Quality Road Firster Runs to the Money in ‘Rising Star’ Fashion

Jace's Road (c, 2, Quality Road–Out Post, by Silver Deputy), a $510,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase, put on a show at Ellis Park Saturday afternoon en route to 'TDN Rising Star' honors.

The bay worked four furlongs in :48 2/5 (2/90) at Brad Cox's Churchill Downs base July 29 and was hammered down to 7-5 favoritism while drawn on the outside in post nine against this deep-looking bunch.

He chased on the outside in third though an opening quarter in :22.47, loomed boldly under confident handling while three-wide on the turn for home and took off impressively down the stretch while under wraps to win going away by 6 1/4 lengths. Second-time starter Retained (Bayern) was second.

This is the 13th 'Rising Star' for Quality Road.

The multiple stakes-placed Out Post, from the same female family as champion Silverbulletday (Silver Deputy) and GISW Forest Secrets (Forest Wildcat), brought $250,000 from breeder Richard Santulli as a KEESEP yearling. After producing a filly by Curlin this year, the winner's dam was bred back to Quality Road.

Jace's Road is bred on a similar cross (Quality Road x Deputy Minister) as champion Abel Tasman and GISW Spring Quality.

Winning co-owner West Point Thoroughbreds was also represented by promising debut winner and $500,000 FTSAUG graduate Battle of Normandy (City of Light) in the opener on Saratoga's Whitney card.

3rd-Ellis, $60,170, Msw, 8-6, 2yo, 6f, 1:09.80, ft, 6 1/4 lengths.
JACE'S ROAD, c, 2, by Quality Road
                1st Dam: Out Post (MSP, $203,690), by Silver Deputy
                2nd Dam: Secret Wildcat, by Forest Wildcat
                3rd Dam: Garden Secrets, by Time for a Change
Sales history: $510,000 Ylg '21 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $36,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or Free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
O-West Point Thoroughbreds & Albaugh Family Stables LLC; B-Colts Neck Stables LLC (KY); T-Brad H. Cox.

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Tobys Heart Favorite In Laguna Distaff Turf As Ellis Park’s Stages Grass Stakes ‘Extravaganza’ Sunday

Ellis Park will stage four $100,000 turf stakes Sunday at the Henderson, Kentucky track: the Twinspires Turf Sprint, Centennial Distaff Turf Mile, Laguna Distaff Turf Sprint, and the Henderson Turf Mile.

Jockey Adam Beschizza is being reunited with Tobys Heart for the first time in 14 races since the now 4-year-old Jack Milton filly won her debut by 6 1/4 lengths. Trained by Brian Lynch, who co-owns the filly with Gary Barber and Terry Hamilton, Tobys Heart is the 2-1 favorite in a field of 10 for the $100,000 Laguna Distaff Turf Sprint at 5 ½ furlongs. She is seeking her fifth stakes, having earlier won the Unbridled Sidney at Churchill Downs May 5 and the Nelson's Green Brier Tennessee Whiskey Music City Stakes last September at Kentucky Downs.

“There's been plenty of water under the bridge since I last sat on her a couple of years ago,” Beschizza said. “She was a real fast, sharp 2-year-old. She had her first win at Churchill and won very impressively. She's continued to do so. She's a very solid, hearty mare. They did experiment with her back and forth with distances. She's bred to go a bit farther. But she's always been a head-strong filly and she just needs races to sort of play into her favor and get her to drop her head and she usually puts her best foot forward. What makes her shine is her toughness and her grit to win. She's 4 now and showing no signs of stopping.

Tobys Heart is 5-1-2 in 14 starts, her $649,995 topping the field. She finished eighth in her last start, the Caress (G3) July 23 at Saratoga, but Lynch is pretty much tossing that non-performance.

Beschizza picked up the mount on Call Me Midnight, a 3-year-old Midnight Lute colt taking on older horses in the $100,000 Twin Spires Turf Sprint, also at 5 ½ furlongs.

Call Me Midnight won the 1 1/16-mile Lecomte (G3), a Kentucky Derby prep in New Orleans, but has been refashioned into a sprinter. Trainer Keith Desormeaux hoped to run him for the first time on the grass in the Dade Park Dash, but the race was taken off the turf. He lost by a head to All in Sync, who also runs back in the Twin Spires Turf Sprint.

“Very narrow defeat here, beaten by one of Mr. (Steve) Asmussen's nice horses,” Beschizza said. “Look, I'm sure in his mind the horse probably thought he won, it was so close. Very privileged and excited to be riding him.”

Beschizza also rides Cupid's Claws, making his first start for trainer Mark Casse in the $100,000 Henderson Turf Mile, with the stakes receiving a name change to honor Ellis Park's host community.

Lynch has a horse entered in all four stakes, including favored Thanks Mr. Eidson in the Twin Spires Turf Sprint, the consistent Take Charge Ro in the Centennial Distaff Turf Mile, and Churchill Downs' Opening Verse winner Gray's Fable in the Henderson Turf Mile.

One thing's for sure: Beschizza and Tobys Heart will have to run down the very fleet Elle Z and jockey Mitchell Murrill to win the Laguna Distaff Turf Sprint.

Murrill has ridden Elle Z in her past 15 races, going 7-4-0. That includes a second behind Yes It's Ginger in the Ellis Park stakes last year.

“She's a straightforward filly. She's very speedy,” Murrill said. “She does everything 110 percent. She never gives up. But when she does get a nice easy fraction for the half-mile, I know that she's got a pretty good shot to win it. And she's been pressed very hard on the front end and still had grit. She's ready to go.”

Soft turf “is not her favorite,” he said. “But she still competes hard, as much as we could ask for.”

Said trainer Chris Hartman: “She's a good hard-trying filly. She puts her race in every time she runs. I think she's ready for her A game: Get the lead and see if we can hold on.”

Hartman also entered Ellis Park's Jeff Hall Memorial winner Necker Island in the Twin Spires Turf Sprint, Sister Annie in the Centennial Distaff Turf Mile, and Tejano Twist in the Henderson Turf Mile.

Trainer Brittany Vanden Berg, who is having a huge meet in her first season at Ellis Park, claimed Bad Beat Brian for $40,000 on behalf of owners Marsico Brothers Racing in the 5-year-old gelding's last start. She was hoping for a horse who could win a nice allowance race at Churchill Downs. Now she's hoping she claimed a stakes winner.

Bad Beat Brian, by Jack Milton, is 10-1 in the odds for the Twin Spires Turf Sprint.

“We kind of needed to replace another 5 1/2-furlong turf horse,” Vanden Berg said. “It just worked out. When I saw him in the paddock, I called my owner and said, 'Hey look, this horse looks gorgeous. He's kind of our type: He's big and chunky. He's got a nice shoulder, a nice hip. He'd suit our program really nice. We better take a shot on him.' They said, 'Go right ahead.'”

The day he was claimed, July 23, Bad Beat Brian uncharacteristically was on the early lead after breaking sharply from post 2. He gave way late to get beaten by three-quarters of a length. Thanks Mr. Eidson, coming in off of a victory in Horseshoe Indianapolis' William Garrett Stakes, is the 7-2 favorite in a wide-open race that includes Totally Boss, winner of this stakes in 2019.

“There are a lot of horses that are from 6-1 to 10-1,” Vanden Berg said. “I feel when you're in a race like that, pace can really make a difference. The way they like a track can really make a difference. He already showed the last race that he does like the racetrack. I've got that going for me. He did press the pace a lot last time, which he usually comes from off the pace, and they set fractions like 21 and 43. We're going to hopefully be able to take him a little bit off of that speedy pace, and hope he comes running like he used to.”

Vanden Berg, who began training in 2019 after riding races for seven years, has won six of 14 starts this meet, with three seconds and thirds apiece. She is seeking her first stakes victory as a trainer, though she has placed in graded stakes.

“Are you kidding? This would be huge,” she said of a potential victory. “That's the goal, to win stakes. If he got that done for us, it would be amazing. I haven't had a lot of time with him yet. Just little things that I tweaked. Maybe they'll help, maybe they won't. But if we did end up winning, it would be really big for our stable.”

Meet-leading trainer John Ortiz is hoping his big Ellis Park meet — through Friday, his eight wins are one more than North America's all-time leader Steve Asmussen — gets bigger by adding on a stakes victory. He's got multiple stakes-winner Mr Dumas, winner of Canterbury Park's Mystic Lake Mile in his last start, in the Henderson Turf Mile.

Reylu Gutierrez has the mount on the 3-1 morning-line favorite.

“He's doing fantastic,” Ortiz said. “He ran a tremendous race at Canterbury. It was my first start there, and it was very successful. I loved it up there. Now we're back home. He's been at The Thoroughbred Center (in Lexington), where he likes it. It's a little quieter for him. He's a horse that likes to train pretty aggressively in the mornings. He's just a horse who likes to run, so we're here to hopefully get the job done here.

“When the horse is right, he looks like a brand-new copper penny. He's beautiful, his coat. He's as healthy as he can be. That's that I like the day of the race, to just know my horse is at his best.”

Undisturbed won't have to deal with her stablemate in Centennial Distaff Turf Mile

Chris Landeros has been a regular rider of the 5-year-old Lea mare Undisturbed, including being aboard for her first two career victories (at Ellis Park) after she came to Kentucky following an 0-for-8 skein in California. But Landeros didn't ride Undisturbed in her most recent start in the Ellis Park Turf July 7. That's because he was busy beating Undisturbed with her Ian Wilkes-trained stablemate, Market Rumor. With Florent Geroux aboard, Undisturbed led most of the way before settling for second by a half-length.

With Market Rumor sitting out the Centennial Distaff Turf Mile, Landeros is back on Undisturbed as he seeks to sweep the track's two middle-distance turf stakes for fillies and mares.

“She's cool. She has a high-cruising speed,” he said. “She's a hard trier, you can never count her out. You can't give her too much room because she will fire at the end. She always tries hard. She likes Ellis; I look for a good run. You can't throw her out, that's for sure.”

Landeros also rides Violenza for Wilkes, his father-in-law, in the Laguna Distaff Turf Sprint.

“That's going to be a tough race,” he said. “We need a little pace set up, because she's going to come from a little bit out of it. But her last race at Colonial Downs was big. She ran second to Michelle Lovell's really good mare (Change of Control) and got beat a length to her. I think she's in good form coming into this race.”

Landeros is reunited with Into the Sunrise in the Twin Spires Turf Sprint for trainer Mark Casse. He has ridden that gelding once before: When he won last year's Dade Park Dash at Ellis Park for trainer Wesley Ward. That was Into the Sunrise's last victory.

“Fast horse,” Landeros said. “Quick horse. Hopefully he can get his form back.”

Demodog, with second start off layoff, “in with good chance.”

Demodog was making her first start in a year and first for trainer Brendan Walsh when she finished third in the Ellis Park Turf. Now she'll try to improve on that in the Centennial Distaff Turf Mile.

The daughter of 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah won her first two starts last year at age 3 for trainer Rodolphe Brisset, then was off the board in Saratoga's Lake George (G3). She was off 51 weeks before the Ellis Park Turf.

“She's a nice filly,” Walsh said. “She obviously was coming off a layoff, so we were very happy with her run. She looks like she needs to improve to have a shot. But just through natural improvement in itself, that should put her in there with a good chance.”

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Aug. 7 Insights: Casse Unveils Pricey Nyquist Filly

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency
5th-SAR, $105K, Msw, 2yo, f, 7f, 3:21 p.m. EDT
D J Stable's RENEGADE REBEL (Nyquist) makes her career bow in this spot for trainer Mark Casse. Privately purchased from Shadwell by Barry Eisaman, the gray summoned $700,000 from OBS April after breezing in :10 flat. Her second dam is MG1SW Sierra Madre (Fr) (Baillamont), who is also responsible for European champion Aljabr (Storm Cat). Wayne Catalano unveils Coffeepot Stables homebred Mirus (Medaglia d'Oro). The dark bay is out of MGSW & GISP Farrell (Malibu Moon), who is a half-sister to Grade I winners Carpe Diem (Giant's Causeway) and J. B.'s Thunder (Thunder Gulch). TJCIS PPs

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Del Mar Summer: Round One, Mandatory Payout Day, Plus One Hot ‘Papa’

Despite having the largest average field size in years and daily cards sprinkled with longshot winners, there has not been a single ticket Pick 6 winner at Del Mar since the seaside track began its summer meet July 22.

The jackpot for the 20-cent bet has grown steadily for the first nine days of the meet and stands at $608,415 going into Saturday's 11-race card. when there will be a mandatory payout for the Pick 6 – the first of three for the summer stand (the others are Pacific Classic Day on Sept. 3 and closing day, Sept. 11. First post Saturday is 2 p.m. PT.

Saturday's Pick 6 sequence begins with the sixth race, which has a scheduled post time of 4:34 p.m. PT/7:34 ET. (those in the Central and Mountain time zones can do your own math). Four of the six races were oversubscribed at entry time and include also eligibles while the smallest field, with seven runners scheduled to compete, comes in the Grade 1 Clement L. Hirsch Stakes, where Shedaresthedevil ships in to defend her title in the Breeders' Cup Win and You're In Challenge Series race for the Distaff division. At 8-5 on the morning line, the Brad Cox-trained mare will be tough to beat as she seeks her 11th win in her 21st career start.

But is Shedaresthedevil worthy of a single on your Pick 6 wager? Not for my money.

There are four other graded stakes winners in the field who deserve a look: Richard Mandella-trained Soothsay; Phil D'Amato-trained Desert Dawn; Bob Baffert-trained Private Mission; and Marcelo Polanco-trained Argentine-bred Blue Stripe. All are capable on their best day.

Desert Dawn, the only 3-year-old filly in the field, is especially intriguing. An Arizona-bred by Cupid (one of 97 Thoroughbred foals born in the Grand Canyon State in 2019), she was a longshot winner of the G2 Santa Anita Oaks in April, then ran a very solid third behind Secret Oath in the G1 Kentucky Oaks.

Last out in the G2 Summertime Oaks at Santa Anita June 12, Desert Dawn stumbled badly coming out of the No. 1 post and, as track announcer Frank Mirachmadi said “was hopelessly last.” It was a miracle jockey Umberto Rispoli stayed aboard as the filly essentially went to her knees when she took her first two strides from the gate. Desert Dawn was never a factor that day as the 7-10 favorite but has impressed clockers with her recent morning activity.

D'Amato, Desert Dawn's trainer, has been red-hot in the early stages of the meet and sits atop the standings with eight wins from 50 starts. His 16 percent winning percentage would be much higher if he didn't have multiple entries in many of the races he's won.

Papaprodromou Notches First Grade 1

Speaking of hot, trainer George Papaprodromou comes into Saturday's program with four winners from his last 13 starters, including an $85.20 shocker in Friday's finale with the first-time starter Spirit of Makena, a Ghostzapper colt owned and bred by Bruce Chandler. This follows a strong Santa Anita meet where Papaprodromou  was seventh in the trainer standings by wins. He's won more races so far in 2022 than in any previous year he's been training and is about to hit the $2 million mark in earnings for the year – a personal best.

“Papa” is second in the Del Mar trainer standings by money won, with over $500,000 earned by his runners. The native of Cypress (the island nation in the Mediterranean, not the Orange County city where Los Alamitos is located) registered a career first last Saturday when the American Pharoah 5-year-old ridgling American Theorem won the Bing Crosby Stakes under “Del Mar Joe” Bravo, giving the trainer his initial career Grade 1 victory.

Daily Racing Form's Jay Privman described this on Twitter as the “Summer of George.”

The Crosby was a “Win and You're In” Challenge Series race for the Sprint division, and Papaprodromou is now setting his sights on the G2 Pat O'Brien Stakes Aug. 27, also a “Win and You're In” but for the Dirt Mile division.

That American Theorem was the horse to give the 46-year-old Papaprodromou his first Grade 1 was especially meaningful.

American Theorem was purchased privately for Rustin Kretz' Kretz Racing by bloodstock agent Gayle Van Leer for $200,000 after he failed to meet his reserve price and bidding stalled at $190,000 at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale. He won his debut in a loaded Del Mar 2-year-old maiden race  in August 2019, then finished second behind Eight Rings in the G1 American Pharoah Stakes next out at Santa Anita.  He raced just once in 2020, finishing unplaced in the G2 Rebel at Oaklawn, then was sidelined with shin problems. After an early-season race in 2021, American Theorem went on the shelf again. When he came back late in the year, Papaprodromou raced him around two turns several times before cutting back to sprint distances, winning the G2 Triple Bend and then taking the Crosby.

On the day of the Triple Bend, Papaprodromou saddled four winners on the nine-race Santa Anita card, another first for the trainer.

“We've loved this horse since day one,” the trainer said. of American Theorem. “We had high hopes for him and then he got hurt. This was my Dad's favorite horse, too. He passed away two years ago.”

His father, Andreas Papaprodromou, was a trainer at the Nicosia Turf Club track in Cypress who came to the U.S. in the late 1990s, initially to look for a stallion to take home, then staying to train a small string of horses in Southern California. George assisted him while also free-lancing as an exercise rider for several years before taking over his father's stable in 2003.

There were some lean years, but things began to improve when Papaprodromou and Kretz teamed up about 10 years ago. Their first winner, Muchos Besos, was a claimer, but they've enjoy graded stakes success with G3 Eddie D. Stakes winner Mr. Roary in 2017 and now with American Theorem.

Kretz, CEO of Scorpion, a Los Angeles-based marketing and advertising technology company, got the racing bug watching Super Saver win the 2010 Kentucky Derby. “I went to that Derby as a fan and fell in love with it,” Kretz said. “I bought my first horse, Westwood Pride, a month later. Kristin Mulhall bought the horse privately and trained her for us and she competed in a Grade 1 but didn't win (2010 Matriarch, finishing fourth).”

Kretz said he now has about 40 horses, including runners at the track and mares, foals, and yearling kept at Mulholland Farm in Kentucky.

“Georgie has such a passion for the game,” Kretz said. “He's excited about the sport and about winning. He's not one of the big-name trainers but he tries his hardest. I like his passion and doing the right thing for his horses.”

Even rival trainers seem to be enjoying Papaprodromou's success, as witnessed by Dan Blacker's Tweet following the Bing Crosby.

Kretz credits Papaprodromou for his patience with American Theorem and for the decision to cut back to sprint distances.

“The first time he ran in 2019, we brought 30 or 40 people out to Del Mar,” he said. “We all went crazy, had a great time. We thought he could keep going and we wanted to run him long because we wanted to win the Kentucky Derby.”

After that ship sailed and American Theorem overcame his shin problems, Papaprodromou proposed a different approach.

“George said the horse does a really good job sprinting, so he cut him back in distance,” Kretz said. “The horse has a ton of heart and obviously Georgie loves him. It's his favorite horse.”

Papaprodromou said American Theorem is at his best “from six furlongs to a mile. Keeping him happy and sound is the most important thing,” he said. “He can go short, long. He can settle, make one big run.”

“If we can win the O'Brien, we've got some options,” said Kretz.

 

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