‘I Know It’s Unconventional’: Rattle N Roll Could Make Quick Turnaround In Indiana Derby

A field of 10 that includes recent American Derby victor Rattle N Roll and Texas Derby winner King Ottoman is set for the $300,000 Indiana Derby (G3) to be run Saturday at Horseshoe Indianapolis.

Several horses come into the Indiana Derby off victories in their most recent starts.

King Ottoman, a son of Curlin, owned by Three Chimneys Farm, has drawn post four and will team up with Horseshoe Indianapolis leading rider Marcelino Pedroza Jr. for the first time. The lightly raced 3-year-old hails from the Steve Asmussen barn, and the Indiana Derby will be his fifth career start at his fifth different racetrack.

Trainer Ken McPeek also has entered Rattle N Roll, who on Saturday (July 2) won the off-the-turf American Derby at Churchill Downs.

“Rattle N Roll might be hard to beat three times in a week,” joked Asmussen in a reference to Rattle N Roll's most recent win in Louisville and also being cross-entered in upcoming Iowa Derby Saturday at Prairie Meadows with the Indiana Derby sandwiched in between.

King Ottoman won the Texas Derby, his first career victory, after breaking from post four, and Asmussen was pleased with drawing post four again for the Indiana Derby.

“Number 4 for King Ottoman; it's his lucky number,” Asmussen said.

Rattle N Roll has drawn post six for the Indiana Derby. The chestnut son of Connect was a $210,000 yearling purchase from the Keeneland September Yearling Sale. Rattle N Roll has three wins, including the 2021 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1), in 10 starts with more than $600,000 in career earnings.

“We didn't work him going into the American Derby,” McPeek said. “We went into it off just gallops. The horse has been doing just fantastic. There are limited opportunities for a horse like him. We looked at the calendar and there isn't another race for him until maybe middle to late August.

“I know it's unconventional. I'm a little nervous about it. But we jogged him up and back Sunday morning after the race. He cleaned up (eating) by 8 o'clock the night after he ran. He cleaned up the next morning. He's never been better. We buy horses to race them. It could be exciting. We're going to look at the PPs. Nothing is set until we ship him up there.”

Brian Hernandez Jr. gets the call aboard Rattle N Roll for McPeek.

One horse returning to the track after a big campaign on the Kentucky Derby (G1) trail earlier this year is Un Ojo, who has moved to the Robertino Diodoro Stable. The one-eyed son of Laoban was a winner this spring in the Rebel Stakes (G2) at Oaklawn Park before incurring a foot bruise that took him out of this year's Kentucky Derby. He makes his return from post 9 with David Cohen aboard. Un Ojo is the richest entrant in this year's Indiana Derby with over $782,000 in career earnings. He has a win and a second in three starts for 2022

The field for the Indiana Derby, in post position order with jockey, includes Trademark (Rafael Bejarano); First Glimpse (Orlando Mojica); Mowins (Jon Court); King Ottoman (Marcelino Pedroza Jr.); New Year's Fever (Rodney Prescott); Rattle N Roll (Brian Hernandez Jr.); Best Actor (Florent Geroux); Actuator (James Graham); Un Ojo (David Cohen); and Fowler Blue (Sonny Leon).

Prior to the Indiana Derby, the 27th running of the $200,000 Indiana Oaks (G3) will lead into the Derby.

Eight fillies have been entered for the Oaks, slated as Race 11, including Black-Eyed Susan winner Interstatedaydream from the Brad Cox barn. The Classic Empire filly, owned by Flurry Racing Stable, has not raced since Preakness Day in mid-May, but comes into the event with two wins and a second in three starts for 2022. Interstatedaydream has drawn post five with Florent Geroux aboard.

A total of eight stakes are included on the Indiana Derby Day racing program.

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Sterling Silver Seeks Graded Stakes Breakthrough In Victory Ride At Belmont

Mark T. Anderson's New York-bred Sterling Silver will look to make the grade in Saturday's Grade 3, $150,000 Victory Ride for sophomore fillies sprinting 6 1/2-furlongs over the main track at Belmont Park.

Trained by Tom Albertrani, Sterling Silver enters from a professional 4 1/4-length victory in the restricted Bouwerie on May 30 over Big Sandy with returning rider Trevor McCarthy in the irons. The daughter of Cupid tracked in fourth behind pacesetter November Rein before going three-to-four wide in the turn and coming away with a 2 1/2-length lead. She continued to find more down the lane and completed the seven furlongs in 1:24.41.

The win came on the heels of two off-the-board efforts against open company, finishing fifth in both the Busher Invitational in March at Aqueduct and the Grade 1 Ashland going around two turns on April 8 at Keeneland.

“She's coming off a good win in her last start, so hopefully we can see another good performance this weekend,” said Albertrani. “We tried to stretch her out two turns and maybe it wasn't the right distance for her. So, putting her back in with her with New York-breds and cutting back in distance was probably the main thing.”

Sterling Silver won her sophomore debut in January going the Victory Ride distance in the Franklin Square against fellow state-breds at the Big A.

Albertrani said turning back a half-furlong from her last outing should be no problem for her.

McCarthy has the mount from the outermost post 7.

Trainer Rudy Rodriguez hopes that stakes-winning Hot Peppers can use the Victory Ride as a springboard to the seven-furlong Grade 1 Longines Test on August 6 at Saratoga Race Course for owners Michael Dubb and Michael Caruso.

A Florida-bred daughter of Khozan, Hot Peppers won three of her first five starts for trainer Ronald Spatz in Florida, including a trio of sprint victories at Gulfstream Park in January and February. After finishing a distant ninth in the seven-furlong Sophomore Fillies in March at Tampa Bay Downs for her stakes debut, Hot Peppers was privately purchased by her current connections and sent to Rodriguez in New York.

Hot Peppers proved to be an astute buy making easy work of the six-furlong Jersey Girl on June 12 in her first outing for Rodriguez. Luis Saez sent the bay filly to the lead and never looked back as she widened margins throughout to cross the wire 6 3/4-lengths the best.

“With the way she was training in the morning, I thought she would run big,” said Rodriguez. “But the way she did it was extra impressive for sure.”

Rodriguez said Hot Peppers has continued to train forwardly since her dominating Jersey Girl performance.

“She's been doing good. I kind of babied her because the race came up a little quick, but she seems good,” said Rodriguez. “In a perfect world, we'd like to wait until the Test, but it's way too long for that. If she performs the way we expect, the Test is the goal.”

Hot Peppers will be trying the 6 1/2-furlong distance for the first time. Her lone start beyond six furlongs was her off-the-board run in the Sophomore Fillies.

Saez gets the call again from post 6.

Brad King, Stan Kirby and Suzanne Kirby's Texas-shipper Smash Ticket will make her second outing in graded company after she dazzled in a second-level allowance on May 30 at Lone Star Park for trainer Todd Fincher. The dark bay Midnight Lute filly easily took down the 5 1/2-furlong sprint by 11 lengths to earn a field-best 92 Beyer Speed Figure under Richard Eramia.

The win came one start after she earned a graded placing in the Grade 2 Sorrento in August at Del Mar with Umberto Rispoli in the irons, finishing a closing third behind the victorious Elm Drive and Grade 1-winner Eda. She finished second on debut last June to Wicked Halo, who went on to win the Grade 2 Adirondack that summer at Saratoga and the Tepin on Saturday at Churchill Downs.

Hall of Famer Mike Smith has the call from post 2.

Marylou Whitney Stables' homebred Pretty Birdie has finished a good second in her last two outings, defeated less than three lengths in both the Grade 2 Eight Belles on May 6 at Churchill Downs behind subsequent Grade 1 Acorn winner Matareya, and the Leslie's Lady behind next-out stakes winner Wicked Halo.

The Norm Casse trainee won the Grade 3 Schuylerville at Saratoga last year before finishing last-of-9 in the Grade 1 Spinaway in September to finish off her juvenile season. She returned in February with a fifth in the six-furlong Dixie Belle at Oaklawn Park before taking the Purple Martin over the same surface and distance in March.

Joel Rosario will ride the daughter of Bird Song for the first time from post 5.

The undefeated Half Is Enough will attempt to keep her perfect record intact in her stakes debut for trainer Michael Trombetta. Owned by Ironhorse Racing Stable, the Frosted bay has won her three starts by more than a combined 14 lengths, including a 7 1/4-length romp on debut in September at Monmouth Park.

She followed with a gritty neck score after a slow start in a first-level allowance over muddy and sealed going in May at Laurel Park before her latest allowance victory by 6 3/4-lengths on June 4 at Delaware Park.

Half Is Enough, who will be racing beyond six furlongs for the first time, will be piloted by Irad Ortiz, Jr. from post 3.

Completing the field are Cash is King and LC Racing's Stand Up Comic [post 1, Frankie Pennington] for trainer Butch Reid, Jr and Gayla Rankin's Grade 3-placed Happy Soul [post 4, John Velazquez] for trainer Wesley Ward.

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Brown Triple-Handed Against European Contingent Seeking Belmont Oaks Victory

A competitive field featuring three contenders from the barn of Chad Brown and five invaders from Europe lead a 10-horse field assembled for Saturday's Grade 1, $700,000 Belmont Oaks Invitational for 3-year-old fillies going 10 furlongs over the inner turf at Belmont Park.

The Belmont Oaks, the first leg of the filly division of the Caesars Turf Triple series, will be followed by the Grade 3, $700,000 Saratoga Oaks Invitational at 1 3/16-miles on August 7 and the Grade 3 Jockey Club Oaks Invitational at 11 furlongs during the Belmont fall meet.

Brown, a four-time Eclipse Award-winner, will saddle Consumer Spending and McKulick for Klaravich Stables as well as Haughty for Bradley Thoroughbreds, Bel Mar Racing and Breeding, Cambron Equine and Team Hanley.

Consumer Spending, a More Than Ready filly, has won both of her starts this year at stakes level. After defeating Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf winner Pizza Bianca in the Memories of Silver in April at Aqueduct, Consumer Spending won the Grade 2 Wonder Again on June 9 at Belmont Park.

A maiden winner at second asking over a yielding inner turf in September at Saratoga, Consumer Spending captured the Selima one month later at Laurel Park before finishing a close sixth beaten 1 3/4 lengths in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf.

“She's been a pleasant surprise,” Brown said. “We put her on course, hoping that she develops. They don't always do that. I was on the fence about her if she was going to be a horse that was precocious and a good 2-year-old. She's really matured physically and mentally; she's gotten stronger in her races and in her works. She stretched out going further than I thought she would. All things positive for her and she continues to advance in her career.”

Manny Franco, who piloted Consumer Spending to both of her victories this year, will return from post 5.

McKulick boasts three graded stakes placings in four lifetime starts. After a triumphant career debut last August at Saratoga, the daughter of Frankel was third next out as the beaten favorite in the Grade 2 Miss Grillo in October at Belmont Park. Upon returning to action seven months later, McKulick was a late-closing second in the Grade 2 Edgewood on Churchill Downs' Kentucky Oaks undercard. She arrives at the Belmont Oaks off a second in the Grade 3 Regret on June 4 at Churchill.

“They were paceless races and she's looking for a mile and a quarter,” Brown said of her two starts this year. “She'll improve as she runs longer.”

McKulick will break from post 1 under Irad Ortiz Jr.

Haughty brings a consistent 4-2-0-2 record to the Belmont Oaks, exiting her first stakes victory in the Penn Oaks on June 4 at Penn National. The Empire Maker bay was a 4 3/4-length winner of her 3-year-old debut, which came seven months after a late-closing third in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf, finishing three-quarters of a length to Pizza Bianca.

Haughty will leave from post 3 under Flavien Prat.

Five fillies by way of Europe have crossed the Atlantic Ocean in search of Belmont Oaks accolades representing three countries, including Ireland's dual group stakes winner Agartha for trainer Joseph O'Brien. Owned by Heider Family Stables, Agartha has yet to go past one mile in 11 lifetime starts, exiting a fifth-place finish in the Group 1 Irish 1000 Guineas on May 15 at The Curragh.

Agartha, a daughter of second crop sire Caravaggio, garnered prominent victories last year when taking the Group 3 Silver Flash at Leopardstown last July at 16-1 odds before capturing the Group 2 Debutante at The Curragh the following month as the lukewarm favorite. She closed out her 2-year-old campaign with a pair of Group 1 efforts, the best taking place in the Moyglare Stud in September at The Curragh, where she finished a close second.

Scott Heider of Heider Family Stables noted the filly's stamina-rich pedigree. Her dam, Arya Tara was a stakes winner in Ireland going 1 3/4 miles and comes from the same family as Group 1-winning stayers Azamour, Ansar, and Astarabad.

“She had a pretty incredible 2-year-old season,” said Heider. “She's a filly that's interesting. She's by Caravaggio. In Europe they remember him being an incredibly fast son of Scat Daddy. [Breeder] Anne Marie [O'Brien], as she often does, crossed speed with stamina. The dam was also trained by Joseph, and she was Group 3-placed, but she did a lot of her running going a mile and a quarter to a mile and a half, so she was a true stayer. The female family is just full of high-class Group 1 and Group 2 winners. The vast majority all were stayers.”

John Velazquez has the call from post 9.

Internationally acclaimed trainer Aidan O'Brien, the father of Joseph, will seek his third Belmont Oaks victory when sending out Group 1-placed Concert Hall.

Owned by Coolmore partners Derrick Smith, Michael Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier and Westerberg, Concert Hall finished a distant third in the Group 1 Irish 1000 Guineas on May 22 going one mile at The Curragh three starts back, which came on the heels of a triumphant 3-year-old debut in the ten-furlong Salsabil at Navan.

A bay daughter of Dubawi, Concert Hall enters off two fourth-place finishes at Group 1 level in the Oaks on June 3 at Epsom and most recently the Pretty Polly at The Curragh. As a 2-year-old, she won The Curragh's Group 3 Weld Park going seven furlongs.

Concert Hall is out of the Group 1-winning Galileo mare Was, who captured the 2012 Epsom Oaks, and comes from the same family as dual Group 1-winner New Approach.

O'Brien, who trained Belmont Oaks winners Athena [2018] and Santa Barbara [2021], has tasked Ryan Moore with piloting Concert Hall from post 10.

Shipping to the states by way of the Moulton Paddocks at Newmarket, England is Godolphin's With The Moonlight for trainer Charlie Appleby.

The bay daughter of Frankel, and full-sister to Group 1-winner Dream Castle, finished last-of-11 in the Oaks, where she secured prominent outside position early on but flattened out in the stretch run. The effort came just one month after winning her 2022 debut, which came stakes level going the Belmont Oaks distance at Newmarket.

Appleby also sends out Nations Pride for the Belmont Derby, and said With The Moonlight has some things in common with her stablemate.

“She's pretty similar to Nations Pride,” Appleby said. “She got beat as a juvenile on the back end over soft ground in a listed race and then came out and won the Pretty Polly decisively on quick ground. In the Oaks, she similarly didn't stay on that [softer] ground. Back to a mile and a quarter and back on a sound surface should suit. They have very similar profiles and if they both turn up fit and well, they'll be very competitive.”

Appleby will looking to build on his recent success in shipping horses to high caliber wins in North America. Last year, he earned eight Grade 1 victories in North America, including the Just a Game and Diana on the NYRA circuit with Althiqa.

World-renowned jockey Frankie Dettori will hope to perform his signature flying dismount in the Belmont winner's circle after he pilots With The Moonlight from post 4.

Representing France in the Belmont Oaks are Francis-Henri Graffard-trained Know Thyself and Hot Queen from the yard of Pia Brandt.

Know Thyself, owned by Craig Bernick, enters off a third-place finish on May 15 going 11 furlongs at Longchamp. The Galileo chestnut filly earned black type in her previous start when second in the Group 3 Prix Vanteaux on April 10 over the same oval.

Graffard, who trained Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies turf runner-up Malavath, will send out his first Belmont Oaks contender in Know Thyself, who will be ridden by Julien Leparoux from post 8.

Finn Blichfeldt's Hot Queen exits a sixth-place finish in the Group 2 Prix de Sandringham on June 5 at Chantilly. The daughter of Recorder won her 3-year-old debut in the Listed Prix la Camargo in March at Saint-Cloud ahead of a third in the Prix Vanteaux, when finishing behind Know Thyself.

French jockey Stephane Pasquier, who guided Karakontie to a 2014 Breeders' Cup Mile score, will pilot Hot Queen from post 7.

Trainer Brendan Walsh sends up Marc Detampel's New Year's Eve, who has won 3-of-4 career starts. The Kitten's Joy filly was an upset 14-1 winner of the Grade 2 Edgewood on May 6 at Churchill Downs last out, where she sported blinkers for the first time.

Luis Saez, a nine-time stakes-winner this meet, has the return call from post Completing the field is David Bernsen and Schroeder Farms' California chipper Cairo Memories for trainer Bob Hess, Jr., who arrives at the Belmont Oaks off two Grade 3 triumphs over the Santa Anita turf in the April 9 Providencia and the May 29 Honeymoon. Both wins were at nine furlongs under Hall of Famer Mike Smith, who will ride from post 2.

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The Week in Review: While Racing Sleeps Late, MLB Opts for Morning Betting

Since the advent of the simulcasting era 30 years ago, I've never understood why some enterprising track somewhere hasn't seized a late-morning first-post slot and carved out its own niche at a time of day when no other pari-mutuel competition on the continent is running.

Be it midweek in the winter, when most of the fair-to-middling Eastern time zone tracks do little to distinguish their products, or as a Saturday special during the summer when some C-level track could have an uncontested advantage for several hours as a lead-in to the attention-grabbing cards at Saratoga, the 10 a.m. to noon Eastern stretch remains an uncharted chasm.

Four years ago this month, shortly after the legalization of sports betting in the United States, I wrote a morning racing-related column for TDN that stated, “The time slot is there for the taking. In real estate, the money-making mantra is 'location, location, location.' The equivalent in simulcasting–if you're not a top track on the totem pole–is 'timing, timing, timing.'”

The revisit of this topic will tack on a slight correction to that 2018 story: The late-morning time slot is no longer completely wide open in terms of the overall wagering landscape. Major League Baseball (MLB) now sees Sunday morning starts at 11:30 a.m. Eastern as a lucrative opportunity.

Although the Sunday morning baseball games debuted with a soft-ish launch, MLB has inked a multi-year deal to lay claim to that time slot (some of the games later in the season will begin at noon, which is still at least an hour earlier than most traditional afternoon starts).

The streamed-only games can only be viewed by online subscribers who pay a monthly fee to watch them. And while MLB revenue executives are championing the early starts as a way to reach new fans outside of cable TV as viewing habits change, the unspoken but obvious message is that pro sports are staking out new territory, time-wise, to maximize revenue from gambling partnerships.

The National Football League figured this out with Monday Night Football broadcasts back in 1970. Although critics were initially skeptical that viewers would tune in to watch (and although it was illegal at the time, bet on) whatever two teams happened to be matched just because it was the only action on the tube, Monday Night Football eventually morphed into an eyeball-capturing juggernaut that spawned only-game-in-town football broadcast strategies on Thursday and Sunday evenings.

A heat wave across the Midwest at the end of June caused both and Churchill Downs (10:30 a.m.) Belterra Park (11:35 a.m.) to experiment with morning racing as a means to keep horses from competing at the hottest point of the afternoon. The one-off post time switches weren't pre-arranged with much notice or fanfare, hence a handle comparison wouldn't be of much value in these instances.

And since Churchill is an A-list track that has the benefit of lights to add flexibility to its scheduling of post times, regular morning racing there wouldn't make much sense.

But you could make a cogent case for Belterra taking a flyer on morning racing.

The Ohio track's current Tuesday-through-Friday schedule with 12:35 p.m. posts causes it to get lost in the shuffle against Saratoga, Monmouth, Gulfstream and Colonial Downs during the month of July. It would even benefit from standing out from the likes of Finger Lakes, Thistledown and Horseshoe Indianapolis, all of which overlap to some degree depending on the day of the week.

Beyer Blitz

Three Grade II stakes winners earned triple-digit Beyer Speed Figures last Saturday. Which was most impressive?

From a raw talent perspective, Life Is Good (Into Mischief)'s 112 wiring of the John Nerud S. over seven furlongs at Belmont Park was outright scary. Now 7-for-9 lifetime and having put together a string of seven consecutive triple-digit Beyers, this 'TDN Rising Star' scored by five after chewing up no-slouch rival Speaker's Corner (Street Sense). But beyond those two, the four-horse field was scant on competition, which allowed Life Is Good to motor home without any sort of a stretch tussle.

Fellow 'Rising Star' Charge It (Tapit) posted a gaudy 23-length victory in the one-turn-mile Dwyer S. at Belmont. His heaviest lifting involved bumping aside a pesky rival five-eighths out so he could maneuver off the fence and reel in the pacemaker, thus becoming the fourth also-ran out of the GI Kentucky Derby to win a next-out start. He earned a 111 Beyer, but only one of his five rivals had ever won a stakes (which was for Delaware-bred 2-year-olds last year), so the quality of competition angle applies here too.

It's difficult to believe that a horse can win five straight races with triple-digit Beyers yet still be considered a bit under the radar, but that's been the case with Olympiad (Speightstown), who is bound to get a lot more attention and respect after his no-nonsense cuffing of a decent field in Saturday's Stephen Foster S. over nine furlongs at Churchill.

Olympiad emerged from a five-horse, first-turn speed scrimmage to be a stalking second through robust splits. He then blasted off at the quarter pole and dug in furiously to repel a wall of contenders off the turn. His presence near the head of affairs early in the race combined with an ability to withstand significant pressure late to score by 2 1/4 lengths lends a nice glow of legitimacy to his 111 Beyer.

(Not yet) the end of an era

It might be a stretch to say Dr. Blarney (Dublin) is the “Last of the Mohicans.” But the 9-year-old sure looks like he'll wind up his career as the most impactful of the dwindling number of remaining Massachusetts-breds.

On July 4 at Finger Lakes, the good doctor won his 26th lifetime race, storming from off the pace to win a three-way photo by a neck for owner/breeder Joe DiRico and trainer Karl Grusmark.

The victory was even sweeter because Dr. Blarney was reunited with Tammi Piermarini, his horsebacking partner for most of his 37-race career.

Piermarini, 55, is the continent's third-winningest female jockey. She hurt her knee in a starting gate accident last November, and the ride on Dr. Blarney Monday was her first race back since that accident.

Fittingly, like her multiple stakes-winning mount, Piermarini was also born in Massachusetts, having started her career back in 1985 at Boston's Suffolk Downs.

Suffolk Downs is now three years defunct and the Massachusetts-bred program began to erode about a decade before the track closed for good in 2019.

Dr. Blarney won Massachusetts-bred stakes at least once a year between ages two and seven (to spend its remaining purse funds that were earmarked for stakes, the Massachusetts breeders' association ran those races at Fort Erie in 2020). Six of his lifetime victories have been by margins between 10 and 20 lengths.

Although many of those romps came at the mercy of overmatched restricted-stakes competition, he's also won a black-type stakes at Delaware Park and has bested open-company allowance horses at Finger Lakes.

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