Monday, April 25, 2022

Apple Blossom Weekend

 April 22 - 23

If you thought last weekend was an abbreviated weekend of racing, this one was even more so.  And it was made that way because I only played the Friday card at Keeneland and then very limited selections for Saturday, which was Apple Blossom Day at Oaklawn, because Kim and I would be in Cape Coral for our eldest grandson's first communion ceremony.  Here's how the abbreviated racing weekend played out.......I'd looked at the entries for the early part of the week and it did not look like there was anything really of interest to me.  But then I read online that the Friday feature at Keeneland was the Grade 3 Doubledogdare and in the entries was 3yo champion filly, Malathaat.  She'd won the Grade 1 Ashland here at Keeneland for me last spring and then won the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks and the Grade 1 Alabama for me last spring and summer.  I didn't think she needed her absolute best to win here so I decided to handicap the Friday card.  I ran third with my first bet but I got my first win of the week in the fourth, a starter allowance going a mile and a sixteenth to the first finish line.  Jump Into The Fire qualified for this $10K starter based on his maiden win three back at Churchill for that price tag.  I was hopeful that handicappers would somewhat overlook him as he exited two races at "minor league" Mahoning Valley.  But the crowd was too sharp and sent him off as the 7/5 favorite.  Right to the front and never was threatened, drawing off by daylight.

WIN #9,987

Passed the fifth then had a triple investment in the sixth, an entry level allowance for 3yo going seven furlongs.  I thought there was a lot to like about Jonathan Thomas' filly, Mouffy.  She'd made her debut on the Gulfstream Tapeta surface and had scored impressively with a big 81 Beyer figure.  In her second, and most recent start she'd run in an allowance on the "real dirt."  That day she faced a winner who was scoring for the third time, the second time under allowance conditions, and who would run next time out in a Tampa stakes.  That Mouffy was running in just her second career start, while switching surfaces, AND winners for the first time - then was 2nd beaten a head while almost half a dozen clear of the field made her very appealing.  The second out improved Beyer of 85 sealed the deal.  The crowd thought the same and sent her off at 3/5.  She was handled patiently, saving all the ground into the far turn while a close fifth.  Rather than swinging wide the rider waited and sure enough the rail opened up - big enough to drive a Mack truck through!  She shot through and ran away to score handily.

WIN #9,988

Passed the next two before it was time for the big one.  Anyone who did NOT want to wager on Malathaat at a short price would not get any kind of argument from me as she was coming off of a layoff and obviously had bigger targets in mind through the season leading up to the Breeders' Cup.  But with that said, I WOULD have issue with anyone who tried to convince me that they had a lot of confidence in BETTING AGAINST her.  She'd been out eight times and won six with a second and a third.  That show finish came facing older, at Del Mar in the Gr 1 BC Distaff.  And she'd only lost by 3/4 of a length.  Anything close to her "B" game would be good enough I thought - and it was an added plus she'd won the Ashland here last year - and off a layoff - at this same distance.  Two longshots sped off to open up a big lead while John Velazquez sat chilly on the favorite in fourth to the far turn.  Began eating up ground through the turn and collared the front runner at the top of the lane.  She had to be driven out but she was clear by daylight and should move forward off the race.  Malathaat was the BEST Bet of the Weekend for me and while I didn't make money, I was rewarded for my confidence in her as a top notch WIN bet.

WIN #9,989

Saturday we were leaving in the morning for the west coast of Florida.  Not sure how the day would play out I made all my bets before we left for the drive across the state.  The day got off to a good start as Writeitontheice won at Laurel paying $7.60, so I cashed for $19.00 on my minimum bet.  

WIN #9,990

Ran fifth and second twice before I took the Grade 1 Apple Blossom at Oaklawn.  I've never been a fan of Latruska, well not so much not a fan, just I don't believe she's nearly as good as everyone thinks.  But she seems to ALWAYS find herself in a graded stakes where the field is suspect at best and/or she is loose on the lead.  A short field of five was all the racing secretary's office could come up to contest this $1 Million feature.  Perhaps it was due to the new schedule at Oaklawn.  In years past Oaklawn opened at the end of January and the racing season ended the week following the Santa Anita Derby/Wood Memorial/Bluegrass Stakes weekend with the Gr 1 Apple Blossom on Friday and the Gr 1 Arkansas Derby on Saturday, closing day.  This year Oaklawn opened in early December and will be running through the first of May.  The Arkansas Derby came on Florida Derby Day and today's placing of the Apple Blossom put it just two weeks away from the Kentucky Oaks & Derby weekend cards which have plenty of big money races.  Regardless, Latruska AGAIN found herself the lone front runner.  I just could not go more than a double investment because there were two other quality graded stakes runners that I thought COULD beat her.  But as is almost always the case, lone speed rules the racing world and she went wire to wire.

WIN #9,991

So I was off to a 2-for-5 start and in the black.  But I had four seconds, two thirds, and a fourth over the span of the next eleven races with only a single winner - Eastside Cool in a second level allowance at Oaklawn.

WIN #9,992

Next week I'll be in Ohio and unless I find some spot plays I'll be passing on the week's races and looking to get wins #9,994-10,000 over Derby weekend!  And oh yes, we were oh-so-proud of our grandson Cameron at his first communion!  Truly he IS "Cam the Man!!!"





Social Media This Week....

First, on Wednesday my former student and current Delta Airline Attendant Michelle posted a photo remarking about it being a good day to fly and her red lipstick.  It marked the first day that flights were going to go without a mask mandate so I remarked it was a good thing so people could see her pretty smile, which resulted in several smiles of appreciation.

Second, the Thursday night CBS-4 news featured my gal-pal Karli Barnett on the anchor desk and as per usual we exchanged messages WHILE she was on the air :)  Never gets old for me!

And finally, Saturday at our son's house one of my favorite peeps from the Oasis football experience came to join the celebration, "Coach Kelly."  Just out of college when Kelly joined the Oasis staff she quickly became a favorite of all the coaches.  So sweet, so cute and very personable.  Was great to see her again!



Monday, April 18, 2022

Jenny Wiley Week

 Week of April 13-16

I decided to play the Keeneland races on Wed, Thur, and Fri because I could.  And even though there weren't many big races on the big Saturday cards, I did have some stakes events at both Keeneland and Laurel Park.  And one bonus for the weekend, it was Opening Day at Woodbine - I like playing the races from Canada :)

The week started off with a one-win day and I was clever in that I upped the bet on Nepotism in the second race, a maiden claiming event going the full two turns around the track while going nine panels.  I did NOT care for the fact that the colt was already a SEVEN time maiden; did NOT care for the fact that his Beyers were on the decline - oh, that can't be good; and did NOT like the fact that in six of the seven starts he'd been "right there," in the money without winning.  BUT.....what I did like is that Luis Saez was riding for trainer Jonathan Thomas and they click at a 41% rate.  I also thought it was significant that in spite of running well nearly every time, Nepotism had NEVER gone off as the favorite.  Hmmmm, maybe, just maybe he'd been in against better all the time?  Add in the drop from seven MSW to a first time maiden claimer, $30K today and that was enough.  Because he was being well bet, I did up the bet.  He was hard held from the start while pressing the leader all the way to the far turn.  Let go he opened up and drew off under a hand ride.

On Thursday I faced quite the predicament in the opener.  Through the first three days of the meet trainer Wesley Ward who ALWAYS sizzles with his 2yo maiden first timers, has been not only a disappointment, but they just have not run.  So what to do here?  But for me in THIS spot I thought he had a better than average chance to score because (a) he had an entry, so we got two for the price of one, and (b) he not only trained the one but also owned it.  THAT was the one I liked most.  Then that one scratched.  Hmmmm, but almost always when a trainer has an entry and they scratch one it's a sign the remaining one is LIVE.  And with the big money showing up in both the WIN pool and the early double I decided to go with the entry AND up the bet.  Hurricane Debby pressed the pace to the top of the stretch then took off and ran away easily.

I scored a second time with a "PRIME TIME" play in the 4th, a six furlong starter allowance.  To be fair, I had mixed feelings about the placement of Baby Yoda, but on the other hand I thought Hall of Trainer Bill Mott was cleverly using the conditions of the race to his benefit.  You see, the conditions here called for runners to have been entered for $10K or less since 2021.  Baby Yoda in his four starts had been in stakes races, and the most recent two were GRADED stakes.  In fact, two back on December 26th he'd been second best behind the ultra-talented Flightline in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes at Santa Anita.  How on earth could he be eligible for this race?  Because in his career debut he dominated $10K maiden claimers at Pimlico.  He looked to be the EASIEST of winners - Free Money Day At Keeneland!  Pressed the pace to the top of the stretch, floated five wide in the clear and jogged home as tons the best.  Whooo hoooo.

Friday was another two-win day for me.  But perhaps the "best" handicapping came in a loss.  In the second race I thought I had a real solid chance with a price play with I'm Glad.  It was a MSW for 3yo going a mile and a sixteenth on the turf.  Trainer Jonathan Thomas was hitting 30% from a 40-horse sample with firsters and at a $3.15 ROI.  Hall of Fame rider John Velazquez was aboard.  Stalked the leaders into the turn, made his move and got to the front turning for home at a big 7/1 price.  Nailed in the final fifty yards but a best of the rest second.  Great handicapping, no money.  I did cash in the fourth, a claiming event going a mile and a sixteenth to the first finish line on the main track.  The outside post did no favors for Fan Club, but he looked strong off a brief four race career.  He'd won his maiden and come right back in a nw1x allowance before running 3rd behind a stakes winner in a nw3L allowance at Oaklawn last time.  He quickly cleared the field and sat second to the far turn.  Took over and was clear heading for the wire.  Then held off the late runner to score at 6/5.

Came right back in the fifth, a nine furlong entry level allowance on the turf.  Ocean Road had several angles in her favor.  Among them was that trainer Brendon Walsh, when he took over her training when she arrived from Europe immediately sent her to the Grade 1 BC Filly & Mare Turf.  She had run well enough.  Hot riding Tyler G was up and she'd paired figures.  She trailed the field all the way into the far turn before beginning to pick off runners.  Still multiple lengths back at the top of the lane while five wide, but found another gear, surged and was up in the nick of time!

Saturday the day did NOT start off the way I thought it would.  With all the big stakes races last weekend all over the country there were not going to be many "big races" this weekend and most all the best horses had run over the last two weekends.  Still, it was Opening Day at Woodbine and Laurel had multiple listed events to go with the standard fare at Keeneland which included two stakes events.  In the Woodbine opener Wesley Ward's Lime was going to be a prohibitive favorite and SHOULD win going the very abbreviated 4 1/2 furlongs as the clear speed of the race while plunging in class.  Went off at 1/9 and was caught late to be 2nd.  WOW.  Then at Laurel Sugar Gray Leonard was 2/5 in a five and a half furlong MSW and he too was caught in deep stretch to finish second.  Topped off the skid when the second at Keeneland saw my pick, the 8/5 favorite run 2nd.  NOT the way to start the day.  So the fact that I went 8-for-16 for the rest of the day was pretty cool....and that I was 0-for-5 at Woodbine on the day and still won money was remarkable.  Turf racing was making it's return to the Maryland track and the third was a starter-optional claiming event turf sprint.  The conditions were for runners who'd run for $25K or less and nine of the ten had LOST at the $25K level or cheaper.  Crabs N Beer had only raced for a tag three times and had won decisively for this same $25K tag.  The other two times he raced for a bigger $40K price and was a good second in both efforts.  The problem was, he'd NEVER been on the turf.  Good enough on figures and his Tomlinsons said he'd handle the grass.  He was towards the back approaching the far turn, ran by the back markers, split horses at the top of the lane and sprinted by the leaders late to score at a generous $9.60 price.

Ran 6th at 6/5 with another added money event to make my start 1-for-5 with FOUR added money losses and the lone win with a minimum bet.  YOWZA.  The fourth at Keeneland was a maiden special event going six furlongs for three-year-olds.  Under Oath was a Todd Pletcher runner and if able to run back to his debut 85 he'd win for fun.  He too was well back heading into the turn, then circled rivals and ran away through the lane.

Ran second again at Woodbine before they were in the gate for the fifth at Lexington for an entry level mile and a sixteenth turf event for sophomores.  Lightly raced 3yo fillies going two turns on the turf could be hard to figure.  But based on what we COULD see on paper it looked like Shug McGaughey's Limited Liability was the class of the field.  He'd won his Saratoga debut around two turns at this distance and you KNOW that (a) only the most highly regarded juveniles debut at the Spa and (b) to win at first asking, as a 2yo, going a route of ground on the turf is NOT easy.  Secondly, he'd exited that win to run back-to-back thirds in graded company before going to the bench.  Now he began his 3yo season with multiple works which indicated to me he was ready to roll.  Jockey Jose Ortiz had him in hand while last through the far turn, got into the clear and it was like he "floored it" in a sports car as Limited Liability ran by the field like they were tied to a post.  While the margin was about a length, the analysts both commented that it could easily be described as a "measured length" as he'd been MUCH the best.  And get this....he went off at a big 4/1 price allowing me to cash for $50!  Suddenly, after playing the races for nearly three hours and getting off to an 0-for-3 and then 1-for-5 start, I'd now upped the day's tally to 3-for-8 and was more than $25 ahead!

Missed AGAIN at Woodbine - wow - when second before it was time for the co-best bet of the day.  The first stakes on the Laurel card was the Weber City Miss for three-year-old fillies going a mile and a sixteenth.  I'd been all over Luna Belle in her last four starts as she'd dominated the 3yo filly stakes ranks.  And I had to agree with one analyst who said she HAD to be the best 3yo filly in the country to NOT be going to the Kentucky Oaks.  She'd won three sprints and a one-turn mile race.  Two of the sprints had come going seven furlongs, and with the way she'd drawn off impressively in all of them made you believe she could get two turns.  But the old adage is you never bet a horse, especially at a short price when trying something they've never done before.  It's also true that "the rule" in handicapping is that "there are no rules."  I made her the prime time play and she was being pounded at 1/9 early in the wagering.  As they approached the gate she'd drifted up to 1/5 but once they were away and she was near the back through the clubhouse turn she was back to 1/9.  Swept up five wide on the turn and just jogged by the field as they were being implored by their riders to keep up while Luna Belle's rider sat motionless.  Drew off to win by a pole as easily best.  WOW, impressive.

Missed at Keeneland and Woodbine, again, before it was time for the Heavenly Cause Stakes at Laurel.  It was a one-turn mile and as I noted in my analysis, I'd scanned the pp's and didn't really care for anyone in particular, but when I read Dan Illman's analysis from the DRF he pointed out that Pennybaker - who was making her first start in North America after shipping from her native France where she'd won four in a row once she was taken OFF the turf to run on the all-weather.  She pressed the pace while in the clear three-wide through the turn.  Accelerated in the stretch to draw off in a "WOW" performance.  

The ninth at Laurel was the Frederico Tesio for 3yo colts and it traditionally serves as the local prep to the Preakness where one or two locals challenge the big sophomores who ran in the Derby.  Looking at the past performances I was struck by two thoughts, (1) NONE of these horses have a real shot to win the Preakness, and (2) this race was WIDE open.  Finally I settled on Joe who had been the even money favorite last time out against several of these seeking his fourth straight win and was second best.  Maybe he redeems himself today.  Swept to the front turning for home and looked like a clear winner until his stablemate at double digit odds collared him at the 1/8th pole and they dueled to the wire, PHOTO FINISH!

Whew, that was close.  The feature race at Keeneland was the Grade 1 First Lady going a mile and a sixteenth on the turf.  I was CERTAIN that Chad Brown would be in the winner's circle for the SIXTH time after this event, but the problem was WHICH of the two fillies would be the winner?  While both were quality and deserving winners, I went with Regal Glory.  She'd been ultra-impressive winning the Gr 3 Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf at Gulfstream (when I was there AND bet her), and she had recency on her side.  I also had noted that earlier in the week Brown had been quoted that they were going to retire her, but owner Peter Brant wanted to run her as a 4yo AND that they thought she would have a "championship season."  Sounds like they thought she was REALLY good.  She stalked the leader to the far turn and as Jose Ortiz took the lead heading for home he looked back several times to see where the other Brown filly was.  Regal Glory had gotten the jump and was too far gone for her rival who was a best of the rest second.

I did NOT handicap the Oaklawn card but I knew that 2021 Eclipse Award winning sprint champion Jackie's Warrior was making his return today to the races in the Grade 3 Count Fleet Handicap.  He was a deserving 1/9 and later 1/5 favorite in a short field of six.  Not only was he the class of the field but no one, and I mean NO ONE would be able to run with him early.  Long gone as the lone speed.  For some reason the crowd began to hammer the local horse who was a come from the clouds closer.  No way Jose I thought.  Jackie's Warrior went wire to wire easily for my eighth winner on the day and somehow the crowd let him go off at 1-2 odds so I gladly collected the "free" $10 to add to my profits on the day!



Social Media This Week.....

One of my favorite shows to watch is "Expedition Unknown" with Josh Gates who's like a real life Indiana Jones.  Well, a couple years ago he developed a spin-off show called "Expedition X" where two of his colleagues explore unusual phenomenon, like the old TV show, "The X Files."  And in this case the female, Jessica Chobot, is the "believer" while the guy is the one who always says there must be another explanation.  So Expedition X hasn't been on for a while and Jessica posted something on Twitter.  I reached out to her about the show and she responded.

Also, on Monday, my girl Karli Barnett was on the anchor desk so we exchanged greetings.


Woke up on Tuesday and one of my other favorite CBS-4 News personalities, Brooke Shafer was on the anchor desk - it was an all-ladies day.  Sad to find out she's leaving the news world for another new adventure.

Our girl Acacia Courtney-Clement posted about her good first week back in NY and I replied which got a response back.

Then on Thursday my best gal-pal news girl Lauren Pastrana was on air in a cute green dress.  I reached out to her and she replied while on the air.

And finally, on Saturday evening after the races, hottie news gal Karli Barnett hosted another live chat.  The theme seemed to be about Easter and chocolate bunnies so we "chatted" live :)






Sunday, April 10, 2022

Spring-Summer-Fall Kicks Off For 2022

 Opening Weekend at Keeneland

With the close of the winter racing season last weekend it's time to turn our attention to the Triple Crown Season and this second weekend of April brings about the last three big prep races for the Kentucky Derby.  Keeneland opened on Friday under very unusual weather circumstances as it rained, snowed, sleeted, and hailed.  And - take note Gulfstream Park management - they stayed on the turf!  All day the racing as unpredictable as the weather with double digit payoffs littering the landscape.  And so we headed into the first graded stakes of the spring, the Grade 3 Transylvania for 3yo on the turf with a lot of questions.  First, obviously, the condition of the ground.  Then, it was a short field of six with no clear cut pace scenario.  I could make a case, and did so in my analysis, for four of the six.  But I landed on the unbeaten Graham Motion colt Sy Dog on the strength of his "paired" figures.  With all the others being nearly equal, it was the one factor that said to me he had a legitimate chance to move forward today.  Down the backstretch he was last of the half dozen and the pace, as I anticipated was moderate.  But he began to move approaching the turn and picked off runners while circling the field some four wide.  Into the stretch he was five wide and got on even terms with the leaders with a furlong to go and then edged clear.  The best news.....from a morning line of 3/1 he floated all the way up to 5/1 and paid a very generous $13.40.  With my double investment bet - through TwinSpires - he paid nearly $70 and I was guaranteed a winning day, even though I finished 1-for-6 on the afternoon.


Saturday I had selections from Keeneland, Aqueduct, and Santa Anita for their big cards and seventeen of my twenty-five selections were stakes races, THIRTEEN of them graded events.  The weather was even more "off the wall" today than yesterday and it led to the third race coming off the turf, but note GP management all the other turf races were run on the grass!  I was ready for the move to the main track and had narrowed that down to two main track contenders.  My betting choice got pounded late to 1/5 favoritism.  Ran 2nd behind my other choice who won at a big 7/1 price.  And THAT in a nutshell summed up the first half of the day as I skidded through nine straight losses (five of with were 2nd or 3rd place finishes, three of which were odds on).  Sigh....  Finally got a win in the second at Santa Anita, the six and a half furlong Echo Eddie Stakes.  Smuggler's Run had lured a minimum bet because in this short field of five he was the fastest and in best form, BUT his last three figures had been earned on the turf.  The only thing that made me bet him, especially at a short price was that his debut had been a runaway score on the dirt.  Tracked the leaders confidently through the turn and then took off as clearly the best and I finally was cashing a ticket.

Missed on two more before it was time for the eighth at Keeneland, a five and a half furlong turf dash in the Grade 2 Shakertown.  Golden Pal was going to be a prohibitive favorite and barring his not taking to the soft going, he WAS going to go right to the front and he WAS going to win.  As analyst Caton Bradar said on the TVG broadcast, we'd know in the first jumps out of the gate.  Sure enough, the gates opened and immediately Golden Pal was daylight clear.  Trainer Wesley Ward has said many times he's the best horse he's EVER trained and he showed it again today.  Never being asked and wiring the field for fun as my prime time bet.  

Thought I had another easy winner when prohibitive favorite Adare Manor swept to the front in the Grade 2 Santa Anita Oaks at 3/5 odds, but then gave way to a big upset winner at the top of the lane and finished second.  The eighth at Aqueduct was the Grade 2 Wood Memorial and my pick was Todd Pletcher's Mo Donegal who I thought had a big chance here.  I was intrigued with Acacia Courtney's early co-host said of all the races all over the country he was most interested in seeing Chad Brown's Early Voting run in this race today.  That one went right to the front was clear into the stretch but in a thrilling finish, Mo Donegal split horses, took dead aim and nailed him in the final strides to punch his ticket to the Kentucky Derby!

Less than a half hour later it was time for the next 3yo Derby prep, the Bluegrass from Keeneland.  I thought the field could be narrowed, but not without a lot of confidence.  I settled on Chad Brown's Zandon who had lost a heart-breaking and somewhat controversial Grade 2 Remsen Stakes to end his 2yo season to Mo Donegal - ironically who I'd just cashed on in the Wood - when that one came in on him more than once through the stretch but survived the INQUIRY.  Zandon kicked off his 3yo season in the Grade 2 Risen Star Stakes at the Fair Grounds where he was my bet, but he hopped in the air at the start and was too far back, but closed bravely to be third.  With a better break I thought he could win today.  He was near the back again today but moved into contention turning for home, and then in the most powerful stretch kick I've seen of the spring he blew by to win handily going away.  I'd doubled the bet so I collected another $30+ to my Twin Spires account.

Less than fifteen minutes later we were back at Aqueduct for the seven furlong Grade 1 Carter Handicap.  And I wrote in my analysis and told Keith - who was watching with me - that the "Best Bet" of the day was to take ANYBODY BUT my top choice, Speaker's Corner.  And the reason for that is because in that one's last two (if not three) starts I've been completely against him and was convinced he was over rated.  When he won both his last two at Gulfstream and drew rave reviews, even the comment that he would next be seen in Gr 1 competition, I immediately remarked he was NOT that good and would be a play against.  But after looking over the race I reluctantly made him the bet here.  But five of his last six Beyers would beat 116 of the 118 lifetime figures earned by the rest of the field, and both those looked out of place.  He pressed the pace three wide through the far turn and it was oh so obvious that the jockey had a strong hold on him.  He took off at the top of the stretch without the rider ever moving.  OK, he IS that good.  I admit the error in my ways.  :)

Got the final winner of the day in the Grade 2 Royal Heroine at Santa Anita.  Going Global was coming off a layoff, and it IS a horse race.  But besides that, uh no.....she'd won five of six turf starts since coming to the US and those included a Gr1, a Gr 2 and three Gr 3 races while going 4-for-4 over the Santa Anita turf course.  Oh.  That she paid $2.40 was still stealing as she rolled impressively.

Next week there aren't many big stakes but I'll have some wagers for sure!


Social Media.....

Monday was the NCAA Basketball Tournament Final and typically following the tournament is the only time I watch college basketball.  But this year I've had little to no interest.  But in the championship tonight it was North Carolina (which I like because two of my gal pals, mother-daughter duo Shari & Danielle Bush are big fans) faced off against Kansas (which I like because on of the sweetest gal-pals I have, Shelly, is an alumni and we've had that connection ever since my oldest worked there).  I watched the last half of the second half and when Kansas won in a thrilling finish I reached out to Shelly who responded back.

This week I was "reunited" with good gal-pal Lauren Pastrana, the evening anchor for CBS-4.  It's been a while since we've "communicated" but this week not once, not twice, but three times not only were we connected but she took time out WHILE ON THE ANCHOR DESK to write back to me :)  I enjoy that a lot.  When I turned on the news on Wednesday Lauren sat on the desk in a very bright and attractive blue print dress that caught my eye.  I reached out to her and she replied right back - not just a like, but wrote her thanks back to me.

The very next day I turned on the news around 6 pm (an hour after it had started) and she and co-anchor Elliot Rodriquez were standing in front of the big screen.  Typically Lauren is in a very nice dress or a cute skirt & top combo.  But today she was in a hot pink (because SHE'S HOT!) pants suit.  And that she wasn't in a dress/skirt caught my eye, so again I reached out to her.  That was at 6:21 as she was reporting the news.  At 6:25, just four minutes later - again in the midst of being on air - she not only "liked" my comment but took time to write a "lengthy" reply and explained why she was in pants today1

Finally, on Friday Lauren posted a shout-out to the Miami Heat for being first in the Eastern Conference of the NBA.  I immediately pointed out that our very own Florida Panthers were also in first.  And again, not just a like or a "thank you," but a full blown comment and she told me she wished she could go to a game.  I'd offer to take her with my "second ticket," but I'd probably have a hard time explaining to my wife why I was taking hottie Lauren instead of her, LOL.  So I offered to loan her my jersey if she went :)

The last contact of the weekend came on Saturday.  I'll so miss hottie handicapper Acacia Courtney-Clement at Gulfstream, but I follow her on the "America's Day At The Races" broadcasts on Fox Sports.  Sure enough, when the big Wood Memorial telecast came on air there was our girl.  I took a photo of her while watching in the "Simulcast Center" and sent it to her and she "liked" it back.