Monmouth Park is due to start its 2026 live season on Saturday, 9 May, but the build-up has been shaped by light field sizes, a reduced horse population and continuing uncertainty over long-term funding.
Monmouth head of management, Dennis Drazin told Thoroughbred Daily News he remains determined to keep the Oceanport track operating while pushing for a more secure future for racing in New Jersey.
Key Takeouts Ahead Of Monmouth Park 2026 Season Opener
- Monmouth Park’s 2026 live racing season is scheduled to begin on Saturday, 9 May.
- The official Monmouth Park opening-day page says the live season runs through 13 September.
- Thoroughbred Daily News reported that eight races and 63 horses were entered for the opening programme.
- The same report said Monmouth currently has around 500 to 600 horses on the grounds, below the level it expects later in the meet.
- Monmouth’s stakes schedule lists the $100,000 Long Branch Stakes for opening weekend.
- The NYRA Bets Haskell Stakes is scheduled for Saturday, 18 July.
Monmouth Park To Open Live Racing Season On Saturday
Monmouth Park is preparing to open its 2026 live racing season on Saturday, 9 May, with the usual spring optimism tempered by a more difficult backdrop.
According to Thoroughbred Daily News, only eight races were carded for the opening programme, with 63 horses entered, while the track’s on-site horse population currently sits well below the level management expects later in the meet.
The same report said the situation has been serious enough to raise fresh questions about Monmouth’s medium-term position within the Mid-Atlantic circuit.
Dennis Drazin, who heads the management team that runs Monmouth Park, struck a defiant tone in that report.
He said he would continue to support live racing and breeding in New Jersey while the track searches for a more durable financial model.
Pressure Points Before Opening Day
The strain is not limited to one weekend card.
Thoroughbred Daily News reported that Monmouth is working with roughly 500 to 600 horses on the grounds at present, with competition from neighbouring circuits again affecting depth in the horse population.
The outlet also reported that New Jersey’s proposed purse support for the sport has dropped from the long-standing $20 million level to $15 million in the state’s fiscal 2027 budget proposal.
That matters because purse support has helped Monmouth compete for horses against tracks such as Parx, Laurel and Delaware Park.
Drazin told the publication that the track is still pressing for alternative long-term solutions, including casino legislation, while trying to keep the current programme intact.
Official Monmouth Park schedule pages confirm that the 2026 live season starts on 9 May and runs through 13 September, with weekend post times set for 12:50pm and the NYRA Bets Haskell Stakes scheduled for 18 July.
The track’s published stakes schedule also shows the $100,000 Long Branch Stakes as part of the opening-weekend programme.
Why It Matters
Monmouth Park remains one of the key Thoroughbred venues in the Mid-Atlantic, so any sign of pressure on field sizes, purse support or race dates has consequences beyond one meeting.
If the track cannot stabilise its horse supply and funding position, the ripple effects could be felt by owners, trainers, jockeys and breeders across the wider regional programme.
For now, Monmouth is still opening on schedule and its headline summer fixtures remain in place.
But the story around this season opener is not just about the first card.
It is about whether one of New Jersey racing’s flagship tracks can secure enough support to protect its future.



