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the leader ESPN Louisville, your home for the College Football
Playoff, NFL, the Final Four and the best sports stock.
We are ESPN Louisville. Welcome to the Kentucky Racing
Spotlight with Louis Roubo, presented by the Kentucky HBPA.
Now here's Louis Roubo. All right, welcome.
And it is a January 10th edition of the Kentucky Racing Spotlight
with Louis Ribow. Hey, I'm Louis Ribow, we're in
the studios of ESPN Louisville. You can catch me 11:50 Audrey
Bowen Co on ESPN 681057. You can come hang out with us.
It's a general sports show, lots of hoops, lots of football, and
of course, we mix in the horse racing as well.
We want to thank our friends over at the Kentucky HBPAKYHBP,
a.com for presenting and partnering with us on all of
these great shows. We're so blessed to have their
role in that. Is the HPA available to us for
this show? We'll talk to Irving Moncada in
this show. It's the kind of name that you
hear and you'll wonder, is this another guy coming up through
the ranks who came out of Peru or came out of Panama?
Ono Irving, Mikado's a Lexington kid.
You get to hear from a kid from the Commonwealth, his
experience, how he got to where he's at, including his first
stakes win this past weekend at Turfway Park.
A very, very fun interview and frankly, one I really suggest
you stick around for. And Irving's what I wanted to
talk about to open the show. And I'm not going to give away
too much from the interview, but I essentially asked him how he
came up in the sport. You know, it's a question that I
try to ask everyone that comes on spotlight with us.
And he was very succinct about it.
And it's something that we've talked about as well with Eric
Camelback, who's the president of the HBPA.
And I get to ask him about the agrarian nature of our sport,
the the farm base of what we do and did we allow our sport to
get too far removed from such a thing.
Eric talks about it a lot with the expansion in our sport right
now. It's happening in Kentucky, it's
happening in Arkansas, it's happening in, frankly, in Iowa
and Nebraska, places like this. We're seeing great returns in
Minnesota, agrarian places, less on the coasts now we're getting
the renovations in New York and Baltimore.
They're great. They look tremendous, and I'm
excited to be there and to see them once they're completed.
But that move is to the middle of the country.
It's something that we've talked about a lot on this program.
And I think that a guy like Irving Moncada is an interesting
test case. And I was thinking about our
interview with Brian Hernandez Junior just a couple of weeks
ago on this show. And if you ever want to go find
those shows, by the way, find us on Twitter or on Facebook at the
Kentucky Racing Spotlight. And we'll link all of our
podcast for this. You can always find it at
espnlouisville.com. But when I talked with Brian, I
asked him, what's the state of the sport in Louisiana?
He was on his way from the November meet at Churchill Downs
down to Louisiana where he rides and fairgrounds and frankly,
where he really cut his teeth in the sport and ask him, how's the
state? How's the state of horse racing
in in Louisiana? And, and the reason I asked is
because I always wonder about the state of it just alone in
Kentucky. But Brian's answer was very
simple. It's not great.
And what was interesting was how he then talked about it because
he talked about the Bush tracks going away.
And those were the smaller tracks in smaller towns where
people were just trying to get it together was much less formal
than what you see at the three tracks that remain at the top of
the chain there in Louisiana, certainly at fairgrounds.
But he talked about that thing going away.
And I started to wonder after he was on because I think all of us
do this with sports right now. For example, in the NBA, we're
we're seeing so many 3 pointer shot because the analytics say
either dunk the ball or shoot a three pointer.
That's all you should do in basketball Now for those of us
who love the guys who, you know, that slash to the rim, the Allen
Iverson types locally, you know, if you're if you're thinking
about some of your favorite teams, you know, the doctor
Duncan Stein's and you know these sorts of players that
we've been so blessed to have in the Commonwealth.
Well, the new game says no, no, shoot from as close to the
basket as you can or from three-point land because
percentages bear out that you'll get more points per possession
on that. Well, I don't think anyone in
the ABA are a thought that even when they put the three-point
line in place that it would dominate the game to the point
that it has. And of course, at some point
there will be an adjustment. The defenses will become Donuts.
There will be such a large gap in the middle that the mid, mid
range game in basketball will matter again.
And I wonder in Bryant's case, when he talks about losing the
Bush tracks, if that's just what he was used to, if that was the
mid range jumper of horse racing for him, or is it something more
sinister like he he thinks it is, which is no, no, we need
those kinds of places for horsemen, horse women to come
out of. And I wonder that about
Kentucky. And Irving's a great example of
coming out of that kind of environment.
I'm a guy that discovered the sport in his 20s.
I didn't grow up around it. No one else with my last name is
involved with horse racing. I'm different that way in what I
do. So many of the people that I
work with and they're great, by the way, this isn't a criticism
of anyone who came up in horse racing, but their experience is
so darn different than mine. If you grow up going to the
track and your and your parent works on the backside, it's a
very different experience than how I've come to love the sport.
And Irving's one of those guys. And you'll hear that story in
the next interview. But where are those people going
to come from in Kentucky was what I was asking myself.
And I what's cool is with the solidification of our circuit
and the solidification of what we're doing here as far as per
structure, as far as knowing the funding is there, as far as
shoring up the facilities, a new Turfway Park, the work they're
going to be doing at Ellis, Obviously all the work being
done at Keeneland currently, you cannot leave out a quarter
billion dollar project just completed at Churchill Downs as
they work on more of the fan experience on the stretch as
well. And of course, all of the work
that gets done in Kentucky Downs.
Every time I go to visit, there seems to be something new going
on down there. But such a solidified circuit.
Where are those horse people going to come from?
In our own town here in Louisville, we've been blessed,
and I use the word blessed on purpose with S Enders, with
people that grew up near the track like a Dale Romans, like a
Brad Cox in the more modern era now, both of their
contemporaries for sure. But that we got those guys out
of our area the way that we did. The Danny Gargons of the world
who are now, you know, based in Saratoga, and that's fine.
He's based in Florida right now. He's got one in the Pasco on
Saturday at Tampa. What is it that we're looking
for here? What is it that we're going to
have in place for young people that want to get into this game?
You know, one of the conversations we have about
sports in America sort of in general, is how expensive we
make it, how difficult we make it just to access the sports
because we have club sports and we have travel sports and we do
these other things where kids are all always playing sports in
an organized fashion. Where is it that a guy right now
can just grow up and break into horse racing and what are we
doing to cultivate those spots? We had the story this week as
well that I wanted to follow up on.
And it's one of those stories and it's it's one of those
people that you hear the stories about and you see him and you
get and you know the name, but it's not someone that you got to
know. And his name was John L
Robertson and he was at Churchill Forever man.
He showed up as a 14 year old and you see him with general
hand grenade and in the in the winner's circle photo.
And of course, he was laid to rest at the end of 2024.
We'll have a memorial service for him tomorrow at End Street
Baptist Church, if you're interested, on 6th Street.
But he was around the sport essentially his entire life.
He dies at 81, but he started essentially in earnest working
at the track at 14. What are we doing for the John L
Robertson's of the world? Where does John Lee Robertson
fit? What are we doing to cultivate
more of that guy who just gets it?
There's something different about being at the track.
There's something so innate and natural for the people that are
the best at it, that are so natural around horses, that are
natural around the situations that only arise at a racetrack.
Mr. Robertson was one of those guys.
And what are we doing? And I bring him up very
succinctly because he is African American.
And what are we doing to get all of our citizens in on horse
racing, but especially young people?
I hear so often from colleagues or from other, you know, people
in the media, hey, we got to grow horse racing and this is
how we do it. And everyone's got an answer.
It's nice to want to cultivate betting.
It really is. It's nice to want to cultivate
betting. I'm not mad at that angle at
all. And we should try to do it.
And in the last second, by the way, we'll talk handicapping.
But where are the people coming from?
Where are the next dogs in what we do in the machine that is
horse racing in the Commonwealth?
Who's the next Mr. Robertson? Who is it?
Where is he right now? Is he a high school student at
Doss? Is he a high school student at a
place like St. XI?
Don't know. Is she at Mercy High?
I don't know. But I really, really hope that
somebody's working on making a place for young people to find a
spot in our sport. So often we meet the younger,
the younger generation, and you'll meet Irving.
This is who we want in our sport.
We got to talk to Jaime Torres in the spring after his win in
the Preakness. He's in his mid 20s.
Those are the people we want in our sport, the ones that care
about horses, the ones that learn the great lessons.
You'll hear from Irving what he learned from Brad Cox in his
years as an exercise rider in The Cox Family.
Essentially, you'll hear those things from him.
Where are those kids coming from?
How do we cultivate that? What is the best way to do it?
I don't have an answer today, but boy, I hope someone is
working on it. Irving Mocato will join us next
here on the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
I'm Louis Roubo. We're in the studios of ESPN
Louisville. We'll take a quick break here.
We are presented by the Kentucky HPPAKYHBP a.com.
On the other end, Irving Mocato. We'll talk to him next.
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We are ESPN Louisville. Download the ESPN Louisville app
today, delivered by UPS Jobs Kentucky.
Welcome back to the Kentucky Racing Spotlight on ESPN 680 and
105.7. Now here's Louis Rabeau all.
Right, Welcome back in. This is a January 10th edition
of the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
I'm Louis Ribow in the studio of ESPN 680-1057.
You can catch me 11:50 on Ribow and Co here at the network.
But of course, every 6:00 on Friday, we turn to horse racing,
whether it be inside Churchill Downs or this show.
We're presented today as we always are, by the Kentucky
HBPAKYHBP a.com. And if you head over there, you
can read about our next guest. And his name is is Irving
Mokana. He is a jockey.
He's got a small number next to his weight, but I don't think
he'll be there very much longer. Irving, welcome in, man.
How are you? Hey.
Louis, thank you for having me man.
Doing good. How are?
You, I'm doing great. Look, we'll start with the good
stuff and it is just absolutely the good stuff.
I'm on your Equibase profile, OK?
And these are things that I don't get to say to people.
Very often I'm on your. Equibase Profile But you win
race 1, you win race 2, and you win race 4 on Saturday at
Turfway Park. Talk to those of us who number
one, have never ridden a horse in a race but #2 have never had
three wins in four races. Is it is it the horse?
Is it Irving Moncada having a day?
Is it a combination? Like what is going on that you
win three of the first four races on a CART?
It's definitely a combination of, you know, you know, it it
take, it really takes the village, you know, for something
for that, for, you know, to have a day like that, you know,
starting with giving opportunities from the owners,
the trainers, you know, getting the horses ready, you know, my
agent, you know, picking the right horse.
And I mean, you know, I'm super thankful, you know, for the
opportunities they've been given to me and, you know, to have a
day like that, you know, I, I'm just really happy, you know.
It's amazing you ride 3-6, you had 8 * 7 different trainers on
Saturday. Do do you find yourself, you
know, look at you're, you're in The Apprentice rank still, but
do you find yourself getting more and more calls?
You know, you mentioned your agent getting you the, getting
these mounts and these sorts of things at Turfway right now in
this season. Do you find though that you're
starting to get more calls, especially after you do win your
first stage choice on Saturday? You know, we're just taking, I'm
just taking it one day at a time, one race at a time.
And at the moment, you know, yeah, we're getting more calls
in and I think a lot of people have noticed those.
You know, my agent, Joe Polly does a great job on workers and,
you know, getting us on a live mount and everything.
And, you know, he does an incredible job.
Super thankful for him. And I think people have really
noticed this now. And I think, you know, that's a,
that's a good thing for, for down the road.
Irvin Mulcata joins us here on the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
I'm Louis Rabo, thanks for making this part of your horse
Racing Friday. So, Irving, let's go back to the
beginning, man. So when did you know you wanted
to be a jock? Where did you grow up?
How did you grow up in the sport?
And how did you end up at Turfway Park of all places?
How about that? So I grew up here in Lexington,
KY, you know, yeah, right down the road where where Keeneland
is. And, you know, my dad would
always take me to the races at Keeneland.
And I grew up on the on John Oxy's farm where my father works
there for about 20 years almost. So I kind of grew up there on
the farm, you know, learning from the ground up.
And then just going to the racetrack.
I kind of, you know, just, you know, I was always going to be
small and, you know, thought, hey, how about maybe it'd be a
jockey? And then, you know, I was able
to start gouting for Brad, for Brad Cox.
I gout for him for three years and then like kind of, you know,
just decided them, you know, take a shot at it and I'm really
happy. I I did and here we are now.
It's perfect work. If someone came to you and said,
how do, how do I become Irving Moncada?
How do I follow your path? Because you mentioned those
three years of riding in the morning for Brad Cox, for
example, you know, when Irving, when someone comes to me and
says, hey, you know, you've got a cool job, I want to try radio,
I always say to them, well, just do a podcast.
Just get your radio muscles that way.
And I don't, you know, it's not apples to apples here, but I
imagine riding in the mornings does get you ready for sure for
race riding. You know, you get to know
thoroughbreds, you get to know their habits and you know, the,
the, the cues that work the best to get horses to, to behave in
the way that you, you know, that maximizes their performance
would. Do you think your route was the
best way? Do you think riding in the
mornings and getting to know thoroughbreds that way was the
best way? Oh, absolutely, absolutely.
You know, Brad has Brad had so many horses there at when I was
dousing for him, I was able to get on, you know, stick horses
and and maidens, you know, and horses that were, you know, just
getting ready to, you know, get their first start.
So being there, you know, helped me learn a lot.
And honestly that that's kind of like the way to go.
You know, start off, you know, breaking baby somewhere, you
know, learning, you know, the, the, you know, the reins and
your balance and everything. And then from there, you know,
just take one step at a time and, you know, eventually you
get the, you know, going pretty fast and then, you know, it's
just done a general rush you just fall in love with and it's
just, it's just hard to beat. You get to work with a guy like
Brad Cox and you ride for him in the mornings.
Is there a thing or two that you could share with us that you
learn from Brad that you carry to this day?
That's something that affects how you ride every day.
Let's see, I'd have to say, you know, consistency, you know,
staying on top of your game, you know, showing up to work, you
know, asking questions if you don't know, you know, and never
stop learning. You know, I was always around
the barn, you know, in the mornings and in the afternoons
and you know it always ask questions to Brad or his
assistants, you know, his assistants, Tessa and Blake, you
know, I was always around them and super thankful for them.
Tremendous horsemen, you know, and, you know, just really think
for them, you know, to help helping me really get started,
you know? You talked about your dad and,
and working on a farm and, you know, this show is presented by
the the Kentucky HPA and I've gotten to know the HP, the
national HPA president, Eric Hamelback pretty well because
of, you know, doing this job and, and being around the HPA
sort of in general. But you talk about your dad
working on the farm, you growing up that way.
And something we've started to notice in horse racing is that
the places where horse racing is going away from and then
contrarily where it's growing is away from urban areas and into
more agrarian type areas. You mentioned Keeneland.
Keeneland is one of the great examples of this for sure.
Big property, it's got its own sort of country feel to it, even
if it is next to an airport, not too terribly far from a big city
in Lexington. But it has that kind of feel.
Obviously in our state, you have even a Kentucky Downs that has
the full agrarian sort of feel. How important do you think?
You know, and especially for you, but for our sport in
general, that sort of agrarian connection, that farm connection
to the sport. Hey, you know, being around at
the farm, you kind of learned a lot being out there, you know,
really from the grown up, you know, and you know, not just the
racetrack way, you know, you learned, I learned out there,
you know how to handle mares, wheelings, yearlings and you
know, dad would also pull out the mares occasionally.
So it's, it's really nice, you know, and I think it's really
important, you know, to, to be around there.
Jockey Irving Moncada is with us here on the Kentucky Racing
Spotlight. You do get your first stakes win
on Coming in Hot in the Preview Stakes.
This was not the easiest of races, frankly.
You had to make a move on the turn.
There were some horses that got the lead and slowed back into
the pace that you were involved in.
Can you kind of walk us through the race and what you saw and
when you knew you were going to win it?
Yeah, I mean, I knew there was a lot of speed going into the
race. So of course I had ran against,
had, you know, come out sharp and had, you know, died off up
front. And I know I had Joe Rosario on
the Wesley workhorse down to the to my inside.
Once I got to about the 3/8, I started asking him and I knew
there was a wall of horses. And I think it was about when I
saw Joel making the move down the rail, he kind of, you know,
slipped on through and, you know, I just followed right
behind him. And I know I had a whole lot of
horse underneath me turning from home.
I just asked him and he asked him and to run for me and he ran
on for me and he just kept on going and just went by the the
Wesley Ward horse. It it's an awesome moment.
You cross the finish line, you realize you've won.
Does it feel different than the other three races you had won
that day because it is a stakes Irving or or are you at the
point where you know you've been, you've been pretty
blessed, man. You got a bunch of wins under
your belt. You had a great 2024.
I don't want to say this is becoming old hat, but did it
feel like, you know, just another race with a with a
slightly higher purse or or was this a different feeling?
After crossing the wire, yes, you know, I was really thankful,
you know, you know, the man upstairs for the for, you know,
giving me the opportunity and for giving me, you know, being
blessed to cross the wire first, you know, but funny because you
know, before you know, the races got started, Joel Rosario, you
know, he was in the same corner as me.
And I asked Joel, I said, Joel, I got an important question for
you. And he said, all right, let me
know. And I said, so I ride my first
stakes race today. How did you feel when you rode
your your first stakes race? Like he said, man, that's,
that's a good question, kid. That's a good question.
He said, listen, just another race.
You've written what, a hundred, 150 race?
I said yes, Sir. You know, he said take it as
another race. You know the horse.
I said yes, Sir. He says, all right, you know,
the horse looks like you won on the horse.
You know, just go out there and just just ride your race.
You know, it's just another race, I said yesterday.
And so before going in the gates, you know, and everything
I and in the paddock also, I said, you know, it's just
another race. It's just another race.
And you know, thankfully we were able to come out, you know, on
top. And I think it wasn't until
after I closed a lot, you know, I was just really thankful to
be, you know, where I was. That's a cool moment, man.
I appreciate you sharing that with us because that is that's
awesome. It's I don't get many stories
like that on this show and I get some pretty cool stories on
here. I appreciate you sharing that.
I what is that? What is that relationship like
with the other guys in that jocks room?
Because for those of us on the outside, I I think it's easy to
understand the camaraderie. You have a very unique job.
You have a job that lots of people don't understand.
Most of us go to work. I sit in a chair Irving.
There isn't a, there isn't an ambulance following me to work
to make sure that I'm going to be OK, right.
So there's a danger element of your job, of course, that all of
you share and all of you, you know, you're in the same Guild
and all of these kinds of things.
But on the track, you know, and, and for, you know, for inquiries
and those kinds of objections, those kinds of things.
Like once in a while, you really do have to be full competitors
that way. And obviously during a race
you're competing against Joelle. Good advice or not, right?
You're trying to beat you're, you're trying to get your horse
ahead of his horse for sure. But what have you found in your
young career as far as you know? If you, you mentioned it, asking
questions of the of, of Brad Cox and his crew and getting the
right answers and making sure you have as much knowledge as
you can. Have you found other jockeys to
be supportive on your journey? Very, very supportive.
You know, someone that's been a big mentor for me, you know,
throughout my right career has been Edgar Morales, who's
another jockey that that, you know, we have the same age.
We have Agent Joe Pauly. And Edgar Morales has really
taught me a lot. You know, he watches a lot of my
races and, you know, we'll go back and view, you know, watch
replays together. But being in the Kentucky
circuit, you know, I was able to ride at Keeneland, Churchill and
now Turfway. Also, Alice, a little bit being
able to ride against, you know, some of the top jockeys and to
be able to go back in the room and to ask, you know, Tyler
Gafflion, Jose Ortiz, Julian Le Peru, Flo.
I can ask. I can go up to any one of those
guys and I can ask and I can ask them, you know, hey, what do you
think about this ride? Any advice you can give me this
ride or they'll pull me aside and say, hey, watch this ride.
And you know, just being around that jockey colony, you know, it
just makes a big difference because everybody, yes,
everybody wants to win, but everybody wants to see you
improve as well. That's beautiful.
Love it. All right.
Well, he's Irving Moncada jockey joins us here on the Kentucky
Racing Spotlight. I'm Lou Urbo in the studios of
ESPN 680-1057 were presented by the Kentucky HBPA.
You mentioned being on the Kentucky circuit.
And by the way, Irving, you're you're coming up on a milestone.
Your next win will be your career 50th when you've been
aboard for 309 starts. I think you would have taken
that deal beforehand, right? If I had told you, hey, about
300 and 10315 starts and you're going to hit fifty wins, you
would have taken that deal, right?
That seems pretty easy. Oh.
Yeah, look, man, hot start. You got to seriously, you got to
feel really good about how it started.
Do you know? No, absolutely, absolutely.
You know that I'm really happy to be where I am and like I
said, I'm more than thankful for the opportunities that have been
given to. Me.
All right. So you mentioned Keeneland and
Churchill and Turfway. Did you get to and Ellis, did
you ride at Kentucky Downs this year?
I actually don't have that in front of me.
I rode one race over at Kentucky Downs.
What was that like? Walk us through that at least.
A roll, A roll, a roller coaster ride.
I mean it's. Did you like?
It, yeah, it was pretty fun. Actually.
It was pretty fun, Yes. I'm not gonna lie, I did like
it. OK, so you think you'll you'll
shoot for some outs of Kentucky downs this year?
You think you're going to be trying to get in on that
madness? Hopefully, fingers crossed, yes,
hopefully we'll be, we'll be over there.
And I, I assume you're going to be staying at Turfway through
March and, and that's a pretty easy thing.
Is it your, your hope, your, your, your agents hope that
you'll be able to stay mostly in the Kentucky circuit?
Is that the hope for Irving Mulcata going forward?
Yeah, that's the hope. You know, if we get any cause
anywhere and we'll we'll see where that takes us.
But mainly we'll be here in the conveyor circuit.
Yeah. You know, we talk about a horse
like coming in hot who, you know, wins over the weekend for
you. Excuse me, and this is a you
know, it's a 3 year old horse just now.
Is this one that you think can improve as a three-year old and
get even better. The two of you maybe, you know,
make the John over to, you know, your hometown, go run at
Keeneland or or end up at Churchill.
You think that's that kind of horse?
Oh yeah, definitely, absolutely. You know, we'll see how he comes
out of the race. And I think, you know, John
Anderson, the and the owners from Rose Hill will get together
and they'll come up with a plan. And, you know, we'll see how he
breathes, you know, going into the next couple days.
And you think future looks bright for that horse?
I know the weather is what the weather is, but have you heard
about coming in hot? Did he come out of the race, at
least initially, OK? Yes, he came out.
He came out good. And he's that.
He's that John, and this is Lauren, and he's doing good.
Yes, Sir. OK, great.
All right, that's good news. All right.
Well, Irving Mocato with us this year coming up.
Are you going to, you know, I, I asked you if you're largely
going to stay in the circuit here with people in the Kentucky
circuit? You know, we see a lot of, you
know, guys, you know, like Leparoux, you mentioned as as
being in the jocks room here is at Oaklawn right now and
Hernandez junior is down, you know, in New Orleans and we get,
you know, Tyler down at at Gulfstream.
You staying up here at Turfway. What is it about Turfway that's
been such a positive for you? What is it about it that that
you can win, you know, 4 races on Saturday for four different
trainers, different levels, claimers, stakes, whatever?
What is it about Turfway that's great for Irving?
I'd have to say the number of people that that are that are
out there, you know, and that are supporting us.
Like I said, you know, my Polly, you know, he keeps me pretty
busy in the mornings, you know, and next year, you know, I make
sure I'm out there and, you know, in case if anybody needs
help, you know, in case somebody doesn't show up, you know, I, I
can jump in and, you know, help out.
All right, so I, I love this. What time do you get to Turfway
in the morning and what time do you end up leaving?
So the hours over there change so the track doesn't open there
until seven. If I remember right, it closes
at 11. So usually I'll get there, you
know, around 7730. And usually I'll, I'll make some
rounds and you check with people and make sure everybody's OK,
you know, for the morning. And I'll stick around, you know,
and usually I'll leave about, I'd say ten, 10:30, somewhere
around there, just just a few minutes before the track closes,
you know, OK. Get some lunch and then head
back for the races that night. Is that about right?
Yeah, absolutely. You know, I'll go.
I'll go home, you know, get some lunch and watch some replays and
get ready for the day. How much how much prep goes into
your day as far as races are concerned?
Let's let's go ahead and just look at your upcoming schedule.
For instance, so I've got Irving Moncada, I've got his entries.
You have 4 races scheduled for today that are not going to
happen. Let's go to oh gosh, all right,
tomorrow you are, you are scheduled to ride 8 races on a
Thursday card, for example. OK.
And I know that the the weather is what it is right now and
we're dealing with all kinds of things.
How much prep goes into you riding a Ziva than a Starship
Belmont in a light bulb moment? In a rosary.
Wavos de Oro, all those kinds of things.
How much prep do you have to do before a race day like that?
So there's a few of those words that I've already written
before. SO, and, you know, usually the
ones that I haven't run before, I'll go back and I'll watch
their, you know, last two starts, last three starts, you
know, where they ran their first, where they ran, you know,
their best races at, you know, I'll watch those replays and,
you know, kind of, you know, write it down, you know, you
know, it's on my phone and and remember that, you know, and
after that, you know, I'll, oh God, I'll get over to the jocks
room, you know, and you know, probably, you know, watch the
replays, you know, one more time, you know, before going out
to the paddock and coming up with the game plan for me and my
train, me and the trainer and yeah.
So you ride for lots of different trainers, those
conversations right before the race.
How often do people say, yo, you know what you're doing, go do
that? Or do other people come to you
and say, hey, you know, I'd like to try this today.
What percentage is it? Is it a mix?
Are certain trainers more hands off, some more hands on?
What have what have you found? It's a, it's a mix.
You know, some trainers will say, hey, you know, there's a
lot of speed. You know, how about we try and
take back this time or hey, there isn't a whole lot of
speed. How about we send forward a
little this time, like you said, you know, there's, there's a
little bit of everything. You know, we can be on Plan A,
Plan B, Plan C, but you know, kind of when those gates open,
you know, a million things can happen.
Well, he is Irving Moncada. I, I always ask this to, to
people in horse racing to close the interview 'cause I'm always
interested in two things. The first is whenever I get, so
I get to do a general sports show, 11:50 here at, at our
station and a a question I always ask coaches what's more
important, your coaching or having great players.
And every single coach I've ever had, Irving has answered exactly
how you're thinking. It's way more important to have
good players. I'm sure with every trainer that
I've asked, it's about having great horses, their training
method, whatever. In your opinion, Irving, what
what is the most important thing?
You know, OK, let me ask a different thing.
The the big races in our sport, the Breeders Cup Classic or
Kentucky Derby, whatever it might be.
Do you allow yourself to dream about winning those races at
this point in your career? In other words, is Irving Mocata
laid his head down at night and thought about being in the
Kentucky Derby winner's circle. Oh, absolutely, definitely.
You know, sometimes I'll just be sending the jocks from or, you
know, just be sitting at home and I'll just be thinking about
it. You know, someday, you know,
we'll, we'll, we'll make it there.
Absolutely all. Right.
Well, he's Irving Locata, Lexington native.
How about that? Love having a Kentucky kid here
on the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
Irving. We really appreciate it, man.
Best of luck. A bunch of safe trips, of
course. And let's talk down the line,
All right? Awesome.
Thank you. All right, Irving, we
appreciate. It you know, we'll do, we'll
grab. Irving Derby week.
We'll grab him for one of our 10:00 shows.
We'll make Irving sit down backside and do some radio with
us. Then This is the Kentucky Racing
Spotlight on ESPN 680-1057 were presented by the Kentucky
HBPAKYHBP a.com. You can find this show, by the
way, on Facebook and on Twitter as well if you want to follow us
on the socials. And you can always find me at
Radio Louie as well. A little handicapping and we'll
wrap up the. Show we do it next.
All right, welcome back in. This is the Kentucky Racing
Spotlight with Louie Rabot. Of course, I'm Louie Rabot at
Radio Louie on the socials. Find this show both on Twitter,
on Facebook, wherever it is that you do your social Ling and your
networking and all of those kinds of things.
We'd love to have you as part of our online communities as well.
Thanks to Irving Molcata joining us in the previous segment.
If I got to say, if he's not set up for super stardom, I don't
know who is just his background, how he thinks about the game,
the years of riding in the in the Cox program as an exercise
rider. He is just, I think set up for
such a bright future here in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
And by the way, we are, we are presented by the Kentucky HBPA,
KYHBP, a.com, frankly, representing people like Irving.
If you are a horse person in the great Commonwealth of Kentucky,
certainly check out everything they offer over at their
website, KYHBP, a.com. And of course, hey, if you're
like me and you're just a horse fan, go check out their
interviews, the articles, the photos and the videos from
around the Commonwealth. All the great people that make
our great sport go here in the state of Kentucky.
Joined by my friend now, his name is Barry Spears joins us
from down there in sunny Florida.
And by sunny Florida boy, you know, I talked to Jason Beam on
Thursday on the podcast Barry, and it was like 52° in Tampa.
And you would have thought that he was the one who got up this,
you know, that morning and, and took his kids to school, which
was me. And it was 8° out.
Barry Spears, how do you think you would do an 8° weather?
It's the same as the 40° weather we have now in Daytona, so.
It's not going. Well, eight 8 = 40.
It's like dog years, right? Eight times. 5.
It's all the same. That's exactly right.
Well, I hope it starts to warm up for you guys.
It actually looks like but they're going to have a fair
amount of good weather for the Friday card.
Sunny high 60s, low 70s for Tampa and then today and then of
course on Saturday looking at high 60s, a little bit of
cloudiness. You know, Barry, you've done
some work around the Tampa Bay Derby and of course the same F
Davis and that kind of stuff. The Tampa the Tampa thing, you
know, Tampa Bay Downs. I think it's kind of a forgotten
track in our sort of thinking about the national scene.
I, you know, when I talked to Jason, I, you know, he mentioned
they run over 100 days. I think their turf course is as
good as anyone's in the United States.
I think, I think that much of it just kind of describe to people
what is Tampa like and, and what's the vibe around the
place. And if someone were to head down
there for the Davis or for or for the Tampa Bay Derby, what do
you think they should expect? It's, it's a beautiful place.
It's, it's sits kind of on its own.
There's not really much around it.
So it, it's very serene, quiet. You're not like near anything
major. So, so you, it has that going
for it. I don't know if anybody out
there has been to the now defunct Rockingham Park, but
it's pretty similar to that. It's, it's not a very big
facility at all, but very quaint, very nice.
The whole staff is excellent there.
I, I can't say enough about it. I, I love the places.
It's just such a great atmosphere for racing it.
Getting a guy like Jason Beam on there, you know, just as part of
their staff down there, obviously calling races, but
just being, you know, the, the, the force he is on the Internet
about horse racing. His podcast obviously is
massive, all of those sorts of things.
Just having him as part of the team down there at Tampa Bay
seems to have been a real boom for them.
We talked a little bit about the Hillsborough and the races they
got coming up down there. And by the way, I, I went ahead
while you were talking. I, I looked up Tampa Bay Downs
on the on Google Earth, and you're right, there's such a
buffer between the track and the rest of the town there that you
could probably get a little bit lost and kind of forget that
you're in the middle of a city, right?
Yeah, I, I mean, it's, it's on a road named Racetrack Rd. so that
that tells you all you need to know.
They have like a driving range adjacent to it, but other than
that it's kind of stands by itself.
Crime site, the driving range is empty.
What percentage of the day? I mean, just a huge percentage,
right. So I mean, it's not as though
there's 1000 people running around on the the driving range
either. So yeah, no, it looks
incredible. And so one of those places on
the bucket list for sure of tracks that I need to get to and
certainly Derby, a set of Derby preps that I need to get to as
well between the Davis and of course the Tampa Bay Derby.
The same F Davis will be run on the 8th of February.
The Pasco that we'll talk about today feeds to that.
And of course, the jewel down there is the grade, the Grade 3
now Tampa Bay Derby, I think. And so they'll be running that
for 50 points on March 8th alongside the Grade 2 Hillsboro
and the I think the Grade 3-4 to Oaks, of course, run on the
grass. So we'll talk about the
Gasparilla, which feeds to the Suncoast, but then all of a
sudden we run on grass when we get to Tampa Bay.
Derby day for the Philly side of things.
But let's open Barry there with what I think is a very cool
pick. 4 sequence in the middle of the card here.
Starts race 4. We're going 7 furlongs on the
dirt. 150K in the Kitty here. A lot of that is actually state
bred bonuses. This is essentially $100,000
race if you are not a Florida bred.
Look, Irad's in town, Junior Alvarado's in town.
It's one of those days. How?
Does Barry's fears approach a big day at A at a track like
this when there aren't like five guys in town like there will be
for the Derby, when you know Tyler will be up to ride a
domestic product like last year, or you know, Irad's in because
he's already based at Gulfstream, or you know, the
juniors of the world, there's only two guys in this weekend
and it's Irad and it's junior. Do you just assume Irad's going
to be just considerably more aggressive because he's got he's
just sees these as checks to pick off or what do you think's
going to happen? I would definitely keep note of
them and where they're at and who they're riding for, but I
wouldn't be afraid to bet against them.
You know, this is an exact science by any means.
They ship horses from Gulfstream all the time over to Tampa that
lose. So yeah, I mean, it's just like
any other day of racing, I think.
I think the the colony actually at Tampa, the jockey colony is a
little bit older. So it's not like Iraq can just
come in there and just bully those guys.
Those those guys have been around and you know, they, they
go toe to toe quite a bit. So you know, it's it's always
good time and and good racing. So that's what I like to enjoy.
Yeah, you got the Jesus Castanons of the World, the
Antonio Gallardos, of course, the Sammy Camachos.
I mean, you've got mainstay, mainstay guys that have been
there for a very, very long time.
But let's open with that Pasco 7 furlongs on the dirt, as I
mentioned, for three-year olds leading into that Sam F Davis,
this is a bit of a handicap. So if you see 124 next to a
horse's name, that means they have won a stakes race.
If you see 118, that means they have not.
Barry. The favorite's going to be the
outside horse and Owen Almighty. And when I was talking with
Jason on Thursday, something he brought up that I really agree
with is we just kind of assume as horse players that someone's
going to make the leap from 2:00 to 3:00 and be just fine, right?
And I think a lot of people did that with fierceness, for
example. And Jason brought that up at
Gulfstream Park last fall or last spring, excuse me, a year
ago, and just assumed he'd be back.
And look, eventually he was. He ran his heart out in the
traverse. He was great, probably did the
most work of the Breeders Cup Classic.
So it wasn't as though Fierceness didn't have a
terrific 2024. But he started with such a dud.
Are you going to try to beat Owen Almighty here?
Obviously, yeah. I mean, if there's if there's
any time to beat these kind of horses that that you think have
a future, it's right. You know, first time off the
layoff and doesn't really draw all that well.
Here is definitely beetle and pull in this spot.
I I think naughty Rascal, who opted for this spot over another
one last weekend, might have the run of the race here.
I mean, it's it's really a three horse race between the four
rookie card, the five, naughty Rascal and O and almighty.
So it you know, it should get interesting between those three.
I mean, any one of them can win. I just think the idea of how
this race is going to be run. Naughty Rascal might have the
the best trip. I was asking Jason on Thursday
if that that time in the inaugural of One O 9 flat is
absolutely insane stuff or is that normal in Tampa?
And he just started shaking his head.
He's like, no, that's not normal.
That's not you know what happens here.
So it's something like 3.35 seconds off the track record or
something at six furlongs there where they run a ton of 6
furlong races because of the setup at Tampa Bay.
So it was interesting to hear him talk about that inaugural
and he even you know at 5:00 to 2:00.
I think that makes that horse, especially at a six horse field
here that we're talking about, that makes that horse pretty
bettable. But I'm with you.
I think rookie cards really interesting here and I, a guy
like Danny Gargan, who, you know, guided Dornik last year,
got society man a graded stakes win here at Churchill Downs over
the summer. You know, he's the kind of guy
that's getting better and better at placing his horses And look,
he's been at it forever. I don't need to, you know, tell
you how great Danny Gargan is. But you know, he's the kind of
guy I think that his, you know, his stakes number, we're seeing
it tick up a little bit. He's up to 16% in his last 31
stakes races. And we're talking about getting,
you know, a smaller operation like Gargans 147 starts last
year, for example, into that kind of level as opposed to say
a Brian Lynch who had 273, almost double the number that he
did. You know, I'm interested in
rookie card here coming out. They started him at Saratoga in
the highest level of maiden there in August and the horse
finished second by a head. Then did the same thing at
Aqueduct at 6 1/2. Gets the seven furlongs here and
he's going to be the fastest out of the gate if he breaks well.
And so it'll be interesting to see if he can hold up and get
the full distance series. The son of Adios Charlie, that's
the Indian Charlie bloodline there.
He is a Florida bred. So this is one where I'm sure
they're trying to pick up a little bit of an extra bonus
there by having the Florida bread in this race.
Barry Spears with us here. You can find them at Urban
Handicapper on social media if you are so inclined to.
Gasparilla is the fifth race, the second leg of our pick 4
here. It does start the pick six in
the late sequence there at Tampa Bay down 7 furlongs for the
girls. They're on the dirt as well in
the Gasparilla. Interesting race here.
A little bit more competitive, I think as when in your in Barry
on the outside 2 to one in this one, to be fair, draw a line
through the last race over two turns.
We're getting back to a shorter distance here for this one.
A good angle for the Carlos David group as well, but does
not feel like a worthy 2 to one favorite here from me Barry, but
where did you land? Yeah, not, not from outside like
that, just another kind of bad draw, especially with the six
Miss Worldwide. I mean, they they're going to
have to make a decision either to run with Miss Worldwide or
kind of try to sit back and then get hung out wide.
And either way, it's it's a tough trip.
But dancing magic seems like the horse that might benefit the
most from that can good, pretty good position here, especially
if miss worldwide goes out front and and somebody wants to run
with her. I'm not really sure who may be
the four, I don't even know how to pronounce that, but.
That horse, Wella Paloma. There you go.
Wella Paloma and Lynn's Milky Way have to have some giddy up,
because if if Miss Worldwide gets out there and winging it,
irad's just going to just be sitting chilly come to the top
of the stretch. But if they do kind of get into
a tussle, Dancing Magic might be the beneficiary and and scoop
them all. What you just described is why I
think Misses Worldwide is the most likely winner of this
thing, because if I read has any patience at all.
He's going to be in a great. Spot in this field right I I am
interested by the the second timer Inland's Milky Way.
What's what's so bad? I, I feel so Luis Ramirez, the
trainer here, is over his last 22 off of this kind of layoff.
But this is a daughter of a volatile, you know, that
violence Lineberry. And you know, it's something
that I, I try not to do this time of year, but I'm sure all
of us are guilty of is because we're looking ahead to races
like the Oaks and, and, you know, eventually the Acorn or
whatever and the Derby and then, you know, the Triple Crown
itself. I think sometimes we put the
expectations of horses in these races on the horses rather than
just looking at this as the seven furlong Sprint that it is,
you know what I mean? And a runner like Lynn's Milky
Way makes a lot of sense in here.
If you look at the breeding, if you look at the last effort, if
you look at where those time, those time form US pace figures
are, this horse is going to be the fastest in this race early.
Now, can she keep the pace going over that longer, You know, that
longer first stretch, especially up there at Tampa, but before
she gets into the turn, I simply don't know.
And I don't know if the connections are ready for this.
Luis Ramirez just Simply put, doesn't win stakes races.
It's not what he does. It's not the kind of trainer
that he is. Smaller barn, 77 runs all of
last year. But man, this sets up really,
really well. But this might be my see my my
single in here, Barry, just because I do think for all the
reasons that you mentioned, this is worldwide probably going to
get a very good trip here. Yeah, I, I mean, there's a
million ways you can lose a horse race, but I'm not sure
what we're going to get here. I mean, this is a really
interesting race. Like in in this pick 4 scenario,
I would I would definitely kind of go a little deeper.
And myself personally, I would. I wouldn't even use misses.
Worldwide, right. OK, yeah, right.
No, try to get some value. That's right.
And you know it, you know, on the on the Happy Hour podcast
that we do the horse racing happy hour, I always try to find
in a sequence the horse that if you beat that horse, then you're
going to maximize your pay, right?
What does that look like going in?
I actually think that horse is in the last leg of this.
I think it's Payne Noir in the wayward last.
If you can beat that horse, if you can beat her, the daughter
of Mendelssohn, I think you're going to have the best chance to
to raise the, you know, the, the, the pay for the pick 4.
But I hear you, Missus Worldwide's another cog in that.
You know, in that link here of the pick four that if you could
beat her in the second leg here, you're going to be looking at a
better payout by the time we do get to Race 7.
But before then, we got a maiden special weight over the turf
short using the turf shoot at a mile and a 16th there.
One of the finest turf courses in America.
This is for Phillies and Mares 4 and up in the maiden ranks.
Some interesting ones in here. You mentioned wanting to go a
little bit deeper in Race 5. I'm probably going a little bit
deeper here in Race 6. Barry, let's do a quick pick
here. Who do you Who is your most
likely winner and who is your most likely upset long shot
winner? That's a tough one in this race
because, yeah, I mean, I would say probably the One Union
Harmony would be my most likely winner.
I know that, you know, it looks a little wonky when the horse
ran good on the synthetic then went to the turf, but that was a
tough, tough race and didn't get a exactly good trip.
And I think the going to Edwin this time at Tampa sets up for
for a better trip for that horse and the two doesn't seem all
that, you know, intimidating in this spot, even with irad.
So so there. There's some options here, but
does. That feel a little to you like
with with Chad, which I Brown training the two here.
This is just like, hey, let's try this horse and this is a
daughter of Nyquist. We've paid a lot of money for
this horse. Let's just see if the Clarovich
folks can get a maiden win in the maiden special weight ranks.
Does it feel like that just switching surfaces like this?
It does. Depend at least.
Yeah, yeah. Because if this horse was meant,
you know, for the grass originally, they would have at
least had one start on the grass already.
Especially with chat room. That's right, exactly this.
This seems like a little kind of desperation moving and we'll see
that quite a bit. I know over the years, past
couple of years on big days, you'd see some outfits try to do
this, try to put one over and and couldn't do it at a short
price. Command Performance was one of
them and they paid a lot of money for the horse and he lost
to a 20 to one shot that day on on Tampa Derby day.
But the long shot would be the seven.
Mecat just hasn't done anything wrong yet.
Doesn't look all that bad pedigree wise out of Kitten's
Joy, so I'd I'd give that one a shot in this kind of strange
wide open race. Hey, get Arnold Delacour like
you said, Daniel Santino gets the amount there they and not a
small sample size 25% together there at at Tampa Bay first time
starters, 12 percenters for Arnold Delacour as well.
I'll go to the outside for my most likely winner here.
Give me the 10 in here. Just one more for Christoph
Clement coming into his barn for the first time.
He has won five of his last 15 in that scenario.
And this kind of layoff is what he does best at 22%.
He turns horses around off. This kind of layoff horse ran in
middle November, getting about two months off here before she
runs again here. 4 year old daughter of English Channel.
It screams turf with this one for sure and so hopefully she'll
be able to get it done. Man, I went to a different place
for my long shot in this one. I'm interested to see if if
runaway lights only 6 to one. I know, but this is a horse that
they tried on the dirt last time and it simply didn't work.
Before that was in the in Maryland.
In New York, it similarly didn't work.
Maybe Sammy Camacho at Tampa is what this horse needs just to
kind of breakthrough out of the Sacco barn here.
I I just wonder if maybe it's just Sammy on the turf that this
horse needs this daughter of City of Light.
We've seen a lot from the City of Lights.
And so I'll lean on the five as my long shot here.
But I will go outside to just one more the 10 as my as my most
likely winner in the maiden special.
We move on to the wayward last. It is Race 7 at Tampa on
Saturday, Mile on the 16th on the dirt.
This is for Phillies and Mares 4 and up.
Barry, do you find yourself? So I haven't made a mistake yet
writing 2025. I haven't written 2024 since
January 1st. Now that I'm jinxing myself, I'm
sure I'll do it tomorrow. But I also haven't screwed up
and said 3 and up yet instead of four and up.
Do you find when we get to the new year you forget that we're
doing 4 and up 1st? I've done it a billion times
since the 1st man. It's, it's unreal, unbelievable.
Oh, no. All right.
Well, there you go. Who do you have in the wayward
lass? I think that Payne Noir is the
is the cog in the chain of the Pick 4 here.
Where do you fall? You know, this is going to sound
strange, but I'm going to go to the old Pro Dream concert.
Nice almost won this race last year off a similar effort prior
to so kind of like a pattern and got swooped by Opus 42 late last
year just got nailed right at the wire and this horse seems to
be coming in the race similarly and there's not a whole lot in
here. I think literate stands a pretty
good chance, but this is another wide open affair.
So like, I don't know if you've heard me talk about it before,
but Tampa has these races like one or two a day that have these
inexplicable results and the board just absolutely blows up.
It seems like this might be the race that something weird.
Happens. Interesting.
All right. I was looking in a different
direction. Little Jamie, she jumps off the
page for me here. Tried her in the Indiana Oaks.
She almost won that race, right behind Chantalis, who actually
got mentioned on the podcast yesterday as well.
They tried her in the Monmouth Oaks and then after that, things
just didn't click. They gave the horse some time
off here a couple of months. It's not a great angle for
Robert Medina, the trainer here. But I do think this horse did
need the time off. And so I think in her case, this
is a chance to get back to that kind of field.
She was only one for 9:00 last year.
But hey, if Barry can take an over for 9:00 last last year, I
can definitely take a one for. 9 here.
There we go. I think at 9:00 to 2:00, that's
very, very fair number on that. I think actually she'll take up.
I think she'll be 5 to one. I think there's a chance of
pain. War, by the way, is like one to
two in this race Bear and people just fall in love with you know
the oh, this horse ran in the greatest stakes at Churchill and
one at Churchill under Floran Giroux and blah blah and like
instead of actually looking at wow, this race is going to set
up at all of those kinds of things can pay more win here.
Of course, you and I know yes, she can of course she fits the
she fits the mold. You know the daughter of
Mendelssohn. Can she go the two turns and win
this race? Of course she can, but like I
said, if this is the cog and the chain that I'm talking about,
then yeah, we got to try to beat her in this spot.
What do you think of Literate in here?
Comes off the handicap on the synthetic or Excuse?
Yeah, on the synthetic there at a Gulfstream after running up at
Woodbine is going to try the dirt here for the second time
ever. How do you how do you look at a
horse like that in a sequence like this?
I like Literate in this spot because she's probably going to
get overlooked to a certain degree just because of her
running style. Just definitely needs a trip.
I wouldn't take too short of a price on her but she might get
the the pace to run into. My thought is little Jamie and
and the inside horse could get involved with each other early.
Throw in a little Bundencia and you got a little party and that
kind of sets it up for a horse like Literate and also Dream
Concert. So that's that's kind of what I
mapped out as far as the the pace scenario.
Well, there you go. Well Barry, we will bother you
ahead of the Tampa Bay Derby on this show as well.
Make sure that we get all of your thoughts there.
If you haven't started to do it, I will go ahead and do it right
now, Tampa. What are you doing?
Get my guy Barry back over there for the Tampa Bay Derby.
What are we doing? What are we doing?
By the way, you got to go back and listen.
I asked Jason to say something nice about you on the podcast
yesterday and he he referred to you as something very specific
and I think you need to hear it and not for.
I love that you kind of already know what it is.
But he's Berry's bears. He's out there in frigid
Florida. Oh, it feels so bad for you up
here at the Commonwealth Berry. But have you know, did you guys
have a great holiday? How was everything happened?
Absolutely. We had a hell of a time.
My my son was home from the Navy.
So yeah, it's got to spend some time with him.
And hey, everything's everybody's healthy and healthy.
Prayers and and thoughts going out to everybody out there in LA
too. It's so hard to watch bear,
because you know, once you, you know, one of the great things
about getting to do these shows and and the podcast and, and you
know, everything else is to travel and see horse racing and
all of its iterations around the world, right?
It all of its regionalisms and you know, we do a bunch of stuff
around Maryland. I love the Maryland horse
culture. You know, you're in Florida.
There's such a difference between the Gulfstream and Tampa
cultures. And then, you know, we've got
the New Orleans thing, we've got the Hot Springs thing.
Of course, we've got New York City and LA in our sport And,
and you know, this weird thing in Kentucky going on and, and
it's, it is heartbreaking when you get to spend time with the
people at a place like Santa Anita.
It's so easy when you sit in Kentucky to just kind of push it
aside and not think about it. But man, Clocker's corner at the
top of the stretch there in the mornings with the, you know, the
sun coming over the mountains and, you know, just the free
coffee sitting out and everybody just talking during the
workouts, man, there might not be a more cordial and, and fun
and interesting group of people in horse racing than right
there. And I hate to think what's
happening to them right now with all the fires out there.
So be safe, everybody out there. And Barry, we will catch up with
you down the line. I'm glad everything was great
for the holidays my friend, and we will talk to you next time.
All right. Thank you so much for having me
man. All right, Barry, thank you very
much. And that was Barry Spears here.
We will wrap up this edition of the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
My name is Louis Ribow, Thanks so much for joining us today.
We were presented by the Kentucky HBPAKYHBP a.com.
Get in with them. Great stuff on the website right
now. So make sure you get over there
and learn all about the great people making our great sport go
here in the state of Kentucky. I'm Louis Ribow.
This has been the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
Thanks so much for making us part of your horse racing week.
We'll see you next week, and good luck this weekend with all
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