Thursday, May 21, 2026
It's his fifth time getting the award . . .

    LAUREL, MD – For the fifth time overall and first since 2022, Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen earned the top prize of $50,000 in 1/ST Racing’s $100,000 trainer bonus offered to horsemen for their participation in stakes races over Preakness weekend, May 15 and 16, at Laurel Park.

    Asmussen started horses in eight different stakes over the weekend including Chip Honcho, who finished third in the $2 million Preakness Stakes (G1). The Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown was being contested for the 151st time and first at Laurel due to the rebuilding of Pimlico Race Course.

    Obliteration in Saturday’s $150,000 Chick Lang gave Asmussen his seventh career victory in the race and lone win over the two days. He also ran second with Faust in the Maryland Sprint (G3) and Benedetta in the $125,000 Skipat and fifth with Thebabeslayer in the $100,000 James W. Murphy.

    On Friday Asmussen had Little Miss Curlin run third in the $150,000 Miss Preakness (G3), Duke of Duval finish fourth in the historic $250,000 Pimlico Special (G3) and Braken Poppa wind up seventh in the $300,000 George E. Mitchell Black-Eyed Susan (G2).

    Asmussen finished with a total of 39 points, just two more than Maryland-based Graham Motion. North America’s all-time leader with 11,299 wins and counting, Asmussen previously earned the top bonus in 2017, the inaugural year, 2018, 2021 and 2022.

    To be eligible for the bonus, trainers had to run a minimum of five horses in the 15 stakes, seven graded, worth $4.2 million in purses offered during Preakness weekend. Points were accumulated for finishing first (10), second (seven), third (five), fourth (three) and fifth through last (one).

    The trainer with the most points earned $50,000, followed by $25,000 for second, $12,000 for third, $7,000 for fourth, $4,000 for fifth $2,000 for sixth. With four trainers qualified, bonus money for places and five and six reverted back to 1/ST.

    This marked the 10th consecutive year the trainer bonus program has been offered. Brad Cox (2019), Mike Maker (2020), Motion (2023), Cherie DeVaux (2024) and Brendan Walsh (2025) have also earned the top prize.

    Motion registered two stakes wins on the weekend – Warming in the $150,000 Gallorette (G3) and Turf Star in the Murphy on Saturday. He also had Cruise the Nile run third in the $250,000 Dinner Party (G3), Ribaltagaia finish seventh in the Gallorette and Proton end up fourth in the Murphy. On Friday, Brat Pack and Siouxse respectively were third and fourth in the $125,000 Hilltop.

    Saffie Joseph Jr., whose main strings are at Gulfstream Park and its Palm Meadows training center in South Florida, was third with 29 points, one more than Laurel Park-based Brittany Russell. Joseph won the Black-Eyed Susan with My Miss Mo and Pimlico Special with Navajo Warrior and was second with Tessellate in the Miss Preakness on Friday, and had Harrow run fifth in the Dinner Party and Bull by the Horns run sixth in the Preakness.

    Maryland’s leading overall trainer each of the past three years, Russell won the Miss Preakness with Peach Tie and Hilltop with Coach Mazzula Friday, also finishing third in the $100,000 The Very One with Lost and Found and fifth in the $125,000 Allaire du Pont Distaff with Complexity Jane. On Saturday she was sixth with Falcon Jet in the $100,000 Sir Barton and 10th with 9-2 favorite Taj Mahal in the Preakness.

    Russell earned the top prize in bonus money totaling $50,000 offered for trainers having the most points in non-stakes races during Preakness weekend. Points were accumulated in similar fashion with $25,000 going to the leader, $10,000 to second, $7,500 to third, $4,000 to fourth, $2,500 to fifth and $1,000 to sixth.

    Trainers needed to have a minimum of three starters to qualify for the bonus. Russell was first with 42 points, followed by Michael Stidham (34), Jamie Ness (19), John Salzman Jr. (17), Chad Summers (16) and Hugh McMahon (12).

    Summers, owner Al Gold and jockey Paco Lopez each earned their first Triple Crown race victory with Napoleon Solo in the Preakn
ess.

Monday, May 18, 2026
Paco Lopez rides 7-1 winner . . .

    LAUREL, MD -- Gold Square’s Napoleon Solo, a Gr. 1 winner at 2 who had come up short in his two races this year, went the distance in Saturday’s 151st Preakness Stakes on an historic day at Laurel Park.

    For the first time, the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown was renewed at Laurel Park, not Pimlico Race Course, which is scheduled once again host the 1 3/16-mile Classic next year when on-going construction on a new facility is complete.


    Napoleon Solo, who had shown signs of distance limitations while fading to fifth in the Fountain of Youth (G2) at Gulfstream Park and Wood Memorial (G2) at Aqueduct at 1 1/8-miles, was given another chance to prove himself at a distance of ground by trainer Chad Summers, and the son of Liam’s Map came through with flying colors with a 1 ¼-length victory.

    The gray colt delivered Summers and jockey Paco Lopez their first victories in a Triple Crown event while scoring as the fourth betting choice at 7-1.

    An easy winner of his two starts last year, including a 6 ½-length victory in the one-turn mile Champagne (G1) at Aqueduct, Napoleon Solo prevailed in a full field of 14 3-year-olds, the largest to enter the starting gate since Shackleford also defeated 13 rivals in 2011.

    Two weeks after Cherie DeVaux became the first woman trainer to win the Kentucky Derby (G1) with Golden Tempo, Laurel-based trainer Brittany Russell saddled the undefeated Taj Mahal, the 9-2 favorite, in a quest to become the first woman trainer to win the Preakness.

    Taj Mahal broke alertly from his rail post position under jockey Sheldon Russell, the trainer’s husband, and sprinted to an early lead along the front-stretch before being joined on his outside by Napoleon Solo and Lopez heading into the first turn. Taj Mahal, who ran the first half mile in 46.66 seconds, continued to show the way along the backstretch with Napoleon Solo rating kindly for Lopez, well within striking distance in second.

    Taj Mahal continued to lead the way on the far turn as Napoleon Solo turned up the pressure but was no match for the eventual winner after straightening into the homestretch, where the Summers trainee asserted his class to forge ahead and hold off a late-running Iron Honor, the 9-2 morning-line favorite who rallied from sixth. Taj Mahal, who had won three races at Laurel without defeat, faded to 10th.

    Napoleon Solo ran 1 3/16 miles in 1:58.69. Iron Honor and jockey Flavien Prat finished 3 ¼ lengths clear of third-place finisher Chip Honcho, who raced evenly throughout. Ocelli, a seven-race maiden who finished third in the Kentucky Derby at 70-1, closed from 11th to finish fourth. No maiden has won the Preakness since 1888.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026
151st Preakness looks wide open ...

    LAUREL, MD – St. Elias Stable, William H. Lawrence and Glassman Racing’s Iron Honor was designated at 9-2 in the morning line for Saturday’s 151st Preakness Stake at Laurel Park, where the son of Nyquist drew Post 9 during Monday’s post-position draw.

    The 1 3/16-mile Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown, being run at Laurel for the first time while construction continues on a new Pimlico Race Course facility, drew a field of 14 3-year-olds for the first time since 2011, when Shackleford defeated 13 rivals.

    Trained by five-time Eclipse Award honoree Chad Brown, Iron Honor is coming off a seventh-place finish in the Gr. II Wood Memorial at Aqueduct, where he had scored back-to-back victories prior to his disappointing effort in the 1 1/8-mile Wood. He won his Dec. 13 debut at six furlongs before taking the Gr. III one-turn mile Gotham, both at Aqueduct.

    “I like the horse, I like the spot for him, but based on his last start, I was surprised he was made the morning-line favorite,” Brown said. “But I am not surprised that he fits in this race.”

    Brown voiced no issues with Post 9. “Right in the middle, we should not have any excuse from there,” he said. Brown, who saddled Preakness winners Cloud Computing (2017) and Early Voting (2022), named Flavien Prat to ride Iron Honor for the first time.

    Undefeated Taj Majal, who has launched his career with three straight victories at Laurel, is one of three entrants priced at 5-1 on the morning line. The son of Nyquist, who drew Post 1, is trained by Brittany Russell, Maryland’s leading trainer, and will be ridden by her husband, Sheldon Russell, who has been aboard for all three wins.

    Taj Mahal, who will represent an ownership group that includes SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables and Stonestreet Stables, earned an automatic entry into the Preakness with an 8 ¼-length front-running victory in the April 18 Federico Tesio at Laurel. Prior to earning his first win around two turns in the Tesio, Taj Mahal debuted with a rallying 4 ¼-length score going six furlongs and won the one-turn mile Miracle Wood.

    “It wasn’t what I was hoping for, but it is what it is. He’s a good gate horse and we’ll just have to play it as it unfolds,” Brittany Russell said of Post 1. “You know, it’s funny. I said to myself the only spot I was hoping not to be was the rail. It’s OK. It’s all good.

    “When I saw that [5-1 odds] I thought, ‘Cool, he’s getting some respect,’” she added. “That’s nice to see.”

    Pin Oak Stud’s Incredibolt, who finished sixth in the Kentucky Derby following a troubled trip, drew Post 12 for the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown and was priced at 5-1 on the morning line. The Riley Mott-trained son of Bolt d’Oro won the 1 1/8-mile Virginia Derby prior to his gutsy performance in the 18-horse Derby. He captured the Gr. III Street Sense at Churchill Downs last fall.

    “I hope we run the way they like us in the odds. Anytime you are in a Triple Crown race and you have odds of 5-1, it is a great opportunity,” Mott said. “We are going to look to try and get the job done.”

    Mott isn’t overly concerned with Post 12. “I would imagine it will be fine,” he said. “The horse has shown he can be fairly tactical at times.” Jaime Torres, who rode Seize the Grey to a 2024 Preakness victory, has the mount.

    Leland Ackersley Racing, James Sherwood, Jode Shupe and John Cilia’s Chip Honcho drew Post 6 and was also rated at 5-1 on the morning line. Trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, who saddled Rachel Alexandra (2009) and Curlin (2007) for Preakness victories, Chip Honcho enters the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown off a disappointing fifth in the Gr. II Louisiana Derby at Fair Grounds, where he had previously won the Gun Runner and finished a close-up second in the Gr. II Risen Star.

    “When the 13 was like first and the 14 went away, I [thought] ‘I can live with any of the rest.’ It was 6, 10, 11 the last three. But 6 is perfect. [Assistant trainers] Darren [Fleming], Scott [Blasi] and I had talked about it today, with it being at Laurel, where would you want? I said, ‘5 through 7.’ So got the 6. That’s perfect,’” Asmussen said.

    Chip Honcho will be ridden by Jose Ortiz, who scored his first Preakness win aboard Early Voting and who guided Golden Tempo to an upset victory in the Kentucky Derby.

    Ashley Durr, Anthony Tate and Front Page Equestrian’s Ocelli, who held the lead n the stretch run of the Kentucky Derby at odds of 70-1 before settling for third, has been priced at 6-1 on the morning line for an eighth attempt to break his maiden. The Whit Beckman-trained son of Connect, who had finished third in the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct, drew Post 2 for the Preakness, which hasn’t been won by a maiden since 1888.

    “I’m perfect with that," Beckman said. "I think our most effective running style dictates sitting back off the pace. So being in the [inside], we can just kind of break and save some ground going into that first turn, and kind of let the race develop in front of us. In the Derby, we had to cut over quite a bit [from post position No. 17] just to get to the first turn.”

    Tyler Gaffalione, who won the 2019 Preakness aboard War of Will, will have the return mount aboard Ocelli.

    Gold Square’s Napoleon Solo, a Gr. 1 winner at 2, drew Post 10 for his third attempt to break through with a win this year. The Chad Summers-trained 2025 Champagne winner, who is priced at 8-1 on the morning-line, set a pressured pace in the Wood Memorial before fading to fifth in his most recent start. Paco Lopez has the mount on the son of Liam’s Map.

    Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, R. A. Hill Racing Stable, Pine Racing Stables, Legendary Thoroughbreds, and Belmar Racing and Breeding’s Talkin, who finished a distant third in the Gr. I Blue Grass at Keeneland last time out, will make his first Triple Crown start from Post 5. The Danny Gargan-trained son of Good Magic, who is rated at 20-1 on the morning line, picked up the services of jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. upon the Monday morning defection of Silent Tactic.

    “I'm pleased with the post-position draw. Obviously, you never want the one-hole, and you never want to be in the 13 or 14 or 12,” Gargan said. “I'm real pleased. I wanted to be somewhere in that realm. I like that Jose Ortiz and Irad are next to each other, so I think they'll get a good break.”

    Rounding out the field will be: Three Chimneys and John Ennis’ Great White (Post 13, 15-1, jockey Alex Achard); Team Penney Racing, Echo Racing, Flower City Racing, Anthony Bruno and Christopher Meyer’s Pretty Boy Miah (Post 14, 15-1, jockey Ricardo Santana Jr.); Peacock Family Racing Stable’s The Hell We Did (Post 7, 15-1, jockey Luis Saez); On Our Own Stable LLC, Commonwealth and partners’ Corona de Oro (Post 11, 30-1, jockey John Velazquez); Robert Zoellner’s Crupper (Post 3, 30-1, jockey Junior Alvarado); and Calumet Farm’s Robusta (Post 4, 30-1, jockey Rafael Bejarano).

Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Wins Gr. III John A. Nerud at Aqueduct . . .
    Durante (Distorted Humor – Seahawk Girl, by Pioneerof the Nile) came with a burst to run down fellow OBS graduate Acoustic Ave in the final furlong to win by a neck in the Gr. 3, $175,000 John A. Nerud at Aqueduct Racetrack, leading the slate of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week.

    Owned and trained by David Jacobson, the 7-year-old Distorted Humor gelding made a winner’s circle trip for the first time since the Gr. 3 Aristides last May at Churchill Downs. Jacobson said mounting a title defense with a return trip to the Aristides on May 30 is the next logical spot.

    “It was an amazing race today. He beat some good horses and he’s doing real good,” Jacobson said. “I can’t wait to get him back to Churchill and run him in the Aristides – he won that last year, so we’re going to aim for that.”

    Consigned by Richardson Bloodstock, agent, to the 2021 OBS March Sale, Durante was sold for $130,000 to Dennis O’Neill after breezing an eighth in :10 1/5.

    At Gulfstream Park, Teresa and David Palmer’s Liberty Rings (Awesome Slew- America First, by Uncaptured) registered a front-running victory in the $125,000 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies to earn a trip to England.  The Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies offered the winner automatic entry into one of six stakes during the Royal Ascot meeting (June 16-20) at Ascot Racecourse, as well as a $25,000 equine travel stipend.

    Trained by Nicholas Palmer, the daughter of Awesome Slew was purchased by Palmer for $27,000 from the Camelot Acres Racing and Sales consignment at the 2025 OBS October Yearling Sale.
Friday, May 8, 2026
Should reach $100,000 . . .

HALLANDALE BEACH - The 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool is expected to grow to an estimated $100,000 Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where the $125,000 Royal Palm Juvenile and $125,000 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies will be co-featured on a 10-race program.

    Saturday’s Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 5-10. The Royal Palm Juvenile will be run as Race 6, while the Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies will be contested as Race 8. Both stakes will be run at five furlongs on turf and will offer their winners automatic entry into one of six stakes during the Royal Ascot meeting (June 16-20) at Ascot Racecourse, as well as a $25,000 equine travel stipend.

    Wesley Ward-trained Skara Brae could turn out to be a popular ‘single’ while taking on the boys as the 8-5 morning-line favorite for the Royal Palm Juvenile. The       daughter of multiple-Grade 1 stakes winner Golden Pal won an open maiden special weight on debut by 4 ½ lengths at Keeneland.

    Phillip Antonacci-trained Pot’s Right has been tabbed as the 2-1 morning-line favorite for the Race 8 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies. The daughter of Bold d’Oro also won on debut on the main track at Keeneland, overcoming a slow start to win impressively. Boots, a dominating debut winner at Gulfstream will make her debut on turf and first start since being transferred to trainer Carlos David. Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse will be represented by first-time starters Pros and Cons, a daughter of Triple Crown champion Justify, and Sass Sass, a daughter of Casse-trained 2019 Preakness winner War of Will. 

    Saturday’s Rainbow 6 sequence will be closed out by a 7 ½-furlong maiden special weight on turf that attracted a field of 3-year-old fillies trained by Casse, fellow Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, Brad Cox, Patrick Biancone, Jose D’Angelo and Saffie Joseph Jr.  Of particular interest is the Mike Repole-owned first-time starter Restock, a Japanese-bred filly who will be saddled by D’Angelo.

    The Rainbow 6 went unsolved Friday for the third racing day following a jackpot hit. There will be a mandatory payout Sunday.

NOTE: Blue Rose Farm LLC’s Moonstrocity, seventh April 4 when running in the Blue Grass (G1), broke his maiden Friday while covering the mile main track in 1:37.99. Trained by Jena Antonucci, Moonstrocity was shipped to Keeneland for the Blue Grass after finishing eighth over the turf in his debut Feb. 8 and then checking in third at a mile over the main track at Gulfstream Feb. 28. Moonstrocity is a son of Tiz the Law.