“I was thinking about giving up my big public stable for a
long time now but this year I finally did it. Not having to be at the barn
early in the morning and put my horses through their paces makes it a whole lot
easier for me,” Aldrich explained. “Now I can concentrate on my driving and I
think that has really helped me a lot when I’m on the racetrack.”
Having a big public stable would make it nearly impossible
for Aldrich to drive at both Monticello Raceway and at Saratoga Raceway on the
same days, something he’s been doing since Saratoga opened in the spring. And
he been successful at both places. He currently lead all drivers at the
Mighty M with 207 winners and his 88 wins at Saratoga ranks
him second there behind Billy Dobson’s 118.
On the Monday , July 8 at Monticello Raceway
Aldrich kept his ball rolling when he added five more wins to his
seasonal resume and now has 295 driving victories this year which ranks his
seventh in races won on the North American leaderboard.
Aldrich began the afternoon with a 1:57.2 victory with
Frank Cuccio’s, Seeyouonthebeach ($4.20) in the second race and then
copped the fourth behind Al Annunziata’s trotter Distinct Victory ($3.30) in
2:02.
Aldrich didn’t win another race until the tenth and then he
swept the last three.
He won the 10th with Stanley Indig’s
trotter Miley Jo ($3.60) in a 2:00.2 clocking and came right back in the
next race and scored a longshot victory with Ruth Ingham’s Lightning Madison
($18.60) in 1:59.4.
In the final contest on the card Aldrich reined Norm
Bradbury’s pacing mare, Red Eye Blue Chip ($3.50) to her 10th
seasonal triumph in a 1:57.4 clocking.
Aldrich got a reprieve of sorts on Monday when he didn’t
have to travel back to Saratoga Raceway because that track is dark on
Mondays. He won’t have to be back on the road until Wednesday when he’ll drive
here in the afternoon and then travel the 165 miles to Saratoga to drive there
at night. Once there he can drive at the Spa on Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
days that Monticello is dark.
It’s easy to see why Aldrich gave up his stable.
“If I had a public stable there no way I could do my horse’s
right and try to race at two tracks that are so far apart,” He said, ”Someday,
I’ll have a public stable but that’s probably down the road a
ways.”