‘It Was Easy For Her’: In Italian Leads In Her Three Brown-Trained Stablemates With Gate-To-Wire Course-Record Performance In Diana At Saratoga

Trainer Chad Brown brought a quartet of talented fillies to the $500,000 Diana (G1) Saturday, with the undefeated Bleecker Street looking to pounce upon a hot pace set by stablemate In Italian. But In Italian's course-record performance proved too much for even her talented stablemates as she led gate to wire to give Brown his seventh victory in the turf test for older fillies and mares at Saratoga Race Course.

“I'm just so lucky to have so many great horses in the division,” said Brown. “When you can work them together and put them into different situations in their morning drills, I can really see when they're in peak form and I can identify their preferred way to run.”

Owned by Peter Brant, In Italian, a daughter of Darley sire Dubawi, was making her seventh start for Brown and arrived from a game third-place effort behind stablemate Regal Glory in the Longines Just a Game (G1) on June 10 at Belmont Park. The Diana was the first Grade 1 triumph for In Italian, whose previous best score was in the Honey Fox (G3) in March at Gulfstream Park.

In Italian broke sharply from the outermost post 6 under Joel Rosario and sprinted to the front of the compact field, while the Brown-trained Technical Analysis flashed speed but was held tightly by Jose Ortiz and taken back to fourth as the field rounded the first turn over the firm going.

In Italian marked an opening quarter mile in :22.45 while Creative Flair skimmed the rail in second with Dalika a half-length back from her in third. It was a long gap behind Technical Analysis to Rougir and post-time favorite Bleecker Street, who bided her time under patient handling from Irad Ortiz Jr. through a half-mile in 45.83.

Dalika and Creative Flair could not keep up with In Italian's quick fractions up front and faded in the turn whilst Technical Analysis was full of run from fourth, quickly overtaking second from her fading rivals and looming to the outside of In Italian. Irad Ortiz got to work on Bleecker Street but was left with considerable ground to make up as In Italian and Technical Analysis moved away from their rivals in the stretch.

In Italian kept finding more with steady urging from Rosario, turning back the challenge from Technical Analysis and completing the nine furlongs in 1:45.06, a record time on the Mellon course. Bleecker Street suffered her first career defeat and finished 1 1/2-lengths behind Technical Analysis, holding onto show honors by a neck over Rougir. Dalika and Creative Flair completed the order of finish.

Brown said he knew In Italian was sitting on a big performance after showing her mettle against her multiple Grade 1-winning workmate Regal Glory in the mornings.

“We had a plan. She was training super in the morning. She's been the lead horse in the works for Regal Glory two or three weeks in a row at Belmont,” said Brown. “I've been so impressed with her not letting Regal Glory by her, who I regard as the top mare in the division just slightly over Bleecker Street. So, her not letting her by in the work and finishing up right on even terms and not giving an inch showed me that's really the way she wants to run, and she's ready for a top effort.”

Rosario, who rode In Italian for the first time, said the filly ran her race with ease.

“It looked like she had the speed on paper. It looked like there were other horses with speed too on paper, but Chad told me to let her break and go on into the first turn and she put herself forwardly placed,” said Rosario. “She was nice and relaxed in front and ran a big race.

“It looked like she was going very easy. It looked like she was enjoying everything and it was easy for her,” he added. “She was able to turn loose going for home and just took off again.”

Brown said that while confident In Italian would give a good account of herself, he was still expecting Bleecker Street and Rougir to come running at the end.

“I was looking towards the rear. I know Technical Analysis was in a cozy spot, but I figured the two horses chasing her couldn't sustain in their form,” said Brown. “I felt good about Technical Analysis maybe getting a jump on Rougir and Bleecker Street, but sure enough In Italian found another gear, much like she has in the mornings recently.”

Brant, who also owns Bleecker Street and co-owns Rougir with Michael Tabor, said he had faith In Italian would deliver.

“I just think she's a terrific filly and she wouldn't be in here if we didn't think she had the ability to win,” said Brant. “The instructions to Joel were ride this race like you can win, not just for pace, and he did it.”

Jose Ortiz echoed Rosario's praise for the way In Italian rebroke, but added that Technical Analysis gave it her best.

“She was a little keen going into the first turn. Other than that, she relaxed well after. I came home running. I'm very proud of my horse,” he said. “She ran an amazing race. I'm very proud of her. She got beat by a horse than ran very hard and went fast early and re-broke. That's very hard to do, but In Italian did it.”

Brown added that he was pleased to see four of his top turf fillies prove their class out on the track.

“They separate each other when you run them together. My approach is, I would rather run them against each other and settle it on the track than start to cherry pick who's running and who's not and a bunch of “What Ifs” if I ran the one I didn't run,” said Brown. “I like to run the horses against each other, settle it out on the track, and this day it worked out this way. We'll see if they meet in the future and maybe someone turns the tables, we'll see.”

Bred in Great Britain by Fairway Farm, In Italian was purchased by Brant as a yearling for over $600,000 at the 2019 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale. Her dam is Australian Group 3 winner Florentina, by Redoute's Choice. She boasts a perfect on-the-board record of 4-2-1 from seven starts and total purse earnings of $591,220. The longest odds of Brown's four runners at 8-1, In Italian returned $18.60.

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Gulfstream Park: Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Guaranteed At $150,000 Sunday

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool is guaranteed at $150,000 Sunday at Gulfstream Park.

The Rainbow 6 has gone unsolved for four racing days since a lucky bettor hit the jackpot for a $118,521 payoff Friday, July 8.

Sunday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 5-10, including the $55,000 Biscayne Park in Race 9. Eddie Plesa Jr.-trained Miss Auramet, a multiple-stakes winner on turf and dirt, is rated as the 7-5 morning-line favorite for the 5 ½-furlong overnight handicap for fillies and mares on Tapeta.

The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70% of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30% is carried over to the jackpot pool.

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Eons Elevated To Victory In Prince George’s County, Bellagamba Earns First U.S. Win In Big Dreyfus, Chub Wagon Takes Alma North At Laurel

Proud of his horse's effort no matter what, trainer Arnaud Delacour was able to celebrate a victory when Mark B. Grier's Eons was promoted to his second straight stakes win following the disqualification of first-place finisher English Tavern in in Saturday's $100,000 Prince George's County at Laurel Park.

The third running of the Prince George's County for 3-year-olds and up and $100,000 Big Dreyfus for fillies and mares 3 and older, both 1 1/8 miles on the grass, were among four stakes worth $450,000 in total purses on an 11-race program highlighted by the $150,000 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash for 3-year-olds and up sprinting six furlongs on the main track.

All four races, including the $100,000 Alma North for fillies and mares 3 and up sprinting 6 ½ furlongs, were part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series.

Ridden by Jorge Ruiz, Eons ($6.60) registered his fifth career stakes win and second in a row following a nose decision over Beacon Hill in the June 14 Bensalem at Parx. Beacon Hill, a winner in his only previous try on the Laurel turf, ran last of six as the even-money favorite.

It was Nick Papagiorgio, winner of the June 19 Find at Laurel, that broke on top but Beacon Hill established himself as the leader by the first turn and continued to take the field down the backstretch and into the far turn. English Tavern, who trailed early under jockey Sheldon Russell, began to roll on the outside and engaged with Eons midway around the far turn as they loomed on Beacon Hill.

Eons switched to the outside once straightened for home and dueled with English Tavern down the stretch but came up a nose short after 1:51.97 over an Exceller turf course rated good. Following a jockey's objection and steward's inquiry, Eons was moved up to first and English Tavern placed second. They were followed by multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire Pixelate, making his first start in 203 days, Nick Papagiorgio, Nathan Detroit and Beacon Hill.

“He ran a great race, regardless of the outcome of the inquiry,” Delacour said. “I thought it wasn't an easy spot for anyone because we didn't know how to ride the race. There was not a lot of speed, and he's a pretty difficult horse to ride. I thought considering everything he ran great, and he's in good form, for sure.”

Ruiz had yet to be aboard English Tavern, whose most recent stakes win came under former Maryland champion Trevor McCarthy, now based in New York.

“The last time I pretty much didn't give any instructions to trevor because he rode him so many times that I didn't have to. This time, I had to be a little more specific with Ruiz because he's never rode on him. I told him because there's no pace, he should be a little bit closer.”\

Argentine-Bred Bellagamba Drives To Victory In Big Dreyfus

Merriebelle Stable's Bellagamba, a Group 1 winner in her native Argentina, scored her first win in the U.S. by driving past her rivals down the stretch to win the $100,000 Big Dreyfus by 1 ½ lengths over Deciding Vote. It was a neck back to In a Hurry in third.

Bellagamba, ridden by Vincent Cheminaud and trained by Ignacio Correas IV, covered a good 1 1/8-mile turf course in 1:51.15. The 5-year-old mare arrived in the U.S. last year and was winless in five previous starts but had placed in four of those races, including a second-place finish in the Blushing K.D. at Fair Grounds and a third-place finish last time out in the Romacaca Stakes at Hawthorne.

While the longshot Double Fireball was pressed by Godolphin's Alms on the lead down the backstretch, Bellagamba raced ninth. But Cheminaud moved the daughter of Grand Reward wide entering the stretch and picked off his competitors being driving to the finish line while racing with blinkers for the first time.

“She run the last time very good [at Hawthorne],” Cheminaud said. “I decided to ride from behind because she had natural speed. The grass was a little soft for her, so I prefer to wait a little bit for a good finish.”

Bellagamba returned $11.40.

Chub Wagon Makes It Four Straight In Alma North

Daniel Lopez and George Chestnut's speedball Chub Wagon, content to sit off the pace in the early going, came rolling to the front around the far turn and had plenty left to repel fellow multiple stakes winner Kaylasaurus down the stretch to win Saturday's $100,000 Alma North at Laurel Park.

It was the fourth straight win and eighth in stakes company for the 5-year-old Chub Wagon ($3.80), whose victory came by three lengths in 1:16.03 over a main track turned sloppy by a heavy mid-afternoon thunderstorm. She is now 12-for-13 lifetime, including victories in the 2021 Skipat and Shine Again at Pimlico Race Course.

“You're never overconfident going into a race especially when the track gets wet like today. You never know,” winning trainer Guadalupe Preciado said. “All these horses today looked like speed. When you run with all these speed horses you see who has the speed. She's coming around very nice. Hopefully she gets a little stronger.”

Chub Wagon, who has shown more of a willingness to settle in behind horses in her recent races, broke sharply from Post 3 and quickly established command but was content to let Chilean Group 2 winner Cheetara come through from her rail post and take the lead after a quarter-mile in :22.41. Silvestre Gonzalez, aboard for the second straight race, kept Chub Wagon in the clear two wide and eased to the front on the turf following a half in :45.63.

“She was very handy. She responded well to the horse on the lead. She was very relaxed and wasn't keen on the bit, just settled in nicely and I had a lot of horse to finish,” Gonzalez said. “She does everything right. She's got a lot of class and she loves to run. She showed her grit today on a sloppy track. She overcame that and she ran well.”

Having dispatched Cheetara, Chub Wagon straightened for home comfortably in front but had to be wary of a looming challenge from Kaylasaurus, late-running winner of the 2021 Willa On the Move and April 23 Primonetta at Laurel.

“The last time I rode her she broke a step slow and today, coming off her first race back, she was a lot sharper. She had some speed on the inside. She didn't hesitate at all and kind of liked having that company a little bit,” Gonzalez said. “When she put her away I was just letting herself get into stride and once they started coming I asked her and she responded very well down the stretch.”

Kaylasaurus held second, 1 ¾ lengths ahead of Cheetara. It was two lengths back to Buy the Best while multiple stakes winner Fille d'Esprit completed the field after being fractious in the starting gate.

The Alma North is named for the Maryland-bred champion 3-year-old filly and Horse of the Year in 1971 and Maryland-bred champion older filly of 1972. Owned by the late Eugene Mori's East Acres Stable, Alma North won 23 of 78 career starts with $513,597 in purse earnings from 1970-74. Her victories included graded-stakes scores in the Matchmaker (G1) and Vineland (G2), Margate (G3) and Betsy Ross (G3) Handicaps in 1973.

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Uncle Mo Colt ‘Strikes’ In the Sanford

Mo Strike (Uncle Mo) was the second 8-1 shot to win a graded event at Saratoga Saturday, taking his record to two-for-two with a victory in the GII Sanford S.

Away in good order from the six-hole, the bay rushed up to contest the pace alongside Curly Jack (Good Magic) with 'TDN Rising Star' Andiamo A Firenze (Speightstown) to his outside through a :22.59 opening quarter. They ran three abreast on the backstretch run, registering a :45.94 half-mile. Great Navigator (Sea Wizard) tried to break through that trio in early stretch, but was forced to swing out for the overland route just as Curly Jack threw in the towel at the fence. Andiamo A Firenze, the half-brother to the speedy GISW Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior), continued to battle Mo Strike in the lane, but that foe found another gear at the eighth-pole, pulling away for a 3 1/2-length decision. Great Navigator made a bold late run for second at 18-1. Favored 'TDN Rising Star' Forte (Violence) ran in seventh most of the way, made a three-wide bid in the turn, but never got into gear, finishing fourth.

“I mean, I didn't really know how the pace would set up,” winning trainer Brad Cox said. “He broke and put himself right there, I saw the :22 1/5, or whatever it was, and I thought if he was there and he was doing it, he would have something to finish up with. He galloped out really well in his first run and he's a pretty intelligent horse. I think he can stretch a bit–I'm not going to say he's going to go a mile and a quarter just yet, but he's a nice horse that I think his biggest asset is his mind. He definitely showed some ability and fought off a very good horse [Andiamo a Firenze]. That horse ran a big figure in his race at Belmont, I believe, and when Florent [Geroux] really asked [Mo Strike] at the eighth-pole, he was able to get away.”

On a potential next start in the GII Saratoga Special Aug. 13 and the GI Hopeful S. Sept. 5, Cox said, ” 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. I think the Hopeful is more likely being he's an Uncle Mo, it's a Grade I, and it would take a lot of pressure off. He's a nice colt.”

“He broke super sharp,” Geroux said. “From there, I was in the clear right from the beginning. I let the inside horse [Curly Jack] go. I kept an eye on [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.”

A $90,000 FTKOCT yearling buy, Mo Strike summoned $325,000 at OBS April after breezing in :10 flat for Gene Recio. He beat nine rivals when taking his debut at Churchill Downs June 19 as the lukewarm favorite, earning a 70 Beyer Speed Figure.

Pedigree Notes:

Mo Strike is the 45th graded winner and 83rd black-type winner for top sire Uncle Mo, whose son Sea Wizard sired runner-up Great Navigator. He is also the 60th graded winner and 148th black-type scorer out of a daughter of Smart Strike. Stakes winner and GISP Featherbed is also the dam of GIII Illinois Derby winner Dynamic Impact (Tiznow). Her recent produce includes a yearling colt by Vino Rosso and a 2022 filly by McKinzie.

Saturday, Saratoga
SANFORD S.-GIII, $175,000, Saratoga, 7-16, 2yo, 6f, 1:11.35, ft.
1–MO STRIKE, 120, c, 2, by Uncle Mo
                1st Dam: Featherbed (SW & GISP, $227,904), by Smart Strike
                2nd Dam: Favorite Feather, by Capote
                3rd Dam: In My Cap, by Vice Regent
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($90,000 Ylg
'21 FTKOCT; $325,000 2yo '22 OBSAPR). O-Nasser Bin
Omairah; B-Blue Heaven Farm & Ashford Stud (KY); T-Brad H.
Cox; J-Florent Geroux. $96,250. Lifetime Record: 2-2-0-0,
$165,710. *1/2 to Dynamic Impact (Tiznow), GSW, $421,006.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick
Rating: A+. 
2–Great Navigator, 120, c, 2, Sea Wizard–All Even, by Stephen
Got Even. 1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE.
O/B-Holly Crest Farm (NJ); T-Eddie Owens, Jr. $35,000.
3–Andiamo a Firenze, 120, c, 2, Speightstown–My Every Wish,
by Langfuhr. 'TDN Rising Star'. 1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED
BLACK TYPE. O/B-Mr Amore Stables (NY); T-Kelly J. Breen.
$21,000.
Margins: 3HF, NK, 2. Odds: 8.20, 18.50, 4.20.
Also Ran: Forte, Curly Jack, Major Dude, Roman Giant, Prove Right, Valenzan Day, Boppy O, I'm Wide Awake, Puttheblameonme.
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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