Early Voting Gives Gun Runner First Classic Winner in Preakness

The story is a familiar one. Seth Klarman, Chad Brown and Jose Ortiz teaming up for a win with a lightly-raced colt in the second jewel of the Triple Crown. In 2016, the duo entered the Classic with a fresh horse, and played the spoiler when Cloud Computing (Maclean's Music) upended Classic Empire to take the GI Preakness S. Fast forward to 2022, history repeated itself with the same connections snagging Pimlico's marquee race with Early Voting (Gun Runner). The colt's victory also provided a well-deserved birthday gift for his owner, who grew up three blocks from Pimlico.

“I just wanted to say how happy I am to deliver a Classic victory to one of my best friends, Seth Klarman, on his birthday,” said Brown. “It's really memorable for me.”

Klarman was also cognizant, and appreciative, of the forces propelling him back into the winner's circle on Preakness day.

“Cloud Computing was a once in a lifetime horse and now I have it twice in a lifetime which is really hard to believe it could happen again,” he said. “Only with Chad.”

Armagnac (Quality Road), a front-running winner in his most recent start at Santa Anita, didn't alter the script and went straight to the front as Ortiz opted to ease Early Voting back to second, rather than contending for supremacy, about two lengths behind. Meanwhile, favored Epicenter (Not This Time) broke cleanly but was soon pinched back by the converging duo of Happy Jack (Oxbow) and Skippylongstocking (Exaggerator), costing the favorite valuable ground. Also encountering issues early, Secret Oath (Arrogate) was also affected by the errant Happy Jack, forcing her to take up position at the back of the field going into the first turn. With the frontrunner gifted a soft :24.32 opening quarter, Ortiz opted to keep the 5-1 chance in close contact as they carved out a slightly faster half in :47.44. A motionless Ortiz, who peeked under his shoulder to see who might be coming along, finally nudging the colt into action, taking over from the fading leader turning for home. In control from there, the colt had plenty left in the tank despite drifting outward, and while Epicenter mounted a gallant run up along the inside late, he was unable to get closer than 1 1/4 lengths to the winner at the wire. Creative Minister (Creative Cause), who was supplemented to the race for $150,000, closed to be 2 1/4 lengths back in third. The filly, sent off at 5-1 facing the boys, crossed the wire in fourth.

It was the second win on the afternoon for triumvirate after Technical Analysis (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) won the GIII Gallorette S.

“Yeah, he is a very good horse out of the gate,” explained Ortiz. “He always has been. He broke well, and that was the main thing. Break good and go forward. We knew that Armagnac had speed, and he never has passed a horse on his right, and we knew he was probably going to go into the lead, and he did, but we were ready for it. We executed the plan perfectly.”

“On the back side, it just felt like we had been drilling in the morning. We had been working him just next to a horse, and he was very relaxed. I was very confident passing the 5/8 pole. I knew I was in a good spot. I took a peek back. Nobody was there. I knew my horse was ready.

He added, “I had the trip I wanted. We planned it out, we executed it with perfection, and we came out top.”

Recipe for Success
In front for most of the way, Early Voting came home a 1 1/2-length winner in his Dec. 18 debut before returning to the South Ozone Park oval with a front-running score in the GIII Withers S. going nine furlongs in the mud Feb. 5. Well supported for the Apr. 9 GII Wood Memorial, the bay had to settle for second behind Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), who got up in the nick of time to catch him at the wire.

“When we've been working the horse We give him a target, and he rates nice. He catches them and finishes them off well,” said Brown, explaining the colt's latest defeat. “I was convinced in the Wood that he was waiting on horses which is why he got beat. He got beat by a good horse, don't get me wrong, with a good trip, but when you are doing this long enough, you can tell a tired horse from a horse that's waiting on horses. And I can see it in his work sometimes as well.”

Explaining the decision to bypass the Kentucky Derby with both of his Preakness winners, Brown explained, “With both horses it's important to know that they were coming out of the Wood, so [we gave] them time. But they're lightly-raced horses. It's not like a horse that we gave time out of the Wood that also had three starts at two and it's their sixth or seventh [lifetime] start. This a lightly-raced horse. In both cases, the Wood was only their third start.”

He continued, “So when you start participating in the Kentucky Derby enough now, you realize what a tough race it is with 20 horses. As the trainer, you have to deal with the aftermath when it doesn't work out. And sometimes, it's not pretty. Those horses need time physically or mentally, and it can really cost a good part of your 3-year-old year if you swing and miss. You could ship all the way over there or draw terrible weather. You name it..I haven't won the [Derby], but we've had a couple of close calls, and I'm a student of it. I feel like you have to have a horse with some experience, and you have to be prepared for a bad post or a bump here or there or a wet track or something.

This horse just didn't have the experience. He is out there on loose leads. He didn't have dirt in his face really. A nice horse, but to throw him in a 20-horse field would not have worked out well for him, I don't believe. It really wasn't that hard of a decision.”

Looking down the road, Brown hopes to have the colt ready to add another Classic later this summer, this time in his neck of the woods.

“[We'll aim for] a race like the [GI] Travers S. [at Saratoga],” said Brown. “I know it's a tick farther, but I don't believe he will have any trouble getting the mile and a quarter. Growing up just 20 minutes from Saratoga, Baltimore native, that was his race today, the Travers would be for me, so that would be really at the top of the list. But there will be some racing before that. We'll get him back to Belmont, assess him, train him a bit, and then start to map out a campaign that, hopefully, leads us to the Midsummer Derby.”

New York, New York
While repeating a Preakness victory for his connections, Early Voting also mirrored the feat accomplished by Cloud Computing in the 2016 renewal of the Classic race. And both colts employed a similar road to victory. While Early Voting took his first two starts, including his initial graded appearance in the Withers, Cloud Computing won his Big A debut, but was runner-up in that season's GIII Gotham S. before finishing third in the Wood. However, despite the subtle differences, both colts sought a Preakness win through the Empire State.

“Cloud Computing was another horse that wintered up [in New York],” he said. “Not only did both of them run in the Wood, but they didn't even go to Florida. It can be done, and I think it just depends on the horse and always just being aware of your environment where you are training these horses, and New York is a good environment.”

Underscoring why remaining in New York over the winter was the right move for his colt, Brown was pragmatic.

“He stayed in New York because he is that kind of make-up,” he said. “He was lightly raced. I didn't want to interrupt his schedule. Sometimes you ship horses down to Florida that are just getting started, and then you have to adjust to ironically the humidity and heat and such when he is just getting going. The weather looked good, so I left him there.”

No 'I' in Team
The relationship between Ortiz and Brown goes far back, and is laden with victory. However, according to Brown, it is the work ethic between professionals that makes the partnership special.

“He rode Zandon [Upstart] in New Orleans [third in the GII Risen Star S. at the Fair Grounds Feb. 19], and he had ridden Early Voting, in the Withers. [They were both scheduled to run on the same day in the [GI Toyota] Blue Grass [S.] and the Wood Memorial [both Apr. 9], I just chose he is going to go ride Early Voting, and I made a change on Zandon [to Flavien Prat]. So I called him to tell him, and he never complained about it. He said, 'Boss, I'll go where you tell me to go.' That's it. He was happy to ride Early Voting. It's hard to be taken off Zandon when they're on the same day because we knew that horse was probably going to go win the Blue Grass and go to the [Kentucky] Derby as one of the favorites. That's how he is. He said, 'I'll go where you tell me to go.'”

Brown continued, “He didn't win the Wood, but it was our feeling that's his horse. He went there for us that day, and I felt that's going to remain his horse. It was never even a thought after the horse got beat to make a change. He went up there and rode him for us, and he rode him brilliantly. Talk about being a team player.”

“I saw the relationship developing with those two. I wasn't sure he was a Derby horse, but I was sure he was a good horse and a Grade I horse. I just know that's a partnership that I want to continue growing, developing that horse, and then I could figure out where I am with Zandon. That's really what it came down to.”

Pedigree Notes:
Gun Runner, the runaway leading first-crop sire based at Three Chimneys, continued the same trend in 2022, leading his U.S.-based contemporaries in worldwide earnings. With Early Voting's Classic win at Pimlico Saturday, the colt became the fifth Grade I winner for the Three Chimneys stallion.
His unraced dam–a $1.75-million KEESEP yearling in 2013–is a full-sister to 2017 GII Blue Grass S. winner and MGISP Irap (Tiznow), as well as a half-sister to champion and leading sire Speightstown (Gone West). They all stem from Canadian champion Silken Cat, tracing back to 1950 Broodmare of the Year Hildene (Bubbling Over), Silken Cat's fifth dam. Amour d'Ete has a 2-year-old full-sister to Early Voting, a yearling filly by Constitution, and was bred back to Volatile. Amour d'Ete's pensioned sire, Tiznow, is the broodmare sire of 52 black-type winners, including 2020 Classic winner Tiz the Law (Constitution).

 

Saturday, Pimlico
PREAKNESS S.-GI, $1,650,000, Pimlico, 5-21, 3yo, 1 3/16m, 1:54.54, ft.
1–EARLY VOTING, 126, c, 3, by Gun Runner
               1st Dam: Amour d'Ete, by Tiznow
               2nd Dam: Silken Cat, by Storm Cat
               3rd Dam: Silken Doll, by Chieftain
1ST GRADE I WIN. ($200,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Klaravich
Stables, Inc.; B-Three Chimneys Farm, LLC (KY); T-Chad C.
Brown; J-Jose L. Ortiz. $990,000. Lifetime Record: 4-3-1-0,
$1,311,500. Werk Nick Rating: A+. Click for the
eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Epicenter, 126, c, 3, Not This Time–Silent Candy, by Candy
Ride (Arg). ($260,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Winchell
Thoroughbreds LLC; B-Westwind Farms (KY); T-Steven M.
Asmussen. $330,000.
3–Creative Minister, 126, c, 3, Creative Cause–Tamboz, by
Tapit. 1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE, 1ST G1
BLACK TYPE. ($180,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Fern Circle
Stables, Back Racing, LLC and Magdalena Racing; B-Dell
Ridge Farm, LLC (KY); T-Kenneth G. McPeek. $181,500.
Margins: 1 1/4, 2 1/4, 2 3/4. Odds: 5.70, 1.20, 10.00.
Also Ran: Secret Oath, Skippylongstocking, Simplification, Armagnac, Happy Jack, Fenwick.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs, or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Early Voting Defeats Favored Epicenter In 147th Preakness

Getting a perfect trip under Jose Ortiz, Klaravich Stables' Early Voting tracked pacesetter Armagnac, took command rounding the stretch turn and held off favored Kentucky Derby runner-up Epicenter to win the 147th running of the Grade 1, $1.5 million Preakness Stakes on Saturday at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md.

The winner is trained by Chad Brown, who opted to keep the Gun Runner colt out of the Kentucky Derby and point for the Triple Crown's middle  jewel, which happened to fall on the 65th birthday of Seth Klarman, a Baltimore native who operates Klaravich Stables. Brown followed a similar pattern to the one he employed five years earlier when Cloud Computing won the 2017 Preakness for Klaravich and William Lawrence. Both horses came into the Preakness off non-winning efforts in the G2 Wood Memorial (Cloud Computing was third, Early Voting second), run six weeks prior.

“Winning once was like the dream of a lifetime and winning twice is beyond belief,” Klarman said during the Preakness trophy presentation. “It's an extraordinary experience. I give all the credit to Chad Brown for getting the horse here and ready to run a big race and, of course, Jose Ortiz did a masterful ride. It's just great to be back in Baltimore today.”

“We thought he needed a little more seasoning, the extra rest would help him,” Klarman said of the decision to bypass the Derby even though Early Voting had enough qualifying points to make the field. “He's pretty lightly raced, only three races before today. And as it turned out, that was the right call because the pace in the Derby was kind of suicidal, so he probably would not have done that well. We wanted to do right by the horse and we're so glad we waited.”

Klarman indicated the June 11 Belmont Stakes would be unlikely for Early Voting, though said it would be Brown's call.

Early Voting finished 1 1/4 lengths clear of Epicenter, the 6-5 favorite, with $150,000 supplemental entry Creative Minister another 2 1/4 lengths back in third. G1 Kentucky Oaks winner Secret Oath finished fourth after trailing the field early, with Skippylongstocking fifth, Simplification sixth, Armagnac seventh, Happy Jack eighth and Fenwick last in the field of nine 3-year-olds.

Early Voting, bred in Kentucky by Three Chimneys Farm, where Gun Runner stands at stud, was a $200,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase from the consignment of John Sikura's Hill 'n' Dale Sales Agency. Produced from the Tiznow mare Amour d'Ete, Early Voting ran 1 3/16 miles in 1:54.54 and paid $13.40.

“It's a dream come true,” said an emotional Jose Ortiz, who was winning his first Preakness with his fifth attempt. “It's amazing to share this moment with my family, my mom, my dad, I know they're watching, and my wife and my kids are here.

“Chad and Seth have been very supporting of my career since day one,” Ortiz continued. They deserve all the credit. They had an option to run in the Derby and they passed. It's very hard to get a winner to pass on the Derby and they made the right choice by the horse. I don't think he was seasoned enough to run in a 20-horse field, and they proved that they were right today.

“I've been on him since he was a baby,” Ortiz added. “We always knew he was very talented but we knew he was going to be a late developer. He's always been very nice. We've always been very high on him.”

Rich Strike, the 80-1 upset winner of the Kentucky Derby, was not in the starting gate for the Preakness. Instead, he was 600 miles away, stabled at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., and preparing for the June 11 Belmont Stakes. In fact, on Preakness morning, Rich Strike breezed a half mile in :47.20.

Owner Rick Dawson and trainer Eric Reed announced five days after the Run for the Roses that the son of Keen Ice would skip the Triple Crown's middle jewel and point for the mile and one-half Belmont.

“Skipping the Preakness was still one of the toughest decisions I had to make as a trainer,” said Reed, who stood alongside owner Rick Dawson for Saturday's Churchill Downs breeze. “I just don't think he would've been mentally ready to run against those horses again.”

Rich Strike became the first healthy Kentucky Derby winner to bow out of the Preakness since 1985 when Spend A Buck's connections successfully chased a $2 million bonus for winning three races in New Jersey along with the Kentucky Derby. Spend A Buck bypassed both the Preakness and Belmont.

Three years before that, Gato Del Sol skipped the Preakness after winning the 1982 Derby because his trainer, Edwin Gregson, felt the race did not set up well for him. He would finish second in the Belmont to Conquistador Cielo.

Twenty-three years before Gato Del Sol, 1959 Derby winner Tomy Lee returned to California after the Derby and raced later in the year. He was the fifth Kentucky Derby in the 1950s to bypass the Triple Crown's middle jewel, following Count Turf (1951), Hill Gail (1952), Determine (1954) and Swaps (1955).

More recently, Country House, the 2019 Kentucky Derby winner via disqualification of Maximum Security, came out of that race with a physical ailment and never raced again. Grindstone, the 1996 Derby winner, was retired after coming out of the race with a knee fracture.

 

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Daughter of Athena Debuts at The Curragh

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Sunday's Observations features a daughter of Grade I winner Athena (Ire) (Camelot {GB}).

1.40 Curragh, Mdn, €20,000, 2yo, f, 6fT
NEVER ENDING STORY (IRE) (Dubawi {Ire}) is another significant Ballydoyle newcomer on this important weekend, being the first foal out of the GI Belmont Oaks Invitational winner Athena (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) linked not only to the G1 Irish Oaks heroine Bracelet (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}) but also to the incredible dynasty of Sea the Stars (Ire) and Galileo (Ire). In against the February-foaled bay is Micheal Ryan's Finsceal Go Deo (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), the Jim Bolger-trained daughter of Finsceal Beo (Ire) (Mr. Greeley) who was fourth on debut here in March; Craig Bernick's Aspen Grove (Ire), the first runner in Europe for Justify from the family of Skitter Scatter (Scat Daddy) representing Fozzy Stack; Amo Coutinho Partnership's Olivia Maralda (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), the Michael O'Callaghan trainee who at 460,000gns was the second-highest-priced lot and top-priced filly at the Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Sale; and Eric Long's €210,000 Goffs Orby purchase Zoinnocent (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), the Joseph O'Brien-trained full-sister to Friday's G3 Gallinule S. winner Hannibal Barca (Ire).

5.20 Curragh, Mdn, €20,000, 3yo, f, 10fT
ENGAGEMENT RING (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) debuts in the Westerberg silks for Ballydoyle, having cost 850,000gns at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1 Sale. A full-sister to the G1 Irish Derby and G1 St Leger hero Capri (Ire), the April-foaled grey holds an entry in the G1 Irish Oaks.

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First Fiddle: Cellist Earns Breakthrough Graded Win In Louisville

Calumet Farm homebred Cellist unleashed a bold bid nearing the stretch, collared the front-runner in lane and edged to a slim lead, then held off a fierce rally from 62-1 longshot Reigning Spirit to take the $200,000 Louisville Stakes (G3) Saturday at Churchill Downs.

Racing in sixth with a half mile to go, Cellist was ready to run when jockey Julien Leparoux gave the cue. Rallying three wide entering the lane, he overtook Cavalry Charge and inched to the lead with a sixteenth of a mile remaining and crossed the finish line with plenty of energy to prevail by head.

Reigning Spirit rallied from ninth early, swung five wide entering the lane, and unleashed a furious rally but could not get to the winner. He outfinished Highest Honors by 1 ¼ lengths for second.

Favorite Camp Hope tracked from fourth through the early stages, then finished seventh after he was bumped in the stretch and then weakened late.

Cellist covered 1 ½ miles in 2:32.12 on turf rated as good. He returned $13.

“We got settled in pretty well down the backside,” Leparoux said. “He seemed to handle the track pretty well early on in the race. I could feel around the turn I still had a lot of horse beneath me. I was able to get him to the outside and he had a really good kick home.”

Trainer Al Stall Jr. said Reigning Spirit ran a great race.

“We were second best,” he said.

Sharp from his runner-up finish in a 1 1/16 mile allowance test April 27 at Keeneland after checking in seventh in the Tampa Bay Stakes (G3) in his season opener, Cellist tallied his first graded win in the Louisville Stakes. He was creditable turf runner last year, placing third in the Belmont Derby Invitational Stakes (G1) in July following his first black-type victory in the Audubon Stakes at Churchill in May.

“He had a really good 3-year-old campaign last year,” Arnold said. “We came into this year with a bad race in Florida (in the Tampa Bay Stakes). He got back to Keeneland and (I) thought that race would be a good setup to going in the Louisville. He ran a good second that day and we knew there aren't too many allowance races at this distance. It was a good setup for the Louisville today.”

With Saturday's win, Cellist improved his career line to 3-2-2 from 10 starts and earnings of $467,875.

Cellist's dam is the English Channel mare Cello.

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