Search Results Back to Winning Ways in the Acorn

Search Results (Flatter) bounced back from a narrow defeat in the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks to handle a stellar field of fillies in the prestigious GI Acorn S. Saturday at Belmont Park.

Well supported by the bettors with what appeared to be a narrow figure edge on her other accomplished foes, the dark bay broke alertly but was reined in by Javier Castellano to stalk from fourth of the five out wide as last year's local GI Frizette S. winner and second choice Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) cruised to the fore. Dayoutoftheoffice clicked off splits of :23.50 and :47.23 while seemingly well within herself. Search Results revved up with a three-wide bid along the turn, and while the pacesetter fought on to midstretch, Search Results wore her down despite traveling on her wrong lead. A new challenge came from Obligatory (Curlin), who was rocketing home from the back of the pack and who had defeated Dayoutoftheoffice in the GII Eight Belles S. last time, but Search Results had built up enough of a cushion to hang on. Eight Belles third Make Mischief (Into Mischief) nosed out Dayoutoftheoffice for third, with GII Fair Grounds Oaks heroine Travel Column (Frosted) disappointing for the second straight time.

“I was at the right place at the right time,” said Castellano, who picked up the mount on Search Results from the sidelined Irad Ortiz, Jr. “I was very fortunate… I'm thankful to Chad Brown for the opportunity to ride this horse; we've had a lot of success in the past. I'm sorry for Irad Ortiz that he got hurt, but it gave me the opportunity to ride.”

Castellano had ridden Search Results in the Mar. 6 Busher.

“The pace wasn't fast [Saturday] but she was right there,” the Hall of Famer said. “That's the good thing about her. You can put her where you want. You can be a little closer to the pace or you can be a little bit off the pace. I don't think she's a difficult horse to manage. She's very easy and straightforward. I'm just lucky I had the opportunity to ride her.”

A four-length debut winner sprinting at Gulfstream in January, Search Results resurfaced at Aqueduct for the Busher Invitational S., seeing out the mile that day before handling nine panels with aplomb in the Apr. 3 GIII Gazelle S. She was the proverbial “too good to lose” in the Oaks Apr. 30, dropping a neck decision to until then fellow unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' Malathaat (Curlin).

“I'm just so proud of her to come back in five weeks after a real dog fight with Malathaat. To bounce right back and lay it on the line again, this filly has so much talent and so much heart. She's a very rare kind of horse to have, and we're so lucky to have her.”

Saturday, Belmont
ACORN S.-GI, $480,000, Belmont, 6-5, 3yo, f, 1m, 1:35.50, ft.
1–SEARCH RESULTS, 120, f, 3, by Flatter
                1st Dam: Co Cola (GSP), by Candy Ride (Arg)
                2nd Dam: Yong Musician, by Yonaguska
                3rd Dam: Alljazz, by Stop the Music
   1ST GRADE I WIN. ($310,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-Klaravich
Stables, Inc.; B-Machmer Hall (KY); T-Chad C. Brown; J-Javier
Castellano. $275,000. Lifetime Record: 5-4-1-0, $804,000.
 Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick
   Rating: A+.
2–Obligatory, 120, f, 3, by Curlin
                1st Dam: Uno Duo (SW, $171,300), by Macho Uno
                2nd Dam: Willstar, by Nureyev
                3rd Dam: Nijinsky Star, by Nijinsky II
O-Juddmonte; B-Juddmonte Farms Inc (KY); T-William I. Mott.
$100,000.
3–Make Mischief, 118, f, 3, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Speightful Lady, by Speightstown
                2nd Dam: England's Rose, by Nureyev
                3rd Dam: Infringe, by Irish River (Fr)
($285,000 Ylg '19 SARAUG). O-Gary Barber; B-Avanti Stable
(NY); T-Mark E. Casse. $60,000.
Margins: HF, 1, NO. Odds: 0.90, 5.30, 21.20.
Also Ran: Dayoutoftheoffice, Travel Column. Scratched: Miss Brazil. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:

Search Results is the fifth Grade I winner Flatter, and one of 21 graded winners for the Claiborne stalwart, who was also represented on the Kentucky Oaks trail by GI Central Bank Ashland S. runner-up Pass the Champagne. Candy Ride (Arg) is just beginning to hit his stride as a broodmare sire, and is the now the dam sire of four top-level winners (including one in the Southern Hemisphere).

Dam Co Cola was second in a trio of six-furlong stakes, including the 2014 GIII Old Hat S. for trainer Todd Pletcher. Her 2-year-old full-brother to Search Results was a $100,000 KEESEP yearling turned $625,000 OBS April buy by Lauren Carlisle and MyRacehorse after breezing in :10 1/5. Co Cola subsequently aborted to Flatter's son West Coast, but produced a Nyquist colt this February and is back in foal to Flatter.

The post Search Results Back to Winning Ways in the Acorn appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Lone Rock Claims Brooklyn Stakes With Overpowering Stretch Run

After a one-year COVID-19 hiatus, the Grade 2 Brooklyn Stakes returned to Belmont Park with a dazzling performance by a former claimer turned long-distance specialist, Lone Rock. Running in the colors of Flying P Stable, Lone Rock sat just off of Musical Heart for the first mile, took the lead on the final turn, and then draw away from Tizamagician and Moretti to win the $400,000 stakes for 4-year olds and up by 11 1/4 lengths.

Favored Tizamagician broke awkwardly, allowing Musical Heart and Lone Rock to grab the lead and run 1-2 for the first mile. With fractions of :23.91 for the first quarter and :47.85 for the first half, Kendrick Carmouche and Musical Heart set a steady pace, with Lone Rock and Ramon Vazquez sitting a length behind. As the field of nine rounded the sweeping final turn, Vazquez moved Lone Rock into the lead, with Tizamagician and Flavien Prat moving up as well. Into the stretch, though, neither Tizamagician nor a fast-closing Moretti could catch the Robertino Diodoro trainee. Lone Rock covered the mile and a half in 2:28.97.

View the race's chart here.

The Brooklyn returned to the Belmont Stakes undercard after the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated changes to the New York Racing Association's stakes schedule in 2020. Friday's rains gave way to a beautiful Saturday, with sunshine that dried out the Big Sandy surface to a fast track.

Lone Rock (3-1) paid $8.90, $4.60, and $3.40. Tizamagician (5-2) paid $4.00 and $3.00. Moretti (6-1) paid $4.00 to show. Campaign, trained by John Sadler, finished fourth, with You're to Blame, Ry's the Guy, Ajaaweed, Rocketry, and Musical Heart rounding out the field.

Trainer Diodoro was pleased with the performance of his former claimer turned stakes horse. “He was meant to be a good horse. He's a horse that is just getting better.” Diodoro told the NYRA press office. “We just have to keep him healthy and happy as long as we can. He loves his job. When you have a horse trying to run these distances, you need one who loves to train, and he definitely enjoys training.”

Ramon Vazquez returned for his third ride and third victory aboard Lone Rock. “When I saw the other horse that has a lot of speed stumble out of the gate, I just put my horse in the best position that I could,” Vazquez said. “I just waited until the end to ask my horse and you can see what happened. It feels awesome.”

Lone Rock is a 6-year-old bay gelding by Majestic Warrior (A.P. Indy) out of Ruby Lips (Hard Spun). He was bred by Town & Country and Pollock Farms in Kentucky and was sold at Fasig-Tipton July 2016 sale for $55,000. The Brooklyn is his fifth start of 2021 and his fourth win of the year. His previous stakes races include a win in the Issac Murphy Marathon Stakes at Churchill Downs on April 27th and a close second in the Temperance Hill at Oaklawn Park in March.

The post Lone Rock Claims Brooklyn Stakes With Overpowering Stretch Run appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

A Horseman’s Derby

EPSOM, UK—”I'm not really a person to get over-excited about things,” said Adam Kirby as he stooped over the podium after winning his first Classic, the most important one of them all.

For the tall, gaunt jockey, so admired by his peers but with nothing like the rock star profile of Frankie Dettori, even riding at nine stone is a struggle. Slow to face the press for the post-race conference, he admitted he'd taken his time in the weighing-room so he could have a bottle of juice while gathering his thoughts.

He added, “I'm not very good at interviews, am I?” That's not a statement you'd ever hear from Dettori either, but it is Kirby all over. Just 15 minutes earlier, however, as he'd been led in to that hallowed circle at Epsom aboard Adayar (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) in the Godolphin third colours with the red cap, there was no mistaking his elation in the crowning moment of his career. 

Dettori hadn't needed the sun to shine for him at Epsom on Friday as he steered Snowfall (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) to her 16-length Oaks romp; his own theatrics were enough to lift the mood following a relentlessly wet day. Being back at the same track on Saturday was like being in a different country. The sun beat down, the Red Devils parachuted onto the track before racing as usual, and the National Anthem rung out. Only The Queen, the double-decker buses and about 50,000 racegoers were missing.

As Kirby agreed, he doesn't exactly have a mega-watt personality but he is a horseman with sublime skills, and that was what shone out across the Downs on Saturday. At the beginning of the week, he was expecting to be aboard John Leeper (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) in the Cazoo Derby. As Aidan O'Brien declared only Bolshoi Ballet (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) on Thursday and Dettori was no longer required for a Ballydoyle runner, the Italian jockey who had been original first choice for John Leeper was confirmed for the ride. Kirby was stood down.

“You wouldn't have wanted to be around me for the first hour that night, but then I got over it,” he admitted. But before long Charlie Appleby had called on Kirby to book him for Adayar. His gain was in turn Oisin Murphy's loss. 

“Mad, crazy, what goes around, comes around,” said Kirby. A mantra all jockeys must live by.

Though not one of the outfit's retained riders, he has enjoyed plenty of success for Godolphin. And with his partner Megan Evans at their Vicarage Farm just outside Newmarket Kirby now plays an arguably even more crucial role for the royal blue team as breaker and pre-trainer of many of their young horses. Appleby stated that Kirby had broken in the horse who would become his Derby winner. Kirby couldn't remember, though he won't be forgetting Adayar now, or anytime soon.

“I broke in One Ruler,” he said with certainty of the Derby sixth-place finisher. “I do a lot of horses for Charlie. I love every minute of that as well. Charlie is a great supporter of us at Vicarage Farm.”

Through his winning Derby ride it's easy to see why he would be such a good pair of hands to have aboard a young colt as he surrenders to the early training process. His was a performance that was as simple as it was skilful: break well, get a good position, get your horse to switch off just behind the leaders and then strike when a gap opens up on the rail. Easy. 

Except it rarely is that easy at Epsom, with its notoriously tricky camber. The modest Kirby might argue that everything simply went right for him and Adayar, but it was a ride that showed exactly why Appleby was happy to put his faith in Kirby, ahead of the reigning champion jockey, as soon as he heard he had been left without a Derby ride.   

“Adam is a natural horseman. He can settle horses, he can send horses,” said Appleby, and that is exactly what he did to win the Derby, making up Adayar's mind for him, sending him on in only the fifth race of his life, as the early leader Gear Up (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) weakened and rolled off the rail.

Frankel is yet to sire a Guineas winner but he had already had the Oaks winner Anapurna (GB) and St Leger winner Logician (GB) before Adayar became his first Derby winner in a field which featured two other colts by him, and another son Mohaafeth (Ire) as a late withdrawal. As brilliant as Frankel was it always rankled that he never tackled the Derby himself. There are two sides to every pedigree, of course, but Frankel's increasingly impressive record with middle-distance runners only increases that regret.

Similarly, it had been a shame to see Adayar's dam, the obviously talented Anna Salai (Dubawi {Ire}) move from Andre Fabre to Mahmood Al Zarooni and never really build on her early promise. A descendant of Anna Paola (Ger), from the same family as the 1000 Guineas winner of 2018, Billesdon Brook (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}), the Irish 1000 Guineas runner-up Anna Salai now claws back some deserved recognition with a Classic winner of her own in Godolphin's second homebred Derby winner in three years.

It was Appleby's retained jockey William Buick aboard Masar (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}) back in 2018, and this time around Buick looked equally thrilled as he returned to the third-place spot aboard supposed first string Hurricane Lane (Ire), another son of Frankel. He's a team player, and first and third in the Derby is some result for the team. But Buick would have been all too aware of what the result would mean to his winning colleague.

With the build more akin to a National Hunt jockey, Kirby makes daily sacrifices to keep his weight in check, and his list of achievements, which now runs to nine Group 1 wins, is all the greater given the number of rides for which his size makes him ineligible. During the covid pandemic he has at least benefited from the rise in the weights.

“It's been an absolute privilege to have the extra couple of pounds for the allowance due to there being no sauna,” he said. “It has made my life a lot easier and a lot less stressful.”

While thanking Appleby for his “unbelievable loyalty”, Kirby also remembered his former boss, the late Walter Swinburn, who wrote his name in the Derby history books on three occasions, most memorably with Shergar (Ire) 40 years ago.

“He was a top man and a very sad loss,” Kirby said. “He was great to ride for and he taught me always to be very cool and calm and relaxed about things, but I wouldn't say that's come out in me today.”

Those who watched the race may beg to differ. Similarly, those who have followed Kirby's career, from grafting away on the all-weather in midwinter to dazzling on racing's biggest day, will draw satisfaction from the fact that sometimes it's enough for innate horsemanship to do the talking. 

The post A Horseman’s Derby appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Parfait Becomes First Winner for Midnight Storm

Parfait became the first winner for her freshman sire Midnight Storm (Pioneerof the Nile) with a debut score at Belterra Saturday. Tracking from second through a :23.23 first quarter, the homebred rallied late, punching through between foes for a 3/4-length score. Quality Bet (Klimt) was the runner-up.

Midnight Storm is a Grade I winner on turf and MGSW on dirt. He stands at Taylor Made for $7,500. Parfait is the first foal out of Miss Emma Maria, who has since produced a colt and filly by National Flag.

 

2nd-Belterra, $22,900, (S), Msw, 6-5, 2yo, f, 4 1/2f, :54.69, ft, 3/4 length.

PARFAIT (f, 2, Midnight Storm–Miss Emma Maria, by Tiznow) Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $13,740. O/B-WinBlaze, LLC (OH); T-Timothy E. Hamm. Click for the Equibase.com chart.

 

The post Parfait Becomes First Winner for Midnight Storm appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights