AREA wins the RICKS MEMORIAL S at Remmington

TRAIN HERE, WIN ANYWHERE is very true for AREA (Street Sense) who has raced and won at Oaklawn. Churchill Downs and now Remington Park.  The 4-year-old filly was sold by Cary Frommer for $140,000 at the FT Midlantic Sale of 2017. This is AREA’s first stakes win. She came from far off the pace and wore down her rivals for the victory. She is owned by Alex and JoAnn Lieblong and trained by Steven M. Asmussen.
Lifetime Record: 10-4-2-1, $236,818.

 

2 year old SEE FOREVER graduates first out

2-year-old gelding SEE FOREVER (Langfuhr) won first out racing 6 1/2 furlong on the turf at Woodbine. He pressed the pace in second and then cleared his rival to win by 1 1/2 lengths. SEE FOREVER is owned by the The Estate of Gustav Schickedanz  and was bred in Ontario by Gustav Schickedanz. He is trained by Mike Keogh.

Terranova ‘Thrilled’ With Killybegs Captain After De Francis Victory

by Maryland Jockey Club Press Office | 09.27.2019 | 4:45pm

Killybegs Captain wins the De Francis Dash

Being unable to attend the first graded-stakes win by one of his own horses in more than four years didn’t make the accomplishment any less exciting for trainer John Terranova.

Terranova and his wife and assistant, Tonja, were about 900 miles away from Laurel Park in Wisconsin, visiting their eldest daughter, Paulina, a college freshman, as Killybegs Captain captured the $250,000 Xpressbet Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G3) in one of its fastest editions ever.

It was the first career graded score for Killybegs Captain, who had been Grade 1 and Grade 2-placed this summer and upset Imperial Hint to win the Pelican Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs over the winter. It was Terranova’s first since El Kabeir swept the Jerome and Gotham respectively in January and March of 2015.

“We couldn’t be there but we were able to watch it. We were thrilled to win,” Terranova said. “I’m glad it worked out and we were able to ship down. Everybody did a great job, and he was doing really well.”

Long-time friends with Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert dating back to time spent in California, the Terranovas have made their New York-based stable a home away from home for such horses as Triple Crown champions American Pharoah and Justify.

Killybegs Captain, meanwhile, had rarely ventured outside of New York, making 19 of his 24 starts in the Empire State including a third in both the John A. Nerud (G2) July 6 at Belmont and Forego (G1) Aug. 24 at Saratoga.

“We took on Grade 1 horses up in Saratoga in his previous start, and we were looking for a spot that maybe he’d have a little bit better shot of winning,” Terranova said. “He always seems to show up. He’s been really consistent this year and held his form, and just gotten to a different level.”

In the De Francis, Killybegs Captain was unhurried early but moved into contention on the turn, took command at the eighth pole and drew off to win by three-quarters of a length in 1:08.10 for six furlongs – the fastest De Francis since Richter Scale set the track record of 1:07.95 winning the race in 2000.

“He’s perfect. He’s so easy and versatile. He’s got speed, but he can sit back off horses and finish, whatever it takes. Inside or outside, he’s been pretty versatile in that way. He’s just a fun horse to have, and we feel fortunate that we have him and that he’s healthy,” Terranova said. “He looks great. He came out of the race really well, happy, healthy sound, and already back to the track and feeling good.”

Killybegs Captain is likely to stay in New York for his next start, possibly in the seven-furlong Bold Ruler (G3) Oct. 26 at Belmont.

“We’ll probably take a look at it,” Terranova said. “It’s kind of uncertain. We’ll get on a couple weeks from now and figure out what he tells us. Logically, that could be the spot.”

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season

The busiest time of the year at the Aiken Training Track is about to begin, and preparations are being made for the annual influx of yearling thoroughbreds that will be prepared for racing there from roughly October through April.

A renovation of the 1-mile oval on Two Notch Road is underway. It began Wednesday and the track is scheduled to be closed to horses through Oct. 1.

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season 1

Chairman Chad Ingram stands on the Aiken Training Track, which is being renovated.

“We are completely redoing the track,” said Training Track Chairman Chad Ingram. “It involves taking off the surface all the way down to the clay base. It (the base) will be repaired if needed. Then the sandy loam (which makes up the surface) will be spread back over it evenly.”

Depending on the amount of work required, the project will cost $5,000 to $10,000, Ingram estimated.

“We had a meeting with the trainers,” Ingram said. “They thought it needed to be done, and we told them that we would do it. Probably our No. 1 priority is the condition of the track.”

Ingram has been the chairman of the training track since April, when the facility’s board of directors voted to make him the chief executive officer.

Over the years, the number of horses using the training track has decreased.

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season 3

The Aiken Training Track is in the process of being renovated.

During the early 1980s, more than 400 thoroughbreds spent the winter at the Aiken Training Track, which was established in the early 1940s. From October 2018 through August 2019, approximately 140 different horses galloped and breezed at the facility.

During an interview soon after he was elected, Ingram told the Aiken Standard that the track wasn’t “like a sinking ship,” but admitted it was “facing a lot of challenges.”

The training track has two main sources of income. One is the fees paid by horsemen for their thoroughbreds to use the track and/or stalls in the barns owned by the facility.

The other source is the money generated by the Aiken Trials, an event in March that attracts thousands of spectators and is the first leg of the Aiken Triple Crown.

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season 5

Chairman Chad Ingram stands on the Aiken Training Track, which is being renovated.

One of the most important concerns for Ingram from the get-go was to find new trainers willing to bring the horses in their care to Aiken.

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season 10

The surface is being removed from the Aiken Training Track during the renovation process.

“I was optimistic at the time, and I still feel that way, but even more so,” Ingram said. “I really like the energy of our board. Everybody seems to be committed to helping out the training track, and everybody seems to be working together more. The whole vibe around the place feels better.”

There are two new trainers with one horse each, and another, 28-year-old Justin Rivera, is getting ready to bring eight to 15 horses to the track.

His parents, Tirso and Beth Rivera, are in the thoroughbred business in California. They are based at Golden Gate Fields racetrack, which is near San Francisco and Oakland.

“I’ve worked for a lot of farms and broken young horses for my dad,” Justin said. “I’ve owned horses with my mom and my dad, and my mom breeds her own horses.”

Logan Bearden, an eventing rider, is Justin’s partner in his Aiken-based horse venture.

“My goal, ultimately, is to have a place for my parents to retire to because they are getting to the end of their race track days,” Justin said. “They want to work with younger horses, so they could run my feeder program and I would be at a bigger track, maybe in Maryland.”

The training track also has two additional new trainer prospects, who would have around 15 horses each, but “they are unconfirmed at this point,” Ingram said.

And there’s more good news.

“All the trainers that we had last winter are coming back,” Ingram said.

Outlook upbeat as Aiken Training Track prepares for its busy season 12

The Aiken Training Track is in the process of being renovated.

They include Canada-based Mike Keogh, the private trainer for Gustav Schickedanz, who died in June.

Year-around trainers Cary Frommer and Legacy Stable’s Brad Stauffer and Ron Stevens will be getting new horses.

During a Sept. 10 meeting, the training track board elected a new president, Bill Gutfarb. He replaced Alice Knowles, who had been the president since April.

“He is making sure our financials are compiled accurately, and he also is helping us with our budgeting, our tax returns, our insurance renewals and those kinds of things,” said Ingram of Gutfarb. “Anything I’ve asked him to do, he’s jumped right on.”

Gutfarb, who is retired, worked in financial management for the Yawkey family, whose patriarch, the late Tom Yawkey, owned the Boston Red Sox.

Gutfarb is still a trustee for two of the Yawkey family’s foundations.

“The training track is a great place, and this is a great community,” Gutfarb said. “I don’t know if we’re going to be able to get the track back to what it was 50 years ago, but we can certainly try to make what we have to offer better known.”

Gutfarb and his wife, Wendy, are thoroughbred owners, and they are among the partners in Mosaic Racing Stable.

Wendy is a joint master of foxhounds for the Aiken Hounds.

In addition to a new president and new trainers, the training track has three new employees – one in the office and two who work in track maintenance.

There also is a new website, aikentrainingtrack.com.

“It is a lot better technically, they tell me,” Ingram said. “It’s quicker and easier to update.”

Earlier this year, the training track expanded and upgraded the clockers’ stand, which was named in honor of Dogwood Stable’s late founder and president, Cot Campbell.

Further improvements are planned, including the replacement of the pergola with a larger covered structure that will provide shade and shelter from any rain for more people.

Meanwhile, graduates of the training track have been enjoying success this year at the racetrack.

In July, on the same day, Henley’s Joy captured the $1 million Belmont Derby Invitational Stakes, and Concrete Rose scored in the $750,000 Belmont Oaks Invitational Stakes at Belmont Park in New York.

More recently, Killybegs Captain won the $250,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash Stakes and Dubini triumphed in the $100,000 Laurel Dash Stakes on Sept. 21 at Laurel Park in Maryland.

MZ SEB PAT graduates at Belmont

Trained in Aiken by Legacy Stable, MZ SEB PAT (Mission Impazible) chased the pace on the inside and then cleared to motor on for the win by 3 lengths. She is now trained by David Donk for Youngs Racing Stable.

DUBINI wins the $100,000 LAUREL DASH

Purchased by Mark Grier for $162,000 at OBS March and started by Legacy Stable, DUBINI (Gio Ponti) recently added still another stakes placing in the DA HOSS S,  sprinting on the turf at the newly opened Colonial Downs.

Today he upped the ante wiining the $100,000 LAUREL DASH S. 3yo/up, 5 1/2fT,1:01.71, fm.
His 1ST BLACK TYPE WIN.
O-PewterStable
B-Castleton Lyons & Kilboy Estate (KY)
T-Kathleen A. Demasi;
Lifetime Record: 18-5-5-1,$324,775.

 

KILLYBEGS CAPTAIN takes the G3 FRANK J. DE FRANCIS MEMORIAL DASH S.

Courtesy of the TDN

FRANK J. DE FRANCIS MEMORIAL DASH S.-GIII, $250,000,
Laurel, 9-21, 3yo/up, 6f, 1:08.10, ft.
1–KILLYBEGS CAPTAIN, 120, h, 5, by Mizzen Mast
1st Dam: Al Maha, by Holy Bull
2nd Dam: Lost Lode, by Mr. Prospector
3rd Dam: Past Forgetting, by Messenger of Song
1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($20,000 Ylg ’15 KEESEP; $75,000
2yo ’16 OBSAPR). O-Curragh Stables
B-H. Allen Poindexter(KY)
T-John P. Terranova II;
Lifetime
Record: GISP, 24-6-5-3, $521,453. W

Killybegs Captain, a runaway winner of the Pelican S. at Tampa
in February, ran well in defeat in his next six trips to the post,
including a pair of third-place finishes at long odds in the
GII John A. Nerud S. July 6 and GI Forego S. Aug. 24,
respectively.

He saved ground while racing in a midpack fourth through a
sharp opening quarter in :21.74 here and came charging up an
inviting opening along the inside in the stretch to get the money.
“John [Terranova] didn’t tell me really any instructions
because I’ve ridden the horse a few times already,” winning
rider Eric Cancel said. “He just told me to ride him with a lot of
confidence and to bring home the winner and, thank God, he
made it possible. I’ve been watching him work in the mornings
and he’s been running his last few races super good. He’s in very
good shape. I never had a doubt that he could win this race.”

Pedigree Notes:
Killybegs Captain becomes the 23rd graded winner for sire
Mizzen Mast. The winner’s dam Al Maha, a maiden of four
career starts, is also responsible for the unraced 2-year-old colt
Benny Chang (Cross Traffic) and a Cross Traffic filly of this year.
Al Maha was bred back to Always Dreaming. H. Allen Poindexter
purchased Al Maha at the age of nine for $17,000 at the 2011
Fasig-Tipton Heiligbrodt Dispersal Sale. This is the extended
female family of millionaire Concerto

Killybegs Captain Wins De Francis Dash At Laurel Park

Courtesy of the BloodHorse Killybegs Captain wins the Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash Stakes at Laurel Park
Killybegs Captain wins the Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash Stakes at Laurel ParkJerry Dzierwinski / Maryland Jockey Club

Sprinter picked up his first graded win after a last-out third in Forego (G1).

Avoiding stretch traffic that caused a couple of rivals to alter momentum, Killybegs Captain rallied inside down the Laurel Park stretch Sept. 21 to win the $250,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash Stakes (G3) over hard-knocking Ohio-bred Altissimo.

The De Francis provided Killybegs Captain with his second stakes victory in eight starts this year and his first graded score. Winner of the Pelican Stakes Feb. 16 at Tampa Bay Downs for owner Curragh Stables, he was third in the John A. Nerud Stakes (G2) July 6 at Belmont Park and third in the Forego Stakes Presented by Encore Boston Harbor (G1) at Saratoga Race Course Aug. 24, beaten 3 3/4 lengths by Mitole—one of the nation’s best sprinters—in his most recent graded start.

Although he faced a solid stakes group at Laurel, none were in Mitole’s class, and it showed when Killybegs Captain kicked into gear after being rated in fourth, nine lengths off the pace under jockey Eric Cancel. He pulled within 5 1/2 lengths after a half-mile and then made the lead inside the final furlong when frontrunning Old Time Revival began to tire, drifting out in the path of Altissimo and third-place He Hate Me.

“I had a lot of confidence. The horse has been training very good,” said Cancel, who rode him for trainer John Terranova. “I’ve been watching him work in the mornings and he’s been running his last few races super good. He’s in very good shape. I never had a doubt that he could win this race.”

The second favorite in the field of six, Killybegs Captain returned $7.80 to win. He is a 5-year-old son of Mizzen Mast  out of the Holy Bull mare Al Maha. Curragh Racing bought him for $75,000 from the consignment of Cary Frommer at the 2016 Ocala Breeders’ Sales Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training.

Altissimo was a clear second, 3 1/4 lengths ahead of 6-5 favorite He Hate Me. It was another two lengths back to Maryland Sprint Stakes (G3) winner New York Central in fourth, followed by Bon Raison and Old Time Revival. The latter, who blitzed out of the gate with splits of :21.74 and :44.37, weakened to lose by 8 3/4 lengths.

Wonderful Light and Sparticle were scratched.

Killybegs Captain’s winning time of 1:08.10 on a fast main track was the fastest De Francis since Richter Scale’s course record of 1:07.95 in 2000.

The race was one of eight stakes worth $1.3 million at Laurel, most of them run on the grass

2 year old colt EPITOMIZE wins first out – an ATT/Cary Frommer grad

Courtesy of the TDN
Prepared at the Aiken Training Track and consigned by Cary Frommer

4th-Presque Isle Downs, Msw, 9-19, 2yo, 6f (AWT), 1:10.05, ft.
EPITOMIZE (c, 2, Cairo Prince-Renee’s Queen {SW}, by AfterMarket) blossomed from a $110,000 KEENOV weanling to a $200,000 FTSAUG yearling to a $350,000 EASMAY juvenile consigned by Cary Frommer after breezing in :10 1/5 in Timonium in May. The x-x shot raced near the rear of the field, well back off an opening quarter in :22.27. Making an eye-catching move up the outside on the backstretch run, the gray ranged up four wide turning for home and coasted clear in the lane with ease to don cap and gown by 4 1/4 lengths. Hay Hay The winner has a yearling half-sister by Flat Out. His stakes-winning dam Renee’s Queen is a half-sister to GSW
Mighty Caroline (Stormy Atlantic) and MSW Cyclogensis (Stormy Atlantic). Sales history: $110,000 Wlg ’17 KEENOV; $200,000 Ylg’18 FTSAUG; $350,000 2yo ’19 EASMAY.
Lifetime Record:
1-1-0-0, $18,000.
O-Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners & Paul Braverman;
B-Stoneway Farm (KY); T-H. Graham Motion.

LOCATION

538 Two Notch Rd
Aiken, SC 29801
OFFICE HOURS

Monday - Friday
9am - 12pm
MAILING ADDRESS

P.O. Box 656
Aiken, SC 29802
CONTACT

803-648-4631
aikentt@bellsouth.net
©2020 Aiken Training Track • All Rights Reserved.