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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

MONTICELLO RACEWAY’S AU REVOIR DOESN’T FILL THIS YEAR

MONTICELLO, NY – It’s not like it was totally unexpected but Monticello Raceway’s Au Revoir,  the race exclusively for 14 year olds who will be forced into retirement on January 1, 2012,  failed to attract enough entries.


“It’s not unusual…we ran a stretch of 14 years after we had the inaugural  in 1991 before we filled then Au Revoir again,” noted Eric Warner the tracks director of racing . “ And it wasn’t because of a lack of trying it ‘s just that this year there aren’t many 14 year olds still currently racing.


“We’ve received emails and phone calls saying why don’t we include 12 and 13 year olds, too. And though that is not a bad idea, one can appreciate the specialty of getting together seven or eight 14 year olds for one final race. That it doesn’t happen every year makes the event even more special.”


Last year it was a like spring in the Southern Catskills of New York  on New Year’s Eve and 14 year old  Sinbad raced  more like a 3-year-old  when the altered son of Falcon Seelster sailed to an incredible 1:58:4 triumph for Jimmy Marohn, Jr.


And at the end of the 2009 season  another Au Revoir saw Satin Time  be victorious  in 1:59:3 for driver Greg Merton.


The first time Monticello Raceway attracted enough entries to present the Au Revoir after it’s inaugural event was at the end of the 2005 season. That year  Try Kacy N was victorious in 2:03:4  over a muddy race track for driver Jimmy Taggart, Jr.


However, during the 2004 campaign although the Mighty M didn’t draw a full field of 14 year old pacers it did offer a match race on the betting card between two grand old campaigner’s, $372,000  winner, Troy D and $412,000 winner, The Suleiman  N in which the latter, driven by Billy Parker, Jr., turned back the former, driven by Todd Frocione,  by a nose in a 2:02:4 clocking.


A race for  exclusively for 14 year olds near the end of the year is unique in that not only is it hard to find enough 14 year old standardbreds still competing in late December  but on January 1st of the new year all harness horses turn one year older and when a horse is 15 years of age it can no longer compete in betting races.


“Though we are a little discouraged in not being able to fill the Au Revoir this year we’ll definitely try again next season,” Warner promised.