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DOODAH CARTEL, JESS IM WORTH IT, BEUTEEFUL HEAD MILLION DOLLAR RACE

Gate Works at Los Alamitos
©Myriam Maynard, Speedhorse

Owned by Thompson Racing, Alexis Andrade and Paul Jones, fastest qualifier Doodah Cartel will look to repeat his tremendous ¾ length trial victory when he heads the 56th running of the Grade 1, $1,170,950 Golden State Million Futurity on Sunday night at Los Alamitos.

Doodah Cartel, a colt by top sire Favorite Cartel and out of the multiple stakes placed mare Suite Expectations, will also hope that his third appearance in a graded futurity is the charm. He previously raced in the Grade 2 PCQHRA Breeders Futurity and before that he was a strong fourth in the Grade 1 Ed Burke Million Futurity. AQHA Hall of Fame trainer Paul Jones will saddle Doodah Cartel while looking for his third Golden State Million victory and first since saddling Igotyourtac to victory in the 2011 running. 

“I’ve always loved (Doodah Cartel) and he’s always shown a ton of talent,” Jones said. “He really got a good go in his trial. They parted the Red Sea for him. They all got out of his way and gave him room to run. When he has room to run and racetrack to run he really relishes it. He’s a homebred and I have some good partners in the Thompsons and Alexis Andrade. We’re having fun with him and just tickled to have such a nice race out of him.” 

Doodah Cartel is named in honor of Debbie Thompson’s father, Bernie Erickson, who passed away over a year ago. “Doodah” was Bernie’s favorite saying. Henry Reynoso Lopez will ride the Jones and Thompson-bred brown colt.  

Jones will also saddle Parsons Ranch’s The Lady Is A Vamp, who’ll start from the rail and will be ridden by Eduardo Nicasio. The Apollitical Blood filly was one of the most impressive young runners at the start of the juvenile season and this could be moment in which she cements her standing as one of the nation’s top fillies.   

“This is her second futurity,” Jones said. “I’ve loved this filly from day one. She’s been a little star. She has a lot of talent and her dam, Another Wise Lady, produces nothing but runners. She’s a great (broodmare), this is a great family, and the Parsons really race some nice horses. I’m really privileged to have the opportunity to train their horses.”

Owned and bred by EG High Desert Farms, the A Mere Felix colt Jess Im Worth It will look to become the seventh juvenile to win both the Ed Burke Million and Golden State Million. If he does, he’ll be the first to score this double since Party Politics in 2022 while joining Heza Dasha Fire, Higher Fire, One Dashing Eagle, Dashing Knud and Jacks Dash on this tremendous list. 

Trained by Jesus Nunez and to be ridden by Ricardo Ramirez from post number eight, Jess Im Worth It enters after scoring a neck victory in the second fastest qualifying time. Jess Im Worth It was sixth at the start of his Golden State Million trial but quickly found his stride to move on to victory. He truly had a big hill to climb in his Ed Burke Million win, as broke slow and was eighth at the start, then fifth at the gap before turning on the rockets to win impressively by ¾ lengths. If he can break on top, he might just be too strong of a finisher for the others to catch up. 

Keith Nellesen’s Beuteeful is unbeaten in four career starts, a record that includes a win in the Grade 2 Robert Adair Kindergarten Futurity. The filly by KVN Corona enjoyed her most complete effort in the Golden State trials, as she did not make any mistakes while scoring a devastating three length victory. Trained by Kristen Watanabe, Beuteeful will look to become the first filly to win the Golden State Million since AQHA champion Flash N Roll in 2018. She’ll also try to remain undefeated in five career starts, duplicating the great Heza Dasha Fire’s five-for-five record at the beginning of his great career when winning the Golden State Million in 2014. Meanwhile, Watanabe will look to become the first woman trainer to win the Golden State Million Futurity. This race was first run in 1970. 

Chris O’Dell won the 2019 Golden State Million with Runforyourlife and will now look for a second victory with West Texas Partners’ Enforce, who is a full brother to Runforyourlife and to many other greats trained by O’Dell. Sired by Favorite Cartel and out of the Dam of Distinction Remember Me Rose, Enforce is a full brother to the likes of Grade 1 winners Cyber Attack, Bomb Cyclone, and Powerful Favorite, all of which learned their lessons from O’Dell. Bred by Steve Burns, Enforce was purchased for $675,000 at the Ruidoso Yearling Sale in 2024, making him the highest priced horse in this race. 

The rest of the field will include a trio for runners owned by Dunn Ranch and trained by Ramiro Castillo in DR Make It Sweet, AJ Cyclone and DR Stone Cold. Whos The V, owned by Valeriano Racing Stables, will complete the field. Jesus Nunez will saddle the gelding by Favorite Cartel out of a daughter of Remember Me Rose named Remember Me Jessie.

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Speedhorse Stake recap

Delta Downs was buzzing with excitement today for a Stakes Race! Take a glance at the winner now, and stay tuned for our full Stakes Results!

Delta Downs
WINNER of the 2026 Old South Derby
CHILLEY (#5)
c. (Chilitos-Zoom in On Me, Shazoom)
Breeder: Tommy And/Or Johanna Bullard
Owner: Jaime Cardenas
Trainer: Ponce, Josue
Jockey: Garcia, Jorge
Remaining Order of Finish: Sheza a Whirlawaytoo (#4), Hi Octane (#6), Eyes So Gray (#3), Jess Telling Beau (#1), Cm Dashing Cartel (#2), Prey N Corona (#8), Ivorys Cartel (#10), Syms Sin Tacha (#9), Aj Big Cash (#7)


Association Of Racing Commissioners International (RCI)


PRESS RELEASE – MAY 14, 2026 –
Racing regulators from across North America who are members of the ARCI met today to
consider a new aggressive approach being utilized in Oklahoma to safeguard horses
utilizing “Emergency Protective Orders” to temporarily exclude horses in the care of
trainers whose horses have demonstrated an abnormal and materially elevated pattern of
severe post-race distress, including repeated incidents in which horses were unable to
safely leave the track under their own power.


To date three trainers have received such orders effectively excluding 171 horses by putting
them on the “Stewards List” temporarily. Affected horses are subject to testing, veterinary
examination, record production, and individualized regulatory review before they may be
considered for removal from that status. The orders provide for the nomination of a
“guardian ad litem” to conduct an independent investigation concerning the welfare of the
affected horses.


ARCI President Ed Martin said that “using the Stewards or Vets list to exclude a horse from
competition is not new, but Oklahoma’s use of “Emergency Protective Orders” to
temporarily exclude all horses managed by a particular trainer is.”
“This is an important new approach that all racing regulators should consider utilizing,”
Martin told the regulators.


In Oklahoma such orders are only issued after the Stewards reviewed evidence, reports,
video recordings, veterinary opinions, and other information concerning horses that
appeared in extreme distress after racing and have determined that there is an abnormal
and materially elevated pattern. Each Order states that the pattern was repeated,
documented, and sufficiently serious to require immediate regulatory intervention.


The regulators were briefed by Amanda English, Interim Executive Director of the Oklahoma
Racing Commission and the commission’s General Counsel Michael Copeland.
Ms. English told her colleagues that the Stewards relied on veterinary opinions from three
veterinarians who concluded that the condition shown by the horses was extreme,
unusual, not a normal post-race recovery pattern, materially adverse to equine welfare,
and inconsistent with the safe and humane participation of such horses in racing absent
further investigation and clearance.


“When horses show signs of extreme distress, we will not look away, we will not minimize
it, and we will not wait for another incident before taking action. These emergency
measures are designed to protect horses immediately, secure the evidence, and ensure
that no horse connected to this matter returns to competition unless and until the
Commission is satisfied that it is safe and humane for that horse to race,” she said.


The Order requires mandatory pre-race and out-of-competition testing, mandatory
veterinary examinations, immediate post-race examination of any horse showing abnormal
recovery or distress, production of veterinary and treatment records, and inspection of
relevant barns, stalls, tack rooms, treatment areas, and other enclosure locations. The
Order also preserves the Commission’s authority to pursue additional remedies if
warranted.


Under the Order, affected horses are subject to testing, veterinary examination, record
production, and individualized regulatory review before they may be considered for
removal from that status.
The Emergency Protective Order states that the Stewards found an abnormal and
materially elevated pattern of severe post-race distress among the affected horses,
including repeated incidents in which horses were unable to safely leave the track under
their own power and required transport from the racing surface. The Order further states
that the pattern was repeated, documented, and sufficiently serious to require immediate
regulatory intervention.


The Stewards also relied on veterinary opinions from three veterinarians who concluded
that the condition shown by the horses was extreme, unusual, not a normal post-race
recovery pattern, materially adverse to equine welfare, and inconsistent with the safe and
humane participation of such horses in racing absent further investigation and clearance.
“The protection of the horse comes first, and the Commission will act decisively when the
facts show a serious threat to equine welfare,” said Interim Executive Director Amanda
English. “When horses show signs of extreme distress, we will not look away, we will not
minimize it, and we will not wait for another incident before taking action. These emergency
measures are designed to protect horses immediately, secure the evidence, and ensure
that no horse connected to this matter returns to competition unless and until the
Commission is satisfied that it is safe and humane for that horse to race.”

by ASSOCIATION OF RACING COMMISSIONERS INTERNATIONAL

_06 MY ROYAL SWINGER RC06
© New Image Media

AJAX DOWNS, MAY 14, 2026 – The equine star of Ajax Downs‘ card of racing on a crisp, windy May 13, Had to Be Ivory, won for the 34th time while later in the afternoon, jockey Corry Beland won his first race of his young career.

The second day of Ajax Downs‘ 2026 Quarter Horse season, which followed a record-breaking wagering opening day, May 6, featured the return of multiple champion HAD TO BE IVORY, the richest Canadian bred Quarter Horse in history. Now 11 years old, the big bay Ontario bred gelding was as quick and slick as ever, winning the featured Gridiron Gallop dash at 110 yards by three-quarters of a length over another champion, Snow Moose.

Ridden by Ismael Mosqueira for owners Carol and Jaime Robertson, Had to Be Ivory raced the distance in a quick 6.855, just shy of his own track record of 6.761.

“He was just so happy, bouncing and on his toes” said Mosqueira, last year’s High Point Jockey at Ajax Downs. “He was so relaxed walking to the gate and just walked in ready to go. The way he runs, he’s like a three or four-year-old.” Had to Be Ivory’s young half sister, Had to Be Fabulous, was the 2025 Horse of the Year and won her 2026 season debut last week.

*Jockey CORRY BELAND earned his first career race when he guided My Royal Swinger to victory in race six for owner and trainer Joe Tavares. The Alberta-born son of former jockeys Stu Brown and Carole Beland was riding in only his seventh career race including his first three races late last season.

©New Image Media

“I just got beat a nose in the race before so that gave me some motivation,” said Beland. “I just tried to not override him and just sit chilly and let the horse do the work.”

Fellow Ajax Downs jockeys awaited Beland to return from the winner’s circle before dousing him with buckets of water, the typical initiation for a jockey when they win their first race.

Corry also hopes to also ride Thoroughbreds at Woodbine this year.

Racing continues at Ajax Downs on Wednesday, May 20 with a first race post time of 3:30 p.m. Admission is always free and you can watch and wager on the races from trackside tables or at www.HPIBet.com.

Be sure to visit www.ajaxdowns.com for the racing schedule and list of events coming up.

By Ajax Downs

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