New York Post

Rice out to be 1st woman trainer to win Triple Crown race

- By GREG JOYCE

Linda Rice has recorded 2,018 career victories on the way to becoming one of the most accomplish­ed female thoroughbr­ed trainers in her sport. But the New York-based horse racing lifer is still chasing the big one: a win in a Triple Crown race.

Rice will have another shot at it Saturday with Max Player in the Belmont Stakes as she tries to become the first female trainer to ever win a leg of the Triple Crown.

“It would be great to win one,”

Rice said Wednesday after Max Player drew the third post position with 15-1 odds. “Obviously things have changed in the last 100 years here. So there’s a lot more women training horses now than there were 100 years ago, so chances are, given a little more time, sooner or later, a woman will win this race.”

Max Player will be Rice’s third contender for a Triple Crown win. Her first came in 2003, when Supervisor finished fifth in the Belmont Stakes. She later saddled Kid Cruz in the 2014 Preakness for an eighth-place finish.

Rice is one of 10 female trainers to run a horse in the Belmont Stakes. Dianne Carpenter came the closest to making history in 1988, when her Kingpost placed second to Risen Star. Sarah Lundy was the first female trainer to saddle a horse in the Belmont Stakes in 1984 with Minstrel Star.

“They just haven’t given women enough time yet,” Rice said jokingly with a laugh.

Rice grew up around horse racing in Wisconsin, where her father, Clyde, was a trainer. By 1987, at the age of 23, she was a licensed trainer herself and in 2009 she became the first woman to win a training title at a major American racing circuit, when she edged Todd Pletcher for the Saratoga summer meet.

Three more New York training titles later, Rice is back with a

Belmont contender. She had to navigate uncharted territory to get there, with the coronaviru­s pandemic disrupting Max Player’s race schedule and forcing a long layoff entering Saturday, but now she has another shot to make history.

“Horse racing right now, we’re just happy to be racing,” Rice said. “Horse racing has gone through some difficult times, like any other business in this economy with the pandemic. I’d like to see more women get more opportunit­y, and hopefully in time they will.”

 ??  ?? LINDA RICE
LINDA RICE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States