Trainer Lou Pena, right, in a wide ranging live TV trackside interview with Pompano's Frank Salive during the Saturday, January 21 program at The Winter Capital Of Harness Racing. |
Pena also spoke of the ties that a current Pompano claiming trotter, Phipps, has to a charitable organization in support of epilepsy based in his former home city of Sacramento, CA and of his friendship and successes with Pompano seasonal driver George Napolitano Jr. The 43 year old trainer was asked to assess his prospects of continuing to post training statistics in 2012 to follow up on his remarkable successes of 2010 and 2011 when his stable won over 500 times from just over 1,700 starters for purses of over $7.1 million in each of the past two years.
"People know far and wide from the internet stories that my entries are not being taken at The Meadowlands, but the sense of the situation I get from talking with their senior management, not Mr. Gural directly though, is that they might just be trying to give the other people a bit of a head start in 2012 so I wouldn't get too far ahead" Pena said. "So the way I'd describe it, and the way I think of it, is it's a bit of a 'time out' and I'm not sure if I'll get the chance to win another training title there or not. I think for now I have exhausted all of the legal avenues of appeal so I'm at their mercy on whether The Meadowlands would take my entries in the future. In the meantime, I am very thankful to the tracks that do allow me race with Yonkers, Chester and Pocono at the top of that list. I still have a stable of 35 horses at Gaitway Farms in New Jersey and depending on how much backing I have from the owners a third straight year of earning $7 million in purses and perhaps racing at Pompano by this Fall will be my goals" he said. "As far as getting back in at The Meadowlands, I will never, ever give up hope."