Mo Strike Shakes Off Rivals, Powers Clear To Notch Sanford Win At Saratoga

Nasser Bin Omairah's Mo Strike attended a strong pace but had plenty of stamina to spare en route to an impressive score in Saturday's $175,000 Sanford (G3), a six-furlong sprint for juveniles at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by Brad Cox, the Uncle Mo colt entered from a prominent three-quarter length debut win in a 5 1/2-furlong maiden special weight on June 19 at Churchill Downs.

Mo Strike exited post 6 under returning rider Florent Geroux in the 12-horse Sanford field and was again hustled into the midst of a sharp early pace as Curly Jack marked the opening quarter mile in :22.59 and the half-mile in :45.94 with Andiamo a Firenze in close attendance to their outside.

Curly Jack and Mo Strike battled through the turn with Andiamo a Firenze looming large to their outside before advancing into a narrow lead at the stretch call. The Jairo Rendon-piloted Great Navigator made strides along the rail out of the turn and was in need of racing room as Curly Jack persevered to the inside of Mo Strike and Andiamo a Firenze.

Mo Strike finally put away his rivals inside the final sixteenth and powered away to a 3 1/2-length score in a final time of 1:11.35 over the fast main track. Great Navigator, angled wide for racing room, found another gear once clear and reeled in Andiamo a Firenze to earn place honors by a head.

Forte, the 7-5 mutuel favorite, finished fourth followed by Curly Jack, Major Dude, Roman Giant, Prove Right, Valenzan Day, Boppy O, I'm Wide Awake, and Puttheblameonme.

Cox said he was pleased with how Mo Strike put away the impressive debut winner Andiamo a Firenze, a Speightstown colt who is a three-quarter brother to Grade 1 winner Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior).

“He definitely showed some ability and fought off a very good horse at the eighth pole,” said Cox. “That horse ran a big figure in his race at Belmont, I believe, and when Florent really asked him at the eighth-pole, he was able to get away.”

Cox said the debut score engineered from the outermost post 10 proved beneficial for Mo Strike against a double-digit Sanford field.

“He did run against a larger group at Churchill, he broke from the outside and did get a good trip that day, but obviously had to fight off some horses that day as well. It worked out well and he got a lot of experience and overcame some things.” Cox said.

Geroux said he felt comfortable being forwardly placed to the outside of Curly Jack and to the inside of Andiamo a Firenze.

“He broke super sharp. From there, I was in the clear right from the beginning,” Geroux said. “I let the inside horse go. I kept an eye on the nine [Andiamo a Firenze]. We were able to slow it down a little bit the second quarter and when the horse came to me down the lane, my horse was able to give me another gear and fight all the way to the wire. I was very pleased with his effort. The last eighth of a mile, I felt the race was pretty much over and he was just keeping along nicely. If someone else was going to attack me, I felt I had another gear to fight them down.”

Cox said he will now consider giving Mo Strike a potential start in the $200,000 Saratoga Special (G2) on August 13 but noted the $300,000 Hopeful (G1) on September 5 is more likely.

“We'll watch him – it would probably be a lot to ask him [to race] in the Special and the Hopeful, but we'll let him determine our plans, and once again how he comes out of it, and go from there,” Cox said. “I think the Hopeful is more likely being he's an Uncle Mo, it's a Grade 1, and it would take a lot of pressure off. He's a nice colt.”

Bred in Kentucky by Blue Heaven Farm and Ashford Stud, Mo Strike, out of the Smart Strike mare Featherbed, is a half brother to 2014 Illinois Derby winner and former classic starter Dynamic Impact.

Mo Strike, a $325,000 OBS Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training purchase from consignor Gene Recio, banked $96,250 in victory. He returned $18.40.

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Rules of Caribbean Stud Poker

Aside from poker, Caribbean Stud Poker is one of the faster growing casino games. It used to be hard to find a place to play, but most casinos today have it. And you’ll always find it at any decent online casino.

I think the game exploded, because it’s a snap to learn and it’s a fun social game. Playing it alone is fun too, but there’s nothing quite like a full and rowdy table of Caribbean Stud Poker players.

Okay, let’s jump into the game and go over some of the rules. If you don’t know how to play and you want to start at the beginning, we’ve got another article on this site that does this.

First, you need to Ante up. Let’s imagine that you’ve just put $5 down. After you get your cards, you need to evaluate them and decide if you want to stay in the hand. Here’s the big decision of the game. If you want to quit, you fold. If not, you need to double your Ante and push this amount to the Bet area. So, in our example, we had a $5 Ante. The Bet would be $10 and we’d end up with $15 on the table.

How you win money

You’re playing against the dealer only. If the dealer has a hand rank of Ace-King or better, it’s game on. If not, your Ante bet is paid even money and your Bet wager is pushed back to you.

If the dealer qualifies, and you beat the dealer’s hand, your Ante is paid even money, but your Bet wager is paid according to your hand rank. Here’s the pay chart:

One Pair or nothing: even money
Two Pair: 2:1
Three of a Kind: 3:1
Straight: 4:1
Flush: 5:1
Full House: 7:1
Four of a Kind: 20:1
Straight Flush: 50:1
Royal Flush: 100:1

Remember, the “odds” are paid to your Bet wager only. If you played the $1 progressive, you’ll receive even money for a Flush or better.

And don’t forget that the dealer must qualify or your beautiful hand gets paid nothing but the even money on the Ante wager. That’s why I love to play the progressive always.

Example Hand

Okay, let’s run through a quick example. First, you place a $10 wager on the table and $1 in the progressive-it’s always just a buck. You get your cards and you have a flush. Obviously, you want to stay in this hand, so you place the $20 Bet wager to stay in.

Let me point out that your Bet wager is always 2x the Ante. You can’t bet more or less ever.

The dealer turns the hand over and has two pair-you win. Your Ante wager is paid $10 and your Bet wager is paid $100 (5:1), for a total of $110 won on the hand. But wait! You played the progressive, so you’ll be paid that bonus too.

The progressive bonus varies and we’ll talk about it in another article.

Beren Upstages Favorite Wonderwherecraigis To Win De Francis Dash At Laurel

St. Omer's Farm and Christopher Feifarek's Beren, second in each of his last three races but never by more than a length, stepped up and ran the biggest race of his life to put away a pair of graded-stakes winners and go on to a 2 ¾-length triumph in Saturday's $150,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash at Laurel Park.

The 31st running of the six-furlong De Francis for 3-year-olds and up served to headline an 11-race program featuring four stakes worth $450,000 in purses that included the $100,000 Alma North and both the $100,000 Prince George's County and $100,000 Big Dreyfus on the grass. For a recap of those three stakes, click here.

All four races were part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series.

Overlooked at odds of 6-1 in a field of eight, Beren ($15) raced in between graded winners Special Reserve and Wondrwherecraigis before taking command nearing the stretch and drawing off to win in 1:09.66 over a main track turned muddy following a mid-afternoon thunderstorm to earn his fifth career stakes victory.

“He came into the race great,” winning trainer Robert E. 'Butch' Reid Jr. said. “We wouldn't be here if he were any other way, and he's a game horse. All you have to do is point him in the right direction and get out of his way.”

Beren, a 4-year-old Pennsylvania-bred son of Weigelia, drew Post 7 in the De Francis flanked by Special Reserve to his inside and Wondrwherecraigis on the far outside. The three broke together but it was Special Reserve that found himself in front after running :22.10 for the opening quarter-mile in his first start since finishing fourth in the Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) last November.

Pennington settled Beren between horses as Wondrwherecraigis, racing for the first time since running 10th in the Dubai Golden Shaheen (G1) March 26 in Dubai, pressed on the outside. The half went in :44.78 when Beren found himself in front and Special Reserve dropping back.

“He's a very quick horse and he doesn't have to be on the lead. He broke sharp and the horse to the inside went to the lead, so I sat off,” Pennington said. “He was pulling me the whole way. At the top of the stretch when I asked him, he took off for me and I knew we were pretty good.”

Beren straightened for home on top but still had to contend with Wondrwherecraigis, who was taken down from first to second in last year's De Francis – then a Grade 3 run in the fall – for drifting out late in the stretch. Jockey Sheldon Russell kept the 5-year-old gelding on a straight path but they were unable to catch the winner.

“I was watching it closely and Frankie looked like he was very confident. He sat off the inside horse a little bit and fortunately the outside took back a hair so he had some breathing room, and it worked out perfect,” Reid said. “We did get a break with that little bit of rain. This is his favorite kind of track, with a little bit of moisture and sealed like this.”

Wondrwherecraigis was two lengths ahead of Grade 3 winner Pickin' Time in third, with another length back to 30-1 long shot War Tocsin in fourth. Threes Over Deuces, Royal Urn, Special Reserve and Karan's Notion completed the order of finish.

Like Special Reserve, last year's winner of the Maryland Sprint (G3) at historic Pimlico Race Course as well as the Phoenix (G2) at Keeneland, Wondrwherecraigis was also returning to action following his 10th-place finish in the $2 million Golden Shaheen (G1) March 26 in Dubai.

“We caught them both off layoffs, so that's the right time to run against them, I guess,” Reid said. “He doesn't have to prove anything. He owes us nothing. He's a very tough runner. I wish they were all like him. He's a total class act. He ships perfectly and stood in the paddock perfectly today. Nothing bothers this horse.”

First run in 1990 and named for the late president and chairman of both Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course, the De Francis' illustrious roster of winners includes Hall of Famer Housebuster; fellow sprint champions Cherokee Run, Smoke Glacken, Thor's Echo and Benny the Bull; and Lite the Fuse, the race's only two-time winner (1995-1996).

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