Saturday, March 31, 2007

'Daddy's' Jersey connection

For those of you who may be looking for a New Jersey connection to this year’s Kentucky Derby, look no further than the winner of today’s Florida Derby — Scat Daddy. The son of Johannesburg is owned by Rumson resident Jim Scatuorchio, a retired Wall Street broker and a regular at Monmouth Park for many years. Scatuorchio said that Monmouth Park was the place where he took his wife Terry on their first date.

Scatuorchio has had plenty of success with his thoroughbreds lately. He also owns the top turf horse English Channel and several years ago campaigned the good 3-year-old More Than Ready.

The one and only time I walked "the walk" from the backstretch to the paddock with the Derby horses at Churchill Downs was in 2000, the year More Than Ready competed. And it was More Than Ready’s entourage with whom I strolled over, right in front of the eventual winner, Fusaichi Pegasus. That was an experience I’ll never forget, and I’ve always closely followed Scatuorchio’s horses since then. More Than Ready has become a very successful sire, too.

Scat Daddy looks like he’ll be a force to be reckoned with on May 5, and luckily for Scatuorchio he’ll have another chance to see and hear the big crowd and view the Twin Spires atop the grandstand at the historic Louisville racetrack when he "walks the walk" again. I’ll certainly be pulling for him.

On a completely different topic, can you believe that an off-track wagering facility has FINALLY opened in the Garden State? It was over seven years ago when enabling legislation was signed in the library at Monmouth Park, but legal mumbo-jumbo and governmental red tape delayed the opening far longer than it should have. The first parlor, christened "Favorites in Vineland," opened on Delsea Drive in that town, and it’s owned and operated by Greenwood Racing Inc., the folks who bring you Philly Park and its six Turf Clubs. The second OTB will open either in Woodbridge or Toms River.

Speaking of the Toms River site, it has encountered some opposition from the local community, since it’s being constructed very near a senior citizen development. They fear the OTB will bring crime and a spike in compulsive gambling, but personally I think those fears will be soon be put to rest once it opens.

When I retire, I hope to live near a racetrack or OTB, ’cause I know it’ll give me plenty of excitement in my "golden years."

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Bombs away!

Depending on your point of view, Philly Park has either been a handicapper’s nightmare or a longshot lover’s dream the last few days. On Tuesday, what surely can be considered a racing rarity occurred — back-to-back horses that paid more than $135 for a $2 ticket.

Yes, in Philly’s 3rd and 4th races, two mega-bombers blew up the toteboard. In the 3rd, the Pat Farro-trained Rymar came home to the tune of $135.60, followed in the 4th by the Diane Day-trained Out of Ireland, who returned $136.80.

Philly Park has been the site of many strange events over the years — remember jockey John Bisono, who was hit in the head by a flying goose, or the starting gate that was left sitting in the middle of the track when the tractor that pulled it ran out of gas? — but this pari-mutuel peculiarity really takes the cake.

And speaking of Philly, word from management is that the reason children are barred from the building during simulcast hours, and are only allowed in the picnic area and fifth-floor restaurant on live race days, is because slots players were letting their kids roam around the fifth floor unsupervised while they pumped quarters into the slot machines.

What I want to see is how the track handles the crowd on Kentucky Derby day, which always packs ’em in despite the fact that the Derby is a simulcast. Let’s hope the weather is nice and the betting machines and televisions are working properly out in the picnic area. In the past, I’ve always enjoyed hanging out there, but it’s a little smaller now since the slots construction took place, and some of the trees were hacked down.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

'Spinning' towards the Derby

It’s time to get excited about a "local" horse in the Triple Crown races again.

Following in the hoofprints of local heroes Smarty Jones, Afleet Alex and Barbaro, Hard Spun, a Pennsylvania-bred 3-year-old colt, thrust himself squarely into the Kentucky Derby picture by capturing the $500,000 Lane’s End Stakes at Turfway Park Saturday for owner Fox Hill Farm (Rick Porter), trainer J. Larry Jones and jockey Mario Pino. Porter, Jones and Pino are based part of the year at Delaware Park, and Porter has some horses stabled at Philadelphia Park with trainer Steve Mick.


It appeared to be a very easy victory for Hard Spun, a son of Danzig foaled in Chester County, Pa. Pino settled the bay right off the early pacesetters, and when he unleashed him, he took over like a seasoned pro. If you liked Hard Spun in this spot, you were generously rewarded with a $7.20 payout.

Like many in this area, I’ve been following Hard Spun since he made his smashing debut at Delaware Park. After he was defeated in the Southwest Stakes at Oaklawn last month, I thought that maybe he wasn’t quite Derby material. When Jones, whom I greatly admire, said the colt didn’t like the Oaklawn surface and shipped him to Turfway for the Lane’s End, I wondered whether he was just trying to make excuses for him. Obviously, I was wrong and he was right ... and once again Jones proves he’s one of the sharpest conditioners in the country. Members of the media covering the Derby are in for a treat — Jones is a gregarious, colorful talker who loves to interject his country-boy humor into every conversation. Prepare to be entertained by the man in the cowboy hat in the days leading up to the first Saturday in May!


If Hard Spun makes it to the Derby, he’ll be the second horse to use the Pennsylvania Nursey Stakes as a springboard to fame and fortune. You’ll remember Smarty Jones also whistled in the mid-December event for Pennsylvania-breds en route to capturing the nation’s attention the following spring.

Hard Spun already has a big fan club, thanks to the web site that Porter runs — www.rockportharbor.com. It’s named after Rockport Harbor, who was a Derby contender two years ago. By clicking the "Forum" link, you can read what Porter has to say about all his horses ... sometimes quite frankly! Porter is committed to sharing information about his stable with fans in order to get new people interested in the game. Too often owners and trainers take the attitude that what happens with their horses is nobody’s business but their own, and the public be damned. They forget that it’s the wagering dollar that helps drive purses, and without people in the stands, racing would soon die ... slot machine revenue or not.

One last point before I wrap this up — Philadelphia Park has announced that it soon will be barring children 18 and under from all areas of the track except the fifth floor restaurant and outdoor picnic area. The reason? Most of the grandstand is now a casino. Not a good way to cultivate the fans of the future, but the interior of Philly Park’s grandstand is way too smoky for kids, anyway. You’re better off waiting until the weather gets warmer and then turn them loose in the picnic area. And if you really want kids to get enthusiastic about racing, take them to Monmouth Park or Delaware Park, where the horse is still king and the ambiance is beautiful.


Wednesday, March 21, 2007

The Derby, Monmouth Park ... and more

It’s hard to believe that the Kentucky Derby is only about six weeks away. That’s not a lot of time for trainers to get their horses ready to run a mile and a quarter, although it seems like an eternity for us handicappers who can’t wait to start figuring our Derby exactas and trifectas in hopes of making a big score.

The last few years, there have been some 3-year-olds that I’ve really liked heading into the first Saturday in May – Smarty Jones and Barbaro – but this year smells like a crapshoot. Yes, Street Sense looked awfully sharp setting that track record in the Tampa Bay Derby on March 17, but was that really what trainer Carl Nafzger wanted in his first start back in more than four months?
He had to fight tooth and nail down the stretch with Any Given Saturday, and my guess is he may regress a bit in his next start. If you think he’ll be a vulnerable favorite come May 5, there are a slew of horses that seem capable of winning the Derby, including the Pennsylvan ia-bred Great Hunter.

Last week, I put a modest bet on Great Hunter in the second pool of the Derby Future Wager and got 11-1 odds, strictly because he was foaled in the Keystone State. I think he’s bred to get a mile and a quarter – by Derby runnerup Aptitude, out of a Roy mare – and he hails from the barn of Doug O’Neill, who seems to be winning all the big races nowadays.

Another 3-year-old I really like is Cowtown Cat, who impressed me winning the Gotham Stakes at Aqueduct two weeks ago in what appeared to be a very easy victory. A big muscular chestnut, he reminds me of the D. Wayne Lukas-trained Charismatic, who also had a couple of very easy wins before taking the Derby in 1999. Plus, don't forget about Rick Porter's Hard Spun, who will attempt to get back in the winner's circle this weekend in the Lane's End at Turfway Park.

On the local front, do any of you like the renovations at Philly Park since the arrival of slot machines and the areas that are now designated for horseplayers? As a non-smoker, I can’t stand walking into the building – it’s just too smoky for me. The small area right inside the paddock is way too crowded, even on weekdays, and so I will have to wait until the weather gets nicer before I start going back on a regular basis. I much prefer hanging out by the paddock and the track apron to sitting on the fifth floor, anyway.

I guess a cramped, smoky environment is the price we pay for having the slots. Their revenue, after all, will keep the sport of racing alive in Pennsylvania. But gee, I long for the days when you could wander around the grandstand and find a nice little spot to study the program.

And before you know it, Monmouth Park will be off and running for what will unquestionably be the most important meet of its 61-year history. It will run two weekends, May 12-13 and May 19-20, before its gala, traditional opening day on May 26, which no horse lover should ever miss. Then, on Oct. 27, the Oceanport track hosts the Breeders’ Cup World Thoroughbred Championships, the first time it will be held in New Jersey.

Over the winter, the N. J. Sports & Exposition Authority spent millions of dollars updating the circa-1946 oval. One of the casualties, alas, was the Olympic-sized swimming pool that was built by Amory L. Haskell for the jockeys. It was beyond repair, I was told, and it will be replaced by a viewing stand so the crowd can see the paddock on Breeders’ Cup Day. I’ve never taken a dip in that pool (though gazed at it longingly on humid, 95-degree days!) but I hate it when a part of the original track is destroyed, much like those distinctive curlicue hedges that used to be in the infield. They were ripped out for the new turf course and were thought to have interfered with the o ld course’s drainage. But I understand that the infield will be landscaped just as beautifully this season as in years past.

Ah, just thinking about Monmouth Park on a warm summer afternoon gets me feeling nostalgic. There’s nothing better than sitting in that big open grandstand and feeling the ocean breeze while sipping a brewski… hearing the roar of the crowd as the horses turn into the stretch … and then perhaps cashing a ticket or two underneath the colorful Hall of Fame banners that hang from the rafters. I often think of wonderful days spent there as a young girl with my father, grandfather and Uncle Ziggy from Bayonne, who loved playing longshots.

That’s what I call a little piece of heaven.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Coming Soon!

Stay tuned at www.trentonian.com for this new blog on horse racing by Trentonian staff reporter Linda Dougherty.