| posted in AA LOCAL HORSES OUT OF TOWN on Dec 02, 2018 11:25 pm by glen
Water is one of the essential nutrients a horse needs to perform a number of life-support functions.
<img src=”https://thehorse.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/heated-water-fountain.jpg” alt=”Horse Water Requirements” title=”Colder temperatures (below 45°F) can reduce a horse’s water consumption, so take steps to encourage him to drink as winter settles in.” />
Water is one of the essential nutrients a horse needs to perform a number of life-support functions, including digestion and thermoregulation.
As horse owners, we know it’s important to provide free-choice water to horses at all times, but it is also imperative that the water is of good quality, clean, and palatable.
A number of circumstances can lead a water deficiency in horses, including unpalatable taste, lack of water offered, or loss of thirst due to exertion. The effects of insufficient water intake include decreased performance, decreased feed intake, dehydration, and eventually, if not remedied, death.
On average, a typical 1,100-pound horse at maintenance consumes four to nine gallons of water per day. The amount of water a horse requires can vary depending upon several factors:
The type, amount, and quality of feed consumed
- Fresh pasture contains between 60-80% moisture and provide a large amount of the horse’s water requirements when grazing.
- Hay and grain are very low in moisture, causing horses to drink more water to meet their needs.
- Higher levels of protein and sodium in the diet also increase the horse’s water requirement as urinary volume increases.
Temperature and humidity
- Ambient temperatures above 85°F will increase a horse’s drinking frequency and volume.
- Colder temperatures (below 45°F) can reduce a horse’s water consumption.
Health status
- Horses with excessive water losses from diarrhea require more water per day.
Physiological stage
- Type of physical activity performed can affect the amount of water a horse needs.
- Performance horses should be allowed to drink water prior to and during prolonged activity. Horses should be cooled down adequately prior to being allowed to drink free-choice after exercise.
- Lactating mares require between 50-80% more water per day for milk production compared to horses at maintenance.
With temperatures dropping in many parts of the country, it’s important to remember how crucial water is to keeping horses healthy. Always ensure your horses have access to fresh, clean water at an appropriate temperature, and ensure they’re drinking the fluids provided. Consider adding a few ounces of salt or an electrolyte supplements to horses’ diets if lack of water consumption is a concern.
| posted in HEALTH OF THE HORSE on Dec 02, 2018 11:22 pm by glen
CYPRESS, Calif. — Four stakes for 2-year-olds – including a pair of Grade I races – highlight the upcoming Winter Thoroughbred meet at Los Alamitos. The eight-day season will begin Thursday, Dec. 6 and continue through Sunday, Dec. 16.
The $300,000-guaranteed Los Alamitos CashCall Futurity and the $300,000-guaranteed Starlet – for fillies – will be renewed on Saturday, Dec. 8. Won a year ago –via disqualification – by the Bob Baffert-trained McKinzie (left), the Futurity – like the Starlet – will be contested at 1 1/16 miles.
Among the nominees to the Futurity, are double Grade I winner Game Winner, King of Speed, a two-time stakes winner on turf for trainer Jeff Bonde, and first out Los Alamitos winner Mucho Gusto.
Nominees for the Starlet, which was won a year ago by the Baffert-trained Dream Tree, include Del Mar Debutante and Chandelier winner Bellafina, Chasing Yesterday, who won the Anoakia Stakes Oct. 14, and Barretts Debutante heroine Kim K.
The other two stakes will be run at one mile and are ungraded. The $100,000 Soviet Problem – for fillies – will be offered Saturday, Dec. 15 while the $100,000 King Glorious will be run Sunday, Dec. 16. Both are for 2-year-olds bred or sired in California.
The complete stakes schedule:
Date Race Distance Purse
Sat, Dec. 8 The Starlet (GI) 1 1/16th Miles $300,000
2-Year-Old Fillies
Sat, Dec. 8 Los Alamitos CashCall Futurity (GI) 1 1/16th Miles $300,000
2-Year-Olds
Sat, Dec. 15 Soviet Problem Stakes One Mile $100,000
2-Year-Old Fillies (California bred or sired)
Sun, Dec. 16 King Glorious Stakes One Mile $100,000
2-Year-Old Colts & Geldings (California bred or sired)
| posted in LOS ALAMITOS NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:20 pm by glen
| posted in ANNOUNCEMENTS on Dec 02, 2018 11:19 pm by glen
Following on the heels of a stellar summer season, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club completed its fifth fall meet Sunday, highlighted by gains in total handle and four weeks of safe racing. All sources wagering for the 16-day session registered $165,289,183, compared to the 2017 total handle of $154,069,710, an increase of 7.3%.
“The fall meet has found its niche and that’s important for the overall health of the California racing calendar,” said DMTC CEO Joe Harper. “All in all, we are pleased with the results and when you combine them with the summer and our continued efforts to provide the safest possible environment for our horses and riders, it was a terrific year.”
Del Mar’s 2018 fall racing festival had several standout performances, including a smart victory in the Grade I Hollywood Derby by Peter Brandt’s Raging Bull on closing Saturday, then an equally impressive triumph by Sol Kumin, Michael Caruso and Robert LaPenta’s Uni the next day in the Grade I Matriarch. Both of those eastern-based horses are trained by the country’s top conditioner, Chad Brown, and both were ridden by former three-time Del Mar riding champion Joel Rosario.
Trainer Peter Miller continued his hot run at Del Mar by winning his fourth fall conditioning crown with 15 victories, while jockey Drayden Van Dyke captured his first fall title with 17 firsts. The pair had swept the 2018 summer honors previously with 31 scores for Miller and 42 for Van Dyke during the 36-day stand.
Del Mar will resume racing on Wednesday, July 17 for its showcase summer season, the 80th in its long and popular seaside run.
| posted in DEL MAR NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:18 pm by glen
Luke Wilson, Victor Espinoza, Joel Rosario, Owen Wilson (Left to Right) © Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
VICTOR ESPINOZA BACK AT DEL MAR WITH OPTIMISTIC REPORT
Hall of Fame jockey Victor Espinoza was back at Del Mar Saturday for the first time since incurring a fractured vertebra and spinal cord trauma in a training accident here on July 22.
The official duties for Espinoza were to present the trophy to the winner of the Grade I $300,000 Hollywood Derby – which he did to owner Peter Brant and jockey Joel Rosario of Raging Bull with A-list acting brothers Luke and Owen Wilson alongside. Before and after the ceremony, however, Espinoza used the occasion to provide some good news to fans, horsemen and followers.
“My body is getting stronger day by day,” said Espinoza, whose initial treatment was done at Scripps La Jolla and who has been recuperating at his Del Mar residence. “Last week I saw my doctor and they checked the MRI and it came out perfect. I was surprised but really happy. Everything is coming along well and I don’t need surgery, which is great. My spinal cord has healed perfectly fine, which was my main concern.
“I think by sometime in January at Santa Anita I’ll be ready to ride again.”
LATE DOUBLE SATURDAY VAULTS VAN DYKE TO JOCKEY LEAD
Victories aboard Kingly ($10.20) in Saturday’s eighth race and Super Patriot ($16.00) in the nightcap, both for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, moved Drayden Van Dyke one in front of Flavien Prat, 17-16 atop the jockey standings entering today’s final day of racing.
Prat, who won the 2017 Summer and Fall meeting riding championships, and Van Dyke, who supplanted Prat this summer, entered Saturday’s program tied with 15 wins each. Prat moved ahead with a first-race win aboard Swamp Souffle for trainer George Papaprodromou before Van Dyke’s closing flurry.
The closing day schedules, each with five mounts, for the two contenders are as follows:
Van Dyke: Powder (2nd, 9-5), Adorably Sweet (6th, 3-1), Insta Erma (7th, 12-1), Red Lightning (8th, 7-2), Felix Leiter (9th, 8-1).
Prat: Arch Anthem (3rd, 3-1), Blitzkrieg (5th, 3-1), Dr Wysong (6th, 12-1), Vasilika (7th, 7-2), Captain Scotty (8th, 2-1).
MILLER COMPLETES SWEEP OF DEL MAR TRAINING TITLES
The fall training title which Peter Miller essentially secured with a four-win day halfway through the meeting – and shortly after he appropriately recorded his 1,000th career win at the track near his Encinitas home – gave him a sweep of the Del Mar seasons.
Miller took the summer crown by a 10-win margin (31-21) over Doug O’Neill and holds an unreachable 14-9 advantage over Jerry Hollendorfer entering the closing day program today for the fall meeting.
Miller becomes a Man For Both Seasons for the second time. In 2014 he shared the summer title with Hollendorfer and won the inaugural fall meeting outright. Miller tied for second, two wins behind in the fall of 2015, but has now won three straight by comfortable margins. Miller, who averaged 15.7 wins for the first four fall meetings, has three entered on the final card.
STATS DON’T LIE: BAFFERT’S AWESOME YEAR WITH DEBUT 2-YEAR-OLDS
Every year Bob Baffert unveils a bounty of 2-year-old winners at any track where he’s got a stable, but especially at Del Mar. And if you thought 2018 might have been an exceptional year for Baffert, research by venerable racing podcaster and columnist Ron Flatter has proved you royally right.
Flatter compiled a list of Baffert first-time starting 2-year-olds this year – down to Kingly winning Saturday’s eighth race, and the numbers are impressive. His overall 2-year-old record: 51 starters, 29-4-5.
Through Saturday, Baffert’s debuting babies have a record of 19 wins from 29 starters with one second and two thirds. That’s nearly a 66 percent win rate and 76 percent in the money.
At Del Mar during the summer meeting Baffert harvested 11 wins from 13 debut starters. One of those victories came at the expense of another Baffert trainee in the same race. Game Winner, who would go on to win the Del Mar Futurity and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, was one of the babes of summer. So were Roadster and Mother Moher.
During fall racing at Del Mar, Baffert sent out seven first-time starters and won three times – with Coliseum on November 17, Quahira on November 25 and Kingly on Saturday.
BOB BAFFERT first-time starting 2-year-olds in 2018 |
Record |
Top win |
1-Dec |
DMR-8 |
Kingly |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
1-Dec |
DMR-8 |
Green Fleet |
MSW |
10th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
25-Nov |
DMR-7 |
Qahira (f) |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
24-Nov |
DMR-2 |
Highlight Reel |
MSW |
6th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
17-Nov |
DMR-2 |
Figure Eight |
MSW |
2nd |
1–0-1-0 |
|
17-Nov |
DMR-1 |
Coliseum |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
9-Nov |
DMR-4 |
Trojan Magic |
Mdn Clmg |
6th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
3-Nov |
SA-7 |
Count Di Luna |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
13-Oct |
SA-4 |
Cruel Intention |
MSW |
1st |
2–2-0-0 |
Golden St Juv |
8-Oct |
SA-2 |
Metropol |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
29-Sep |
SA-4 |
Power Player |
MSW (t) |
3rd |
1–0-0-1 |
|
29-Sep |
SA-1 |
Improbable |
MSW |
1st |
2–2-0-0 |
Street Sense |
20-Sep |
LRC-3 |
Mucho Gusto |
MSW |
1st |
2–2-0-0 |
G3 Bob Hope |
8-Sep |
LRC-7 |
Raneem (f) |
MSW |
8th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
7-Sep |
LRC-4 |
Midnight Mystery |
MSW |
3rd |
2–0-0-1 |
|
3-Sep |
DMR-8 |
Rayana (f) |
MSW (t) |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW (t) |
2-Sep |
DMR-5 |
Message (f) |
MSW |
5th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
1-Sep |
DMR-9 |
Magic On Tap |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
1-Sep |
DMR-9 |
Admiral Brown |
MSW |
7th |
1–0-0-0 |
|
1-Sep |
DMR-5 |
Much Better |
MSW |
1st |
3–1-1-0 |
MSW |
26-Aug |
DMR-4 |
Tale Of The Union |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
25-Aug |
DMR-1 |
Fighting Mad (f) |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
18-Aug |
DMR-9 |
Game Winner |
MSW |
1st |
4–4-0-0 |
BC Juv (3 G1s) |
11-Aug |
DMR-6 |
The Aurelia Factor (f) |
MSW |
1st |
1–1-0-0 |
MSW |
5-Aug |
DMR-2 |
Der Lu (f) |
MSW |
1st |
2–1-0-0 |
MSW |
29-Jul |
DMR-6 |
Roadster |
MSW |
1st |
2–1-0-1 |
MSW |
28-Jul |
DMR-1 |
Chasing Yesterday (f) |
MSW |
1st |
4–3-0-0 |
Desi Arnaz |
*7/28 |
DMR-1 |
Honeyfromthesouth (f) |
MSW |
* |
*2–0-1-1 |
|
22-Jul |
DMR-7 |
Mother Mother (f) |
MSW |
1st |
3–2-1-0 |
Rags To Riches |
29-Jun |
LRC-3 |
Dark Prince |
MSW |
5th |
5–1-0-1 |
MSW (t) |
Baffert 2-year-olds on debut: 29–19-1-2
Baffert 2-year-olds in 2018: 51–29-4-5
Source: Equibase
*Honeyfromthesouth was trained to a 2nd-place finish in her debut for David Hofmans before her transfer to Bob Baffert. Her overall record is 3–0-2-1. Her record shown on the list is for Baffert.
RAINS SHRINK FIELD SIZE NUMBERS … BUT WHO’S COMPLAINING?
Entering the final week of the meeting, the racing office could anticipate average field size numbers for the fall meeting to be close to the outstanding 8.5 of 2017.
Then rains hit Thursday and carried over into Friday. Seven races were taken off the Jimmy Durante Turf Course and switched to the main track. Twenty-four horses were scratched rather than make the switch.
Racing Secretary David Jerkens now projects an average field size of 7.7 in the final analysis after the finale today.
Fair to say that the meeting was to use a phrase of announcer Trevor Denman, “Moving like a winner,” until Mother Nature intervened?
“I think that’s a fair assessment,” Jerkens said.
In many ways, rain is always a blessing in arid Southern California. And betting opportunities may be considered a small price to pay by those who remember the tinder-dry conditions of North San Diego County one year ago next week, which fueled fires that devastated San Luis Rey Downs.
“We’re pleased with the meeting from a quality standpoint,” Jerkens said. “We’re finishing especially strong this weekend with the Hollywood Derby and Matriarch fields and I thought the Thanksgiving Week cards were also very good.
“Thanks to the local horsemen, and those who shipped in from out of state, for their support. We knew going in that the bar had been set high last year and there were some issues, not unique to Del Mar, that we’d have to be dealing with.
“When it’s all over, we’ll take a look at what went right and wrong and evaluate what to do looking forward to next year.”
CLOSERS – Selected workouts from 193 at Santa Anita and 64 at Del Mar officially timed Sunday: Santa Anita – Bellafina (4f, :49.40), Catapult (4f, :50.00), City of Light (4f, :48.80), Fatale Bere (4f, :50.40), He Will (4f, :51.20), Heck Yeah (4f, :48.00), Liam the Charmer (4f, :48.40), Selcourt (4f, :48.60), St. Joe Bay (4f, :48.60), Dueling (5f, 1:01.40), Shivermetimbers (5f, 1:01.40), Californiagoldrush (4f, turf, :49.40); Del Mar – Paradise Woods (3f, :39.80), Richard’s Boy (4f, :48.60), Solid Wager (4f, :48.40) …Thanks to all Stable Notes readers. Happy Holidays and Happy New Year… The Southern California Thoroughbred racing circuit continues with the Los Alamitos meeting starting Thursday, December 26. Racing will be conducted on a Thursday-Sunday basis through December 16 with a first post of 1 p.m. on weekdays and 12:30 on weekends. Two Grade I events, the Futurity and Starlet for 2-year-olds, will be contested on December 8…Santa Anita’s winter/spring meeting begins, as is traditional, on the day after Christmas, December 6 … Live racing returns to Del Mar on Wednesday, July 17, 2019 and goes through September 2.
DEL MAR STATISTICS
Jockey Standings
(Current Through Saturday, December 1, 2018 Inclusive)
Jockey |
Mts |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
Win% |
In-money% |
Money Won |
Drayden Van Dyke |
61 |
17 |
8 |
8 |
28% |
54% |
$752,028 |
Flavien Prat |
81 |
16 |
19 |
9 |
20% |
54% |
$873,636 |
Geovanni Franco |
61 |
12 |
7 |
7 |
20% |
43% |
$474,211 |
Heriberto Figueroa |
66 |
9 |
9 |
10 |
14% |
42% |
$296,040 |
Rafael Bejarano |
59 |
9 |
8 |
11 |
15% |
47% |
$435,950 |
Joseph Talamo |
48 |
9 |
4 |
8 |
19% |
44% |
$513,235 |
Tyler Baze |
81 |
7 |
11 |
12 |
9% |
37% |
$428,344 |
Tiago Pereira |
68 |
5 |
6 |
10 |
7% |
31% |
$235,730 |
Kent Desormeaux |
36 |
5 |
6 |
6 |
14% |
47% |
$261,720 |
Mike Smith |
25 |
4 |
8 |
2 |
16% |
56% |
$263,499 |
Trainer Standings
(Current Through Saturday, December 1, 2018 Inclusive)
Trainer |
Sts |
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
Win% |
In-money% |
Money Won |
Peter Miller |
43 |
14 |
5 |
5 |
33% |
56% |
$520,890 |
Jerry Hollendorfer |
36 |
9 |
6 |
4 |
25% |
53% |
$426,945 |
Bob Baffert |
14 |
7 |
2 |
0 |
50% |
64% |
$315,420 |
Doug F. O’Neill |
62 |
6 |
7 |
7 |
10% |
32% |
$296,886 |
Philip D’Amato |
35 |
6 |
4 |
3 |
17% |
37% |
$307,628 |
Brian J. Koriner |
16 |
6 |
0 |
1 |
38% |
44% |
$191,205 |
George Papaprodromou |
17 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
29% |
59% |
$101,900 |
Richard Baltas |
34 |
4 |
6 |
2 |
12% |
35% |
$260,872 |
J. Keith Desormeaux |
22 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
14% |
36% |
$118,450 |
Richard E. Mandella |
22 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
14% |
36% |
$174,265 |
Winning Favorites Report
(Current Through Saturday, December 1, 2018 Inclusive)
Winning favorites — 53 out of 127 — 41.73%
Winning favorites on dirt — 36 out of 79 — 45.57%
Winning favorites on turf — 17 out of 48 — 35.42%
Winning odds-on favorites — 14 out of 26 — 53.85%
In-the-Money favorites — 92 out of 127 — 72.44%
In-the-Money odds-on favorites — 23 out of 26 — 88.46%
| posted in DEL MAR NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:17 pm by glen
Uni © Benoit Photo
Providing jockey Joel Rosario and trainer Chad Brown with a sweep of Del Mar’s two Grade I stakes events this weekend, Great Britain-bred Uni rallied from next-to-last with a blazing burst of speed in the stretch to win the $300,000 Matriarch Stakes Sunday, closing day of the 16-day fall racing season.
Content to allow Uni to lag in the early stages of the one-mile race over the infield Jimmy Durante Turf Course, Rosario steered his mount to the outside at the top of the stretch and the four-year-old daughter of More Than Ready responded brilliantly to overhaul 25-1 longshot Daddy Is a Legend in the last half-dozen strides and win by a length in 1:34.35.
Daddy Is a Legend, piloted by Manny Franco, appeared all over a winner until overtaken by the winner and was a length and one-quarter in front of third-place Quidura, also trained by Brown. The 2-1 favored Vasilika was a neck farther back in fourth in pursuit of her ninth straight victory. Withdrawn from the race for older fillies and mares was Ms Bad Behavior.
Rosario and Brown teamed to win Saturday’s $300,000 Hollywood Derby in similar come-from-behind style with the talented Raging Bull. They also won the 2017 Matriarch renewal with Off Limits, and Rosario won the race in 2014 aboard La Tia.
Uni, owned by Head of Plains Partners and Bethlehem Stables, scored her fourth consecutive stakes win in four starts this year. Sent off at 5-1, Uni paid $13.20, $6.40 and $5 while earning $180,000 to swell her bankroll to $892,880. Daddy Is a Legend paid $16.40 and $10.80, while Quidura returned $6.40.
JOEL ROSARIO (Uni, winner) – “I could tell they were going a little quick up front, because my filly has some speed and we were far back. But she was comfortable, so I was too. I just wanted to make one move with her. About the three furlong (pole) I could feel she was good under me. So we went outside and she went on with it. She’s a nice one.”
MANUEL FRANCO (Daddy Is a Legend, second) – “I had the perfect trip; couldn’t have asked for better. We were outside and she fired. Just what I wanted. But the winner was just too good today.”
JOSE ORTIZ (Quidura, third) – “No complaints from me. I was in a good spot with her; tucked her in right where I wanted to be. Then we came running. She fired; we just weren’t quite good enough this time.”
JOSE HERNANDEZ, assistant to Chad Brown (Uni, winner) – “It was not the plan (to be so far back). We told Joel to break with the field and see what happens. (Uni) can come from behind or be up close. I was a little nervous being so far behind, but she was really, really strong in the stretch. It’s a really great experience for me and it’s really nice for my boss. It’s my first time to (stand in and saddle stakes winners in 11 years working for Brown) at Del Mar, but I’ve done it in other places. (Brown) is one of the best men I’ve ever known and he has very good horses.”
FRACTIONS: :22.80 :46.29 1:10.59 1:22.76 1:34.35
The stakes win was the second of the meet and third (he won it last year with Off Limits and in 2014 with La Tia) in the Matriarch for rider Rosario. He now has 26 stakes wins at Del Mar.
The stakes win was the second of the meet and the second (he won it last year with Off Limits) in the Matriarch for trainer Brown. He now has seven stakes wins at Del Mar, six of them in Grade I races.
The winning owners are Head of Plains Stable of Sol Kumin of New York City, Bethlehem Stable of Michael Caruso of Bethlehem, PA, and Robert LaPenta of Yonkers, NY.
| posted in DEL MAR NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:16 pm by glen
|
With a massive, late run under jockey Joel Rosario that sent her barreling to the wire, Uni proved herself to be a true force of nature on the grass and notched her first grade 1 score in the $300,000 Matriarch Stakes (G1T) Dec. 2 at Del Mar.
|
| posted in A TODAYS BLOODHORSE NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:12 pm by glen
Results
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
|
|
|
Race 1 |
Maiden Claiming – $20,000 |
$18,000 |
|
|
|
Race 2 |
Allowance Optional Claiming – $20,000 |
$54,000 |
|
|
|
Race 3 |
Maiden Special Weight |
$53,000 |
|
|
|
Race 4 |
Claiming – $8,000 |
$18,000 |
|
|
|
Race 5 |
Starter Allowance – $50,000 |
$32,000 |
|
|
|
Race 6 |
Maiden Special Weight |
$53,000 |
|
|
|
Race 7 |
Matriarch S. |
$300,000 |
|
|
|
Race 8 |
Allowance Optional Claiming – $62,500 |
$56,000 |
|
|
|
Race 9 |
Maiden Special Weight |
$53,000 |
|
|
|
| posted in DEL MAR NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:11 pm by glen
Results
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
|
|
|
Race 1 |
Optional Claiming – $10,000 |
$5,500 |
|
|
|
Race 2 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
|
|
|
Race 3 |
Maiden Optional Claiming – $30,000 |
$12,500 |
|
|
|
Race 4 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
|
|
|
Race 5 |
Claiming – $3,500 |
$7,000 |
|
|
|
Race 6 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
|
|
|
Race 7 |
Claiming – $3,500 |
$7,000 |
|
|
|
Race 8 |
Starter Allowance – $3,500 |
$8,200 |
|
|
|
|
Early Entries
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
Race 1 |
Allowance |
$20,000 |
Race 2 |
Claiming – $3,500 |
$7,000 |
Race 3 |
Claiming – $8,500 |
$8,000 |
Race 4 |
Claiming – $3,500 |
$7,000 |
Race 5 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
Race 6 |
Maiden Claiming – $5,000 |
$6,300 |
Race 7 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
Race 8 |
Claiming – $8,500 |
$8,500 |
|
Final Entries
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
Race 1 |
Maiden Optional Claiming – $30,000 |
$12,500 |
Race 2 |
Maiden Optional Claiming – $30,000 |
$12,500 |
Race 3 |
Maiden Claiming – $5,000 |
$6,300 |
Race 4 |
Claiming – $3,500 |
$7,000 |
Race 5 |
Allowance Optional Claiming – $10,000 |
$14,500 |
Race 6 |
Waiver Maiden Claiming – $5,000 |
$6,300 |
Race 7 |
Claiming – $3,000 |
$7,000 |
Race 8 |
Waiver Maiden Claiming – $5,000 |
$6,300 |
|
| posted in TURF PARADISE on Dec 02, 2018 11:10 pm by glen
Results
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
|
|
|
Race 1 |
Claiming – $6,250 |
$12,000 |
|
|
|
Race 2 |
Maiden Claiming – $20,000 |
$13,000 |
|
|
|
Race 3 |
Claiming – $8,000 |
$12,500 |
|
|
|
Race 4 |
Starter Allowance – $12,500 |
$17,000 |
|
|
|
Race 5 |
Waiver Claiming – $25,000 |
$23,000 |
|
|
|
Race 6 |
Allowance |
$27,000 |
|
|
|
Race 7 |
Maiden Special Weight |
$35,000 |
|
|
|
Race 8 |
Claiming – $6,250 |
$11,000 |
|
|
|
Race 9 |
Allowance |
$27,000 |
|
|
|
Race 10 |
Claiming – $4,000 |
$10,400 |
|
|
|
|
Early Entries
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
Race 1 |
Claiming – $3,200 |
$9,000 |
Race 2 |
Claiming – $4,000 |
$10,500 |
Race 3 |
Maiden Claiming – $5,000 |
$9,000 |
Race 4 |
Claiming – $3,200 |
$9,000 |
Race 5 |
Claiming – $20,000 |
$18,000 |
Race 6 |
Maiden Claiming – $8,000 |
$10,000 |
Race 7 |
Starter Allowance – $50,000 |
$19,000 |
Race 8 |
Claiming – $4,000 |
$11,000 |
Race 9 |
Maiden Claiming – $12,500 |
$11,000 |
|
| posted in GOLDEN GATE NEWS on Dec 02, 2018 11:09 pm by glen
Results
Race# |
Race Type |
Purse |
|
|
|
Race 1 |
Claiming – $25,000 |
$32,600 |
|
|
|
Race 2 |
Maiden Special Weight |
$61,000 |
|
|
|
Race 3 |
Claiming – $12,500 |
$22,000 |
|
|
|
Race 4 |
Claiming – $20,000 |
$24,100 |
|
|
|
Race 5 |
Maiden Claiming – $25,000 |
$27,200 |
|
|
|
Race 6 |
Maiden Claiming – $25,000 |
$27,200 |
|
|
|
Race 7 |
Starter Optional Claiming – $40,000 |
$42,800 |
|
|
|
Race 8 |
Sir Barton S. |
$100,000 |
|
|
|
Race 9 |
Allowance |
$61,000 |
|
|
|
Race 10 |
Maiden Claiming – $25,000 |
$27,200 |
|
|
|
Race 11 |
Maiden Claiming – $10,000 |
$18,700 |
|
|
|
| posted in woodbine on Dec 02, 2018 11:09 pm by glen
|