The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Answering Reader Questions With Gary Contessa

We're switching things up a bit on this week's episode of The Friday Show.

If you follow us on Instagram or subscribe to the Paulick Report Insider Patreon feed, you're familiar with our “Ask Me Anything” video series, where a member of our staff answers reader questions about horse racing, or whatever else passes through the inbox.

During a recent trip to Saratoga, we decided to get some members of the racing industry in on the action, including trainer Gary Contessa, who is never afraid to share his opinion.

Contessa has had a long career as a New York-based trainer and has campaigned Uncle Sigh, Rydilluc, Eightyfiveinafifty, Rite Moment and Sippican Harbor. He has spent time both as a private trainer and managing a public barn, is a breeder, and scouts yearlings and 2-year-olds at the sale. He's also president of The Exceller Fund, which facilitates aftercare for Thoroughbreds at risk of neglect or entry into the slaughter pipeline.

Contessa was so thorough with his answers to our readers' questions that we split it into a two-part video on our Patreon.

On this week's episode of The Friday Show, we'll share one of those parts, where Contessa discusses topics including how much it costs to keep a horse in training, how a new owner can find a “clean” trainer, and what the industry can do to lower the number of equine fatalities.

If you enjoyed this “Ask Me Anything” video and want to see more like it from Paulick Report staff and Thoroughbred industry members, become a subscriber to the Paulick Report Insider Patreon account by clicking here.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

The post The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Answering Reader Questions With Gary Contessa appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

WATCH: Catching Up With Kentucky Derby, Queen’s Plate Runner State Of Honor At LongRun

Running in either the Kentucky Derby or the Queen's Plate – known today as the King's Plate – is a monumental achievement that signifies a horse's place among the top 3-year-olds of his class in the U.S. and Canada, respectively.

State of Honor was the rare horse that ran in both first jewels of the U.S. and Canadian Triple Crown, which he accomplished in the spring and summer of 2017.

Today, the 9-year-old To Honor and Serve gelding resides as a pensioner at LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement Society in Hillsburgh, Ontario, among a field of 16 geldings and sharing a property with greats including 2017 Canadian Horse of the Year Pink Lloyd. 

An Ontario homebred for Manfred and Penny Conrad, State of Honor won just once in 14 career starts, but he ran in high-level competition on both sides of the border.

He began his racing career at Woodbine in the barn of trainer Mark Casse, making his first two starts in stakes company, which included a third-place effort on debut in the Victoria Stakes. After finding his footing in maiden special weight company to earn his first win, State of Honor climbed the ladder once again to run second in the Coronation Futurity in his 2-year-old season finale.

Casse brought State of Honor to Florida for the start of his 3-year-old campaign with eyes on the Triple Crown season. Though he never got a statement win on the Triple Crown trail, he earned his place in the conversation with runner-up efforts in the listed Mucho Macho Man Stakes, the Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby, and the G1 Florida Derby, along with a third in the G3 Sam F. Davis Stakes.

If he wasn't the one setting the pace, he was rarely far off it, conceding in the end to the likes of future Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming and future Belmont Stakes winner Tapwrit.

State of Honor left the gate in the 2017 Kentucky Derby at odds of 54-1, which made him the second longest price on the board. Under jockey Jose Lezcano, he led the way through the race's opening half-mile before getting headed by Always Dreaming after six furlongs. He then faded to 19th, beating only Thunder Snow, who was quickly pulled up after the break and did not finish the race.

A month later, State of Honor regrouped for a bid at the Canadian classics, starting with the Plate Trial Stakes, where he finished third in a tight finish after setting the early fractions.

He set the pace once again in the Queen's Plate under jockey Patrick Husbands, but he gave way after a mile and flattened out to finish eighth. His final start came in the second leg of Canada's Triple Crown, the Prince of Wales Stakes at Fort Erie, where he set the pace through the top of the stretch and finished third.

Support our journalism

If you appreciate our work, you can support us by subscribing to our Patreon stream. Learn more.

State of Honor came out of the Prince of Wales with a bowed tendon, after which the Conrads retired and gelded the horse before sending him to LongRun.

“When I first met State of Honor, I was just impressed by his size,” said LongRun's Tania Veenstra. “You don't often see racehorses that are 17-plus hands. He was just a really nice horse. He was friendly and easy to work around.”

After a gradual acclimating process, State of Honor was introduced to LongRun's sanctuary herd, a 10-acre field of geldings living out their days on the rural Ontario farm, about 65 kilometers from Woodbine.

In any gelding field, there is an unspoken pecking order amongst its residents, and Veenstra said State of Honor occupies a high spot in his field; though it's not quite as high as his status as one of the field's biggest horses might suggest.

“State's near the top of the hierarchy, I'd say – if you want to call it a hierarchy,” she said. “He has a couple buddies that are at the top, and he'll usually be one of the first that are fed, or he pushes his way in there and makes sure he gets fed.

“He's a real dude,” Veenstra continued. “He's huge, but he's a softie. He can push his way around a little bit, but he's not mean. He's like 'Okay, get out of the way. I'm coming through.' He does it in a gentlemanly way.”

The Conrads remain active in State of Honor's life in his retirement, fully sponsoring his stay at LongRun. They visit about every six months, and LongRun chairperson Vicki Pappas said they are in plenty of contact between visits.

“If they run a horse that does well, I like sending them an email to congratulate them,” she said. “They're back and forth. They come to our open houses, or they come up by themselves to see the big horse. We're obviously humbled to be entrusted with the care of a horse like that with his retirement from racing.”

The video below can be found on the Paulick Report's new TikTok account. To view more videos on our TikTok, and to subscribe, click here.

@paulickreport Abead of today's King's Plate at Woodbine, let's check in with State of Honor, who ran in both the 2017 Kentucky Derby and Queen's Plate. Today, he lives at LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement in Ontario. #horseracing #foryou #paulickreport #kentuckyderby #wherearetheynow #horses #thoroughbred #thoroughbredsoftiktok #aftercare #StateOfHonor #QueensPlate #KingsPlate #KP23 ♬ original sound – Paulick Report

The post WATCH: Catching Up With Kentucky Derby, Queen’s Plate Runner State Of Honor At LongRun appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Holding On For Dear Life, Abel Lezcano Survives Scary Incident At Hawthorne

Jockey Abel Lezcano

Abel Lezcano put on an incredible show of courage and athleticism at Hawthorne Race Course near Chicago on Sunday, holding on for dear life after his right stirrup broke while he was battling for the lead in the third race aboard the 5-year-old gelding Christmas Present.

The duo started from the No. 1 post position in the one-mile, 70-yard claiming race on the main track, with Christmas Present taking the early advantage on his rivals. As Christmas Present rounded the clubhouse turn into the backstretch while engaged with Blooming Garden for the lead, Lezcano virtually disappeared from the camera view after the right stirrup suddenly gave out.

The next day, Lezcano told the Paulick Report he heard a loud snap, and suddenly his right foot was without a stirrup, adding that he had just purchased the equipment. The stirrup, he said, was made from a carbon material.

Track announcer Peter Galassi was momentarily confused, not sure if Lezcano had been thrown from the mount, but then saying “the rider is out of the saddle but is still with the horse… a little confusing there, didn't see him. Thought he was off, but he was on. … Just a tremendous job by Abel Lezcano to keep aboard that horse.”

The head-on patrol films showed Lezcano, pitched onto the right side of his mount, clinging onto the neck of Christmas Present, who continued to run at full speed. For more than 10 seconds, Lezcano struggled to get back atop the horse, finally pulling himself back aboard Christmas Present, who gradually dropped back while racing close to the rail.

Lezcano continued his way around the course riding bareback style, his legs wrapped around the horse, until an outrider caught up with him as he trailed the field down the stretch.

Lezcano may have been shaken by the incident, but he came back to ride the next four races on Sunday's card, going out a winner in the seventh-race finale with a stretch-running victory aboard Maneuver.

 

On Sunday night, Lezcano posted the following message on the social media site formerly known as Twitter:

A 33-year-old native of Panama, Lezcano has won 448 races since coming to the U.S. in 2009. One of those victories was aboard Nancy From Nairobi in the Grade 2 Royal Heroine Stakes at Santa Anita in 2016.

A similar incident occurred at Golden Gate Fields in 1989 when jockey Nate Hubbard was unseated after his mount Sweetwater Oak stumbled in deep stretch on a muddy track. Hubbard hung on to the mare's neck for the final dozen strides and won a photo finish for second. Because Hubbard did not touch the ground while dangling from Sweetwater Oak's neck, no rules were violated and the result was allowed to stand.

The post Holding On For Dear Life, Abel Lezcano Survives Scary Incident At Hawthorne appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Does The King’s Plate Go Through Kalik?

An overflowing entry box for Canada's most important Thoroughbred race, the $1-million King's Plate, suggests that this year's field of Canadian-bred 3-year-olds is without a standout.

Seventeen horses are expected to be in the starting gate, with two others on the also-eligible list for Sunday's race, the highlight of a 13-race card that begins at 12:25 p.m. ET. The Plate, race 10, is scheduled for 5:39 p.m. ET.

The King's Plate, first run in 1860 and intermittently known as the Queen's Plate, is run on the all-weather Tapeta surface over the classic distance of 1 1/4 miles, with colts and gelding toting 126 pounds. Two fillies who ran one-two in the Woodbine Oaks, Elysian Field and Wickenheiser, are entered and will each carry 121.

Toronto-based racing writer and handicapper Jennifer Morrison joins Ray Paulick on the Friday Show to sort through this year's field for the Plate, and she says the race goes through Kalik, the 3-1 morning line favorite who will be making his first start in Canada and first on Tapeta. Morrison points out that the son of Collected trained by Chad Brown follows the same trail into the Plate that 2021 winner Safe Conduct took for Phil Serpe, racing in the G2 Pennine Ridge and G1 Belmont Derby on turf at Belmont Park before heading north of the border.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

The post The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Does The King’s Plate Go Through Kalik? appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights