Friday, January 23, 2015 Maven ‘Sharp and Smooth' in Vincennes Work By Lucas Marquardt PARIS--Well beaten in both of her local preps, Maven (Glidemaster) might well be sitting on a big performance in Sunday's €1 million Prix d'Amerique. That's if her work at Vincennes yesterday is anything to go by. How did her trainer, Jimmy Takter, assess the move? "Ready to kick some ass," Takter said via Twitter afterward, and while the ‘lol' he tagged on meant he was joking on some level, it wasn't a tweet that suggested a lack of confidence. In her last start, she had just a little touch of mucus, so I don't think she was at her very best. I think we'll have her at her best." Takter added that he will race Maven barefoot Sunday. She wore shoes in her two prior starts in France Maven will be program No. 14 in the 18-horse field. Other notables include last year's Elitloppet winner Timoko (Fr), who is program No. 17 Maven is owned by John Fielding, Herb Liverman and Joyce McClelland. On a foggy morning at Vincennes, Maven and Jimmy Takter hit the track (photo by Lucas Marquardt) Stabled beyond the suburbs of Paris at the training center at Chamant, Maven shipped in to Hippodrome Vincennes on a raw, cold morning and stepped out onto the track roughly two hours before the day's 1:50 p.m. first post. She took a relaxed clockwise tour of the track, turned in front of the gap leading to the stables just beyond the finish line and, gradually picking up steam down the backstretch, put in an energetic drill once into the home straight. Takter gave her plenty of time to catch her breath, then sent her around a second time, encouraging her with a few yells as she finished strong to the line once again. "I was really happy with Maven," he said in another tweet. "She felt very sharp and smooth." Maven's pilot for the Prix d'Amerique, Yannick Gingras, touched down at Charles de Gaulle Airport at 11:30 a.m. yesterday morning and headed straight for Vincennes to both catch up with Maven and Takter, and to get a feel for Vincennes quirky course. Gingras said he was going to ask permission to watch the gateless, free-form starts with the starter. Gingras also picked up three drives on Saturday's card at Vincennes. Takter admitted that Maven's preparations for the Prix d'Amerique haven't been ideal, but rates his charge as one of several with a big chance Sunday. "The race is super wide open," he said. "I think five or six horses could win it, us included. We need to get the perfect trip, but so does anybody else to win it. If you're not in it, you can't win it, and you have to take chances. I know the filly's very good. Watch a video of Maven working at Vincennes today. Paris Diary By Lucas Marquardt "Paris in the winter is rainy, cold, beautiful and cheap." This was the first line from a dispatch Ernest Hemingway wrote for The Toronto Star Weekly back on Feb. 22, 1922. It isn't post-war France, and with temperatures in the low 30's today, any precipitation would probably have come as snow. So it is cold, and it is beautiful in Paris, and two out of four isn't bad. I'm on the road again for HRU, this time to cover Sunday's €1 million Prix d'Amerique, the biggest trotting race in HarnessRacingUpdate.com • 1/23/15 France and one of the biggest in all of Europe. America's hopes will rest on the withers of the 6-year-old mare Maven, who is becoming something of a travel buddy. Her participation in the Elitlopp last May meant I got to go to Sweden, too. Like last time, I'll mix race coverage with some random reports on what I've been up to. I took a relatively uneventful redeye out of New York City on Tuesday night, stopping in Reykjavik--we deplaned, had our passports stamped, then re-boarded the same flight--before going on to Paris. I say relatively because there were some solid bumps in and out of Iceland, and for some bizarre reason, Icelandair thought it was a good idea to name the plane "Eldborg." There was a sign adhered to the fuselage just as you ducked through the main cabin door that explained the word means ‘Fire Castle,' and that Eldborg is a volcano known for its ‘beautiful crater.' I'm glad my younger, more imaginative self, the one who got white knuckled at the slightest unidentifiable noise or smell while airborne, didn't fly on Eldborg. Once in Paris, I collected my luggage at Charles de Gaulle, hopped on the RER train that runs into the city center, and switched over to a Metro line that got me close enough to my hotel in the Lucas’ first dinner in Bastille area. Then I did what any Paris. Guy must think he’s on an unlimited good journalist would do: I spent the next eight hours in my hotel expense account room, finishing work that I probably should have done the week before. But I shook free in time to catch the small bistro down the street before it closed and got a terrific first Paris meal--an artichoke heart salad with smoked duck and green beans, along with an appetizer of soppressata and croutons. I read more from the book I stole from my partner Ada, Hemingway on Paris--that's where that opening line came from--and learned about Monsieur Deibler, a plump, jovial man who was also France's "permanent executioner." Deibler traveled around with three large men and a portable guillotine, going to whatever part of the country that needed his services. I looked it up later--France, which by law could act out capital punishment in no other way, used the guillotine until 1977. I suppose you didn't expect to learn in today's HRU. As I was finishing up an excellent Bordeaux the waitress recommended, with the place just about empty and the chef sitting a table over, eating some pasta he'd made for himself, a Serge Gainsbourg song came on. If you don't know him, YouTube a few songs (and avoid the Whitney Houston interview); he's one of those rare artists that appeals to fans of everyone from the Sex Pistols to Sinatra. The song was one of his best, too. "Je t'aime...moi non plus"--French for "I love you… me neither." In all, a very good first day in Paris. -Lucas Marquardt Prix d’Amerique Field €1,00,000 (US$1,136,311), Prix d'Amerique, 2700m PN Horse Trainer/Driver 1 Vulcain de Vandel Nivard/Nivard 2 Tumble Dust Malmqvist/Verbeeck 3 Voltigeur de Myrt Donati/Gelormini 4 Solvato Denberger/Kihlström 5 Olmo Holz V. Martens/C. Martens 6 Linda di Casei Gocciadoro/Gocciadoro 7 Aladin d'Ecajeul Guarato/Abrivard 8 Kadett C.D. Bergh/Bergh 9 Mosaique Face Kolgjini/Vercruysse 10 Uhlan du Val Megissier/Megissier 11 Severino Bigeon/Bonne 12 Napoleon Bar Savarese/Bellei 13 Texas Charm Moulin/Dubois 14 Maven Takter/Gingras 15 Up And Quick Leblanc/Bazire 16 Tiego d'Etang Bigeon/Bigeon 17 Timoko Westerink/Goop 18 Roxane Griff Guarato/Raffin Though Payments Have Been Made, Traceur Hanover Will be Banned from Meadowlands Pace By Bill Finley There's generally been an unwritten rule in harness racing that once an owner has made staking payments for a race there's nothing that can be done to keep them out of the race. But in the case of Traceur Hanover track owner Jeff Gural is about to rewrite the "rules." Though payments for Traceur Hanover were Traceur Hanover will not be received by the allowed to compete in the Meadowlands for the Meadowlands Pace (Lisa Meadowlands Pace during Photo) the colt's yearling and 2-year-old year, Gural said yesterday that under no circumstances will he allow the horse to compete in the track's signature pacing race as HarnessRacingUpdate.com • 1/23/15 long as he is owned by Richard Berthiaume. Berthiaume has thus far paid $425 to keep his horse eligible to the race. "I am not going to let him race," Gural said. "What makes this case different is that he embarrassed the industry by sticking with a trainer who I guess knew he was going to lose his license anyway so he raced both of his Breeders Crown horses on cobalt. The conditions for the Meadowlands Pace give us very wide latitude and we can do this. (Berthiaume) hasn't asked about this and I have not been in touch with him." Traceur Hanover's trainer Corey Johnson was hit with a TCO2 positive in Ontario prior to the Breeders Crown and his license was suspended indefinitely by authorities there, but the ban could not be honored in New Jersey at the time. The suspension occurred after Traceur Hanover won a Breeders Crown elimination and Gural said he asked Berthiaume to replace Johnson before the Breeders Crown final and that the owner refused. After the Breeders Crown, the Meadowlands announced that both of Johnson’s horses that competed in the finals tested for an excess level of cobalt. It was not immediately clear what other races Berthiaume has staked his horses to at Gural-owned tracks, but the same rules will apply, meaning he also won't be able to compete in the Cane Pace. Gural has vowed that he is going to be tougher than ever on owners this year who he believes employ dishonest trainers. "In the future if a trainer enters a horse in a stakes that is not allowed to participate here we won't take the entry," he said. "We cleaned up our conditions to make it clear you can't race in any of our stakes races unless you are using a trainer who is approved to race at the Meadowlands." In a related development, Voelz Hanover, the other horse Berthiaume/Johnson started in the Breeders Crown was scratched by the judges last week at Yonkers. Berthiaume said officials there told them they wanted blood tests taken on the mare to make sure her system was clean before they would let her race. Berthiaume said that the blood tests showed she was clean and that she can now compete at Yonkers. As for the Meadowlands Pace ban, Berthiaume was upset but seemed to understand there probably isn’t much he can do about it. "What can I do to change his mind?" he said. "I don't know why he doesn't want my horse to race there, but he is the owner of the track. I had nothing to do with this and I don't think he should have the right to keep me out. I used a trainer to take care of my horse and I don't know what he is doing with the horse. I am in Montreal and he is in New York with the horse. I don't know what he is doing. I didn't know anything about cobalt. I didn't know anything about what was going on until I read about this in the newspaper. There's nothing I can do when my trainer is doing something behind my back." Missed an Edition of the HRU? Check out our archive at www.harnessracingupdate.com Sweet Lou’s Book Full and Closed Diamond Creek Farm has announced that the initial book for 2014 Pacer of the Year and runner-up for Horse of the Year, Sweet Lou, is now full and closed. “We expected a great response, and that’s certainly what we got,” said Diamond Creek’s owner Adam Bowden. “It seems like this horse’s charisma equals his credentials, and his popularity on the racetrack pretty much just transferred over straight to the breeding shed. “With the quality of the mares he’ll be bred to, his first crop of yearlings should rival those of any horse out there,” he added. Sweet Lou retired to stud at Diamond Creek Farm of Pennsylvania after his 5-year-old season with earnings of more than $3.4-million and a World Record mark of 1:47 taken on a five-eighths Sweet Lou’s book is mile track. He is a son of Yankee full and closed Cruiser from Sweet Future, also the dam of $2.7-million winner and World Champion Bettor Sweet. “I think that sometimes people primarily see Sweet Lou as a champion free for all pacer, which is true of course, but the fact that he was also a World Champion, Breeders Crown winner, and divisional Pacer of the Year as a 2-year-old is sometimes overlooked,” Bowden said. “We think he has everything it takes to be a tremendous sire.” The multiple World Record-holder--and first horse to ever pace six consecutive sub-1:48 winning miles--was campaigned by Burke Racing Stable, Weaver Bruscemi, Lawrence Karr and Phillip Collura and trained by Ron Burke. Breeders and fans may follow the continuing career of the horse many called “The Great White Blaze” on Twitter @greatwhiteblaze. The Ultimate Dance Competition Name the first A Rocknroll Dance foal born at Diamond Creek and win $10,000 in yearling credits! We are anxiously awaiting the first foal's arrival and will announce the mare's name and sex of the foal as soon as he/she arrives (expected in mid February). Contestants will submit names, Adam Bowden will choose his top 3 A Rocknroll Dance’s favorites, and the winner will be first baby will soon hit chosen by a public vote. All are the ground welcome to submit their suggestions, and all will be welcome to participate in the voting. Please check our website (www.diamondcreekfarm.com ), Facebook page, or A Rocknroll Dance's twitter @arocknrolldance for contest news and updates. We will post the submission form and contest dates as soon as we have a foal on the ground! HarnessRacingUpdate.com • 1/23/15 disingenuous, but the game was not disappointing. After being behind most of the game, Green Bay had just taken a 26-21 lead, but Dallas was charging for a go ahead score, on the Packers 30-yard line. After three plays, a pivotal 4th and two play was not your average, every day fourth down. It caused quite a bit of controversy that will probably last a long time; possibly resulting in rule changes. The play was a fly pattern from quarterback Tony Romo to Dallas wide receiver Dez Bryant. Mr. Bryant went up, caught and controlled the ball, took three steps and SRF Breedings Now Available appeared to reach for the goal line. Was it a go ahead Millstone Twp., NJ - The Standardbred Retirement touchdown? No, it did not look like it, but Dallas was in Foundation's (SRF) most important and consistent source business at the one - first and goal. Not long after, however, of funding comes from yearly and lifetime breeding a challenge flag came out, and upon further review, the ball donations, and sales. This year's list includes the fabulous seemed to hit the ground at the very end of the play (it Sweet Lou, Mach III, Lucky Chucky, Possess The Will, popped up, so it likely did, anyway). The new NFL McArdle, Chapter Seven, and many more. parsed-replay-catch rules read like Swahili when it comes to Breedings are being sold, not auctioned and are catches and non-catches, but in a nutshell: If a receiver available all season to purchase. Donations, which are catches the ball - even if he takes three steps - but fails to tax-deductible, are gratefully appreciated to assist SRF in make some sort of "second move" and the ball comes free, caring for the 204 Standardbreds in need of homes, 121 of it is no catch. If he makes a "second move", it is a catch, which are retired for life under SRF's full care, due to age and if the ball comes free later on it's a fumble, or down by or injury. contact, depending on the situation. A second move is This is SRF's 26th year as the only organization of its simply some sort of move that involves avoiding a defender, kind, solely dedicated to the Standardbred, which also reaching the ball out to get a first down or score, anything follows all of its adopted horses diligently for life. SRF has really that would be considered a "football move." served thousands of Standardbreds and helped hundreds After a long replay review, the biggest play of the game of children through its award winning programs. the biggest play of the entire season for either team - was SRF's sale of breedings makes a substantial difference. reversed. No catch. After the game, league officials To purchase a breeding, as well as to donate a breeding, explained they didn't think Dez Bryant made a football move please contact Tammy Hollock at 732-446-4422 or email by trying to score, thus it [email protected] . SRF is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit was no catch. Many in organization, gifts to SRF are tax-deductible. the league's media, like NFL Network's Rich Eisen and Fox's Howie Long thought it was obvious he wanted to score by extending for Our Dean Towers thinks NFL the goal line, and the “judges” could learn something evidence of that is if the from harness racing judges catch was made at the ten, he would've just gathered the ball in, like a regular in-field play, thus making it a legal catch. The referees, one way or another, had to judge whether someone's intent met what was shown on the video, and they disagreed. By definition and consistency, they don't reverse plays on the field when the word "think" is involved, but this time they did. Green Bay Racing's Judging Just Might Have it Right was given the ball on downs, and ran out the clock. I'm about to submit an article in support of the judging Horse racing has a lot of experience with this already. system. You read that right. For the few of you not so Video evidence has been judged on a daily basis since perplexed who plan to keep on reading, I promise, it will at video was invented. It's old hat. And boy, oh boy, the NFL least make a bit of sense. can learn something from this sport. Two Sundays ago, an NFL game occurred between the Horse racing judges call fouls not by the letter of the law, Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers. It was a dandy but if they are sure the outcome of the race, or a placing affair with the underdog Cowboys playing inspired football warrants it. There are dozens of infractions a day when a against a hobbling Aaron Rodgers and the Packers. The horse might get shoved out a little bit, or someone shuts a NFL was dubbing the game "Ice Bowl II" which was a little hole a little late, or who drifts out sideways a little in the Sunshine Entrants to Sell Sunday via Ongait.com Just a reminder that those remaining Sunshine Select Sale entries are now listed on ongait.com and will be sold via the internet auction system on Sunday January 25th. Pedigrees, photos and particulars about the remaining gaited and going 2-year-olds can be found at the Sunshine Select sale website or of course the On Gait website. HarnessRacingUpdate.com • 1/23/15 stretch. These don't cause placing's because things happen in a horse race with 1,000 pound animals pulling sulkies, or having a 120-pound man or woman on their backs, and most of them have no bearing on the placing's. They're only called when they are blatant and obvious. I guess the biggest example of that this season was the $5 million Breeders' Cup Classic, televised on NBC. At the beginning of that mile-and-a-quarter race, eventual winner Bayern broke inwards at the start, bothering race favorite Shared Belief. Was that interference so bad and malicious that it changed the race finish? Was Shared Belief so bothered that he lost all chance to hit the board? After review, there was no change. The stewards said they could not tell for sure if it affected the outcome, and Shared Belief had the entire race to make a move to improve his position, which he never did. Probably half the people who watch that race agree, the other half don't. But the stews never bowed to pressure. They kept to racing's judging mantra: Unless we are sure, we have to let the athletes decide a five million dollar race. Compare that to the NFL call from the Green Bay-Dallas game. Half the people believe the receiver was making a football move, half don't, but the officials changed the result. They did not let the players on the field decide. In harness racing - as much as we get upset with judges - when a horse in the stretch is bothered, but the horse is losing ground and unable to keep pace with any closer or the leaders, there is no placing even though a rule was broken. Meanwhile, if a horse is charging hard on the outside, decelerating slower than the lead horse and he or she suddenly stops because of interference, it's an autopitch. In another case, if two horses are slugging it out and there is some movement, but the judges can't tell for sure that the outcome is altered, judgments are left with the participants on the track, and the result stands. There are some people who do not like this form of judging, but to me, the alternatives are much worse. We as horse owners or bettors do not want judges to use a crystal ball, to try and surmise what might've happened. We don't want them to say "well, the horse was bothered by the six at the eighth pole and might've lost three feet, so since he lost by two feet to the offender, we have to place him." Tic tacs are mints, not something to decide horse races, and we don't want inquiries lasting ten minutes every second race. In turn, we certainly don't want a free for all on the track, where drivers can commit dangerous moves, endangering our equine and human athletes, where the judges let everything go, to decide things on the track. This bar is set just about right. Sure horse racing has plenty of controversy when making rulings that are not so cut and dry. Remember the slow quarter incident at the Red Mile two years ago, for example. You will simply have that with tens of thousands of horse races, with horses and humans pacing or trotting around in a circle at more than 30 miles per hour. Things are going to happen. The NFL is a marvelous league with a tremendous history. Its revenues are at an all-time high, it is proactive and has made good move after good move to grow the game. It usually makes horse racing look like it lives in the business dark ages. However, in this one instance - judging - they should've looked to this sport; the sport of horse racing. If they're not 110% sure about a play and have to think, they need to let the participants decide an outcome, not a fellow in a replay booth watching a video. That's what racing does, and it's the right way to go. Maybe we have to give the NFL a break. Racing has been dealing with these questions for a century, they're only just learning. Race 7, B-2 Trot UPFRONT BILLY drops out of the top conditions where he nearly won one more than one occasion at big odds and lands the inside to boot. You don’t always know what Billy you’re going to get but his best would be good enough; including even though the price will be shorter than I’d like. WELL BUILT steps up off a career best win and I suspect there’s even more in the tank; this one’s always had potential and a repeat win isn’t out of the question. MODEST PRINCE was left with little chance in both of his HarnessRacingUpdate.com • 1/23/15 last two races and I suspect the driver will get him more involved early on the drop. STRUCK BY LINDY was just 4/1 a couple back in a race won by Team Six but then didn’t offer much last out; a bit puzzling. CASHONTHEROCS popped in 1:53:2 right off the qualifier; O’Sullivan import is intriguing. CLEMENTINE DREAM was a winner at this level two back although this group looks tougher than the one from a month ago. Race 8, C-1 F&M Pace CUT A DEAL was used hard last out when she was parked past an opening quarter of :26:4 and was spent through the :54:4 half. Two back she was involved in a race with Jerseylicious and now lands the rail in her second try in a C-1; looks like Brett Miller will get the call for Burke while Gingras is in Paris. CLORIS HANOVER was first over against better two back and it looked like she encountered some traffic issues last out in the stretch; Trace Tetrick has been driving well here over the last couple weeks. MARTY PARTY makes her first start since November and has to be the lowest level she’s ever seen here; classy mare has to be better than that recent qualifier shows but may need one. FOUR STARZ ROE has back class and steps up off the bottom level group; RHAPSODY ROSE N throws in a good one every now and then at this level. Race 9, C-1 Trot PHOTOSAVVY takes a rather sizable drop when we consider what he was up against in his race here two weeks ago. The winner of that race came back next out to shock the A-1 types at 50/1 and this one came back to win as the even money favorite at Yonkers. He seems fast enough on paper and is just as good as any. MARION MAYFLOWER was one that I liked last out and she almost lasted; only lost to a game horse that was pounded down to favoritism off a 15/1 morning line and speed should be coming again. ROLLS BLUE CHIP looks like he’s tailed off but it’s still a dangerous barn and the rail; I wouldn’t be too quick to disregard entirely. DREAMS OF THUNDER comes off a game first over try and now takes another shot against these C-1’s, SPLITSVILLE rallied willingly in his most recent. Race 10, C-2 Trot KLM EXPRESS goes off at about 100/1 it seems like every time he’s here but if he’s ever going to win one, this is the spot. He only missed by three lengths a few races back to Coffeecake Hanover and shows a number of other superior foes on recent view; the post and drop to the bottom make him dangerous. CHOCOHOLIC was a winner at this level two back and now is fortunate to get placed in this class again after just one try against the C-1’s; third place finisher from his race two back already came back to win. WORTH THE MONEY AS was involved in a quick mile last out as the beaten favorite; barn is 0 for 10 this winter though. OMNIPOTENT hasn’t been the same horse since moving away from Burke and CAPTAIN PRIMEAU gave chase last out to a heavily backed winner; fires off the gate. $18 ticket ($0.50 base): 1-3 / 1-5-9 / 4-5-8 / 1-3 $36 ticket ($0.50 base): 1-3-4 / 1-9 / 1-4-5-8 / 1-3-7 For TrackMaster past performances for the Meadowlands Pick 4 click here. For all other pps go to www.trackmaster.com Thursday’s Results 10, DD, $25,000, P, DELAWARE Special, M, 25.4, 53.2, 1:21.4, 1:50.1, FT Bandolito (h, 5, Ponder--Sody's Home Brew, by Matt's Scooter) O-Daryl Scott Bier. B-Warren L & Joan B Harp. T-Daryl Bier. D-Daryl Bier, $12,500, Lifetime Record: 32-15-3-3, $287,585 To view replay click here Thursday’s Results 9, Mea, $20,000, P, *W/O $10,000 LIFE/PREFERRED HANDICAP* P.P.1-4 DRAWN; 5-7 DRAWN; 8 ASSIGNED, 27.4, 57.1, 1:25.2, 1:53.4, SY Visible Gold (g, 7, Bettor's Delight--Gabrielle, by Dragon's Lair), $65,000 2009 SHS-HBG O-Burke Racing Stable LLC & Weaver Bruscemi LLC & Rtc Stables Inc. B-Fair Winds Farm Inc. T-Ron Burke. D-Dave Palone, $10,000, Lifetime Record: 88-28-18-10, $383,944 To view replay click here Monday’s Results 2 Wdb, $34,000, Trot. Preferred. 27.4, 57, 1:25.2, 1:53.4 FT Charmed Life (m,5 - Majestic Son-Christina M-Muscles Yankee) O-Menary Racing Inc, Brad D Gray, Michael A Guerriero. B-William Jones. T-Dave Menary. D-James MacDonald, $17,000. Lifetime Record: 60-17-11-10, $724,003 Follow Harness Racing Update on Twitter at www.harnessracingupdate.com/twitter
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