Sunday’s Insights: 600K Flatter Colt Debuts at Del Mar

4th-DMR, $57K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 5:00 p.m. ET
Muir Hut Stables LLC’s AFFABLE (Flatter) gets a start for trainer Mark Glatt. Out of the unraced mare Wildaboutshopping (Wildcat Heir), the chestnut realized a $600,000 final bid earlier this spring at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-olds in Training sale. The colt is the highest-priced offspring by the stallion in 2020. Always well-represented in these West Coast tests for babies, Bob Baffert saddles BARRAZA (Into Mischief) and SAVILLE ROW (Quality Road). Out of graded winner Halo Dolly (Popular), the former enters in this race off a pair of fast works, including the most recent a five-furlong move in :59 2/5 (2/53). Equally sharp in the mornings, Saville Row is a grandson of juvenile champion filly Folklore (Tiznow). This represents the family of Essential Quality (Tapit), Friday’s winner of the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile. TJCIS PPs

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Knicks Go Leads Them A Merry Chase in the Dirt Mile

Backed into 9-5 favoritism, the Korea Racing Authority’s KNICKS GO c, 4, Paynter-Kosmo’s Buddy, by Outflanker) continued his rich vein of form with a front-running tour-de-force. Sent hard from gate five, the $87,000 Keeneland September graduate made the early running in advance of Complexity (Maclean’s Music), covering the opening quarter-mile in :21.98 over a Keeneland main track producing wickedly fast sectionals all weekend long. Skipping along through a nearly unimaginable half-mile in :44.40, the 4-year-old always looked to have the measure of his pace pressure, found more off the final corner and stayed on to score in 1:33.85. Knicks Go is the fifth Maryland-bred winner of a Breeders’ Cup race and the second in two years, following Sharing (Speightstown)’s success in last year’s GI Juvenile Fillies Turf. Sales history: $40,000 Wlg ’16 KEENOV; $87,000 Ylg ’17 KEESEP. O-Korea Racing Authority; B-Angie Moore (MD); T-Brad Cox.

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Glass Slippers Takes Rail Trip To Become First European To Win Turf Sprint

Glass Slippers (GB) justified a long flight from her European base with a brilliant performance under a patient ride by jockey Tom Eaves to win the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint Saturday. The 4-year-old filly hung well back, tucked along the rail behind the majority of the field through the backstretch and around the turn, appeared to have nowhere to go until a gap opened up, allowing Eaves to quietly ease her closer to the pace. Still, Glass Slippers was forced to wait behind dueling Wildman Jack and Into Mystic in front, hemmed in to her right shoulder by Extravagant Kid. She found another gear and burst through a narrow gap inside of Extravagant Kid, charging forward to challenge Wildman Jack, easily putting him away and holding off a wall of late challengers led by Wet Your Whistle. The final margin was a half length.

“It's just brilliant,” said Eaves. “We arrived on Monday and we exercised her on the turf  track all week. We also walked it a couple of times. I spoke to Ryan Moore beforehand for some advice on how to ride the track. What a training performance. She's been great all year so come to and win it's unreal. She's raced round a bend before but the plan was to go on the instead and ride for a bit of luck. We had a great run through which doesn't always work but it did today. To have a Breeders' Cup winner Is amazing and a day I won't forget. She'll be in training again next year.”

The win is the first in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint for a European-based horse.

Wet Your Whistle was second, followed by Leinster. Glass Slippers paid $22.40 to win.

The final time for the five and a half furlongs was 1:01.53.

Kevin Ryan trains Glass Slippers for owner/breeder Bearstone Stud Limited. She is the daughter of Dream Ahead and Night Gypsy (GB) by Mind Games (GB). The filly came to this race off a narrow second-place finish in the G1 Prix de l'Abbaye de Longchamp on Oct. 20, and a win prior to that in the G1 Flying Five Stakes at the Curragh.

“Awesome. I'm ecstatic,” said Ryan. “To come and compete against the best sprinters in the world and beat them is just amazing. She's been great all week. Every day getting fresher and cantering on the turf track every morning. I said to Tom earlier in the week now you're going quicker running into bend let's see how she changes her legs and straight away no issues at all in the bend. I knew then we were in business. We decided going on a brave ride up the inner and go the shortest route and if it didn't work such is life. Today was our day.”

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Gamine Sets Track Record In Breeders’ Cup Filly And Mare Sprint

A roller-coaster season for Gamine hit its highest point yet on Saturday when the filly set a new Keeneland track record for seven furlongs in the Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint.

The 3-year-old daughter of Into Mischief went against the playbook on Saturday, leaving the gate quickly, but allowing Serengeti Empress to assume the lead early on. For the first time in Gamine's six career starts, she did not have the lead after the opening quarter-mile or half-mile, which Serengeti Empress clocked in :21.77 seconds and :44.27 seconds respectively.

Gamine sat on Serengeti Empress' outside hip through the turn, got within a half-length at the quarter pole, and drew even with the leader with three-sixteenths remaining. Serengeti Empress, making her final career start, fought valiantly, but jockey John Velazquez found another gear aboard Gamine, and the filly carried on through the stretch with minimal serious urging.

Gamine crossed the wire effortlessly, 6 1/4 lengths ahead of a fading Serengeti Empress, who held on to second by a nose over Bell's The One. The winner paid $4.20 to win as a heavy favorite.

The winning time for the seven-furlong race was 1:20.20 over a fast Keeneland main track, eclipsing the mark of 1:21.32 set by Taris when she won the Grade 2 Raven Run Stakes on Oct. 18, 2014.

Gamine marked the the 17th Breeders' Cup victory for Velazquez. She was 16th for trainer Bob Baffert. The filly races for Denmark-born owner Michael Lund Petersen, who bought her for $1.8 million at last year's Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale.

Though her campaign has been highly successful in 2020 – the Filly and Mare Sprint was her third Grade 1 victory this season – it has also been bogged in controversy, following a pair of positive drug tests.

Gamine was disqualified from an Oaklawn Park optional claiming race on May 20 – a race she won by a neck – after testing positive for lidocaine, a substance used by veterinarians during lameness examinations to “block” or numb a horse's limbs. It's also commonly found in ointments and analgesic treatments and patches to alleviate pain in humans. Baffert's attorney argued that the presence of the substance in tests was caused by a patch worn by a member of the trainer's staff suffering back pain. Baffert trainee Charlatan, the winner of the G1 Arkansas Derby on the same day, also forfeited his victory for a lidocaine positive.

In September, Gamine tested positive for betamethasone, a corticosteroid, following the G1 Kentucky Oaks, where she finished third. A ruling has not yet been made, pending the result of a split sample.

Bred in Kentucky by Grace Thoroughbred Holdings, Gamine is out of the stakes-placed Kafwain mare Peggy Jane.

To view the race's full chart, click here.

Winning trainer Bob Baffert (Gamine) – “That's the baddest b**** in the land right there! I knew (Serengeti Empress) was going to go and I told Johnny if you get separation to get to the outside. She is doing as well as she did when she won the Acorn. She is just brilliant. She is the fastest filly going one turn I've ever trained. I wanted it bad for her. What she's gone through. She deserved it. Of all my races, this meant the most to me.” 

Winning jockey John Velazquez (Gamine) – “We knew that other horse would come out running, but I didn't want to give it up too easy. I wanted to make him [Luis Saez] work a little harder. Once he passed me, I came off the rail and even then I didn't get want to give it to him that easy either. I made sure I put a little pressure on because I know that filly is really tough on the lead. I made sure I was close to him. When I asked my filly, she was there for me.”  

Second-place trainer Tom Amoss (Serengeti Empress) – “We just got outrun. There's no secret to it. We just got flat outrun. Gamine turned in a spectacular performance, but I'm still so very proud of my filly. Being second-best today is no disgrace, not by a longshot. My girl was a winner a long time ago before this race.” 

Second-place jockey Luis Saez (Serengeti Empress) – “I had a pretty good trip. I put her on the lead and she was pretty comfortable. When the other filly came to her she fought, but the winner is a very good filly.” 

Third-place trainer Neil Pessin (Bell's the One) – “They didn't go, that was the problem. Gamine took off Serengeti which was a smart thing to do on her part. It was a slow pace for this type of race, the way the track is playing today. But my filly ran her eyeballs out. Very proud of her. Another jump and she would have been second.” 

Third-place jockey Corey Lanerie (Bell's the One) – “She ran great. I actually thought I was second. Hat's off to the winner. She beat us today fair and square. My filly showed up like she always does, and she gave me everything she had. I was a little wider than I wanted, but I knew I couldn't get stopped. If I have to check any, my chances were done. So, I put her out in the clear, and we were coming but just weren't good enough today.”

Fourth-place trainer Greg Foley (Sconsin) – “She's a good filly and running against the best in the world. It is a shame she got beat a half-length for second. I thought we were going to be second and then we got zapped for third the last jump. Serengeti Empress got to laying on us a little bit while our filly was running up the fence. She got a good ride and it was just a shame we weren't second or third. The fractions set up great for us (with the leaders) going fast which we figured they would. She ran her race and I am proud of her.” 

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