‘Massive, Big, Powerful Filly’: Statuette First Black-Type Winner For Triple Crown Winner Justify

Represented by his first stakes performer last weekend at Santa Anita, undefeated 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify went one better Sunday when 2-year-old daughter Statuette won the Airlie Stud Stakes (G2) at the Curragh.

A half-sister to Group 1 winner Tenebrism, the chestnut fillyraced along with the leaders early on in the six-furlong turf race before showing her best inside the final quarter mile of the six-furlong event.

Jockey Ryan Moore asked for a step up in pace and Statuette slid down the rail to win by three-quarters of a length with Badb (by Footstepsinthesand) in second and Matilda Picotte (by Sioux Nation) giving her own freshman sire a second stakes performer with a third place finish in the race.

Trained by Aidan O'Brien for the Coolmore partners, Westerberg, and Merribelle Stables, Statuette was bred by Coolmore and Merribelle.

“She has a beautiful mind, great stride, and an unbelievable physique. We think the Justifys are something to look forward to,” O'Brien told Thoroughbred Daily News. “She's a sister to Tenebrism but she'd carry her on her back as she's a massive, big, powerful filly this one. She's probably not as precious as normal for a filly running at this time of year but she has so much class she was able to run and do it rather than us making her do it.”

She is one of two group winners out of Pivotial's dual Group 1 winner Immortal Verse, who is also the dam of European champion 2-year-old filly Tenebrism. Out of stakes winner Side of Praise, Immortal Verse is also a half sister to the dam of stakes winner and Group 1-placed Roseman. This is also the family of multiple Group 1 winner Last Tycoon, Group 1 winners Sense of Style and Valentine Waltz, and others.

Immortal Verse had a colt from the first Irish-bred crop of Wootton Basset this year.

Justify's first crop has now seen two of his eight runners win or place at stakes level with Tahoma finishing second in the Fasig-Tipton Futurity last Sunday at Santa Anita. Six of his eight runners have either won or placed in their debuts.

Justify was 2018 Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old male after winning the 2018 Kentucky Derby (G1), Preakness Stakes (G1), and Belmont Stakes (G1) in a sweep of the Triple Crown races for owners China Horse Club, Head of Plains Partners, Starlight Racing, and WinStar Farm.

A son of Scat Daddy out of the Ghostzapper mare Stage Magic, Justify stood the 2022 season at Coolmore's Ashford Stud in Versailles, Ky., for an advertised fee of $100,000.

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Walter Rodriguez Rides First Winner at Laurel

Walter Rodriguez, a 24-year-old native of El Salvador, rode the first winner of his career when he guided Rationalmillennial (Orb)–owned and trained by Jose Corrales–to victory in the sixth race at Laurel Park Sunday.

“I kept looking at the right side to make sure nobody else was coming because I wanted to go around the horse in front of me, and after that I knew I had it,” Rodriguez said. “It's very, very exciting. It's been a lot of hard work and a lot of help from all my friends.”

It was the third lifetime race for the Rodriguez, who rides with a 10-pound weight allowance and had no racing experience when he sought out Corrales more than two years ago.

“He came one day to the track and he said to me, 'I want to be a jockey.' I asked him what he was doing and he told me he was delivering refrigerators,” Corrales said. “Then I asked him if he had ever walked a horse, and he said no. That's where we started.

“In El Salvador, they don't even have a racetrack there,” Corrales added. “I said, 'You have to know how to walk horses. You have to learn everything, how to muck stalls and brush horses and be here early every day,' and he said, 'I'll do whatever it takes.' He worked his way along to where he was jogging horses for me and after that he started galloping horses, and at one time he was galloping all my best horses, my stakes horses. When all his paperwork came through, I took him to get his jockey's license. I told him, 'I'm going to make you famous.'”

Rodriguez made his professional debut June 17 at Laurel, finishing sixth aboard Manklin Creek (Bandbox), co-owned and trained by Corrales.

Corrales won 1,031 races as a jockey between 1981 and 1993 before becoming a trainer, but has continued to mentor prospective riders such as his nephew, Gerardo Corrales, currently tied for ninth in the standings at Churchill Downs, and David Egan. England's champion apprentice of 2017, Egan registered his first North American victory at age 19 on the Corrales-trained Bobby G Mar. 1, 2019 at Laurel. Two years later, Egan captured both the G1 Saudi Cup and G1 Dubai Sheema Classic aboard Mishriff.

“I've been teaching for the last 40 years and that's my passion. That's what I like to do. I love it,” Corrales said. “This kid deserves everything he gets. He learned everything by never giving up. He's a good listener and I'm glad I got him. I think he's going to have great things. He's got a good heart and he takes cares of his grandmother and everything like that. I see a lot of future in this kid.”

 

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Matareya, Speaker’s Corner At Forefront Of Godolphin Runners For Saratoga Meet

International racing and breeding powerhouse Godolphin, the reigning Eclipse Award winner for outstanding owner the past two years, enjoyed a prominent summer last year at Saratoga Race Course spearheaded by victories from Essential Quality in the Jim Dandy (G2) and Runhappy Travers (G1), as well as with Althiqa in the Diana (G1).

With the prestigious meet less than three weeks away, the stable appears to have dead aim on more Spa glory with several valuable players on their roster.

Both Essential Quality and Althiqa have retired, but Godolphin has had no issue filling their void this season, with 10 graded stakes [three Grade 1] wins this year already.

On Belmont Stakes Day, Godolphin sent out the Brad Cox-trained sophomore filly Matareya to a stellar 6 1/4-length victory in the Acorn (G1) at a one-turn mile. She was scheduled to face off against last year's champion 2-year-old filly Echo Zulu, who was scratched at the gate.

Matareya, a Pioneerof the Nile bay, has won all four of her starts this year by a combined 22 1/4 lengths, which also includes triumphs in the Beaumont (G3) at Keeneland and the Eight Belles (G2) at Churchill Downs. She will now target the seven-furlong Grade 1, $500,000 Longines Test on August 7 at Saratoga.

“Our early season goal was the Beaumont, the Eight Belles and the Grade 1 Acorn. We thought stretching out to a mile, even though it was around one turn, we would be OK,” said Godolphin USA Director of Bloodstock Michael Banahan. “As we saw, she handled it exceptionally well. It ended up being a watered down race with the scratch of Asmussen's filly [Echo Zulu], but you can only run against who's in there and she was very impressive. We expected her to run like she did and the Test is the next opportunity for her. Seven furlongs at Saratoga should suit her very well, so we're looking forward to it.”

Matareya saw two turns twice in her career. Following an impressive debut victory at Ellis Park, she raced in the Alcibiades (G1) at Keeneland going a two-turn 1 1/16 miles, finishing fifth. Two starts later, she ran a two-turn mile at Oaklawn Park, but was no match for subsequent Kentucky Oaks (G1) victress Secret Oath.

“She told us what she likes doing and what she's good at doing. When they're 2-year-olds, you always dream about having an Oaks filly or a classic distance type of horse,” Banahan said. “We ran her in the Alcibiades last year and she ran very well in it, but when she hit that last three sixteenths, you could tell that maybe that wasn't what she wanted to do. We gave her a chance and ran her back in the mile race down at Oaklawn in the wintertime just to confirm which direction we needed to go. When we got run off our feet down there, and not knowing the quality of the filly who beat us that day initially, we were convinced that we needed to go back to one turn. Lo and behold, it was Secret Oath we were trying to beat, so it wasn't all bad when you look back on it.”

A third generation Godolphin homebred, Matareya is out of the graded stakes-winning Bernardini mare Innovative Idea. She is a maternal descendant of influential broodmares Caress, Busanda, and La Troienne.

“It's a fast family. Her mother was fast as well,” Banahan said. “We bred her to Pioneerof the Nile, sort of hoping that we would get a horse that would stay a little bit further, but we're very happy to have a high class sprinter on our hands.

“She's progressed in each race she's run and each step up she's been more impressive,” Banahan continued. “She probably didn't have to be at her best in her Acorn, but I think she would have been well able to run her best had she been pressed in there and I think she's probably the leading sprinting 3-year-old filly in the country at the moment. We're looking forward to having a big second half of the year with her, hopefully starting with the Test and the dream would be to head to Keeneland for the Breeders' Cup.”

Grade 1-winner Speaker's Corner could target the Grade 1, $600,000 Forego on August 27 following a third-place finish to Flightline in the Grade 1 Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan Handicap on Belmont Stakes Day.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, the 4-year-old son of Street Sense registered a 114 Beyer Speed Figure – the highest recorded figure this year – when capturing the Carter Handicap (G1) in April at Aqueduct, defeating Reinvestment Risk and multiple Grade 1-winner Mind Control by 4 1/2 lengths in the seven-furlong test.

Prior to the Carter, Speaker's Corner defeated Fearless, winner of the Brooklyn (G2) on Belmont Stakes Day, twice at graded stakes level going a one-turn mile at Gulfstream Park.

Speaker's Corner is unbeaten in three starts at seven-eighths, including an allowance win at Saratoga last year where he emerged off a 10-month layoff.

“We're going to sit back a little bit. For a miler in the second half of the year, there isn't much of a program set up for them. Obviously, there's the Carter (G1) and the Met Mile in the late spring, summertime, but there aren't too many mile races until the back end of the year,” Banahan said. “We'll probably take a look at a race like the Forego. We'll just let him get back and see what direction we go in. We don't feel like we want to stretch him out, we tried that last year and he probably doesn't want to do that the top end. A race like the Forego (G1) would probably be our next target.”

Godolphin previously won the Forego with Emcee [2012] and Pyro [2009].

Speaker's Corner is not the only talented one-turn miler Godolphin has this year.

Cody's Wish, also trained by Mott, displayed brilliance at the distance in the Westchester (G3) over a sloppy and sealed track on May 7. Unbeaten in four starts at a one-turn mile, the 4-year-old son of Curlin was a three-time winner going a one-turn mile at Churchill Downs last fall.

Banahan said they were contemplating targeting the Met Mile with Cody's Wish as well but regrouped when the horse spiked a fever. Cody's Wish has resumed training in Saratoga with no set plans for his next start.

“We were looking a little bit at the Met Mile as well, but he came up with a little temperature. We just have to come up with a game plan for him going forward,” Banahan said. “He's very similar to Speaker's Corner in that he's a one-turn mile type of horse. We're just going to have a look at the condition book and see what is going to suit him. There was the mile race at Monmouth [Salvator Mile] last week even though it was two turns, but it came up too soon for him. We'll have to see what happens and see what races are right going forward. He's doing well and he's bounced back and we have high hopes that he can have a really good finish to the year.”

Prior to the Westchester, Cody's Wish made his seasonal debut in the Challenger (G3) in March at Tampa Bay Downs. He finished a neck behind Scalding, winner of the next-out Ben Ali (G2) at Keeneland, and 2 1/4 lengths ahead of Dynamic One, who captured the Blame at Churchill Downs two starts later.

“At Churchill last year, he rolled off three in a row going a one-turn mile. It seemed like he enjoyed doing that. We ran him at Tampa at the beginning of the year in what turned out to be a nice race, we just didn't know if he wanted to go much further than that,” Banahan said. “Scalding, who won that race, came back and won the Ben Ali. Both of those horses ran back in the Blame at Churchill and they both were in the first three again. So, those were some pretty nice horses he's been running against. When we backed him up in the Westchester, he was pretty impressive doing that. I think we have several horses that like that one turn mile distance, so we just have to figure out the best way to separate them and run them where they belong.”

Cody's Wish is out of the Grade 1-winning Tapit mare Dance Card, who also produced multiple graded stakes-placed Endorsed.

Banahan said graded stakes winner Nostalgic, a troubled tenth in the Kentucky Oaks, appears to be training forwardly alongside Mott's string at Saratoga. The daughter of Medaglia d'Oro checked heavily around the five-sixteenths pole and came up empty when shifted to the three path nearing the stretch.

Nostalgic, who captured the Gazelle (G3) in April at the Big A, will eye the $500,000 Coaching Club American Oaks (G1) on July 23 at nine furlongs en route to the ten-furlong $600,000 Alabama (G1) on August 20.

Godolphin captured the CCA Oaks-Alabama double in 2012 with Kiaran McLaughlin-trained Questing and boast prior CCA Oaks accolades with It's Tricky [2011], Music Note [2008] and Jilbab [2002].

Banahan expressed confidence in Nostalgic's classic distance capabilities.

“She got interfered with twice, at the half mile pole and then again as they were coming into the stretch. She's the type of filly that you can't really stop her momentum once you get her going,” Banahan said. “She's back again, doing well and we'll probably go to the Coaching Club and then the classic distance with her in the Alabama. Knowing that there's a deep group of fillies, none of the races will be easy but I think she'll really enjoy the distance. There aren't that many opportunities for fillies to go that distance so we're looking forward to the Alabama.”

Nostalgic is out of the stakes-placed Tapit mare Been Here Before and comes from the same family as 2005 Wood Memorial winner Bob and John.

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