Emerald Downs

Last updated

Emerald Downs
Emerald Downs.jpg
Location Auburn, Washington,
United States
Coordinates 47°19′44″N122°14′02″W / 47.32889°N 122.23389°W / 47.32889; -122.23389
Owned byMuckleshoot Indian Tribe
Date openedJune 20, 1996
Course type Thoroughbred flat racing
Notable races Longacres Mile
Official website

Emerald Downs is a Thoroughbred racetrack in Auburn, Washington, located a half mile east of Highway 167. It is named after Seattle, the Emerald City.

Contents

History

Emerald Downs first opened its doors to race fans on June 20, 1996, [1] with the inaugural 100-day meet running through November 4. It replaced Longacres Racetrack, which closed in September 1992 after sixty seasons of racing. Following the closure of Longacres, racing was not held in Western Washington from 1993–1995. However, Thoroughbred racing continued at Yakima Meadows and Playfair Race Course in Spokane during this time. Emerald Downs operated as a Limited Partnership from 1996 to 2015, with a group of investors led by Ron Crockett. In 2002, the land where Emerald Downs is situated was purchased by the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe for roughly $70 million. The Tribe purchased the track buildings and facilities and formed Emerald Downs Racing LLC in 2015. The Tribe has made a number of improvements since taking over the operation including a 1,150 square feet (107 m2) infield big screen. Emerald Downs celebrated its 20th anniversary Monday, June 20, 2016, with a special night of racing featuring many of the stars from the track's first two decades. [2]

Physical attributes

Aerial view from west-southwest, 2013 Aerial view of Emerald Downs racetrack from the west 01 - white balanced & cropped.jpg
Aerial view from west-southwest, 2013

The Track

The Emerald Downs track is a one-mile (1.6 km) oval in the shadow of Mount Rainier. The track surface itself is made of geo-textile fabric, washed rock, coarse sand, and one-component track material. However, there is no turf course. The tote board is located in the center of the oval track.

The Emerald Downs infield is designed as a storm system that is sized to accommodate all storm runoff for the entire southern portion of the track property, including all rooftop surfaces as well as parking lots and the racetrack surface. Before releasing any water, Emerald Downs tests for turbidity and PH levels. Samples are also sent to a laboratory for further testing of dissolved oxygen, ammonia and fecal coliform levels. Finally, the water is released into Mill Creek at an engineered rate of discharge in order to help prevent flooding downstream from the track. Much of the infield is under water during the fall and winter, creating a home for ducks, geese, and other small wildlife.

The grandstand

Grandstand with general admission seating on track level Emerald Downs Grandstand pre-live racing - 30 June 2021.jpg
Grandstand with general admission seating on track level

The Emerald Downs Grandstand is a modern racetrack facility designed by EwingCole. There is general admission seating on track level, including a grassy park area with free children's activities on weekends (weather permitting). Outside on the third floor are box and reserved seats in the grandstand, as well as box and reserved seats on the fifth floor indoor clubhouse.

Pari-mutuel windows are located on each floor to place wagers. There are eight food stands and six beverage services throughout the facility.

Barn area

Each of the 11 barns is a complete facility for horsemen with: 116 stalls; 22 tack and feed storage areas; six trainer offices; 12 hay and straw storage areas; 10 wash racks; 13 dorm rooms for grooms and six mechanical hot walkers. Each stall is 10 feet (3.0 m) by 12 feet (3.7 m) in size. For the horse's protection, each stall is padded with plywood wainscot kick-boards.

Sales pavilion

The Morris J. Alhadeff Sales Pavilion is the home for the Washington Thoroughbred Breeders Association. The $1 million facility opened to the public on December 14, 1997, for the 1997 Winter Sale. It was funded by significant donations from Micheal and Kenneth Alhadeff and other industry members. The entire structure—including the sales arena and 4,400 square feet (410 m2) of office space—is 17,300 square feet (1,610 m2).

Paddock and saddling area

Paddock and covered saddling area Paddock and saddling area at Emerald Downs on 30 June 2021 pre-live racing.jpg
Paddock and covered saddling area

Beside the grandstand is a paddock and covered horse saddling area. Paved surfaces around the paddock and up to the saddling area provide spectators an opportunity to view the horses when the horses are in these areas. [3] Prior to the start of each race, horses are walked through the paddock into the saddling area, walked around the saddling area a few times and their saddles put on. Once the horses are saddled, they are walked once around the paddock before the jockey mounts the horse and the horses are walked out to the race track. [4]

Equine hospital

Funded jointly by Northwest Racing Associates, track veterinarians, the families of Mike and Ken Alhadeff and private contributors, the Morris J. Alhadeff Equine Hospital is a state-of-the-art facility used by the Emerald Downs Veterinary Association. The vet clinic includes:

Mitigation site

As part of the process in building the facility that exists today, Northwest Racing Associates, L.P. developed an extensive plan to mitigate the impact of a fill on low grade wetlands on the Emerald Downs property. Located a mile and one-half south of the track property, at a cost of $6.5 million, 56 acres (230,000 m2) of wetlands were created or enhanced. On the east side of SR-167, 100,000 cubic yards of soil were excavated, creating 6 acres (24,000 m2) of open water. Habitat features were added to benefit water fowl, birds of prey and mammals.

Washington Racing Hall of Fame

Washington Racing Hall of Fame Washington Horse Racing Hall of Fame at Emerald Downs - 30 June 2021.jpg
Washington Racing Hall of Fame

The Washington Horse Racing Hall of Fame is housed on the track level of the grandstand. Inductees are recognized for their accomplishments in five main categories: jockeys, trainers, horses, breeders, or lifetime achievement. [5] The inductees for each class, year, of inductees are determined by a combination of the media, Emerald Downs, the Washington Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Association, and the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association. [6] Emerald Downs shares videos highlighting various hall of fame inductees and their induction ceremony on its YouTube channel. [7]

A number of individuals inducted into this hall of fame have also been recognized at the Washington state level for sports excellence and are inductees in the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame as well. These individuals include Basil James, Joe Gottstein, Russell Baze, and Albert Johnson. [8]

Racing

Emerald Downs hosts live Thoroughbred racing during the spring and summer. The 2022 racing season began on Sunday, May 15 and will conclude on Sunday, September 18. Races are run Friday through Sunday the majority of the season. The track conducts several large ungraded stakes (i.e. the Auburn Handicap) and many overnight handicaps and stakes. There are an average of 7-8 races on weeknights, and 10 races per race weekend. In addition to live racing, the track offers simulcast wagering and a card room casino year round.

The first Quarter Horse race in track history was held in 2010. In 2011, Emerald Downs added a major Quarter Horse stakes, the $60,000 Bank of America Emerald Championship Challenge Stakes run on Labor Day weekend.

Emerald Downs also hosted Indian Relay Racing in 2015 and the popular feature returned June 8–10, 2018.

Jockeys

Gallyn Mitchell is the all-time leading rider at Emerald Downs with 1,419 wins through the 2015 racing season and the only jockey to have raced at every meet since Emerald Downs opened in 1996. Jennifer Whitaker is the all-time leading female rider with 457 wins. Ricky Frazier set records for wins in a season (157) and earnings ($1,632,102) in 2007. Frazier won the riding title again in 2009 with 155 victories and $1,492,455 in earnings. Vann Belvoir owns the best winning percentage in track history at 23.9%. The track record for wins in a single day is six, shared by Seth Martinez (July 27, 2008) and Kevin Radke (September 2, 2002). Eliska Kubinova set a record for wins by an apprentice with 75 victories in 2012.

Many famous jockeys have ridden at Emerald Downs, including several members of the Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame. Laffit Pincay Jr., Pat Day, Eddie Delahoussaye, Russell Baze, Gary Stevens, Alex Solis, Garrett Gomez, David Flores, Robby Albarado and Gary Baze have all competed on the Emerald Downs oval.

RankJockeyCareer Wins 1996–2020
1Gallyn Mitchell1,419
2Juan Gutierrez1,401
3Ricky Frazier886
4Leslie Mawing744
5Rocco Bowen575
6Frank Gonsalves561
7Kevin Radke532
8Ben Russell501
9Javier Matias551
10Jennifer Whitaker499
11Debbie Hoonan439
12Nate Chaves417

Trainers

Washington Hall of Fame trainer Tim McCanna is the all-time leader at Emerald Downs with 906 wins through 2015 and has won 10 training titles since the inaugural season of 1996. McCanna set a track record with 66 wins in 2008, a mark that Jeff Metz tied with 66 wins in 2015. Since arriving from California in 2013, Metz has reeled off three straight training titles with 42, 49 and 66 wins. Washington Hall of Fame Trainer Jim Penney remains one of the most accomplished trainers in state history. His five career wins in the Longacres Mile (three at Emerald Downs) ranks best of all time. He is also the only trainer in Washington State history to win five races in a single day twice. Doris Harwood is the only other trainer to accomplish the feat a single time, collecting five wins on August 8, 2009. Penney's 50 career stakes wins rank second all-time and he also earned a training title at Emerald Downs in 1998 when he led all conditioners with 46 wins. Doris Harwood set a record for earnings in a single season with $931,916 in 2009. She also won 12 stakes in 2009, tying a track record she set in 2007, and is No. 1 all-time with 66 stakes wins at Emerald Downs.

RankTrainerCareer Wins 1996–2015
1Tim McCanna906
2Frank Lucarelli837
3Howard Belvoir684
4Jim Penney651
5Doris Harwood514
6Roy Lumm409
7Bud Klokstad402
8Dan Markle345
9Sharon Ross337
10Tom Wenzel334

Owners

RankOwnerCareer Wins 1996–2015
1Ron Crockett Inc.246
2Sue & Tim Spooner172
3Larry & Veralene Hillis155
4Howard Belvoir144
5Billie Klokstad129
6Dunn Bar Ranch121
7Northwest Farms108
8Homestretch Farms Inc.104
9Seawind Stables LLC102
10Hern/LePley Racing101

Horses

Wasserman is the track's all-time leading earner, with $575,024 in purses thru the 2015 season. West Seattle Boy is the winningest horse in track history with 21 career trips to the winner's circle, the most recent on September 25, 2011 as a 12-year-old. [9] Noosa Beach leads in career stakes victories with 11. In 2005, Halonator set the track record for wins in a season with 8. In 2015, Jim & Mona Hour's 6-year-old Washington-bred Stryker Phd became the first horse to win the Longacres Mile twice at Emerald Downs. [10]

Career wins

RankHorseCareer Wins 1996–2015
1West Seattle Boy21
2Olympic Lights17
3-tieMarket Master16
3-tieBob Stories16
3-tieBuddy Dave16
6-tieFleet Pacific15
6-tieSeattle Game15
6-tiePolish Dollar15
9-tieToobusytoocall14
9-tieKimos Friend14

Horse of the Meeting

YearHorse
2023Slew’s Tiz Whiz
2022Slew’s Tiz Whiz
2021Top Executive
2020Dutton
2015Stryker Phd
2014Stryker Phd
2013Herbie D
2012Class Included
2011Noosa Beach
2010Noosa Beach
2009Assessment
2008Wasserman
2007The Great Face
2006Flamethrowintexan
2005No Giveaway
2004Demon Warlock
2003Youcan'ttakeme
2002Flying Notes
2001Makors Mark
2000Edneator
1999No Curfew
1998Wild Wonder
1997Kid Katabatic
1996Name for Norm

Speed records

DistanceTimeHorseAgeWeightDate
300 Yards:15.560Jacango (QH)3123August 15, 2015
350 Yards:17.30Snip N Dale (QH)5126September 25, 2010
400 Yards:20.574Bh Country Chrome (QH)4124August 29, 2015
440 Yards:21.376Bh Lisas Boy (QH)3121September 6, 2015
2 Furlongs:2125Midnight Cruiser2118May 4, 2000
:2125Adventuresome Man2118May 10, 2000
870 Yards:45.78Bleu Tarp6122Sept. 14, 2012
412 Furlongs:49.98Trackattacker2118June 1, 2014
5 Furlongs:5525Jazzy Mac598August 20, 2000
:5525Victor Slew4115August 24, 2003
:5525Starbird Road4119October 1, 2006
512 Furlongs1:00.87(World Record)Hollywood Harbor5118April 22, 2012
6 Furlongs1:06:86 (State Record)Kaabraaj4123April 23, 2016
612 Furlongs1:12.94 (World Record) [11] I Keep Saying5124July 27, 2014
One Mile1:32.90 (State Record) [12] Point Piper6118August 14, 2016
1 1/16 Mile1:3935 (State Record)Kid Katabatic5123July 26, 1998
118 Mile1:4525 (State Record)Flying Notes3122September 2, 2002
1 3/16 Mile1:5725Andoras Attitude4119August 25, 2005
114 Mile2:01Itstufftobegood4124August 5, 2005
1122:29Military Deputy5120August 26, 2007
134 Mile3:02Itstufftobegood4128September 18, 2005
2 Miles3:3235 (State Record)Horatio5115September 20, 2004

Note: (QH) = Quarter Horse

Longacres Mile

Emerald Downs biggest race is the Longacres Mile Handicap, a listed event. The race was announced in June 1935 so Longacres founder Joe Gottstein could have a signature one mile (1.6 km) race. He felt the mile was an overlooked distance, neither a sprint nor an endurance run. In order to attract racers and attention, the purse was set at $10,000, instantly the largest staked one mile (1.6 km) race in the country (and it would remain so for more than 40 years).

As soon as the announcement was made, the first running of the race had 20 entrants; 16 actually started. The stakes attracted the owners of a New Orleans horse named Biff, grandson of Man o' War, who had just won $5000 in Chicago. Biff had the attention of everyone for weeks before the event and no owners would run their horses in preliminary races with him. Biff was first out of the gate but was stalked by Coldwater, a 20-1 longshot that wasn't regarded well. Near the end of the mile Biff was showing clear strain and Coldwater overtook him to win.

In 2008, locally owned and bred Wasserman took the Longacres Mile closing fast to win in a photo finish over horses shipped in to run the race. The 75th Longacres Mile was run on August 22, 2010. It was won by the betting favorite, Noosa Beach. [13] Ridden by Ricky Frazier and trained by Doris Harwood for owner Jeff Harwood, the winner paid $5.60, $3.80 and $3.00. Jersey Town finished second, followed by the 2009 Mile champion, Assessment.

The 2011 Longacres Mile featured a showdown between defending champion Noosa Beach and multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire Awesome Gem. Awesome Gem took the lead near the wire, defeating Noosa Beach by 1 1/2 lengths. [14] It was his 9th win in 46 career starts, boosting his earnings to over $2.6 Million. In 2012, jockey Mario Gutierrez became the first rider to sweep the Kentucky Derby and Longacres Mile in the same year, guiding I'll Have Another to wins in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes, and then taking the Mile aboard Canadian shipper Taylor Said.

In 2014-2015, Stryker Phd became the first horse to win the Longacres Mile in consecutive years at Emerald Downs. The 6-year-old Washington-bred gelding by Bertrando-Striking Scholar is owned by Jim and Mona Hour of Bellevue, Wash., trained by Larry Ross and ridden by Leslie Mawing.

Emerald Downs selected other races and inaugural date:

Washington Cup races:

Emerald Downs Mutuel Payoff records

Highest $2 Win payoffs

PayoffHorseDate
$153.00Making FireMay 31, 2015
$142.00My Lady BootsJuly 27, 1997
$139.60ClurmorJuly 28, 2007
$132.20Clever RidgeAug. 24, 2007
$122.00No GiveawayAug. 21, 2005
$120.80Unknown DoctorJune 12, 2008

Highest $2 Place payoffs

PayoffHorseDate
$63.20Making FireMay 31, 2015
$58.00Georgia EchoOct. 6, 1998
$55.60SugarslittleacornMay 4, 2003
$52.40Royal AlaskanMay 17, 1998
$50.00Wrapped In RibbonJuly 7, 2007

Highest $2 Show payoffs

The massive payoffs for the top three horses listed were a result of a fourth-place finish by then-undefeated Knight Raider in the Diane Kem Stakes for two-year-old fillies on Washington Cup Day. $148,000 of the $156,000 pool was put on Knight Raider, providing huge payoffs for the top three finishers when she finished out of the money. [15]

PayoffHorseDate
$187.00Have'n Wild TimeSeptember 13, 2009
$156.40Pistolpackin'galSeptember 13, 2009
$108.60Private FortuneSeptember 13, 2009
$96.40Private BossSeptember 28, 2014
$50.00Moony MoonySeptember 29, 2013

Highest $2 Daily Double

PayoffHorsesDate
$1,907.40Neardistracted-Magical MondayMay 17, 2002
$1,878.20Delirious Laughter-Bishop WinsAug. 8, 2003
$1,464.80Follow My Heineken-Specious EditionJuly 5, 1999
$1,289.60Zairsaplan-Sea Tac JetMay 9, 2004
$1,102.80Cider Burg-Strategic PatienceJuly 4, 2010

Highest $1 Exacta payoffs

PayoffHorsesDate
$2,317.80Salty Season-Another Bar FlyAug. 28, 1998
$2,077.40No Way To Go-Almost SmashedAug. 12, 1996
$1,843.60Naab The Win-Do As You're ToadAug. 14, 1998
$1,678.80Mighbabe-ScattySept. 7, 1998
$1,286.80Tip A Moon-Treasure GirlDec. 21, 1996

Highest $1 Trifecta payoffs

PayoffHorsesDate
$27,356.90Meridian Thriller-Foxy Love-Foxy FrostyJuly 2, 2002
$24,399.00Freefur-Mollie Stone-Jennifer StarJune 26, 2005
$24,337.90Timbercamp-Kisses of Wine-Initial ReactionMay 7, 2006
$23,782.80Salty Season-Another Bar Fly-Seattle JackAug. 28, 1998
$20,805.20Clurmor-Buckshot West-Cahill BluesJuly 28, 2007

Highest $1 Pick Three

PayoffHorsesDate
$7,479.90Alena's Tornado-Wa Dancer-Talking AboutJuly 9, 2000
$7,177.70Tommy Ray-Braydon's Choice-Wacky Joe WackyJuly 25, 1998
$6,987.60Chisos Free Candy-Sea Pirate-Dee Cee NineApril 11, 1997
$6,649.50Alibhai Basket-Lucky Pusher-Travel The SunAug. 8, 1998
$6,274.60Volare Princess-Secret Game-Wrapped In RibbonsJuly 7, 2007

Highest $1 Pick Four

PayoffDate
$18,223.20April 17, 2009
$13,373.30Aug. 2, 2007
$12,829.25 ($0.50 Pick Four)May 30, 2011
$12,593.30June 26, 2005
$12,096.40May 26, 2008

Note: The Pick Four was changed to a $0.50 minimum wager in 2010.

Highest $2 Pick Six

PayoffDate
$217,140.00June 8, 1997
$96,172.00Aug. 5, 1996
$80,489.40Sept. 1, 1996
$64,700.80Sept. 14, 1996
$48,507.80Nov. 6, 1996

Highest $1 Superfectas

PayoffDate
$15,581.35August 31, 2014
$15,487.20June 2, 2002
$15,319.60Sept. 21, 2003
$14,926.70Aug. 21, 2005
$14,423.10July 25, 1999

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