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Daily Racing Form: Breeders’ Cup 2019—The Big Day Has Arrived

ARCADIA, Calif. – Saturday is big of course, because the Breeders’ Cup is always big. It’s a celebration of what’s good in racing – for racetracks, horsemen, and fans.

For the 10th time in its 36-year history, Breeders’ Cup has landed at the foot of the San Gabriel mountains, at picturesque Santa Anita Park. It is the track also known as the Great Race Place. Also known, for many, as home.

Perhaps Breeders’ Cup 2019 is a good time to enjoy Santa Anita racing just for the fun of it.

Santa Anita hopefully will host many more big days, like past Breeders’ Cups and the 82 Big Caps and cards that include future Triple Crown winners such as Justify and American Pharoah. At Santa Anita, you can practically feel the history by walking past big, grand statues of Seabiscuit, Zenyatta, and John Henry in the paddock gardens.

At the Breeders’ Cup, you want the sport to be big also. You want more history to be made. You want another Santa Anita thriller such as Beholder and Songbird nose and nose in the 2016 Distaff, or a $269.20 bomber like 1993 Classic winner Arcangues. You want Zenyatta storming down the stretch in the 2009 Classic. “This-is-un-be-lie-vable!”

Saturday, the stage is set.

Bricks and Mortar (Turf), Midnight Bisou (Distaff), and Sistercharlie (Filly and Mare Turf) may have clinched divisional championships already. They will try to finish their seasons undefeated before lobbying resumes for Horse of the Year.

Mitole (Sprint) and Omaha Beach (Dirt Mile) have targets on their backs, as do many favorites. And on the 10th anniversary of Zenyatta, the veteran mare Elate will try to upset favorite McKinzie in the Classic.

It will be fun to see championships clinched, and Horse of the Year determined. Eclipse Awards are important, and so are the optics. Fans will hold their breath watching many of the world’s top Thoroughbreds go head and head. Here’s to safety.

There is more. There is gambling. Breeders’ Cup offers attractive betting opportunities. You don’t have to be right that often, because most of the time the odds are generous. One or two unique handicapping opinions, if correct, can produce exponential wagering profits.

Breeders’ Cup is where the best meets the best.

Unless of course, you are Omaha Beach. He could have entered the BC Sprint, one of the toughest races on the card. But rather than take a swing at Mitole in a $2 million race, Omaha Beach ducked. He entered the Dirt Mile instead. Big whoop.

Omaha Beach is off to stud at some point, with a reputation to protect. If running in the Dirt Mile, a race with half the purse and less prestige than the Sprint, gets that done, then nice job. From a fan’s perspective, it would have been cool to see Omaha Beach in the Sprint, battling Shancelot again, facing Mitole and Imperial Hint for the first time.

Who knows, Omaha Beach might have a fight on his hands anyway. Improbable at 5-1 in the Dirt Mile is more appealing than Omaha Beach at 6-5.

Of course, Omaha Beach as a heavy favorite is appropriate for the Breeders’ Cup this year. It seems there are more lopsided favorites than usual. Omaha Beach, Sistercharlie, Midnight Bisou, and Bricks and Mortar all are 7-5 or less on the DRF line.

But the Dirt Mile is race 6 on Saturday, so let’s back up, and take the big races in the order they will be run, starting with race 4, the first Breeders’ Cup race on Saturday.

The Filly and Mare Sprint has nine entrants, matching the lowest in its 13-year history. Test Stakes winner Covfefe is favored while trying to be the first Test winner to win the Filly and Mare Sprint. Eight tried and failed, including four as the favorite. Spiced Perfection is this handicapper’s reluctant choice. Longshot bettors could do worse than take flyers on likely pacesetter Selcourt or route-to-sprint Bellafina.

The Turf Sprint fizzled when Santa Anita abandoned the hillside course due to safety perceptions. Now the Turf Sprint is five furlongs on the main oval; distance specialist Eddie Haskell is the pick. It will be a surprise if the best horse wins. Chaos is an unavoidable byproduct when 12 runners scream five-eighths. At 6 1/2 furlongs on the hill, at least bettors could be relatively confident the best horse had a fair shot.

Dirt Mile upset? On a media teleconference last week, Bob Baffert posed a revealing question: “Nobody’s going to ask me about Improbable?” Trainer tips are not always relevant, but when Baffert gets bullish, be certain the horse will fire. Improbable and jockey Rafael Bejarano occasionally have gate issues, so the start is everything. One misstep, and the race is over. It might be over anyway. Omaha Beach is very good.

Sistercharlie in the Filly and Mare Turf, or Dan Ward-trained longshot Vasilika? Ward is assistant trainer to Jerry Hollendorfer, currently disallowed from Stronach Group tracks. Vasilika won 10 straight races at Santa Anita for Hollendorfer. If you think Hollendorfer is bad for racing, go ahead and root against Vasilika. This handicapper will cheer her on.

Mitole will be tough in the Sprint, even against speedsters Shancelot and Imperial Hint. And who makes the lead? Answer that and find the winner – 15 of 26 sprints (through Sunday) at six furlongs were won by the pacesetter. (Half the races were maidens.)

Circus Maximus is rock solid in the Mile. As for the Distaff, it is deeper than Midnight Bisou. Paradise Woods and Ollie’s Candy both have a look, notwithstanding posts 1 and 2. Bricks and Mortar is legit chalk in the Turf, while outclassed front-runner Acclimate is not impossible. He ran super last time setting a wicked pace.

The $6 million Classic is the final race Saturday, and one participant commented on the quality of the field: “It’s not the best group ever.” The quote was not for attribution.

Perhaps lukewarm favorite McKinzie will stay 1 1/4 miles. Maybe longshot closer Yoshida will rally from the clouds. Higher Power has a look if he does not stumble at the start. One can hope.

One hopes Saturday helps to purge a season of turmoil, and that the Breeders’ Cup returns many more times to Santa Anita.

One hopes the track continues as a Great Race Place.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com.

Everything You Need To Know About The 2019 Breeders’ Cup—And Its ‘Classic’ Saratoga Connection

Saratoga Race Course may be closed for the season, but one of Thoroughbred racing’s biggest days is just around the bend. Running this Friday, November 1 through Saturday, November 2 is the annual Breeders’ Cup World Championships, a series of 14 races, almost all of them Grade 1 stakes, amounting to more than $30 million in purses and awards, which this year will be held at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, CA (each year a different racecourse hosts the event). The 2019 Breeders’ Cup will not only feature some of the toughest competitors in the horse racing world, but will also welcome in impressive crowds of fans, including a number of celebrities. Of course, there will also be great non-racing entertainment at Santa Anita all weekend long, along with top-shelf culinary offerings and more than a few chances to wear a fancy hat.

Just how big a deal is Breeders’ Cup weekend? Big. Since 1984, the world’s top Thoroughbreds have faced off against one another there. Expanded into a two-day event in 2007, the Breeders’ Cup is also one of the richest single, horse racing events in the world (surpassed by only a handful of racing tournaments), and this year’s cup is sure to be just as impressive. The Cup’s first day will feature a full day of racing dedicated to juvenile racehorses (under three years of age), with four Grade 1 races and one Grade 2 race. The gems of Friday’s card are a pair of $2 million races: the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile and Juvenile Fillies. Day 2 includes a staggering nine Grade 1 stakes (all with a purse of $1 million or greater), including the big three: the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Distaff, the $4 million Breeders’ Cup Turf and the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic (often referred to simply as “The Classic”). (For a full list of the races and entries, click here.)

For those local fans pining for the racing-packed days at this past summer’s Saratoga meet, the two-day Breeders’ Cup card will evoke some fond memories. “It’s going to be a pretty spectacular [lineup], including a lot of Saratoga winners,” says Peter Rotondo, the Breeders’ Cup’s vice president of media and entertainment, who also happens to be a recent Saratoga Springs transplant. Among those horses that dominated at Saratoga, who will be appearing in Breeders’ Cup races this weekend, will be McKinzie, winner of the 2019 Whitney Stakes; and Code of Honor, winner of the 2019 Travers Stakes, both of whom will both competing in the Breeders’ Cup Classic. Also racing will be Midnight Bisou, winner of the 2019 Personal Ensign Stakes at Saratoga, who is favored to win the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Distaff. “It’s literally a Who’s-Who of Saratoga stakes winners battling it out in California,” says Rotondo.

Mucho Macho Man, with jockey Gary Stevens aboard, after winning the 2013 Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita.(Alex Evers/ Eclipse Sportswire)

If you’re lucky enough to be jetting off to Santa Anita this weekend, there will be a lot to do besides watching world-class racing. For instance, if you’re a foodie, you’ve come to the right place. There will be a celebrated guest chef’s program, with some of New York City’s and Los Angeles’ hottest restaurants represented at the track, including LA’s Pizzeria Mozza and Jon & Vinny’s, as well as Manhattan’s 21 Club. The latter designed the Breeders’ Cup’s first-ever official cocktails. “The Kentucky Derby has mint juleps so, after 36 years, we said it’s time to have [our own] official cocktail,” says Rotondo. “So we made two!” The two beverages? The Torrie Cup (bourbon, sweet vermouth, orange juice and lemonade) and The Garland (vodka and triple sec with green tea and fresh lemon juice).

And if you’re a celebrity-watcher…well, you’ll be in good company. One of Rotondo’s responsibilities is managing the Breeders’ Cup’s celebrity ambassador program. “We have this group of celebs and athletes that love horse racing or even just horses,” says Rotondo. “When they’re available, they come out to the Cup.” That list of big-wig regulars that make cameos on Breeders’ Cup weekend includes Baseball Hall of Famer Joe Torre; Broadway actress Laura Bell Bundy (Hairspray, Legally Blonde); Hollywood screen legend Bo Derek; celebrity chef Bobby Flay, who has a horse running in the Breeders’ Cup this year; a slew of Dodgers players, including young hurler Walker Buehler; and award-winning actress Elizabeth Banks (The Hunger Game).

Even if you can’t make it to Santa Anita this weekend, don’t worry about it too much: Rotondo says that this year’s Breeders’ Cup is going to be a special one. Those aforementioned Saratoga winners? “They have a very good shot [to win] this year,” he says.

Daily Racing Form: Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Would Be Signature Win For The Albaugh Family Stable

ARCADIA, Calif. – It was not Dennis Albaugh’s time in 2016. Perhaps it will be his moment in Friday’s $2 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile at Santa Anita.

In 2016, the Albaugh-owned Not This Time fell a neck short to Classic Empire in the Juvenile at Santa Anita. Friday, Albaugh and his son-in-law Jason Loutsch, who race under the banner Albaugh Family Stable, are back at Santa Anita with Dennis’ Moment, who was made the 8-5 morning-line favorite for the Juvenile.

Dennis’ Moment, a son of Tiznow, won a maiden race by 19 1/4 lengths at Ellis Park in his second start. He validated that with a 1 3/4-length victory in the Grade 3 Iroquois Stakes at Churchill Downs on Sept 14.

Dennis’ Moment is the latest in a line of runners the Albaugh family has brought to this race. In 2015, they finished 3rd and 12th with Brody’s Cause and Unbridled Outlaw. Following Not This Time’s second-place finish in 2016, Hollywood Star and Free Drop Billy finished sixth and ninth in 2017.

Though Free Drop Billy and Brody’s Cause each won the Grade 1 Breeders’ Futurity at Keeneland, Loutsch says he and his father-in-law are still seeking that signature win for the stable.

“Absolutely. Winning a Grade 1 at Keeneland twice is unbelievable,” Loutsch said. “To win that big one on the biggest race day – the Triple Crown or Breeders’ Cup – that’s our next step. We got a shot this year.”

It was Loutsch who got his father-in-law into racing about 14 years ago. They bought into a horse Miss Macy Sue, and the filly won six stakes and earned $880,000. Albaugh, who made his fortune as head of a pesticide and fertilizer company based in Alkeny, Iowa, thought he had found another gold mine in racing. He soon found out it wasn’t so easy.

“I thought ‘How can I go wrong?’ ” Albaugh said. “I bought some more and learned there is something more to this.”

Albaugh said he has a team of seven individuals that provide input when purchasing yearlings at auction. Albaugh said he buys about 10 yearlings a year and also breeds to 10 to 15 mares he owns. Miss Macy Sue, Albaugh’s first horse, produced Liam’s Map – whom Albaugh sold as a yearling for $800,000 and who won the 2016 Dirt Mile – and Not This Time.

Not This Time (Taylor Made), and Brody’s Cause and Free Drop Bill (both Spendthrift) all are stallions based in Kentucky A stud deal regarding Dennis’ Moment is expected to be announced shortly before or right after the Breeders’ Cup, Loutsch said.

“I’ve taken more money off the table than I’ve put in,” Albaugh said of his time in racing.

That this horse is named after him came as a surprise to Dennis Albaugh. Loutsch said the family had luck naming horses after friends or family – Free Drop Billy and Brody’s Cause – and he wanted to name one for his father-in-law. Bloodstock agent Barry Berkelhammer, who had a role in selecting Dennis’s Moment, told Loutsch he thought this son of Tiznow – a sire Loutsch long admired – was special.

“He didn’t know about it when I met with him in the spring to go over the roster,” Loutsch said of his father-in-law. “He said ‘Dennis’ Moment? What’s this?’ I said, ‘He might be a good one.’ I had no idea he was going to be this good.”

The first race wasn’t too good. Albaugh was having a family reunion in Iowa the day Dennis’ Moment made his first start at Churchill Downs, and everybody gathered around the television to watch. About an eighth of a mile into the race, Dennis’ Moment clipped heels with a horse that had come over on him and unseated jockey Robby Albarado.

“I was quite shocked,” Albaugh said. “I was worried about Robby, too. Then to watch that horse go on and win the race without a rider, I thought I think I got myself a horse here.”

Dennis’ Moment proved Albaugh right by romping in a seven-furlong maiden race. He came back to punch his ticket to Santa Anita in the Grade 3 Iroquois.

Three years ago, Romans said Not This Time had the potential to be the best horse he had trained. Now, he thinks it could be Dennis’ Moment.

Not This Time “was the only one of my dirt horses that breaths the same air as this one,” Romans said. “This one is so special. Even around the barn or in the stall he has an aura about him that horses don’t have. I don’t know what it is. You stand around him for five minutes you see what I’m talking about.”

Albaugh hopes everybody gets to see what Romans is talking about on Friday.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com.

$9.5 Million Renovation Project Now Underway At SPAC

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The Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) is about to get a major facelift. On Tuesday, October 29, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that construction had begun on a $9.5 million upgrade project at the Saratoga Springs venue. The list of improvements will include two completely new concessions and restroom facilities; a rooftop terrace to view concerts; and a new, year-round, indoor events space for more entertainment, educational programming and community engagement activities.

The ambitious project is being funded with $8 million from SPAC and Live Nation (SPAC’s summer partner for booking popular acts), plus up to an additional $1.5 million in grants from Empire State Development and State Parks, awarded by Governor Cuomo’s Regional Economic Development Council initiative. “For decades, the Saratoga Spa State Park has attracted visitors from across the state and around the world,” said Governor Cuomo. “This project is another major step forward in the renewal of this great park and will provide needed renovations to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center that will further cement it as a critical economic and cultural driver in the Capital Region.”

Replacing the old tent structures in the main plaza, the two new facilities will offer SPAC patrons a completely modern concessions and restrooms area. One of the new buildings will be two stories high and feature, in addition to the aforementioned amenities, a climate-controlled events space and an atrium recounting the history of SPAC. Other upgrades in the construction package will include a new, open-air pavilion in the center of the main plaza and updated pedestrian walkways from the plaza to the amphitheater lawn.

“Aside from being an economic powerhouse in the region—with an estimated $100 million in annual economic impact—SPAC is a cultural powerhouse as well, bringing best-in-class artists and companies from across all genres,” says SPAC’s President and CEO Elizabeth Sobol. “With these series of infrastructure upgrades thanks to Governor Cuomo and Live Nation, SPAC is positioned to be a vibrant international cultural destination for years to come.”

The upgrades are expected to be completed and open before the beginning of SPAC’s 2020 summer season.

FBI Seizes Nazi-Looted Painting From Canajoharie’s Arkell Museum

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A work of art stolen by the Nazis, sitting for decades, unnoticed, in a museum in Upstate New York, later seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)? No, it’s not the plot of Nicolas Cage’s latest movie; it actually happened about an hour southwest of Saratoga Springs this past September.

A painting entitled, Winter, by American impressionist Gari Melchers had been on display at the Arkell Museum in Canajoharie until last month when, according to court documents, the piece was handed over to the FBI after the work had been confirmed to be a long-lost piece of art looted by the Nazis in 1933. Its formers owner was Rudolf Mosse, a respected German publisher and philanthropist in the early 20th century, whose heirs have been hunting down his stolen collection.

Gari Melchers’ ‘Winter.’

While the Arkell Museum’s Executive Director and Chief Curator Suzan D. Friedlander, did not personally respond to saratoga living‘s request for comment, she did, however, forward us a statement from the museum, saying: “The Arkell Museum was of course very upset to learn the history of the painting’s seizure from the Mosse family by the Nazis in 1933 and its subsequent sale at the Lepke Auction in 1934. We fully support the work of the Mosse Art Restitution Initiative and other efforts, and willingly turned over the painting to the FBI, waiving all right, title, and interest in the painting.”

As the museum notes, the work was tracked down by The Mosse Art Restitution Project, the aforementioned initiative by the Mosse family’s heirs to regain Rudolf’s stolen art through proper legal channels (hence, the FBI). Rudolf Mosse originally acquired the painting from the Great Berlin Art Exhibition in 1900. Influential German Jews, with ties to the Berliner Tageblatt, a newspaper critical of Hitler, Mosse and his family drew the ire and persecution of the Nazis and were forced to flee Germany in 1933. In absentia, the Mosse’s estate was then seized and looted by the Nazis, and Winter was sold at auction a year later to industrialist and art-collector Bartlett Arkell, who built the Arkell Museum to house his personal collection.

While it’s unclear how much Melchers’ Winter is worth, a search of completed auctions on Sotheby’s website shows that, in the past, Melchers’ works have gone for anywhere from $5000 on the low end to more than $900,000 on the high end.

The painting is currently in holding at the FBI’s Albany facility awaiting its release to Mosse’s heirs.

Empire State Youth Orchestra To Celebrate 40th Anniversary At Troy Savings Bank Music Hall

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It’s time for your curtain call, Empire State Youth Orchestra (ESYO). After four decades of offering exceptional music training and performance opportunities to young musicians throughout the Capital Region and western New England, the ESYO will throw a 40th anniversary celebration at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall this Saturday, November 2.

The award-winning youth orchestra, which is based at Schenectady’s Proctors, will perform a program filled with classical fanfare, from Shostakovich’s Festive Overture to Die Fledermaus by Strauss II and Respighi’s Pines of Rome. The concert will also feature guest artist and principal cellist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Kenneth Olsen, performing Edward Elgar’s fiery Cello Concerto in E Minor. (Olsen grew up in Albany and is an ESYO alumnus.) ESYO Music Director and Conductor Carlos Ágreda will also give a pre-concert presentation about the four pieces on the program. Tickets are just $20, and can be purchased online.

In addition to the ESYO’s birthday celebration, there’s a lot more going on in Saratoga Springs and throughout the Greater Capital Region this week/weekend. Check out saratoga living‘s hand-curated list below.

Tuesday

The Saratoga Performing Arts Center will present its brew-inspired Science on Tap: The Science of Voting – A Revolution in Modern Political Campaigning at The Parting Glass in Saratoga (October 29)

Catch the Saratoga premiere of How to Tell a True Immigrant Story, a new 360-degree VR film set in the Spa City, as part of Caffè Lena’s In Their Own Words series (October 29)

Opera Saratoga begins its 2019-20 season with the 6th Annual Saratoga Sings! for Seniors tour at various senior centers in Saratoga County (October 29 through November 1)

Wednesday

Enjoy spooky drinks, cocktails and more at Saratoga City Tavern’s 3rd Annual Haunted House (October 30)

Don’t miss the kick-off of a new exhibition, Glens Falls at Work: Photo & Audio Exhibit, at the Crandall LIbrary’s Folklife Center (October 30)

Thursday

For Halloween, Solevo Kitchen + Social in Saratoga will transform into the costume-themed Blackbeard’s Seafood House & Pirate Bar (October 31)

Don’t miss a special Halloween party featuring Hartley’s Encore and Bearly Dead and more at Putnam Place in Saratoga (October 31)

For Halloween, Rivers Casino & Resort in Schenectady is throwing a Death at a Wedding: Murder Mystery Dinner Show (October 31)

Jazz at the Spring presents a special Halloween concert with Dom Minasi and DTR Jazz at the Spring Street Gallery in Saratoga (October 31)

Albany’s Crossgates Mall is celebrating All Hallow’s Eve with its own MALL-O-WEEN (October 31)

Friday

Northshire Bookstore is bringing award-winning children’s book author Kate DiCamillo to the Saratoga Springs City Center to present her new book Beverly, Right Now (November 1)

The US Navy Band Commodores, the Navy’s preeminent jazz ensemble from D.C., will give a free concert at Albany’s Palace Theatre (November 1)

The Malta Community Center is hosting its Arts, Crafts and Gifts Fair 2019 (November 1)

Watch the classic dark comedy Clue with Live Shadow Cast at the Charles R. Wood Theater in Glens Falls (November 1-2)

The NYC Craft Beer Festival’s Halloweekend Harvest kicks off this weekend at Union West in Manhattan (November 1-2)

There will be plenty of fine and classic cars to admire all weekend during the Albany Auto Show at the Times Union Center (November 1-3)

The Northeast Filmmakers Lab returns to The Linda in Albany to offer a three-day lab and workshop for cinephiles (November 1-3)

Join raw food author, speaker and chef, Karen Ranzi, for an all-inclusive, three-day Women’s Health Retreat at the Hideaway Suites in Rhinebeck (November 1-3)

Saturday

Take part in a costumed  “run-walk-roll” with the Joy US Foundation‘s Stronger Than Cancer Day throughout Downtown Saratoga (November 2)

The Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Council will host its Annual Fall Arts Festival at the Adirondack Sports Complex in Queensbury (November 2)

Latin Grammy-winning, superstar singer Marc Anthony brings his Opus Tour to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center (November 2)

Capital District native and singer-songwriter Bob Warren will celebrate half a century of performing, with 50 Years of The Bob Warren Band at Saratoga’s Caffè Lena (November 2)

The Brooklyn Raga Massive, an artist collective of Indian-inspired music, is performing at the Hudson Opera House in Hudson (November 2)

Sunday

Anyone planning or thinking about upcoming nuptials in the near future won’t want to miss the 2019 National Museum of Dance Bridal Expo at Saratoga’s National Museum of Dance (November 3)

Save some room for a Fall Festival with Pig Roast and Chicken BBQ at the Lansing’s Farm Market in Troy (November 3)

Saratoga’s Fourth Annual Veteran’s Ball will take place in the Hall of Springs at Saratoga Spa State Park (November 3)

Get ready for some Caribbean rock with Haitian ensemble Ram, performing at Troy’s The Sanctuary for Independent Media (November 3)

Celebrate the Big Apple’s bustling market scene with the New York City Public Markets Festival at Pier 17 in Manhattan (November 3)

The Glens Falls Symphony will celebrate the art of dance with Ballet Grace, a program of the best ballet music at Glens Falls High School (November 3)

Saratoga Youth Hockey Partners With The NHL’s New York Rangers To Offer Local Kids Better Access To Hockey Programming (Exclusive)

Attention pro hockey fanatics: The New York Rangers are coming to town—and they’re putting their best skate forward for Saratoga Springs youth hockey. saratoga living has learned that the New York City-based National Hockey League (NHL) team has officially partnered with Saratoga Youth Hockey, the Spa City’s own youth hockey nonprofit, to offer programming aimed at creating greater accessibility to the sport. The official announcement came this morning, Saturday, October 26, during Saratoga Youth Hockey’s Fall Classic game between the Bethlehem Eagles and the Saratoga Blue Knights at the ice rinks on Weibel Avenue in Saratoga.

“This [partnership], to us, is really to benefit the community, to give accessibility to young players to come into the organization and really develop the game of youth hockey,” says Melinda Guyett, executive board member and tournament and special event director at Saratoga Youth Hockey. The new partnership will entail the Rangers sending up members from their staff—trainers, coaches and even some players—once a week to offer on-ice, skill sessions (including learn-to-skate and learn-to-play classes) for Saratoga Youth Hockey members. There will be a total of three pro-taught hockey-training sessions over the fall and winter (the first session has already begun), each running for ten weeks with a one-hour lesson every week, and the price includes all gear. (Learn more about the program or sign your kids up here.) “[Our players will] learn the basic skills in these sessions, such as skating, stick handling, passing and shooting,” says Guyett.

The Rangers will also help develop Saratoga Youth Hockey’s two, brand-new all-girls hockey teams. The community-based organization has actually been teaching hockey to girls since its founding in 1976, but this season will mark the unveiling of Saratoga Youth Hockey’s first tournament-bound girls team, as well as its first development team for younger girl players, both sharing the name of the Saratoga Blue Knights. “It’s something we do to keep the girls interested in hockey, to give them a sense of [being on a] team, and to move the girl’s program forward as well,” says Frank Ovitt, President of Saratoga Youth Hockey. To that point, Amanda Kessel, Olympic gold medalist and professional hockey player for the New Jersey Metropolitan Riveters, will travel to Saratoga to support the new all-girls teams at a couple of hockey-themed events, including a girls-only hockey free skate and an all-girls “Try Hockey for Free Day” later this year. Girls signed up for this season’s hockey sessions will also receive some on-ice training from Kessel and various Rangers’ representatives.

One of those reps, who’ll be teaching both boys and girls the fundamentals of hockey, will be former Rangers left winger Brian Mullen, who spent 11 seasons playing in the NHL and who’s been teaching with the Rangers’ youth hockey program since its inception three years ago. “You could have the worst day of your life and you get out on the ice with these kids, and they just put a big smile on your face,” says Mullen, who will be making his first visit to Spa City for Saratoga Youth Hockey’s new partner program. “I hear it’s beautiful, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Mullen grew up in Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen, and for several years, his father was part of the seasonal ice crew at Madison Square Garden. Partly due to that connection, Mullen got to be a stick boy in his teens for the New York Rangers, whose home stadium is the Garden. “I got to see all the players up close and personal,” he says. “And I was lucky enough to make it to the NHL and play for them.” Now, long retired from his professional playing days, Mullen travels across the northeast teaching for the team. “I’ve been involved in hockey for 20 years now, and nothing like this program has come along,” says Mullen.

The partnership announcement between the Rangers and Saratoga Youth Hockey was timed to coincide with Saturday’s second annual Fall Classic hockey match, a popular way to promote Saratoga’s youth hockey community, programs and teams. “We started doing this [game] to benefit our scholarship fund, which of course also helps kids who want to play hockey,” says Guyett. The Fall Classic match also includes an all-day cookout, an on-site skate sharpening station, raffles (the price of admission includes a raffle ticket), a meet-and-greet with the Skidmore College men’s hockey team and an appearance by Rangers alumnus Mike Hartman, who played on the ’94 Stanley Cup-winning team. “It’s an awesome partnership with the Rangers, and we’re super excited about it,” says Ovitt.

Starting this week, members from the Rangers franchise will take over the remainder of Saratoga Youth Hockey’s first session and will completely run the second and third sessions, even handling the registration process. “The goal really is to expose all kids to hockey,” says Ovitt. “The game is great—the lessons and the people that you’re surrounded with are awesome, and it’s just a good experience for kids of all ages.”

Esperanto Opens New Commercial Oboy Bakery In Ballston Spa

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Move over potato chips. Another Saratoga-inspired snack has aspirations for going global. Caroline Street staple, Esperanto, known best for its doughy, chicken-and-cheese-filled late-night snack the Doughboy, now called the Oboy, has officially opened a 2700-square-foot commercial bakery in Ballston Spa to mass-produce Oboys. “We’ll be able to triple or quadruple or more what we’re producing out of the restaurant,” says Will Pouch, Esperanto’s founder and owner.

The Milton Avenue bakery officially opened its doors on October 23, and it caught the attention of New York State Senator Jim Tedisco, who was on hand to help bake the first batch of tasty snacks. Though the new facility hasn’t ratcheted up production just yet, Pouch expects that within a week the bakery will begin shipping out Oboys to regional convenience stores, college campuses and gas stations. “We think Stewart’s, in particular, is going to be an awesome synergy and partnership,” says Pouch. “We’re hoping to cover most of their area in select stores.”

Esperanto was able to make the new bakery possible—and support longterm employee training at the new bakery—in part, through a $15,000 grant from the Workforce Development Institute, a statewide, job-growth-promoting nonprofit. The Oboy bakehouse is expected to create 40 new jobs in the area over the next two years. Pouch says that even some of the original Doughboy-makers recently returned to Esperanto just to work in the new bakery (the restaurant has been making the snack since the ’90s). “It’s cool being a community business, but what’s cooler is that we’re able to retain people and get them back over the years,” says Pouch. “We’re going to start with the original product and ramp that up, but soon we’re going to be adding different flavors for wholesale.” Though he wouldn’t reveal any of those new Oboy options, Pouch says one of those new flavors will be a gluten-free, vegetarian option.

Formerly called Doughboys, the tasty, portable treat was rebranded last year as the Oboy in an effort to bring the snack beyond New York State and one day take it national—maybe even international. “We started out doing ethnic street food, so stranger things have happened,” laughs Pouch. “But absolutely, that’s the dream. This product is pretty unique and, even though it has the most pedestrian ingredients, people go nuts over this thing.”

‘Brady Bunch’ Actress Eve Plumb To Narrate ‘Kris Kringle’ Musical Live At Proctors

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Here’s the story…of a lovely lady. Yes, folks, get ready, because the Capital Region’s about to get a dose of the Brady Bunch just in time for the upcoming holiday season. From December 14-15, Schenectady’s Proctors will be hosting performances of a brand-new musical, aptly titled Kris Kringle The Musical, a family-friendly origin story of that portly fellow in the red-and-white getup, who, if your children are good boys and girls, will use your chimney as his own personal gift-giving Hyperloop.

The best part, though? The musical will be narrated, live, by actress Eve Plumb, otherwise known as America’s best-known middle daughter, Jan Brady. She’s also since starred in TV series such as Crashing, Blue Bloods, The Path and Army Wives, as well as the 2016 revival of well-known musical Grease: Live. You may have also recently caught her in the HGTV special A Very Brady Renovation, where original Brady Bunch cast members—including Maureen McCormick (Marcia Brady), Chris Knight (Peter Brady) and Susan Olsen (Cindy Brady), took part in a renovation of the original Brady home in Studio City, CA (used only for exterior shots), which HGTV purchased in 2018 for $3.5 million.

The Kris Kringle musical has actually been Xmas season-ready since November 2017, when it made its debut at performance venue Town Hall in New York City, with famed Peter Pan portrayer Cathy Rigby doing the narration.

Tickets to the musical, which runs from Saturday, December 14 (2pm and 8pm performances) and Sunday, December 15 (2pm), cost $20–$60. They’re currently available for purchase here.

Saratoga County’s The Sick-Kit Offers A Creative Cure-All For Cold Season

Dealing with this year’s flu and cold season is going to get a little easier soon, thanks to one Saratoga County business. Galway-based company The Sick-Kit creates boxes full of curative goodies (soups, cough drops and over-the-counter medications) to treat everything from the common cold to a particularly head-splitting hangover. Best of all, The Sick-Kit offers same-day shipping on all its kit options (free shipping when purchased from Etsy), so there are no long waits or having to drive to the store nursing a head cold involved.

“It took my wife and me about a year to find out what we were going to put in the kits,” says Scott Eastwood, who co-founded the company with his wife, Teri, in March 2018. “[Sick-Kits are] based on what we were bringing to our families, and it’s just something that everybody needs.” Indeed, it’s impressive just how much is packed inside one Sick-Kit. Priced at $20 per box, The Sick-Kit “Original Box of Wellness” (i.e. the original “recipe” of items) holds everything from over-the-counter medicines such as Advil, Vicks VapoDrops and Tylenol to under-the-weather sundries such as disposable gloves, lip balm, Gatorade and even a can of Campbell’s chicken noodle soup (with oyster crackers). Each kit has a shelf-life of about three to six months, doesn’t need to be refrigerated and can even be left in a car or camper. “A lot of people buy it [as a] gift, and a bunch of people send them to their kids in college,” says Eastwood. To that point, the company currently offers three different editions of The Sick-Kit—Original, Hangover and PMS—and is currently working on a fourth, a miniature edition, which will be lighter and cheaper to ship.

The Sick-Kit isn’t the Eastwoods first rodeo. In addition to their latest invention, they’re the founders and owners of The Plant Keeper, an organic gardening service (also out of Galway) that’s celebrating its 20th anniversary this year. “We love gardening, but we thought we needed to do something else, because that’s just our entrepreneurial way,” says Eastwood. “My wife and I were always giving chicken soup and ginger ale to our loved ones when they were sick, and Teri thought it would be a great idea to give [the kits] to everyone.”

It turns out, Teri was onto something. Just a few months shy of its third-year anniversary, The Sick-Kit has already enjoyed impressive success, regularly being shipped to the sick and sniffly throughout the Northeast and even as far away as California. The next step, according to Scott, is to take The Sick-Kit international by selling it on Amazon, where the locally packed medicinal parcel should be available later this year or by early next year. “We’d really like to take it global,” says Eastwood. “The response has been so positive so far that we’re just keeping going with it, and [we’ll] see what happens.”