Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Calling the race among silence

- By David Grening

ELMONT, N.Y. – For the past five years, Larry Collmus and John Imbriale have shared the announcer’s booth on Belmont Stakes Day. Collmus would call the majority of the races, including the Belmont, while Imbriale would call the races following the Belmont.

Saturday, Collmus and Imbriale will be among the few people even allowed on the grounds of Belmont Park, each one calling the race for a different audience. Collmus, as the race-caller for NBC, will describe the action for a national television audience. Imbriale, who is calling his first Belmont Park meet as the fulltime New York Racing Associatio­n announcer, will be heard by those watching on a variety of advance-deposit wagering platforms that show the track feed.

Neither one’s call will be heard by a live audience because no fans or owners are permitted to attend Belmont Park due to COVID-19-related restrictio­ns. That protocol has been in place since racing resumed here on June 3 and will likely continue through the end of the meet on July 12.

This was not how Imbriale envisioned his first Belmont Stakes call.

“I guess I’m a pretty big jinx,” Imbriale said. “The distance changes, the [Triple Crown race order] changes, no fans. You got to go with the hand that’s dealt you.”

This will be the 10th Belmont Stakes for Collmus, who took over the Triple Crown announcer’s job from Tom Durkin in 2011. Collmus became NYRA’s lead track announcer in 2015, but negotiatio­ns on a new contract fell through last fall and he was not retained. On Wednesday, it was announced that Collmus would be calling the Del Mar summer meet.

“It’ll be a different feel coming back to Belmont Park than it’s ever been,” Collmus said. “But I’m looking forward, as always, to working with the great folks at NBC and calling my 10th Belmont stakes.”

Collmus will have a different vantage point for this year’s Belmont. He will be calling the race from a camera platform on the third floor, on the finish line. NBC will be on air from 2:45 p.m. to 6 p.m. and Collmus will be calling races 6 through 10 for a national audience.

“I’ll be there by myself calling the races,” Collmus said.

Collmus called the two most recent Triple Crown winners in the Belmont – American Pharoah in 2015 and Justify in 2018. This year, the Belmont will be the first leg of the Triple Crown, with the Derby having been moved to Sept. 5 and the Preakness to Oct. 3.

“The way I’m approachin­g it is it’s the kick-off to the Triple Crown that has finally begun,” Collmus said. “The distance, the date, the order, everything is completely different this year.”

He said the lack of an ontrack audience will only be noticeable to him right before and right after the race is run.

“Leading up to the race every year, as the horses approach the gate for the Belmont Stakes and the field is right in front of the stands, the place just keeps getting louder and louder and louder and you do feed off the energy of that as the horses go into the gate,” Collmus said. “Once the race starts, the race starts, and then it’ll be bizarre when the race is over and you don’t hear anything again.”

Because the Belmont distance has been changed from 1 1/2 miles to 1 1/8 miles, the start of the race goes from right in front of the announcers to the farthest point of the track. The 1 1/8-mile races start out of a chute on the backstretc­h.

“I think it’ll be fine,” Collmus said. “If there are a couple of spots that’ll be a little difficult, I’ll have hi-def monitors. I don’t anticipate any problems.”

Imbriale said the distance change could pose challenges.

“You always worry coming out of chute that you’re going to miss a little bit of a hesitant start for somebody,” Imbriale said. “That’s the concern at a mile and a half versus a mile and an eighth.”

Rider switch on Max Player

The owners of Max Player will have to pay a double jockey’s fee for the Belmont Stakes after making a late switch from Dylan Davis to Joel Rosario, according to the stewards. Thus, whatever Rosario earns, Davis will also get.

The stewards said that Davis had a call with trainer Linda Rice to ride Max Player in the Belmont. On Sunday, Rice said Rosario would ride Max Player, leaving Davis without a mount for the race.

George Hall, who owns majority interest in Max Player, said he wanted the experience of Rosario, who won the Belmont last year on Sir Winston.

“We will honor what the stewards think is appropriat­e,” Hall said. “I hadn’t had any direct discussion with Dylan Davis or the stewards. In this race, Joel Rosario is the right guy for this horse given his experience, so I think he is my first choice for this horse.”

Davis rode Max Player to victory in the Grade 3 Withers Stakes at Aqueduct on Feb. 1. The horse was pointing to the Grade 3 Matt Winn at Churchill Downs on May 23. In order to ride the horse in that race, Davis, who had been riding at Gulfstream, went to Kentucky a week early to serve a trackmanda­ted quarantine period due to the coronaviru­s. Ultimately, Max Player didn’t run in that race.

Mike Migliore, Davis’s agent, said that Davis gave up calls on seven horses that won at Gulfstream Park during that week. Migliore notified the stewards of his call with Rice.

“I had to look out for my client,” Migliore said.

In the 2017 Breeders’ Cup Distaff, Rosario was on the other side of a jockey switch when owner Charles Fipke took him off Forever Unbridled in favor of John Velazquez. Forever Unbridled won and Fipke had to pay Rosario the same amount that Velazquez earned.

 ?? NYRA (IMBRIALE); BILL DENVER/EQUI-PHOTO (COLLMUS) ?? John Imbriale (left) and Larry Collmus will each call the Belmont Stakes for a different audience. With no fans ontrack, they won’t hear the usual roar of the crowd.
NYRA (IMBRIALE); BILL DENVER/EQUI-PHOTO (COLLMUS) John Imbriale (left) and Larry Collmus will each call the Belmont Stakes for a different audience. With no fans ontrack, they won’t hear the usual roar of the crowd.

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