El Gazpacho is a step ahead in the preview of the Clásico Jockey Club de Venezuela
- Turf Diario

- Apr 14
- 2 min read
The son of Bodemeister will face several tough rivals in Tuesday's feature race on the La Plata track

A highly interesting spectacle is expected in this afternoon's feature at the local track, the Clásico Jockey Club de Venezuela (L-1400m, dirt), a weight-for-age contest for horses 4 years old and up.
Form and recent performances suggest El Gazpacho (Bodemeister) as the one to beat. A consistent protagonist in the stakes ranks, he counts the Clásico Mesa del Senado (L), Clásico Urbano de Iriondo (L), and the Handicap Whipper In—all at San Isidro—among his victories.
The Stud La Frontera runner arrives following a strong effort on the Palermo dirt, where he finished second, three lengths behind Boyero Spring (Greenspring) in the Handicap Good Time, finishing ahead of quality names like Atomic Trigger (Cosmic Trigger) and Emergent (Il Campione). His local credentials also support his candidacy, including a third-place finish in the Clásico Jockey Club de Corrientes behind Yak Sport (Glory Seattle) and El Ernesto (Señor Candy).
He faces a stern challenge from Declan Dall (Victor Security), who is in career-best form. In his most recent outing at Palermo, he pulled off an upset in the Handicap Equal Stripes over 1200 meters, defeating the talented Rugiente (Il Campione). While he stretches out in distance today, it does not appear to be an insurmountable hurdle.
Coming out of the Especial Jockey Club de Mendoza are Colour Vision (Univision) and Bombay Lake (Anjiz Lake), who combined for a surprising exacta finish separated by four lengths, defeating the aforementioned Yak Sport. Notable Island (Lizard Island) finished fourth in that race and returns today looking for improvement.
The field is completed by Indy Pro (Indy Point), who has come close to significant victories against tougher competition. Having recently regained confidence with a solid conditional win, he is more than capable of handling the step back up in class.





Spent some time looking into crypto gaming platforms available to Norwegian users. The transaction side works as expected on most major networks, confirmations are reasonably fast and the fee structure is transparent. Midway through my research I came across https://www.casinokrypto.net/ which aggregates options specifically for the Norwegian market. Game variety is broader than I initially assumed, including some titles not commonly found elsewhere. That said, decentralized platforms still carry technical risks that centralized alternatives do not. Anyone exploring this space should verify licensing independently and not rely solely on aggregator lists. Proceed with measured expectations.
From what I have observed, the situation for Icelandic players is mostly shaped by offshore licensing rather than local rules. Operators registered in Malta or Curacao tend to accept users and run entirely in English, so accessibility is rarely the problem. What actually varies is reliability. I usually check licensing details and withdrawal terms first, and resources like www.bestonlinecasinosiceland.is can be useful for cross-referencing. Mobile stability and verification systems matter more than promotional offers in practice. Treat everything cautiously and verify claims independently before committing.
I have noticed that pokies sections on many platforms take a large part of the interface and the structure stays fairly simple while variety comes from themes rather than mechanics.
For general comparison I sometimes check resources like https://pokiesworld.com/online-pokies but I treat it only as orientation since details shift and operators are inconsistent.
Overall I prefer cross checking and staying cautious with assumptions and technical claims closing note keep a rational and careful approach