Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

New York winter strategy paying off for Linda Rice

- By David Grening Follow David Grening on Twitter @DRFGrening

OZONE PARK, N.Y. – After finishing second in the standings each of the last five winters, trainer Linda Rice is poised to win her first Aqueduct winter meet title this season.

Following a month during which she won 16 races from her last 50 starters, Rice has 43 wins at the meet, eight more than three-time defending winter meet champion Rudy Rodriguez. There are six days remaining in the winter meet, which ends on March 31.

An Aqueduct winter meet title would be a first for Rice, who has won outright or shared the Aqueduct spring title three times. Rice also shared a Belmont spring/summer meet title and in 2009 she became the first female to win a Saratoga trainer title with 20 wins.

“Absolutely,” Rice said when asked if winning an Aqueduct winter meet title was meaningful. “The winter meet at Aqueduct is important to me and my clients. I keep a lot of horses here in the winter. I think it’s a great time to run in New York.”

Rice’s run of successful winter meets coincided with a decision she made six years ago not to split her stable between Florida and New York.

“I thought we got positive results out of that,” said Rice, who has won 169 races over the last five Aqueduct winter meets.

Rice did maintain a small string at Gulfstream and Tampa Bay this winter – she won a race at both meets – consisting of mostly turf horses.

Training around the winter weather is the biggest hurdle for horsemen in the Northeast. In reality, the last two winters have been tame. After a cold snap that canceled racing for the first 10 days in January 2018, there was only one card canceled last winter over the last two months. This winter, there were only three full-card cancellati­ons.

“Over the last five winters, maybe two were a little rough,” Rice said. “You just learn how to train around it. We got a nice barn where we can jog horses in the shed row when we have days you can’t go out to the track.”

For the second straight winter, Rice has enjoyed success with her string of female sprinters. Holiday Disguise, Split Time, and Startwiths­ilver won three of the seven stakes Rice won at Aqueduct last winter. They have won three of the six stakes Rice has won this winter, including Startwiths­ilver’s victory in Saturday’s Correction Stakes.

Rice also won three stakes with New York-bred male sprinters Blindwilli­e McTell and Bavaro. Blindwilli­e McTell recently returned to Rice’s barn after getting time off due to an infection. Rice said Blindwilli­e McTell got stepped on when he stumbled at the start of the Rego Park Stakes, which he won on Jan. 13. Blindwilli­e McTell is pointing to a division of the New York Stallion Stakes here on April 20.

Holiday Disguise, who won the Broadway Stakes on Feb. 16, could make her next start in the Grade 3 Distaff here on April 5. Holiday Disguise won that race last year.

Manny Franco on a hot streak

As hot as Linda Rice has been over the last month, jockey Manny Franco has been hotter.

Over the last 13 Aqueduct cards at which he has ridden, Franco has won 30 races from 84 mounts (35.7 winning percentage) to cement what will be his second straight Aqueduct winter riding title.

Franco has 90 wins, 24 more than Junior Alvarado in second and 40 more than both Dylan Davis and Jose Lezcano, who are tied for third. There are six days remaining in the winter season.

Since Feb. 21, Franco has had 10 multiple-win days, including a five-win day on March 10 and four-win days on Feb. 21 and Sunday.

Durkin’s Call eyeing Wood

Durkin’s Call earned a career-best 87 Beyer Speed Figure for his 7 1/4-length victory in Sunday’s $100,000 Gander Stakes for New Yorkbred 3-year-olds at Aqueduct.

The victory was the third from nine outs for Durkin’s Call, who was making his first start since being privately purchased last month by owners Adam Wachtel, Peter Deutsch, and Christophe­r Dunn and turned over to Bill Mott.

The Gander was run as a one-turn mile, but it is likely Durkin’s Call will get a chance to stretch out around two turns in his next start, possibly the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct on April 6.

Wachtel also said he would talk to Mott about possibly making Durkin’s Call a late nominee to the Triple Crown series. The deadline for a $6,000 late nomination fee is April 1.

◗ When 60-1 shot Manifest Destiny won Sunday’s seventh race at Aqueduct, it created a two-card pick-6 carryover of $133,982 into Friday.

Friday’s pick-6 will begin on race 4 (3:15 p.m. Eastern) and includes three maiden races.

The six races in the sequence have fields of 8, 6, 8, 7, 8, and 10.

 ?? FASIG-TIPTON PHOTO ?? Linda Rice, with 43 winners at the current Aqueduct meet, is on the cusp of notching her first winter meet training title.
FASIG-TIPTON PHOTO Linda Rice, with 43 winners at the current Aqueduct meet, is on the cusp of notching her first winter meet training title.

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