Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Cohen forging local success

- By Mary Rampellini Follow Mary Rampellini on Twitter @DRFRampell­ini

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. – Jockey David Cohen is in the midst of a strong meet at Oaklawn Park, but has yet to team in the afternoon with some of the highprofil­e horses he’s been working in the mornings. That changes Friday. Cohen will be aboard Wonder Gadot, a leading candidate for Canadian Horse of the Year who starts her season in an allowance. And looking ahead to March 16, trainer Mark Casse said Cohen will have the mount on champion Shamrock Rose in the Grade 2, $350,000 Azeri.

Mounts of that quality – and the support of the meet’s current leading owner, M and M Racing – have put Cohen in a position to vie for the title at Oaklawn. He had won 27 races at the meet through Wednesday, three behind six-time Oaklawn champ Ricardo Santana Jr.

Cohen, with 120 mounts, is winning races at a 23 percent clip – highest of all riders with five or more mounts at the meet, according to Equibase. He’s also already closing in on his win total from last year – 37 – when he was coming back from a more than three-year hiatus. This year, he’s at full force for Oaklawn.

“I’m very excited about implementi­ng a lot of higherend business,” Cohen, 34, said. “We’re riding in a lot of the stakes, have a lot of stakes and allowance horses that we really didn’t have coming in last year.”

One of the driving forces behind that developmen­t is Casse, the trainer of Wonder Gadot who has brought a division to Oaklawn. The trainer put Cohen on Power Gal for her win in last month’s $125,000 Martha Washington, and he’s named him to ride her again Saturday in the Grade 3, $200,000 Honeybee, a points race for the Kentucky Oaks.

Casse and Cohen first teamed last year at Woodbine, when Cohen traveled from his New York base to guide 6-1 starter Federal Law to a close runnerup finish in the $225,000 Coronation Futurity in November.

“I don’t know how many races David’s ridden for me, but I’ve been extremely impressed,” Casse said. “I don’t think he’s ever ridden a bad race for me. I have the utmost confidence in him.”

Cohen said he’s grateful for Casse’s support.

“It’s one of those relationsh­ips that just clicked,” Cohen said.

“What he’s giving me are very live, live opportunit­ies, and we’ve been able to make the most of them.”

The needed numbers to make a splash in the standings come courtesy of the M and M Racing stable of Mike and Mickala Sisk.

“They’re great supporters year round, and obviously, more so here,” Cohen said. “They’re more active here than in New York. This is where they focus. They have a house in Hot Springs. There’s not too many owners you ride four to five horses a day for – they are just great.”

Cohen won three races for M and M on March 2, with all trained by Robertino Diodoro. Cohen also has won for M and M’s other trainers at the meet, Karl Broberg and Norm McKnight.

For the card Saturday, Cohen has an additional stakes mount. He has been named to ride Heartwood in the $150,000 Hot Springs Stakes. Cohen was aboard the Kentucky shipper last month when he won the King Cotton at Oaklawn.

Cohen said following the meet he will ride at Churchill Downs rather than in New York, a decision he made in part because of the increased purse structure the Kentucky track is rolling out for 2019.

“I knew that was coming up,” Cohen said. “I always wanted to make that a part of my circuit. I’ve had a house there a few years, and it looks like I’ll have good support of owners and trainers in Kentucky.”

Until then, Cohen is focusing on Oaklawn and specifical­ly on Wonder Gadot on Friday.

“She’s doing great,” he said. “I worked her the other day out of the gate and she worked well. The way she covers ground, she just does it so effortless­ly and just glides over the track.”

Just as smooth as the meet Cohen is having at Oaklawn.

Gray Attempt may skip Rebel

Gray Attempt, the winner of the $150,000 Smarty Jones in January at Oaklawn, is not certain to make the Grade 2, $1 million Rebel on March 16, trainer Jinks Fires said Monday.

“We could go in if it would be a really short field,” Fires said Monday.

Gray Attempt finished 11th after a rough go around the first turn in the Southwest here in his last start, and missed training after the race due to filling in an ankle. The horse is back on schedule, but Fires said the ideal plan might be to await the Arkansas Derby.

◗ Trainer Steve Asmussen said that She’s a Julie, winner of the Grade 3, $200,000 Bayakoa here last month, is being considered for the Azeri on March 16. Copper Bullet, who ran second by a neck in the Grade 3 Razorback last month at Oaklawn, is under considerat­ion for the Grade 2 New Orleans Handicap at Fair Grounds, said Asmussen.

◗ Madaket Stables has purchased minority interest in 3-year-old Comedian, a maiden special weight winner at Oaklawn, Bloom Racing Stable announced Thursday.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? David Cohen, riding his second full season at Oaklawn, is in a position to vie for the jockey title.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON David Cohen, riding his second full season at Oaklawn, is in a position to vie for the jockey title.

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