Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Horsemen hope for end to quarantine

- By David Grening Follow David Grening on Twitter @DRFGrening

OZONE PARK, N.Y. – New York racing officials and horsemen are hopeful that a quarantine placed on a Belmont Park barn Jan. 10 will be lifted later this week.

A horse trained by Linda Rice tested positive for the equine herpesviru­s (EHV-1) on Jan. 9. That unraced 3-year-old male had a temperatur­e for several days before being sent to the Cornell Ruffian Equine Hospital across the street from the Belmont barn area. The horse did not show any neurologic­al signs of the virus.

The unnamed horse was returned to Belmont Park on Jan. 11 and isolated in an empty barn on the backside. Meanwhile, horses in Barn 44, where Rice has about 40 horses and David Duggan six, were placed under quarantine.

The horse was scheduled to be re-tested Wednesday, and the results are expected back Thursday or Friday morning. NYRA has allowed both Rice and Duggan to enter horses for Friday’s Aqueduct card, and they will be permitted to run pending a negative EHV-1 test on that horse. Rice entered Holiday Disguise in the reschedule­d $100,000 La Verdad Stakes.

On Monday, Rice said that the horse in question was doing well and did not have a temperatur­e. She even showed a visitor a video of the horse charging the front of his stall when his handler was preparing his food.

“He shows no signs of illness,” Rice said. “He’s feeling very good and anxious to get back to work.”

During the quarantine period, horses stabled in Barn 44 were not permitted to train with the general horse population. Since Jan. 12, the training track has closed at 10 a.m. – 30 minutes earlier than usual – and from 10:15 to 11:15 horses based in Barn 44 were allowed to train.

Since the quarantine was put in place, horses based at Belmont have not been permitted to ship out of town.

Trainer Jason Servis is keeping close tabs on the situation as he has the filly Actress, winner of the Grade 3 Comely Stakes, stabled at Belmont Park and is thinking of shipping her to Sam Houston for the Grade 3, $400,000 Houston Ladies Classic on Jan. 28.

Servis said his only options are to fly the filly via FedEx, and those planes typically leave on Fridays.

If Servis and owners Gary and Mary West opt to skip that race, Actress is nominated to Sunday’s $100,000 Ladies Handicap at Aqueduct. As of Monday, a small field was expected for the Ladies, including Bombshell, Just Got Out, and Sherini. Possible runners included Girl Talk and Julerette.

Field of six for Jazil

There is a void of older male stakes horses on the grounds, evidenced by the fact only six horses were entered Monday for Saturday’s $100,000 Jazil Stakes and the Alex M. Robb, a race for New York-breds, has not been able to fill for two straight days.

The 9-year-old Turco Bravo, a horse who has won stakes at Belmont, Saratoga, and over Aqueduct’s now defunct inner track, is making a third attempt at the Jazil.

Turco Bravo finished second in this race in 2015 and sixth in 2016. He did not participat­e in the race in 2017, a year in which he went winless from 11 starts. Turco Bravo, claimed for $32,000 by David Cannizzo last September, hasn’t won since taking the Birdstone Stakes at Saratoga in 2016.

Turco Bravo will face a field that includes Harlan Punch, a recent allowance winner for David Jacobson; Back side of the moon; Do you know something; and Unbridled Daddy. Also entered was Clowney, who shipped here from Parx Racing last month for trainer Patricia Farro to win a starter allowance going 1 1/4 miles.

Meanwhile, the Alex M. Robb had seven horses when originally carded for Dec. 31, a card that was ultimately canceled due to weather. It has since been reschedule­d twice, but there have not been enough entries to fill.

The racing office may bring it back for next Sunday or, at the latest, Jan. 25.

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