Camacho Wins Third Jockey Challenge

With his second Tampa Bay Downs jockeys title already locked up, Samy Camacho secured his third jockey challenge win at Tampa. Riding four winners on Wednesday's card, he added three more wins Thursday capture his third $5,000 Jockeys' Challenge title.

Camacho secured the $2,500 first-place prize with 103 points. Wilmer Garcia, who finished second with 76 points, earned a $1,500 bonus, while Keiber Coa and Marcos Meneses tied for third with 55 points, each earning $500.

The leading trainers, with two victories apiece today, are Earl Robinson and Brian Lusk.

Today's card was also highlighted by the first lifetime victory for 37-year-old apprentice jockey Lucky Mbatha, who began his career at Arlington Park in September of 2020.

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Coral-Eclipse: Globetrotting Star Mishriff ‘Needs To Do It In The UK’

John Gosden believes Mishriff can claim a first British Group One success in what promises to be a fascinating clash of the generations in the 125th running of the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown Park on Saturday (July 3rd).

Last year's Prix du Jockey Club winner will attempt to land a first domestic top level success at the weekend on his first start in Britain this year in the prestigious Group One prize.

It has been a campaign to savor so far for the son of Make Believe who made a winning return in the Saudi Cup at Riyadh on his dirt debut in February before following it up with Group One victory on his first start over a mile and a half in the Dubai Sheema Classic at Meydan the following month.

Although Mishriff has demonstrated his talents on an international stage Gosden, who is seeking a fifth Coral-Eclipse success, feels he must now translate that form back on home soil.

He said: “I think that it is absolutely right (that he needs to win a British Group One to be one of the best mile and a quarter horses around). He has done it in France and done it in the Middle East but he needs to do it in the UK.

“We've been happy with him. He trained nicely into the Saudi Cup and then flew home then had to train again for Sheema Classic. He showed his versatility having to do a mile and an eighth on the dirt and a mile and a half on the turf.

“The idea was to freshen him up and give him every possible chance to come back in for our summer program. We are starting him off here in the Coral-Eclipse which had been our plan for a long time. I've been very happy with his preparation. He is not a horse I've taken away for a racecourse gallop as he has had enough travelling this year already.”

Despite this year's Coral-Eclipse attracting only four runners, Gosden insists it is very much a field of quality over quantity.

He said: “I know it is a small elite purist field but what people have to realize is that it is a lot of money to enter these races, it is a lot of money at the first forfeit stage and it is a lot of money to confirm.

“When you have the likes of the front three here they are not easy to take on so I think people slightly take that view point.

“When people criticize the size of the field remember the Prince Of Wales's was only run 16 days ago and from my experience it is very tough to come from the Prince Of Wales's and roll straight into a Coral-Eclipse – they come awfully tight.”

Assessing the opposition Gosden has respect for both this year's French 2000 Guineas and French Derby winner St Mark's Basilica from the yard of Aidan O'Brien and his old adversary the William Haggas-trained Addeybb, who he finished behind in last year's Champion Stakes at Ascot.

Gosden continued: “I've got tons of respect for Addeyyb. I think he is a wonderful horse. He has won a Champion Stakes and he has won in Sydney.

“I don't want to be critical but the ground was diabolical (at Ascot) and full marks to the winner as he handles it but our fellow couldn't go in at all. I had a lot that day that went wrong and Aidan (O'Brien) had a lot that day that went wrong. It was bottomless ground.

“There is talk about some rain on Saturday afternoon and if the rain came that is something Addeyyb would enjoy immensely. We are probably happier on anything from good to firm to good soft. I've lots of respect for him then comes the big question and it is great that you have the best mile and a quarter three year old colt in Europe (St Mark's Basilica) running. He has won a Dewhurst, a French Guineas and he has gone and won the Prix du Jockey Club, the same as Mishriff did, so that really is the ultimate test of the three year olds against the old ones.

“Interestingly enough I remember Lester (Piggott) saying to me that the 3-year-old has the advantage in his opinion in the Coral-Eclipse with the weights.

“I know it has changed one pound since those days and it is a 10lb difference now but he always felt 3-year-olds had the edge and I've never been frightened to run 3-year-olds in this race and nor for that matter in the King George.”

Helping Mishriff reach the heights he has enjoyed this year has been his growing bond with jockey David Egan, whom Gosden offered plenty of praise for.

He said: “He (David) has ridden him very well and he knows the horse well. He pops up on him not long before races.

“We have Ben (De Pavia) here who rides him all the time in his work and every day in his exercise. David is a classy guy, a good rider a good horseman and he is bright and very intelligent with it.”

Since claiming the Coral-Eclipse for the first time with Nathaniel in 2012 the Newmarket handler has won the race on three further occasions with Golden Horn, who followed up his Derby success at Epsom Downs in the 2015 renewal, Roaring Lion (2018) and Enable (2019).

Although Mishriff has yet to prove himself domestically at the highest level, Gosden feels he is the right type of horse to join his previous winners on the race's outstanding roll of honor.

He added: “Roaring Lion was a 3-year-old when he won it and so was Golden Horn so they took advantage of the weights. Enable was coming back off after a long layoff and she had her old friend Magical with her, then last year she ran against Ghaiyyath (finishing second).

“To that extent it is always demanding but he is a lovely horse and he fits in with that type we have been fortunate to have. We are happy with him going in but I'm perfectly aware of the task in hand. He is a very game honest horse that wears his heart on his sleeve.

“We are hoping for a good race and for the purists it is the sort of thing they enjoy but you will probably find the outsider El Drama will come and do the lot of them.”

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Firenze Fire Chases Breeders’ Cup Berth In Sunday’s John A. Nerud

Through a 33-race career, nine-time graded-stakes winner Firenze Fire has asserted his talent over seven different racetracks, but it's no secret that the veteran son of Poseidon's Warrior has an affinity for Belmont Park. He will seek an eighth triumph over Big Sandy on Sunday in the 13th running of the Grade 2, $250,000 John A. Nerud going seven furlongs for 4-year-olds and upward.

The John A. Nerud, a “Win and You're In” qualifier to the Grade 1, $2 million Breeders' Cup Sprint in November at Del Mar, will be televised live on NBCSN as part of a show airing from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern.

The event is named in honor of the late Hall of Famer whose 44-year tenure as a trainer included campaigning fellow Hall of Fame inductees Dr. Fager, Gallant Man, and Ta Wee. Following his retirement in 1978, Nerud assisted John Gaines in developing the Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships, for whom he was marketing committee chairman in its early years. As an owner, Nerud campaigned 1985 Champion Turf Horse Cozzene as well as influential stallion Fappiano. Nerud passed away in August 2015 at the age of 102.

Mr. Amore Stable's Firenze Fire, trained by Kelly Breen, brags a consistent 10-7-1-0 record at Belmont Park and lifetime earnings of nearly $2.5 million. The accomplished 6-year-old sprinter has won both of his starts this season, notching repeat stakes conquests over the local strip in the Grade 3 Runhappy on May 8 and Grade 2 True North on June 4. In the latter, Firenze Fire battled down the backstretch to the inside of multiple graded stakes-winner Flagstaff through swift opening fractions, but kicked clear of his foe to notch a 1 ½-length victory.

The True North came just minutes before the track was deluged with rainfall. Firenze Fire was beaten by double-digit lengths in his three starts over a track rated sloppy.

“That was heart attack material because by the time we got back to the test barn it was a downpour,” Breen's assistant John Attfield said. “Someone was watching out for us that day.”

Owner Ron Lombardi expressed a similar sense of relief regarding the weather.

“It was unbelievable, that was great,” said Lombardi. “We would have run anyway, but at that point there wasn't much you could do. What a godsend that the rain held off.”

Firenze Fire commenced his love affair with Big Sandy in his fourth career start when capturing the Grade 1 Champagne in October 2017 over subsequent Champion 2-Year-Old Good Magic. He has won at least one stakes race at Belmont Park for the past five seasons, registering a career-best 107 Beyer Speed Figure during his sophomore campaign when returning to Belmont with a nine-length romp in the 2018 Grade 3 Dwyer.

Following a successful 2019 campaign, which included a victory in the Runhappy at Belmont, Firenze Fire made his debut for Breen in the Grade 1 Runhappy Carter in June 2020, finishing a distant fourth prior to capturing the Grade 2 True North and the Grade 2 Vosburgh at Belmont three starts later.
After closing the curtain on his 5-year-old season when third in the Grade 3 Mr. Prospector on December 19 at Gulfstream Park, Firenze Fire remained in training but did not start until capturing the Grade 3 Runhappy on May 8 two starts ago.

“One of the biggest advantages of this year was for the first time in his career, he had five months off. We gave him the winter off without running him, he was still training a little bit, but he's come back great,” Attfield said.

Elsewhere, Firenze Fire has conveyed his aptitude against graded stakes company at Saratoga, Parx Racing and Laurel Park. Following last year's Grade 2 Vosburgh triumph, he finished a good third to accomplished sprinters Whitmore and C Z Rocket in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Sprint on November 6 at Keeneland.

With a start in the 2021 Breeders' Cup Sprint in mind, Lombardi is hopeful that Firenze Fire can maintain his winning form throughout this season. A start in this year's Sprint would be a fifth straight Breeders' Cup appearance for Firenze Fire.

“I think he's at the top of his game at the moment,” Lombardi said. “He's always had the MO where he comes out of the race unbelievably. After a race he's eating, perky and he doesn't miss a beat. The next morning he's ready to go. Typically horses of his caliber wait more than four weeks, but he recovered so greatly. He didn't miss a beat, but he did take some time off in the winter. He has two stakes under his belt so far this year and it will be his fifth year in a row going to the Breeders' Cup.”

Firenze Fire's name is influenced by the Italian word for the city of Florence, Italy.

“My daughter designs shoes and has them made in Italy,” Lombardi explained. “We were over there six years ago in Florence, and I needed to name the horse. At the time, Tom Hanks was filming the movie Inferno in Florence so that's where the 'fire' comes from.”

Lombardi said owning a horse like Firenze Fire has been a dream come true for a lifelong racing fan.

“Especially being a homebred makes it that much more special,” Lombardi said. “It's been great. It really is a dream come true. My dad owned a horse in 1948 had it for a year and a half. All my aunts and uncles every Saturday went to Monmouth.”

A Florida homebred, Firenze Fire is out of the Langfuhr mare My Every Wish, whose other progeny include stakes-placed Firenze Freedom as well as a full-brother to Firenze Fire in Just Leo, who is training towards a July debut.
Jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. has been aboard for nine of Firenze Fire's 14 lifetime victories and returns to the irons from the inside post.

Dual Grade 1-winner Mind Control will make his debut for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher seeking a return to winning form.

Owned by Red Oak Stable and Madaket Stable, Mind Control has gone winless in eight starts since capturing the Grade 3 Tom Fool last March at Aqueduct for former trainer Gregg Sacco.

Red Oak Stable racing manager Rick Sacco said he is hoping to see the son of Stay Thirsty recapture his previous form which earned him elusive Saratoga triumphs in the Grade 1 Hopeful in 2018 and the Grade 1 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial in 2019.

“We went through a few races where he didn't win, and we knew there were no races for him at Monmouth,” Sacco said. “We just thought it was a change of scenery that would do him some good. Todd is on our team, and he has horses for us. My brother Gregg won him a couple of Grade 1 races and did a fantastic job, but we figured we would change things up, send the horse over to Todd and try to win a race with him. It's a hard lens to look through to move a horse. We're just trying to get him back on track. He's sound and training super.”

Mind Control and Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez will vie for their sixth stakes triumph together from post 2.

Trainer Rob Atras earned his first overall graded stakes triumph when American Power won the Grade 3 Toboggan on January 30 at Aqueduct, and will seek his first Belmont graded stakes-triumph when saddling the son of Power Broker for the Nerud.

Owned by Sanford Goldfarb, Irwin Goldfarb and the Estate of Ira David, American Power replicated his winning form at seven furlongs when capturing the Caixa Eletronica on March 20 following the Toboggan. Last out, he finished third in the Grade 2 True North.

American Power has placed in six of seven starts since being claimed by Atras last July.

Breaking from post 3, American Power will be ridden by Joel Rosario.

Three Diamonds Farm's Doubly Blessed will see a cutback in distance from 1 1/16 miles when seeking a sixth career win for trainer Mike Maker. The son of Empire Maker out of graded stakes winner Via Villaggio earned a career best 100 Beyer Speed Figure last out in an allowance optional claiming tilt on May 29 over a sloppy and sealed track at Belmont Park, which he won by 1 ½ lengths.

Jockey Luis Saez, who was aboard for his last out triumph, retains the mount from post 7.

Rounding out the field are Top Seed [post 4, Jose Ortiz], Wicked Trick [post 5, Jose Lezcano] and Three Technique [post 6, Manny Franco].

The John A. Nerud is carded as the finale on Sunday's 10-race Independence Day program. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

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