14/05/2020. (UK) GOLDEN STARS LINING UP FOR OPPENHEIMER // (USA) Oaklawn Park’s Louis Cella on the TDN Writers’ Room – Watch the podcast on Vimeo – or listen audio-only version

 

GOLDEN STARS LINING UP FOR OPPENHEIMER

By Emma Berry

Exactly five years ago, Golden Horn (GB) led home his stablemate Jack Hobbs (GB) for a John Gosden-trained one-two in the G2 Dante S. at York, foreshadowing the result of the Derby a little over three weeks later. Golden Horn’s Classic victory ignited a gloriousseason for his owner-breeder Anthony Oppenheimer, whose colt by Cape Cross (Ire) represented generations of hisfamily’s Hascombe And Valiant Studs’ breeding.

Golden Horn went on to claim victory in the Coral-Eclipse S., Irish Champion S. and Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe before narrowly losing out in the Breeders’ Cup Turf and retiring to Dalham Hall Stud. Oppenheimer may well have reflected on that triumphant year, which came half a century after hisfather Sir Philip Oppenheimer had bought Hascombe Stud, and felt that it would be hard to top. Indeed, a homebred Derby winner is the realisation of excellence in the pursuit of Thoroughbred breeding, and though Golden Horn’s achievements have not been topped, they have come close to being equalled by another two homebreds in recent seasons.

Two years later, Oppenheimer had another legitimate Classic contender on his hands in the shape of Cracksman (GB), a huge-striding son of the mighty Frankel (GB).

https://www.thoroughbreddailynews.com/pdf/tdn/tdn200514e.pdf

 

Oaklawn Park’s Louis Cella on the TDN Writers’ Room 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
On this week’s episode of the TDN Writers’ Room podcast presented by Keeneland, the writers were joined by Oaklawn Park owner and president Louis Cella to discuss the challenges and logistics of running a race meet in the coronavirus era. Oaklawn, along with Gulfstream and Tampa, have led the way for major tracks continuing operations uninterrupted through the pandemic, and Cella, as the  Green Group Guest of the Week, talked about the advice they can impart as other ones start to reopen.

 

   “Some of the details that we’ve shared with other tracks: we take the temperature of every single person every single day,” he said of a system that Churchill Downs has also adopted for its backstretch. “That’s over 900 people from Mar. 15 on, and we have color-coded bands. So today is yellow, tomorrow might be green, and if you’re not wearing the right color, you step aside immediately. We have our trainers going into their barns temping also every single day. So it’s been truly a group effort and we’re very fortunate that we were able to pull this off, and I hope the other tracks will as well.”

 

   Cella also talked about the difficulty of running a racetrack without casino revenues, something other tracks will have to contend with as they reopen before casinos are able to.

 

   “We cannot have the purses that we have at $600,000 a day if we do not have that casino alternative revenue source,” he said. “The spigot turned off on Mar. 15. So we reduced our purses by 35% in anticipation of trying to make the numbers work. Our horsemen agreed. Our commission agreed. And that’s why we were able to give away just a freckle under $30 million, which is extraordinary given the circumstances.”

 

   Elsewhere on the show, in the  West Point News of the Week, the crew debated the reasoning for and implications of The Jockey Club’s new 140-mare cap for stallions, looked forward to the return of racing to Kentucky and California, and called for more transparency in the reporting of workouts. Click here to listen to the podcast, and click here to watch it on Vimeo.
 
 

 

by : TDN