Medaglia d’Oro Filly Gets Up in Time in Santa Ysabel

She had to be worked on early in Sunday's GIII Santa Ysabel S. at Santa Anita and seemed an unlikely winner as late as the eighth pole, but Baoma Corporation's Beautiful Gift (Medaglia d'Oro) produced a strong rally in deep stretch to nail Moraz (Empire Maker) in the last jump while making her first start since October.

A debut third behind re-opposing GSW barnmate Kalypso (Brody's Cause) going 5 1/2 furlongs Sept. 5 at Del Mar, the homebred stretched out to a local mile Oct. 23 and surged in the closing strides to get up by a half-length as the odds-on chalk.

Off as the 3-1 third choice in this four-horse group as Kalypso was knocked down to 3-5, the bay was away without issue and found a good spot in a pocketed third as the chalk dictated terms by a measured length through a modest :23.95 quarter. Stalking Moraz turned up the heat just a touch past a :48.13 half and those two appeared to leave Beautiful Gift behind as she was pushed along by John Velazquez at the top of the far turn. Moraz pulled even with Kalypso three furlongs from home and started to do the better work soon after, kicking clear into the final furlong. Beautiful Gift began to uncoil her best stride right about then, however, and had just enough racetrack to charge alongside the leader and get her head down first on the wire. Kalypso was third.

“I didn't think Johnny was going to get there and all of a sudden she kicked in, and she's really good,” said winning trainer Bob Baffert. “We gave her some time. She got really light on us. The further the better for her. I didn't think she got there until I saw the super slow-mo, but I'm just happy that they ran well. It's nice to get these fillies, it's all I have for the Oaks, so it's fun.”

Pedigree Notes:

With the victory, Beautiful Gift becomes the 150th stakes winner and 78th graded stakes winner for 22-year-old super-sire Medaglia d'Oro. She is the second black-type performer out of Sea Gift, who won her only career start as a 3-year-old in England, following Chitu, who captured the 2014 GIII Sunland Derby before running third, beaten less than a length by Shared Belief (Candy Ride {Arg}), in that year's GI Malibu S. Second dam Ocean Queen is a GSW half-sister to MGSW Dance Parade (Gone West), who in turn produced MG1SW marathoner Leading Light (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). A $450,000 RNA at Keeneland November in 2014, Sea Gift has a juvenile Arrogate colt named Mwari and was bred to Justify last spring.

Sunday, Santa Anita
SANTA YSABEL S.-GIII, $98,000, Santa Anita, 3-7, 3yo, f,
1 1/16m, 1:44.83, ft.
1–BEAUTIFUL GIFT, 120, f, 3, by Medaglia d'Oro
                1st Dam: Sea Gift, by A.P. Indy
                2nd Dam: Ocean Queen, by Zilzal
                3rd Dam: River Jig, by Irish River (Fr)
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. O/B-Baoma
Corp (KY); T-Bob Baffert; J-John R. Velazquez. $60,000.
Lifetime Record: 3-2-0-1, $99,600. *1/2 to Chitu (Henny
Hughes), GSW & GISP, $597,800. Werk Nick Rating: A.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Moraz, 120, f, 3, Empire Maker–Malvinia, by A.P. Indy.
O/B-Don Alberto Corporation (KY); T-Michael W. McCarthy.
$20,000.
3–Kalypso, 120, f, 3, Brody's Cause–Malibu Cove, by Malibu
Moon. ($240,000 Ylg '19 FTKJUL). O-David A. Bernsen, LLC,
Gainesway Stable (Antony Beck), Rockingham Ranch & Chad
Littlefield; B-Spendthrift Farm LLC (KY); T-Bob Baffert. $12,000.
Margins: HD, 2 3/4, 23. Odds: 3.00, 2.20, 0.70.
Also Ran: Heels Up. Scratched: A Real Hero. Click for the Equibase.com chart,
the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Red-Hot Jonathan Thomas Sets Sights On Wood Memorial With Nicky The Vest

Nicky the Vest, trained by Jonathan Thomas for owner Robert LaPenta, matched a career-best 83 Beyer last out in a dominant 11 3/4-length score in the $100,000 Gander, a one-turn mile for New York-bred sophomores on Valentine's Day at Aqueduct in Ozone Park, N.Y.

In victory, Nicky the Vest, bred in the Empire State by Highclere, became the first stakes winner for his sire Runhappy. Purchased for $110,000 at the 2019 OBS Yearling Sale, Nicky the Vest is perfect through two starts which includes a 3 1/4-length score on debut in December going the one-turn mile at Aqueduct.

Nicky the Vest covered a half-mile in 49.95 seconds on the Belmont dirt training track on February 26 and Thomas said the bay colt will return to the work tab on Monday as preparations continue for the Grade 2 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino on April 3.

“He's doing well. He'll breeze tomorrow and so far we're on target for the Wood,” said Thomas. “He came out of the Gander well and his energy level was good. The weather has been a little contentious the past couple weeks, so we didn't want to take having a nice track for granted and we went ahead and got him back a week earlier than we'd anticipated.”

Thomas said he will look to provide the lightly-raced Nicky the Vest with valuable experience in upcoming works.

“I might try next week to give him two horses as a target and give him the opportunity to take a little kickback,” said Thomas. “You never know if he might need to overcome a trip with that kind of scenario. But we'll also focus on some longer works so he doesn't come in too fresh and settles well.

“It's exciting. He's undefeated and he's done it by open lengths thus far,” added Thomas. “Every task from here on out is only going to get incrementally harder, but we like him a lot and we're going to give him every chance to succeed.”

Thomas, a multiple Grade 1-winning conditioner, is off to a flying start in 2021 with a record of 22-10-3-3 and purse earnings of $285,445. He credits that success to patient owners and being able to focus solely on training at Belmont.

“Our owners have been patient and have let these horses develop into their 3-year-old years,” said Thomas. “A lot of these horses have longer winded pedigree and that's something we don't have control over. You may want to debut them in August, but it's not the right thing to do and probably wouldn't run their best anyway. The barn is cycling in the right way and we've had a really good couple of months.”

Thomas sent out a pair of promising maiden winners for Augustin Stable at Turfway Park earlier in the week in Be Here and Siraneuse.

Be Here, a Kentucky homebred by Ghostzapper out of 2009 Champion Female Sprinter Informed Decision, earned a 62 Beyer for her 1 1/2-length score in a one-mile maiden special weight on March 4. The sophomore grey colt, who was prepared at Belmont, earned a 62 Beyer.

Thomas said the colt will likely be nominated to the Wood Memorial.

“The Wood offers some opportunity,” said Thomas. “He seems to be very stamina laden and going to a mile and an eighth off of that, I wouldn't be as worried. Obviously, you'd like a little more seasoning but it isn't out of the question.”

Siraneuse, a sophomore filly by Tapit, was purchased for $450,000 at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale. Bred in Kentucky by Vegso Racing Stable and Tapit Syndicate, Siraneuse earned a 78 Beyer for a rallying five-length score in a one-mile maiden special weight on March 3.

Thomas said Turfway's Tapeta surface offered both young horses an alternative debut experience.

“Be Here doesn't act like a sprinter,” said Thomas. “The more ground he gets the better he will be. Also, after training here at Belmont, the verdict was out on whether or not he's a dirt horse. Obviously, we have no turf racing here on the immediate horizon, so I wanted to get him started.

“The same can be said of the filly, Siraneuse. Both horses were coming out of good works and those races were available,” continued Thomas. “I'm not certain they're dirt horses yet and I wanted to be careful and not debut them on the dirt and have a bad experience. There's a chance both will end up on the grass in New York.”

Last week's scores built on earlier Turfway success for Thomas with Augustin Stable sophomore filly homebreds Into Vanishing and Song of Innocence.

By Into Mischief and out of the Lemon Drop Kid mare Vanishing, Into Vanishing graduated at third asking in December at Turfway and followed with a six-length optional-claiming win on January 15 at the Florence, Kentucky oval garnering a 70 Beyer in the one-mile trip.

Song of Innocence, by Munnings and out of the Pulpit mare Remember Then, rallied from seventh for a one-length score in a one-mile maiden special weight on January 29.

Thomas said Siraneuse, Into Vanishing and Song of Innocence will be nominated to the Grade 3, $250,000 Gazelle at nine furlongs on April 3 at the Big A offering 100-40-20-10 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points to the top-four finishers. The veteran conditioner also noted at least one is likely to enter the one-mile Bourbonette Oaks on March 14 at Turfway.

Thomas said Bridlewood Farm, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Robert V. LaPenta's Gale has been retired following a 2 3/4-length score in the Geisha, a one-mile event for Maryland-bred or sired fillies and mares on January 16 at Laurel Park.

The 4-year-old Tonalist filly, who finished fifth in the Grade 3 Comely at the Big A in November, matched a career-best 86 Beyer for her first stakes score.

“She got really unlucky in the Comely,” said Thomas. “She went into that race as good as we've ever had her but it was an unfortunate trip and break. The whole thing was done before it got started.

“It was nice to get her a stakes win,” added Thomas. “She's a really pretty filly and from a talent perspective it was nice for her to go out a stakes winner. She has been retired and will be a broodmare. She's down in Kentucky at Gainesway.”

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The Sports Business Furlong: Michael Behrens, Founder and CEO of MyRacehorse

   Michael Behrens is synonymous with innovation in the racing industry, having brought the concept of microshares into everyday conversation. His MyRacehorse struck gold early–and almost immediately–when Authentic (Into Mischief) won the 2020 GI Kentucky Derby and GI Breeders' Cup Classic en route to Horse of the Year honors just months after buying in. Carter Carnegie recently had a conversation with Behrens, who remains in the news with other high-profile investments, including a recently announced partnership in two-time champion Monomoy Girl (Tapizar).

   CC: Please share your favorite racing memories.

   MB: That one is easy. It was the first Saturday in September 2020, and it was when Authentic turned back Tiz the Law [Constitution] and won the Kentucky Derby. For me personally, as an entrepreneur, it was a combination of years of getting this idea off the ground and getting the business going and the hard work of a lot of people to help me get it to that point. Two, it was the first time ever you had over 5,000 people that had the same vested interest. And third, it was in partnership with Mr. [B. Wayne] Hughes, who has been such a tremendous partner on this journey. So, there's definitely nothing close to it. That's been the pinnacle for me in racing.

   CC: Can you share a brief history of your professional career?

   MB: It's not in racing. Racing has been my joy and my place of decompression and to let loose after a tough week at the office, but the reality is I spend most of my time in e-commerce, ad tech, and marketing.

   CC: What was your motivation to explore microshares?

   MB: As a marketer, my obsession was how brands are built and how categories are created. As a fan of racing, I had been searching for the reasons that were holding racing back from a prominent place in the sports entertainment landscape in America, and came to the conclusion that the sport was very difficult for people to try to experience. [I thought] the best possible way to do that was to experience it through the lens of ownership. This is a sport that has really struggled with attracting new fans and educating fans how to experience the sport. Microshares became what I believe to be the perfect product to meet that need.

   CC: What similarities do you see between what Casper Mattress did to the mattress industry during your time as chief marketing officer and what you are doing with MyRacehorse in the Thoroughbred industry?

   MB: You wouldn't think there's a lot of similarities, but there's a common trait as both industries were stale and lacked the desire to promote innovation. Prior to Casper, the mattress industry provided a terrible buying experience. [Casper] proved to be ridiculously disruptive to the mattress industry because it offered the consumer a better product and a better experience.

The same thing is true in racing. It's been done the same way for decades, and people have either not thought of or had the wherewithal to bring a lot of disruptions to its business model. My obsession is to understand the consumer, what their wants are, what the desires are, where they find frustrations in each industry. In the case of racing, it was unlocking a way to make a fan participatory without just focusing on betting.

   CC: What are some of the key results that you believe have benefited the Thoroughbred industry through microshare participation?

   MB: A lot of people will think the obvious: that MyRacehorse in a very short period of time has come in and bought a lot of bloodstock. As a new player, the amount of bloodstock we have been able to purchase benefits a lot of people whose livelihood relies on raising, training, or caring for Thoroughbreds, but I think that's just a small fraction of the influence that MyRacehorse and the community that we have develop has had. These fans are bringing in new fans. These new fans are spending time in racing content, on racing media websites, and hopefully–after COVID–returning to the track. They are also very active wagering as our horses' odds definitely indicate compared to the morning line. Therefore, more than our bloodstock acquisitions, I think what's

exponentially bigger is the amount of people that we've re-energized or newly captured and brought them into the entire ecosystem.

   CC: With such a large community, how do you manage/balance the natural restrictions of providing real-world experiences while keeping the microowners engaged and participatory in their investment?

   MB: Like most brands, it is being able to give a rewarding digital experience by providing unique content and experiences within the digital platform. And then balancing that with being opportunistic and how you can have the physical experiences we've been able to deliver. Prior to the pandemic, outside of a few big days, the racetracks have a lot of capacity. We don't have to shy away from the fact that racing is widely enjoyed and really appreciated when you're in the physical environments of the game. Some racetracks have really embraced this concept, Santa Anita specifically, who has been a big supporter of ours early on and did a lot to get our fans to come out and enjoy racing. I expect that's going to be a huge part of 2021 and beyond as we're seeing a lot of demand to attend the racetrack. But the digital side supports the largest percent of our owners and we have great online communities which are very vibrant as well.

   CC: Do you think MyRacehorse is a powerful marketing platform for the sport?

   MB: It's becoming a very significant channel. Our customers are becoming brand ambassadors that are sharing their visits to their horses, the race results they've had, and their connection with the other stakeholders. Our community is very active in sharing that kind of content in their own personal networks. I think that's how categories like racing can achieve scales. When you think about the size of our community and how socially-centric they are and how socially active they are, the fact that with their good experiences, they're going back out and they're sharing that. The numbers are pretty tremendous in terms of how much scale you get by just the network effect of the racehorse owners that we've created.

   CC: What can stakeholders do to help in your efforts?

   MB: I think that there have been those that have been more helpful than others. And I get it. It's new. It's not defined. There's not a lot of precedent for it. But the reality is that if you take a step back as any stakeholder in industry and realize that there's just a lot of passionate, excited people that are now involved in racing, what we need to do is enrich and cultivate that collectively. We need to harness it. I think the fact that whatever we can do to allow these people to experience everything that racing has to offer. Right now, I think we're approaching a situation where with the pandemic restrictions hopefully lifting in the next three to four months, we're going to really turn to the tracks and we're going to look for their support as we want to be able to bring out this community and be able to enjoy the races live and with friends and with family, and have them bring new people out to the races.

   CC: Do you see your category having an impact on wagering?

   MB: Absolutely. You can see it in each race that we have, how much money are into the pools, how disproportionately our horses are relative to the morning-line odds. I think over time, we'll do a lot more work on being able to measure this. But the reality is that when you get connected to the sport, there is a direct correlation to your participation in pari-mutuel. We'll see it more and more and it won't even be so directly correlated to the horses that we have racing, but just the size of the community that is now better educated, and that education is going to manifest itself in much more significant handle because they have become more confident with the product.

   CC: Can you address how significantly the support of B. Wayne Hughes has impacted your success?

   MB: I'm not sure I can totally put it into words. It's been something that I couldn't even have imagined that I'd have a partner with this type of support, this type of commitment, this type of passion for seeing something be done differently and be able to catalyze real change. There's just innovation. There's creativity. As a business partner, there's a lot of accountability, but the reality is that his commitment and passion and love of the sport has been a benefit to us. We wouldn't have the success that we've had in such a short period of time without his support.

   CC: You just announced Monomoy Girl on your platform. Why are purchase of shares limited and what is your goal with this offering?

   MB: We want people to be able to experience every part of this game. One part of this game is competing at the highest level. I think there's not much of a higher level than Monomoy Girl. She is the definition of a champion. We want as many people to participate and go on this journey as possible. The financials, as people will see, are very, very attractive. They're very shareholder-friendly. This is not about having a few people come in and take up a lion's share of it. We want as many people as possible to experience this. So, there'll be very aggressive limits on how much one person can participate.

   CC: What is more important, financial success or a positive experience for your investor?

   MB: It's both. I don't think you're in a positive experience if you're basically not having financial success, but no one does this because they're selling their 401(k) and deciding this is going to be the wave of their future investment. So, at the end of the day, we live in a world in which we have to be fiscally responsible. We have to make sure we get people into horses that provide them a great experience. We have to then take that experience and we have to deliver great content and digital and physical experiences that matched the joys and the thrills of what it is to own a racehorse, but we also want to be good stewards of other investments.

   CC: Can you share some of the other plans you have for MyRacehorse in 2021?

   MB: Our focus now is really going to be to continue to scale. One of the challenges the business has faced in the last couple of months is to keep up with the amount of demand that we've had by new people coming in. People who've had a good experience are telling friends. We're super happy they're signed up. They're downloading the app. They're registering for investments. We've actually only had horses on the website for a handful of days in the last couple of months, just because the overwhelming demand. So, what we focus on aggressively is building out infrastructure and we are committed to making sure that we have more inventory to meet the demand. We are also going to go explore expansion in international markets. The two international markets that we are focused on right now are Australia, which will be launching in the next month or so, and then we'll be going into the UK and Ireland shortly thereafter.

   CC: What does success look like?

   MB: According to a survey that I saw a few years back, there's over nine million people that have a curiosity of horse racing. There's no doubt that we've been losing market share overall to other sport. Success will be when we basically start seeing tremendous growth overall in the industry. Obviously, we want to build a good business and we want to be able to build a big base of customers. But overall, I think the ultimate success is going to be that we bring a real growth trajectory back to racing.

   CC: What are the unique traits in horse racing that need to be exploited by stakeholders to deliver a greater interest from owners and race fans? 

   MB: I think racing has a very unique combination of the ability to have competition at the highest level centered around this majestic animal and the equine athlete and the Thoroughbred and the gaming components. The intersection of those makes it very, very compelling when you think about what you're competing against in terms of mind share for consumer attention. We have to continue to be able to embrace the fact that it's the intersection that's so important. It's not one or the other. It's not just about the experiential component, which is great. It's not just about the gaming component and it's not just about the athlete and the sport. It really is about bringing it all together. Overall, we need to do a better job of making it available. We've got to make it easy to participate in all those things. We have to make it more digestible. It seems to focus on the audiences that are already known. When you expand and you bring them into a world that maybe isn't the easiest to understand, you've got to change. I think that's really what we have to do is get to understand what makes us unique and different. We have to accept the fact that maybe it's not simple and that's okay, but we just got to be able to change the way that we engage and change the way we message and share it, change the way we market to be able to get that message out there. Because once the message is appreciated, once the sport is really understood, it's beautiful and it's going to capture a lot of people.

   CC: What's the best professional advice you've received as a marketer?

   MB: I think the best thing is to ask why, an intellectual curiosity, the ability to question everything. It's really what I wake up every single day and I challenge: why did we do what we did yesterday? Was that the best possible result we could achieve? How could we have done it better? Why did this cause frustration? Why can't we do it differently? Why can't we emulate another role model from a brand or a category that we like? I'm sure my staff will attest to the fact that it can get tiring if you're questioning everything, but that's the best way to be a marketer, to have this pursuit of always doing better. You question why can't we do it better.

   CC: Is there a business mistake that you try to avoid at all costs?

   MB: I think one of the biggest mistakes is being afraid to fail. Early in my career, I was and I think a lot of people are. But the reality is that experimentation, testing, and learning is part of the natural evolution of any business of any category and you've got to embrace it. You've always got to celebrate failure. I think when you really do create a culture, be it in your professional career, be it in your business, be it in the industry, that you embrace trial, you embrace experimentation, you embrace failure, you learn from it, you enjoy it. It's something that Mr. Hughes is as adamant [about] as I am. It's very liberating to have a culture, to have a business philosophy that embraces failure, celebrates failure. If you're not failing, then you're really not trying.

   Carter Carnegie is president of Metrical Consulting and has over 30 years of experience as a sports business professional both in racing and working with sports leagues/events such as the NBA, NFL, and Olympics. Metrical offers marketing solutions and business strategics to brands as well as sports properties.

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$63,716 Payout In Cross Country Pick 5 From Aqueduct, Tampa Bay Downs

Saturday's Cross Country Pick 5 featuring a slate of all stakes from Aqueduct Racetrack and Tampa Bay Downs paid $63,716.50 for selecting all five winners for the 50-cent wager. The sequence's total pool was $149,923.

Wall-to-wall stakes competition started with the Grade 2 Hillsborough for fillies and mares 4-years-old and up going nine furlongs in Race 9 at Tampa. Micheline rallied from third in the stretch to defeat Morning Molly by three-quarters of a length. The Michael Stidham trainee returned $11.20 on a $2 win wager, with Luis Saez calming his charge after she was reluctant to load but responded to firm handling to complete the course in 1:47.19.

Aqueduct got in on the action when Lake Avenue drew away to an impressive 6 3/4-length score in the Heavenly Prize for older fillies and mares going a one-turn mile in Race 8. The 4-5 favorite, trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, bested an eight-horse field, kicking away from runner-up Portal Creek to hit the wire in 1:39.25 under jockey Manny Franco. Lake Avenue paid $3.90.

Back at Tampa, Domain Expertise completed a thrilling run to best Jouster by a nose in the Grade 3, $200,000 Florida Oaks for sophomore fillies going 1 1/16 miles on the turf. Piloted by Antonio Gallardo, Domain Expertise ran down the favorite Jouster in the final jumps. Conditioned by Chad Brown, Domain Expertise [$12.80], registered a final time of 1:41.12.

Aqueduct closed its stakes action with the first of two “Road to the Kentucky Derby” prep races on the Cross Country Pick 5 docket, with Weyburn earning a big-price win at 46-1 for Jimmy Jerkens in the Grade 3 Gotham in Race 9 that had 50-20-10-5 points to the top-four finishers. Weyburn, ridden by Trevor McCarthy, captured 50 qualifying points when besting the Brown-trained Crowded Trade and Highly Motivated. Weyburn, who paid $95.50, edged Crowded Trade, off at 5-1, by a nose with 4-5 favorite Highly Motivated back in third. Freedom Fighter, a California shipper for Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, ran fourth.

Alternating back to Tampa, Helium soared in the Grade 2, $350,000 Tampa Bay Derby in Race 11. With 50-20-10-5 qualifying points also on the line, the son of Ironicus became his sire's first graded stakes-winner, outkicking Hidden Stash by three-quarters of a length under Jose Ferrer. Trained by Hall of Famer Mark Casse, Helium rallied from 10th at the opening quarter-mile to pick up points for the “Run for the Roses,” returning $32.80 in the process. Moonlite Strike ran third and Unbridled Honor was fourth to also earn points.

The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is also available on track, on ADW platforms, and at simulcast facilities across the country. Every week will feature a mandatory payout of the net pool.

The Cross Country Pick 5 will continue each Saturday throughout the year. For more information, visit NYRABets.com.

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