Top three from Louisiana Champions Day Return in Red Camelia

All the best LA-bred fillies and mares have tried, but few can beat Maximo Lamarche and Federico Deltoro’s Net a Bear. Winner of five of her last six and six of 11 turf starts overall, half-million-dollar earning 6-year-old mare looks for career win number 11 in Saturday’s 46th running of the $60,000 Red Camelia Stakes for 3-year-olds and up going 1 mile over the Stall-Wilson turf course at Fair Grounds. Seven-time stake winner, including the 2020 Red Camelia, 9-5 morning line favorite Net a Bear’s best runs have come on the turf, though she exits a dirt stakes score winning the Premiere Distaff at Delta Downs in February.

The last Time Net a Bear lost on turf was last year’s Red Camelia when she finished second to Oak Tree Stables’ Offspring (post two, Jareth Loveberry/Louie Roussel III, 7-2 ML). With three wins on the lawn, all of those have been at the 1 mile Red Camelia distance. Previously trained by Edward Johnston, Offspring makes her second start for trainer Roussel after finishing third last out behind Net a Bear and Blessed Anna.

Putting on quite the run herself, Steven and Pat Roe’s Fort Polk has won 4 out of her last 6–losing to Net a Bear twice in that stretch. But the Patrick Mouton-trained Fort Polk had her say over Net a Bear and Winning Romance in the Louisiana Champions Day Distaff. That was on the dirt course, and when they faced each other again in February, Net a Bear got the win in the Premiere Distaff at Delta Downs. Jorge Guzman will guide Fort Polk from post five as the morning line 5-2 second-favorite.

After taking the lead at the mile call, Wayne Davis’s Blessed Anna ended up third last out when going 1 1/16 miles on the Stall-Wilson turf course. Making her third start for trainer Shane Wilson, Blessed Anna looks for a second win on the grass, though finishing in the exacta seven out of nine times (post four, James Graham, 5-1 ML).

Allied Racing’s Winning Romance sped to the lead and held for 2nd, beating out Net a Bear in the Louisiana Champions Day Distaff. Making her second career start on turf, “Midas Man” Bret Calhoun looks to continue his success transferring dirt horses to the turf course. Calling upon Deshawn Parker to break from the rail, Winning Romance will likely be loose on the lead (9-2).

Whispering Oaks Farm’s Tecate Time looks for her first win on turf and at two turns in the Red Camelia. The three-time winning 4-year-old finished third last out in an allowance at Delta Downs (post three, Mitchell Murrill/Steve Flint, 12-1 ML).

Carded as race four, the first of three turf stakes races on the day, post time is scheduled for 2:35 pm CT.

Who Took the Money’s Form Casts Shadow over Eddie Johnston Field of Eleven

The 42nd edition of the $60,000 Edward J. Johnston Memorial Stakes, running under its current title for the first time on Saturday at Fair Grounds, attracted a large field of LA-bred 3-year-olds and up. Everything from first-time-turfers to multiple turf stake winners will compete on the lawn, but Allied Racing’s Who Took the Money stands out from the crowd.

Winning the Louisiana Champions Day Turf in just his second grass start, Bret Calhoun’s 4-year old is two for three on the lawn after beating a salty group of optional claimers last out, including Louisiana Champions Day Classic winner, Grand Luwegee.  Flashing an impressive late turn of foot in the Louisiana Champions Day Turf, he rallied from 12 lengths back at the third call to win by 5 ¾ lengths over Treys Midnite Moon, Budro Talking, and Mangelsen – all of who will test him again in the Eddie Johnston. Deshawn Parker keeps the mount on the 4/5 morning line favorite and will begin his voyage from post six.

If anyone could steal it from Who Took the Money, Allen Cassedy’s front-runner Mangelsen seems like a logical choice. After speeding off in the Louisiana Champions Day Turf and tiring to finish fourth, Mangelsen’s form came into question next out when losing by 9 ½ lengths as the favorite in an optional claiming starter allowance, but trainer Ron Faucheux righted the ship with the next out effort, as the gelding led throughout to beat three of his Eddie Johnston foes.  Jareth Loveberry will ride Mangelsen for the first time, sending from post seven (9-2 ML).

Multiple turf stakes winner, Hermilo Racing’s Budro Talking will make his first start in Hugo Rodriguez’s barn after being claimed out of the February optional claimer where he finished behind Mangelsen, Get Them Justin, and City Park. With a late-running style, Budro Talking will break from post eight under Mitchell Murrill looking for his 10th lifetime turf win (12-1 ML).

Snake Racing’s 7-year-old Treys Midnite Moon, a 15-time winner with a stakes victory on his resume, looks for his first win in 2022 after finishing on top five times in 2021. Third in his last three starts, including three back to Who Took the Money in the Louisiana Champions Day Turf, trainer “Bunky” Richards calls on James Graham to ride this late-kicker from post five (8-1 ML).

The remainder of the field with post position, jockey/trainer and morning line odds is as follows: Spartan Team investment’s Ballinonabudjet (post one, Colby Hernandez/Michelle Lovell, 15-1 ML) looks to make it three wins in a row while seeking the elusive first turf victory in his sixth attempt; meet-leading owner Brittlyn Stables’ Behemah Star (post two, Reylu Gutierrez/Jose Camejo, 12-1 ML) began his career sprinting and finishing 10th on the grass but has not tried since, though he exits an impressive third-level allowance dirt win at Fair Grounds in January; Autumn Hill Farms’ Get Them Justin (post three, Jose Riquelme/Sturgis Ducoing, 15-1 ML) finished second last out to Mangelsen, improving in his third turf start; Jeanne Dolan’s Changi (post four, Carlos Ulloa/Jeanne Dolan, 30-1 ML) has not won since July 2020 in 19 tries; Norman Stables’ Drewhustle (post nine, Aubrie Green/Lonnie Briley, 20-1 ML) exits a third-place allowance finish at Delta Downs but won the race prior on Fair Grounds’ dirt course; MAT Investments’ City Park (post ten, Pedro Cotto Jr./Eduardo Ramirez, 12-1 ML) is 6 for 7 on the grass, finishing third to Mangelsen and Get Them Justin last out, where he was claimed from Hugo Rodriguez; Glockenburg’s Mr. Universe (post eleven, Jose Vega/Gennadi Dorochenko, 20-1 ML) won against second-level allowance company last out, his second tally in seven turf tries.

Carded as race number eight, the last of three turf stakes races on the day, post time is scheduled for 5:36 pm CT.

 

VODKA GIMLET WINS SECOND STAKES RACE OF THE SEASON IN THE BIG DRAMA AT DELTA DOWNS

ALLEN LANDRY TRAINEE GETS CLEAR LATE TO NIP LIGHTNING STRUCK AT THE WIRE

 

Vodka Gimlet wins the Big Drama S. at Delta Downs. Coady Photography.

 

VINTON, LA. – Delta Downs hosted the $75,000 Big Drama Stakes for 3-year-olds on Saturday afternoon and it was Ellen Epstein’s Vodka Gimlet who got the win under jockey Thomas Pompell. It was the second straight stakes victory for the Allen Landry trainee as he also won the $100,000 Louisiana Premier Day Prince at Delta Downs just 21 days earlier.

 

In the early stages of the Big Drama it was a speed duel between Brian’s Iron Mike and Feisty Fist, who clicked off early fractions of 23.57 seconds for the quarter mile and 47.47 for the half. The pair began to feel pressure from the closers as they entered the second turn of the seven-furlong affair as Totalizer came to the attack three wide wile Vodka Gimlet was bottled up behind rivals.

 

As the field entered the top of the homestretch after traveling three-quarters in 1:14.61, Vodka Gimlet angled out from behind horses and took aim at Lightning Struck and Totalizer who were dueling inside the sixteenth pole. In the final strides Vodka Gimlet was able to overhaul his rivals and record the win by a neck over Lightning Struck while Totalizer settled for third, another ¾ of a length behind the top pair.

 

Vodka Gimlet stopped the clock in 1:28.59 over a track what was listed as fast all day.

 

Vodka Gimlet has now won three races lifetime from seven overall starts. His $45,000 paycheck on Saturday upped his career bankroll to $147,645.

 

Bred in Louisiana by 5 B Farm, Inc, Vodka Gimlet is a 3-year-old bay gelding by Goldencents, out of the Out of Place mare Shy Baby.

 

Sent to the gate at odds of 8-5, Vodka Gimlet paid $5.40 to win, $3.20 to place and $2.20 to show. Lightning Struck returned $10.80 to place and $5.20 to show. Totalizer was worth $3.40 to show.

 

Delta Downs will conclude its 2021-22 Thoroughbred season next Wednesday through Saturday. Post time each day is scheduled for 12:55 pm.

 

Delta Downs will wrap up its next-to-last race week on Saturday with another nine-race program starting at 12:55 pm. The featured race is the $75,000 Big Drama Stakes for 3-year-olds competing at seven furlongs.

For more information about the current season visit the track’s website at www.deltadownsracing.com. Fans can also get information about the track through Facebook by visiting the page ‘Delta Downs Racing’. The track’s Twitter handle is @deltaracing.

 

Delta Downs Racetrack Casino and Hotel, a property of Boyd Gaming Corporation (NYSE:BYD), features exciting casino action, live horse racing and fun dining experiences. Delta Downs is located in Vinton, Louisiana, on Delta Downs Drive. Fro

WHOLELOTTAMO GIVES JAYDE GELNER FIRST STAKES WIN IN THE TAKE CHARGE BRANDI AT DELTA DOWNS

DAUGHTER OF MO TOM OUTLASTS MISS JANA TO GET THE NARROW VICTORY

 

Wholelottamo wins the Take Charge Brandi Stakes at Delta Downs. Coady Photography.

 

VINTON, LA. – Delta Downs hosted the $75,000 Take Charge Brandi Stakes on Friday afternoon and it turned out to be a very special race for Thompson Racing LLC’s Wholelottamo, who gave trainer Jayde Gelner the first stakes win of his career. Jayde is the son of longtime Delta Downs trainer Scott Gelner and the grandson of late trainer John Charles Gelner.

 

Under jockey Thomas Pompell, Wholelottamo stalked an early pace set by Roll Baby and Miss Jana, who covered the opening quarter mile of the seven-furlong affair in 23.38 seconds. As the field approached the second turn it was Miss Jana who drew clear by two lengths while going a half mile in 48.66 seconds. At that point Wholelottamo began to rally and the pair reached the top of the homestretch side by side.

 

Through the final strides the outcome was still in doubt as Miss Jana dug in at the rail while Wholelottamo stayed right by her tenacious rival until the finish, when she got a narrow lead and prevailed by just a head. Wholelottamo covered the distance over a muddy racetrack in a time of 1:29.89.

 

The win by Wholelottamo was the third of her career and the second in stakes company. Her previous stakes tally came in the Louisiana Cup Juvenile at Louisiana last August when she was saddled by Scott Gelner. Friday’s paycheck of $45,000 raised Wholelottamo’s bankroll to $148,845 through eight overall starts.

 

Bred in Louisiana by Cloyce C. Clark, Jr., Wholelottamo is a 3-year-old filly by Mo Tom, out of the A. P. Jet mare Jet’s Tradition.

 

Sent to the gate as the 3-2 wagering favorite, Wholelottamo paid $5 to win, $2.80 to place and $2.40 to show. Miss Jana was worth $4.80 and $3.80. Taylors Babe returned $10.20 to show.

 

Delta Downs will wrap up its next-to-last race week on Saturday with another nine-race program starting at 12:55 pm. The featured race is the $75,000 Big Drama Stakes for 3-year-olds competing at seven furlongs.

For more information about the current season visit the track’s website at www.deltadownsracing.com. Fans can also get information about the track through Facebook by visiting the page ‘Delta Downs Racing’. The track’s Twitter handle is @deltaracing.

 

Delta Downs Racetrack Casino and Hotel, a property of Boyd Gaming Corporation (NYSE:BYD), features exciting casino action, live horse racing and fun dining experiences. Delta Downs is located in Vinton, Louisiana, on Delta Downs Drive. From Lake Charles, take Exit 7 and from Texas, take Exit 4.

 

LTBA to hold 2022 Breeders Sales Company of Louisiana Yearling Sale, October 1st

LTBA to hold 2022 Breeders Sales Company of Louisiana Yearling Sale, October 1st

The Louisiana Thoroughbred Breeders Association announced today, February 18, 2022, that they will be hosting a Yearling Sale followed by a mixed session under the banner of Breeders Sales Company of Louisiana on October 1st.

The sale will be held at the Equine Sales of Louisiana Facility in Opelousas, La. and be limited by the number of stalls at the facility being 228.

After not conducting a sale since 2015 the LTBA stepped up last year to host a sale when Equine Sales of Louisiana opted not to have a yearling sale in 2021. Last year’s sale averaged just over $13,000 with a median of $8,000.

With the introduction of Sports Betting and the coming of Historical Horse Racing Machines it is anticipated that purses for Accredited Louisiana Breds will increase dramatically.

The entry deadline is July 6th. Entry forms will be available in late May and be available to be downloaded from the Louisiana Thoroughbred Breeders Association web site of www.louisianabred.com

2021 Louisiana-Bred Foals

(November 13, 2021-January 17, 2022)

2021 Louisiana-bred foals accredited before November 13 are published in the 2022 Louisiana Horse Stallion Register.

 

2021 Louisiana-Bred Foals

Graham ‘s Cruiser First Winner for Hard Aces

Hard Aces, by Hard Spun, won the 2015 Gold Cup at Santa Anita Stakes (G1).

 

 

Graham ‘s Cruiser  became the first winner for Louisiana stallion Hard Aces  when he won a state-bred maiden race at Delta Downs Feb. 11.

The 3-year-old raced in fourth for the first three-eighths of a mile before gaining on the leaders and taking the lead in the final furlong. He won by three-quarters of a length, racing five furlongs in 1:00.78 under C. J. McMahon. He earned $22,800 for winning the $38,000 race.

Hard Aces was retired after running 11th in the Berkeley Handicap (G3) at Golden Gate Fields in November 2017 and went to stud the following year at Averett Farm in Louisiana. He currently stands there for a $2,000 fee.

 

Read BloodHorse Article

LANGS DAY STORMS HOME IN FRONT TO WIN THE $150,000 LOUISIANA PREMIER DAY CHAMPIONSHIP AT DELTA DOWNS

– FREE LIKE A GIRL NOTCHES THIRD STAKES WIN OF THE SEASON IN THE STARLET –

Langs Day wins the 19th Running of the LA Bred Premier Championship Stakes. Coady Photography

 

VINTON, LA. – Delta Downs hosted its richest program of the season on Saturday afternoon as the 19th edition of Louisiana Premier Day took center stage. The 11-race program featured 10 stakes races and more than $900,000 in total purse money for Louisiana-bred horses.

 

The featured race of the day was the $150,000 Louisiana Premier Day Championship, which featured a full field of 10 competing at 1-1/16 miles. The race appeared to be wide open without Underpressure, as the winner of the last two editions of the event was not entered this time around. The morning line favorite and race-time chalk Langs Day did not disappoint, as the Lee Thomas trainee went from last-to-first while scoring his second stakes win of the meet.

 

“He’s a simple horse but a hard horse to ride,” said jockey Ty Kennedy. “You have to let him find himself but once he hits the three-eighths pole he does the rest and I just let the big guy roll. He always runs well at Delta Downs.”

 

Langs Day is known for his strong late kick, and on Saturday he used it well. After dropping back to last in the initial strides he began to pick up momentum racing into the second and final turn while pacesetters Magawildtime and Beauregard carved out fractional times of 23.85 seconds for the opening quarter mile and 48.37 for the half. When the field hit three-quarters of a mile in 1:14.54 it was Speaktomeoflove who had forged a narrow lead.

 

In the homestretch Speaktomeoflove looked to be in for a big payday but Langs Day had other ideas. The pair hooked up at the sixteenth pole and it was a war of wills before Langs Day got the upper hand late to record a half-length win over his tenacious rival. Jimi’s a Star finished well to be third, another 1-1/2 lengths behind the top pair.

 

Langs Day now has six wins from 17 career starts for owner Keith Plaisance. The winner’s prize of $90,000 on Saturday raised Langs Day’s bankroll to $277,040.

 

Bred in Louisiana by J. Adcock & Adcock’s Red River Farm, LLC, Langs Day is a 5-year-old chestnut gelding by New Year’s Day, out of the Langfuhr mare Langsyne.

 

Sent off at odds of 8-5, Langs Day paid $5.40 to win, $3.20 to place and $2.40 to show. Speaktomeoflove returned $4.80 to place and $3.60 to show. Jimi’s a Star was worth $4.60 to show.

 

Net a Bear scored her second stakes win of the season in the $125,000 Distaff on Louisiana Premier Day. The win came in dramatic fashion as jockey Tim Thornton had to angle out from the rail in the upper-stretch and rundown leaders Snowball and Fort Polk to get up just before the wire. The Allen Landry trainee also took the Magnolia Stakes at Delta Downs on October 29.

 

Net a Bear is now 10-for-30 during her career and has earned $523,870 after taking home $75,000 on Saturday afternoon for owners Maximo Lamarche and Federico Deltoro.

 

Trainer Allen Landry did himself one better in the $100,000 Prince as he saddled the first and second-place finishers, Vodka Gimlet and Brian’s Iron Mike. The pair were far in front of the rest of the field at the wire with Vodka Gimlet winning the first stakes race of his career with jockey Thomas Pompell in the saddle. Vodka Gimlet is owned by Ellen Epstein.

 

The win by Vodka Gimlet put another $60,000 into his bankroll which now stands at $102,645. He is a 3-year-old gelding by Goldencents out of the Out of Place mare Shy Baby.

 

The $100,000 Starlet featured Free Like a Girl, who already had two stakes wins under her belt this season. The Chasey Deville Pomier trainee won the Louisiana Jewel in October before taking the My Trusty Cat just one month later. She most recently won a stakes race at Fair Grounds

before her appearance in the Starlet on Saturday where she took the lead early and never looked back under jockey Pedro Cotto, Jr.

 

Free Like a Girl notched her sixth win from just 11 career starts in the Starlet and raised her career bankroll to $341,473. The bay filly by El Deal is owned by Gerald Bruno, Jr., Carl J. Deville, Chasey Deville Pomier and Jerry Caroom. She was bred by former jockey Kim Stover and her sister Lisa Osborne.

 

Bertie’s Galaxy turned in a sharp performance to win this year’s $100,000 sprint under jockey Jareth Loveberry. The Ron Faucheux trainee broke sharp and lead every step of the way in the five-furlong dash for older horses. Bertie’s Galaxy has now won 10-of-23 career starts and earned another $60,000 on Saturday to raise his overall bankroll to $382,850. The son of Greeley’s Galaxy is owned by Allen Cassedy.

 

The $100,000 Matron featured graded stakes winner Cilla, who dazzled the fans with a romping victory in the five-furlong test for older fillies and mares. Cilla is owned by P. Dale Ladner and trained by Brett Brinkman. The daughter of California Chrome was ridden to victory by jockey Thomas Pompell. Cilla has now won seven of 14 starts and owns a bankroll of $476,000.

 

The $60,000 Gentlemen Starter was taken by Greeley’s Dealer. The Dale White, Sr. owned and trained 9-year-old gelding saved his best for last, coming up the rail to snare the win under jockey Jose Guerrero. Greeley’s Dealer has now won 15-of-55 starts during his career.

 

Longshot Girl Thirsty was victorious as a huge longshot in the $50,000 Ladies Starter. Overlooked at odds of 30-1, the Ronnie Ward trainee ran down race favorite Heart That Binds in the stretch to get the win under jockey Alexander Castillo. Girl Thirsty is owned by Claudio Solis.

 

This year’s $50,000 Bon Temps Starter was won by Sandy Badeaux’s Madison’s Place with jockey Joel Dominguez in the saddle. The Eduardo Ramirez trainee overhauled race favorite Wild Mallory in the stretch to record the ninth win of her 32-race career.

 

And finally, it was the Keith Charles owned and trained gelding Alterana who took the $50,000 Ragin Cajun Starter under jockey Gerard Melancon. Alterana has now won nine of 31 career starts and the score on Saturday afternoon extended his current winning streak to four races.

 

Delta Downs will conduct live racing for the next four weeks on a Wednesday through Saturday schedule until the meet comes to a close on March 5. First post time each day is at 12:55 pm.

 

For more information about racing at Delta Downs visit the track’s website at www.deltadownsracing.com. Fans can also get information about through Facebook by visiting the page ‘Delta Downs Racing’. The track’s Twitter handle is @deltaracing.

 

Delta Downs Racetrack Casino and Hotel, a property of Boyd Gaming Corporation (NYSE:BYD), features exciting casino action, live horse racing and fun dining experiences. Delta Downs is located in Vinton, Louisiana, on Delta Downs Drive. From Lake Charles, take Exit 7 and from Texas, take Exit 4.

To See the Whole Game: Father, Son and Friend’s Success Speaks to So Much More

Earl Hernandez, Keith Hernandez, and John Duvieilh–LA-bred owners and advocates

 

Father and son, Earl and Keith Hernandez

 

 

New Orleans, LA (February 3, 2022) – Across Lake Pontchartrain, north of Covington, tucked away by winding sideroads, shaded by elder pine trees and oaks, Earl Hernandez, his son Keith Hernandez, and good friend John Duvieilh have created a sanctuary for broodmares, foals, and turned out horses, alike. A setting where the Thoroughbred can be energized by Louisiana land and sky.

At the Hernandez Farm, the efforts of the entire state can be found. The energy, ideas and friendships that yield the crops of our sport. Owners of racehorses since the 1980s, breeders since the 1990s, and advocates for Louisiana horsemen and backside workers alike, these three men are as hands-on as they get in every facet of the sport so many of us love.

Currently tied for third in the Fair Grounds’ owner standings with five wins, success came early in the meet for Earl, Keith, and John. It’s easy to see the ownership side of all this. Their names are there in the programs, their pictures taken in the winner’s circle with the likes of Hyper Piper. Silver King. Rail to Seattle. Special Connection. Half Fast Rose. Alphadoodole and Jax Man. The list is long.

They’ve teamed up with others – Rose Hernandez, Stephen Landry and Bill Langford. They’ve owned separate interests, but together Earl Hernandez, Keith Hernandez, and John Duvieilh have sent their horses to the starting gate 1,462 times, winning 229 of those and amassing $5,174,838 in career earnings. (Together Earl and Keith have had 102 winners out of 599 starters for $2,292,501.) This level of success would impress anyone, but to stop there is to discredit the herculean effort that goes into breeding the horses they run. The struggle and the heartache, the investment and the time, the horses who refused to be haltered and the scars to prove it.

Ask them and they’ll tell you. Keith begins to explain, but John hops in at the third word: “You can’t let the highs get too high or the lows get too low. That’s just this game.”

A cold weekend in January does not stop these three men. With 35-45 horses usually at the farm, there’s always something that needs to be done, and they take the time to do it themselves. Wooden fences section off the 42.5 acres into pastures for the fillies or the colts, for the athlete simply given time to be a horse outside of the confinement of a stall, for the weanlings, for the yearlings, and a vast stretch for the 16 mares. Huts and hay stations at the ready. Longtime veterinarian at the farm Roger Lowell is there to check the mares. Curiosity brings the duos of colts and the pairs of fillies to the closest fence. The winter wind blows through the insulated workshirts and across the trimmed pastures of rye grass, rustling the horses’ warm coat of soft hair rarely seen at the racetrack. Rosy cheeked, sniffling and serious, the four are hard at work. Keith pulls up in the ATV as John Duvieilh and Lowell walk out of the stall where the last of the broodmares has been checked.

“She’s empty,” John calls out.

There is loss in this sport, you don’t need to look far or long to find it. This was a racehorse that will never enter the starting gate. This was approximately a $10,000 investment gone. The betting public and the weekend fan want to watch a horse run their best race. Jockeys want to ride winners. Investors want a profit. Backside workers, writers, and public handicappers want jobs. All of those hopes and expectations rely upon the foal.

Earlier in the morning, nine 2-year-olds just left, heading to trainer Sam David Jr.’s care. Nearing $20,000,000 in earnings with 1,285 wins, including the Kentucky Oaks with Blushing KD, David needs no introduction. Serving as their trainer since Frank Leggio retired, David has won at a steady clip for the team since 2017. Together they aim for winning the many state-bred races across Louisiana. Delta, Evangeline, Louisiana – between the three downs and Fair Grounds, a robust menu of state-bred races are slated every racing day, and in the Pelican State, more often than not two tracks are running concurrently.

In the house to warm up, stories of how it all began are cued from favorite winners’ photos on the wall, Sunday’s races at Fair Grounds on the television, their promising filly Macee making her first route effort in race three, their insights and laughs energized by a decades-long friendship between Keith and John.

Similar to many who have owned horses, all it takes is one good horse. A horse that makes it all look easy and provides the thrills of a lifetime. Bits A’ Jingle was that horse for Earl and wife Rose Hernandez. In 1983 Rose liked a filly running in a maiden claiming race at Jefferson Downs, the old race track in Kenner just outside New Orleans. She had just shipped in after finishing 9th at Monmouth Park. Rose and Earl made a claim on Bits A’ Jingle, who won that race and her next three. She put another three-win streak together, all in a year’s time, until Earl and Rose decided they had a broodmare, resulting in A Cause to Jingle, My Precious Moment, Bitsyboomamaluvsu, Bitsy’s Diamond Z, and many others down the line.

Earl was hooked. Keith was the next fish looking to take the bait. What started as a claim became the father and son team’s first stallion.

“My dad was getting a little sour at work and I asked ‘you want to claim a horse?’” said Keith Hernandez.

Earl said yes and they agreed $5,000 was the max. When Earl reported back he said that the one they had in mind didn’t go their way, however, they got another. For $12,500.

“‘Have you lost your mind! I don’t want to do it that much,’” Keith remembers telling his dad. “Well that was Rail, he won $90,000 in a blink and broke track records.”

John Duvieihl met Keith through their daughters being in the same class at school. As fate would have it Duvieihl’s horse Ruby Begonia was running at Fair Grounds on the same day as Rail. Both their horses won that day. Nothing like a good omen to quicken a friendship and plant the seed for a partnership.

Friendships deepened and so did their involvement in the sport. They take the next logical step and transition Rail into a stallion at Clear Creek Stud, have success, and get an idea.
“How about we start growing ‘em,” Keith said. “Next thing you know we’re working eight hours every Sunday.”

It takes a deep level of commitment, one might say an obsession, to go to these ends to participate in horse racing. But as many around the race track know and will willingly attest, it also takes luck. Enter the trio’s first broodmare: Wise and Happy.

“This is how bizarre it is,” Keith recounts. “I used to get Bloodhorse magazine, back in those days you’d actually get the magazines—that’s all there was. I looked in the back of the magazine and there was a horse for sale in New York, her name was Wise and Happy. Her sister was a horse named Cagey Exuberance who was a multiple stakes winner and who produced multiple graded stakes winners, so I paid $5,000 and they shipped me the horse down from New York. She went on to produce Unfriendly Koo, another horse named Kookalu. At one point there were $1.9 million worth of horses that came out of her. That is this sport. You never know where the good horses are coming from. You never know.”

Social Misfit, one of the soundest Louisiana-breds you find, was out of Unfriendly Koo: Claimed away at age eight and recently retired as a 13-year-old, Social Misfit was a four-time winner at age 12 who banked nearly $675,000, winning 28 times in his 102-race career. If sound horses don’t thrill you then how about the sounds of the B-52s? One of the farm workers asked if she could name all of Bedazzle Seattle’s babies, and “Love Shack” by The B-52s has been her inspiration. Perhaps you’ve heard of Tin Roof Rusted, Wholeshackshimmies, Funkylittleshack, Knockalittlelouder, names that certainly play well. All these and hundreds of others that have entered the starting gates can be traced back to these three horsemen.

John, Keith, and Earl are as active as stewards of the sport as they are as breeders and owners. Whether it be their involvement in the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protection Association (HBPA) or the Louisiana Thoroughbred Breeders Association (LTBA), their perspectives and actions are shaped by a shared philosophy – to do what is in the best interest of Louisiana racing.

“I’m on the HBPA board for the eighth year,” Keith said. “Now I’m on the LTBA board. I make decisions all the time I know aren’t in my best interest. I make decisions that are in the best interest of racing. We have all kinds of classes of people in Louisiana. You may see one or two allowance races a day and the rest are $5,000 claimers. Those are the people that actually fill the races and make the tracks roll. Everybody has to have a seat at the table and you have to look at the big picture.”

The 2022 crop of foals is on its way. The 2020 2-year-olds are in the process of learning their jobs and will soon be in the hands of their trainers. The older horses are at the track working to prove they belong. In a game that can appear like everything hinges on the efforts of the trainer to prepare each horse between races, the mighty efforts of other horsemen to get foals to the racetrack often goes unnoticed. Earl, Keith and John do what they do to bring Thoroughbreds to the starting gates.

To win, to point to Louisiana Championships, to find the next filly worthy of being one of their select broodmares. From Delta Downs to Fair Grounds, the heritage of Louisiana horse racing depends on the efforts and dedication of people who live the life from sun up to cool down and see the entire game in front of them.