Rispoli Guides Lighthouse To Music City Stakes Score At Kentucky Downs

LNJ Foxwoods' Lighthouse showed them the way home in the $400,000 Music City Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at the RUNHAPPY Meet at Kentucky Downs in Franklin, Ky., becoming the first runner to win at the current meet after shipping in from California. The 1 1/2-length victory over Miss J McKay sent burgeoning superstar jockey Umberto Rispoli home with a winner out of only two mounts after spending most of a week in town.

But Rispoli came — and wanted to stay — for the Simon Callaghan-trained Lighthouse, a daughter of Mizzen Mast who in her last race was second by only a neck against older fillies and mares.

“When they postponed the races, I could have traveled back for the meeting at Santa Anita,” said the Italian-born Rispoli, who rode in Hong Kong before relocating to Southern California, where he lost the Del Mar riding title on the last day by one win to his close friend Flavien Prat. “I decided to stay. I knew she was going to have a chance. She probably could have won last time as well, but the distance was too short at Del Mar. So I knew she might handle the track. When Simon ships a horse, he's always confident. This was good. It was a nice experience. The track is a funny track. But being around Europe, I've been riding many times on tracks like that so it doesn't bother me at all. I waited three more days and I'm so happy to go back home with a winner. So that's perfect.”

Evil Lyn and Bredenbury (IRE) led through the first quarter-mile in a swift 21.87 seconds while Rispoli kept Lighthouse in striking distance, just 1 1/2 lengths off the pace.

With a half-mile booked in 45.27 seconds, Lighthouse was about to roll by Evil Lyn, and the eventual winner led by a quickly-widening three lengths with a furlong remaining. Lighthouse easily held safe Miss J McKay, who was fourth by two lengths during the first four furlongs and gamely stayed on to finish 1 1/2 lengths behind the winner. The time for 6 1/2 furlongs was 1:14.99 over a course rated good.

“We were surprised because there wasn't much speed in the race,” Rispoli said. “When I looked around and nobody wants to go, I say, 'Well, I'll take it.' I knew she was good enough to win from the front… I decided to run away, and she ran very good to the line. So I'm very pleased and happy with her.

“I've been riding around the world, and even in Italy we have a few up and down tracks. Not like this. But in England and France too. But I love the grass, so I can adapt myself anywhere, no matter what.”

Lighthouse, who had previously run six times exclusively at Santa Anita and Del Mar, has failed to hit the board only once in seven starts. With her victory at Kentucky Downs, she has three wins, two seconds and a third combined with earnings of $335,171 after today's payday of $233,120. Available money in the Music City was $360,385.

“She's been incredibly consistent,” Callaghan said by phone. “I've been on a really progressive path, and I think her best race of her lifetime was against older fillies. I think that's when she really showed she's really improving. We felt it warranted the trip. We thought it's good timing, it's a big pot and makes sense. It was great that she got the win.

“She was in a good spot. But you're always cognizant on that track that you don't want to go too early. You just want to be patient. She was just loaded the whole way. Umberto hasn't ridden much at this track but is a world-class rider. I said 'Just don't take anything away from her. But certainly don't be too aggressive.' She just placed herself there. He sat as as long as he could, and she was loaded and he went on and got the job done.”

Even-money favorite Kimari was another length-and-a-quarter back in third, and Outburst was fourth, an additional 2 3/4 lengths back.

Trainer Wesley Ward — who settled on the Music City after entering Kimari in three stakes this meet, including in Wednesday's closing-day Grade 3 Franklin-Simpson against males, joked afterward, “Maybe I'll run tomorrow, too.” More seriously he said, “She ran well.”

The top two finishers were each sent off at 11-1 odds, producing a $2 exacta worth $206.40. Mutuels paid $24.00, $10.40 and $6.80 to win, place and show on $2 tickets with Lighthouse on them. Miss J McKay produced payoffs of $10.00 and $5.60 to place and show, and Kimari paid $3.20 to show.

After the four best runners, rounding out the order of finish were Lucrezia and Bredenbury who dead-heated for fifth, She's My Type (FR), Evil Lyn, Enola Gay, She's So Special and Finite. Scratched were Hear My Prayer, Mom's Red Lipstick and also-eligibles Fashionable Lady, Poseidon's Passion and Lucky Jingle.

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Del Mar Wraps Up with Handle Increase; Prat Edges Rispoli for Jockey Title

During these unprecedented times of global pandemic and spectator-free stands, the 81st Del Mar summer meet wrapped up Monday with a gripping battle to the wire between Flavien Prat and Umberto Rispoli for leading jockey honors. They were tied at 49 races apiece going into the GI Runhappy Del Mar Futurity, with Prat winning on Dr. Schivel (Violence) and Rispoli finishing fourth on Scooby (Fast Anna). It was the penultimate race of the meet and left Prat alone atop the rider standings with 50 wins and $2,968,918 in earnings. It marked the fourth leading jockey title at Del Mar for Prat in the last five years, who won 15 black-type events during the meet.

Trainer Peter Miller was a runaway winner of the trainer title, notching 28 wins and $1,498,472 in earnings. It was his fourth leading training title of Del Mar’s summer meet. Conditioner Phil D’Amato came in second with 20 wins. Leading owner honors went to both Reddam Racing and Hronis Racing with the former having higher earnings–$452,180–and the latter having more wins with seven.

Del Mar closed out the summer meet with an 8% increase in total wagering compared to last year, in spite of having 27 racing days in 2020 compared to the 36 days of 2019. Total wagering was $466.68 million, an increase of $34.71 million compared to the $431.98 million of 2019. Average daily handle was $17.28 million, an increase of 44% from 2019 when fans were allowed. Online wagering increased by 125% in the state of California, with out-of-state wagering growing by 65%. Del Mar was a first-time host of California’s wagering for the GI Kentucky Derby with the seaside track handing $24.8 million on the day, the fourth-highest wagering day in Del Mar’s history.

In addition, Del Mar field size increased from 8.0 runners per race last year to 8.4 runners per race this year.

“Given the extraordinary circumstances, we are very pleased with our results,” said Joe Harper, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club’s CEO. “The racing product was first-rate and players around the country responded in kind. It is especially gratifying that we were able to achieve positive business results while maintaining our commitment to the health and safety of our workforce and our neighbors despite the obvious challenges.”

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Prat Edges Rispoli For Del Mar Riding Title; Miller Tops Among Trainers

A victory aboard Dr. Schivel in the Grade 1, $250,000 Runhappy Del Mar Futurity was the decider as Flavien Prat overcame the unwavering challenge of newcomer Umberto Rispoli to win the riding title of the 81st Del Mar summer season at the seaside track near San Diego, Calif.

Prat won twice on an 11-race closing day program Monday while Rispoli was blanked. A victory in the seventh race, on Joe L. Turner's Table for Ten for trainer Phil D'Amato, forged a 49-49 tie atop the standings.

The 1 3/4-length score in the Futurity, the traditional closing day feature and penultimate race of the meet, secured a title defense for Prat and his fourth championship, solo or shared, in the past five years. The Futurity was the 15th stakes victory of the meeting for the 28-year-old native of France, a single-season record for a jockey.

The race between Prat and Rispoli, a 32-year-old native of Italy in his debut season at Del Mar, had drama like the final minutes of a tense NBA playoff or NCAA tournament basketball game. There were four ties and seven lead changes from the second weekend of the meeting through closing day. Three of the lead changes came on the last three days of a four-day, Labor Day weekend to end the meet.

On Saturday, Prat won four while Rispoli was blanked to take a 46-45 advantage in wins. But Rispoli responded the next day with four wins to Prat's two to take a 49-48 lead into the final day.

Rispoli had incredible success on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course, winning 35 of 115 races on the surface, a 30 percent victory rate. Over one weekend in the middle of the meeting he went 7-for-14 in turf events.

Miller, a resident of nearby Encinitas, notched his fourth summer meeting title, equaling the number of fall championships he has logged in the six years Del Mar has been a venue for that session.

Miller saddled 28 winners from 116 starters, an eight-win margin over Phil D'Amato and 13 over third-place Bob Baffert.

The 28 wins was the second-most in securing a summer title for Miller. He had 21 to prevail in 2012; 20 in tying Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer in 2014 and 31 in 2018.

Miller and Hall of Famer Bob Baffert tied for most stakes wins with six each. One of them was the third stakes dead heat in Del Mar history when Miller's Proud Emma and Baffert's Message couldn't be separated at the wire in the Tranquility Lake Stakes.

Miller went wire-to-wire for the meeting. He saddled four winners on the opening weekend to get a lead by two and it was only threatened briefly.  D'Amato put together back-to-back two-win days on August 14-15 to move within one, 15-14, of the top of the leaderboard.

But Miller padded the lead with three-win days on August 23 and August 28 and maintained a comfortable margin through the final seven days of racing.

Jockey Mounts 1st Purses
Flavien Prat 216 50 $2,968,918
Umberto Rispoli 203 49 $2,326,254
Abel Cedillo 246 30 $2,240,567
Juan J. Hernandez 213 29 $1,513,034
Tiago Josue Pereira 141 21 $863,202
Drayden Van Dyke 132 17 $1,224,242
Ricardo Gonzalez 132 16 $829,040
Mario Gutierrez 103 14 $781,150
Victor Espinoza 66 7 $628,454
Mike Smith 59 7 $506,012
Trainer Starts 1st Purses
Peter Miller 116 28 $1,498,472
Philip D'Amato 83 20 $1,010,690
Bob Baffert 63 15 $1,432,102
Doug F. O'Neill 118 13 $843,545
Richard Baltas 94 12 $735,930
John W. Sadler 73 12 $709,370
Simon Callaghan 32 11 $461,240
Mark Glatt 74 8 $718,632
Peter Eurton 50 8 $327,540
William Spawr 29 8 $152,020

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Stidham Ships Pixelate West To Win Del Mar Derby

Godolphin's Pixelate, benefitting from yet another perfectly timed ride on the turf by Del Mar's leading rider, Umberto Rispoli, was along in time to score by a head in the 76th running of the $200,000 Del Mar Derby Sunday at the shore oval near San Diego, Calif.

The invader from the East Coast — trained by Michael Stidham — had a near perfect trip saving ground and laying third for most of the run, then put it in gear down the lane for the Italian journeyman who is riding like a star in his first season at Del Mar. It was the fourth winner on the afternoon for Rispoli giving him a one-win lead – 49 to 48 — over his ace counterpart, Flavien Prat, who had a pair of victories on the card, including a stakes score that was his 14th of the meet, a Del Mar riding record. The battle for supremacy between these two exceptional riders at this 81st summer stand will come down to the 27th and final day of the meet on Monday.

Pixelate, a homebred City Zip colt and the 3-2 favorite, returned $5.00, $3.20 and $2.80 across the board after he covered the nine furlongs in 1:50.25.  He picked up a winner's share of $120,000 and now has a record of three wins, five seconds and three thirds in 11 starts for winnings of $311,400.

Finishing second was Alfred Pais' Margot's Boy, while third was Paula Capestro's Dominant Soul.

“I talked to Mike (trainer Michael Stidham) this morning and we both agreed that we had the best horse in the race. I said I wanted to ride him up closer than normal for him; I told him this is a smaller tighter course, not like Churchill (Downs). He said: 'You ride him like you want to.' I had a great trip and he fired when he had to. I'm very happy. And I've waited 16 years (his riding career) to wear these (pointing to the Godolphin royal blue silks).”

Earlier on the card, Kaleem Shah's Madone split horses at the head of the stretch and went gamely through the stretch under Flavien Prat to capture the ninth running of the $75,000 Del Mar Juvenile Fillies Turf at a mile on the grass by a half length.

The victory gave rider Prat his 14th stakes win of the meeting, establishing a new mark for stakes scores in a single summer session. Previously, Rafael Bejarano held the record with 13 victories set in 2012.

Madone paid $5.20, $3.00 and $2.40 across the board as the race favorite and earned a check for $$48,300 for his second victory in two starts and now shows winnings of $81,300.

CYBT, Nentwig or Altamira Racing Stable's Nimbostratus was second across the line, but moved back to third for interference in the stretch with LNJ Foxwoods' Ivy League, who was moved up from third to second.

Final time for the 2-year-old filly stakes was 1:39.09.

Del Mar's closing card will take place tomorrow on Labor Day with an 11-race program on tap. First post will be at 1 p.m.

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