JC / Railbird

#delmarI met Marc Subia today and he told me the story of his amazing autograph jacket. "It's my most prized possession." Marc started coming to Del Mar with his dad in the 1970s. It's his home track. And he's been collecting jockey autographs for decades ...Grand Jete keeping an eye on me as I take a picture of Rushing Fall's #BC17 garland. #thoroughbred #horseracing #delmarAnother #treasurefromthearchive — this UPI collage for Secretariat vs. Sham. #inthearchives #thoroughbred #horseracingThanks, Arlington. Let's do this again next year. #Million35That's a helmet. #BC16 #thoroughbred #horseracing #jockeysLady Eli on the muscle. #BC16 @santaanitapark #breederscup #thoroughbred #horseracing

NTRA Contest Results …

Are up, after “going through the normal 48-hour audit.” There still seem to be some gremlins in the tabulations. These are the results given on the front page as of Monday evening:
NTRA
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And these are the results as posted on the leaderboard:
NTRA
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“Entry 1” actually appears no less than six times in the first 50 on the leaderboard, which suggests it’s not a contestant’s name, but a database field or ID or some such thing, so “Entry 1” could well be the same as “pantelisthegreat.” The frequent appearance of “Entry 1” though suggests a database or software problem, as does the discrepancy between “Roe’s Runners” and “saratogasummer,” a name that doesn’t even appear in the top 50.
This is all very curious …

Weekend Results

Island Sand paid $13.20 to win in the Delaware Handicap, despite having Jerry Bailey aboard (Blood-Horse). I’m not usually an advocate of betting jockeys, but Bailey has been unquestionably hot in filly and mare stakes races this month. On Saturday, he won the Virginia Oaks with My Typhoon (Daily Press). A week ago, it was the Princess Rooney with Madcap Escapade. And before that, it was Splendid Blended in the Vanity Handicap, Wend in the New York Handicap, and Stellar Jayne in the (ungraded) Misty Galore Stakes. That’s quite a record.
The Delaware Handicap was Bailey’s first ride on Island Sand. He picked up the mount only 10 days ago, when his agent Ron Anderson called trainer Larry Jones after hearing that regular jockey Terry Thompson was off with a pelvic injury. Bailey said that Jones told him the filly was a “grinder,” but “She was really in hand and tugging on me all the way … I caught up to Pat [Day] in a hurry” (Phila. Daily News).
The big disappointment in the Delaware Handicap was 6-5 favorite Isola Piu Bella, who reared up in the gate and was slow breaking. “She just left her race in the gate,” said jockey John Velazquez. “That was it. She just left her race in the gate” (News Journal).
The only one of trainer Nick Zito’s 11 Triple Crown starters to run in the money in any of those races this spring, Sun King went wire-to-wire in the Leonard Richard Stakes. “You saw the real Sun King again,” said a happy Zito after the race, who credited an equipment change with the victory (News Journal). “The blinkers were a minor thing that made a big difference. He was on his game today. Did you see him gallop out after the wire? If the race was longer he would have won by a pole.”
Richards runner-up Golden Man accomplished the unusual feat of placing in two graded stakes races on back-to-back days. The day before the Richards, Golden Man finished third in the Long Branch Stakes at Monmouth (Washington Post). His accomplishment is not unprecedented: Rushaway won the 1936 Illinois Derby and Latonia Derby on back-to-back days (Thoroughbred Times).
Smokume won the Tom Fool Handicap at Belmont (New York Post). “This feels pretty cool,” said jockey Chantal Sutherland, who earned her first US graded stakes win on the horse.
And on Saturday …
R Lady Joy held off Round Pond to win the Delaware Oaks (Phila. Inquirer). The longshot’s win stunned the crowd, but not trainer Kirk Ziadie. “I told my owners after her last race that if you give me two months to get her ready, we’ll go to the Delaware Oaks and I don’t care who is in it, we’ll win,” he said. Trainer John Servis made no excuses for Round Pond, the overwhelming favorite, but said that the sloppy track and the filly’s performance reminded him of another disappointing loss earlier this spring:

[Servis] said it brought back memories of the start the Porter-owned Rockport Harbor had in the Lexington Stakes at Keeneland (Ky.) in April. Rockport Harbor had problems with the sloppy track and ran out of the money as the favorite…. “Watching her go into the first turn, I thought of the Lexington all over again,” Servis said. “I knew we were in trouble then. The filly just didn’t seem to take to the track” (News Journal).

Owner Rick Porter said Round Pond “came out of the race great” and may run in the Alabama on August 20.
English Channel is now halfway to the Grand Slam (Washington Post).

Nearing the Start …

I was in Saratoga this weekend and spent more than an hour wandering over the grandstand and backstretch. The place was buzzing with preparations — groundskeepers touching up paint, workers moving massive piles of United Tote boxes, newly-hired mutuel tellers training. In the barn area, I saw the new security accomodations. Fencing, screened on the front to block sight of the track, was up around a couple of barns and the tents that will be used to hold horses on race day. When I read about these tents, I was skeptical, but I have to say they looked solid, with steel frames and heavy covering. I’d guess that after a week, horses and horsemen alike will be used to the compound.

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