baltimore, the closure of Laurel Park, the construction of a new training facility in the state, and 1/ST Racing and Gaming ceding control of day-to-day Maryland racing to a non-profit entity.

Triple Crown traditionalists who are already in a tizzy about the GI Belmont S. needing to relocate to Saratoga Race Course and change its distance for 2024 because of the complete overhaul of Belmont Park had better brace for a radically nomadic renewal the sport's signature series in 2025.

If the proposed re-imagining of Pimlico Race Course gets green-lighted by the Maryland legislature as per the MTROA's desired timetable, and if the New York Racing Association (NYRA) confirms the expected Belmont-at-Saratoga festival again for next year, the 2025 series of spring Classics could feature the GI Kentucky Derby run per usual at Churchill Downs, followed by the GI Preakness S. at Laurel Park (the placeholder host during Pimlico's reconstruction), and the Belmont S. at Saratoga for the second season in a row (at the truncated distance of 10 furlongs because NYRA doesn't want to start what is traditionally a 12-furlong race on the Spa's far turn).

Even assuming that a modernized Belmont Park is ready to take back its namesake stakes in 2026, the Maryland time frame still has Pimlico's construction ongoing through at least that year, meaning the earliest return to Triple Crown normalcy, in terms of host tracks and race distances, could be 2027.

In addition, the 150th running of the Preakness will occur in 2025, but the festivities will likely be muted because of the temporary move. The anniversary will certainly be recognized, but don't expect a Preakness-at-Laurel celebration to have the same cachet Churchill will enjoy this year when it unveils long-planned facility upgrades and partners with the city of Louisville for an extended Derby 150 bash. It will be tough for whoever controls the rights to the Preakness to take advantage of the historical hoopla associated with its big anniversary if the race gets moved to temporary digs 28 miles south of Baltimore.

The Preakness is only one day, but the turf racing season in Maryland usually lasts for more than six months. Consolidating racing at Pimlico will mean limiting grass racing to one smaller course that won't get much of a break during the sweltering summer months.

    When Laurel's expanded turf course opened in 2005, it was billed as a game-changer for Maryland racing, and it has proven to be an investment that paid off handsomely in terms of delivering more grass opportunities, boosting field sizes and generating handle.

While Pimlico's existing (and proposed new) turf course is seven furlongs in circumference, roughly the same as Laurel's (seven furlongs and 254 feet), the key difference is width–Pimlico's existing/proposed width will remain at 70 feet according to the MTROA report, while Laurel's is a generous 142 feet wide, allowing for the ability to move portable rails out 17, 35, 53, 70 and 87 feet to provide six different running lanes.

Just last month, the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (MTHA) issued a press release that underscored how the “Laurel turf is integral not only to the Maryland racing product but the overall mid-Atlantic racing product.”

According to the MTHA's count, in 2023 Laurel ran 273 turf races, the most since 2019 and the highest number among all racetracks in the mid-Atlantic region. Average field size for the course was 9.2 horses per race over six-plus months of usage, while the average field size for dirt races at Laurel between Jan. 1 and Nov. 30 was only 6.8.

Pimlico, which conducted short meets in May/June and September 2023, ran 72 grass races, giving Maryland access to 345 in-state turf events. But the actual number of turf races at Pimlico isn't as important as the break its meets afford Laurel's course, which had shown signs of strain in previous years when Pimlico didn't run during the summer.

Pimlico's ability to carry on Maryland's reputation as a strong grass-racing state is dubious given the course's size and a calendar that will give it a summer break only when the Timonium fair is in session at the end of August and early September.

The turf course at Colonial Downs is 180 feet wide and 180 miles south of Pimlico. Over the course of a 27-date 2023 summer meet, the Virginia track ran 213 turf races, the second-highest in the region, according to the MTHA's numbers.

To Maryland, Colonial looms as a horse-siphoning threat in both the short term (for the several years Laurel will race almost non-stop while Pimlico gets rebuilt) and over the long term, when Pimlico takes over with a turf course that isn't as expansive or versatile as the one it's replacing.

Whether Pimlico's main track and turf course remain in their existing locations or get rotated to better fit within the redesigned property's footprint (both options are outlined by the MTROA), one of the report's “Guiding Principles” states that “The dirt track shall be engineered to be 'synthetic-ready' allowing the quick and economical transition from dirt cushion to a synthetic cushion.” The proposed new training facility is also supposed to have this “synthetic ready” infrastructure in place.

Wanting both Pimlico and Maryland's new training center to have the option of switching over from dirt to a synthetic surface in the future seems to be a good idea from a planning perspective, because it's unknown at this point if a federal mandate requiring synthetics might be in the pipeline from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act Authority. But claiming that having such infrastructure is going to position Maryland to be able to “quickly and economically” pivot from one surface to the other understates the difficulty of taking on this sort of after-the-fact conversion.

More than two decades of synthetic-surface history in North America has shown that making a switch is, by its very nature, neither fast nor cheap.

When Woodbine Racetrack changed from Polytrack to Tapeta during the winter of 2015-16, the work took three months, was purposely scheduled for the offseason, and had to include a settling-in period before horses were allowed on it. Turfway Park made the same surface switch in 2020, but had the luxury of an April-to-November time window between race meets to get the project done properly. To a certain degree, both those tracks were “synthetic ready” because they were switching from Polytrack to Tapeta. The cost for each project was measured in seven digits.

Can you imagine if “Pimlico Plus” reopened in 2027 with a dirt surface, and at some point soon after that the entity running the operation decided Maryland's only racing venue needed to cease racing for a while in order to switch over to synthetic?

By all means, build the base and its infrastructure to the best possible standards with a focus on safety. But if a synthetic surface is in Pimlico's future, decide on that right from the outset without making it seem like a subsequent change from dirt could realistically be “quickly and economically” accomplished.

When Laurel closed for five months in 2021 to replace its main dirt track with an entirely new dirt surface, Maryland racing had Pimlico to fall back on so racing on the circuit wouldn't go dark. If Pimlico becomes the state's sole Thoroughbred track, there will be no Plan B for Maryland racing if it needs to repair or switch surfaces.

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Road To Kentucky Derby: Catching Freedom Accelerates To Win Smarty Jones

Catching Freedom used an explosive late kick to post a 2½-length victory in Oaklawn's $300,000 Smarty Jones Stakes for 3-year-olds Monday.

Catching Freedom collected 10 points toward starting eligibility for the Kentucky Derby with the victory. The Smarty Jones offered 21 total qualifying points (10-5-3-2-1, respectively) to the top five finishers.

Cristian Torres rode Catching Freedom, the 8-5 favorite, for trainer Brad Cox and Iowa-based Albaugh Family Stables (Dennis Albaugh and son-in-law Jason Loutsch). Cox and Albaugh Family Stables teamed to win the Arkansas Derby (G1) last April with Angel of Empire.

Just Steel finished second in the Smarty Jones, a neck ahead of Informed Patriot.

Gettysburg Address, another neck farther back in fourth, was followed, in order, by Mystik Dan, Lagynos, Mo Winning, Chaperone, and Fidget. The top seven finishers were separated by 4½ lengths.

Catching Freedom ($5.40) finished the 1 1/16 miles over a fast track in 1:44.59. The Smarty Jones was extended to 1 1/16 miles in 2024 after being run at one-mile since its inception in 2008.

“He's a nice horse,” Torres said. “In his two races, he's a horse that hasn't shown much early speed. He just runs them down at the end. We were able to have great trip. I saved all the ground the first part of the race. As soon as I got him out, he accelerated like he always does.”

Cox said Catching Freedom is still learning.

“I think he was a little green there down the lane, but overall showed that he does have a lot of stamina and talent,” he said. “I thought he stepped up and ran well against a solid group of 3-year-olds.”

Ramon Vazquez, rider of Just Steel, said the colt got a little tired in the final sixteenth.

“The trainer (D. Wayne Lukas) told me he was going to be a little bit short. He tried hard. He's going to be a good horse.”

A son of Constitution out of the Pioneerof the Nile mare Catch My Drift, Catching Freedom raised his career earnings to $237,350 with his second victory from three career starts. Bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm LLC, Catching Freedom was a $575,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase in 2022. He was consigned by Warrendale Sales.

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‘He Got Out Of The Trouble’: Otello Clears Traffic, Kicks Late To Win Mucho Macho Man

WinStar Farm LLC and Siena Farm's Otello overcame traffic at the top of the stretch to capture Monday's $150,000 Mucho Macho Man with a late surge under Luis Saez on Gulfstream Park's New Year's Day program.

The Mucho Macho Man, a one-turn miles stakes for newly turned 3-year-olds, is the first stop on the Road to the Curlin Florida Derby (G1), the premier Triple Crown prep that will be renewed March 30.

Christophe Clement-trained Otello, a Curlin colt who was the 8-5 betting favorite, was making his stakes debut while coming off a debut victory at Aqueduct Nov. 24.

“He won first time out in New York, and he won well, got into a lot of trouble. The same applied today, so I guess he likes to be in trouble. But he won well, and he got out of the trouble. He was good enough to overcome it,” Clement said. “I'm not exactly sure what he beat today. I know that they liked the second horse. I'm thrilled. I don't train too many Curlins, so it's nice when it works out.”

Saez settled Otello on the rail behind a contested pace along the backstretch set by longshot Everdoit and pressed by Sea Streak for the first half-mile on fractions of :24.33 and :46.63. Approaching the stretch, when an attempt to squeeze inside a tiring Everdoit was thwarted, Saez was forced to bide his time before tipping to the outside aboard the chestnut colt in deep stretch. He responded with an impressive kick once clear of traffic to edge First World War.

“We had a little trouble at the three-eighths because the horse in front was going all over the place,” Saez said. “The thing with him was trying to get a clean run and he did it pretty well.”

Otello, who prevailed by a half-length over First World War, ran a mile in 1:37.76 and returned $5.40 for the win.

First World War, a winner on turf who had finished second in his dirt debut in a Churchill Downs optional claiming allowance last time out, loomed boldly at the top of the stretch while keeping Otello locked in on the rail, but shortened stride late to finish second by a neck over Sea Streak. Inveigled, who lacked room behind horses entering the stretch, made a mild stretch bid to finish fourth, three-quarters of a length behind Sea Streak. No More Time, who made a strong sweeping move on the turn into the stretch before faltering.

The next stop on the Road to the Curlin Florida Derby is the $250,000 Holy Bull (G3) at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 3, followed by the $400,000 Fountain of Youth (G2) at 1 1/16 miles March 2.

Clement said he would talk with WinStar's Elliott Walden about future plans for Otello, who was bred in Kentucky by co-owner Siena Farm.

“He's had two starts and he's had plenty of schooling,” he said of the winner, who was produced by the Eskendereya mare Isabella Sings, a multiple graded stakes winner. “We'll see how he comes out of it. As you know, Elliott Walden is very involved, so we'll speak with him and have a plan. We'll enjoy this for a day or so and go from there. He'll have to go two turns next time, obviously, the question is: where? We've got time to think about that.”

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Road To Kentucky Derby: Drum Roll Please, El Grande O To Meet In Jerome

Gold Square LLC's graded stakes-placed Drum Roll Please will look to rebound from a last-out third in the Remsen (G2) when taking on four rivals in Saturday's $150,000 Jerome, a one-mile test for sophomores at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The Jerome is the first Kentucky Derby prep race of the year on the New York circuit and offers qualifying points on a 10-5-3-2-1 scale to the top-five finishers, respectively.

Trained by Brad Cox, Drum Roll Please faced winners for the first time last out in the nine-furlong Remsen on December 2 at the Big A. There, he raced in seventh-of-10 under Javier Castellano and made up ground late in the turn to come within one length of the lead at the stretch call. The top duo of Dornoch and Sierra Leone drew clear from Drum Roll Please down the lane and finished 4 3/4 lengths ahead of him as he finished a clear third. Drum Roll Please earned a career-best 84 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

“He's training really good,” said Dustin Dugas, Cox's Belmont Park-based assistant. “He's always been one that trains well and he's a good keeper – a good doer.”

The Hard Spun chestnut graduated at third asking two starts back in a one-mile maiden tilt at Aqueduct, earning the victory with a more prominent trip under Castellano and challenging the top flight with a four-wide bid at the top of the lane. He was met with a bid from Hunt Ball in the stretch, but shook clear of his rival to draw away to a two-length score in a final time of 1:36.46.

Dugas said he expects the cutback will benefit Drum Roll Please.

“He's one that you just play the break. He can be a little sluggish sometimes, but once he grabs the bridle, he'll get in there for you,” said Dugas. “We'll see what the pace is and where he'll be.”

A $250,000 purchase by agent Joe Hardoon at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, Drum Roll Please is out of the multiple stakes-winning E Dubai mare Imply. His fourth dam, Sharon Brown, produced Hall of Famer and 1994 Horse of the Year Holy Bull.

Castellano has the call from the inside post.

Barry Schwartz's New York homebred El Grande O [post 4, Kendrick Carmouche] brings a seasoned resume that includes two stakes victories against fellow state-breds for trainer Linda Rice.

The dark bay son of Take Charge Indy was last seen scoring a front-running victory in the one-mile Sleepy Hollow over a muddy and sealed Big A main track on October 29. There, he battled for the early lead with Solo's Fury before drawing clear with ease to take a 5 1/2-length advantage at the stretch call. He faced a late challenge from stablemate B D Saints, but had plenty left to stave off his rival and post the 1 1/4-length victory in a final time of 1:37.98.

El Grande O was given a one-month freshening following the Sleepy Hollow and returned to the work tab in early December. He most recently worked five furlongs in 1:02.31 on Sunday over Belmont's training track.

“He's doing well,” said Rice. “He got a little break, so hopefully he's as good a 3-year-old and he was a 2-year-old.”

El Grande O's Sleepy Hollow victory came after an uncharacteristic sixth-place finish in the Champagne (G1) in October, which he had entered off a dominant 8 1/4-length romp in the state-bred Bertram F. Bongard in September at Aqueduct. His lone other start against open company came with a game runner-up effort to Ship Cadet in an off-the-turf edition of the Skidmore in August at Saratoga Race Course.

Through a record of 8-3-3-1, El Grande O boasts field-best earnings of $319,000. He is a half-brother to the graded stakes-placed Malibu Moon mare Meal Ticket.

“[Seasoning] is always helpful,” said Rice. “Bottom line is, if someone is just better than him, that's usually where it [helps].”

Goodfella's LLC's Regalo [post 5, Sheldon Russell] streaks in off back-to-back wins at Laurel Park for trainer Brittany Russell.

The son of Maximus Mischief was last seen passing his first test against winners in a 1 1/16-mile optional claimer on December 9 where he engaged in an early battle with Masakado before taking the lead at the stretch call and powering home a 4 1/2-length winner in a final time of 1:46.40.

The consistent bay finished second in his September debut sprinting six furlongs at the Maryland oval before graduating by 5 1/4 lengths when stretched out to seven furlongs. A $280,000 purchase by agent Frank Alosa at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, Regalo's second dam, Referendum, is a half-sister to multiple Grade 1 winner and Grade 1-producer Jersey Girl.

Built Wright Stables' Kentucky homebred Sweet Soddy J [post 3, Dylan Davis] will look to secure his third stakes win for trainer Raymond Ginter, Jr.

Sweet Soddy J was a three-length winner of the 6 1/2-furlong Timonium Juvenile in September and arrives from a frontrunning six-length romp in the seven-furlong Heft on December 30 at Laurel Park.

The Bee Jersey gelding is cross-entered in Saturday's 6 1/2-furlong Turfway Prevue, but owner Norman “Lynn” Cash said Sweet Soddy J is most likely to contest the Jerome.

“We're 85 percent to run there [at Aqueduct],” Cash said. “The horse is in Maryland and it looks like he can handle a little distance.

“It's a longer ship to Turfway,” added Cash. “I'd actually entered him at Turfway before the race ran at Laurel. I didn't realize then we had a six-length winner there, but the way he ran it just feels like he can go long. There's a lot more money going long than going short, so if he can take the long I'd much rather have him going that way.”

The well-traveled chestnut has competed at seven tracks through a record of 8-3-0-1, which includes a debut maiden-claiming score in August at Colonial and a third-place finish in the Fitz Dixon Jr. Memorial Juvenile in September at Presque Isle Downs.

Cash said Sweet Soddy J's win at Timonium was even better than it looked on paper.

“He broke decent in the first race [at Colonial] and he took the lead going around the corner and drew off a little bit. The next one [at Timonium] – where he came off the pace – he stumbled coming out of the gate and almost hit the rail,” Cash said. “A horse came in and he reacted and almost hit the rail coming through the gap. The whole race he sat behind them because he couldn't get through. He finally got through at the top of the short stretch. He was eight or 10 lengths better than everybody that day.”

Sweet Soddy J has made one previous start at a one-turn mile finishing a distant eighth after pressing the pace in the Champagne in October. But Cash said Sweet Soddy J has improved with racing and could have been a three-time stakes winner had he switched leads after putting a head in front at the stretch call in the six-furlong James F. Lewis III in November at Laurel.

“He had the race won but he wouldn't switch leads. That's been his issue in his earlier races,” Chapman said. “He made the lead at the head of the stretch, but he didn't switch leads and we ended up running fourth. If he switches leads that day, he'd have won three stakes.”

Cash said Sweet Soddy J switched leads perfectly last out and he is hopeful that Dylan Davis can work out a patient trip.

“Just let him break and get where he wants to. If he makes the lead, I don't need him way out in front,” Cash said. “I hope we push towards the lead coming around the corner. We don't have to have the lead, but get him running down the lane.

“He looks like he wants to go long. He's a big horse,” added Cash. “If he had another furlong to go last time he'd make that easily, he was pulling away from everybody.”

Rounding out the field is Calumet Farm's maiden winner Khanate [post 2, Manny Franco] for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher.

The Hightail colt, a $35,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, drew off to win by 10 1/2-lengths in a restricted seven-furlong maiden sprint in October at Keeneland. He arrives from a pacesetting sixth in a 1 1/16-mile optional-claimer on November 9 at Churchill Downs.

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