Pegasus Turf Runner-Up Never Surprised Returns In Gulfstream’s Canadian Turf

Repole Stable's Never Surprised, beaten by multiple Grade 1-winning stablemate Colonel Liam in his most recent start, gets the chance to start a new streak in Saturday's $150,000 Canadian Turf (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

The 56th running of the 1 1/16-mile Canadian Turf for 4-year-olds and up is part of a blockbuster 13-race program offering nine stakes, eight graded, worth $1.7 million in purses anchored by the $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) for 3-year-olds on the road to the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) April 2.

Six of the Fountain of Youth Day stakes are scheduled for the turf, led by the $200,000 Mac Diarmida (G2) for 4-year-olds and up going 1 3/8 miles. First race post time is 12:10 p.m.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, a five-time Canadian Turf winner including champion English Channel in 2006 and most recently Sombeyay in 2020, Never Surprised had won two straight before setting the pace in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) Jan. 29 at Gulfstream. Colonel Liam wrested a short lead at the top of the stretch and went on to defend his Pegasus title by a length over Never Surprised, who held second over late-running Space Traveller.

Never Surprised returns to a distance where he owns three wins from four tries, including the Gio Ponti last November at Aqueduct and Gulfstream's Dec. 26 Tropical Park Derby, the race Colonel Liam won in 2020 as a prep for his first Pegasus victory.

“We were optimistic going into the Pegasus. We thought he'd run well, and he did,” Pletcher said. “He had an outside draw and [jockey Luis Saez] had to use him a little bit to get over, and he really fought back when Colonial Liam came to him. It was a big effort.

“He's backing up a little bit in distance, and he seems to be in good form,” he added. “He's run consistently well. If this goes well, we might look at the Grade 1 Maker's Mark Mile [April 15] at Keeneland. The spacing is pretty good to that.”

Saez, leading the Championship Meet with 87 victories, gets the return call from Post 2 in a field of seven.

Calumet Farm Grade 3-winning homebred English Bee was among invitees to the Pegasus Turf but was unable to draw in, instead traveling to Tampa Bay Downs where he ran fourth in the 1 1/16-mile Tampa Bay (G3) Feb. 5. In his prior race, he was third by two lengths in the 1 1/8-mile Fort Lauderdale (G2) Dec. 18 at Gulfstream.

“Originally we had been invited to Pegasus and then he didn't draw in, which was fine,” trainer Graham Motion said. “I happen to think he really likes Gulfstream. His best races potentially have been on racetracks like Gulfstream and Colonial [Downs] where it's really kind of firm and he can hear his feet rattle.

“He ran a big race in the Fort Lauderdale. He didn't get beat very far but that's him, consistently,” he added. “He just got beat in a Grade 1 at Keeneland. He's always right there.”

English Bee won three stakes – the Virginia Derby (G3), James Murphy and Parx Fall Derby – in a span of five races in 2019. The following year he ran second in the Canadian Turf, beaten a half-length by Sombeyay, and was sixth by a length to 2019 Preakness (G1) winner War of Will in the Maker's Mark Mile (G1).

“I love this horse. I think he's a really hard-knocking, kind of blue-collar horse. He's always around at the end. It doesn't matter what kind of race you run him in,” Motion said. “He's just a really, really cool horse. He's a hard-trying horse and he's doing well.”

Paco Lopez has been named to ride from Post 3.

MEB Stables' Clear Vision ran second in the Claiming Crown Emerald and won the one-mile Tropical Turf (G3) Jan. 8 at Gulfstream in his first two starts after being claimed by trainer Matthew Brice O'Connor for $25,000 last fall at Belmont Park. The Tropical Turf was the first career graded triumph for trainer and horse, fifth in the Tampa Bay, a half-length behind English Bee.

Jose Ortiz will be aboard from Post 6 at topweight of 124 pounds.

Also entered are Mouillage, making her U.S. debut after never running worse than third in 11 starts in her native France; Mira Mission, last out winner of a 1 1/16-mile optional claiming allowance Jan. 15 at Gulfstream for trainer Ian Wilkes; 2018 Louisiana Derby (G2) winner Noble Indy, claimed for $35,000 out of his most recent start Feb. 10 at Gulfstream by trainer Gustavo Delgado; and Sigiloso, runner-up in Gulfstream's Jan. 22 Sunshine Turf, rained off the grass to the all-weather Tapeta at 1 1/8 miles.

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Epicenter, Life Is Good Lead First NTRA Top Thoroughbred Polls Of 2022

Epicenter and Life is Good have topped the first two Top Thoroughbred polls conducted by the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), covering racing performances through Feb. 27. Voting is conducted by national media.

The Three-Year-Old poll represents horses competing up and through the Triple Crown.

Epicenter, last-out winner of the G2 Risen Star Stakes at the Fair Grounds for trainer Steve Asmussen, heads the first 3-year-old poll with seven first-place votes. Winchell Thoroughbreds' son of Not This Time has won three of his five starts and tops the Kentucky Derby leaderboard with 64 points earned.

Smile Happy, second in the Risen Star for trainer Ken McPeek, is ranked second this week with two first-place votes. Lucky Seven Stable's son of Runhappy has two wins from three starts, including last fall's G2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs, and is third on the Kentucky Derby leaderboard with 30 points earned.

Third in the first NTRA Top 3-Year-Old Poll of 2022 is Messier, with 11 first-place votes. The son of Empire Maker won the G3 Bob Lewis Stakes in impressive fashion, but is currently ineligible for Kentucky Derby points due to Churchill Downs' ban against his trainer Bob Baffert.

The full 3-year-old rankings, along with points earned*, are as follows:

  1. Epicenter (254)
  2. Smile Happy (169)
  3. Messier (165)
  4. Classic Causeway (153)
  5. White Abarrio (114)
  6. Un Ojo (86)
  7. Corniche (83-T)
  8. Secret Oath (83-T)
  9. Zandon (72)
  10. Mo Donegal (61)

Meanwhile, Pegasus World Cup winner Life Is Good, trained by Todd Pletcher, leads the first NTRA Top Thoroughbred Poll of 2022. The Top Thoroughbred poll represents horses competing for Horse of the Year. The Top Thoroughbred Poll concludes on Tuesday, Nov. 8 following the Breeders' Cup World Championships.

The full Top Thoroughbred rankings, along with points earned*, are as follows:

  1. Life Is Good (295)
  2. Letruska (225)
  3. Colonel Liam (181)
  4. Hot Rod Charlie (145)
  5. Flightline (137)
  6. Mandaloun (100)
  7. Midnight Bourbon (88)
  8. Country Grammer (73)
  9. Knicks Go (61)
  10. Express Train (43)

*Points earned on both polls are on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-1 basis.

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Blea Goes To Court Seeking To Lift Veterinary Board Suspension

Dr. Jeff Blea has filed a writ of mandate with the California Superior Court for the County of Los Angeles, according to the Thoroughbred Daily News, which seeks to lift the California Veterinary Medical Board's interim suspension on his veterinary license.

The Feb. 24 filing argues that in his role as the Equine Medical Director for the California Horse Racing Board, Blea does not perform veterinary work and therefore does not require an active license. Blea has not been operating his racetrack practice since taking the job of equine medical director last summer.

In addition, the filing argues that the suspension of Blea's license is invalid because the judge did not use a high enough standard of evidence to support her decision, stating that her findings “are not supported by the weight of the evidence, or by any substantial evidence, or at all.”

Blea is facing eight causes for discipline, according to formal “accusation” documents issued in late December. Blea's veterinary license was suspended at an emergency meeting held on Christmas Eve, and that suspension was upheld by Judge Nana Chin after a hearing in late January. During that formal hearing, deputy attorney general Elaine Yan, representing the medical board, argued that the allegations against Blea are violations of the veterinary medical practice act.

Meanwhile, Blea's attorney George Wallace argued that the allegations against the veterinarian do not meet the “extraordinary standard” generally required for the suspension of a veterinary license.

Dr. Gregory Ferraro, chairman of the California Horse Racing Board, called the action by the Veterinary Medical Board to temporarily suspend Blea's license an “unwarranted and unfair vendetta” that is “ill-advised and slanderous.” Ferraro said Blea has become a “pawn in a politically driven effort” to hurt horse racing in California. As a result of Blea having to be put on administrative leave from his post with the CHRB, Ferraro added, “the health and safety of racehorses are being compromised.”

Blea was placed on administrative leave by UC Davis, which appoints the Equine Medical Director for the CHRB, in mid-January. Drs. Heather Knych and Ashley Hill have been named acting equine medical directors and have been performing the statutory functions of the Equine Medical Director.

Blea was also removed from his role overseeing the investigation into the death of Bob Baffert-trained Medina Spirit, who dropped dead after completing a workout at Santa Anita. The equine medical director is not responsible for actually performing necropsies or testing biological samples on horses who die in racing or training in California or elsewhere. Those responsibilities go to veterinary pathologists and toxicologists — in California, those duties are contracted to UC-Davis, though some samples have been shipped outside California in this particular case. The equine medical director would be responsible for gathering reports and interpreting them for presentation to the board and to the public.

John Pascoe, executive associate dean of UC Davis's School of Veterinary Medicine, ultimately oversaw Medina Spirit's necropsy.

Read more at the Thoroughbred Daily News.

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Taking Stock: Deceased Arrogate and Laoban Strike at Oaklawn

Neither Arrogate, by Unbridled's Song, nor Laoban, a son of Uncle Mo, is still with us, but a first-crop daughter of the former and a second-crop son of the latter won graded Classic preps at Oaklawn over the weekend, underscoring the sire potential each had. Arrogate was seven when he was euthanized in 2020 and Laoban was eight when he was put down almost a year later.

Arrogate's Secret Oath won the Glll Honeybee S. Saturday by 7 1/2 lengths for trainer D. Wayne Lukas, and she has the look of a special filly. She showed explosive acceleration when asked and covered 1 1/16 miles in 1:44.74, earning a 92 Beyer figure and 50 qualifying points for the Gl Kentucky Oaks. She's now a winner of four of six starts, the last three in a row, and it's possible she may take on colts next in the Gl Arkansas Derby to earn points for the Gl Kentucky Derby. Lukas has trained a slew of top-class fillies during his decorated career and hasn't been shy to take on colts with the best of them. He won the Arkansas Derby in 1984 with Althea, a filly, and he also trained Winning Colors, who won the Kentucky Derby in 1988 after beating colts in the Gl Santa Anita Derby.

Secret Oath won the Honeybee in the manner of the odds-on favorite she was, returning $2.60. In contrast, Laoban's Un Ojo, a one-eyed New York-bred gelding, was all out to win the Gll Rebel S. by a half-length at 75-1 from the Lukas-trained Ethereal Road (Quality Road), a 16-1 shot, triggering some massive payouts. Saddled by Ricky Courville, Un Ojo covered 1 1/16 miles in 1:45.69, a slower time than Secret Oath registered in the Honeybee, and he earned an 84 Beyer for his second win in six starts. Nevertheless, Un Ojo picked up 50 qualifying points for the Churchill Classic and earned $600,000 from the $1-million Rebel purse, while Lukas's runner-up took home a check of $200,000 and 25 qualifying points.

In contrast, Secret Oath earned $180,000 for winning the Honeybee and zilch Derby points, which is amusing because she'd likely have won the Rebel based on her Beyer and final time. And Lukas was probably aware beforehand that his filly was better than stablemate Ethereal Road at this point in time, which is another case to make for her testing colts in the Arkansas Derby.

Secret Oath

Secret Oath is one of two black-type winners for her sire, who was a late-developing colt at his best at 1 1/4 miles. Trained by Bob Baffert, Arrogate won seven of 11 starts, earned a North American record of $17.4 million, and is remembered for a remarkable four-race win streak that encompassed the Gl Travers S., Gl Breeders' Cup Classic, Gl Pegasus World Cup Invitational, and the G1 Dubai World Cup. Despite not winning his first stakes race until the Travers in late August of his sophomore season, he won an Eclipse Award as champion 3-year-old colt.

Arrogate entered stud at his owner's Juddmonte in 2018 for a $75,000 fee–highest of all new recruits in North America, with Gun Runner next at $70,000–and was considered Unbridled's Song's last and best hope for getting a top-level stallion son. So far, Secret Oath aside, Arrogate hasn't met expectations, but it's early yet for the type of horse he was, and he'll have three crops to prove his worth, with the Lukas filly leading the way at the moment.

Another young Unbridled's Song son, Lane's End's Liam's Map has exceeded expectations and has quickly become a high-level stallion with four Grade l winners so far, and at this point it looks like he may end up as his sire's best son at stud. It's instructive here to compare his pedigree to those of both Arrogate and Secret Oath.

First, both Arrogate and Liam's Map are bred on a similar cross, as each is from a Forty Niner-line mare.

Second, Liam's Map and Secret Oath share some notable ancestors in their respective backgrounds. I wrote about Liam's Map's pedigree here last October–“Flying Unbridled's Song Flag”–but the short takeaway linking the two is this: both have a lot of Tartan's Aspidistra, the dam of champions Dr. Fager and Ta Wee, in their genetic makeup.

Note that Unbridled, the sire of Unbridled's Song, was 4×4 to Aspidistra–his fourth dam. Liam's Map's second dam Yada Yada was closely inbred 2×3 to Ta Wee, giving Liam's Map four repetitions of Aspidistra, his sixth dam, 6x6x5x6. The other cross to the Tartan foundation mare comes through Great Above, a son of Ta Wee.

Secret Oath, like Liam's Map, also gets Aspidistra twice through Unbridled. But she also gets another two doses through her broodmare sire Quiet American, who was 3×2 to Dr. Fager, and one through Great Above, just like Liam's Map. She is, therefore, 7x7x6x5x5 to Aspidistra, for a total of five crosses.

In fact, the imprimatur of John Nerud and Tartan is all over the pedigree of Secret Oath. Another great foundation mare for Nerud/Tartan was Cequillo, the third dam of Fappiano and his son Quiet American. Because Secret Oath is inbred 4×3 to Fappiano and is from a Quiet American mare, she has Cequillo 7x6x5.

Secret Oath is owned by Briland Farm and was bred by Briland in partnership with Robert Mitchell and Stacy Mitchell. Secret Oath's dam, the Quiet American mare Absinthe Minded, also bred by the same connections and raced by Briland with Lukas, was a multiple Grade l-placed stakes winner of $607,747, but there isn't much black type in the pedigree under the next few dams. The third and fourth dams, Rockford Peach, by Great Above; and Strawberry Skyline, by Hatchet Man, respectively, were bred in New York by Michael Mulholland.

Un Ojo

Un Ojo was bred in New York by Southern Equine Stables and is raced by Cypress Creek Equine. In partnership, Southern Equine raced Laoban, whose only win from nine starts came in the Gll Jim Dandy S. at Saratoga. The son of Uncle Mo retired to Sequel Stallions in New York with earnings of $526,250 and initially stood for $7,500, but he was a hit with his first 2-year-olds–ending up second on the 2020 first-crop list behind Uncle Mo's Nyquist–and was moved to WinStar in Kentucky for the 2021 season at a $25,000 fee.

Along with Nyquist and Outwork, Laoban was part of a trio of Uncle Mo freshmen to make an immediate impact in 2020. He's the sire of 10 black-type winners, with his first crop containing Grade l winner Simply Ravishing and Grade ll winner and multiple Grade l-placed Keepmeinmind, a surefire sign that Laoban was moving his mares way up.

Un Ojo is a well-bred gelding compared to some others by his sire, who covered mares for $5,000 in his last season in New York. Un Ojo's dam is the A.P. Indy mare Risk a Chance, a New York-bred stakes-placed winner for owner/breeders Chester and Mary Broman. Risk a Chance was out of the Broman-bred Seeking the Gold mare Seeking the Ante, a Grade ll winner of almost $400,000, who in turn was produced by multiple Grade l winner Antespend, an Elmendorf-bred daughter of Spend a Buck raced by the Bromans late in her career after Elmendorf's Jack Kent Cooke passed away. Antespend also produced the Bromans' homebred Gl Florida Derby winner Friends Lake.

The Bromans bred Risk a Chance's first three living foals (she was not pregnant in 2016 and aborted in 2017) without stakes success. Her first foal by Desert Party was unplaced, the second, by Freud, was a winner who earned almost $120,000 racing exclusively at Finger Lakes, and her third was a Quality Road colt, now four, who is unraced after bringing $550,000 as a yearling at Saratoga. They sold Risk a Chance in foal to Laoban for $40,000 at the Fasig-Tipton New York Saratoga Fall Mixed sale in 2018, and Southern Equine was the lucky buyer.

That fortuitous purchase made Southern Equine the breeder of Un Ojo, who now has a ticket to the Kentucky Derby.

Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks.

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