Scrambling to make up eight lost days of racing, Oaklawn Park officials announced a revamped schedule that reschedules its five canceled stakes races, and adds races and purse money to the Arkansas track’s schedule.

Oaklawn-Winter Rescheduling
Unfortunately for bettors, there is no morning line on snowplow races at Oaklawn Park. The Arkansas track lost eight days of racing — including five stakes races — over two weekends to the winter storms. (Image: Coady Photography)

Oaklawn isn’t the only American racetrack feeling the polar blast buffeting the Central and Eastern US. New York Racing Association officials canceled Thursday’s eight-race card at Aqueduct because of the weather. NYRA officials pulled the plug after the National Weather Service forecast upwards of 8 inches of snow throughout New York City.

The NYRA said it plans to run Friday’s card as scheduled.

Ice storms already scrubbed two weekends at Oaklawn, postponing a total of five stakes races. As a result, Oaklawn rescheduled the Grade 3 Southwest Stakes and the Grade 3 Razorback Handicap for Saturday, Feb. 27. Those join the already-scheduled Spring Fever Stakes.

Oaklawn Putting $2 Million Back at Stake Here

The Grade 3 Bayakoa headlines the Sunday, Feb. 28 card, with the Dixie Belle and Downthedustyroad stakes on the Bayakoa’s undercard. All told, Oaklawn is reinstating nearly $2 million in stakes races for that weekend.

“There’s no fighting Mother Nature, especially when our priority is safety,” Oaklawn President Louis Cella said in a statement. “However, we feel these changes will greatly benefit our horsemen and our fans by creating a huge weekend of racing to kick off the rest of the season.”

When Oaklawn resumes racing on Feb. 25, the track plans increasing overnight purses by as much as $4,000 per race for the season’s duration. That will bump up maiden special weight purses from $82,000 to $86,000, on average. Top-level allowance races will increase from $88,000 to upwards of $92,000. That represents about a 5% average increase per overnight race.

More Money Means More Races

Along with the increased purses come more races. Oaklawn added 27 races to its season schedule. Those will run on two new race days, Wednesday, March 31, and Wednesday, April 28.

State crowd restrictions limit attendance to Oaklawn box holders, Jockey Club members, and those with dining/simulcast reservations. Oaklawn General Manager Wayne Smith says he hopes to open the Oaklawn infield when the weather thaws in the coming weeks.