ELMONT, N.Y. - He began the day at the scene of his greatest triumph. Well before sundown, the Belmont Stakes winner Tonalist was expected to arrive at the place where he hopes to accomplish more great things.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Departing has never run at Saratoga, but the way he’s trained over the local oval the past two summers, one can’t blame trainer Al Stall Jr. for looking forward to finally starting his three-time graded stakes winner here early next month in the Grade 1 Whitney Handicap.
EAST BOSTON, Mass. – David Amiss, Vernon Bush, and Taylor Hole, who have a combined 92 years of experience in the saddle, came back to Suffolk Downs this season believing they could still be competitive. Midway through the meet, expectations have been exceeded.
Amiss, 49, finds himself in the pleasant position of being atop the leaderboard with 34 wins through July 9, and the 43-year-old Hole sits in second with 24. Bush, who turns 53 next month, has 18 victories and is tied for fourth with the decades-younger Gary Wales.
Those who can’t wait for Friday’s official opening of Saratoga can attend a five-hour open house from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.
The day will include a couple of exhibition races being run over the Oklahoma training track. Those non-wagering races, known as the Newman E. Wait Jr. Trials, will begin at 11:30 a.m. Eastern.
The day will include family-friendly activities, as well as backstretch tours and handicapping seminars.
Summer Front, second in his last two trips to Southern California, is headed west again, this time pointing to the Grade 1, $300,000 Eddie Read Stakes on July 20 at Del Mar.
Last month, Summer Front shipped to California, where he finished second to Obviously in the Grade 1 Shoemaker Mile. Last November, Summer Front shipped to Southern California and finished second, beaten a nose by Silentio in the Grade 2 Citation.
Trainer Christophe Clement planned to work Summer Front on Sunday at Belmont.
Saratoga Snacks, the multiple stakes-winning New York-bred owned by Hall of Fame football coach Bill Parcells, worked four furlongs in 49.01 seconds Friday morning over the Belmont Park training track. It was his first breeze in six months.
Saratoga Snacks has not raced since losing by a head to Zivo in the Whodam Stakes over Aqueduct’s inner track Jan. 19. Zivo went on to win his next four starts, including the Grade 2 Suburban Handicap on July 5.
“When he got beat a head, he got beat by a good horse,” said trainer Gary Sciacca, the trainer of Saratoga Snacks.
Trainer Bret Calhoun is setting up a 15-horse division at Louisiana Downs and said he would begin moving horses to the Bossier City track Monday. The group will include Louies Flower, a stakes winner being pointed for the $100,000 Prelude at Louisiana Downs on Aug. 2, and Sithechristmas Elf, a 2-year-old co-owned by “Duck Dynasty” cast member “Uncle Si” Robertson.
ELMONT, N.Y. – Wood Memorial winner Wicked Strong continued preparations for an expected start July 26 in the Grade 2, $600,000 Jim Dandy Stakes at Saratoga by working a strong six furlongs in 1:13.17 Friday morn ing over the Belmont Park training track.
Under exercise rider Kelvin Pahal, Wicked Strong broke off at the five-furlong pole and shaded 36 seconds for his first three furlongs. With his ears up and reaching out nicely, Wicked Strong went his final three furlongs in 37.27 seconds. He galloped out six furlongs in 1:26.72.
The 3-year-old Good Bye Greg, a sharp winner in each of his first two starts at Arlington and Woodbine, remains on track to race at the Saratoga meet after breezing a half-mile in a bullet 47 seconds Wednesday.
“He worked awesome,” said trainer Larry Rivelli. “It was like a maintenance work, and the horse, he just drug the kid around there, galloped out in about a minute.”
Good Bye Greg, by Teuflesberg, has only raced on Polytrack so far. Rivelli was considering the Amsterdam on dirt but now is leaning toward the Quick Call, a turf sprint July 24.
Having won the Arlington Sprint for the third time in a row, the 9-year-old Saint Leon finds himself in a familiar midsummer position – a holding pattern.
Saint Leon has made 19 of his last 21 starts in Chicago. He’s a quirky horse with some anxieties, and trainer Michele Boyce, who rarely leaves town, has been averse to shipping Saint Leon. She gave in and tried last summer, with Saint Leon finishing second in an Ellis Park turf-sprint handicap in August and sixth at Euro-style Kentucky Downs in September.