Santiago Sets The Standard In Irish Derby

In this topsy-turvy season, Saturday’s G1 Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby at The Curragh has a large field including six well-regarded maidens who have been unable to open their account before the big day largely due to its proximity to the real start of the current campaign. Half-chances are situated everywhere in the line-up, but this one-off renewal could be an open-and-shut case if Santiago (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}) is able to replicate his success in Royal Ascot’s G2 Queen’s Vase eight days previously. Aidan O’Brien’s horses have a remarkable record when backed up in such a short time and his 2 3/4-length success from the Listed Lingfield Derby Trial runner-up Berkshire Rocco (Fr) (Sir Percy {GB}) in last week’s 14-furlong contest stands up to the closest inspection. Runner-up to Alpine Star (Ire) (Sea the Moon {Ger}) as a 2-year-old at the Galway festival in August, the bay was always one set to come into his own tackling middle distances this term and it will be a surprise if he is not aided by a strong pace with Ballydoyle so well-represented.

Santiago would be providing the former Haras du Logis-based Authorized with a first Classic here, having been bought in utero by Robert Nataf of Horse France as he purchased the 4-year-old filly Wadyhatta (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}) at Arqana’s 2016 Summer Sale. Coolmore must have appreciated the foal as a physical specimen to hold on to the relative of the dual Group 1-winning sire Tamayuz (GB) and the miraculous Urban Sea (Miswaki) and it is now paying rich dividends. It will be an extremely rare occurrence should Coolmore win a European Classic with the son of a sire who stands in Turkey–Authorized was sold to that country’s Jockey Club last year–but this is the kind of year when strange things are going to happen. He benefits from having Seamie Heffernan in the saddle, who with three renewals since Soldier of Fortune (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) smashed up the field in 2007 is the Classic’s most successful current rider.

“He seems to be in good form since Ascot–he obviously hasn’t done much,” O’Brien said of Santiago. “He’s a horse we always thought would stay and that’s why he went to the race in Ascot. It will be interesting coming back to a mile and a half as well. I think he’s versatile enough ground-wise.”

Joseph O’Brien denied his father two years ago with Latrobe (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) and could easily do the same again with Scott Heider’s unbeaten Crossfirehurricane, who bids to provide Kitten’s Joy with a second European Classic winner in less than a month. Heider’s racing operation has come a long way since the California champion Answer Do (To-Agori-Mou {Ire}) gave him the ideal kickstart in the early nineties and the Omaha-based real estate developer bred this chestnut with Craig Bernick’s Glen Hill Farm. His dam is a half to the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches heroine Flotilla (Fr) (Mizzen Mast) from a fast family and while there was genuine Classic class in his defeat of the G2 Beresford S. third Gold Maze (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}) and Sherpa (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) in the G3 Gallinule S. over 10 furlongs here last time June 12, this trip is the unknown.

“Throughout his whole career he’s been progressive, with each run he’s taken a big step up with a career-best last time out over 10 furlongs. He earned his spot by winning the Gallinule,” Joseph O’Brien said of Crossfirehurricane. “He had a couple of runs on the all-weather, winning both impressively, and then he went on to the Gallinule last time. That was his first run over 10 furlongs and obviously the Derby is another step up by two furlongs, but if you’re not in you can’t win. He has a fantastic will-to-win. I’d be a little worried if it went very soft, as he handles the all-weather well and won well on good-to-firm last time.”

Runner-up in the G1 Criterium de Saint-Cloud in October, Arthur’s Kingdom (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) fared better than stablemate Mogul (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) when splitting Pyledriver (GB) (Harbour Watch {Ire}) and Mohican Heights (Ire) (Australia {GB}) in Royal Ascot’s G2 King Edward VII S. on June 16 and stamina is assured in his case. Aidan O’Brien has moved to fit the half-brother to the triple Canadian International hero Joshua Tree (Ire) by Camelot’s sire Montjeu (Ire) in the cheekpieces that worked so well on Ruler of the World (Ire) in the 2013 G1 Epsom Derby. “He’s a real honest, straightforward horse,” Aidan O’Brien said. “Ascot was his first run of the year, so it was a good run.”

It is guesswork as to which of Ballydoyle’s June 9 Leopardstown maiden one-two-three Tiger Moth  (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Dawn Patrol (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Order of Australia (Ire) (Australia {GB}) will hold most sway here, but Dawn Patrol must have significant upside as a half-brother to the 2011 G1 Epsom Derby hero Pour Moi (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). “Tiger Moth won nicely over a mile and a quarter the last day on nice ground and seems to be in good form since then,” Aidan O’Brien added. “We thought Dawn Patrol would stay further than the mile and a quarter and he seems to be in good order since the run, and Order of Australia is another horse who looks like he might stay further than the mile and a quarter as well.”

O’Brien was not ruling out a big show from one of his outsiders and said, “Horses are going to come from out of the clouds in this race. Nobody is going to know what’s what until after this race. After it we’ll know who is the best mile-and-a-half horse, what horses need to drop back to a mile and a quarter or even a mile. That’s the best thing about The Curragh, you know where you are going after it, we always think. We would usually like two runs well spaced out before the Derby, but most have only had one run. I think it will be the most exciting of all, because there’s so much mystery in it.”

Camelot has a big week ahead of him here and at Epsom and he is also represented here by the maiden Chiricahua (Ire), who hails from the Ger Lyons stable. Owned by another American in Mark Breen, he was last seen finishing runner-up over a mile on heavy ground at Naas in November and was protected from fast going when taken out of his intended 3-year-old reintroduction in the Gallinule.

Fittingly, last year’s shock six-length Irish Derby hero Sovereign (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) is back for the first time subsequently in the G3 Comer Group International Vintage Crop S. over 14 furlongs. He meets the G1 Melbourne Cup fourth Master of Reality (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) and other smart staying benchmarks as he gets his 4-year-old campaign underway. “He’s just ready to start. He’s done very well, but will improve plenty from the run,” Aidan O’Brien said. “Ideally we might have liked to start a couple of furlongs shorter, but the race was there to suit him so we said we’d start and go from there.”

Kicking off the day’s action is Newcastle’s G3 Betfair Backs Racing Welfare Chipchase S., in which Shadwell’s dream run last week could carry on into this prize via the Sir Michael Stoute-trained 4-year-old Mubakker (Speightstown). Earning this tilt with a course-and-distance handicap success on June 2, the unexposed son of the GII Beaumont S. winner Ready To Act (More Than Ready) is unsurprisingly three-for-three on artificial surfaces but has something to chew on here taking on the likes of the 2017 G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest hero Brando (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), who is having his first all-weather start at the age of eight, and the June 6 G3 Palace House S. runner-up Judicial  (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}). “We pulled him out of [Royal] Ascot last week because of the ground, he doesn’t like it soft,” Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum’s racing manager Angus Gold said of Mubakker. “The fact he’s been up to Newcastle and won should be in his favour. Hopefully he’s a progressive horse and this looks the right race for him.”

Newcastle also hosts the G3 Betfair Exchange Hoppings Fillies’ S., where Kirsten Rausing’s 2019 Listed Height of Fashion S. winner Aloe Vera (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) faces five including Anamoine Limited’s 3-year-old Virgin Snow (GB) (Gleneagles {Ire}). Ed Dunlop is hoping the daughter of one of his two star distaffers Snow Fairy (Ire) (Intikhab) can build on her win in a Haydock handicap over an extended 10 furlongs on June 9. “She’s taking on older fillies and she’s obviously bred to be a better 3-year-old,” he said. “It’s still very much a learning curve with her and we are restricted to what races we can run in, so we’ve ended up taking her to Newcastle. We’re not sure just yet what her optimum trip will be. We hope she might stay a little further, but she can be a bit keen in her races.”

Night of Thunder (Ire) is one of the sires of the moment and he has a duo in Newmarket’s 10-furlong Listed Fairway S. headed by Highclere Thoroughbred Racing’s Thunderous (Ire) who is coming back from a lengthy absence having won Newbury’s Listed Washington Singer S. in August.

Back at The Curragh, the Listed GAIN First Flier S. over five furlongs sees the juveniles get their first chance of domestic black-type and Ballydoyle’s Chief Little Hawk will be trying to provide Coolmore’s freshman Air Force Blue with a first having been to Royal Ascot for the Listed Windsor Castle S. Seventh in that speed test on June 17, the son of the GI Matron S. heroine Marylebone (Unbridled’s Song) will either come back strong for that effort or it might take its toll as he faces six rivals including SBA Racing Limited’s June 10 Navan fillies’ maiden scorer Frenetic (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}).

Click here for Saturday’s group race fields.

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On Aftercare: With Pardo At the Helm, Aftercare Charles Town Stays on Track

Aftercare of Charles Town (ACT) was founded in 2013 under the corporate name of Equine Encore Performance at Charles Town. ACT’s stated purpose is the rehoming, repurposing and retirement of Thoroughbreds that have raced and trained at Charles Town Races located in Charles Town, WV. The program was started with a fund from the Charles Town Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association and is supplemented with a paddock fee (start fee) of $5 per start. Until last fall, the paddock fee contribution was $2 per start. In 2019, ACT assisted 43 horses. The program operates with just a small volunteer board and no employees. I caught up with Georgiana Pardo, the current volunteer president who guides the organization and maximizes its tight budget while maintaining high standards in their careful placements of the Thoroughbreds entrusted to them.

DP: Georgiana, what is your background and how did you come to this post at Aftercare Charles Town?

GP: I have a small general practice law firm in Charles Town. I’ve ridden most of my life and had off-track Thoroughbreds as my riding horses. In late 2016, a friend of mine was on the board and she contacted me to ask me if I was interested in serving. I said yes right away because it was something I care about. I became the president in 2018.

DP: What makes you most proud about serving on the board and as president of ACT?

GP: ACT may be a small program, but we have high standards and insist on quality programs for our horses and I think we can hold our head up, even among some of the more well-funded heavy hitters in the track-based aftercare realm.  We are down in the trenches doing the actual hard work of dealing with the needs of each individual horse and creating good outcomes. It is very satisfying to see the horses and their new owners happy and connected.

DP: Can you give us an overview of how the program operates?

GP: Horsemen file paperwork with us to accept horses that have raced or are racing at Charles Town. Because most of the funding comes from the horsemen at Charles Town, we have guidelines that allow us to serve the horses that have primarily raced here. We also require vet records to help us get a picture of the horse’s soundness and what sort of second career will be most appropriate for the horse. Based on the horse and its potential, we arrange for it to go to one of our placement partners where the horse will be rehabilitated, retrained and adopted out. We provide a stipend and pay for procedures that are needed to make a horse sound for a second riding career.

DP: How do you choose your placement partners?

GP: We work with non-profit organizations who are experienced, do follow-up and provide a safety net if that horse is returned. Each horse is a unique individual with personality and potential. I am not sure that everyone understands the amount of time and effort and skill it takes to give a horse the best chance of ending up in the right place and in the best condition. We look for partners who have experience and care about identifying the issues, doing the appropriate rehab, making full disclosure to the potential adopters and then matching the adopter to that horse and what conditions the horse may have.

DP: Did the COVID19 pandemic affect your organization financially?

GP: Yes, when racing stopped our income from paddock fees stopped so that has seriously impacted our budget.

DP: When the track was forced to close, did you see an increase in requests to accept horses?

GP: Surprisingly, no. We expected that we would receive more requests to place horses, but we did not. I think that the Horses First Fund relief effort as well as generous in-kind donations from Triple Crown and Blue Seal helped horsemen to feed their horses and hold on to their stables until racing started up again.

DP: How did the relief program work?

GP: We partnered with Thoroughbred Charities of America, Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races, the Charles Town HBPA, Southern States, Gower’s Feed and Triple Crown to aid trainers facing economic hardship due to the cancellation of racing, with horse feed and forage.

DP: What is your greatest challenge going forward in 2020 and beyond?

GP: Our greatest challenge is that our funding is limited even with the supplemental private donations that we receive. With better funding, we could place more horses. We also need to convince more horsemen that aftercare should be their first choice when a horse is ready to retire from racing.

DP: What do you see as the greatest opportunity going forward?

GP: After Care Charles Town is a great example of how a racetrack and its horsemen have stepped up to help provide reliable equine retirement options. Racing’s image with respect to horse welfare is only as good as the latest story out in the public on aftercare. It doesn’t matter to the public if the horse is a champion or never broke its maiden. So, every story should be a good one. Every racehorse deserves a safe and secure retirement. They don’t know if they made $2 or $2 million. The horse that never managed to break his or her maiden tried just as hard as the multiple graded stakes winner, and they are equally valuable and deserving of a good life after racing. Adequately funded aftercare at every track for every horse is achievable and it is a worthy investment for all involved: the owners and trainers; the horses; and the horses’ new owners/adopters. Everyone wins in this scenario.

For more information on Aftercare Charles Town and to reach Georgiana Pardo, go to tbaftercare.org or email tbaftercare@gmail.com.

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Cox Confident Owendale Will Take ‘Next Step Forward’ In Stephen Foster

Rupp Racing's multiple Grade III winner Owendale (by leading sire Into Mischief) will attempt to take a step forward to become one of the top older horses in the country in Saturday's $500,000 Stephen Foster (GII) at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky.

“He's only had one start this year (in the $100,000 Blame) but his victory was visually very impressive for us,” trainer Brad Cox said. “It's only one race but we're hoping he keeps showing that positive progression from a 3-year-old to an older 4-year-old. The Blame was a one-turn race, which is not his preferred distance and a distance he hasn't run at in several starts. The 1 1/8-mile distance in the Stephen Foster should definitely suit him better and we're confident he can take that next step forward to becoming one of the top handicap horses in the country.”

Saturday's Stephen Foster is the marquee race of the 2020 Spring Meet at Churchill Downs with the winner receiving an automatic berth to the Breeders' Cup Classic (GI) on Nov. 7 at Keeneland.

The Stephen Foster has had a strong influence on the Breeders' Cup Classic and Horse of the Year honors. Four horses used victories in the Stephen Foster as part of their résumés in Horse of the Year campaigns: Black Tie Affair (1991), Saint Liam (2005), Curlin (2008) and Gun Runner (2017). In addition, two runner-ups were crowned Horse of the Year: Mineshaft (2003) and Wise Dan (2012). Also, Awesome Again (1998) and Blame (2010) completed same-year Foster-Classic doubles. Fort Larned won the Classic in 2012, and won the Foster the following year prior to a fourth-place run in his bid for a second Classic win.

Owendale was made the 4-1 third choice on the morning line for Saturday's Stephen Foster and his regular pilot Florent Geroux will be in the irons. The Stephen Foster is carded as Race 10 of 11 with a post time of 5:47 p.m.

The complete field for the Stephen Foster (with jockey, trainer and morning line odds): Fearless (John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher, 12-1); Pirate's Punch (Mike Smith, Grant Forster, 15-1); Alkhaatam (Declan Cannon, Danny Peitz, 30-1); Multiplier(Tyler Gaffalione, Peter Miller, 10-1); Tom's d'Etat (Miguel Mena, Al Stall Jr., even-money); By My Standards (Gabriel Saez, Calhoun, 5-2); Silver Dust (Beschizza, Calhoun, 10-1); and Owendale (Florent Geroux, Brad Cox, 4-1).

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Midnight Bisou Leading Charge Of The Asmussen Brigade On Churchill’s Closing Weekend

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen is poised to close the 2020 Churchill Downs Spring Meet on a charge with 15 horses entered in the final three days of racing including 2019 Champion Older Dirt Female Midnight Bisou (3-5 on the morning line) in the $200,000 Fleur de Lis (GII) and promising juvenile Cazadero (8-5) in the $100,000 Bashford Manor (GIII).

“We're very grateful to be able to run horses of this quality during this 'new normal,'” Asmussen said. “Even though the schedule of racing has been altered, we remain grateful to have horses like (Midnight Bisou) to be able to run in stakes races such as the Fleur de Lis.”

Saturday's 11-race program is highlighted by the $500,000 Stephen Foster (GII) but many racing fans will be focused on the Fleur de Lis with a star-studded matchup between Midnight Bisou and last year's Longines Kentucky Oaks (GI) winner Serengeti Empress.

“This has been an unprecedented year in more ways than one,” Asmussen said. “The (national) stakes schedule has not been as traditional as it used to be. We gave (Midnight Bisou) ample time to get over the trip and effort she put in at the world's richest horse race (the $20 million Saudi Cup) in February. She was quarantined in Chicago and eventually moved to Keeneland thereafter. Her time off lasted longer than expected, which wasn't ideal at the time but is now.”

Midnight Bisou (20-12-5-3—$7,250,000) has been nothing short of spectacular throughout her 20-race career. The now 5-year-old mare began her career on the 2018 Road to the Kentucky Oaks with victories in the $200,000 Santa Ynez (GII), $100,000 Santa Ysabel (GIII) and $400,000 Santa Anita Oaks (GI) with previous trainer Bill Spawr. Midnight Bisou finished third behind Monomoy Girl in the 2018 Kentucky Oaks (GI).

“She's always been a beautifully kind filly to train,” Asmussen said. “She's become more confident in her training over the last two years.”

Saturday's Fleur de Lis is a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In Distaff Division” series race. The winner will get an automatic berth to the season-ending championship race on Nov. 7 at Keeneland.

“Her next two races will likely determine which (Breeders' Cup) race we could point toward,” Asmussen said. “We have constantly discussed where we are at with her training and progression but we know how well she performed against some of the world's best racehorses in Saudi.”

The Fleur de Lis field from the rail out (with jockey, trainer and morning line odds): Go Google Yourself (Brian Hernandez Jr., Paul McGee, 8-1); Another Broad (John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher, 12-1); Chocolate Kisses (Declan Carroll, Mark Casse, 12-1); Serengeti Empress (Joe Talamo, Tom Amoss, 2-1); Midnight Bisou (Mike Smith, Asmussen, 3-5); Red Dane (Corey Lanerie, Charlie LoPresti, 50-1); and Motion Emotion (Julien Leparoux, Richard Baltas, 15-1).

Another top contender for the Asmussen barn entered Saturday is Stonestreet Stables' debut winner Cazadero in the Bashford Manor. The precocious 2-year-old son of Street Sense won his debut by 8 ¾ lengths at odds of 5-1. Asmussen's go-to rider Ricardo Santana Jr. will be in the irons for the six-furlong Bashford Manor, which will go as Race 8 on Saturday.

The Bashford Manor field, which features all first-out maiden winners, from the rail out (with jockey, trainer and morning line odds): Crown and Coke (Miguel Mena, James Lawrence II, 30-1); Hulen (Corey Lanerie, Steve Asmussen, 5-1); Gatsby(Tyler Gaffalione, Juan Alvarado, 4-1); Hyperfocus (John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher, 4-1); Herd Immunity (Brian Hernandez Jr., Peter Miller, 9-2); Cazadero (Ricardo Santana Jr., Asmussen, 8-5); and County Final (James Graham, John Ennis, 6-1).

Entering the final three days of the meet, Asmussen remained one win behind Dale Romans, 742-to-741, for the all-time leading trainer mark at Churchill Downs. Asmussen surpassed Romans' mark earlier in the meet but, in turn, Romans won five races in less than two weeks to retake his spot on top.

 

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