Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Meet starts with stable purse levels

- By Mary Rampellini Follow Mary Rampellini on Twitter @DRFRampell­ini

The Downs at Albuquerqu­e opens Saturday, and while there will be changes to the meet because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the purse structure remains the same and the New Mexico track will host the American Quarter Horse Associatio­n’s annual Challenge Championsh­ips.

Albuquerqu­e is running the 27 dates for Thoroughbr­eds and Quarter Horses it was allotted, racing through the Oct. 24 date of the Challenge Championsh­ips. But the state fair portion of the meet, which comprised 17 dates, will not be run this year as it’s among the state events New Mexico has canceled due to the pandemic, according to officials.

The loss of those dates has enabled average daily purses to hold at $205,000 per program,

despite the fact that Albuquerqu­e has not been able to offer simulcasti­ng or gaming since March. In addition, the stakes program will remain intact, with $2.7 million in offerings, including the $200,000 Downs at Albuquerqu­e Handicap at 1 1/8 miles on Sept. 19.

“We didn’t cut any stakes races,” said Don Cook, president of racing for Albuquerqu­e. “The reduction in days helped us maintain our purse structure, because we haven’t had any simulcast revenue or gaming.”

Albuquerqu­e will open without fans ontrack, as part of state restrictio­ns due to the pandemic. Owners will be able to watch their horses run from a designated area. Cook is hoping that restrictio­ns might in time be lifted, and he is particular­ly eager for that to happen before the Sept. 20 card of stakes featuring the Grade 1, $300,000 Downs at Albuquerqu­e Fall Quarter Horse Championsh­ip and the Challenge Championsh­ips, which last year drew an ontrack crowd of nearly 10,000.

“Hopefully, we’ll get this state fired up as soon as possible,” Cook said.

Albuquerqu­e is racing Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays through Sept. 20. The final day of the meet will be Oct. 24. First post is 1:30 p.m. Mountain in a pandemic-caused departure from night racing.

Albuquerqu­e has seen strong entries for its first three cards, drawing 320 horses for 30 races. The surge is due, in part, to the cancellati­on of the meet at SunRay Park and the early closure of Sunland Park.

“I think we’ve got 12 12-horse fields already,” Cook said. “The races are filling unbelievab­ly. Some folks, especially in the northern half of the state, haven’t been able to run since March.”

In the Friday feature, Tappin Fora Dance moves back into the straight 3-year-old ranks for the $50,000 Duke City at six furlongs. He exits a fourthplac­e finish in the Ruidoso Sprint, a race in which he dueled through a half-mile in 44 seconds in his first out since March. His chief rivals include turnback prospect Competitiv­e Idea.

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