Showing posts with label thoroughbred. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thoroughbred. Show all posts

April 13, 2011

Talking Mo-Mania On The Derby Trail

Animal Kingdom winning the Vinery Spiral Stakes at Turfway Park

     With 23 days to go until the 137th running of the Kentucky Derby, it is time to talk about Mo-Mania – and we are not talking about Uncle Mo. We are talking about trainer Graham Motion. The momentum started when Animal Kingdom won the Vinery Spiral, but reached an absolute roar when lightly-regarded Toby’s Corner shocked 1-to-9 favorite Uncle Mo in the Wood Memorial.
     In the thoroughbred racing community, there isn’t a trainer who is more highly regarded by his peers, his owners and his fans.  His slow climb to where he stands now started with Motion’s first stakes winner Gala Spinaway.  He then scored his first Breeders’ Cup win with veteran turfer Better Talk Now. Now, as the recently selected primary trainer for Barry Irwin’s Team Valor, he has two, maybe three legitimate Kentucky Derby starters.
     The 2010 campaign started a little slowly for the Cambridge, England native, but the way it finished propelled Motion to the ranks of elite trainer.  The graded stakes winners started coming during the summer. First there was Check The Label, then Gypsy’s Warning and Shared Account. The biggest victory though came in the Breeders’ Cup.
Trainer Graham Motion
     Shared Account is owned by Under Armor CEO Kevin Plank and his Sagamore Farm.  The mare’s chances of winning the 2010 Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf might have taken a turn for the worse when she was spooked during a morning workout. Shared Account reared up and dropped exercise rider Heather Craig.  Luckily for all involved, including Shared Account, Hall-of-Fame trainer Bill Mott was nearby. He wheeled his pony around playing outrider and managed to keep the mare from bolting into the distance. Shared Account won the $2,000,000 turf race the next night.
Shared Accounts tries to run during morning workouts.
     It was shortly after this win that Barry Irwin announced that Motion would become Team Valor’s sole trainer. According to Irwin, “Graham is attractive to Team Valor because he has been successful with the kinds of horses we own and in the races we want to win.”  Irwin added, “Also, he is squeaky clean in terms of his record with drugs and he trains at Fair Hill, which we consider to be a huge plus.”  That’s right, while many trainers were racking up suspensions for medication violations, Motion had exactly zero in more than 8,000 starts.
     All Team Valor horses were transferred to Motion and will eventually be stabled at a newly purchased barn at the Fair Hill Training Center.   Among the horses who came Motion was recent Juvenile Turf winner Pluck.
Shared Account (inside, 5) wins the 2011 Filly and Marf Turf.
     That quickly, Motion was able to claim something not even UberTrainer Todd Pletcher could claim – three Breeders’ Cup winners in the barn.  To be fair, Better Talk Now is retired. He is still in the barn at Fair Hill. Better Talk Now gets regular exercise, gets to frolic in the fields and still delights the many visitors who just can’t get enough of “Blackie,” as he is called by the many who love him.
     The training center is but 350 acres of the 5,600 acres that comprise the Fair Hill Natural Resources Management Area.  The rolling hillside and woods in northeastern Maryland have not only the thoroughbred facility, but it also plays host to steeplechase racing, a nature center, a county fair, 80 miles of hiking trails and is home to the annual Fair Hill International, a upper-level Three Day Event.
Dianne Cotter (right) leads Toby's Corner to the winner's circle.
     In addition to training Pluck and Animal Kingdom for Team Valor, Motion also manages Crimson China and the recently purchased Summer Soiree, the runaway winner of the Bourbonette Stakes. Animal Kingdom and Summer Soiree have already punched their tickets for the Kentucky Derby and Oaks, respectively. Pluck had been ambitiously pointed to the Irish 2000 Guineas until bone bruising was revealed during a recent examination. He will have time to recuperate at Fair Hill.
     Crimson China still has to prove himself in the Toyota Bluegrass Stakes this weekend at Keeneland Racecourse. In his first non-turf start Crimson China finished a fast-closing second in the Rushaway Stakes on Spiral Daym but has no graded earnings. According to Irwin, “We hope Crimson China can pull off an upset in the Blue Grass, because like Animal Kingdom he can get the Derby's 10 furlongs and has a better pedigree to handle the dirt.” Irwin is also happy with the path Motion has taken thus far. “Graham has given these two every chance and we are thrilled with the job he has done with them,” Irwin said.
Graham Motion at Santa Anita for morning workouts
     Crimson China will not be highly regarded in the Bluegrass, but Motion is no stranger to longshots.  His first Breeders’ Cup win came at odds of 28-1.  Shared Account scored the second win at 39-1. Then, there was the 2011 Wood Memorial.
     Uncle Mo was being billed as “The Next Secretariat” by many. His legend had grown so large, so fast, that even Sports Illustrated sent a team of photographers to document his coronation in the Wood Memorial.  What the crowd of more than 12,000 witnessed though was, well, very much like Secretariat.  Not since Big Red himself was shocked in his own Wood Memorial effort had race fans seen such an upset.
     It would the Graham Motion trained Toby’s Corner, Dianne Cotter’s homebred son of Bellamy Road, that would deliver the defeat. The win in the Wood vaulted Toby’s Corner to 4th in the graded earnings list, making him the second Motion trainee to secure a spot in the starting gate at Churchill Downs on May 7th.
Summer Soiree winning the Bourbonette Stakes
     The win in the Wood Memorial gave Graham Motion his sixth graded stakes win for 2011, already two-thirds of the way to the 2010 total for Herringswell Stables.  Having Animal Kingdom, Toby’s Corner and Summer Soiree also gives Motion a real chance at winning the elusive Kentucky Oaks-Derby Double.
     According to KentuckyDerby.com, only two trainers have managed to accomplish that feat -- Ben Jones in 1949 and 1952 with Calumet Farms' Wistful/Ponder and Real Delight/Hill Gail, respectively, as well as Herbert J. Thompson in 1933 with Colonel E.R. Bradley's Barn Swallow/Brokers Tip.
Toby's Corner (center) rushes between horses ofr a win in the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct.
     Graham Motion is on a roll in 2011 and most think it couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.  Many were stunned when Uncle Mo lost, but the consensus among spectators was that if Mo had to lose, they were glad the winning trainer was Motion.

March 6, 2011

Catching Up With Larry Jones and Karyn Wittek


story by Scott Serio
photos by Jimmy Jones, except as noted   

 As trainers Larry Jones and Karyn Wittek gallop their horses around the Oaklawn Park oval, one would be hard-pressed to find a link between the veteran Jones and the freshman Wittek.     

     But on the backstretch, kinships often are formed during the pre-dawn light through passing conversations. It was through those conversations, that Jones and Wittek formed a bond, discussing the sport they love and the connections they make with their horses by galloping them each morning. Without this, the pair would never have crossed paths.
     
  Jones saddled his first winner before Wittek was born. He was raised in the rural setting of Hopkinsville, KY.and Wittek grew up on Staten Island in the shadow of Manhattan. But, the road that led them to Hot Springs, Arkansas has provided each of them with memorable experiences and valuable lessons.
     Originally a commercial farmer, Larry Jones turned to horses in the 1970’s when the economy was hurting.  Jones grew up riding horses and, while he never really thought he would end up in thoroughbred racing, he did.
      Wittek aspires to be like Jones. But, Jones, in his typical self-deprecating manner advises the young trainer to aim her sights a little higher.  It was Wittek’s father, Dennis, who actually first exposed his daughter to racing with regular trips to Monmouth Park. Wittek says, “We used to have picnics, but I would always make him take me to the paddock. He would go bet and I would hang out with the ponies.” Wittek now owns a couple of horses with her father.
     She can still remember rooting for Alysheba to win the Kentucky Derby with her father when she was three.  It is her first memory of horse racing and, to this day, the 1988 Horse of the Year is still her favorite. She even had Alysheba written on the back of her shirt when she ran track in high school. “My coach would wait at the turn when I ran the ¼ mile and call me Alysheba as I was running by.”
     Six years before Alysheba, Jones saddled his first winner at Ellis Park. Since then he Jones has trained, and also owned, many horses with names familiar to fans of thoroughbred racing – Hard Spun, Just Jenda, Honest Man, Friesan Fire, Old Fashioned, Wildcat Bettie B, Island Sand, Ruby's Reception, Josh's Madelyn, Solar Flare, Proud Spell and the ill-fated Eight Belles were all trained by Jones.

     Jones’ career has not been without challenges. The man with the signature white cowboy hat was on top of the world after Eight Belles finished second to Big Brown in the Kentucky Derby on May 3, 2008. He had won the Kentucky Oaks the day before with Proud Spell and had just missed completing an Oaks-Derby double with his other talented filly.
      
     As many who know racing will tell you, sometimes those peaks of happiness can be derailed all too quickly. Eight Belles suffered a catastrophic injury on the track immediately after the finish.  There were public demonstrations, there was public outcry and Jones was vilified – all of it undeservedly so.  The filly was in top condition and the accident had nothing to do with Jones’ care according to many experts, including On Call Kentucky Derby Veterinarian Larry Bramlage.
(Joan Fairman Kanes/Eclipse Sportswire)
     With his wife Cindy, an excellent horsewoman in her own right, supporting him, Jones fought through the media frenzy and continued to train and do what he loved. Jones managed to secure an Eclipse Award for Proud Spell as the champion three-year-old filly.
     The furor that followed the 2008 Kentucky Derby subsided and Larry Jones was back on the 2009 Kentucky Derby trail. Suddenly, Jones made an announcement that was a complete head-scratcher for everyone who knew him – he was retiring. On November 7, 2009 he did just that. And while Jones was retiring, Wittek’s career was just getting on a roll.
     She wanted to become a jockey, but there were a few factors lined up against her. She didn’t ride her first horse until visiting a dude ranch when she was seven. She took her first lesson at twelve. “I never had my own horse, I took lessons, but I never competed, “ says Wittek, who added, “I was so jealous of those kids who had their own horses.” And then there was biology – Wittek was just entirely too tall to become a jockey.
     Undeterred, she looked for a way to become more involved in horse racing.  That path led her to the State University of New York-Cobleskill (SUNY for short)for a major in Equine Management. For those of you Googling it, the town of Cobleskill is midway between Cooperstown and Albany along I-88.
     Your next question is “they have equine management there?”  It is a good question. “It was only me and one other girl,” says Wittek, “They just tied us in with the Equine Science majors.” Among other notable alumni from the SUNY-Cobleskill Equine Management program – Trainer Chad Brown.
 
     But going to Cobleskill paid off for Wittek. “My college instructor got us internships at Saratoga.” Without the move, Wittek believes she would have never made it this far. “If I didn’t do it, I would have never gotten to the backstretch. When I graduated I went straight to work walking hots and exercising horses for Todd Pletcher.”
     With that open door, Wittek made the most of the opportunity. Since then she has worked and learned from many notable trainers like Michael Matz, Mike Maker and even Carl Nafzger when he had Street Sense.
     While Wittek was learning from Nafzger on the Triple Crown trail with Street Sense, Jones was in the middle of a wonderful run of back-to-back 2nd-place finishes in the Derby with Hard Spun and Eight Belles.  Not a win, but still a great showing.  His success made his retirement all the more puzzling.
     Jones didn’t really know why he was retiring, but for the man who made a living out of reading horses, it was his ability to read his own body that may have saved his life.  In a phrase many horseman use to describe their horses, Jones “just wasn’t right” and he knew it.
Larry Jones catches a nap during Preakness Week in 2009. (Wendy Uzelac/Eclipse Sportswire)
     When he was diagnosed with aluminum poisoning and the doctor told him the symptoms, it all made perfect sense. Short-term memory loss, bad decision-making and even the early onset of dementia, were all things Jones was experiencing and now he knew why. For the record, it is not known whether aluminum poisoning causes Alzheimer’s or just facilitates its onset, but the two are definitely connected.
Larry Jones exercises Friesan Fire in 2009. (Eclipse Sportswire File)
     Jones was able to experience the domestic life during retirement. He bought a house in Maryland, close to the Fair Hill Training Center and Delaware Park. For the first time in a long time, Jones wasn’t always on the road. When contemplating his retirement Jones said, “That rocker (on the front porch) felt pretty good for about three weeks, then that horse got to feeling a lot better.”
     As Jones started his recovery, he also considered what life after “retirement” would be like. Things had grown so fast for Cindy and him. At the point he decided to un-retire and return to training in 2011, he wanted things to be different.
     He says the size of their stable is down from its peak. “It gives us a little more individual time with each horse,” and Jones added, “With the quality of the horses we have, its great to work with these kinds of horses.”
     It might take Jones a little longer to get ready for his day than it used to, but getting loosened up to gallop his own horses is important for him. It is that daily routine which has Jones crossing the path of young trainers like Karyn Wittek.
     Maybe in Wittek, Jones sees a little bit of himself. He says, “She does good, you can tell she has a good background, and her work ethic is the same way,” and Jones adds, “she is out there, she works, she’s not afraid to get her hands dirty and put her backbone in it.”
     On a recent race day, it was Wittek who decided to go to a spot in the grandstand to her first-time starter at a TV where many trainers go. She was nervous. “I was worried I had him at the wrong distance,” she said, “since I sent him long first time, or for the wrong price, what if he got beat 30 lengths?”   She watched the race with Jones. After the first led most of the way, but faded to fifth, Jones told her she was doing a great job and she just needed to keep at it.
     The fact a veteran trainer like Larry Jones notices her is gratifying for Wittek. She adds what she can pick up from trainers like Jones to the things she has incorporated into her repertoire from trainers to whom she has been exposed.
    “All of them were very hands on people, in the barn every day,” she said. And with regards to Todd Pletcher she said, “He has hundreds of horses, but when he showed up, he knew exactly what was going on with each horse, he never missed a beat.”
     When Wittek set out as a freshman trainer in 2010, she didn’t have hundreds of horses. She had two.  Her first win came in August at River Downs in the likes of the four-year-old Dead Serious. “A friend got him for free from a rescue and he was doing so well on the farm she thought she would race him.“  Dead Serious finished second five times in a row. She said, “I was dying to get my first win. Then he broke his maiden and so did I.”
     Now she is at Oaklawn Park for her first full meet with a string of 13 horses and she has tallied two wins and hit the board numerous times.  “Owner Billy Hays gave me an opportunity and it has worked so far,” she said, “Hopefully, I can keep that going and pick up some owners of my own.”
     Even with the early successes, Wittek’s aspirations are grounded. She doesn’t want a huge stable. “I would like to have a nice string of maybe 30-50 horses.” When asked if winning the Kentucky Derby is included in her goals, she said, “I would just like to be successful, go see my family in New York, go back to my farm in Kentucky and maybe go to some place warm like Florida in the winter with my horses, that would be nice.”
     And with this opportunity comes a whole new set of challenges. Wittek feels it is important to stick with basics. “I love the rush of breezing horses, but being out there on them is so important. You feel every little thing with your horse and you know right away if something isn’t right.”
     Wittek recognizes that as a female trainer there may be a few competitors our there who will be her detractor. “Sure some people don’t respect you,” she says, but adds, “But the more experienced trainers, people like Larry Jones, they show a lot more respect and are much more willing to help you.”
     They are unlikely horse training contemporaries at first glance, but they both get up at 4 a.m. every day. They both gallop their own horses.
     “You don’t get Sundays off, you always worry about your horses.”
     Karyn Wittek said it, but, it could just as easily have been said by Larry Jones.  
   

March 5, 2011

Stay Thirsty Scores In Gotham

     Uncle Mo's understudy Stay Thirsty made the most of his chance to play the leading role by stealing the show in the Gotham Stakes at Aqueduct Race Track.  Stay Thirsty took command easily and remained in front for the win, but he lugged in during the stretch drive triggering an objection. Maybe he just wanted to add a little drama for his time in the spotlight. In the end, trainer Todd Pletcher gave a fist pump as the son of Bernardini's first graded stakes win was upheld and owner Mike Repole was able to return to the winner's circle once again.

     Next up for Mike Repole's Kentucky Derby hopefuls will be the 2011 debut of Uncle Mo on March 12th in the Timely Writer Stakes at Gulfstream Park. If all goes well with that start, Repole Stables will be loaded for the Derby. Stay Thirsty's win jumped him into the Top 10 in grades stakes earnings.

     It is unclear where this win will rank for Stay Thirsty when compared to other Derby preps.  This was his first start since finishing fifth in the 2010 Breeders Cup Juvenile, so it was expected he might not be completely fit. The winning time for the 1 1/16-mile race of 1:44.78 wasn't stunning either. Then there is the aforementioned lugging in.


     For Mike Repole, it is one win down in one debut. According to an interview with the The Bloodhorse, trainer Todd Pletcher was ecstatic and thought Stay Thirsty ran huge off the layoff. Now Uncle Mo will return to the spotlight and it is his turn to deliver.
CAPTIONS: Top, Mike Repole leads Stay Thirsty to the winner's circle (Sue Kawczynski/Eclipse Sportswire); Left, Todd Pletcher gives a fist pump as stewards leave the order of finish unchanged (Eric Kalet/Eclipse Sportswire); Right, Ramon Dominguez talks with owner Mike Repole and trainer Todd Pletcher while awaiting the outcome of an objection (Eric Kalet/Eclipse Sportswire); Bottom, Ramon Dominguez looks under his arm and sees daylight as Stay Thirsty cruises home with a 3-length win in the Gotham Stakes (Sue Kawczynski/Eclipse Sportswire)

February 28, 2011

Road To The Roses Fantasy League

Are you riding Soldat all the way to Churchill?
Soldat, jockey Alan Garcia up, wires the field for a front-running win in the Fountain of Youth Stakes.

     Just about everyone in the Stride LIVE league for the Road to the Roses Fantasy Game had Soldat to win the Fountain of Youth. Flashpoint winning the Hutcheson? Not so much.  Many stables also had Gourmet Dinner, To Honor And Serve and Travelin Man.
     With One weeks of results, here are the Top 5 stables in Stride LIVE's league. Anyone see anything familiar? Apparently Barry Mitchell and Keith Cooper knew something the rest of us didn't.

Rank    Score    Stable Name - Player - Hometown
1               56    CMCC, Barry Mitchell, Inglewood
2               50    Zain-in-my-heart Stable, Keith Cooper, cassatt
3               48    Zain-In-My-Heart-2, Keith Cooper, cassatt
4               46    Ivargroup, Barry Mitchell, Inglewood
4               46    Professor Thoroughbred, Barry Mitchell, Inglewood

     According to several interview, Soldat's trainer Kiaran McLaughlin believes the colt is just as amenable to being on the front end as he is rating, which is good news on the Derby Trail.  Soldat earned a 96 Beyer Speed Rating for the win, down from the 102 he earned in his dirt track allowance debut in the slop. Still, the 96 is respectable.
     What's is next on the Derby Trail?  Next weekend has the Gotham Stakes and the John Battaglia Memorial as races where you can earn RTTR points. We will analyze those races later, but it looks like Stay Thirsty, Toby's Corner and maybe even Hutcheson scratch Crossbow might vie for honors.
      Who are your sleepers? From looking at the entrants in the Stride LIVE league, many have chosen the horses who occupy many of the Top Ten lists out there.  Some folks do have Fort Hughes, Wilkinson, Sweet Ducky, Albergatti and the like.  We like Crimson China, he has a chance to be a real difference maker. If you don't have him in your stable yet, you will after he wins the Spiral.
     If you have an RTTR Stable and still want to become a part of the Stride LIVE league, here is our information.

OUR LEAGUE INFO:
Entry link: http://www.roadtotheroses.com/G=94/game/join_league.phtml 
League Number:1313038988
Activation Code:4192170078

     To Barry and Keith, very nice job this week. Question is...will your stable be able to hold up for the entire Derby Trail?  Front runners don't exactly do well at Churchill.  Stay tuned...

February 26, 2011

Flying High In The Big Easy

GIRL FLYING LIKE A G-5 
story by
Maria Glorioso

On a recent visit to the Fair Grounds with my brother Trey, we were lucky enough to sit outside the jockey’s room and chat with jockey Anna Napravnik. While in the paddock, she may be all business, but during our brief encounter in between races she was open, friendly and possessed southern-like hospitality and charm.
Anna Rose Napravnik, “Rosie” to her friends, fans and family, came to the Fair Grounds after becoming the first female jockey in 73 years of racing at Delaware Park to capture the riding title. Rosie says she didn’t come to the Fair Grounds with any expectation she would be the leading rider, but with five weeks left in the meet she has the title squarely in her sights. Rosie has a 17-win lead and she is getting excited about it.  Claiming this riding title as a female, at the oldest race meet in the country against such veteran riders as Robby Albarado, Miguel Mena and Shaun Bridgmahon would be another first.
Rosie credits her continued successes to arriving in the Big Easy with a plan.  She sought the help of someone local to secure mounts on the many Louisiana-breds. She found that in longtime local agent Derek Ducoing.  Rosie wanted to work with top-level trainers like local Sturges Ducoing, Bret Calhoun and Michael Stidham.  She says the “Michael Stidham outfit was a big part of the reason I came down here.”  It doesn’t hurt that Stidham’s assistant trainer Joe Sharp is also Rosie’s boyfriend.
Yes, I know guys, sorry, she’s spoken for.
She credits these people and many more in helping her focus on what is important to her success.  She also credits her fans. She said there are a lot of people that come out to see her ride. She gets excited when she sees them cheering and yelling, “Go Rosie!”   I could see on her face she gets a kick out of that. “I love it down here” she says with a big smile.
It is not surprising that our locals, in and out of the sport, have welcomed this newcomer from the East Coast.  The sport of horse racing, however, is very competitive. Some Fair Grounds veterans wondered early on if this 5’1, 112 pound girl could hold her own riding down here against the big boys. They tested her spirit, her abilities and her toughness. Rosie admits proudly and eloquently, “the Fair Grounds is the toughest jockey colony I have ever ridden in a meet.”  She said nothing extreme happened, but she was given a hard time in a few of her early races. The veterans would try to push her out of position or get her “locked in” during a race.  Her understanding of the competitiveness in the sport and her steady even-keeled demeanor kept her focused. It didn’t take long for the veterans to realize Rosie was more than capable of competing against them. Her 17-win lead is evidence enough. 
Rosie believes there are challenges in being a female jockey, but there are also advantages.  She says by (mostly) sticking to a healthy diet she isn’t confronted with the same riding weight issues that haunt many male jockeys.  Some worry that female Jockeys might not be as strong as their male counterparts and will have trouble controlling the 1,200-pound rockets they ride. Rosie doesn’t need, nor have time for, any additional weight training.  Her physical fitness and strength comes from a lifetime of very long days riding and racing.
 The one area Rosie does feel pressure – family.  She knows she wants one someday, maybe even before thirty. So, at 23 she knows someday soon she will start feeling the clock ticking on her career. Her male counterparts certainly don’t have this worry, but, for now, it isn’t at the top of her list either. She is focusing on the job she loves.
Her passion for racing is clear. You can trace it to when she was seven-years-old racing ponies with her sister. She remembers begging her mom to let her put her stirrups up higher and let her out of the arena so she could cantor the pony as fast as she could go.  And now, except for in the early waking hours, Rosie says, “It doesn’t feel like a job,” adding, “There is never any lack of excitement. There are always new horses to ride, new people to meet and new places to travel to.”
But make no mistake, the professional sport of thoroughbred racing may have a place for girls but it is NOT for sissies.  Riding these powerful animals at 40mph while balancing on a strip of leather and two pieces of metal can take its toll. High physical energy, mental energy and stamina are required to perform well and remain safe.  In order to stay at peak performance and prevent jet lag, Rosie says earned naps are as frequent as she can get them, even between races at times in the jockey room.  Cornell social psychologist James Maas might have had Rosie in mind when he coined the term power nap.   
In a sport where horses and jockeys fall, sometimes getting seriously injured, Rosie has had her share of bruises, bumps and broken bones.  At the inquiry of a family friend we attend the races with, I asked Rosie how she overcomes her fear after a big spill. Without hesitation she stated, “Fear cannot be a factor. If you’re scared, you’re dangerous to yourself, your horse and your fellow horsemen.” She added, “If you fall and get hurt, you put it behind you and focus forward.” There are those who say jockeys have to have ice water running through their veins because they need to be so cool. Rosie is no exception. “I do not allow myself to feel the pressure so I can focus on exactly what I want to do,” she said.  In her own words Rosie describes a kind of courage that can only be defined as wanting something so badly that no perceived risk is enough to stop you. She said that after a serious injury, the first question 99% of jockeys will ask is “when can I get back to riding?”
There aren’t many, if any, who would question Rosie’s courage, passion or commitment. Those traits are what have helped her get to where she is today.  But, there is more.
When asked what makes her a good rider, a top jock, she says she finds it hard to articulate. Rosie has been doing it so long that it just comes natural and with little thought. Just because Rosie has trouble putting into words something that has become almost involuntary over the years, don’t mistake that for a lack of knowledge. This young woman is smart.  And more importantly, she is a smart rider. She has maturity and horse instinct way beyond her youth. 
She was eventually able to explain to me a few of the things she does that she attributes to her being a top jockey.  I don’t want to give all her secrets away, but one thing she discussed was her calm, steady nature.  She believes this demeanor creates opportunities for her to develop mutual trust between her and a horse. 
This bond proves very beneficial when the crucial time comes to ask a horse to deliver everything he has and more. She talked about how this works well with one of her favorite horses on the grounds, 3-year-old Kentucky Derby hopeful, Action Ready.  Rosie says he can get anxious at times, but she has developed a mutual trust and allows Action Ready to calm himself to where his trainer, Bret Calhoun wants him to be.  She loves racing Action Ready, not only because he is a quality horse, but also because the tall, beautiful, jet-black horse whose ears are always perked loves the thrill of racing as much as she does.  “We get each other.”
I went out to the track to get one last look around before putting this in final form.  It was a gorgeous, 75 degree and sunny day here in New Orleans so my family and I went outside by the rail of the track to take a look at the horses as they were approaching the finish line. Not surprisingly, there she was, speeding down the track like a G-5 jet, out in front and winning another race!
If you’re looking for a sport that has speed, power athletes, thrills, chills, jet streams, fantastic sights and sounds, passion, history, the chance to meet new people, watch amazingly athletic animals perform, win some money or party till the money runs out, then get yourself down to the races.
 Spring is definitely in the air in New Orleans and everything is coming up “Rosie” at the Fair Grounds Race Course.  Come on out, take a look for yourself and give Rosie a shout out!


Ps: I asked Rosie if she was coming back next season.  Her reply:  “ABSOLUTLEY!”



February 24, 2011

Road To The Roses Fantasy League

     The Road To The Roses Kentucky Derby Fantasy League opens this weekend with three races available to earn you points towards winning the Stride LIVE league.  If you have joined yet, you have until 11:59am on Saturday to join and have the choices count. This week's races include the Fountain of Youth (G2) and Hutcheson (G2) at Gulfstream Park and the Borderland Derby (Listed) at Sunland Park.

OUR LEAGUE INFO:
Entry link: http://www.roadtotheroses.com/G=94/game/join_league.phtml 
League Number:1313038988
Activation Code:4192170078
    
     If you are unfamiliar with the RTTR, here are some important rules, including one excellent format change.  In year's past, you would only have five active horses in your stable of 10. This would cause problems of very active weekends and sometimes you had to hope you guessed right. Well, this year, all ten are active AND you can choose five "power horses" that will earn double points. As with past years, you also have to choose two jockeys and two trainers.
     Here is the point structure copied directly from RTTR.


This contest will use a rotisserie scoring system. Each stable will be awarded points on the following basis for horses:

Grade I
Grade II
Grade III
Listed
Kentucky Derby
1st:
15 points
12 points
8 points
4 points
25 points
2nd:
7 points
5 points
3 points
2 points
15 points
3rd:
4 points
3 points
2 points
1 point
10 points
Designated “POWER” horses will be eligible to earn two (2) times the amount of points of non-power horses.  Points for “power” horses will be awarded on the following basis:

Grade I
Grade II
Grade III
Listed
Kentucky Derby
1st:
30 points
24 points
16 points
8 points
50 points
2nd:
14 points
10 points
6 points
4 points
30 points
3rd:
8 points
6 points
4 points
2 point
20 points
Points for your selected jockeys and trainers are awarded for a win only on the following basis:

Grade I
Grade II
Grade III
Listed
Kentucky Derby
10 points
8 points
5 points
3 points
20 points
      As you can see, with both the Hutcheson and the Fountain of Youth being Grade 2's, there are a bunch of points up for grabs this weekend. We will start off with the Borderland Derby.   There are many unknown horses in the race, but top trainers like Steve Asmussen and Doug O'Neill are taking their shot.  The morning line favorite Special Kid, an $80,000 Ocala Sale purchase in 2010, will be ridden by Christian Santiago Reyes and is listed at 5/2.

Big Drama's little brother Little Drama
     The Hutchseon Stakes has all the makings of a FAST race.  The most likely favorite will be Crossbow.  He will be making his stakes debut and has already clocked a 1:22.86 at the Hutcheson distance of 7-furlongs in a previous allowance race. But, Crossbow isn't alone, Madman Diaries, Travelin Man, Flashpoint, Razmataz, Manicero and Champion Sprinter Big Drama's little brother Little Drama have all shown exceptional sprint speed in recent wins.  Good luck sorting out this race.
     The Fountain of Youth isn't nearly as confusing. There are several horses who scores impressively in recent lower level/maiden races and are stepping up to stakes competition for the first time. The real story everyone is hoping for is that this will be To Honor And Serve's coming out party as a three-year-old and kick off a successful Triple Crown campaign.

     Among the other challengers in the FOY who have graded-stakes experience are Soldat, 2nd to Pluck on the turf in the 2010 Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf, and Gourmet Dinner, winner of the Delta Downs Jackpot.
     Good luck with you entries this weekend. And remember, the winner of the Stride LIVE league will win an HD DVD of the Zenyatta video currently on our site.  To enter go to this link -http://www.roadtotheroses.com/G=94/game/join_league.phtml Our league number is 1313038988 and the Activation Code is 4192170078