Game Face rallies to win First Lady Stakes

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Game Face rallied to win the $100,000, Grade 3 First Lady Stakes for fillies and mares at Gulfstream Park on Sunday, drawing away to a 2 3/4 -length victory over Any Limit.

There wasnt nearly as much drama in the $100,000 Sweetest Chant Stakes for 3-year-old fillies, with 22-1 longshot Oilgonewile leading all the way.

Ridden by John Velazquez, Game Face ran six furlongs in 1:10.57 and paid $4.80, $3.20 and $2.20. Any Limit paid $3.40 and $3, while Slewfoundmoney paid $2.60 to show.

Any Limit took the lead from the start with JZ Warrior pressing the pace. Game Face eventually caught Any Limit in midstretch and has now finished in the money in all five stakes races in which shes run, winning three of them for earnings of $353,834.

Oilgonewile, with Wesley Henry Sr. aboard, won by 1 3/4 lengths over Weekend Strike. Exe finished third and Bankers Choice, the favorite, finished last in a field of 11.

Oilgonewile ran a mile on the grass in 1:36.24 and paid $46.60, $18 and $10.20. Weekend Strike paid $6.80 and $4.20, and Exe paid $5 to show.

Oilgonewile has won three of nine races for earnings of $130,306.

Life Is Sweet wins Santa Anita feature

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Life Is Sweet rallied from next-to-last to win the $150,000 El Encino Stakes for 4-year-old fillies by 2 1/2 lengths Sunday at Santa Anita.

Ridden by Garrett Gomez, Life Is Sweet covered 1 1-16 miles in a stakes record 1:41.30 and paid $9.40, $4.40 and $3.20. Country Star returned $3.20 and $2.60 as the 6-5 wagering favorite, while Miss Singhsix was another three lengths back and paid $3.20 to show.

It was Life Is Sweets first stakes victory and first under John Shirreffs, who took over training from Bill Mott when the filly moved to the West Coast.

By the eighth pole, she had inhaled the whole field, and she stayed on her left lead, so shes still learning, Gomez said. Its nice to know theres more left in the tank.

The victory, worth $90,000, increased Life Is Sweets career earnings to $240,810, with two wins in seven starts. She had not raced since last May.

McCoy’s shrewd game plan helps Exotic Dancer to pole position

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You could tell what it meant by the demeanour of Tony McCoy. His customary granite deadpan was replaced by a wide grin and his usual earnest debrief by a hug for Jonjo O’Neill. For jockey and trainer, belated graduation of the exasperating talent called Exotic Dancer was cause for deep satisfaction.

Six previous grade one chases had brought a clutch of silver and bronze medals. Finally, they had to travel abroad to achieve the breakthrough but, for two Irishmen like McCoy and O’Neill, there was added gratification in winning the Lexus Chase, and at the principal expense of Ireland’s only plausible Gold Cup hope.

War Of Attrition has been skilfully coaxed back from serious injury by Mouse Morris, his trainer, but he was beaten 20 lengths yesterday. There were no obvious excuses, whereas for connections of The Listener, who fell at the second, and Neptune Collonges, still in front when departing two from home, there was at least the consoling uncertainty of what might have been.

The latter will assuredly progress and the Irish Hennessy, back here in February, could see him restate the challenge to his stablemates, Denman and Kauto Star, at Cheltenham. And that must now be the aim once more for Exotic Dancer after a change of tactics executed by McCoy brought the glory that had eluded him so long.
Defeat in the Betfair Chase at Haydock, even after the exit of his old nemesis Kauto Star, had left McCoy despairing. Not for nothing, though, has he been champion jockey 13 years in succession. McCoy devised the notion of dropping his horse right off the pace to relax him, then carried it out flawlessly.

His obstacles were chiefly overcome before the race begun. First, he had to obtain release from his day job riding for J.P. McManus, who ran Glenfinn Captain. With this granted, he had to survive a boneshaking fall at Kempton on Saturday which left him prone for several minutes.

The race itself changed shape with the fall of The Listener donating an easy lead to Ruby Walsh on Neptune Collonges. In the back straight for the final time, Exotic Dancer scythed through the field, jumping immaculately. He had taken the measure of War Of Attrition and was the winner in waiting even before the leader hit the second-last hard enough to dislodge Walsh.

Paul Nicholls, left to reflect on a fruitless four-horse raid on this meeting, said: Neptune was in the right place and he would have galloped right to the line. It was just one of those silly mistakes and we won’t rush to run him again before February.

Perversely, though, this also made life harder for McCoy, now left in front. I was worried, because it wasn’t where I wanted to be, he said. I’d kept him out of the race to help him settle - I knew if I rode him like I did at Haydock, he wouldn’t win. Few horses have deserved a grade one as much as him. Take out the top two in the Gold Cup and he’s the next best, so we’d feel sick if something happened to them and we weren’t there.

O’Neill, while agreeing that frustration has been paramount in the training of this gifted horse, believed this was the best he has performed since his days of winning big handicaps at Cheltenham. He is likely to return there next month for the Letheby and Christopher Chase before a third try at the Gold Cup, for which Ladbrokes cut him from 33-1 to 12-1.

Nicholls confirmed that Kauto Star is blooming after his third King George win and that Denman will not run before the Aon Chase at Newbury. You wouldn’t know Kauto has had a race - he seems to know when he’s been good. As for Denman, I could run him in a hurdle race but what would it achieve?

The Nicholls runners were second and fourth in the Coral Welsh National on Saturday as Notre Pere provided a first Irish winner of the Chepstow marathon. A year ago yesterday, the winner took the grade one novice chase at Leopardstown, which this time was widely expected to see Trafford Lad maintain his unbeaten record over fences.

Instead, Trafford Lad idled and was caught close home by Casey Jones, while the grade two three-mile hurdle saw a scrambling head victory for the odds-on Catch Me. It was not an advertisement of his prospects for the World Hurdle and Edward O’Grady, his trainer, observed: I don’t think Nicky Henderson will lose any sleep.

Henderson will be watching intently today, though, as the likely Irish threats to his Champion Hurdle favourite, Binocular, line up in the Festival Hurdle. Sizing Europe, the obvious favourite, was slightly lame yesterday, putting his participation in doubt.

Proudinsky wins San Gabriel at Santa Anita

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Proudinsky beat Ferneley by three-quarters of a length to win the $150,000 San Gabriel Handicap on Sunday, one year after finishing second in the Grade II turf event.

Ridden by Rafael Bejarano, Proudinsky ran 1 1-8 miles in 1:48.53.

Proudinsky paid $4.60, $3.20 and $2.80. Ferneley returned $7.80 and $4.80 while Medici Code, third in last years San Gabriel, paid $3.80 to show.

Bejarano was tapped to ride after Garrett Gomez sustained hand and leg injuries in a spill on Saturday. Gomez said he hopes to return to the saddle on Monday when Santa Anita will have a Pick Six carry-over of $156,069.

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R Clear Victory wins Robb Handicap at Aqueduct

R Clear Victory beat South Fourth St. by 1 1/2 lengths Sunday to win the $85,100 Alex Robb Handicap for New York breds at Aqueduct.

The 5-year-old gelding ridden by Stewart Elliott for trainer Steve Asmussen earned his seventh win in 27 starts. The time was 1:44.85 for 1 1-16 miles on a good track.

R Clear Victory paid $23.80, $11.60 and $7.30. South Fourth St. returned $13.60 and $8.20. Icabad Crane paid $4.80 to show.

Vacare wins $150,000 feature at Hollywood Park

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Favorite Vacare held off Gotta Have Her and In My Glory to score a one-length victory in the $150,000 Dahlia Handicap on the closing day at Hollywood Park on Sunday.

Ridden by Jose Valdivia Jr., Vacare covered 1 1-16 miles on the turf in 1:43.13 and paid $3.60, $2.60 and $2.40. Gotta Have Her returned $3.60 and $2.80. In My Glory paid $5.40 to show.

With the win, Vacare banked $90,000 to boost her earnings to $1.2 million. Trainer Christophe Clement also got his 1,000th win. Vacares connections said the 5-year-old mare will be retired.

Shes such a pleasure to ride. Im going to miss her a lot, but at least she goes out a winner, Valdivia said.

Rafael Bejarano added another jockeys title by riding 52 winners at Hollywood Parks 40-day meet. He completed a sweep of the five major Southern California meetings this year. Doug ONeill saddled 30 winners to take the training title. Its the seventh time ONeill was the top trainer at Hollywood Park.

Track officials said attendance during the meet fell 12 percent compared to last year.

Los Al jockey in critical condition

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Quarter Horse jockey Sam Thompson was in critical condition at Los Alamitos Medical Center on Sunday evening after being thrown from his mount in a one-horse spill on Saturday, according to Los Alamitos track officials.

According to a friend of Thompson’s, the 35-year-old jockey suffered a neck injury. Members of his family were flying to Southern California on Sunday to be at his side. The extent of Thompson’s injury was not immediately known.

The accident occurred in Saturday’s eighth race. Thompson was riding Harems Dynasty who suffered an injury after a 300-yard race for maidens. Thompson was unseated, and may have been struck by Harems Dynasty while he was on the ground.

Harems Dynasty was believed to be injured during the running of the race, according to Cody Joiner, an assistant to his father, trainer Mike Joiner.

Sam realized that something was wrong but he probably did not know exactly what, Cody Joiner said in a statement released by the track. He tried to pull the horse up.

Sam is one of my best friends in the world. We play golf every Monday. We never miss a Monday golf outing. Sam was excited to ride this filly. That’s all he talked about (Saturday) morning. He didn’t want any other rider to get on her in the mornings. We are all hoping for the best for Sam.

Thompson, 35, was sidelined earlier this year with a broken foot. He has won several major races at the Quarter Horse track in the last decade. Thompson was regular rider of the millionaire Corona Kool in the late 1990s and earlier this decade, and has won the Los Alamitos Million Futurity twice.

For many years, Thompson has been closely allied with former champion trainer Donna McArthur. This year, Thompson has won 28 races from 210 mounts that have earned $499,484.

Pioneerof the Nile by nose in CashCall

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It’s a long way from the CashCall Futurity to the Kentucky Derby, but the road there looked a little shorter for Pioneerof the Nile following his hard-fought victory over I Want Revenge in the Grade 1, $750,000 Cash Call Futurity on Saturday at Hollywood Park.

Pioneerof the Nile ($4.80), the favorite, prevailed by a nose over I Want Revenge in the 1 1/16-mile race, but it was the prospect of what he had done to date, and what the future holds, that had his connections so excited after the race.

“He’s a May foal by Empire Maker. He’s not supposed to be running this well as a 2-year-old,” said Ahmed Zayat, who bred and owns Pioneerof the Nile.

Bob Baffert, who now trains Pioneerof the Nile, said the 2-year-old colt is “a big, one-paced horse who covers a lot of ground.”

“A mile and a sixteenth, hes not going to quicken with them,” Baffert said. “A mile and an eighth and longer, he’s just getting in gear. He was just getting started.”

Pioneerof the Nile got a perfect stalking trip under jockey Garrett Gomez, who was able to ride despite a suspension because the Futurity is a designated race. As Ventana and Frumious set off early and dueled through fractions of 23.42 seconds for the opening quarter-mile and 47.08 seconds for a half-mile, Pioneerof the Nile settled into third, outside and in the clear.

Gomez began shoving on Pioneerof the Nile on the turn, and Pioneerof the Nile gradually advanced on the leaders. He took over just inside the furlong pole, then bravely held off I Want Revenge, who rallied menacingly heading into the stretch but never could get past Pioneerof the Nile.

“When he makes the lead, he pulls himself up,” Baffert said. “As soon as he saw the other horse, he dug in.”

Chocolate Candy finished another 1 1/2 lengths back in third. Of the other fancied runners, Bittel Road was fourth and Azul Leon fifth in the field of 11. Mr. Rod was scratched.

Pioneerof the Nile completed 1 1/16 miles on Cushion Track in 1:41.95. He gave Baffert his fourth win in this race, following Captain Steve, Point Given, and Real Quiet, all of whom proved to be major stakes winners.

Bill Mott trained Pioneerof the Nile for his first four starts. He was turned over to Baffert following the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, in which he finished fifth.

“He came to me in really good shape,” Baffert said. “This is a pretty good gift.”

‘Tis the season.

Dewey might miss Breeders Crown.

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Dewey might miss Breeders Crown.
Deweycheatumnhowe has developed a throat abscess, jeopardizing his appearance next weekend in the Breeders Crown.

The Hambletonian winner, and a leading contender for Harness Horse of the Year honors, is heavily favored in the 3-year-old Colt Trot, one of eight finals worth a combined $4.9 million at the Meadowlands Racetrack on Nov. 29.

Fortunately, his division did not require an elimination, which would have been held Saturday night. If the problem clears, Deweycheatumnhowe could still attempt to join Mack Lobell (1987) and Malabar Man (1997) as the only trotting colts to win Breeders Crowns at 2 and 3.

In two years he has never had a thing wrong with him, so I guess it had to happen sometime, said trainer and driver Ray Schnittker. Ill wait till Monday and see what Im going to do. Were lucky there was no elimination.

Deweycheatumnhowe has won 22-of-24 starts, earning over $3 million.

Always for Love wins Big A feature.

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Always for Love wins Big A feature. Always for Love beat Impression by a half length Friday, springing an upset in the $48,000 allowance feature for fillies and mares on the turf at Aqueduct.

The 4-year-old earned her first win in eight races this season for the Philadelphia Park-based team of trainer Guadalupe Preciado and jockey Angel Arroyo. Overall, Always for Love improved to 4-for-20, running the 1 1-16 miles on the good course in 1:43.29.

Always for Love paid $17.60, $6.70 and $3.90. Impressionism, the 2-1 favorite, returned $3.30 and $2.50. Flibberjibit paid $2.80 to show.

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Curlin to stand stud at Lanes End Farm in 2009.

Reigning Horse of the Year Curlin will stand at stud next year at Lanes End, a Kentucky horse farm owned by a former U.S. ambassador to Britain.
Will Farish announced Friday the richest racehorse in North America will become a stallion at his Versailles farm, where Curlins sire, Smart Strike, is already a breeding star.

Curlin will command a stud fee of $75,000 his opening year, half what Smart Strike receives. But its $10,000 more than the fee for Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Big Brown.

Curlins performance on the track, his pedigree and his conformation make him the most exciting sire prospect to retire in many years, Farish said in a news release.

Curlins majority owner, Jess Jackson, announced last week he was retiring the horse after perhaps one last race. Jackson has bid $4 million to buy out the 20 percent interest in the horse he doesnt already own, but the complicated ownership dispute is being worked out in court.

Although Jacksons Stonestreet Stables had looked into the possibility of standing Curlin itself, by choosing Lanes End, the horse will live at what Jackson calls the nations premier stallion farm.

He is one of the best examples of the breedfast, strong, and durable, Jackson said. I predict he will make a substantial contribution to our sport through his gene pool, and I am looking forward to seeing his foals compete and possibly exceed his unequaled race record.

Curlin has won 11 of 16 career starts, plus a pair of second and third place finishes. The only time he finished out of the money was his fourth-place finish last month in the $5 million Breeders Cup Classic, which he was attempting to win for the second straight year.

Despite that loss, Curlins career includes wins at the Preakness Stakes, Jockey Club Classic, Stephen Foster Handicap and Dubai World Cup. His career winnings of $10.5 million have passed Cigar to make him North Americas richest racehorse in history.

Curlin made his mark in the history books in so many ways: as a classic winner, as a colt who traveled to Dubai and captured the World Cup, and who returned to take three more Grade 1 races and tally record earnings, trainer Steve Asmussen said. His physical and mental attitude is unparalleled and he retires perfectly sound.

Former attorneys William Gallion and Shirley Cunningham Jr. of Lexington bought Curlin for $57,000 in 2004 through their Midnight Cry Stables. They sold a majority interest to a group led by Jackson in 2005. Jackson, the founder of Kendall-Jackson Wines, has since bought out the other investors.

Gallion and Cunningham are under a court order to sell their 25 percent share of the horse to help satisfy a $42 million civil judgment against them by former clients, who accused them of fraud in a settlement over the diet drug fen-phen.

A court-appointed receiver oversees that share of the horse and is recommending Jacksons $4 million offer be accepted. A thoroughbred appraiser has set Curlins value at $20 million, but attorneys for Gallion and Cunningham say the amount should be much higher. Big Brown sold last spring for $50 million.

NY racing stumbles amid weak economy.

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NY racing stumbles amid weak economy. Betting is down at New Yorks horse tracks and Off-Track Betting parlors this year amid a weak economy.

The amount bet on races, called handle, is down 4 percent to $527 million through October at New Yorks thoroughbred and harness tracks compared to the same period last year.

The state Racing and Wagering Board said three thoroughbred tracks, Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga, had a 4 percent drop. There also are decreases at seven of eight harness tracks.

Handle at OTBs dropped 6 percent over the same period to $1.58 million. Bets at New York City OTB, which accounts for more than half the OTB handle statewide, dropped by 8 percent, according to the board.

Horse racing has been struggling for years as casinos and Internet gambling sites proliferate. But gambling operations around the nation have suffered this year. Just this week, the American Gaming Association, an industry group, reported that casino revenue was down 4.6 percent nationwide in the third quarter compared with last year.

Industry officials believe the decreases were caused by high gas prices this summer and the financial meltdown this fall.

Theres no doubt that the economy is a major factor in this, said state racing board chairman John Sabini. I dont think New York is necessarily at fault. This is a nationwide problem.

Still, the revenue drop means New York state and its local governments must deal with a smaller revenue stream from gambling when they can least afford it. For instance, as they tighten their belts, state officials are looking at reduced pari-mutuel tax collections and counties must brace for smaller shares from local OTBs.

Sure, theres a concern, said Mark LaVigne, spokesman for the New York Association of Counties. We dont want to lose any stream of revenue, especially a stream that isnt the property tax.

One oddity is that even as harness tracks post losses in on-track handle, they are reporting higher revenue from their onsite video lottery terminals, or VLTs. The VLTs were introduced in recent years to boost state education revenue while shoring up business at the harness tracks.

VLT revenues were up April-through-October compared to 2007 for all harness tracks except Monticello Raceway. Gambling industry analysts believe that the racinos, particularly Yonkers, took away business from casinos in Atlantic City and Connecticut.

The lone harness track to post a gain in handle over the period was Saratoga Gaming and Racetrack, with an increase of less than 1 percent. Director of racing operations John Matarazzo said they have been able to keep handle from declining through marketing and the introduction of Sunday racing. He said it also helps to be located in an area famous for horse racing and loaded with fans.

We have a really, really strong local market, he said.