‘Happy On The Lead,’ Acclimate Holds Off Dicey Mo Chara In San Luis Rey

A California-bred joy to behold, 8-year-old gelding Acclimate made his 31st career start and he had his running shoes on Saturday at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., as he led a half dozen rivals on a merry chase for a mile and one half on turf, winning the Grade 3, $125,000 San Luis Rey Stakes by a half length under regular rider Ricky Gonzalez.  Trained by Phil D'Amato, the bay son of 2011 Eclipse champion older male Acclamation got the trip in 2:25.40 on firm turf.

With a hillside start, Acclimate, the even-money favorite, went to the lead as expected and enjoyed a 1 3/4-length cushion over Current and jockey Chris Emigh as he led the field under the wire the first time around the oval.  With Gonzalez sitting still and Emigh asking his mount, Acclimate had a three-length advantage heading into the far turn and they then held off a determined charge from Dicey Mo Chara the final three sixteenths of a mile.

“I sound like a broken record, but that's what he likes to do,” said Gonzalez, who won last year's Grade 3 San Juan Capistrano Stakes with Acclimate and has now ridden him in eight consecutive starts.  “He likes to go out there and be happy on the lead.  I just let him do what he likes to do.  He was just playing around the whole time and as soon as he felt (Dicey Mo Chara) on his hip, he dug in and showed his heart, how big it is.”

Most recently fifth going a mile and one quarter on turf in the Grade 2 San Marcos Stakes Jan. 30, Acclimate paid $4.20, $2.80 and $2.40.

Owned by The Ellwood Johnston Trust, Timmy Time Racing, LLC, Brooke and Ryan Bartlett, Michael Goritz and Ken Tevelde, Acclimate, who is out of the Boundary mare Knows No Bounds, was also bred in part by the Johnston Family's Old English Rancho.

In garnering his fourth graded stakes victory, Acclimate improved his overall mark to 31-8-6-5.  With the San Luis Rey winner's share of $75,000, he increased his earnings to $763,372.

“He's just a cool horse,” said D'Amato, who rang up his eighth stakes win of the meet and his meet-leading 26th win overall.  “He deserved the opportunity to put in this kind of a performance today.  You know, he's been knocking on the door.  Today, he made a pretty sensible pace, the other horse came to him and he fought him off, so the win was well deserved.”

When asked if Acclimate, a two-time winner of the San Juan Capistrano would be pointed to the 2022 edition of the 1 3/4-mile marathon on June 19, D'Amato responded, “I would say (it's) the most logical next step.”

Trained by Leonard Powell, English-bred Dicey Mo Chara, fresh off a victory in a second condition allowance going 1 1/8 miles on turf Feb. 4, rallied three-deep turning for home and fought gallantly through the stretch drive but was second best under Drayden Van Dyke.

Off at 6-1, he paid $5.60 and $3.80 while finishing 3 ½ lengths in front of Current.

Off at 9-1, Current dropped back approaching the quarter pole but held on for third money, finishing one length better than Offlee Naughty while paying $4.20 to show.

Fractions on the race were 25.08, 48.26, 1:12.32, 1:36.87 and 2:01.38.

There were two key scratches earlier in the day, as D'Amato's 5-2 morning line favorite Say the Word and the David Hofmans-trained Award Winner (5-1) were both declared.

First post time for an eight-race card on Sunday is at 12:30 p.m. with admission gates opening at 10:30 a.m.

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Scalding Pours It On For Challenger Triumph

Scalding continued his progression up the class ladder Saturday and showed determination in edging favorite Cody's Wish by a neck in the $100,000 Michelob Ultra Challenger Stakes (G3) at Tampa Bay Downs.

The Challenger marked the stakes debut for Scalding, a 3-year-old Nyquist colt who proved up to the task under Javier Castellano. He tracked from third early, about four lengths behind pacesetter Wolfie's Dynaghost before closing in on that rival while moving inward through the far turn. He bid between foes nearing upper stretch to take a slim lead just as Cody's Wish launched a strong rally to his outside. Wolfie's Dynaghost began to fade with a furlong to run and Cody's Wish proved a dogged competitor in the stretch drive, but he could not get past the winner.

With Castellano's encouragement, Scalding finished 1 1/16 miles in 1:43.53 on a track rated as good and returned $12. Cody's Wish was 2 ¼ lengths clear of third-place finisher Dynamic One.

“I like the way he did it today,” Castellano said. “He's straightforward. When I asked him he responded really well. He passed the pacemaker and the horses on the lead and he was comfortable coming from behind. I like the way he finished.”

Trained by Shug McGaughey for Grandview Equine, Cheyenne Stable, and LNJ Foxwoods, Scalding is perfect in three starts this year, including an allowance/optional claiming win at the same distance at the Oldsmar, Fla. track Feb. 11. He has an overall record of 3-1-0 from five starts.

“It's a big job going from an allowance/other than condition to this spot, but we've always liked this horse,” McGaughey said of Scalding, who was bred by Godolphin and Cobalt Investments from the Medaglia d'Oro mare Hot Water. “He has been training forwardly and from what we saw today, his future is definitely (bright). He had a race over the track and I think that probably helped him. He is a pretty talented number and his last two races had been so good, with a little encouragement from the owners we decided to take a shot, and it worked.”

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Apprentice Ailsa Morrison, ‘Wonder Boy’ Wilfred Vasquez Score Gulfstream Firsts

It didn't take apprentice Ailsa Morrison long to get acquainted with the Gulfstream Park this weekend, scoring aboard Summer Shandee ($55.20) in Saturday's first race in only her third mount since switching her tack from Aqueduct to the Hallandale Beach, Fla., track.

“I'm on Cloud-9 right now. It's a tough meet – the Championship Meet. To get that win is very special,” the seven-pound apprentice said.

Morrison, who started riding at Woodbine outside Toronto in 2019 before taking a year off, rode three winners from 35 mounts at Aqueduct.

“I listened to my agent who said it would be a good spot in the summer,” said the 23-year-old native of New Brunswick, Canada, whose book is handled by Mike Sellitto. “So, this is where we set our sights on.”

Morrison saved ground aboard Summer Shandee around the first turn in the 1 1/16-mile maiden race on Tapeta while stalking the pace in fourth. Summer Shandee followed front-running Sonic Kitten into the stretch before being steered to the inside, and the son of Summer Front Kicked in to graduate by a length.

“I was patient with him. I was trying to go outside with him for the footing, but the rail opened up,” Morrison said. “The opportunity presented itself and I took a shot and he delivered.”

Morrison, who didn't grow up in a racing family, rode show horses before eventually gravitating to the racetrack.

“I started galloping as a supplement for my event riding to become a stronger rider, and I never looked back,” said Morrison, who rode two horses on Friday's card before breaking through with a victory Saturday.

Wilfred Vasquez Rides First U.S. Winner at Gulfstream
Jockey Wilfred Vasquez, who earned the nickname 'Wonder Boy' in Venezuela due to his success as an apprentice, rode his first U.S. winner in Saturday's Race 3 at Gulfstream Park.

The 18-year-old jockey guided Atomic Rose ($16) to victory in a mile maiden claiming race to notch his career achievement on his 15th U.S. mount.

Vasquez is the youngest winning rider in the history of the Simon Bolivar, Venezuela's most prized stakes race, when he guided Apistos to victory in 2020 at the age of 17.

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Gulfstream Park’s Rainbow 6 To Have $350,000 Guaranteed Jackpot On Sunday

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $350,000 for Sunday's program at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., where the popular multi-race wager went unsolved on the fourth racing day following last Sunday's mandatory payout.

Sunday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 6-11.

The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Who's Hot: Miguel Vasquez rode three winners on Saturday's card, scoring aboard Inevitable Me ($14) in Race 4, Riot House ($11.40) in Race 6, and Unikee ($9.80) in Race 9.

Tyler Gaffalione captured the $100,000 Hurricane Bertie (G3) aboard Obligatory ($4.40) in Race 7 before going back-to-back aboard Megayacht ($4.40) in Race 8.

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