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Daily Racing Form: Rain Dampens Business At Saratoga

After benefitting from fabulous weather the last three years, the New York Racing Association has felt the wrath of Mother Nature this summer at Saratoga.

All-sources handle through the first 22 days of the 40-day meet was $333,965,894, down 9.1 percent from last year’s figure of $367,492,480 through the same period of 2017, according to figures provided by the NYRA.

Ontrack handle was $77,408,190, down 10.1 percent from last year’s figure of $86,146,767. There have been 218 races run so far this meet, 75 on turf, compared to 221 (108 on turf) through the first 22 days of last year’s meet.

New York Racing Association officials said that 7.30 inches of rain has fallen in Saratoga since the meet began on July 20. That rain has forced management to move 36 races scheduled for the turf to the dirt. That doesn’t include management’s decision to cancel the final two races scheduled on the Aug. 4 Whitney Day card.

In 2017, there were only 27 turf races lost to weather for the entire meet. In 2016, that number was 25, and in 2015 only eight races were washed off the turf for the entire meet.

Since turf races tend to draw more horses than dirt races, field size has taken a big hit this summer. Average field size for the first 22 days is 7.50 horses per race compared to 8.29 through this point last year. Average field size on turf is 8.93, down from 9.18 last year. Average field size on dirt is 6.97, down from 7.43 in 2017.

Despite the loss of 36 turf races, trainer Chad Brown – whose barn is filled with high-class turf horses – has dominated the proceedings with 25 wins, 11 more than Todd Pletcher.

Irad Ortiz Jr. leads all jockeys with 29 wins, followed by Javier Castellano (24) and Luis Saez (23).

Seth Klarman has 12 wins at the meet, to lead all owners. He has seven under the Klaravich Stables banner and five with William Lawrence.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Wine Wednesdays With William: Brushing Up On Prosecco

For this week’s column, let’s focus on Prosecco. As you may know, it’s a popular sparkling wine from northeastern Italy. There’s also a village called Prosecco. The village is 100 miles from the classic Prosecco vineyards, on the other side of the Adriatic and close to Trieste. Ten years ago, Prosecco was also the name of the grape variety in the wine, but that’s no longer the case.

Exactly when the winemakers of northern Italy realized that anyone in the world could make a sparkling wine and call it “prosecco” is debatable, but in the late 1990s, Australian and Brazilian versions emerged. Determined to impose a monopoly over the wine, the Italians gave the grape variety a new name, Glera, and in 2009 secured a European Union-protected denomination of origin (DOC) for an expanded area that included Prosecco the village. Thus, Prosecco DOC is by far the largest DOC in Italy, comprising 34,580 acres, and only northern Italians may ride the Prosecco gravy train.

All sparkling wine involves trapping carbon dioxide in the finished wine, but the techniques for achieving this vary considerably. Champagne and other ambitious sparkling wines are made fizzy in the bottle it will be served from. Prosecco is made sparkling in a large pressure tank and subsequently bottled under pressure. Whereas it will take four years to make a bottle of Pol Roger NV champagne, prosecco can be on the shelf within months of the harvest. The tank method is cheaper, faster and less labor-intensive than traditional sparkling winemaking, and the finished wine is cheaper, too.
Glera is an unexceptional grape variety, so the newly regulated DOC permits the addition of up to 15 percent of varieties like Pinot Grigio and Chardonnay. Most Prosecco are extra dry, which means they are a little sweet, or dry, which are sweeter still.

The extreme expansion of the area of production has not been without consequence. Enola Ceola is CEO of market leader MionettoUSA: “There is, sadly, a lot of poor prosecco in the market,” he said. “They suffer from too high a yield and overproduction. That’s why many of them have a bitter aftertaste.” But they make a decent bellini.

Wine Challenge No.5:
Buy three bottles: a bottle of the cheapest prosecco you can find, a bottle of prosecco that costs $12 or more and a bottle of orange juice. Open the wine before Sunday brunch and taste side by side. Add the orange juice to the one you like less.

Nu Deco Ensemble Electrifies In ‘SPAC on Stage’ Debut

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Occasionally, you see or hear something that blows your mind. Last night (August 13), the “SPAC on Stage,” during which the audience literally gets to sit onstage during the performance, the Miami-based group made their New York debut with an evening of fiery, captivating and refreshingly original music. In fact, it wasn’t just the ensemble’s first performance here in the Empire State—it was also their first concert outside of Florida. (saratoga living and Putnam Place were presenting sponsors for the event).

Founded in 2013 by conductor Jacomo Bairos and composer/arranger Sam Hyken, the group of eclectic and virtuosic musicians is billed as a 21st century chamber orchestra, not only playing contemporary classical music, but also adding instrumentation that you normally wouldn’t hear in an orchestra such as a rhythm section, electric guitar and even electronics and digital sound effects. Bairos and Hyken met back in 2004 while they were both auditioning for the Singapore Symphony, and the pair quickly found out that they shared a creative curiosity about the future of classical music: What it would sound like, and what its orchestras would look like.

Conductor and Co-Artistic Director Jacomo Bairos talks to the ‘SPAC on Stage’ audience between pieces. (Gabriella Boschetti)

Thus, the Nu Deco Ensemble was born. From the start, Bairos and Hyken had two main goals in mind for the orchestra: reinvention and collaboration. “The Nu Deco ensemble is all about mixing genres,” said Bairos. “It’s nothing new. Gershwin did it, and everyone thought he was crazy—until they heard ‘Rhapsody in Blue.’ Even Brahms did it with his ‘Hungarian Dances.’ He took music off the streets.” You needn’t more proof of this than the program the ensemble played last night at SPAC. The show opened with a couple of classical music staples, including Bach’s “Toccata and Fugue,” which was arranged, or better yet, reimagined, with bongos, a horn section and other percussion instruments to give the Baroque classic a Cuban flair, an homage to the ensemble’s Miami roots. Nu Deco then moved on to some original compositions, including several breathtaking pieces by New York City-based composer and virtuoso percussionist Andy Akiho, including one entitled to wALk Or ruN in wEst harlem, based on the time Akiho was mugged as a student in Harlem. Akiho’s music wasn’t just featured in the program; the composer was literally there onstage with the orchestra giving the most dazzling display of steel pan playing I’ve ever seen. (It’s not very common to see classical composers performing their own work in concert). To close out the night, the Ensemble performed two original orchestral suites, one based on a medley of the most popular songs by hip-hop duo OutKast and the other inspired by Daft Punk’s hit album Random Access Memories.

I’m a classically trained musician, and it’s my favorite genre of music, but, if I’m being honest, going to see it played live can sometimes feel a bit stuffy. (No offense, of course, meant to the Philadelphia Orchestra.) However, I’ve never attended a classical music concert where the conductor encouraged the audience to dance and even take photos. “We want you to have a good time,” Bairos reminded the audience with a smile. And boy did we ever! I don’t think I’ve ever seen so much chair-dancing (especially during the Daft Punk suite) in my entire life. Next time you’re in Miami, go see the Nu Deco Ensemble. You won’t be disappointed.

EXCLUSIVE: Grammy-Winning A Cappella Group, Pentatonix, Is A Perfect Fit For SPAC

I have this undiagnosed anxiety disorder (maybe you suffer from it, too?). If I’m watching someone having a bad go at her five minutes of fame on national TV, her anxiety transfers to me. My heartbeat races, my stomach gets knotted up, and I come away feeling worse off than I did during the previous few minutes. And the worst part? The feeling might last all night, long after the TV’s been shut off and the covers have been pulled up. That’s the reason why I almost never watch reality TV music competition shows anymore. American Idol did it to me. And so did The Voice. Nashville Star? Ouch. There’s always someone who finds herself in a situation where she thought she was winning, and all of a sudden, she gets struck with the realization, on-air, that she has no chance. All the judges hate her. She’s “dreadful,” to swipe a particularly anxiety-inducing adjective from longtime Idol judge Simon Cowell.

There’ve been a few exceptions to the rule, of course. One such show was NBC’s short-lived a cappella competition reality show, The Sing-Off, which I started watching during its third season and just couldn’t get enough of (this was before the days of binge-streaming). A few things I immediately liked about it: Two rock stars from my childhood, Shawn Stockman of Boyz II Men and Ben Folds of Ben Folds Five, were not only judges, but also offered incredibly insightful, intelligent advice to the competing teams. (Sara Bareilles, who I came to really enjoy as both an artist and judge, was also on the panel. You might know her music from that little Broadway show called Waitress.) The show also didn’t really ever single out the bad apple of the bunch either; it all came down to the sum of the parts (Folds would often be able to tell where the exact weaknesses in the harmonic structure existed, but he was never a dick about it like Cowell). It was also the little-show-that-could at the time: It never roped in the type of viewership numbers that ratings-juggernaut Idol did, but what it lacked in household totals, it made up for in pure heart, and well, talent, among the groups it brought in. (The way I looked at it was this: On Idol, just one person had to be a standout, but on The Sing-Off, each member of the group had to be incredible. That was a much bigger task, in my mind.) It featured myriad styles of groups, from college glee clubs to old-timey barbershop quartets and inventive, new-age groups that were seemingly ahead of the times and constantly thinking outside of the box. Season 3’s winners, Pentatonix, were one such group. You could tell, the second they rocked their first number, that they were going to be famous…whatever it took. Even with the foreknowledge that a cappella groups rarely ever crack the surface of mainstream pop radio. They were just that good.

That was seven years ago. At the time of The Sing-Off‘s airing, Pentatonix had only just recently formed, making the winning feat all the more incredible. Then, the group consisted of Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, Kirstin Maldonado, Kevin Olusola and Avi Kaplan, who blew away the competition with tightly (and inventively) arranged pop covers—with Hoying, Grassi and Maldonado sharing lead vocal duties as a quasi trio-within-the-quintet (though Hoying was clearly the leader)—all held together by the vocal beat-box/bass one-two punch of Olusola and Kaplan. The Sing-Off win earned the members of Pentatonix $200,000 and got them signed to Sony Music—but immediately following their big win, the true reality of showbiz came crashing down on the quintet. Just three weeks after the season finale of the show, Epic Records unceremoniously dropped the group, “because they just didn’t believe that a cappella music could have a significant place in the industry,” said Olusola at the time. But that didn’t stop the group from dusting themselves off, launching a YouTube channel and starting a viral, grassroots movement, the likes of which not many in the pop world had ever seen. Ironically, being dropped allowed Pentatonix to reach the absolute stratosphere of popularity as independent artists, reining in a staggering 15 million subscribers on their YouTube channel, and logging obscene amounts of views for their slickly produced videos, which include “Hallelujah” (331 million views), “Daft Punk” (285 million), the “Evolution of Music” (118 million) and “Somebody That I Used To Know” (63 million). (They’ve since been re-signed, by the way.)

Although Kaplan is no longer with the group—he was replaced last year by bass vocalist Matt Sallee—Pentatonix has continued its meteoric rise, winning three Grammys, landing a No.1 album on the Billboard charts (and a number of other high-charters) and a string of gold/platinum singles and records. They’ve also performed at a number of high-profile gigs, including the Kennedy Center Honors. And on August 22, they’ll be making their debut at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC)—a truly perfect fit for the group, who have both classical leanings (Olusola is a Yale-educated cellist) and street cred among the pop-minded, hook-crazy masses.

This actually marks the second time in my career that I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing the band—the first time coming five years ago for a Food Network blog (unfortunately, none of the 40-plus links exist in cyberspace, so you’re just going to have to take my word for it). I caught up with founding member Olusola and “new guy” Sallee in advance of their big SPAC debut.

The last time I talked with you guys—back in 2013!—you hadn’t scored your first No.1 album yet or won a Grammy, and Avi Kaplan was still part of the group. How have your lives changed in five years? What’s the coolest part of fame?
Kevin Olusola (KO): Wow, it’s been a crazy five years, and there’s so much that’s changed, and honestly, we’ve loved the journey we’ve been on. The coolest thing, I think, is to know that so many people respect the art that we’ve been able to put out. We’re so thankful that so many more people know about what we do as an a cappella group. And the fact that we, as an a cappella group, can fill out arenas and amphitheaters—I mean, we’re on tour right now, and it’s crazy to know that Logic and Halsey are performing in the same venues that we are. So we feel very blessed and thankful.

You got your big start on the TV competition show The Sing-Off. Have you stayed in touch with judges Sara Bareilles, Ben Folds and Shawn Stockman?
KO
: Not necessarily intentionally, but we’ve seen them at different awards shows and backstage parties, and it’s always such a good thing to see them again, ’cause they’re just so proud of what we’ve done. We went to the Vanity Fair party for the Oscars last year as a band, and it was cool to see Sara Bareilles; she had so much praise to give us, which we appreciate so much, ’cause we love her and appreciate her art.

Who do you look up to as your mentors in show business today?
KO
: Oh man, the biggest mentor for me has been Quincy Jones. I got to meet him, because he heard my cello/beat-boxing video, so I got to go over to his house and spend four hours with him. He taught me so much about music and the industry. He said that you have to have a beautiful pairing of the two, but also to remember that you are trying to communicate your art. It’s all about communication and being able to do that in the simplest way possible. That’s something I’ve kept with me the whole time we’ve been doing Pentatonix.

Tell me a little bit about the addition of Matt Sallee. What has Matt brought to the table that is new and exciting?
KO: Man, it has been such an amazing thing to have Matt with us on this journey. He’s brought so much life, energy and such a kind-hearted spirit to the band that we’re so thankful for. And the fans have latched onto him so well and so easily. I remember when we announced that Matt was going to be with us for the Christmas tour, and fans were already making drawings of him, creating all this really cool Matt art. It’s just amazing to have such an amazing character with us on this journey.

A cappella always struck me as something that was cool in high school and college and then sort of fizzled out afterwards. You guys have changed that perception, dramatically. What do you think resonated (and still resonates) with fans about your group and its music?
KO
: I think there are a couple of things; I mean I think it’s a perfect storm of several situations. The Sing-Off was on, Pitch Perfect was going on at the time, Glee as well, so there was already an established fanbase of people who were interested in what a cappella was. We tried to make a cappella a pop, mainstream thing. When we thought about our sound, we wanted it to be something where people said, “Oh, this is so different, this is so interesting.” You know, I think our formula really captured a lot of people, in addition to the fact that, we are blessed to have this amazing platform called YouTube. As a distribution platform, that fact that you can see and hear something—like you can watch Matt hitting the low notes, me doing the beat boxing, the trio doing their crazy harmonies—I think that kind of brings about the magic of what a cappella is. So I think the perfect storm of a lot of situations that came together to allow us to be able to do what we do best.

I’m guessing that one part of that formula to success is the inventive ways you cover other pop artists’ tunes.
Matt Sallee: Yeah, it’s really cool to take a song and reinvent it in a way that’s us and fun and cool and different. We all have different musical backgrounds and styles, so we get to put all that into a melting pot and just pick and chose from different parts of it.

Have any of the artists you’ve covered reached out to you and praised you for your take on their work?
MS: Yeah! It’s really fun to be able to do that with different artists, and it’s really cool when they notice it. On our most recent album, PTX Presents: Top Pop, Vol. I, Charlie Puth actually retweeted our version of his song “Attention.” I think Camila Cabello saw our version of “Havana.” It’s so cool to hear that I was honored by a famous artist. Like, wow, it’s really cool. [Editor’s Note: Puth performed at SPAC back on July 22.]

Who’s the member of the group that’s most creative on his or her toes? Who’s the biggest comedian?
KO: Wow, I think it depends on the situation…but you know, I would say in a lot of ways, we all love Scott so much, because when it comes to the visual aspect of the band, he’s so brilliant. And he’s really great at coming up with concepts. For example, “Evolution of Music” was something that he completely thought of just in his head. Especially with the video concepts, he really has a very strong idea of what a video should be. Who’s the comedian? I think we all have our moments, but definitely Mitch [Grassi]. Mitch is just a ridiculous, hilarious character. I don’t even know how he thinks of most of what he says.

Tell me your favorite celebrity encounter of 2018 so far.
MS: I’m a huge Jonas Brothers fan, and we got to go to a Grammy party for Republic Records, and Joe Jonas is friends with the other members of the group, so he comes up to us to say hello, gives me a big hug and says congratulations on being a new member and I was just like, “You know who I am, and you know what’s going on in my life—what is going on?!” It was crazy!

You guys’ll be playing SPAC on August 22. This is your first time in Saratoga, right?
KO: I think this actually is our first time performing at Saratoga Performing Arts Center. We’re so excited. We’ve heard about the racetrack, but we’ve never been. And listen, if there are good places to eat that y’all know of, please let us know, because we love a good meal in a city that we’ve never been to!
MS: And if there are ways for us to ride cars on the racetrack, we’ll take that, too [laughs]. You know, we’re fun. We like to have fun.
KO: True that.

Speaking of the racetrack, you’ll be here at the height of track season. Have any of you ever bet on horses before and won? Who’s the luckiest member of the group?
MS: Yes, we actually had the privilege of singing the Justify to win, and I won a little bit of money, but at the end of the night, it was the last race and everyone was putting money up and I was like, you know, I’m gonna put a bunch of money on this No.6 horse, and I came out with, like, triple the amount! I had never bet before, and everybody was so shocked. We were all cheering. It was a fun experience.

Daily Racing Form: Hofburg, Elate Together In Key Stakes Work

Trainer Bill Mott is pointing Elate and Hofburg to Grade 1 stakes here in less than two weeks. On Sunday, he put the two in company for what would be their most important workouts for their respective races.

Though Hofburg will be credited with the faster time – five furlongs in 1:00.54 – it was Elate [1:00.71] who was clearly the stronger of the two in the move conducted over the Oklahoma training track.

Elate, under Neil Poznansky, started the work about 1 1/2 lengths in front of Hofburg, under Felipe Castro. Elate went in splits of 12.40 seconds, 24.40, and 35.30 to the quarter pole with Hofburg still a length or so behind. In midstretch Poznansky looked behind him, waiting for Hofburg to catch up. Hofburg got within a neck of Elate at the wire. Elate galloped out six furlongs in 1:13.99 while opening up on Hofburg.

“I thought Elate was really good,” Mott said. “Hofburg worked okay, but he didn’t work quite as good as she did. There might not be many horses that run by that mare now. I was very impressed with her.”

Elate, last year’s Alabama winner, is pointing to the $700,000 Personal Ensign. Elate has run only once this year, but she was victorious in the Grade 2 Delaware Handicap.

Hofburg, coming off a five-length victory in the Curlin Stakes, is pointing to the $1.5 million Travers.

Elate and Hofburg will work again next week, but it will be an easier type of move and most likely not in company with each other.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


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Daily Racing Form: Voodoo Song Pointing To Breeders’ Cup Mile

Voodoo Song, who won his first Grade 1 race by taking Saturday’s $500,000 Fourstardave Handicap at Saratoga, will follow a course that his connections hope gets him to the Breeders’ Cup Mile at Churchill Downs on Nov. 3.

What races he uses to get there are still to be determined. The usual stepping-stones – the Grade 1, $800,000 Woodbine Mile on Sept. 15 and the Grade 1, $1 million Shadwell Turf Mile at Keeneland on Oct. 6 – will be considered. But so, too, will the Grade 2, $250,000 Bernard Baruch Handicap, held on the Sept. 3 closing-day card at Saratoga. Voodoo Song is 5 for 5 over the Saratoga turf.

“He clearly likes this course,” said trainer Linda Rice, who noted she has already nominated Voodoo Song to the Grade 1 Sword Dancer going 1 1/2 miles here Aug. 25.

Rice said she would like to run Voodoo Song two more times before the Breeders’ Cup.

“I think the horse is better off if he runs once a month versus sitting idle too long, because he’s a hard horse to keep fit in the morning,” Rice said.

Barry Schwartz, the owner and breeder of Voodoo Song, said he hadn’t discussed next steps yet with Rice, but acknowledged the Bernard Baruch “makes some sense” for a couple reasons.

In addition to his affinity for Saratoga’s turf course, Voodoo Song has yet to prove he can ship and win. He ran second in the Grade 3 Commonwealth Derby at Laurel last September and fifth as the favorite in the Hawthorne Derby last October, which was Voodoo Song’s eighth race of the year.

“The ground was just crazy-soft then,” Rice said. “I mean, it was soft here [Saturday], but I’ve never seen anything as soft as Hawthorne that day.”

Voodoo Song, a 4-year-old New York-bred son of English Channel, beat Delta Prince by a neck in the Fourstardave. He earned a career-best 104 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

Delta Prince will be pointed to the Woodbine Mile. He won the King Edward Stakes at Woodbine in June.

Trainer Jimmy Jerkens felt the soft turf “told on him late” in the Fourstardave. “It would have been better if it was firmer.”

Meanwhile, trainer Bill Mott said he could not find anything amiss with Yoshida, who finished fifth as the favorite in the Fourstardave.

“Bit of a head-scratcher,” Mott said. “He was not full of run for whatever reason.”
Mott was unsure of future plans for Yoshida, though at one point earlier this meet dirt was mentioned as possible for him.

Inspector Lynley, the three-quarter-length winner of Saturday’s $100,000 Lure Stakes, will be considered for the Bernard Baruch or the Woodbine Mile, trainer Shug McGaughey said Sunday.

Inspector Lynley, who rallied from last under Jose Lezcano, earned a 100 Beyer Speed Figure for the Lure performance.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


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Daily Racing Form: Absatootly—Morning Glory Or Ready To Fire?

On paper, Absatootly looks like she’s gone off form. On the track, at least in the morning, Absatootly has never been better, according to her trainer, Charlton Baker.

“If she runs like she’s doing, she’s going to be very tough to beat,” Baker said.
Baker will put his evaluation to the test when Absatootly takes on familiar foe Picco Uno and three others in Thursday’s $100,000 Union Avenue Stakes for New York-bred females going 6 1/2 furlongs at Saratoga.

Absatootly has been beaten 10 1/2 lengths in her last two starts – the La Verdad at Aqueduct in January and the Dancin Renee at Belmont in June.

Her recent workouts, though, have Baker believing there is something left in the tank for the 5-year-old daughter of Mineshaft.

“The thing she’s doing now that she’s never done is galloping out,” Baker said. “As soon as she passed the wire she’d shut it down. Her last five works, she’s galloping out. She’s impressing me just by doing that alone.”

Absatootly hasn’t won since she rallied from last to win the Iroquois Stakes at Belmont last October. But she’s more versatile than that, and Baker is hoping for a different kind of trip Thursday. She gets a rider change to Jose Ortiz.

Picco Uno won the Union Avenue last year, but then went off form. Trainer Jason Servis thought Picco Uno was close to being done after finishing fifth in the Grade 3 Distaff in April. But the filly came around in her training and delivered a front-running four-length victory in the Dancin Renee.

Asked if she was doing as well now as she was then, Servis said, “Semi.”

Servis, who won two stakes last week at Saratoga, also sends out Bonita Bianca, who comes off a better-than-it-looks fifth in a stakes under Paco Lopez at Delaware Park.

“I thought Paco was going to pull her up turning for home,” Servis said. “When he went outside and the dirt stopped hitting her, she took off and got beat [3 1/2] lengths. We’ll try to get her clear of the dirt. I think she’ll come running.”

Swing and Sway, a two-time stakes winner in the slop at Oaklawn last winter, and Wonderment, who beat Absatootly in the 2017 Dancin Renee at Belmont, complete the field.

With only five runners, the Union Avenue has been carded as race 3 on Thursday’s nine-race card.

KEY CONTENDERS

Absatootly, by Mineshaft
Last 3 Beyers: 72-64-85
◗ In a short field, price could be fair for a filly who looks off form on paper, but who has fired three bullet works out of her last five moves.

Picco Uno, by Macho Uno
Last 3 Beyers: 96-77-79
◗ Comes off a career-best race numbers-wise after looking like she was headed in the wrong direction.
◗ Won this race last year, one of three wins from five starts at this distance.

Bonita Bianca, by Curlin
Last 3 Beyers: 78-89-70
◗ Could be the best closer in the field.
◗ She is a multiple New York-bred stakes winner going a mile or farther.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


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Daily Racing Form: Bolton Landing Stakes Runs Through Ward’s Frequent-Flying Fillies

There’s no doubt about it, Wednesday’s $100,000 Bolton Landing Stakes begins and may end with trainer Wesley Ward and his well-travelled trio of juvenile fillies Shang Shang Shang, Chelsea Cloisters, and Stillwater Cove. The 5 1/2-furlong turf dash drew a field of eight, including Drynachan and Elsa, who each has won her only start.

All three of Ward’s potential starters made their last start across the pond in England or France. Shang Shang Shang was the only winner of the three in Europe, hanging on late for a nose decision in the Group 2 Norfolk Stakes on June 21 at Ascot. Chelsea Cloisters did not fare as well at Ascot, where she finished 11th in the Group 2 Queen Mary, although she did bounce back two weeks later to be second in the Group 3 Prix du Bois at Deauville. Stillwater Cove set a lively pace under Joel Rosario only to falter late and finish far back in the Group 3 Albany Stakes, also at Ascot, on June 22.

Ward said Monday he would likely run only two of his three fillies in the Bolton Landing while holding out at least one to face males in Friday’s $100,000 Skidmore Stakes here. Ward won’t make the final decision until Tuesday, although he said he was leaning toward starting Chelsea Cloisters and Stillwater Cove in the Bolton Landing.

“I worked Chelsea Cloisters with Shang Shang Shang the other day in company,” Ward said. “I had David Flores on Chelsea Cloisters and Eric Cancel on Shang Shang Shang. David is retired now, so he weighs about 130 pounds. There was about a 25- to 30-pound weight swing, and they finished heads-up, so visually Chelsea was better. It was a really good work for her.”

Ward said Stillwater Cove has done well since getting a little freshening upon returning stateside.

“I was really disappointed in her race in Ascot,” Ward said. “I really had high hopes for her. She settled in very nicely over there before the race, which is why I chose to run her six furlongs. She came out about a head behind the field. That’s when Joel punched on her a little bit, and when he did she took off and went 44 flat for the half, and it was just too much for her.”

Ward said he expects all three of his fillies, no matter which race they compete in this week, to bounce back well from their overseas adventures.

“If you look at my record since I’ve been going over there these last nine years, most of my horses win first time out,” Ward said. “I give them plenty of time when they get back to settle in and put the weight back on before I breeze or run them again.”
Drynachan rallied to a very professional two-length victory going 5 1/2 furlongs on the turf here earlier in the meet for leading trainer Chad Brown.

“She’s a nice horse, solid,” Brown said. “It didn’t surprise us that she won. She has to take a big jump up in a stake, though, but she seems like she really fits. She laid a little closer than I thought she would last race. I was surprised she was that forward, but it really worked out well for her.”

Elsa also came from off the pace to capture her debut by 3 3/4 lengths last month at Laurel for trainer Michael Stidham. The daughter of Animal Kingdom has continued to work forwardly since her debut at the Fair Hill Training Center.
Completing the field are Questionoftheday, a winner of two of her three starts, Avocado Toast, and Fightress.

– additional reporting by David Grening

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


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Northshire Bookstore Celebrates 5 Years At Its Saratoga Location

One of the best gigs I’ve ever had was working at an independent bookstore called the Little Professor Book Center, just outside of Birmingham, AL (where I’m from). Opened in 1973 and owned by, of all people, a former Birmingham Barons player (Alabama’s minor league baseball team), it was a bit of an institution in the Birmingham metro area—the stopping ground for bookworms and writers like Daniel Wallace, author of Big Fish (which was made into an awesome Tim Burton film of the same name)who used to frequent the store when he was a kid. When I was working there in my early 20s, it was one of only a handful of bookstores left in the city. It was homier than your typical sleek franchise store. It didn’t have a cheesy, horn-filled soundtrack that played while you browsed either. And there was no café where orders were hastily called out and lattes nosily foamed during the hectic lunch rush—no, people came to the Little Professor to browse and sit in the armchairs and read in silence (sometimes for hours), and of course to walk up and down the cool metal spiral staircase that ascended near the center of the store.

Nearly ten years later, I’m proud to say the Little Professor is still in business. And as for me, I’m really happy to have found myself in Saratoga Springs, another city that has its own fantastic book vendors, one of them being Northshire Bookstore right off of Broadway (maybe you’ve noticed the “welcome stone” in front of their entrance that says, quite ironically, “Nothing is written in stone.”). Northshire’s Saratoga location (there’s another storefront in Manchester, VT) celebrated its 5th anniversary Sunday, August 5. “It was very casual,” says Chris Morrow, the owner of Northshire. “We had special tote bags that we had produced and were giving out all day. There was also a raffle and a big, book-themed cake and toast for the patrons, employees and customers of the store.”

Chris Morrow
Northshire Owner Chris Morrow grew up at the store’s Manchester, VT location, which his parents opened when he was nine.

Like the Little Professor back in Birmingham, Northshire offers something you can’t get at online sellers like Amazon or even at many franchise stores—an experience. “There are three main components to creating an experience that people want to come back to and they’re willing to pay for,” says Morrow. The first, according to Morrow, is the ambience of the store: the oak molding on the shelves, the fake branches that whimsically jut out from the walls surrounding the staircase and the wonderfully colorful and exploratory second floor, which features kids and young adult books as well as a cool model train set (with a kind of “I Spy” list of objects to find in the model) among other toys. The second component, Morrow says, is the selection of the products sold in the store. Morrow’s book buyers (those who decide what to stock on Northshire’s shelves) have decades of experience and are tuned in to what the customers at Northshire want. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, because it’s exactly what online sellers can’t offer, is a knowledgeable and friendly staff. Morrow is passionate about who he hires. “We have employees who not only understand basic hospitality but are readers and can really help people find the right book at the right time in their lives,” he says.

Morrow knows what he’s talking about too. His parents, Ed and Barbara Morrow, founded the original Northshire Bookstore in the heart of Manchester in 1976. Today, the Manchester store resides in a historic, century-old inn that the Morrows converted into a bookstore in 1985. Chris Morrow remembers those early days. “I was nine years old when they opened, so I grew up in the business.” Chris took a break from the book business for a while to go to college and then later to do a stint in the Peace Corps. He came back to the store in Manchester about 20 years ago to take over for his parents (who still have a hand in the business), and he’s been running it ever since then.

Besides books, magazines, records and other for-sale items, the Saratoga Northshire offers a lot of unique events and opportunities to our community. Firstly, it has a huge monthly schedule of authors who give readings, signings and talks. Former Press Secretary Sean Spicer will be there this upcoming Wednesday, August 15 for a signing (tickets are $28.99 and include a copy of Spicer’s new book, The Briefing: Politics, the Press, and the President). Northshire also offers the Open Mind Scholarship, which each year gives college-bound seniors from New York and Vermont scholarships based on essays that demonstrate the power of books to change people’s lives for the better. This year, three winners in Vermont were named because two Manchester patrons donated an additional $9,000, making the award much larger.

And to top off the perfect book-buying experience, there’s a newly opened Jewish deli, Saratoga’s Broadway Deli, connected to the store. It’s both delicious and far enough away from the books so as not to distract from your browsing and reading experience, but close enough so you can grab a quick bite should all those nouns, adjectives and gerunds begin to fatigue you. Speaking of which, I’m pretty hungry for something to eat and something to read. I think I’ll head over there now. Maybe I’ll see you there.

 

David Cassidy’s Band To Honor Late Star For A Cause At Putnam Place

This Tuesday, August 14 at 7:30pm, the David Cassidy Band & Special Guests will perform at Putnam Place in downtown Saratoga Springs to benefit the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF). Expect songs from Cassidy’s final EP and recording, Songs My Father Taught Me, sung by Cassidy’s band members, performing together for the first time since the icon passed away in November 2017. Musician, horse owner and trainer and Cassidy’s long-time friend Gary Contessa will also join the band on bass guitar in a tribute to Cassidy, who held TRF, and Saratoga Springs, close to his heart. The evening will also feature an auction of a painting by David Hill of one of David Cassidy’s horses, food by Pies on Wheels and drinks from Putnam Place’s beautifully renovated bar.

Putnam Place
Putnam Place will host the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundations’ fundraiser featuring the David Cassidy Band Tuesday, August 14 at 7:30pm.

After writing about three foundations that take care of Thoroughbreds after retirement for saratoga living’s “The Races!” issue, my eyes have been opened to so many more amazing organizations doing similar work for the horses that mean so much to the racing industry and Saratoga Springs. One such organization is the Saratoga Springs-based TRF, the largest of its kind in the world, which provides retired horses sanctuary at 21 TRF retirement facilities across the country, 9 of which are TRF Second Chances Program farms, located at state correctional facilities. On these nine farms, inmates participate in vocational training programs in equine care and stable management, and the benefits of the program after the inmates are released are tremendous.

Tickets to the fundraising event are $50, but for saratoga living readers (a.k.a. YOU) and Putnam Place frequenters, the entrance fee has been waived! All you have to do is email [email protected] with the number of guests, say you were referred by saratoga living, and you’ll be added to the guest list.

What’s better than a night in downtown Saratoga listening to live music for a great cause? We’ll see you there.