Bernie Dickman

Long layoff doesn’t hurt Yvonne’s Miss – she pays $2.60

After finishing second in her career debut last May in a race over the all-weather track at Golden Gate Fields, Yvonne’s Miss spent the next 10 months on the shelf, making her return at Lone Star Park with a new trainer in a race at 5 1/2 furlongs over the main track.

The layoff didn’t deter the betting faithful, and the 3-year-old California-bred daughter of Bucchero went off at odds of 3/10 in her first race back with Stewart Elliott. She had seven works listed, all over the all-weather track at Turfway, the best of which was the latest, a five-furlong trial in 1:00.60.

Yvonne’s Miss broke in the air and was off fourth and last in the short field, but the veteran Elliott sent her up on the outside on the turn and she proved to be a ton the best, drawing off late by 2 /4 lengths. She paid $2.60, collected a check for $9,600, and gave red-hot Bucchero his 12th winner of 2023.

It was yes-yes at Tampa Bay Downs for the backers of Infamous Nono

Paying close attention to the first group of Bucchero’s foals who reached the race track last year, it quickly became apparent that they could run early, and weren’t in need of three or four starts to show their best form. Infamous Nono added his name to the precocious list yesterday in his debut at Tampa Bay Downs.

With veteran Jose Ferrer aboard, the 3-year-old gelding was slow to begin in the 5 1/2-furlong, $32,000 maiden special, and was well back in the pack four or five wide heading down the backstretch. As the field approached the turn, Ferrer turned on the jets and Infamous Nono made a monster 8-wide run, catching the leaders as they began the stretch battle, and closing with a burst to get up at the wire by a neck over 8/5 favorite Rainbow’s Pride.

Bucchero’s 11th winner of 2023 rewarded the stallion’s faithful to the tune of $14.60 after getting the 5 1/2 furlongs in 1:04.77 and earning a check for $19,760. He was bred by the partnership of Pamela Edel, Lee and Elaine Vinson and Irish Eyes Stable and is trained by John Vinson.

Gone Nuts is crazy about Ailsa Morrison’s return

Ailsa Morrison spent more than four months on the sidelines after suffering a knee injury, but she was in top form yesterday aboard Gone Nuts in a five-furlong race over the Tapeta course at Gulfstream Park.

Aboard her fourth mount since making her return, Morrison scored with the 4-year-old Gone Astray gelding to raise his record to 2-0-2 in seven starts, while getting his sire winner No. 13 of 2023.

Gone Nuts was off fourth early, racing four wide down the backstretch. Morrison sent him up four wide on the turn and the gelding bred by long-time Ocala breeder Jim Cavanaugh responded with a strong run to the wire, winning by a little more than a length in :57.57. He paid $7.20 and earned a check for $13,500, increasing his total to $63,110.

Long On Value gelding gives handicappers a devil of a time

Slick handicappers are always quick to judge a trainer whose first-time starter pays off handsomely for a sharp victory after posting a series of mediocre morning trials.

That scenario played out in spades in Gulfstream’s 11th race Saturday, when trainer George Weaver struck with Devil’s Only Friend, a first-timer who gave Long On Value victory No. 3 of 2023, and paid $44.60 in so doing.

The 3-year-old gelding bred by Bulldog Racing had seven Palm Beach Downs works listed, none of them of the kind that would make someone sit up and take notice. But Kevin Krigger sent Devil’s Only Friend to the lead and they battled up front through six furlongs in a quick 1:09.81 before the gelding shook clear in upper stretch and won by nearly two lengths, getting 7 1/2 furlongs on the grass in 1:28.66, less than two seconds off the course record.

The $35,000 OBS March 2-year-old earned $26,800 and a solid Equibase ‘E’ speed figure of 84.

Poiema scores 4th victory; closes in on $200,000

Poiema returned from a vacation of more than three months yesterday and was reunited with former jockey Eddie Perez in the seventh race at Gulfstream Park; Perez took her wire-to-wire in a $51,000 allowance optional claimer at seven furlongs.

The 4-year-old filly broke on top, and never had a breather as she passed the furlong markers in :22.87, :45.70 and 1:10.34. She crossed under the wire three-quarters of a length in front clocked in 1:23.41, collecting a check for $31,300. Poiema raised her record to 4-3-2 in 18 starts and her earnings to $180,735, becoming winner No. 6 for Neolithic this year.

The $14,000 OBS June 2-year-old bred by Cheryl and James McGuire paid $8.60 and received an Equibase ‘E’ speed figure of 89. She’s her sire’s third highest earner and first to reach four victories.

Long On Value strikes for another Pleasant Acres exacta at Gulfstream

It was just nine days ago that an all-Pleasant Acres exacta (Chalcolithic, by Neolithic; Bella Facia, by Long On Value) paid $229 for $2 at Tampa Bay Downs. In the third race at Gulfstream Park yesterday, Pleasant Acres stallions struck again, this time with a pair of Long On Value fillies.

The two 3-year-olds, Oopsie Doopsie and Constitutionalist, jumped out of the gate first and second in the race at 5 1/2 furlongs over the Tapeta track. Oopsie Doopsie, ridden by Edgard Zayas and owned and bred by George Kerr, put up fractions of :23.26, :46.72 and :58.61, and continued on an easy lead for the entire trip, with Constitutionalist not far behind. Oopsie Doopsie, won it by 3 1/4 lengths and the Long On Value $2 exacta paid $81.80.

In her first five starts on dirt and turf, Oopsie Doopsie had posted one second and a third, and this was her first try over the all-weather track. She earned $14,700, paid $13, and reached the 5 1/2 furlongs in 1:04.57, giving her sire his second winner this year.

A pair of winners for Amira’s Prince at Tampa, 61 minutes apart

Amira’s Prince began yesterday having just two winners since Jan. 1, but in the space of 61 minutes at Tampa Bay Downs, doubled the number to four.

3rd race: Wrecking Ball, a 3-year-old gelding bred by Martin and Emily Goodell who didn’t start at two, broke his maiden under Samuel Marin in his third try in a $32,000 claimer at 1 1/16 miles on the turf. Marin had Wrecking Ball coasting in third place on the rail and under a stranglehold down the backstretch, let him out on the turn, sent him after favored Whiskeymac for the stretch run and they blew by the even-money shot to score by 1 1/4 lengths.

Wrecking Ball earned $9,850 for his first victory, achieved in 1:44.26, and received his best speed figure – a 77 – from Equibase.

5th race: Night Jumper, a 3-year-old gelding making his first start of 2023, scored his fourth career victory in a field of six going one mile on the grass. In one of the rare occurrences in racing, Night Jumper led the finishers home in the exact order of their odds. The gelding owned and bred by Darsan Inc. was sent off at $2.10-1, followed by the second horse at $2.40-1, the third at $2.50-1. the fourth at $3.80-1, the fifth at $9.80-1 and the trailer at $47.90-1.

Night Jumper raced the mile in 1:35.62 with Samy Camacho, won by half a length and earned a check for $17,050, increasing his total to $125,372 on a record of 4-1-0 in 11 starts.

Three months into 2023, Bucchero has 10 winners

Bucchero’s initial 2-year-old crop of last year wound up getting him 14 winners, along with progeny earnings of $638,575. After Thorn Crown’s maiden-breaking victory at Oaklawn Park yesterday, the son of Kantharos already has 10 winners and earnings of $401,561 in the first 89 days of 2023.

After four unsuccessful tries using three different riders, trainer Steve Asmussen opted for his 24-year-old son, Keith, to try to turn it around in yesterday’s 5 1/2-furlong test in Arkansas. Keith rushed his filly out quickly to battle for the top, and after a quarter in :22.78, she took a slight lead into the stretch and continued on for a neck victory over 4/5 Street Painter in 1:06.20.

Thorn Crown, a $25,000 OBS March 2-year-old, paid $7.60 and earned a check for $15,600.

Princess Tereska scores at Tampa after long layoff

In her first seven races, which were run over a span of four seasons, the best Princess Tereska could muster up was a lone second and a third. Prior to the eighth race at Tampa Bay Downs yesterday, the daughter of Gone Astray hadn’t seen action for a year and six days.

When the 6-year-old mare bred by Dancing Wind Stables made her return, it wouldn’t have been a surprise if she went off at 20-1 or higher. Yet, with just three recent ho-hum morning trials listed at the Nelson Jones Training Center in Ocala, Princess Tereska went to the post at just 6-1. She more than validated the heavy action.

With Mario Fuentes in the saddle, Princess Tereska took back to sixth heading down the backstretch in the race at six furlongs. She then made a strong run on the turn, was up to second at the top of the stretch, caught 9/2 Feel Like Guessing in the last 100 yards, and sprinted away to a nearly three-length victory in 1:12.40. She earned $7,850, paid $14.40 and gave Gone Astray his 11th winner this year.

Two more winners for Bucchero, he surpasses $1 million in earnings

A pair of 3-year-olds with widely different resumes were victorious on Sunday, giving Bucchero his eighth and ninth winners of 2023, while moving him up to sixth place on this season’s Florida general sire list, and raising his progeny earnings for a little more than one year to $1,005,496.

Ms. Bucchero – Winner of the final race on the Tampa Bay Downs Florida Cup Day program, the filly bred by Pamela Edel had finished a creditable second in her career debut with Jose Batista aboard just 15 days earlier. In her maidenbreaker, again under Batista and at odds of 6/5, Ms. Bucchero sizzled on the lead in :22.04, :44.70 and :56.85, reaching the wire four lengths in front in and putting an eye-catching 1:09.58 on the teletimer. It was worth $19,760.

Toddchero – Bucchero’s leading money-winner also went wire-to-wire, this one at Sam Houston in Texas, and collected a check for $21,360. The twice stakes-placed colt bred by GDS Racing Stable, a $77,000 OBS April purchase, raised his bank account to $120,020 on a record of 2-2-4 in 10 starts. He won by half a length under Lane Luzzi, getting a mile in 1:38.93, and paid $11.40.