Oaklawn Announces $5 Million Apple
Blossom
Hot Springs, AR, - February 04, 2010 - Calling it “one of
the most important moments at Oaklawn and in Arkansas
sports,” Oaklawn President Charles J. Cella announced
Thursday that Oaklawn will increase the purse of the April 3
Grade I Apple Blossom to $5 million provided champions
Rachel Alexandra and Zenyatta both start.
At a morning press conference, Cella reported that he has
spoken with the owners of both Rachel Alexandra (Jess
Jackson) and Zenyatta (Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Moss). Both showed
enthusiasm for bringing their champions to Oaklawn for the
first Saturday of the famed Racing Festival of the South.
Rachel Alexandra (Three-Year-Old Filly) and Zenyatta
(Older Filly or Mare) were unanimous Eclipse Award winners
in their respective divisions in 2009 and were the only
finalists for horse racing’s highest honor – The Eclipse
Award for Horse of the Year. In one of the closest ballots
in recent memory, Rachel Alexandra was named Horse of Year.
Oaklawn has long been perceived as the ideal neutral
ground for the dream matchup, because both have used the
Arkansas oval as a launching pad to future success. As a
lightly-raced but promising 4-year-old in 2008, Zenyatta
captured her first Grade 1 victory in that year’s Apple
Blossom, beating then reigning champion Ginger Brew among
others in her only start outside of California and only
start on a conventional dirt surface. She has since gone on
to post a perfect 14-for-14 record, highlighted by her
victory in the 2008 Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic and her
victory against males in the 2009 Breeders’ Cup Classic, in
what was believed at the time to be the final race of her
career.
Rumblings about Zenyatta’s “un-retirement” began to be
felt in December and Moss made it official Saturday, Jan.
16.Rachel Alexandra kicked off her three-year-old campaign
at Oaklawn with a pair of eye-popping stakes wins in the
Martha Washington and the Fantasy Stakes. Her record victory
in the Kentucky Oaks the day before the Kentucky Derby
clearly stamped her as the best three-year-old filly in the
nation. She proved more than that in her next start when she
became the first filly to win the Preakness Stakes in 85
years. Rachel Alexandra beat three-year-old colts again in
the Haskell and became the first three-year-old filly to win
the prestigious Woodward Stakes against older males in
September.
Should both Rachel Alexandra and Zenyatta start, this
year’s Apple Blossom will be an invitational event.
Other leaders in the filly and mare division will be
invited to participate. The $5 million purse will be the
largest purse for a filly and mare race in the history of
North American thoroughbred racing.
“We have always pursued a goal of bringing the world’s
best racing to Arkansas,” Cella said.
“That is what led us to create the Racing Festival of the
South more than 30 years ago. We have been even more
fortunate in recent years. That gives us the opportunity to
fulfill the promises we continually make to our fans, our
horsemen and all of our supporters – should this race come
off as expected, it will most certainly fulfill every
promise made.
”The distance of the race, historically contested at a
mile-and-one-sixteenth, will be extended to a mile-and-one-eighth.
Should Rachel Alexandra or Zenyatta fail to start, the
Grade I Apple Blossom will revert to its original status as
of February 3, with a purse of $500,000 Guaranteed.
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