‘You’ve Got To Lose Better Than You Win’: Reed Takes Aim On Travers With Derby Winner Rich Strike After Disappointing Belmont Finish

Red TR-Racing's Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Rich Strike will be pointed to the $1 million Runhappy Travers (G1) on August 27 at Saratoga Race Course after finishing sixth of eight runners in Saturday's Belmont Stakes (G1).

The chestnut son of Keen Ice displayed rail-skimming tactics in his stunning 80-1 upset victory in the “Run for the Roses,” but tried something new when angling outside of foes from post 4 in the Belmont, which was won by Derby fifth-place finisher Mo Donegal, who also is pointed to the Travers.

Jockey Sonny Leon, who expertly piloted Rich Strike to his Derby win, struggled throughout the first mile of the 1 1/2-mile test to bring Rich Strike's attention to the race rather than trying to make the rail. Rich Strike trailed the field in eighth before swinging wide in the turn and only managing to put away two rivals in the “Test of the Champion.”

Trainer Eric Reed said Rich Strike likely would have run better with an inside trip.

“He came back great. It was my fault. I had a feeling the race would shape up like it did, and I told Sonny that all we had to do was settle eight lengths back down the backstretch and we'd win,” said Reed. “We knew that they would be waiting on us to come on the inside and I said, 'Good, because we're not going on the inside; we're not going to get stopped in an eight-horse field.' But he won't run on the outside of horses. He has no interest and all he did was turn his head and try to fight to the rail and not concentrating on anything but trying to get to the rail and doing what he does. I didn't know that. It didn't cost us the win, but I do think it cost us a placing.

“I should have had a bit of an indication, because when we breeze him, Gabriel [Lagunes] breezed him about four or five lengths off the rail because he doesn't go as hard that way,” Reed continued. “When he's on the rail he wants to go too fast. I thought with horses around him, he'd be waiting to go, but he lost interest.”

Rich Strike will now set his sights on a cutback to the Derby distance of 1 1/4 miles in the Travers, a distance that Reed said suits him perfectly.

“We were going there win, lose, or draw. We're going to give him a little rest and that's a mile and a quarter and there'll be plenty of speed,” said Reed. “The track will play to his liking and we'll run another bang-up race. I have no doubt about that. We'll give him three or four easy weeks and then start training him up to the Travers. He'll train in Kentucky and train [at Saratoga] a little.”

While Rich Strike's finish in the Belmont was not what his team was hoping for, Reed said he couldn't be happier to continue to train a Kentucky Derby winner.

“We didn't think we could win coming from last, but this was a chance to get another good finish and that's why we targeted it. He's still the Derby winner and he'll win plenty of races,” said Reed. “It's not his only race and I would feel a lot worse if he had tried really hard and got dead tired and couldn't win. He drank a half a bucket of water and wasn't tired. He wasn't trying to win, he was trying to get to the rail.”

Reed expressed his gratitude to the fans and to Belmont Park for their accommodations during Rich Strike's stay in New York.

“Oh God, I got hundreds and hundreds of messages. I'll keep everybody informed when he goes back to the track,” Reed said. “He's not going anywhere and he'll get his say again. We had guys as we were walking back come out of the barns and say, 'Congratulations, you've still got the good horse, you'll get them next time.' I was real surprised that dozens of people came out and were so nice to us. You've got to lose better than you win – that's my motto. As long as the horse is healthy, I'm happy.”

“Everybody has treated me so good from the day I got here and Juan Dominguez [NYRA's Senior Director of Safety and Racing Operations] and Frank [Gabriel Jr. NYRA's Senior Vice President of Racing Operations] stood here at 1 in the morning to watch him go to the stall; the press giving us our space and always being so kind,” Reed added. “Who wouldn't like that?”

The post ‘You’ve Got To Lose Better Than You Win’: Reed Takes Aim On Travers With Derby Winner Rich Strike After Disappointing Belmont Finish appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Champion Echo Zulu Headed To Kentucky For Precautionary Tests

Echo Zulu, 2021 champion 2-year-old filly, was reported to be in good shape Sunday morning after having been scratched at the gate by the track veterinarian due to lameness in her left foreleg prior to the start of Saturday's $500,000 Acorn Stakes (G1) at Belmont Park.

“She is giving us all the signs that we want to see,” said Scott Blasi, trainer Steve Asmussen's assistant who added that she will be shipped to Kentucky for a full evaluation by Dr. Larry Bramlage and his team.

Immediately following the scratch, Echo Zulu, who is owned by Winchell Thoroughbreds and L and N Racing, was examined at the barn and Asmussen reported later in the day that all her x-rays were “clean.”

“She was fine again this morning, but we will do all of the complete diagnostics on her and go from there,” said David Fiske, the general manager of Ron Winchell's operation. “We'll take every precaution, as we do with all of our horses.”

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‘We Were Battling The Whole Stretch’: Cyberknife Prevails By Slimmest Margin In Matt Winn Thriller

Arkansas Derby (G1) winner Cyberknife rebounded from his 18th-place finish in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and put his nose in front of pacesetter Howling Time at the wire to narrowly win Sunday's 25th running of the $225,000 Matt Winn Stakes (G3) for 3-year-olds at Churchill Downs.

Cyberknife, owned by Al Gold's Gold Square LLC, clocked 1 1/16 miles over a fast track in 1:41.98 under Florent Geroux, who rode the winner for trainer Brad Cox. Both Geroux and Cox teamed to win last year's Matt Winn with Fulsome. Additionally, Geroux won the 2016 Matt Winn aboard Cyberknife's sire Gun Runner.

Cyberknife, breaking from post No. 6 of seven, hesitated slightly at the start as last year's Street Sense Stakes winner Howling Time broke alertly from the three-stall to lead the field of seven through fractions of :24.19, :47.81, 1:11.51, and 1:35.60. Cyberknife was never more than a length off Howling Time's right hip. Leaving the final turn, the two drew even and brushed each other slightly before engaging in a thrill stretch battle. A photo finish was needed to determine the winner as the two appeared to hit the wire together.

The narrow victory was worth $136,520 and improved Cyberknife's overall record to 4-2-0 and earnings of $996,520 from eight starts.

“He broke a little slow but I was able to get him into a good position,” Geroux said. “He was traveling well and (Howling Time) was really game on my inside. We were battling the whole stretch. I couldn't tell which one of us won, but I'm glad it was Cyberknife.”

Added Howling Time's jockey Joe Talamo, “You can't get a more brutal beat than that.”

Cyberknife, the odds-on 1-2 favorite, returned $3.

Howling Time, the 4-1 second choice and finished six lengths in front of Rattle N Roll under Brian Hernandez Jr.

Droppin G's was another eight lengths back in fourth, and was followed by Camp David, Trafalgar, and Tough to Tame.

Cyberknife, out of the six-time stakes-winning Flower Alley mare Awesome Flower, was bred in Kentucky by Ken and the late Sarah Ramsey. The colt is named after Accuray Inc.'s robotic radiation therapy that was successfully used to treat 66-year-old Gold's prostate cancer.

“He's still a developing 3-year-old and he gets that experience by running in the afternoon,” Cox said. “I think he's making good progress and ran hard today. We got on the right side of a tight photo. (Howling Time) ran a really game race. (Cyberknife) is a horse that I think we are looking to take the next step. He's a sound, happy horse and he's growing up. We're excited about him as a prospect throughout the rest of the year.”

The Matt Winn is named in honor of the famed Churchill Downs president that served as the driving force in the development of the Downs and his beloved Kentucky Derby.

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Following Triple Crown Finale, Saratoga Dates for Belmont Runners

GI Belmont S. winner Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) and GI Kentucky Derby Rich Strike (Keen Ice), sixth in Saturday's Belmont, will now be pointed towards the Aug. 27 GI Runhappy Travers S., connections confirmed Sunday morning.

“I haven't really talked to the ownership group about it too much, but both of our Travers winners went through the Jim Dandy,” Mo Donegal's trainer Todd Pletcher said Sunday. “So to me, if he has a prep between now and the Travers, that would make the most sense.”

The GII Jim Dandy will be run July 31 at Saratoga.

Nest (Curlin), runner-up in both the GI Kentucky Oaks and the Belmont S., will also have Saratoga targets this summer, Pletcher said.

“I thought she ran great,” Pletcher said of the filly. “We'll target the [Aug. 20 GI] Alabama and decide if we want to target the [July 23 GI] Coaching Club before that or not. I think she solidified what we already felt going into the Kentucky Oaks. Everyone talked about it being one of the deeper Oaks in a while. I think that Nest showed that to be the case yesterday.”

Mo Donegal gave Pletcher his fourth Belmont S. triumph, following 2007 winner Rags to Riches, 2013 winner Palace Malice and 2017 victor Tapwrit. Saturday's win put Pletcher on even terms with his former boss, Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas.

“That's an honor,” Pletcher said of the tie. “I consider him to be the best of all time, so that's pretty cool.”

Eric Reed, trainer of Rich Strike, said the Derby winner exited Saturday's race in fine shape and he is looking forward to cutting back in distance for the 1 1/4-mile Travers.

“We were going there [to the Travers] win, lose or draw,” Reed said. “We're going to give him a little rest and that's a mile and a quarter and there'll be plenty of speed. The track will play to his liking and we'll run another bang-up race. I have no doubt about that. We'll give him three or four easy weeks and then start training him up to the Travers. He'll train in Kentucky and train [at Saratoga] a little.”

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