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Friday’s Lock Is At Scioto Downs On Race 11

Friday’s “Lock” is at Scioto Downs on race 11 with the #5-Sarah Said:-Beaten Fav makes amends today. Eric Goodell drives.

Last “Lock” won again making the pick record at 1302 of 2066 wins with 370 seconds and 137.

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Today's Tracks

Friday September 20th

  • Fairview (SAf)    6:40am
  • Downpatrick (IRE)    8:45am
  • Newbury (UK)    8:55am
  • Follonica ITA (H)    9:00am
  • Ayr Races (UK)    9:03am
  • Newton Abbot (UK)    9:10am
  • Kempton Park (UK)    11:35am
  • Dundalk (IRE)    11:50am
  • Belterra Park    12:15pm
  • Laurel Park    12:25pm
  • Delaware Park    12:30pm
  • Freehold Raceway    12:30pm
  • Gulfstream Tropical    12:55pm
  • Tropical Turf Pick 3    12:55pm
  • Los Alamitos (TB)    1:00pm
  • Belmont At The Big A    1:05pm
  • Woodbine (TB)    1:10pm
  • Plainridge    2:00pm
  • Albuquerque    3:30pm
  • Prairie Meadows    6:00pm
  • Batavia Downs    6:00pm
  • Running Aces    6:00pm
  • Lone Star Park    6:05pm
  • Vernon Downs    6:05pm
  • Tioga Downs    6:15pm
  • Hoosier Park (H)    6:15pm
  • Harrahs Philly (Chester)    6:30pm
  • Grand River    6:30pm
  • Fraser Downs    7:00pm
  • Charles Town    7:00pm
  • Monmouth at Meadowlands    7:00pm
  • Yonkers Raceway    7:00pm
  • Woodbine at Mohawk    7:10pm
  • Remington Park    7:30pm
  • Wanganui NZ    8:15pm
  • Ellerslie NZ    8:30pm
  • Randwick AUS TH    9:50pm
  • Gold Coast AUS TH    9:55pm
  • Dalby AUS TH    10:10pm
  • Caulfield AUS    10:10pm
  • Newcastle AUS TH    10:45pm
  • Morphettville Parks AUS    10:50pm
  • Echuca AUS    10:55pm
  • Singapore    11:55pm
  • Belmont AUS TH    11:55pm

Carryover Information

Carryover Wager Type Track Date
$48,658 PICK 6 BELMONT@THE BIG A Sep 19
$6,594 JP PICK 6 CHARLES TOWN Sep 19
$6,450 JP HI 5 WOODBINE TB Sep 19
$680 JP HI 5 BELTERRA PARK Sep 19
$1,062 PICK 4 NAAS Sep 19
$429 PICK 4 URAWA Sep 19
$2,323 PICK 4 HARRAH'S PHILLY Sep 19
$978 PICK 4 FREEHOLD RACEWAY Sep 19
$1,863 PICK 5 FREEHOLD RACEWAY Sep 19
$716 PICK 5 TIOGA DOWNS Sep 19
$1,983 HI 5 FLAMBORO DOWNS Sep 19
$835 HI 5 DELAWARE FAIR Sep 19
$242 HI 5 CHARLOTTETOWN Sep 19
$18,280 JP HI 5 WOODBINE HARNESS Sep 19
$617 JP PICK 6 HOOSIER PARK Sep 19
$1,887 JP HI 5 PLAINRIDGE Sep 19
$7,698 Hi 5 Churchill Downs Sep 19
$142,817 JP Pick 6 Churchill Downs Sep 19
$2,094 JP Hi 5 Lone Star Park Sep 19
$636 JP HI 5 BATAVIA DOWNS Sep 20
$5,974 JP PICK 5 RUNNING ACES Sep 20
$805 Pick 5 Presque Isle Sep 20
$227,195 JP Pick 6 Gulfstream Park Sep 20
$5,017 JP Pick 6 Laurel Park Sep 20
$42,711 PICK 6 LOS ALAMITOS Sep 21
$4,825 PICK 5 HASTINGS RACECOURSE Sep 21
$263,897 JP PICK 5 PARX RACING Sep 21
$10,824 JP PICK 7 FANDUEL RACING Sep 21
$30K EU** OMNI R7 CHANTILLY Sep 21
$985 PICK 6 NORTHFIELD PARK Sep 21
$1,599 JP Hi 5 Fresno Sep 21
$151,846 JP PICK 5 ASSINIBOIA DOWNS Sep 23
$2,082 HI 5 ASSINIBOIA DOWNS Sep 23
$1,984 PICK 6 FINGER LAKES Sep 23
$1,592 JP HI 5 FORT ERIE Sep 23
$8,813 JP Pick 6 Louisiana Downs Sep 23

Player News

  • Thursday’s “Lock” is at Delaware County Fair: Race: 4-#2-Rick Wink-Has never lost and goes for 7 in a row today-Chris Page drives. Last “Lock” was off the board making the pick record now at 1345 of 2133 wins with 382 seconds and 141 thirds. Thank you for choosing IdaBet.com as your place to wager!

    read more
  • Today’s “Lock” is at Running Aces on race 1 with the #6-Lucy Jewle: Has been 1st or 2nd 9 out of 12 races and has won 5 of last 6! James Gould drives! Last “Lock” Was 3rd and the pick record is at 1344 of 2131 wins with 382 seconds and 141 thirds. Thank you ...

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Still Reeling from Arlington Closure, Illinois Racing Sees Fairmount Evolving as Source of Optimism

Still Reeling from Arlington Closure, Illinois Racing Sees Fairmount Evolving as Source of Optimism

Thursday’s Illinois Racing Board (IRB) meeting, at which 2025 race dates were awarded, yielded almost the exact same headline and summation of how the very same commission meeting unfolded last year: Illinois racing is still struggling to recover from the twin blows of the 2021 closure of Arlington International Racecourse and the inability of the state’s two surviving Thoroughbred venues–Hawthorne Race Course and Fairmount Park (AKA FanDuel Sportsbook & Horse Racing)–to follow through with building their proposed racinos that were legalized back in 2019.

Yet while last year’s IRB annual dates meeting was conducted with a noticeable tone of statewide optimism for the near future, this year’s marathon 5 1/2-hour meeting Sept. 19 painted a hopeful outlook primarily only at Fairmount.

That’s because the Collinsville track’s just-approved new ownership group, Accel Entertainment, asked for and received IRB permission to switch some November race dates into October this autumn so Fairmount (280 miles southwest of Hawthorne and just over the Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri) can begin construction on a temporary racino that it hopes to have operational before GI Kentucky Derby Day in 2025.

By contrast, the ownership at Hawthorne Race Course, which has faced numerous delays and setbacks to the construction of its own racino, frustrated already-stressed Chicago horsemen by leading off its presentation at Thursday’s meeting by having an attorney inform the IRB and everyone in attendance that no one from Hawthorne would publicly share any details of that track’s racino development because of purported confidentiality issues related to the project.

Tim Carey, Hawthorne’s president and general manager, stuck to broad generalities when outlining the potential future of the racino, which he said has already absorbed “tens of millions” in investment money, yet sits uncompleted right near the racetrack, in some spots blocking traditional grandstand views of the races.

“What I will say is that we remain steadfast in our efforts to completely redevelop Hawthorne and to revitalize Illinois horse racing. I believe the information that we’ve privately shared with the board is unquestionable evidence of that commitment and our continued progress in the effort,” Carey said.

Both David McCaffrey, the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (ITHA)’s executive director, and ITHA president Chris Block, decried Hawthorne’s decision to keep the horse racing community in the dark about the racino.

(It’s worth noting that none of the eight IRB members present for the meeting questioned, challenged or spoke up about Hawthorne management’s desire to stay publicly silent on such an important issue).

Both ITHA leaders went on record as saying that Hawthorne’s racing management team is great to work with, but that its racino leadership continues to exasperate horsemen.

“The cooperation level that we have on the racing side is second to none, and those guys are to be commended,” McCaffrey said. “Whoever the hell’s running the casino show, it’s an outrage. They try to blindfold all of us, and not give us details on how to proceed with our businesses…

“The racino side is abysmal,” McCaffrey continued. “To be blindfolded like this is inexcusable…. The racino side is killing us.”

Block said Hawthorne’s lack of direction on the future of the racino, which is supposed to eventually provide the main economic engine for purses at the Chicago-area track, is preventing the sport’s stakeholders in Illinois from making plans about their livelihoods.

“I need to let this board know that this racino [was] needed a long time ago,” Block said. “So every day that goes by, you can’t appreciate the pressure that Dave and I are under, and the questions we get from horsemen, breeders, jockeys. I mean this is just endless on when this is going to happen.”

As far as the awarding of dates is concerned, Fairmount was granted its requested 55 programs for 2025, a cut of seven race dates from what had been awarded for 2024.

Hawthorne applied for 80 race dates, technically an increase of two over what had been awarded for 2024. But Hawthorne already received permission earlier this season to abandon a series of Saturday cards from mid-July onward, so the actual total of 2024 dates will be closer to around 64 programs when the current season ends Oct. 13.

And that figure of 80 dates for 2025 comes with “an asterisk,” McCaffrey pointed out, referring to the likelihood that, just like this season, Hawthorne next year will not be able to sustain the three-days-a-week racing schedule that it proposes for portions of the 2025 Thoroughbred calendar.

Fairmount will retain its two-day race weeks in 2025, with the season going from Apr. 22-Oct. 28, slicing a little bit of time off of the start and end of the meet compared to this year. Tuesday afternoons and Saturday nights will remain the race days.

Hawthorne, which has tried to make a number of different post times and days of the week work for the past few years, will try adding Monday twilight racing to the mix in 2025.

Hawthorne was granted dates from Mar. 20-July 3 (two days per week on Thursdays and Sundays, with Saturdays replacing Thursdays on the weeks of Triple Crown race simulcasts). Adding in a third date per week (Mondays) will start Aug. 4 and run through Nov. 3, with the racing days being Sundays, Mondays, and Thursdays.

Block did state that Hawthorne’s willingness to extend the meet into early November will be helpful to horsemen.

Hawthorne, in Stickney on the gritty southwest outskirts of Chicago, for decades had a decidedly blue-collar reputation on the Illinois circuit. But for the past three years it has been thrust into only-game-in-Chicago status after the devastating exodus of the more opulent and suburban Arlington, which was sold and has been razed, but has yet to be redeveloped.

Although it was not explicitly stated at Thursday’s IRB meeting, it appears as if Accel might be intending to go back to calling the first horse track in its gaming portfolio by its nearly century-old former name, Fairmount Park.

Fairmount had been rebranded as FanDuel Sportsbook & Horse Racing in 2020 when FanDuel took over as the track’s owner. Accel bought the track in July, and the IRB approved the ownership change at Thursday’s meeting.

No one who spoke at the Sept. 19 meeting, including executives from Accel, referred to the racetrack as anything other than “Fairmount.” The only time the name “FanDuel” came up was when Accel executives confirmed that a partnership with the sportsbook would continue.

Fairmount received IRB permission to change its scheduled Nov. 5, 9 and 12 dates this autumn to three Thursdays in October (17, 24 and 31) and to vacate the Nov. 16 program by means of adding extra races on other days.

Closing day for 2024 will now be Nov. 2, dovetailing with the second day of the Breeders’ Cup simulcast.

The request was made to get a jump on racino construction. A temporary gaming facility will go up before the permanent one at a later date.

Melissa Helton, the president and general manager at Fairmount, acknowledged “there’s not a lot of horse experience” in the new ownership group, “so all of us have been helping out, [and] I think we’re finally at that point where we’re going to see slots.”

Purses for 2025 at Fairmount are projected to be $5.5 million, Helton said.

No corresponding 2025 purse figure for Hawthorne was stated at the meeting.

Illinois Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association president Jim Watkins, who represents horsemen at Fairmount, told the IRB that his organization concurs with the new Fairmount regime on race dates and a vision for the future.

Watkins said a contract is in place through the current year, and that a renewal is in the works that he believes will include keeping Fairmount open for off-season training.

“I’m very confident that with the resources available to Accel, the new ownership, the backside is going to look a lot different” in 2025, Watkins said.

The post Still Reeling from Arlington Closure, Illinois Racing Sees Fairmount Evolving as Source of Optimism appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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With Two Days Remaining, September Sale Becomes Highest-Grossing Auction In Keeneland History–Updated

With Two Days Remaining, September Sale Becomes Highest-Grossing Auction In Keeneland History–Updated

With two days of selling in Book 6 yet to come, the 2024 Keeneland September Yearling Sale became the highest-grossing sale in the history of the auction house.

When the gavel fell on hip 3634 not long after 6 p.m. Thursday evening, gross receipts totaled $405,519,500 (not including post-sale transactions) for the first 10 days of trade, breaking the previous high-water mark of $405,495,700 set in 2022. The cumulative average of $174,342 represented a healthy 7.3% bump over the corresponding figure from 2023, while the median price of $95,000 was up 11.8% over last year’s figures.

“An achievement of this magnitude is only accomplished by a community of people who share a passion for their horses and the sport of racing,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “We thank our breeders and sellers for the tremendous quality of horses they brought to market and the many buyers from around the world participating in this sale. We are grateful for their strong support of Keeneland.”

Added Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy: “We enjoy collaborating with our customers to create the best sales environment possible. The amazing energy and excitement we saw surrounding Book 1 created momentum that continues to flow through week 2 of the sale. With two sessions still to go, we’ve got many nice horses yet to be sold.”

During Thursday’s 10th session, Keeneland reported sales on 278 horses for $9,306,000. The average of $33,475 was ahead by 4.3% over 2023, while the median price of $26,000 represented a 4% gain. A total of 65 horses were unsold for a buyback rate of 19%.

Beau Liam Filly The Icing On the Cake for Ledgelands

A filly from the first crop of Airdrie Stud’s one-time ‘TDN Rising Star’ Beau Liam (Unbridled’s Song) was knocked down to Tom Tatum for $200,000 to top Thursday’s second of two Book 5 sessions at the September Sale. A Mar. 5 foal, hip 3375 is out of the three-time maiden Moonlight Kiss (Malibu Moon) and was consigned to the September Sale by Shelley Ritter’s Ledgelands LLC. The bay was bred by Ledgelands and Andrew C. Ritter.

“She was just an exquisite individual, very racey, big hip and well- balanced,” Shelley Ritter said when reached by phone just prior to the end of the session. “She just hit the mark from an physical standpoint. She had a lovely walk, a beautiful ground-covering sort of walk.”

Hip 3375 was the third first-crop yearling by Beau Liam to sell for a price of $200,000 or more. Overall, some 19 yearlings have sold from 23 through the ring for an average of $78,947 off an introductory stud fee of $6,000.

“We have traditionally always supported the young stallions at Airdrie and we felt that he would be a good match for the mare,” Ritter said. “He has a very lovely physique and we thought we’d give it a try.”

Beau Liam | Sarah Andrew

Ritter said she acquired Moonlight Kiss off the racetrack after finishing unplaced in Turfway maiden company in March 2021.

“A friend of mine called and asked if I might be interested in a Malibu Moon filly and I said, ‘sure, great, why not?’” Ritter offered.

The first foal from Moonlight Kiss is the 2-year-old filly Many Mo Kisses (Mo Town), who was bought back on a bid of $6,500 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton October Sale.

“We were going to try to make the 2-year-old sales with her, but we’ve retained her and she’s in training at The Thoroughbred Center,” Ritter said. “[Former jockey] Jimmy Bruin is galloping her and he told us we would not be sorry we kept her.”

Ledgelands offered the first horses through its own consignment at the 2016 September Sale, selling two yearlings for a mere $30,000 combined. By any metric, the consignment’s results for this year’s sale have exceeded any conceivable expectations. After selling four horses on Thursday, Ledgelands has now accounted for $1.47 million in turnover for eight horses sold, good for an average of $183,750.

Their biggest result came on day three of the sale, when a filly by Yaupon fetched $475,000 from Selective LLC/Cary Bloodstock. Other name buyers to patronize the draft included BSW/Crow, Albaugh Family/West Point/Barry Berkelhammer and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, while Ledgelands also sold a horse to Saudi Arabian interests.

“It’s been unbelievable,” Ritter said. “It’s super gratifying to have raised such a filly (Yaupon) and to be recognized for it and this result today is just great.”

Ritter said Ledgelands has a further six horses to sell during Saturday’s final day of the September Sale.

Bidding resumes Friday morning at 10 a.m. ET. For full results visit www.keeneland.com.

The post With Two Days Remaining, September Sale Becomes Highest-Grossing Auction In Keeneland History–Updated appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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