It was a three-day weekend of racing before we took off on our next big adventure - off to Alaska for the FIFTH time! Typically the full day of racing comes on Saturday, but after looking over the stakes schedule I decided to make Monday the "big day." Here's how the weekend unfolded.....
Saturday May 25
Today I continued with my handicapping of every live race at Monmouth Park. So I had selections in seven of the thirteen races. Passed the first, noteworthy that my third pick won at 3/1 odds. In the second race I ran third at 5/2 when the 4/5 favorite wired the field easily - the winner was my second choice.In the third I went with Jorge Navarro's Tweeting in spite of the fact that her overall resume was just 18/2-5-3 because her best effort came here at today's distance. She surged to the front turning for home then was run down by the 2nd choice in the betting, my second choice. I passed the fourth, and I wrote this about my second choice in the race, "....Rock The Causeway (9/1) could show significant improvement to upset this field, but his Beyers are slow....." You guessed it, Rock The Causeway was the winner and paid a whopping $57 for a $2 ticket. Wow. In the fifth, the first stakes on this four-stakes card, was the John J. Reily Handicap. I had Chunnel, the third choice and it was a photo finish! Second behind a 26/1 winner. Passed the sixth, then was nowhere to be found in the Boiling Springs on the turf when sixth. Passed the seventh. The eighth was the Grade 3 Salvatore Mile and I thought Sunny Ridge if he ran back to his triple digit Beyers from late last year, he'd be a clear winner. Sent out by Jason Servis I thought that was highly probably because in those he'd be a very close second and third in a Gr 1 and Gr 2. As they came out of the turn he was behind a wall of horses and jockey Jose Lezcano, in from Belmont where he leads the jockey standings, waited for a seam on the rail. He squeezed through a very narrow hole and burst through to score!
In the tenth I passed. The eleventh was the main feature, the Grade 2 Monmouth Cup going nine furlongs on the turf. Synchrony looked to be tough if he could handle the two Chad Brown runners. But his local record and record at the distance were easily best in here. Typically coming from mid-pack or farther back he sat a close third into the stretch when one of Chad Brown's runners made an early move to the front. Synchrony came after him but the leader drifted out, so for every step forward we were taking two side-ways at an angle. This continued all the way to the wire where we were second by a neck. CLEARLY the drifting cost us the race. An objection was filed and the stewards looked at it. The bad thing was jockey Trevor McCarthy on Synchrony did the right thing to keep away from making contact with the "winner" but this also meant there wasn't any clear "interference." Still, it was very obvious from the head-on view that if I'd been able to run a straight line I would have won. After several minutes, no change. Really? The twelfth was my BET of the Day. Diva's Revenge looked much, MUCH the best on paper. The 4yo filly, another from the Jason Servis barn held a Triple Beyer Advantage. Won by half the length of the stretch!
I had debated if I should play the Evangeline Downs "Louisiana Legends" card which had a first post after the finale at Monmouth. If it had been a "full" day of handicapping I would have played without question. But did I want to add on a second track when I was "only" playing Monmouth. In the end I played because when I downloaded the Monmouth pp's the Evangeline pp's were offered for free. I found four stakes events that I thought were worth investing in.
The first stakes I liked was the La Legends Mademoiselle, which was race two. Last spring Ours To Run had scored in this event and had not lost since! She won five in a row, all in stakes and last time out she won an OPEN event at Oaklawn. Easily the BET of the Night. She pressed the two leaders from just off the pace while three wide through the turn then accelerated for home under a vigorous hand ride, easily best! WHOOOO HOOOO - back-to-back "BEST Bets" win on the day.
Next up was the La Legends Cheval for three-year-olds. In retrospect I probably should have upped the bet from the minimum because Shang had already won two stakes events and was a standout. But I was trying to be conservative. Was near the back to the far turn, swept up powerfully to take over and held the field at bay comfortably running to his 3/5 post-time odds.
Right back in the La Legends Distaff Turf. I went with Bermuda's Star who was a 4x winner on the grass and already had two stakes wins on turf. The difference between her winning and the favorite running second at 4/5 was the jockey's decision and ride. Mid-way on the turn my rider stayed in the clear and sacrificed the lengths lost while three-wide. The odds-on favorite saved ground and waited for an opening. By the time she got through I had opened a daylight lead and she could not run me down. Bermuda's Star paid a generous $11.20 and I cashed for nearly $30 with my third consecutive win at Evangeline!
And right back again, this time in the La Legends Sprint. Much like Ours To Run was defending her title, so was Monte Man here. He'd won seven in a row before having that streak stopped four back. That night he was second in the La Champions Sprint behind a multiple graded stakes placed runner. The three efforts since had come at distances probably a little short (twice) and in a turf sprint. A return to a fast main track and to a slightly longer trip would make him the winner. Those four losses shied some bettors away as he left the gate at a fair 4/5 price. I was a big concerned when reserved at the back of the pack, but on the turn he began building momentum as he ran by horses one by one. The fanned trip into the stretch cost him some lengths but you could tell the rider knew he had them measured. Up in time and edging away by a better-than-it looked 1/2 length to provide me with my fourth win in a row at Evangeline which put me at 6-for-11 (with three seconds and a third) for the day!
Sunday May 28
I only played Monmouth today. Ran my winning streak to six straight as I won both the opener and the second race. But that was it for the day.
Monday May 29 - Memorial Day
I played the first part of the card online and then Kim and I headed out to Gulfstream for lunch and to watch a couple of live races. Before we left for Gulfstream I had an online bet in the Monmouth opener. I liked Tizaprincessa. On the DRF early odds line she was 20/1. I knew I'd never get that even though she was coming off a long layoff. Trainer Michael Stidham had big numbers for MSW to MC class droppers and long layoff types. Sat behind horses to the top of the lane, found a seam turning for home and ran away as the 6/5 favorite. WHOOOO HOOOO. I had five more bets online, but since Kim and I were having lunch first I made all my live bets up to the featured Crystal River Stakes, which was the 7th at GP. We then head over to the Yardhouse restaurant for lunch. While we ate there was a TV right above us with the same broadcast I'd been watching at home. And in the next eight races (including the two replays I watched on my phone) I ran second S-E-V-E-N times and third the other time! Can you believe it? And one of those was with the 2/5 favorite who was "long gone" turning for home before being caught. Wow. But I kept telling myself, "patience oh Paddo-wan - the wins will come, you know they will." Kim said she was sorry as I finished second, again and I said, "Well, you always want to win every race, but if I HAD to pick, I'd rather win the races later in the day." We finished lunch and headed outside, trackside and took our photo. Don't we look nice in our patriotic outfits! Then back to the Silks Simulcast area where I made nine bets that would cover me until when I anticipated we'd be home.
Out to the rail to watch the Crystal River Stakes, a five furlong turf dash. My pick was one of my most favorite local runners - Pay Any Price. The ONLY way you could not pick the veteran speedster today would be either (a) you just don't want to take a short price - better to cash a winning ticket than through a "value play" ticket on the ground in my opinion - or (b) you think he'll be cooked in a speed duel. But next to no one in the country can run with this veteran who's 13-for-19 in his career and is the course record holder AND world record holder at the distance. He WAS cooked last time but while dueling through insane fractions - and he held third in spite of that. Finally, it was noteworthy the winner of that stakes came back to win a Grade 2 event at Keeneland. The gates opened and in a heartbeat Pay Any Price was two lengths in front. Race OVER. Wire to wire, but he was tiring nearing the wire.....but as I told Kim he always does that because he goes SO fast so early.
Tripled the bet and had snapped my streak! Enjoyed it all the more because we only stayed for this race and then headed for home. When we got home I tried to check Arlington's 3rd which should have already gone off but they were in a weather delay. Before we'd left for lunch I'd set the recorder for the races on TVG so I started at the beginning and watch the next race on my sheet. The Belmont Park holiday card featured all New York-breds today and multiple stakes for these kind. The fifth was my BET of the Day, and it was the Mt. Vernon Stakes going a mile on the grass. SO many statistics made her a standout. She was 8-for-17 on the grass and 8/4-2-11 over the Belmont course. But here was the big stat - she'd run Beyer speed figures of 91 in EIGHT straight races - and of the 194 combined races run by her rivals today they had only five races that would be competitive with those eight efforts. She sat mid-pack to the turn, made her move and drew clear as much the best.
Right back in action with my first bet at Santa Anita. It was a maiden special event with not one but two Bob Baffert fillies. Raneem was the DRF favorite after showing speed in her debut but Bowl of Soul was my pick. A $400K sales grad she'd been brought along slowly for her debut today with works dating back to February. Recently she'd been sizzling in the morning and she ran to those works by coasting by her stablemate at the top of the lane to a confident score. Tripled the bet on my third score in the last four selections. The ninth at Monmouth was an entry level allowance, and typically I do NOT like to play last out maiden winners. But Todd Pletcher's Valiance had been very impressive in her debut. The $650K daughter of Tapit had earned a big Beyer figure in the Gulfstream Park win, and the runner-up who Valiance was clear by open lengths had come right back to win. Valiance rode to rails to the top of the lane, accelerated along the inside and drew clear to run her record to a perfect two-for-two.
The seventh at Belmont was the Critical Eye Stakes and as I wrote, here you needed to decide if you thought Kathryn The Wise would run back to her previous state-bred efforts or not. In those races against fellow NY-breds she was a perfect 4-for-4 with two stakes wins. She went right to the front in this one-turn mile and I have to admit when the fractions were posted as :22 and change and then :45 and change I was dubious she'd go all the way. But as they hit the turn I could tell her rider was riding her confidently and had yet to move. Even when announcer Larry Colmus called out that the favorite had been given a hot pace to chase I wasn't worried - never stopped, scoring at a generous 2/1 price for my five win in six races.
After a disappointing 3rd at even money at Gulfstream I won the featured Hysterical Lady at Monmouth (my third win there today) when Royal Charlotte ran her record to a perfect three wins in three starts. I missed on five straight after scoring in the Jersey Shore feature. But the next win was one of the most memorable of the spring/summer season to date. So much so that yesterday I told Kim this handicapping story and said if this horse wins it will make a great story! Check out my analysis and comments.....
It seems once or twice every racing season I run across a race with conditions calling for a last win prior to a certain date, and almost always when there's a match close to it, that's your winner. But I don't think I've EVER had a near perfect match like this! Sitting mid-pack to the far turn jockey Victor Santiago then swung out three wide and came with a determined run. I would have bet you at the top of the lane that he was going to win, and while it looked close, it never was. And the price was a big 6/1!
Cashed for nearly $80 on the UPSET SPECIAL of the day! The last three races were probably the three most exciting races of the day. The tenth at Belmont was the Commentator Stakes and I liked Giant Expectations. He was the 9/5 favorite, but right out of the gate he stumbled with his nose going to the ground and nearly unseating the jockey. He's done I thought. But the rider didn't panic, swung up on the turn, circled the field and caught the leader. A spirited duel the length of the stretch with one head up and one head down....PHOTO finish. Just missed, but what a valiant effort. Great pick, but no reward. Then the seventh at Santa Anita was the Grade 1 Gamely. In nearly every other start since being claimed a year ago Vasilika had been a prohibitive favorite while winning ELEVEN of twelve starts. But today instead of the "usual cast" of west coast rivals she'd need to handle Chad Brown's multiple graded stakes winner, Rymska. She'd won for me at Tampa on their Derby Day, but she had been a HUGE disappointment in early February when I was at GP with my Mom. Maybe I held that against her, or maybe I just thought Vasilika was simply better on her home turf. She came rallying down the middle of the lane while Rymska split horses and the two dueled for about a furlong before Vasilika edged clear!
My NINTH win of the day. While it's early in the year, at this point you'd have to say Gift Box was the leader in the older handicap division. He edged to the front in the mile and a quarter Grade 1 Gold Cup, but then here came Todd Pletcher's shipper Vino Rosso with John Velazquez. Should have know that Johnny V would not have flown out here for Pletcher if this guy wasn't live. Edged clear late at 4/1 to upset the favorite. Considering I'd started the day 1-for-8, to finish 9-for-25 was excellent! For the week I hit at a 40% clip and closed out the month of May as Kim and I head off to Alaska this week!
The first stakes I liked was the La Legends Mademoiselle, which was race two. Last spring Ours To Run had scored in this event and had not lost since! She won five in a row, all in stakes and last time out she won an OPEN event at Oaklawn. Easily the BET of the Night. She pressed the two leaders from just off the pace while three wide through the turn then accelerated for home under a vigorous hand ride, easily best! WHOOOO HOOOO - back-to-back "BEST Bets" win on the day.
Next up was the La Legends Cheval for three-year-olds. In retrospect I probably should have upped the bet from the minimum because Shang had already won two stakes events and was a standout. But I was trying to be conservative. Was near the back to the far turn, swept up powerfully to take over and held the field at bay comfortably running to his 3/5 post-time odds.
Right back in the La Legends Distaff Turf. I went with Bermuda's Star who was a 4x winner on the grass and already had two stakes wins on turf. The difference between her winning and the favorite running second at 4/5 was the jockey's decision and ride. Mid-way on the turn my rider stayed in the clear and sacrificed the lengths lost while three-wide. The odds-on favorite saved ground and waited for an opening. By the time she got through I had opened a daylight lead and she could not run me down. Bermuda's Star paid a generous $11.20 and I cashed for nearly $30 with my third consecutive win at Evangeline!
And right back again, this time in the La Legends Sprint. Much like Ours To Run was defending her title, so was Monte Man here. He'd won seven in a row before having that streak stopped four back. That night he was second in the La Champions Sprint behind a multiple graded stakes placed runner. The three efforts since had come at distances probably a little short (twice) and in a turf sprint. A return to a fast main track and to a slightly longer trip would make him the winner. Those four losses shied some bettors away as he left the gate at a fair 4/5 price. I was a big concerned when reserved at the back of the pack, but on the turn he began building momentum as he ran by horses one by one. The fanned trip into the stretch cost him some lengths but you could tell the rider knew he had them measured. Up in time and edging away by a better-than-it looked 1/2 length to provide me with my fourth win in a row at Evangeline which put me at 6-for-11 (with three seconds and a third) for the day!
Sunday May 28
I only played Monmouth today. Ran my winning streak to six straight as I won both the opener and the second race. But that was it for the day.
Monday May 29 - Memorial Day
I played the first part of the card online and then Kim and I headed out to Gulfstream for lunch and to watch a couple of live races. Before we left for Gulfstream I had an online bet in the Monmouth opener. I liked Tizaprincessa. On the DRF early odds line she was 20/1. I knew I'd never get that even though she was coming off a long layoff. Trainer Michael Stidham had big numbers for MSW to MC class droppers and long layoff types. Sat behind horses to the top of the lane, found a seam turning for home and ran away as the 6/5 favorite. WHOOOO HOOOO. I had five more bets online, but since Kim and I were having lunch first I made all my live bets up to the featured Crystal River Stakes, which was the 7th at GP. We then head over to the Yardhouse restaurant for lunch. While we ate there was a TV right above us with the same broadcast I'd been watching at home. And in the next eight races (including the two replays I watched on my phone) I ran second S-E-V-E-N times and third the other time! Can you believe it? And one of those was with the 2/5 favorite who was "long gone" turning for home before being caught. Wow. But I kept telling myself, "patience oh Paddo-wan - the wins will come, you know they will." Kim said she was sorry as I finished second, again and I said, "Well, you always want to win every race, but if I HAD to pick, I'd rather win the races later in the day." We finished lunch and headed outside, trackside and took our photo. Don't we look nice in our patriotic outfits! Then back to the Silks Simulcast area where I made nine bets that would cover me until when I anticipated we'd be home.
Out to the rail to watch the Crystal River Stakes, a five furlong turf dash. My pick was one of my most favorite local runners - Pay Any Price. The ONLY way you could not pick the veteran speedster today would be either (a) you just don't want to take a short price - better to cash a winning ticket than through a "value play" ticket on the ground in my opinion - or (b) you think he'll be cooked in a speed duel. But next to no one in the country can run with this veteran who's 13-for-19 in his career and is the course record holder AND world record holder at the distance. He WAS cooked last time but while dueling through insane fractions - and he held third in spite of that. Finally, it was noteworthy the winner of that stakes came back to win a Grade 2 event at Keeneland. The gates opened and in a heartbeat Pay Any Price was two lengths in front. Race OVER. Wire to wire, but he was tiring nearing the wire.....but as I told Kim he always does that because he goes SO fast so early.
Right back in action with my first bet at Santa Anita. It was a maiden special event with not one but two Bob Baffert fillies. Raneem was the DRF favorite after showing speed in her debut but Bowl of Soul was my pick. A $400K sales grad she'd been brought along slowly for her debut today with works dating back to February. Recently she'd been sizzling in the morning and she ran to those works by coasting by her stablemate at the top of the lane to a confident score. Tripled the bet on my third score in the last four selections. The ninth at Monmouth was an entry level allowance, and typically I do NOT like to play last out maiden winners. But Todd Pletcher's Valiance had been very impressive in her debut. The $650K daughter of Tapit had earned a big Beyer figure in the Gulfstream Park win, and the runner-up who Valiance was clear by open lengths had come right back to win. Valiance rode to rails to the top of the lane, accelerated along the inside and drew clear to run her record to a perfect two-for-two.
The seventh at Belmont was the Critical Eye Stakes and as I wrote, here you needed to decide if you thought Kathryn The Wise would run back to her previous state-bred efforts or not. In those races against fellow NY-breds she was a perfect 4-for-4 with two stakes wins. She went right to the front in this one-turn mile and I have to admit when the fractions were posted as :22 and change and then :45 and change I was dubious she'd go all the way. But as they hit the turn I could tell her rider was riding her confidently and had yet to move. Even when announcer Larry Colmus called out that the favorite had been given a hot pace to chase I wasn't worried - never stopped, scoring at a generous 2/1 price for my five win in six races.
After a disappointing 3rd at even money at Gulfstream I won the featured Hysterical Lady at Monmouth (my third win there today) when Royal Charlotte ran her record to a perfect three wins in three starts. I missed on five straight after scoring in the Jersey Shore feature. But the next win was one of the most memorable of the spring/summer season to date. So much so that yesterday I told Kim this handicapping story and said if this horse wins it will make a great story! Check out my analysis and comments.....
It seems once or twice every racing season I run across a race with conditions calling for a last win prior to a certain date, and almost always when there's a match close to it, that's your winner. But I don't think I've EVER had a near perfect match like this! Sitting mid-pack to the far turn jockey Victor Santiago then swung out three wide and came with a determined run. I would have bet you at the top of the lane that he was going to win, and while it looked close, it never was. And the price was a big 6/1!
Cashed for nearly $80 on the UPSET SPECIAL of the day! The last three races were probably the three most exciting races of the day. The tenth at Belmont was the Commentator Stakes and I liked Giant Expectations. He was the 9/5 favorite, but right out of the gate he stumbled with his nose going to the ground and nearly unseating the jockey. He's done I thought. But the rider didn't panic, swung up on the turn, circled the field and caught the leader. A spirited duel the length of the stretch with one head up and one head down....PHOTO finish. Just missed, but what a valiant effort. Great pick, but no reward. Then the seventh at Santa Anita was the Grade 1 Gamely. In nearly every other start since being claimed a year ago Vasilika had been a prohibitive favorite while winning ELEVEN of twelve starts. But today instead of the "usual cast" of west coast rivals she'd need to handle Chad Brown's multiple graded stakes winner, Rymska. She'd won for me at Tampa on their Derby Day, but she had been a HUGE disappointment in early February when I was at GP with my Mom. Maybe I held that against her, or maybe I just thought Vasilika was simply better on her home turf. She came rallying down the middle of the lane while Rymska split horses and the two dueled for about a furlong before Vasilika edged clear!
My NINTH win of the day. While it's early in the year, at this point you'd have to say Gift Box was the leader in the older handicap division. He edged to the front in the mile and a quarter Grade 1 Gold Cup, but then here came Todd Pletcher's shipper Vino Rosso with John Velazquez. Should have know that Johnny V would not have flown out here for Pletcher if this guy wasn't live. Edged clear late at 4/1 to upset the favorite. Considering I'd started the day 1-for-8, to finish 9-for-25 was excellent! For the week I hit at a 40% clip and closed out the month of May as Kim and I head off to Alaska this week!
Memorial Day Weekend Highlights
















































