Archive for the ‘kentucky oaks’ Category
Monday, December 21st, 2009
Press Release
ONLINE KENTUCKY DERBY, OAKS TICKET SALE
RESCHEDULED FOR WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6 AT 12 P.M. EST
Churchill Downs’ online sale of limited two-day Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks ticket packages, which was delayed Wednesday by a potential data error with its new online box office, has been rescheduled for Wednesday, Jan. 6 at noon EST. A total of 3,000 seats have been allocated for this online exclusive at http://tickets.churchilldowns.com.
“Our concern regarding a potential data error that temporarily delayed our online sale of Kentucky Derby and Oaks tickets has been erased, and we’re pleased to announce that those coveted tickets will go on sale shortly after the holidays on Wednesday, Jan. 6 at noon,” Churchill Downs Racetrack President Kevin Flanery said. “The customer experience with this first-of-its-kind online offering is paramount, and we truly appreciate our patrons’ patience as we worked through this process.”
As promised, reserved seating packages to be sold, which include tickets to both the Kentucky Oaks on Friday, April 30 and Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands on Saturday, May 1, include:
- Third-floor clubhouse box seats in sections 312-314 and access to the Secretariat Lounge, an exclusive, upscale, indoor hospitality area that will feature premium gourmet food, an open bar, televisions, betting kiosks and live music between races (50 boxes or 300 seats which range from $6,132-$6,390 per six-seat box);
- First-floor clubhouse box seats in section 111 (166 boxes or 996 seats which cost $1,500 per six-seat box);
- Second-floor grandstand bleacher seats in sections 222-225 (300 seats which range from $214-$225 per seat); and
- First-floor grandstand bleacher seats in sections 121-128 (1,404 seats which range from $172-$207 per seat).
Ticket prices vary based on location. There is a purchase limit of six seats or one box per order. Those who want to purchase box seats must purchase the entire box, which includes seats for six. Tickets must be purchased with a Visa credit or debit card. Minimal ticket processing charges will apply.
This offer is exclusive to http://tickets.churchilldowns.com; no sales will be made in person or by submitting letters, e-mail or telephone calls to Churchill Downs.
Already available for purchase on the Website are advance general admission tickets to the Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks, which cost $40 and $25, respectively, as well as reserved seat packages to other 2010 events, including six “Downs After Dark” nighttime racing events scheduled for June 11, June 18, June 25, July 2, Oct. 31 and Nov. 19.
Churchill Downs, the world’s most legendary racetrack, has conducted Thoroughbred racing and presented America’s greatest race, the Kentucky Derby, continuously since 1875. Located in Louisville, the flagship racetrack of Churchill Downs Incorporated (NASDAQ Global Select Market: CHDN) also operates Trackside at Churchill Downs, which offers year-round simulcast wagering at the historic track. Churchill Downs will host the 136th running of the Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands on Saturday, May 1 and the Kentucky Oaks on Friday, April 30. The track will conduct its 2010 Spring Meet from Saturday, April 24 through Sunday, July 5. Churchill Downs is scheduled to host the Breeders’ Cup World Championships for a record seventh time on Nov. 5 and 6, 2010. Churchill Downs tickets are available at tickets.churchilldowns.com or by calling (502) 636-4400. Additional information about Churchill Downs can be found on the Internet at www.churchilldowns.com.
Tags: churchill downs, Daren Rogers, kentucky derby, kentucky oaks, Kevin Flanery, Paulick Report, Ray Paulick Posted in Churchill Downs Inc., kentucky derby, kentucky oaks | Comments Off
Wednesday, December 16th, 2009
That darn technology! Churchill Downs Inc., the Louisville, Ky., racetrack company with the world’s most legendeary propeller heads, had to postpone the start of online ticket sales to the 2010 Kentucky Oaks and Derby due to, you guessed it, technology glitches at its new online box office. Can anyone say "Stub Hub"?
Following is the press release distributed by CDI late Wednesday morning, just minutes before the online sales were supposed to begin. – Paulick Report
POTENTIAL DATA ERROR DELAYS WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULED ONLINE SALE OF KENTUCKY DERBY, OAKS TICKETS
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2009) – In an effort to respectfully serve its customers, Churchill Downs has decided to delay a scheduled online sale of two-day Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks ticket packages due to a potential data error with its new online box office, http://tickets.churchilldowns.com. The online sale had been scheduled to commence Wednesday (Dec. 16) at noon EST.
“Churchill Downs regrets having to make this late announcement of a delay, but the customer experience comes first,” said Churchill Downs Racetrack President Kevin Flanery. “While exhaustively testing our online ticketing system, we detected a potential data error that could have resulted in customer service issues for some patrons. We regret any inconvenience, but the best way to serve all patrons is to delay the online offering, address the potential data error and offer these limited tickets at a later date. We will announce the new date as soon as possible.”
A total of 3,000 seats were allocated for the online exclusive and included:
- Third-floor clubhouse box seats in sections 312-314 and access to the Secretariat Lounge, an exclusive, upscale, indoor hospitality area that will feature premium gourmet food, an open bar, televisions, betting kiosks and live music between races (50 boxes or 300 seats which range from $6,132-$6,390 per six-seat box);
- First-floor clubhouse box seats in section 111 (166 boxes or 996 seats which cost $1,500 per six-seat box);
- Second-floor grandstand bleacher seats in sections 222-225 (300 seats which range from $214-$225 per seat); and
- First-floor grandstand bleacher seats in sections 121-128 (1,404 seats which range from $172-$207 per seat).
Posted in Churchill Downs Inc., kentucky derby, kentucky oaks | 8 Comments »
Monday, May 11th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
For those of you who decided to disconnect from the racing world on Sunday, let me just say that we had a little situation here.
Actually, it wasn’t so little. Collusion between the co-owner of Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird and the owner of runner-up Pioneerof the Nile to keep Kentucky Oaks winner Rachel Alexandra out of the starting gate for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes would have, if successfully orchestrated, created one of the biggest embarrassments this sport has seen in my lifetime.
Apparently, and thankfully, the plot to keep the filly out of the race was aborted on the same day it was hatched. And that says something about the world we live and how cable television and the internet not only have changed how we get our news, but have given the public an opportunity to swiftly react to it, and in some ways alter the course of events.
I was enjoying a quiet Mother’s Day brunch Sunday afternoon with my family when I got an urgent message that Ahmed Zayat, Pioneerof the Nile’s owner, during a telephone interview on HRTV said Mine That Bird’s co-owner Mark Allen called Zayat and asked him to enter an additional horse in the Preakness to block Rachel Alexandra’s entry in the race. The filly, newly acquired by Jess Jackson last week and expected to be supplemented to the Preakness at a cost of $100,000, would only get into the starting field if fewer than 14 horses were entered, because early Triple Crown nominees are given preference over supplemental entrants in the Preakness.
Allen said he would enter a maiden in the race, and if Zayat entered a second horse, there was a strong likelihood Rachel Alexandra would not get in. It would also put Derby-winning jockey Calvin Borel back aboard Mine That Bird after he chose to ride the filly.
The Paulick Report linked to Dan Farley’s timely dispatch in England’s Racing Post that quoted Zayat, who repeated part of the conversation he’d had with Allen. Internet forums (Thoroughbred Champions, Pace Advantage, among others) and blogs lit up with comments about “cowardice,” “unsportsmanlike conduct,” and actions that were “terribly unflattering to the sport,” and would take “the racing industry’s massive dysfunction to brand new levels.”
The late Paul Mellon, who for me defined the kind of sportsmen who helped make this game so wonderful, was, I’m certain, spinning madly in his grave over how racing has degenerated and deteriorated.
Officials of the Maryland Jockey Club must have had visions of angry, pitchfork wielding mobs of racing fans descending upon Pimlico Saturday in search of the two would-be evil-doers, Zayat and Allen. One of those officials called Zayat to explain to him that his actions weren’t being very well received and that it might not be such a bad idea to reconsider.
NBC Sports, which pays a handsome sum to televise the Preakness and has been promoting the hell out of the anticipated matchup between Mine That Bird and Rachel Alexandra, might have been a little upset as well if the filly was somehow excluded.
Before sunset, a flurry of online articles was published by Bloodhorse.com, Sports Illustrated, New York Times and others, quoting both Zayat and Allen with abandoning their ill-conceived plan and waving white flags of surrender–but not before humiliating themselves and embarrassing the sport.
The whole news cycle was over in about six hours. I’m convinced the internet reporting and commentaries, along with the public outrage expressed in online forums, drove the decisions of Zayat and Allen as much as the phone call from a racing official in Maryland may have done.
Twenty years ago, before racing had two cable channels and the internet to provide an explosion of instant information, this Sunday storm might not have ever made into the public spotlight. The late Joe Hirsch, the executive columnist for Daily Racing Form, would have gotten wind of the conspiracy first (Joe always got it first), but by the time the Form had its next press run on Monday afternoon, someone (probably Joe himself) would have smacked some sense into Zayat and Allen.
For those of you who on Sunday were plugged in to HRTV (or TVG, which also did its own reporting on the issue), the Paulick Report or other web sites, this whole unseemly saga would be old news by the time your daily newspaper hit the front door Monday morning, or the weekly trade magazines are delivered later this week.
Times have changed.
One final thought: What is it about fillies and the Preakness that brings out the worst in some people?
Twenty-nine years ago, Angel Cordero Jr. used intimidating, and many of us still believe unsportsmanlike, riding tactics aboard Codex to beat the Kentucky Derby-winning filly Genuine Risk in the 1980 Preakness.
In 1988, the late Woody Stephens hit a low point in his Hall of Fame training career when he had jockey Pat Day employ suicidal tactics in the Preakness aboard Forty Niner against Winning Colors, the front-running filly who defeated Forty Niner in the Kentucky Derby two weeks earlier. It ruined both of their chances of victory.
Interestingly, in both cases, the Daily Racing Form published front-page editorials criticizing the tactics used against the two fillies, an extremely unusual occurrence by the Form. The 2009 version of Daily Racing Form might well have an editorial printed on the Rachel Alexandra saga in the next day or two, but by then will anyone care?
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
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Tags: ahmed zayat, angel cordero, codex, daily racing form, dan farley, fillies in the preakness, fillies vs. colts, forty niner, genuine risk, Horse Racing, HRTV, jess jackson, joe hirsch, kentucky derby, kentucky oaks, Mark Allen, Maryland Jockey Club, mine that bird, nbc sports, paceadvantage.com, pat day, Paulick Report, pimlico, Pioneerof The Nile, preakness, Rachel Alexandra, racing post, Ray Paulick, thoroughbredchampions.com, tvg, winning colors, woody stephens Posted in Maryland Jockey Club, Racing Media, daily racing form, kentucky derby, kentucky oaks | 43 Comments »
Sunday, May 10th, 2009
The following press release was issued on behalf of Mark Allen, co-owner of Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird, concerning previously publicized comments by Allen to enter the horse Indy Express in an effort to prevent Kentucky Oaks winner Rachel Alexandra from securing a starting berth in Saturday’s Preakness Stakes at Pimlico. — Ray Paulick
For immediate release (Sunday, May 10, 1015 p.m.)
Indy Express out of Preakness
Mark Allen, owner of the 135th Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird, will not enter Indy Express in the 2009 Preakness Stakes.
Early this morning Allen was delivered a message to contact another owner “Our conversation consisted of congratulating me on our win in the Derby and talking about a rematch, wanting a chance to hook us on a fast surface. We laughed and joked about what a race that would be,” said Allen.
“When it comes to Rachel Alexandra, I personally don’t think any filly should be in a race against colts at this stage of their careers. I don’t believe in running fillies against the colts. But Rachel Alexandra is a superior filly and could be the exception. Mr. Jackson has a great trainer in Steve Asmussen and I’m sure they will make the right decision and Lord help us all if she does get in.”
“And yes, it’s true that I would like to have my jockey back. Calvin Borel is great and did a great job for us. I also respect him and I completely understand his love for Rachel Alexandra. If the filly gets in we have a commitment from Mike Smith. We have a lot of confidence in Mike, he’s from our part of the country and he’s got some Cowboy in him too, I’ve seen his boots,” said Allen.
“Additionally, my decision to enter Indy Express in the Preakness was strictly business but after consulting with my Dad and Doc Blach, I have decided to withdraw Indy Express to prevent any further miss understandings. They’re advice to me was just to do what’s right, because arrogance and greed isn’t right. Indy Express is a good colt and showing a lot of potential. I’ll just have to look forward to running him later on down the road. The bottom-line for me is that we came here to race and enjoy our win here in Louisville. So, we’ll meet everyone in Baltimore, ready to run,” said Allen.
Tags: ahmed zayat, Calvin Borel, fillies against colts, indy express, jess jackson, kentucky oaks, leonard blach, Mark Allen, mine that bird, preakness, Rachel Alexandra, ray paulick paulick report Posted in People, kentucky derby, kentucky oaks | 25 Comments »
Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
From Stonestreet Stables Press Release/Caroline Shaw Public Relations
LEXINGTON, KY (May 6, 2009) – Stonestreet Stables, majority owner of two-time Horse of the Year, Curlin—and Harold T. McCormick of Birmingham, Alabama together with Dolphus Morrison and Mike Lauffer of L and M Partners, LLC announced today the purchase of Rachel Alexandra, the three-year-old filly who is undefeated in 2009 and the winner of last Friday’s Kentucky Oaks by over 20 lengths. As agreed to by both parties, terms of the deal were kept confidential.
“Rachel Alexandra is one of the best horses in racing today,” said Jess Jackson of Stonestreet Stable. “She is fast, strong and durable—the traits we should all be breeding into all future generations of race horses. Her beauty and athleticism will thrill thousands of fans. ”
“We are delighted to sell Rachel Alexandra to Jess Jackson’s Stonestreet Stables. Its reputation for integrity, putting the best interest of the horses above all else, and just doing things right will ensure this incredible thoroughbreds’ future and the industry at large. We are equally please she will retire after her racing career to Stonestreet Stables,” said Dolphus Morrison of L and M Partners, LLC.
In addition to the Kentucky Oaks win, Rachel Alexandra’s major victories include the Golden Rod Stakes (2008), Martha Washington Stakes (2009), Fair Grounds Oaks (2009), and Fantasy Stakes (2009). Foaled in 2006, Rachel Alexandra was out of Lotta Kim, a daughter of Claiborne Farm’s multiple stakes winner, Roar. Rachel Alexandra was sired by Medaglia d’Oro, a multiple Grade I winner who retired with career earnings in excess of $5.7 million.
Jackson indicated that when Rachel Alexandra’s racing career concludes, he will breed her to Curlin, whose speed, strength and durability are the key qualities in his “New Horse.”
The resilient Curlin, winner of 11 of 16 races in two consecutive campaigns—including the 2008 Dubai World Cup, the 2007 Preakness, and the 2007 Breeders’ Cup Classic—is known as an “iron horse” for never missing a race or a workout and retiring in perfect form and health. Rachel Alexandra has many of these same traits.
“We are tremendously excited by the prospect of one day seeing the offspring of Curlin and Rachel Alexandra,” said Jackson. “But for now, the story of this filly is still being written. My four daughters and granddaughter will be delighted this super filly will race in our colors.”
About Stonestreet Farms
Owned by Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Stonestreet Farms currently maintains a broodmare band of over 100 in its breeding operation in Lexington, Kentucky and races several dozen thoroughbreds through Stonestreet Stables. Jackson is the majority owner of Curlin, 2007 Horse of the Year. Together with his wife Barbara Banke, Jackson is also the founder and owner of the world-class Kendall-Jackson Wine Estates. For more information visit www.stonestreetfarms.com.
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Tags: jess jackson, Rachel Alexandra, stonestreet stables Posted in Curlin, Horse Racing, Racing Greats, kentucky oaks | 68 Comments »
Friday, May 1st, 2009
Justwhistledixie has been scratched from today’s Kentucky Oaks because of a stone bruise in a foot. The daughter of Dixie Union was the 5-2 second choice on the morning line.
Tags: justwhistledixie, kentucky oaks, Paulick Report Posted in Uncategorized, kentucky oaks | Comments Off
Friday, May 1st, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Click here to link to Kentucky Oaks day charts.
So many questions about today’s Kentucky Oaks program. Will Rachel Alexandra continue to dominate her division without breaking a sweat in the Oaks? Who will benefit from the scratch due to the wet track conditions of champion Zenyatta in the Louisville Stakes? How will the track (labeled sloppy early in the card) affect the day’s racing? And why on earth is HRTV’s Carolyn Conley wearing a potted plant on her head?
I hope to have those answers and more as I live blog the 12-race marathon Kentucky Oaks day program from Churchill Downs. I’ll be back shortly after 1 p.m. (Eastern) to cover the rich stakes program, culminating with the Kentucky Oaks.
1:10 p.m. … Well, we have a muddy, sealed racetrack for the Oaks card, which means the track superintendant rolled it tight to keep as much moisture from seeping in to the surface as possible. What often happens with a sealed track are speed biases early in the day and a more tiring track as the day wears on–provided there’s not a lot more rain that falls. Times can vary, but I’ve seen sealed racetracks rated sloppy that were faster than a dry and fast racing strip.
The early races yielded slow fractional times, with the winners either racing on the early lead or pressing the pace. The first race, a 1 1/16-mile allowance race, was won by Luna Vega and Shaun Bridgomohan, coming from just off the pace (fractions were creepy crawly :26.11, :51.23, :1:15.45, 1:39.30 and a final time of 1:45.64).Susies Gal, the early leader, finished second.
The second race, a starter allowance, was won by pace-presser Multipass, who drew off from Lokomamma to win by four under Julien Leparoux (fractions were quicker, :23.93, :46.83, 1:24.65 and a final time for the mile of 1:38.12). The speed in the race, Lost Village fell back to last.
In the third, the A.P. Indy filly On a Roll broke her maiden under Rafael Bejarano going wire to wire to win by a half-length while setting moderate fractions of :24.11, :48.34, 1:13.60 and 1:40.29 en route to a final clocking for 1 1/16 miles of 1:47.27.
1:22 p.m. … Here’s a news flash. Friesan Fire is the early betting favorite for the Kentucky Derby at 4-1, with morning line favorite I Want Revenge second choice at 5-1, Pioneerof the Nile and (get this) General Quarters co-third choices at 8-1, and Dunkirk and Chocolate Candy next at 9-1 each. The Louisville bettors are obviously smitten by the Tom McCarthy saga, the story of the former hometown school teacher and principal with a horse stable and a Derby dream. I’m guessing the early play on Friesan Fire is based on his superior off-track form in the Louisiana Derby.
1:25 p.m. … Stlil catching up on the early part of the card. Senor Fuego charged from far off the pace to take the fourth race, a maiden sprint, but the fast fractions set by Mighty Score (under that great judge of pace, Stewart Elliott) set it up for the John Velazquez ridden, Todd Pletcher-trained first-time starter by Speightstown. The fractions were :21.45, :44.96, and :57.76 en route to a six-furlong clocking of 1:11.03.
1:35 p.m. … What happened to the racetrack after the third? All of a sudden, the fractions are ultra-fast. Calvin Borel rallied up the rail from last place to win the fifth under Warrior’s Reward, closing fast under fractions of :21.93, :44.10 and 1:08.92 to beat the Grade 1-placed Munnings in 1:21.60 for seven furlongs, just 1 1/5 seconds off the track record. Fufty Too set the pace at 17-1 and beat just one horse.
1:55 p.m. … Apparently track superintendent Butch Lehr "opened up" the track after the third race, which allowed it to dry out and apparently quickened the track up almost immediately. As the day goes on, however, the track could become sticky and tiring, one horsemen told me. He also said the rail has been the ideal place to be so far, and that might not change.
One word of caution about track biases. Jockeys see horses winning on the lead, and all of sudden several of them will gun for the front. That leads to faster fractions and completely different pace scenario, resulting in more winners coming from off the pace. Biases may not always be what they seem.
2:00 p.m. … This isn’t Kentucky Oaks related, but until we get a chance to post it elsewhere, I thought I would pass on word that stewards at Delaware Park have decided to scratch the two horses formerly owned by Paraneck Stable, the operation run by Ernie Paragallo, that were entered to race on Monday in the name of Nob Hill Stable. Paraneck’s horses have been banned from racing in New York until a new authorized agent has been approved by the New York State Racing and Wagering Board to replace Paragallo.
2:02 p.m. … Is there a method to Butch Lehr’s madness? After opening the main track for races four and five (the sixth, the Aegeon Turf Sprint was on grass), he’s floated it again, sealing it back up. Should we look for a frontrunner to win this next race, the 1 1/6-mile Louisville Stakes (the race from which Zenyatta scratched)?
2:05 p.m. … Catching up on the sixth race, the Aegon Turf Sprint went to course specialst Chamberlain Bridge, a War Chant gelding winning for the third time in as many starts on the Churchill Downs turf. Garrett Gomez rode for trainer Bret Calhoun. Cannonball finished second, with Smart Enough third.
2:10 p.m. … Are we going to have an inquiry after Miss Isella and Calvin Borel bulled their way through a narrow opening on the rail and past unbeaten One Caroline to win the Louisville Stakes? She clearly leaned out and into One Caroline and Edgar Prado near the eighth pole. The two fillies appeared to bump solidly, then Miss Isella drew off to win by three-quarters of a length on the same track on which she won the Fall City Handicap last fall. Ian Wilkes trains Miss Isella for Domino Stud of Lexington. One Caroline was losing for the first time in six starts for G. Watts Humphrey Jr. and trainer Rusty Arnold. Swift Temper finished third.
There was no inquiry.
"The other filly didn’t give me much of a fight. It looks like she fell to pieces," Borel said of One Caroline. "She hung in with me for six or seven strides and run out of horse. My filly loves this track, though, you couldn’t imagine. She just glides on it." The winner is a daughter of Silver Charm, who showed a lot of heart throughout his career, including the 1997 Kentucky Derby, which he won by a head. She was bred by her owners.
Borel, the regular rider of Oaks favorite Rachel Alexandra, said he thinks that filly will just love the track condition.
Miss Isella paid $19.40 after completing the mile in 1:36.68. One Caroline went right to the front and set fractions of :23.96, :47.65 and 1:11.72 before being hooked first by Swift Temper on the turn for home and then by the winner.
3:10 p.m. … Last year’s 2-year-old filly champ Stardom Bound may be on the sidelines for now, but IEAH Stables and their partners have another star filly on their hands in Laragh, who wired the field in the 1 1/16-mile Edgewood Stakes, the eighth race on the Oaks Day program. Ridden by Edgar Prado and trained by John Terranova, Laragh was never seriously threatened as she rolled to her fourth win in eight lifetime starts, winning by about 1 1/4 lengths over the fast-closing Magical Affair. Banker’s Choice was third.
Laragh showed good early speed to get the lead, then relaxed beautifully, setting fractions of :23.57, :48.43, 1:13.04 and 1:37.32, with a final time of 1:43.88. Prado used the whip twice in deep stretch to keep Laragh’s mind on business. Laragh was coming off a fifth-place finish in the Grade 2 Comely at Aqueduct on a sloppy track, her worst career performance. She, along with Stardom Bound, is a gray daughter of Tapit, the Pulpit stallion standing at Gainesway Farm. Mike Ryan bred Laragh, who was produced from the El Prado mare, Rose of Summer.
3:30 p.m. … Scratch Justwhistledixie from the Kentucky Oaks…apparently a stone bruise that isn’t serious but enough to take her out of the race.
3:55 p.m. … Another rallying winner up the rail, as Bullsbay under Jeremy Rose got up in the final sixteenth of a mile to defeat Cool Coal Man in the Alysheba Stakes. The 5-year-old son of Tiznow was winning at Churchill Downs for the third time in as many starts for trainer Graham Motion. He covered the 1 1/16-miles in 1:44.29. Informed and Garrett Gomez set the early fractions (:24.55, :48.72, and 1:13.57) and was tackled by Cool Coal Man and John Velazquez on the turn for home. Cool Coal Man appeared headed to victory, but Rose shot up the rail after racing in mid-pack to the stretch and got the narrow victory. Cool Coal Man was second, with Star Guitar third and Informed fourth. The winner paid $8.40.
4:40 p.m. …. After a brief (if late) lunch interlude, I realized that the 10th at Churchill Downs, the American Turf Handicap, may be the only good betting race left on the card. Rachel Alexandra will be 1-9 to win the Kentucky Oaks and the 12th race of the day, a maiden race scheduled on turf, has been scratched down to four horses as a main track event. Tough to make much money or "get out" under those conditions.
The American Turf has a field of nine 3-year-olds, with the rail horse, Stormalory, coming off a narrow win at Keeneland in the Transylvania Stakes, the 2-1 favorite. I think a better alternative in the race will be Battle of Hastings, trained by Jeff Mullins and going for his third win in a row after running poorly in his U.S. debut. The Royal Applause gelding won two of five in England last year at 2. Skipadate, a Mark Casse-trained colt by Skip Away, took some early money in the wagering, perhaps because of the troubled trip he had in the Transylvania when lacking room at the three-eighths pole and going very wide into the stretch.
4:55 p.m. … The American Turf was a "get out" race for whoever had the 45-1 shot Orthodox, who tracked the early pace of Turfiste, then grabbed the lead in the final furlong and held Battle of Hastings at bay to win by three-quarters of a length. Stormalory was pulled up on the backstretch of the 1 1/16-mile race.
The winner, a 3-year-old by Pulpit, was ridden by Jon Court and is trained by John Glenney. He was winning for the third time in nine starts and this was his first stakes victory. Jockey Tyler Baze had to fight to keep Battle of Hastings from lugging in down the stretch, compromising his chances after getting a good early trip in third position as Turfiste set fractions of :24.23, :48.86, and 1:13.86 for the opening six furlongs. Orthodox covered the distance in 1:44.17 after a mile split of 1:38.15. The turf course was rated good by Equibase.
We’ll try to get an update on Stormalory as soon as possible.
We’re going to see if we can the Bravo channel to watch the Kentucky Oaks, which it’s been rumored will be shown between features on lifestyles of the housewives of Jefferson County (Ky), reruns of Make Me a Supermodel, and the debut of I’m a Horseplayer: Get me Outta Here.
5:00 p.m. … Seems like a regular horse racing show for the first minute, with NBC’s Bob Costas setting the scene…then it’s on to the fashion….Nancy O’Dell wearing a silly hat and promising to tell us all about the fashion and food (hot dogs?) of Oaks Day. Then a quick shift to NBC’s Donna Brothers and Bethany Frankel (who seems like a perfectly awful person and is one of the Housewives of New York). Back to Nancy O’Dell again, this time with NBC’s Bob Neumier (nice pink tie, Bob!). Nancy O’Dell says she looks at the horse’s asses for her handicapping. Neumier seems rightly stunned.
I may have to switch back to HRTV.
5:05 p.m. … I’m a glutton for punishment. Bravo now has ex-footballer Tiki Barber (nice pink tie, Tiki!) interviewing a top chef (I guess that’s another Bravo show), who is explaining how to make bread pudding…a racetrack staple if I ever heard of one. Goes down really well after a dog.
5:07 p.m. … A serious note: the switch to Bravo was a good fit for this year’s Kentucky Oaks and the emphasis on breast cancer awareness by Churchill Downs. Many of the sporting world’s biggest events involve charities, and this year’s Oaks is a fund-raiser for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, the leading breast cancer education and research organization. (Click here to read Brad Cummings’ Paulick Report Good News Friday article sponsored by Liberation Farm on this issue.) A parade of cancer survivors around the track has the Churchill Downs crowd cheering, and Donna Barton does an interview on horseback with breast cancer survivor and retired jockey Patti Cooksey, who now works for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission. It’s all good.
5:15 p.m. … Bethany Frankel ("I don’t mind being judgmental," she says…so she really is trainer Bobby Frankel’s daughter!) picks the winner of a hat contest that is part of the show. HRTV’s Carolyn Conley didn’t make it to the finals with her potted plant hat. Haven’t seen a horse yet on the Bravo telecast, but I’m sure we will sooner or later.
5:20 p.m. … It’s the dynamic handicapping duo of Neumier and Mike Battaglia (nice pink tie, Mike!), who’d have a hard time picking winners in a walkover. Battaglia tells people not to bet on the race…just watch it and enjoy. Let’s hope Bob Evans, the Churchill Downs chairman, isn’t watching. CDI doesn’t make money by having people just watch a race.
5:25 p.m. … Tom Hammond and retired Hall of Fame jockey Gary Stevens make their first appearance on the show and start talking about the horse race to come. (NIce pink ties, fellas!) And there are the horses in the paddock.
Another serious note: the Make a Wish Foundation has a young girl, Rachel Mattson, the filly’s namesake, brought next to Rachel Alexandra and she’s given a souvenir pink halter with the filly’s name on it, and jockey Calvin Borel goes out of his way to greet Miss Mattson.
5:35 p.m. … There’s a lot of talk about Rachel Alexandra being nearly unbeatable, but we’ve yet to see any of her dominating performances via videotape on the telecast….just lots of voiceovers by Stevens and Hammonds as they show the paddock scene. I’d love them to show the replay of the Fair Grounds Oaks, where Borel spent most of the final sixteenth of a mile celebrating, doing everything but flipping the bird to the jockeys who were racing behind him that day. He was told to tone it down a bit for the Medaglia d’Oro filly’s next winning start, the Fantasy Stakes at Oaklawn Park.
Rachel Alexandra comes into the race off a four-race winning streak that began last November in the Golden Rod Stakes at Churchill Downs. Prior to that, she’d won 2-of-5 starts for trainer Hal Wiggins and her owners, L and M Partners. The Kentucky Oaks is Rachel Alexandra’s first Grade 1 race.
5:45 p.m. … I’d guess 18 lengths (it was 20 1/4, officially). Rachel Alexandra just destroyed her opposition in the Oaks. Calvin Borel actually gets paid for that ride? Other than a few looks back to his inside and outside, Borel sat chilly as a statue down the stretch after Rachel Alexandra took the lead from pacesetter Gabby’s Golden Gal inside the five-sixteenths pole. "It’s the greatest horse I’ve ever been on in my life," an emotional Borel said of the long-bodied filly in a post-race interview with Donna Brothers. of NBC.
"Tremendous," Hal Wiggins said to NBC’s Kenny Rice. "More than what I thought I had to tell you the truth." He was asked about running the filly in the Kentucky Derby and said it "never entered my mind," though added he might think about it as he soaks in the victory.
Rachel Alexandra covered the 1 1/8 miles in 1:48 4/5, following early fractions of :23 3/5, :47 2/5 and 1:11 4/5, but it wasn’t the time that she posted as much as the manner of this victory. I’ve only seen one filly win by a bigger margin, and that was Landaluce winning the six-furlong Hollywood Park Lassie Stakes (since renamed the Landaluce) by 21 lengths. The quality of Landaluce’s competition in that Grade 2 race wasn’t that strong, and neither was this year’s Kentucky Oaks, but when you put that much daylight between yourself and your foes, it is spectacular, no matter who you beat. Only Secretariat’s 1973 Belmont Stakes victory by 31 lengths was more dominating, at least in my memory.
Stone Legacy, one of three fillies entries from the barn of D. Wayne Lukas (trainer of Landaluce), finished second, with Flying Spur third.
Dolphus Morrison, the breeder and co-owner of Rachel Alexandra, said he has no regrets not running his filly in the Kentucky Derby. "No sir," he told Bob Costas. "The Triple Crown races are a showcase for the future stallions of our industry and fillies should run with fillies and stallions with stallions."
I’ve got a feeling the connections of the 20 colts scheduled to run in the Derby aren’t regretting his decision, either.
That’s it from Ray Paulick
Postscript: Stormalory, who pulled up as the favorite in the American Turf, was euthanized because of multiple fractures to his left front leg.
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
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Tags: Bravo, churchill downs, dolphus morrison, hal wiggins, HRTV, justwhistledixie, kentucky derby, kentucky oaks, Live blog, Paulick Report, Rachel Alexandra, rachel mattson, Ray Paulick, zenyatta Posted in Live Blogs, kentucky oaks | 14 Comments »
Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
Pedigree consultant and author Edwin Anthony examines the bloodlines of Rachel Alexandra, the heavy pre-race favorite for Friday’s Kentucky Oaks, in his final analysis in a series of articles written exclusively for the Paulick Report.
Anthony previously looked at leading candidates for the Kentucky Derby: Louisiana Derby winner Friesan Fire, Florida Derby winner Quality Road, Santa Anita Derby winner Pioneerof the Nile, Florida Derby runner-up Dunkirk, Wood Memorial winner I Want Revenge, Arkansas Derby winner Papa Clem, and Santa Anita Derby runner-up Chocolate Candy.
RACHEL ALEXANDRA (Medaglia d’oro—Lotta Kim, by Roar)
By Edwin Anthony
Every horse race has a winner; that’s a fact. And just because a horse wins an otherwise important race, that does not make that horse particularly special, other than it may have been the best (that day) of an average field of Thoroughbreds. Greatness must be earned—gauged against the clock, measured against the history books. There must be dominance and consistency, across state borders and time zones, over varying track conditions and against the best competition available. When these conditions are met, then a discussion of history and greatness can begin.
It is too early to call Rachel Alexandra great; she hasn’t even won a G1 race yet, much less run in one. But any serious fan of Thoroughbred racing has chill bumps in anticipation of the Kentucky Oaks (G1) and the rest of her 2009 campaign. Having seen her races in the Golden Rod (G2, new stakes record), Martha Washington Stakes (in time a second faster than Old Fashioned’s winning time in the Southwest Stakes), Fair Grounds Oaks (G2), and Fantasy (G2), all of which she won with devastating ease, we know that this filly has very serious talent.
Will Rachel Alexandra ever race against males? Perhaps. She looks a lot more like a colt than a filly, and her imposing frame makes her seem like the kind of filly that wouldn’t be intimidated by colts. Her front-running style would also make it easy for her to stay out of trouble, and she could simply run them off their feet (like Winning Colors or Lady’s Secret), which is a distinct possibility, given the times of her races. You can’t blame her owners for wanting to pick off the important filly races that are at their mercy in the immediate future, however, as those races are very prestigious in their own right and very difficult to win under any circumstances.
But, then, all of that is conjecture. Let’s discuss things that are a little more based in fact. Where does Rachel Alexandra’s talent come from? We should take a closer look at her pedigree, in search of some clues.
The race record of Medaglia d’Oro (her sire) is fairly fresh in our minds, as Rachel Alexandra is from his first crop. There were his wins in the Whitney (G1), Travers (G1), Donn Handicap (G1), Oaklawn Handicap (G2), Strub Stakes (G2), San Felipe (G2), and Jim Dandy (G2)—he certainly liked Saratoga—as well as solid second place finishes in the Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1, twice), Belmont (G1), Dubai World Cup (G1), Pacific Classic (G1), and Wood Memorial (G1). So, he was very fast and very consistent, always part of the exacta in important races, it seemed (he was first or second in 15 of his 17 starts).
El Prado, sire of Medaglia d’Oro, was champion 2-year-old colt in Ireland and has a top-drawer pedigree, being a son of the great stallion Sadler’s Wells from a classic-winning dam (Irish 1000 Guineas) by Sir Ivor from a mare by Tom Fool. His family is very deep, having previously yielded stallions like Drone (damsire of Kentucky Derby winners Grindstone and Charismatic), Dunce, Notebook (damsire of 2009 Dubai World Cup winner Well Armed), and Sir Wimborne. His dam also carries inbreeding to Sir Ivor’s family via the three-quarter siblings Menow and Athenia (second dam of Sir Ivor).
Medaglia d’Oro’s dam side has some quality, although it is not as obvious as in the case of his sire, El Prado. His dam was a stakes winner of five races, although not of particularly high quality. You have to go back to his third dam to find another graded stakes winner (Sapling-G1 winner Travelling Music) but his family is better than it appears. Medaglia d’Oro’s second dam was sired by champion 2-year-old colt Silent Screen, who is from the same family as Medaglia d’Oro (creating inbreeding to the foundation mare Sunday Evening) and it is a deep family indeed. Sunday Evening is part of the great Idle Fancy family that has yielded a number of champions, including Hill Prince (Horse of the Year), First Landing, Cicada, Dark Mirage, Indian Skimmer, and Speightstown, as well as G1 winners like Bluebird, Cherokee Colony, Classy Mirage, Crusader Sword, Daaher, Java Gold, Kennedy Road, Missy’s Mirage, Spun Sugar, Timely Writer, Timely Assertion, and Upper Case. That’s quite a list, and it shows what you can learn if you are simply curious enough to look off the edge of a catalog page.
Bailjumper, the damsire of Medaglia d’Oro, elicits yawns from commercial breeders, but he is closely related to a number of other successful progeny by Damascus from the important Frizette family. Furthermore, Bailjumper was the sire of the extremely sound runner Skip Trial (Haskell—G1, Gulfstream Park Handicap—G1 twice), who in turn sired the equally hickory Skip Away (Horse of the Year). The important thing is that Medaglia d’Oro was a top-class performer, and the potential was always there for him to be a good sire. It doesn’t always work out that way (seldom, in fact), but the potential was there. And the fact that he comes from such sound stock (El Prado and Bailjumper are both known for passing this forward) makes him a sire to watch. Soundness comes from soundness.
Moving to the dam side of Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree, her dam was a very nice racemare, winning the Tiffany Lass Stakes at Fair Grounds, and finishing a credible second in the Golden Rod (G2) at Churchill. Her dam’s sire, Roar, was a winner of the Jim Beam Stakes (G2, now known as the Lane’s End at Turfway) and bred in the purple, being a son of champion Forty Niner from the mare Wild Applause (by Northern Dancer and closely related to Kentucky Derby Sea Hero). Roar’s second dam is Broodmare of the Year Glowing Tribute, she being a daughter of Graustark from one of the most productive branches of the La Troienne family.
Rachel Alexandra’s second dam, Kim’s Blues, is by Cure the Blues, who is from the family of Secretariat and Sir Gaylord, and Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree does in fact carry two crosses of Sir Gaylord, giving us three crosses of the Imperatrice family. Lotta Kim carries 4 x 5 balanced inbreeding to Raise a Native (through a son and a daughter) and 5 x 5 inbreeding to the important mare Pocahontas (through her sons Tom Rolfe and Chieftain), while Kim’s Blues has 4 x 4 balanced inbreeding to Bold Ruler.
El Prado has a similar pedigree to that of Lotta Kim, with balanced inbreeding to Northern Dancer (4 x 4) and Native Dancer (6 x 6), as well as inbreeding to Hail to Reason (6 x 5), Sir Gaylord (5 x 5), Tom Fool (5 x 6), and Turn-to (6 x 6) when they are crossed in Rachel Alexandra’s pedigree. Rachel Alexandra also picks up balanced inbreeding to Ribot (6 x 6,6) through his daughter Social Position and his sons Tom Rolfe and Graustark in Lotta Kim’s pedigree.
The lesson that we can learn from Rachel Alexandra’s lineage is that if you start with a mare than can run some (Kim’s Blues) and start inbreeding to all of these important and well-bred stallions, good things are going to start happening for you. Talent doesn’t fall out of the sky, at least not in Thoroughbreds. If you look closely enough and do your research, you can invariably figure out the source or sources of excellence in a horse’s pedigree. It can skip a generation or two, but it’s always there.
Edwin Anthony was the staff pedigree consultant at Three Chimneys Farm for six years and has penned dozens of articles on pedigree research. He recently published a reference book, The American Thoroughbred (Volume I), which can be ordered by clicking here.
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Tags: Chocolate Candy, dunkirk, Edwin Anthony, Friesan Fire, I Want Revenge, kentucky oaks, lotta kim, medaglia d'oro, Papa Clem, Paulick Report, pedigree analysis, Pioneerof The Nile, Quality Road, Rachel Alexandra, Ray Paulick, roar, the american thoroughbred (volume i), thoroughbred pedigrees Posted in Edwin Anthony Pedigree Report, kentucky oaks | 2 Comments »
Saturday, April 18th, 2009
TVG reports that Stardom Bound will not go in the Kentucky Oaks following her third-place finish in the Ashland Stakes at Keeneland. The Ashland was her first loss since finishing second as a maiden in the Sorrento Stakes at Del Mar last August. She had won five consecutive Grade 1 races prior to the Ashland, including the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, which helped secure her claim on the Eclipse Award as the outstanding 2-year-old filly of 2008.
Jill Byrne reported on TVG that Michael Iavarone of IEAH Stable, which purchased the daughter of Tapit for $5.7 million at the Fasig-TIpton fall mixed sale, said Stardom Bound was not herself following the Ashland and she would be given some time off. There was no specific physical ailment cited, and the report indicated she would return to the races later this summer of fall.
The absence of Stardom Bound makes Rachel Alexandra a heavy favorite in the May 1 Oaks.
Tags: Horse Racing, IEAH, jill byrne, kentucky oaks, Michael Iavarone, Paulick Report, Rachel Alexandra, stardom bound, tvg Posted in kentucky oaks | 9 Comments »
Friday, March 20th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Can the cable network Bravo do for 3-year-old female Thoroughbreds what it’s done for countless wannabe runway models or packs of shallow housewives in New York City, Atlanta or Orange County, Calif.?
Come to think of it, I’m not sure I really want that to happen.
But with Bravo — the sister network to NBC Sports in the NBC Universal family of media companies – televising this year’s Kentucky Oaks for the first time on May 1, it’s anybody’s guess the type of programming we’ll see. A press release from Churchill Downs says the one-hour telecast (5-6 p.m. Eastern) will focus on the “food, fashion and celebrity experience” associated with the Kentucky Oaks. The NBC Sports production and on-air team televising the Derby on May 2, led by host Tom Hammond, will be available for the Bravo telecast, so here’s hoping they’ll be able to find time to show the horse race, too. With a possible field that includes Stardom Bound and Rachel Alexandra, it could be one of the most interesting and best Kentucky Oaks in recent history.
First, though, let’s give Churchill Downs management credit for hooking the Oaks with the Susan G. Komen for the Cure breast cancer organization. It’s a most worthy cause, and if Friday is still considered by some to be “ladies day,” there may be no better time for the horse racing industry to raise awareness and research money to help find a cure for breast cancer.
But let’s be real for a second. The Kentucky Oaks is one of the best and most important fixtures on the Thoroughbred calendar, and a perfect setup to the following day’s Kentucky Derby. It’s been part of ESPN’s Derby week coverage for many years. Moving the Oaks to Bravo – a network best known for shows like “Project Runway,”
“Top Chef,” “Real Housewives of …” and “Tabatha’s Salon Makeover” – is a sign that Churchill Downs is giving up on growing the Oaks as a sporting event and making it more about fashion and celebrity.
That apparent shift in philosophy (the Kentucky Derby web site is also putting a great deal of emphasis on fashion, parties and entertainment) coincides with business developments involving the longtime horse racing provider to ESPN, the Tulsa, Okla.-based Winnercomm. Winnercomm, for years known as Winner Communications, the company founded by Chris Lincoln and Jim Wilburn, was purchased earlier this year by the Outdoor Channel.
Winnercomm has traditionally been horse racing’s gateway to ESPN, but many of Wilburn’s close associates at ESPN are no longer at the network, so he doesn’t have the “juice” he once had. Winnercomm’s deal with Churchill to provide Derby week coverage ended, as did his agreement with the National Thoroughbred Racing Association to produce racing telecasts.
Churchill Downs opted to negotiate directly with ESPN for programming (without Winnercomm), and in this difficult economy they didn’t really want to be on the hook for the cost of the programming without having assurances they would be able to generate enough revenue through advertising to pay for it. ESPN apparently wasn’t interested in trying to sell the programming, and Churchill didn’t want to work through Winnercomm. Thus, there will be no “Breakfast at Churchill Downs” programming on ESPN or ESPN2, and no “Kentucky Derby Draw” or “Kentucky Oaks” telecasts. ESPN will televise some of the Derby Day undercard, which traditionally has attracted a relatively large audience. The Oaks and other Derby week programming has not done very well in the ratings, though Wilburn always managed to sell advertising for them.
Sources have said ESPN will not have live programming from Pimlico during the week of the Preakness, either, though there may be programming from Belmont Park leading up to the Triple Crown’s final jewel. The Derby and Preakness telecasts are shown on NBC, while the Belmont is on ABC, a sister network to ESPN.
Complicating all of this is the fact that Churchill Downs and Magna, which owns Pimlico, home of the Preakness, are partners in the racing cable network HRTV. If the Oaks and Pimlico’s Black-Eyed Susan (which, like the Oaks is on a Friday), were telecast on ESPN or ESPN2, that network most likely would have wanted exclusivity, which would have prevented HRTV from showing the races live.
Like many things in racing, there is no central leadership here. The NTRA, which has its own deals with ESPN for prep races leading up to the Kentucky Derby, has never been given the responsibility of negotiating TV time for the Triple Crown tracks, which have done so on their own or through Triple Crown Productions. The Triple Crown itself is now divided between NBC (Derby and Preakness) and ABC (Belmont). Bob Evans, the CEO of Churchill, is widely viewed as someone who is more interested in technology than television. Magna, of course, has its own problems with bankruptcy, Wilburn, horse racing’s former “go to” guy for getting the sport on ESPN, has lost his clout with the “worldwide leader in sports.”
Perhaps all of this might make a good reality show … on Bravo!
Tags: Bravo, churchill downs, espn, kentucky oaks, NBC, Paulick Report, Project Runway, Ray Paulick, Susan G. Komen, Winnercomm Posted in Churchill Downs Inc., kentucky oaks | 13 Comments »
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