Keeneland Barn Notes — April 26
By Amy Owens —-
THURSDAY, APRIL 26
Keeneland’s 16-day Spring Meet runs through Friday. Post time for the first race is 1:05 p.m. ET.
**********
• LANERIE STORY HIGHLIGHTS 10TH ANNIVERSARY HORSES AND HOPE PINK DAY
• COX HAVING FUN IN QUEST FOR FIRST KEENELAND TRAINING TITLE
• FORMER BETOLOGIST BACK AT KEENELAND AS CO-OWNER OF BEWITCH STARTER
• GALLOPING OUT
• CLOSING WEEK SPECIAL EVENTS
• SPRING MEET LEADERS
LANERIE STORY HIGHLIGHTS 10TH ANNIVERSARY
HORSES AND HOPE PINK DAY
During today’s 10th Anniversary Horses and Hope Pink Day, Keeneland jockeys will wear pink leg bands that read “Fight with Shantel” to support Shantel Lanerie, wife of jockey Corey Lanerie (pictured at left), who is undergoing treatment for breast cancer.
Horses and Hope was established in 2008 by the Kentucky Cancer Program with former first lady Jane Beshear and the Pink Stable, made up of members of the racing community, to increase breast cancer awareness, education and treatment referral, along with providing lifesaving screenings to members of Kentucky’s signature horse industry workers and others across the Commonwealth. Horses and Hope’s cancer screening van travels across Kentucky, screening men and women for seven types of cancer. The program has provided more than 7,000 mammograms.
Shantel, who was diagnosed earlier this year, is beloved in the tight-knit racing community and known as a wonderful cook who celebrates her Cajun roots with such specialties as crawfish bisque. The daughter of a racehorse trainer, she met Corey at Evangeline Downs in Louisiana and has held several jobs at the race track, from photographer’s assistant at Churchill Downs to mutuel clerk at Fair Grounds.
She and Corey have been married 21 years and have a 10-year-old daughter, Brittlyn.
After today’s second race (post time 1:39 p.m.), Keeneland will present a check to Horses and Hope on behalf of Shantel.
At 1:50 p.m., Keeneland’s jockeys will gather in the Winner’s Circle with Mrs. Beshear and Shantel. Jockeys will have the pink saddle towels for the fourth race (post time 2:45 p.m.), the Horses and Hope.
COX HAVING FUN IN QUEST FOR FIRST KEENELAND TRAINING TITLE
Through the first 14 days of the 16-day Spring Meet, Brad Cox leads all trainers with 13 wins as he takes aim on his first Keeneland title. Cox, who has a 50 percent win percentage, has three starters remaining this meet – one today and two Friday.
Cox is two wins ahead of both Wesley Ward, whose final starters of the meet are entered in four races today, and Chad Brown, whose final two starters are racing Friday.
North America’s fifth-leading trainer of 2018 by earnings with $4.16 million, Cox said earning his first leading Keeneland training title would be an unexpected bonus to a season punctuated by the triumph of Michael Dubb, Monomoy Stables, The Elkstone Group and Bethlehem Stables’ Monomoy Girl in the $500,000 Central Bank Ashland (G1) on April 7. Monomoy Girl, Cox’s first Keeneland stakes winner, is one of the early favorites for the Kentucky Oaks (G1) at Churchill Downs on May 4.
“Winning the Ashland with Monomoy Girl was the major goal,” Cox said. “This has been a pleasant surprise to be in this position. Hopefully, it will work out. We have some live horses running the next few days, so we will see what happens. It is a little stressful, but it is fun.”
Cox credits his Keeneland success to several factors.
“We have a large number of horses and a lot of quality horses, and their owners allow us to place them in the proper races,” he said. “And I have a great staff. Obviously, if you have a lot of horses, you have to have a lot of help and my staff is second to none. They are as good as anyone out there.”
Cox, a Louisville native, grew up going to Churchill with his father and opted for a track job after graduating from Iroquois High School in 1998. He learned the basics under various trainers before working as an assistant to Dallas Stewart for five years. He obtained his own training license in 2004.
Cox came to Keeneland this year after being the leading trainer by wins at Fair Grounds. He also had a string at Oaklawn Park, where he ranked fourth by wins.
FORMER BETOLOGIST BACK AT KEENELAND
AS CO-OWNER OF BEWITCH STARTER
When Vagas Mathiesen took a self-described breather from the insurance business in Omaha, he expected to spend time doing relaxing chores at his friend Pat Waresk’s Central Kentucky Thoroughbred farm. But an online ad for a position at Keeneland as a BETologist during the 2015 Fall Meet changed his plan.
BETologists are Keeneland’s wagering experts who assist fans with questions. The position interested Mathiesen, and he landed the job after a Skype interview.
The BETologist experience renewed Mathiesen’s interest in Thoroughbred racing, which had originated at Omaha’s Ak-Sar-Ben race track, where his grandfather owned Thoroughbreds.
“I have many pictures of me in the winner’s circle at Ak-Sar-Ben,” he said.
Mathiesen returns to Keeneland Friday to watch a horse he owns in partnership compete in the closing-day feature, the $150,000 Bewitch (G3).
She is Sully’s Dream, a 4-year-old daughter of Colonel John who is coming off a win in the March 24 New Orleans Ladies Stakes at Fair Grounds. Mathiesen owns the filly, trained by John Ortiz, with Pat Waresk, Ralph Ebert, Michael Waresk and Randy Taylor.
Mathiesen said he stopped following racing when his grandfather died 1998 but returned to the sport in the summer of 2016 when he claimed Sly Star for $5,000 at Prairie Meadows in Iowa. The filly went on to win several races, including a stakes in Nebraska.
Since then, Mathiesen has expanded his Thoroughbred portfolio to include other racehorses and broodmares in partnerships. On April 1, he acquired an interest in Sully’s Dream.
“When I was in Kentucky for the 2015 Keeneland season, I saw her every day when she was a yearling at Pat Waresk’s farm,” he said. “So I am very happy to now be a part owner.”
GALLOPING OUT
Jockey Euclyn “Pete” Prentice Jr. recorded his first Keeneland win in Wednesday’s fifth race aboard Andrew D. Janszen’s Radiantrithym for trainer Doug Danner. Prentice rode the 4-year-old Algorithms filly to a 2½-length victory in the 7-furlong claiming race in 1:22.98.
CLOSING WEEK SPECIAL EVENTS
The Keeneland Library is paying tribute to Pierre Bellocq, the internationally celebrated artist better known as “Peb,” with the exhibit “Artistry of Peb: Fifty Years of Features” and a virtual exhibit on Keeneland.com titled “The Artistry of Peb.” “Artistry of Peb” showcases 18 of Bellocq’s features from The Morning Telegraph and Daily Racing Form spanning the mid-1950s to the mid-2000s. This work solidified Peb’s renown as an artistic commentator of the Thoroughbred racing industry. The Keeneland Library is free and open to the public from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET Monday through Friday.
Official Keeneland Tours – Keeneland offers a selection of guided tours, including a Backstretch Tour and Behind-the-Scenes Tour.
Friday, April 27 – Closing Day
Tailgating on The Hill. Keeneland’s popular tailgate lot, located adjacent to the Keene Barn & Entertainment Center, features local food trucks, a jumbo television screen, wireless wagering and wagering terminals, race-day programs, The Keeneland Shop kiosk and free shuttles to the track. BETologists will be available to answer fans’ questions.
The Hill is among the hosts of Everything is Science, a science festival at locations across Lexington. Keeneland is one of several community partners for the event, which aims to bridge the gap between science and the general public while making science accessible. Topics cover subjects relevant to the Lexington community. “Hold Your Horses – The Science of Horse Racing” will be held on The Hill from 1-6 p.m. between races.
SPRING MEET LEADERS
Through April 25 (14 days of 16-day season)
Jockey Starts Wins 2nd 3rd Purses
Florent Geroux 76 18 11 5 $913,594
Jose Ortiz 83 14 14 14 $1,500,211
Corey Lanerie 77 13 11 8 $725,064
Joel Rosario 55 12 12 12 $789,709
Brian J. Hernandez Jr. 66 9 7 8 $713,991
Adam Beschizza 44 8 7 3 $403,983
Gabriel Saez 35 7 2 6 $333,810
Albin Jimenez 26 6 3 3 $245,339
Trainer Starts Wins 2nd 3rd Purses
Brad Cox 26 13 1 2 $679,971
Chad Brown 21 11 3 2 $1,491,910
Wesley Ward 35 11 8 3 $607,064
Bret Calhoun 13 5 1 2 $402,353
Mark Casse 39 4 9 5 $571,987
Kenny McPeek 33 4 8 3 $401,784
Tom Amoss 14 4 2 2 $93,630
Larry Jones 12 4 1 3 $148,177
Owners (*includes partnerships) Wins
Mark Detampel 4
G. Watts Humphrey Jr.* 4
Peter M. Brant* 3
Michael Dubb* 3
Calumet Farm (Brad Kelley) 2
Cobra Cooper Racing (Ted Cooper) 2
Tom Durant 2
e Five Racing Thoroughbreds (Robert J. Edwards Jr.)* 2
Fern Circle Stables (Paul Fireman) 2
Charles E. Fipke 2
Brereton C. Jones 2
PTK (Paula Haughey) 2
Stonestreet Stables (Barbara Banke) 2
###