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Tuesday’s “Lock” is at Northfield PARK on race 2 with the #1 HydropanenHenry -from 7 hole to rail, was 2nd last 2- Wins tonight-Kurt Sugg drives.
Last “Lock” was off the board and the pick record is at 1543 of 2437 wins with 433 seconds and 166 thirds. Thank you for your support of IdaBet.com!
Sha Tin Selections(Sunday, May 31, 2026) Race 1: #12 Rising World, #1 Spice Bag, #9 Ever Wealth, #6 Sharp PlanetRace 2: #10 Storm Mirror, #5 Grand Nova, #1 Looking Bright, #13 Jumbo BlessingRace 3: #1 Papaya Brose, #4 Fun N Fun Together, #12 Ka Ying Radiance, #7 Happy SmileRace 4: #7 Oldtown, #5 Dancing Blaze, #2 Malpensa, #1 Speedy SmartieRace ...
read moreToday’s “Lock” is at Northfield Park: Race: 7 #1-Jet Stream-Easy wire to wire winner here-Chris Lems drives. Last “Lock” Was scratched making the pick record stay at 1627 of 2572 wins with 449 Seconds and 181 thirds. Thank you for your support of IdaBet.com!
read moreError: Feed has an error or is not valid
Six days after Decisive Win made light work of his first two-turn test en route to ‘TDN Rising Star’ presented by Hagyard honors at Santa Anita, Flying Dutchmen Breeding & Racing’s Where Luck Lives (f, 3, Nyquist–Holiday Soiree, by Harlan’s Holiday) made all the running to take a salty first-level allowance Thursday evening at Churchill Downs to also earn ‘Rising Star’ laurels.
Exiting a defeat of next-out ‘Rising Star’ Movie Night (Speightstown) in a sloppy Keeneland maiden Apr. 3, the $725,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga purchase caught a flyer from gate five beneath Luis Saez and took her rivals through an opening quarter-mile in :22.62.
Keeping up the gallop on the turn, the athletic bay filly turned them in after a half in :45.68 and finished full of run, covering her final two furlongs in a strong :24.35 to take it by 5 1/4 convincing lengths. The Grade III-placed French Blue (Gun Runner) gave vain chase to be second ahead of Kayla’s Comet (Mitole), who got home well for third.
Where Luck Lives appears to be another in a strong series of females produced by Holiday Soiree, winner of the Shine Again Stakes and third in this track’s GI Humana Distaff Stakes during her racing days.
The mare was acquired by Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds for $160,000 in foal to City of Light at Keeneland November in 2021, producing a filly the following season. Holiday Soiree’s foal of 2020, Vahva (Gun Runner), took out the GIII Charles Town Oaks and GII Lexus Raven Run Stakes at three and Rock Ridge sold the mare for $300,000 back in foal to City of Light at KEENOV in 2023. Holiday Soiree is the dam of the 2-year-old filly Christmas Lights, who sold for $850,000 at Keeneland September last fall.
Vahva would go on to become one of the leading distaff sprinters of her generation, with an elite-level score in the GI Derby City Distaff, while Ahavah would go on to round out the exacta in the GII Fair Grounds Oaks in 2025. For her part, Vahva fetched $3.1 million at Keeneland last November.
Nyquist is now the sire of five ‘TDN Rising Stars.’
6th-Churchill Downs, $125,591, Alw (NW1X), Opt. Clm ($125,000), 5-28, 3yo, f, 6f, 1:10.03, ft, 5 1/4 lengths.
WHERE LUCK LIVES, f, 3, by Nyquist
1st Dam: Holiday Soiree (SW & GISP, $405,642), by Harlan’s Holiday
2nd Dam: Try to Remember, by Include
3rd Dam: Casanova Strike, by Smart Strike
Sales history: $725,000 Ylg ’24 FTSAUG. Lifetime Record: 3-2-0-0, $142,382. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
O-Flying Dutchmen Breeding & Racing LLC; B-Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds LLC (KY); T-Brian A Lynch.
Where Luck Lives wins race 6! pic.twitter.com/C70jX7nn9m
— Churchill Downs (@ChurchillDowns) May 28, 2026
The post Where Luck Lives Another New ‘Rising Star’ For Nyquist appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
read moreIn the latest salvo amid an oftentimes confusing chain of events that have played out across Pennsylvania’s racing industry the last couple of months, the Pennsylvania Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (PTHA) issued a statement Thursday denying allegations the organization had failed to provide adequate support for the nine trainers at Parx Racing who were told last month by track management they would be denied stalls at the track, but were given no reasons as to why.
“The information that is being provided is one-sided and fails to reflect the immediate and extensive work that the PTHA did to assist these individuals as soon as it learned of the denials,” according to the organization’s statement.
“Any suggestion that the PTHA has let down these individual members who have recently been denied stall allocations by Parx is inaccurate and misleading. Given the time and effort that the PTHA spent attempting to help the affected horsemen through this situation, the criticism is particularly unwarranted and seems to merely reflect an agenda inconsistent with moving the PTHA forward,” the PTHA statement adds.
According to Bob Hutt, the former PTHA president and a current board member, however, the press release was issued without the board’s approval and is a “misrepresentation of the truth.”
“I want to know who drafted it and who gave it to Pete Peterson. It does not represent the board,” said Hutt, pointing to the vice president of a Pennsylvania PR firm, Bellevue Communications, which distributed the statement.
“This board has done very little, almost nothing, to help these people,” Hutt said.
The PTHA statement supports some of the timeline of events already detailed by the TDN as to the way in which this process has played out.
For example, it details how the PTHA president Kate DeMasi and one of the affected trainers met with Parx management to discuss the stall denial and attempt to reach a resolution. “Unfortunately, those efforts were unsuccessful,” the statement reads.
The PTHA statement also mirrors the TDN’s reporting that the organization’s new legal counsel Jan Budman had recommended the affected horsemen first request an immediate hearing as outlined in the Parx stall application.
If that hearing was denied, Budman next recommended the affected horsemen seek an arbitration hearing, “which requires filing an arbitration demand” with the American Arbitration Association in Philadelphia, according to the statement.
According to the PTHA, none of the trainers nor their legal counsel have pursued the specific legal route outlined in the stall application agreement.
“Several affected members spoke with an experienced horsemen’s attorney who has handled many horsemen’s cases over the years. Despite being shown the clear path to challenge Parx’s decisions, not one of the affected members or their counsel (at least to the PTHA’s knowledge to date) has attempted to follow the specific dispute resolution process expressly set forth in the Stall Application,” the statement reads.
“Contrary to what has been reported, these individuals appear to have voluntarily decided not to follow the process to challenge the stall allocation denial decisions. Had the PTHA learned that Parx was somehow denying the affected horsemen their ability to challenge these decisions as expressly set forth in the Stall Application, which is simply not the case, the PTHA Board was (and still is) prepared to step in to vigorously protect the membership.”
According to Alan Pincus, the attorney representing seven of the nine affected trainers, there are several reasons he has not pursued an arbitration hearing on behalf of the trainers. One is that the stall agreement (agreed upon by the PTHA) is “completely one-sided” in favor of the track, he said.
“It’s a dead-end,” said Pincus of any legal process under that agreement. He added how many of the impacted trainers also don’t have the financial resources for such a legal fight.
“So, why do you have a horsemen’s group? They get millions of dollars to run their organization that comes out of the purse fund, and they all make great salaries. They’re doing fine,” said Pincus. “But they’ve done nothing. And I don’t remember any instance in the last twenty years where the PTHA fought for anything.”
Earlier this month, Hutt told the TDN that the board voted down a motion for the PTHA to legally challenge Parx (to allow the trainers a full merits hearing) on advice from Budman that such a legal move might jeopardize their tax-exempt status.
The PTHA’s statement appears to allude to that detail.
It reads that the organization “advised the affected members that the PTHA was not in a position to pay for any individual member’s legal fees or other costs associated with their disputes given the limitations on non-profit trade associations from using funds to benefit individual members. This is the same reason that the PTHA is unable to provide legal counsel to individual members who may have a positive drug test violation.”
In the background of this issue is a horsemen’s association riven by internal strife, due to allegations of financial mismanagement among certain members of the board over recent years. The PTHA board ordered an audit of this alleged financial impropriety. That audit is complete but it has not been made public.
“The PTHA’s Board, and leadership team have inherited some challenges, but this group is committed to strengthening the PTHA moving forward. It intends to do so systematically and reasonably with the best interests of all of the association’s collective membership in mind,” the PTHA’s Thursday statement adds.
Elsewhere in the state’s horse racing industry this week, Tom Chuckas, Tony Salerno and Jason Klouser lost their jobs with the state Department of Agriculture, according to a brief email from an agency spokesperson Wednesday.
When asked about the reasons for the terminations, the spokesperson wrote that “we do not comment on personnel matters.”
Chuckas was the department’s director of Thoroughbred Horse Racing. Tony Salerno was the director of Harness Racing. Jason Klouser was the director of enforcement for the Bureau of Thoroughbred Horse Racing.
According to a ruling posted on the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit’s (HIWU) website last week and reported in the TDN Wednesday, charges against Parx trainer Felissa Dunn (brought when Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission investigators claimed to have found syringes in her barn} have been dropped after an internal investigation revealed that one or more of the investigators made material misstatements of fact.
The post PTHA Claims “Extensive” Support For Trainers, Board Member Calls It “Misrepresentation Of Truth” appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
read moreSha Tin Selections(Sunday, May 31, 2026) Race 1: #12 Rising World, #1 Spice Bag, #9 Ever Wealth, #6 Sharp PlanetRace 2: #10 Storm Mirror, #5 Grand Nova, #1 Looking Bright, #13 Jumbo BlessingRace 3: #1 Papaya Brose, #4 Fun N Fun Together, #12 Ka Ying Radiance, #7 Happy SmileRace 4: #7 Oldtown, #5 Dancing Blaze, #2 Malpensa, #1 Speedy SmartieRace ...
read moreToday’s “Lock” is at Northfield Park: Race: 7 #1-Jet Stream-Easy wire to wire winner here-Chris Lems drives. Last “Lock” Was scratched making the pick record stay at 1627 of 2572 wins with 449 Seconds and 181 thirds. Thank you for your support of IdaBet.com!
read moreError: Feed has an error or is not valid
Six days after Decisive Win made light work of his first two-turn test en route to ‘TDN Rising Star’ presented by Hagyard honors at Santa Anita, Flying Dutchmen Breeding & Racing’s Where Luck Lives (f, 3, Nyquist–Holiday Soiree, by Harlan’s Holiday) made all the running to take a salty first-level allowance Thursday evening at Churchill Downs to also earn ‘Rising Star’ laurels.
Exiting a defeat of next-out ‘Rising Star’ Movie Night (Speightstown) in a sloppy Keeneland maiden Apr. 3, the $725,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga purchase caught a flyer from gate five beneath Luis Saez and took her rivals through an opening quarter-mile in :22.62.
Keeping up the gallop on the turn, the athletic bay filly turned them in after a half in :45.68 and finished full of run, covering her final two furlongs in a strong :24.35 to take it by 5 1/4 convincing lengths. The Grade III-placed French Blue (Gun Runner) gave vain chase to be second ahead of Kayla’s Comet (Mitole), who got home well for third.
Where Luck Lives appears to be another in a strong series of females produced by Holiday Soiree, winner of the Shine Again Stakes and third in this track’s GI Humana Distaff Stakes during her racing days.
The mare was acquired by Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds for $160,000 in foal to City of Light at Keeneland November in 2021, producing a filly the following season. Holiday Soiree’s foal of 2020, Vahva (Gun Runner), took out the GIII Charles Town Oaks and GII Lexus Raven Run Stakes at three and Rock Ridge sold the mare for $300,000 back in foal to City of Light at KEENOV in 2023. Holiday Soiree is the dam of the 2-year-old filly Christmas Lights, who sold for $850,000 at Keeneland September last fall.
Vahva would go on to become one of the leading distaff sprinters of her generation, with an elite-level score in the GI Derby City Distaff, while Ahavah would go on to round out the exacta in the GII Fair Grounds Oaks in 2025. For her part, Vahva fetched $3.1 million at Keeneland last November.
Nyquist is now the sire of five ‘TDN Rising Stars.’
6th-Churchill Downs, $125,591, Alw (NW1X), Opt. Clm ($125,000), 5-28, 3yo, f, 6f, 1:10.03, ft, 5 1/4 lengths.
WHERE LUCK LIVES, f, 3, by Nyquist
1st Dam: Holiday Soiree (SW & GISP, $405,642), by Harlan’s Holiday
2nd Dam: Try to Remember, by Include
3rd Dam: Casanova Strike, by Smart Strike
Sales history: $725,000 Ylg ’24 FTSAUG. Lifetime Record: 3-2-0-0, $142,382. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
O-Flying Dutchmen Breeding & Racing LLC; B-Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds LLC (KY); T-Brian A Lynch.
Where Luck Lives wins race 6! pic.twitter.com/C70jX7nn9m
— Churchill Downs (@ChurchillDowns) May 28, 2026
The post Where Luck Lives Another New ‘Rising Star’ For Nyquist appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
read moreIn the latest salvo amid an oftentimes confusing chain of events that have played out across Pennsylvania’s racing industry the last couple of months, the Pennsylvania Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (PTHA) issued a statement Thursday denying allegations the organization had failed to provide adequate support for the nine trainers at Parx Racing who were told last month by track management they would be denied stalls at the track, but were given no reasons as to why.
“The information that is being provided is one-sided and fails to reflect the immediate and extensive work that the PTHA did to assist these individuals as soon as it learned of the denials,” according to the organization’s statement.
“Any suggestion that the PTHA has let down these individual members who have recently been denied stall allocations by Parx is inaccurate and misleading. Given the time and effort that the PTHA spent attempting to help the affected horsemen through this situation, the criticism is particularly unwarranted and seems to merely reflect an agenda inconsistent with moving the PTHA forward,” the PTHA statement adds.
According to Bob Hutt, the former PTHA president and a current board member, however, the press release was issued without the board’s approval and is a “misrepresentation of the truth.”
“I want to know who drafted it and who gave it to Pete Peterson. It does not represent the board,” said Hutt, pointing to the vice president of a Pennsylvania PR firm, Bellevue Communications, which distributed the statement.
“This board has done very little, almost nothing, to help these people,” Hutt said.
The PTHA statement supports some of the timeline of events already detailed by the TDN as to the way in which this process has played out.
For example, it details how the PTHA president Kate DeMasi and one of the affected trainers met with Parx management to discuss the stall denial and attempt to reach a resolution. “Unfortunately, those efforts were unsuccessful,” the statement reads.
The PTHA statement also mirrors the TDN’s reporting that the organization’s new legal counsel Jan Budman had recommended the affected horsemen first request an immediate hearing as outlined in the Parx stall application.
If that hearing was denied, Budman next recommended the affected horsemen seek an arbitration hearing, “which requires filing an arbitration demand” with the American Arbitration Association in Philadelphia, according to the statement.
According to the PTHA, none of the trainers nor their legal counsel have pursued the specific legal route outlined in the stall application agreement.
“Several affected members spoke with an experienced horsemen’s attorney who has handled many horsemen’s cases over the years. Despite being shown the clear path to challenge Parx’s decisions, not one of the affected members or their counsel (at least to the PTHA’s knowledge to date) has attempted to follow the specific dispute resolution process expressly set forth in the Stall Application,” the statement reads.
“Contrary to what has been reported, these individuals appear to have voluntarily decided not to follow the process to challenge the stall allocation denial decisions. Had the PTHA learned that Parx was somehow denying the affected horsemen their ability to challenge these decisions as expressly set forth in the Stall Application, which is simply not the case, the PTHA Board was (and still is) prepared to step in to vigorously protect the membership.”
According to Alan Pincus, the attorney representing seven of the nine affected trainers, there are several reasons he has not pursued an arbitration hearing on behalf of the trainers. One is that the stall agreement (agreed upon by the PTHA) is “completely one-sided” in favor of the track, he said.
“It’s a dead-end,” said Pincus of any legal process under that agreement. He added how many of the impacted trainers also don’t have the financial resources for such a legal fight.
“So, why do you have a horsemen’s group? They get millions of dollars to run their organization that comes out of the purse fund, and they all make great salaries. They’re doing fine,” said Pincus. “But they’ve done nothing. And I don’t remember any instance in the last twenty years where the PTHA fought for anything.”
Earlier this month, Hutt told the TDN that the board voted down a motion for the PTHA to legally challenge Parx (to allow the trainers a full merits hearing) on advice from Budman that such a legal move might jeopardize their tax-exempt status.
The PTHA’s statement appears to allude to that detail.
It reads that the organization “advised the affected members that the PTHA was not in a position to pay for any individual member’s legal fees or other costs associated with their disputes given the limitations on non-profit trade associations from using funds to benefit individual members. This is the same reason that the PTHA is unable to provide legal counsel to individual members who may have a positive drug test violation.”
In the background of this issue is a horsemen’s association riven by internal strife, due to allegations of financial mismanagement among certain members of the board over recent years. The PTHA board ordered an audit of this alleged financial impropriety. That audit is complete but it has not been made public.
“The PTHA’s Board, and leadership team have inherited some challenges, but this group is committed to strengthening the PTHA moving forward. It intends to do so systematically and reasonably with the best interests of all of the association’s collective membership in mind,” the PTHA’s Thursday statement adds.
Elsewhere in the state’s horse racing industry this week, Tom Chuckas, Tony Salerno and Jason Klouser lost their jobs with the state Department of Agriculture, according to a brief email from an agency spokesperson Wednesday.
When asked about the reasons for the terminations, the spokesperson wrote that “we do not comment on personnel matters.”
Chuckas was the department’s director of Thoroughbred Horse Racing. Tony Salerno was the director of Harness Racing. Jason Klouser was the director of enforcement for the Bureau of Thoroughbred Horse Racing.
According to a ruling posted on the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit’s (HIWU) website last week and reported in the TDN Wednesday, charges against Parx trainer Felissa Dunn (brought when Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission investigators claimed to have found syringes in her barn} have been dropped after an internal investigation revealed that one or more of the investigators made material misstatements of fact.
The post PTHA Claims “Extensive” Support For Trainers, Board Member Calls It “Misrepresentation Of Truth” appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
read more