Harrington Raceway’s 74th season starts Monday

Harrington, DE — Although a lot will be different when Harrington Raceway opens without spectators for its 74th season of live harness racing Monday (June 15), some things will remain familiar.

Most notably perhaps is the return of 2019 Delaware Valley USHWA Harrington Raceway Horse of the Meet Slick Tony (7-2, Russell Foster), who is slated to make his first start since March 5 in the featured $10,000 Open Pace, the fifth race on the nine-race card.

Owned by his breeder/trainer George Leager, the 5-year-old No Spin Zone stallion is a graduate of the Delaware Standardbred Breeders Fund program, which jump started his $670,043 in career earnings. A 16-time winner last year, he banked $231,449 as a 4-year-old and despite the COVID-19 related disruption to racing, he remains on track for another $100,000 season.

Slick Tony will face a quality field of eight, which is the anchor leg of the early Pick-4 wager (races 2-5).

Another regular sighting will be the return of last year’s driving champ, Art Stafford Jr., who had a career year in 2019 and has five drives on the card. Two-time defending leading trainer Joe Columbo will have a busy night with five entries from his stable. All of the Columbo-trained entries will be driven by former track driving champ Mike Cole, who is part of a formidable driving colony opening the meet.

Tim Tetrick, who was recently voted into the Harness Racing Hall of Fame, will compete in all nine races on the opening card. Many of his drives will come from the powerful barn of Jo Ann and Jim King Jr., who trained 2019 Dan Patch Horse of the Year Shartin N.

Last year was a landmark year for Harrington-based horses, as the town with a population of less than 4,000 has become a hot bed for harness racing talent with prior champions like Wiggle It Jiggleit, Rainbow Blue and Adios Harry, just to name a few.

Its most recent success stories from 2019 are Lather Up, who raced out of the George Teague stable for trainer Clyde Francis, stabled on the east side of Harrington. Lather Up is the co-fastest horse in the sport’s history with a 1:46 win at The Meadowlands. And the aforementioned Shartin N not only was the Horse of the Year, but is also the sport’s fastest mare ever. Not to be outdone was 2-year-old pacing filly of the year Lyons Sentinel, who is also trained by the King barn, located on the west side of town.

Post time for the Monday program is 4:30 p.m. Live racing will continue on a Monday through Wednesday schedule through July 15. There will be a break in the schedule before resuming on Aug. 17.

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