Actuator Delivers Off Private Purchase in Indiana Derby

Actuator (Bodemeister), just a $2,200 FTKFEB yearling graduate, stayed perfect on dirt to capture a career high in Saturday's GIII Indiana Derby.

Third in his first two tries on grass for trainer Rodolphe Brisset at Horseshoe Indianapolis last term, including going a mile in his juvenile finale Oct. 6, he returned from the bench to air in his dirt debut going seven furlongs in his first try for trainer Michael McCarthy at Churchill Downs last time June 8.

With Black Type Thoroughbreds acquiring a 75-percent controlling interest since, 3-1 third-choice Actuator broke inward at the start from his outside draw here. Favored GISW Rattle N Roll (Connect), drawn two to his inside, took the worst of it at the break, clipping heels while getting bumped from both sides with rider Brian Hernandez, Jr. briefly losing the irons.

Actuator, meanwhile, raced in an outside fourth while rounding the clubhouse turn. Chasing from third while three deep heading down the backstretch, the bay was ridden to keep pace on the far turn, challenged from the outside while racing a bit greenly with his lead change as they straightened and dug down deep in the stretch to hold Best Actor (Flatter) safe while brushing with that rival inside the sixteenth pole.

Actuator survived a steward's inquiry involving the start and also an objection lodged by jockey Florent Geroux aboard the runner-up alleging interference in deep stretch.

“I don't know where I interfered with him,” winning jockey James Graham said. “He did break in a little bit, but his horse didn't break either. We kind of made contact. But that's the first jump. I grabbed him immediately and he actually came and leaned on me the last sixteenth. My horse ran his race. He showed a lot of grit and tenacity today, so I'm happy with that.”

McCarthy added, “He didn't get away from there great, but James was able to go ahead and get us into a great spot going into the first turn. Up the backside, he was sitting right off the speed and around the turn. James asked him to pick it up, and he slowly got into a rhythm. He was game through the lane.”

McCarthy continued, “Everybody was quietly confident. I thought his performance off the layoff was very, very good. The horse came back and trained well after his maiden score. Jake Ballis and his partners were very keen to get in on the horse. I thought there were bigger and better things to come with him.”

Pedigree Notes:

Actuator is the 11th graded/26th stakes winner for former WinStar stallion and current Jockey Club of Turkey resident Bodemeister. Like Bodemeister's 2022 GII American Turf S. winner Stolen Base, Actuator is also out of an Indian Charlie mare. Indian Charlie is now responsible for 30 graded/90 stakes winners as a broodmare sire. The E. Paul Robsham-bred Indian Rocket, a winner of two of 16 career starts, was a $175,000 KEENOV weanling. The half-sister to GISW and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies runner-up R Heat Lightning (Trippi) passed away in 2019. Actuator was her final produce.

Saturday, Horseshoe Indianapolis
INDIANA DERBY-GIII, $300,000, Horseshoe Indianapolis, 7-9, 3yo, 1 1/16m, 1:44.48, gd.
1–ACTUATOR, 118, c, 3, by Bodemeister
                1st Dam: Indian Rocket, by Indian Charlie
                2nd Dam: Yellow Heat, by Gold Fever
                3rd Dam: The Real Thing, by Capote
   1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. ($2,200 Ylg
'20 FTKFEB). O-Black Type Thoroughbreds, Rags Racing Stable
LLC, Rick Howard & Gavin O'Connor; B-WinStar Farm, LLC (KY);
T-Michael W. McCarthy; J-James Graham. $174,600. Lifetime
Record: 4-2-0-2, $250,860. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple
Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Best Actor, 124, c, 3, Flatter–Abraqat, by Smart Strike.
1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($330,000 Ylg '20
KEESEP). O-Gary & Mary West; B-E. H. Beau Lane, Gail
McMichael Lane, J. B. Lane Orem & Michael Orem (KY); T-Brad Cox. $58,200.
3–King Ottoman, 124, c, 3, Curlin–Shook Up, by Tapit.
1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($335,000 RNA Ylg '20 KEESEP).
O/B-Three Chimneys Farm, LLC (KY); T-Steven M. Asmussen.
$32,010.
Margins: HF, 2HF, 3/4. Odds: 3.20, 2.90, 4.90.
Also Ran: Trademark, Mowins, Fowler Blue, Rattle N Roll, First Glimpse. Scratched: New Year's Fever, Un Ojo. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Jockey Tyler Conner Registers 1,000th Career Victory

Jockey Tyler Conner earned his 1,000th career victory at Parx Racing in Bensalem, Pa., on Saturday when My Dixie Lass won the ninth race on the card, an allowance event, for trainer James Lawrence II.

Conner, 28, was born into a racing family in Lancaster, Pa., his father a trainer  at Penn National and his mother having worked as a jockey, racing official and exercise rider. Tyler was on a different career path, however, riding in motocross races at an early age until he was convinced by a couple of accidents that it was too dangerous of a sport. He then turned to horse racing.

He took out his apprentice license in 2014, accepting his first mount on June 14 but not getting into the winner's circle until his 40th ride on Aug. 1 aboard Love Talk at Penn National for trainer Kimberly Graci.

Conner finished that first year with 40 wins from 465 mounts for earnings of just under $1 million, then won 168 races from 1,188 rides in 2015, his mount earnings more than $3.2 million.

Conner has been leading rider at Penn National, where he currently sits atop the jockey standings, and his 22 percent win rate in 2022 is his career best.

His biggest career win came last month when he guided Wow Whata Summer to a $168.69 upset victory for trainer James Lawrence II in the Grade 2 , $400,000 Penn Mile at Penn National.

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Classic Causeway A Rousing Success In Turf Debut With All-The-Way Win In Belmont Derby

Classic Causeway earned multiple graded stakes wins on dirt in his eight-race career before trainer Ken McPeek entered him against top-caliber divisional competition for his turf debut in the $1 million Caesars Belmont Derby Invitational (G1). But the son of Giant's Causeway took to the new surface immediately, surging to the front as a 26-1 longshot and never relinquishing the lead in a gate-to-wire victory on Belmont Park's inner turf course on Saturday.

Classic Causeway won by three-quarters of a length from Nations Pride, with Stone Age a head back in third. He covered 1 ¼ miles in 1:59.99.

The 73rd running of the Belmont Derby, the last of four stakes on the Stars and Stripes Racing Festival card, was the first leg of the Caesars Turf Triple series, and will be followed by the Grade 1, $1 million Caesars Saratoga Derby Invitational at 1 3/16-miles on August 6 and the Grade 3, $1 million Caesars Jockey Club Derby Invitational at 12 furlongs during the Belmont Fall meet.

Kentucky West Racing and Clarke M. Cooper's homebred Classic Causeway won the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis and Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby over the winter at Tampa Bay Downs before finishing 11th in both the Grade 1 Florida Derby at Gulfstream and Grade 1 Kentucky Derby for his former conditioner Brian Lynch. After transferring to McPeek's care, he ran third in the nine-furlong Grade 3 Ohio Derby on June 25 at Thistledown before the surface switch.

Under jockey Julien Leparoux, Classic Causeway broke sharp from post 4 with only Royal Patronage in close pursuit entering the first turn, leading the 12-horse field through an opening quarter-mile in :23.55 and logging :48.02 for the half, and 1:12.33 for six furlongs over firm going.

Out of the turn, Classic Causeway maintained his lead and fended off all challengers, including Nations Pride to his outside in the shadow of the wire before cruising across the finish line.

“We knew he was pretty much the speed in the race,” said co-owner Patrick O'Keefe of Kentucky West Racing. “He's like a 14-year-old kid that can throw a baseball 100 miles per hour. Now, he's slowed down a little to 90 miles per hour and can hit the play.

“[McPeek] is amazing,” O'Keefe added. “To me, he's a life send. I have someone who really knows the breeding and knows where to put them. I loved [the idea of running him on the turf].”

Classic Causeway paid $55.50 on a $2 win wager. He earned millionaire status with the victory, increasing his bankroll to $1.12 million, and improved to 4-1-2 overall in nine starts.

O'Keefe said the two-week turnaround time in addition to the turf debut did not deter them from entering and will now likely enter the Caesars Saratoga Derby Invitational next month.

“He came back good and was eating the bottom out of the feedbag. What Kenny says, I do,” O'Keefe said.

Leparoux won his first Belmont Derby and his second Grade 1 win since 2020, adding to his victory in the 2021 Flower Bowl with War Like Goddess at Saratoga.

“The plan was to go on the lead. The only time I was a little worried was in the first turn when Joel [Rosario, aboard Royal Patronage] was kind of head-to-head with me,” Leparoux said. “When he took back, my horse got to cruising and happy to be on the lead. I was getting him to relax nicely and switch off. It was a good run for him.

“He was actually feeling pretty fresh today,” he added. “It was Kenny's idea to wheel him right back on the grass, and it paid off today for sure.”

Nations Pride, the slight 2-1 favorite for trainer Charlie Appleby and ridden by Frankie Dettori, held off fellow Irish-bred contender and 5-2 selection Stone Age under Ryan Moore, both riders based in Great Britain.

Grand Sonata, Royal Patronage, Sy Dog, Limited Liability, Machete, Tiz the Bomb, Implementation, Napoleonic War, and Stolen Base completed the order of finish. Emmanuel scratched.

“He got upset in the gates. I was the last one out and I had to play catch up then and go through traffic,” Dettori said of Nations Pride. “The winner had a trouble-free run. If he jumped, it could have been a different story. In America, if you give too many lengths away at the start, you're going to pay at the end.”

Stone Age, trained by Aiden O'Brien, was making his North American debut two starts removed from a Group 3 win in his native country at Leopardstown in May, breaking from the outermost post.

“He was finishing off well. Ryan was very happy with him. He had a wide draw,” said T.J. Comerford, traveling assistant for O'Brien. “It's his first run in America, I'm sure he'll build on it. It's a good run back from his run in the English Derby. Ryan is happy with him and Aidan is happy with the run.”

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Key Biscayne Strikes At 36-1 Odds In Robert G. Dick Memorial At Delaware Park

Arindel's homebred Key Biscayne sprung a 36-1 victory in the $200,500 Robert G. Dick Memorial (G3) Saturday at Delaware Park.

With Daniel Centeno aboard, the 5-year-old daughter of Brethren returned $74.20 as the second longest shot in the field of nine after notching a 1 ¼ length triumph Daniel Centeno aboard.

Sister Otoole, with Kendrick Carmouche, finished second 1¾ lengths in front of Gladys, with Jaime Rodriguez, in third.

With Key Biscayne positioned in fifth , Gladys set the early pace of 1:18.25 for six furlongs and 1:44.79 for the mile in the 1 3/8 mile turf contest. Key Biscayne willingly responded when called upon, bid between rivals at the top of the stretch, and drew clear.

“The plan was to try and stay close,” Centeno said. “She broke really good and she saved a lot of ground. She got a perfect trip. At the half-mile I asked her and I knew I had a lot of horse. I took a look and I did not see anybody coming and that was when I thought we had a pretty good chance. When we turned for home and took the lead, she just opened up.”

Key Biscayne entered the Victory Ride off a 1 1/8-mile allowance optional claiming victory going gate to wire June 12 on Gulfstream Park's all-weather track. She finished Saturday's trip in 2:25.59 over a soft turf course, earning her first graded stakes triumph.

The Florida-bred conditioned by Juan Alvarado, raised her career record to six wins from 23 starts and boosted her lifetime earnings to $435,758. She earned her first black type in the 2021 Monroe Stakes at Gulfstream and earlier this year was third there in the Sunshine Filly & Mare Turf Stakes.

Key Biscayne, who returned $74.20, was bred in Florida. She was produced by the Lemon Drop Kid mare Boa Twelve.

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