Birthday, Breezing, Betting and Backside

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One week ago today I got a little older.  So what does a Thoroughbred blogger do to celebrate her birthday?  She spends her time with the horses!  I had a great time at The Thoroughbred Center, Churchill Downs, and again at Churchill, to visit the backside.

The Thoroughbred Center in Lexington, KY is owned by the Keeneland Association.  This property is the home for up to 1,000 horses.  The facility has 32 barns and 10 paddocks.  I went out early Saturday morning to meet power couple, Mr. and Mrs. V.  They took me to meet with their friend’s horses and trainer Geoff Mulcahy.  Mulcahy Equine has been in operation in Lexington for 10 years and is a premier equine operation. Mulcahy Stables has a barn on the property.  There I met 2 year olds Ma’am and Tidal as well as several other beautiful horses and a barn cat.  Ma’am and Tidal went onto the track and got their 2nd ever turn to run.  I watched the exercise riders work the horses on the track.  It was a great time and I plan to return.  The Thoroughbred Center offers tours as well.  Tours

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That same evening, I got dressed up and headed to Churchill Downs in Louisville, KY, home of the Kentucky Derby.  My friends and I sat in a nice box  to watch the Night Racing and by great fortune we were sandwiched between the famous trainer, D. Wayne Lukas and his exercise rider, Jessica Sheffield.  Sheffield was excited that my friends and I were spending my birthday following the Thoroughbreds so she invited us back to the Lukas barn on the backside in the morning.  We took in all 11 races that night including race 8 where Skyring ran for Lukas.  When that race concluded Lukas left promptly.  He awakens daily at 3:30 a.m. and heads to his barn, which is located on Churchill’s property.

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Somehow, my group and I struggled but after three and a half hours of sleep we woke at 4:45 a.m. to get to the backside by 5:30 a.m.  These horse people start their days way too early.  It was pitch black outside but Churchill’s backside was busy with horses, horsemen, and barn cats everywhere.  My weary but excited group seemed to be the only tourist that morning.  We were taken by Sheffield directly to be introduced to Lukas.  He was very welcoming as his busy barn had the horses up and training.  D. Wayne Lukas is a top trainer.  He is a Hall of Famer and an Eclipse Outstanding Trainer.  He has trained 26 world champions, 20 Breeders’ Cup champions, 4 Kentucky Derby winners, 6 Preakness winners, 4 Belmont winners, has 14 world champion training titles and has had 3 horse of the year champions.  In his barn we met Take Charge Brandi, Hillbilly Style, Mr. Z. and more.  We watched the horses be exercised in the barn and on the track.  The track kitchen has direct track side views as well as biscuits and gravy.  We walked all over the backside and it was a very good time.  Hillbilly Style will race today, July 3rd 2015, at Ellis Park and he looked great to me Sunday morning.

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My birthday weekend was wonderful and I am glad I got to share my experience with all of you as well.  If given the chance you should check out The Thoroughbred Center and Churchill Downs.  I hope you all get to watch some good racing this weekend and enjoy all the 4th of July festivities!

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Mother Goose

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I am horsing around today for sure.  I got an early start this morning at the Thoroughbred Center watching the horses breeze and petting them and a barn cat. Tonight, I am attending Downs After Dark at Churchill Downs for some live racing, including some graded stakes.  In between, I am watching the Mother Goose Stakes at Belmont Park.  It is a busy day for this blogger and I will share some trip photos and stories later but now let’s focus on the Mother Goose Stakes.

The Thoroughbred Center

Downs after Dark

The Mother Goose Stakes started in 1957 and was named for Mother Goose, herself.  She had the distinction of being the winner of the Breeders’ Cup Futurity in 1924.  The Grade 1 stakes race is 1 and 1/16 miles on dirt.  It is currently held at Belmont Park in New York, where we recently saw American Pharoah win the Triple Crown.  The Mother Goose is for 3 year old fillies.  The purse is $300,000.  At different periods, in our nation’s history, this race has been considered part of the filly triple crown or triple tiara.  The other legs were usually the Acorn and the Coaching Club American Oaks.  Those two races and the Alabama Stakes are currently considered the New York Triple Tiara.  The fastest and largest margin to win the Mother Goose was Rachel Alexandra.  She also won the Kentucky Oaks and the Preakness.  She holds the record for the largest win at the Kentucky Oaks too.  She was the first filly to win the Preakness in 85 years.  She has the record for speed at the Mother Goose and was less than a second from Secretariat’s speed record.   Tonight at 5:28 pm, the Mother Goose Stakes will be race 9 at Belmont.  The Acorn and Coaching Club American Oaks won’t take place until late July and August.  It has only been 3 weeks since the Acorn.  Curalina won the Acorn Stakes and she will not be participating in the Mother Goose.  In fact, only one horse in this stakes race was entered at the Acorn. The 10 featured horses are:

  1. Embellish the Lace
  2. Include Betty
  3. Hot City Girl
  4. Munasara
  5. Chide
  6. Pleasant Tales
  7. Money’soncharlotte
  8. Danessa Deluxe
  9. Eskenformoney
  10. Wondergal

Embellish the Line won both of her 2 starts this year.  This will be her 1st stakes race.  Include Betty came in 8th at the Kentucky Oaks and 2nd in the Black-Eyed Susan stakes.  She is the horse with the experience to win this, having 9 career starts including 4 graded stakes, 1 of which she won.  Hot City Girl is one of only 2 New York bred horses in this race, the rest are from Kentucky.  She has 7 starts but just 1 win, back in January, and none of her races have been graded stakes.  Munasara is my favorite.  She is undefeated but she has had just 2 entries.  The last win was at Belmont Park.  I like her tainer Kiaran McLaughlin and her jockey John Velazquez.  Her jockey won the Mother Goose last year on American Champion 3 Year Old, UntapableChide has won 2 of her 3 starts.  Her last two races were at Churchill Downs.  Pleasant Tales has been in a total of 4 races at Churchill, of her 8 starts, and she won her last race there.  Moneysoncharlotte came in lucky 13 in the Kentucky Oaks.  That was her last race of 7 career starts.  Danessa Deluxe was 4th in the Black-Eyed Susan when she had John Velazquez for a jockey.  Tonight, Manuel Franco will ride her.  She has not won in 2015 but she has 7 lifetime starts, with the last 3 being graded stakes.  Eskenformoney came in 10th in the Kentucky Oaks.  She has had 10 starts with 3 of them being graded.  In those graded stakes she was third and then 2nd before her Kentucky Oaks race.  Finally, Wondergal is considered the favorite.  She is the other New York filly.  She was 3rd in the Acorn as well as the 14 Hands Winery Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies race.  5 of her 6 starts were graded stakes.

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What Does The Silk Say?

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On June 6th I am hoping to see the jockey in blue and gold with a Z come in 1st!  I am awfully excited about our chances of getting a Triple Crown Winner this year.  I touched on jockey silks a bit in The Emperor’s New Clothes but that post addressed the uniform of the jockey and the tack for the horse. The silk is actually a representation of the owner.

Owners have been registering their silks since medieval times.  In New York, owners register their colours thru The Jockey Club, established in 1894.  Owners from other states may register thru New York as well.  The Belmont Stakes, the final piece of the Triple Crown, is a New York race.  Owners may choose from 38 jacket designs with 19 sleeve designs.  The design may only be registered in 1 person’s name.  The front and back must be identical.  The Jockey Club offers a maximum of 4 colors per silk, with a max of 2 colors on the jacket and 2 on the sleeves, but they will not offer navy blue because it looks a lot like black.  They allow a tasteful emblem or up to 3 initials on 4 of the jacket designs and just 1 initial on 1 of the other jacket designs.  Despite being called silks they are usually made with lycra or polyester now.  They are lightweight and fitted to be aerodynamic.  My favorite jacket design is the shamrock pattern.  Silks Illustration

Owners can be very superstitious about the colors they choose.  Some colors seem to be luckier than others.  Another superstition leads the jockeys to toss their silks on the floor and stomp on them when they are new so the garment hits the ground in hopes they won’t fall and hit the ground themselves while wearing it.

In the top photo we see jockey Jerry D. Bailey wearing green and pink silks.  These are the colours of Prince Khalid Ibn Abdullah, owner of Juddmonte Farms.  Bailey is most famous for riding the great Cigar.  Bailey won 7 Eclipse Awards before he retired in 2006 but he went on to be a horse racing commentator and analyst.  Juddmonte Farms has earned many awards including 10 Eclipse Awards.  Cigar was National Museum of Racing Hall of Famer and American Horse of the Decade for the 1990s.  Sadly, he died last October.

11 horses have won the Triple Crown.  These were; Sir Barton, Gallant Fox, Omaha, War Admiral, Whirlaway, Count Fleet, Assault, Citation, Secretariat, Seattle Slew, and Affirmed. The prettiest silks of these horses owners were those of Meadow Farms owner Penny Chenery, who owned Secretariat.  These silks were a blue and white checkered jacket with blue and white striped sleeves.  Both Whirlaway and Citation jockeys wore Calumet Farm’s red jacket with a blue collar and blue hat and 2 blue stripes on each sleeve.  The jockeys of 2 more on this list wore white jackets with red polka dots.  The horses they rode were Gallant Fox and Omaha.  These silks belonged to Belair Stud in Maryland that raced from 1923 to 1953.

American Pharoah’s jockey wears the colours of Zayat Stables,LCC. owned by Ahmed Zayat and located in Hackensack, Maryland.  The jockey silk is blue with 3 gold balls in a sash formation and a gold Z on one shoulder and on the hat cover.  Zayat has been racing since 2005.  He has had 19 Breeders’ Cup contenders, 13 GI winners, and 6 Eclipse Award winners.

35 horses have won the 1st two jewels of the Triple Crown with 23 stopping there and 11 winning it all.  Will American Pharoah be next?

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