Derby Upsetter Rich Strike Will ‘Try To Do The Impossible Again’ In Travers

Trainer Eric Reed will be starting his first runner in the Grade 1, $1.25 million Runhappy Travers on Saturday at Saratoga Race Course, sending out RED TR-Racing's Rich Strike for his run at another top level victory after shocking the world with his 80-1 rail-skimming victory in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby this May.

“Who would have ever thought I'd be in the Travers? Not me,” Reed said, with a laugh. “I'm glad to be here and I hope 'Richie' runs his normal race, because win, lose or draw, everybody will respect him.”

Rich Strike made his final preparations on Friday morning over Saratoga's main track.

“He's doing really good,” Reed said. “Today was his last day on the track and he was real happy, bucking and playing on the way back. We just galloped him a mile and a quarter, and for him, that's a real light day. He's ready. He just has to keep his composure tomorrow and he'll try to do the impossible again.”

Normally, the winner of the “Run for the Roses” would be at the forefront of the conversation in any race, but Rich Strike faces the unusual scenario of flying somewhat under the radar in a loaded Runhappy Travers field that includes formidable Kentucky Derby runner-up Epicenter and Grade 1 Haskell Invitational winner Cyberknife.

The betting public has turned their attention elsewhere after Rich Strike, 10-1 on the morning line for the Runhappy Travers, ran a disappointing sixth-of-8 in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets in June. There, he stayed to the outside of rivals instead of an inside trip like the Kentucky Derby and never threatened, fighting with jockey Sonny Leon for much of the 1 1/2 miles and wanting to maneuver towards the rail.

Although he enters from a distant effort in the Belmont, Rich Strike displayed his talent and heart in the Kentucky Derby when he broke from the outermost post 20 and made his way to inside position under expert handling from Leon. He eventually worked his way through traffic down the stretch and was forced to quickly angle to the outside of a tiring Messier before coming away with the three-quarter-length victory over Travers favorites Epicenter, Zandon and a well-beaten Cyberknife.

Reed said he hopes that the Travers will change peoples' minds about Rich Strike and that he won't be seen as a one-time wonder going forward.

“It just bothers me because everybody said that the Belmont isn't for horses like him and doesn't play good for horses like him, and then he runs like they said and they say, 'see, he's no good,'” Reed explained. “He's got to have everything go right, but he can do it – he's already done it and did it easily. He had trouble in the stretch of the Derby and had to wait quite a while in the turn. [But] I know Epicenter is on his game and [trainer] Steve [Asmussen] wants it bad.”

Reed, a longtime horseman with nearly 1,500 wins on his resume, said winning the Travers isn't about him, but about the charismatic son of Keen Ice who has taken him to the heights that all trainers dream of.

“I want it for him. Just to solidify his place, and if he won, I'm sure it would give him a shot at the 3-year-old title,” said Reed. “I want everything the horse can have. For me, it would be fun and great, but it's always been about 'Richie' for me. It sets a place in history. He's already got that, but maybe he'll finally get some respect from people. If he comes running down the stretch like he has done in every other race this year other than the Belmont, that's all I ask of him.”

Rich Strike will emerge from post 2 with Leon in the irons again.

The post Derby Upsetter Rich Strike Will ‘Try To Do The Impossible Again’ In Travers appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

How Pat Day Struck ‘Gold’ Against One Of Best Travers Fields In History

On Saturday, August 22, 1987, the Travers Stakes celebrated its 118th running. While not a milestone number, that year's edition was special for two reasons as it marked the first year the race boasted a $1 million purse, becoming Saratoga Race Course's first seven-figure race; and the Travers field saw not only one of its best ever lineups, but also one of the most talented group of horses ever to compete against each other at the historic track.

The field for the 1987 Travers comprised a cumulative 19 Grade 1 victories, including winners of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes [Alysheba]; Arlington-Washington Futurity, Laurel Futurity, Belmont Stakes and Haskell Invitational [Bet Twice]; Champagne and Cowdin [Polish Navy]; Florida Derby [Cryptoclearance]; Hollywood Futurity, Swaps, and Santa Anita Derby [Temperate Sil]; American Derby [Fortunate Moment]; Futurity, Hopeful, Wood Memorial and Met Mile [Gulch]; and the Remsen and Whitney Handicap [Java Gold] all lined up in pursuit of superiority amongst the sophomore division.

The day would end up belonging to Paul Mellon's Java Gold, who bested elders in the Grade 1 Whitney one start prior to the Travers. This feat was also accomplished by his sire, Mellon's Key To The Mint, in 1972.

A Virginia homebred trained by Hall of Fame horseman MacKenzie “Mack” Miller, Java Gold bested Met Mile winner Gulch and four-time Grade 1-winner Broad Brush by three-quarters of a length in the Whitney. Java Gold was piloted by Hall of Famer Pat Day, who was in the irons for three of his previous eight victories, including a 2 3/4-length conquest of the prior year's Grade 1 Remsen at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Day rode Java Gold for the first time in the 1986 Grade 1 Champagne at Belmont Park, where he finished fourth behind future Travers contestants in Ogden Phipps' Polish Navy and Bet Twice. He would go on to pilot the bay colt in his 3-year-old debut – a 5 1/2-length allowance victory over a sloppy and sealed main track at Aqueduct – two weeks before Randy Romero guided him to victory in the Big A's Best Turn. A two-month layoff due to a respiratory virus prevented any Triple Crown aspirations, but Java Gold was reunited with Day for his next three starts, where he was second beaten a nose in a Belmont allowance race before winning for the same condition over Big Sandy, en route to the Whitney.

“When I rode him in the Champagne, he was very immature and didn't do a lot of things right. And then he matured significantly,” Day said. “At the time, with his running style, he was a little bit anxious early and was slow on his lead changes. In the race at Aqueduct, he broke, went to the lead and that day, he changed leads on cue coming into the stretch and won pretty handily, but he was still kind of anxious early. He had that same temperament early on in his 3-year-old season. Between the last race at Belmont and the Whitney, he really changed his running style from breaking and wanting to be in contention early. He was dropping back, relaxing and finishing strong, which is what he did in the Whitney.”

In that year's Whitney, run just two weeks before the Travers, Java Gold faced Broad Brush, who carried 127 pounds after his Grade 1 Suburban Handicap victory five weeks earlier at Belmont. The field was strung out around the first turn as Java Gold raced in tandem with Gulch down the backstretch tracking a moderate pace up front led by the filly Seldom Seen Sue and Gorky, an entry-mate rabbit for Gulch.

As the field approached the far turn, the frontrunners gave way and Java Gold inched his way up to a close and ground-saving fifth, advancing into fourth in upper stretch. Gulch was several lengths clear but Java Gold was advancing in position down at the rail. Inside the final furlong, Java Gold moved a path to the outside of Gulch and got up in the final strides to the wire.

“Java Gold had changed his running style on his own and possibly the way Mr. Miller was training him,” Day said. “In the Whitney, he was content to drop back, split horses off the turn and finished up running. The Travers was very much the same way.”

The following afternoon, Day piloted familiar foe Polish Navy, a dual Grade 1-winner at 2, to victory in the Grade 2 Jim Dandy for Hall of Famer Shug McGaughey. But Day would ultimately remain on Java Gold for the Travers, where he would be up against the ultimate test to show where he truly belonged amongst a division of heavy hitters.

Headlining the loaded Travers field was Grade 1 Kentucky Derby and Grade 1 Preakness winner Alysheba for Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg, who arrived with vengeance after two straight losses in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes and Grade 1 Haskell to returning rival Bet Twice. Strong opposition was provided by Polish Navy, Grade 1 Florida Derby winner Cryptoclearance, and four-time Grade 1-winner Gulch, who captured the Met Mile at Belmont Park in between starts in the Preakness [fourth] and Belmont Stakes [third].

“Certainly, there was chitter chatter about who all was in the race and how tough the field was. It was an incredibly deep field,” Day said. “When you have a field of that many quality horses, it's going to generate some buzz and some excitement. But the Travers is the Travers, it's going to generate some buzz period. It's just a great race and it's one that everyone is looking at. Leading up to it was an exciting time.”

Day had boasted previous experience aboard multiple of Java Gold's opponents. In addition to Polish Navy, he had ridden Gulch to victory in the Met Mile, as well as five wins aboard Grade 1 American Derby winner Fortunate Moment, an Illinois-bred trained by Harvey Vanier. He also piloted Alysheba in four of his previous starts, including runner-up finishes in the Grade 1 Hollywood Futurity at Hollywood Park and Grade 1 San Felipe Handicap at Santa Anita.

“I had ridden a number of horses in that race, and I was tremendously blessed to have those opportunities,” Day recalled. “I rode Alysheba early on in his career, I rode Gulch in the Met Mile and I secured the mount because he got in there light and he was up against older horses. I was able to make the weight and he finished up strong that day. He was a nice colt. Polish Navy was a pleasure to ride for Shug. At that time, I was already committed to Java Gold for the Travers.”

A crowd of 45,055 gathered at the Spa for the Travers, which at the time was the fourth largest crowd in the track's history, and a two-hour downpour of rain that morning led to sloppy track conditions. The rain held off in the afternoon, but resumed with just six minutes to post. Although Bet Twice had entered off two sharp wins over Alysheba, the betting public made the latter the favorite, and Java Gold the second choice.

Gorky assumed his usual pacesetting tactics just to the outside of three-time Grade 1 winner Temperate Sil. Although the field was compact heading into the first turn, the two frontrunners opened up nearly 10 lengths on the field. Meanwhile, Day was patient as usual aboard Java Gold, who had only one horse beaten, and that was Cryptoclearance under Hall of Famer Angel Cordero, Jr.

“He dropped back, saved ground around the first turn into the backstretch and was able to work his way to the outside and make a big run off the turn,” Day said. “I don't recall any specific instructions prior to the race, I think we both had confidence in the horse and in his ability to get the distance and to handle the opposition. I rode him with confidence.”

The two pacesetters retreated around the far turn as Bet Twice moved in tandem with Polish Navy, and the two established command in upper stretch. Cryptoclearance, swung out by Cordero, Jr., had dead aim on both runners and gained a 1 1/2-length advantage past the eighth pole. But Day's patience paid off once more, despite being last to make his move, and spurted past Cryptoclearance. Java Gold finished two lengths clear of Cryptoclearance in a final time of 2:02 over the sloppy track. Polish Navy was another 6 3/4 lengths back in third.

“Coming off the turn, I got him out in the clear and he came home like gangbusters,” Day said. “He was well back, far back early. Cryptoclearance and myself were back there trailing the field. Angel made a move into and around the far turn and then I pulled out later in the turn, got to the outside and when I called upon him, he was full of run and obviously finished very well.”

Day said the sloppy conditions were no issue for Java Gold, who had previously won on an off track.

“It certainly didn't bother him,” Day said. “It might have had a negative effect on some of the other horses in the race that day, but he was the kind of horse that didn't seem to have to take his track with him. He'd run over anything.”

Following the race, the late Miller was full of praise for the Hall of Fame ride given to his now three-time Grade 1-winner, who made a solid case for divisional supremacy with both his Whitney and Travers victories.

“He has the patience, and never gets unnerved,” Miller said at the time. “He had him outside where he was supposed to be and when this horse changes leads, he kicks in and it works. The ride was the big thing. I just love Pat Day.”

Day said Miller was very easy to ride for.

“He would tell me peculiarities or particulars of certain horses. We might discuss how a race might unfold,” Day recalled. “He showed a tremendous amount of confidence in me, which allowed me to ride the race the way it came up and the way I felt it needed to be ridden in order to get the job done. I don't recall him ever giving me any hard and fast instructions. I was the pilot and I needed to be making those moves on the track.”

Java Gold went on to race two more times following his memorable Travers coup, earning another Grade 1 victory in the Marlboro Cup at Belmont Park the following month, defeating the Grade 1-winning Shug McGaughey entry of Nostalgia's Star and Polish Navy. He made his final start in the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup when second as the 3-5 favorite beaten 4 3/4 lengths by 1985 Belmont Stakes winner Crème Fraiche.

Despite bragging high caliber wins against elders, Eclipse Award honors for Champion 3-Year-Old went to Alysheba, who captured the Grade 1 Super Derby at Louisiana Downs en route to a narrow defeat to fellow Kentucky Derby champion Ferdinand in that year's Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic at Hollywood Park.

The loaded Travers field backed up their heavy form following the race with three horses in the field going on to win multiple Grade 1 races.

Cryptoclearance would go on to have a prosperous career, adding three more Grade 1 wins to his ledger over as many surfaces [the Pegasus Handicap at Meadowlands, the Donn Handicap at Gulfstream Park and the Widener at Hialeah Park]. Gulch went on to become 1988 Champion Sprinter with victories in the following year's Carter Handicap at Aqueduct, a repeat victory in the Met Mile and a successful swan song in the Breeders' Cup Sprint.

But Alysheba covered the most ground, notching seven more Grade 1 victories following the Travers. His 4-year-old season was capped by the Charles H. Strub and Santa Anita Handicap on the West Coast, as well as a string of four straight Grade 1 victories – the Phillip H. Iselin at Monmouth, the Woodward Handicap at Belmont, the Meadowlands Cup Handicap and the Breeders' Cup Classic at Churchill Downs. His season earned him Champion Older Horse and Horse of the Year honors in 1988, as well as Hall of Fame induction in 1993.

Java Gold initially stood at Lanes' End Farm in Midway, Kentucky from 1988-95, and was met with a successful stud career, producing 2000 Champion Sprinter Kona Gold and multiple stakes-winning Texas-bred Mocha Express. He moved to Gestut Ammerland in Germany, where he lived out the rest of his life and produced Czech champion Access To Java.

Still, Day can't help but wonder what type of impact Java Gold would have had as an older horse.

“I can only imagine, based off of what he was doing as a 3-year-old, what he could've done as a 4-year-old,” Day said. “He could've had a say in some of the outcomes of those races that year for sure.”

The post How Pat Day Struck ‘Gold’ Against One Of Best Travers Fields In History appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

This Side Up: Will Travers Stars Stick to Script?

Our sport thrives on anticipation; our business, on outcomes. But actually it can take a while to unpick one from the other–especially when even a race as storied as the GI Runhappy Travers S. is not just an end in itself, but also a potential means to viability for the whole program of whoever is lucky enough to own the winner.

In principle, the bare couple of minutes dividing anticipation from outcome at Saratoga on Saturday will be history tangibly in the making. From the flux of hopes and interests vested in the maturing Thoroughbreds that enter the gate, a single name will suddenly be petrified into the pantheon.

In reality, however, it's very seldom that we can know quite what it is we might be looking at. In terms of volunteering a stallion of due stature, for instance, it has to be acknowledged that the Travers overall shares a rather patchy profile with the GI Kentucky Derby either side of the last horse to win both, Street Sense in 2007. Take out Bernardini, who won the Travers the year before, and it's only recently that a couple of young stallions have begun to shore things up again for either race.

Poignantly, it does appear as though the spectacular flowering of Arrogate in 2016 was a legitimate signpost–only for the road to plunge clean off a cliff. Those bidding for his final crop of yearlings at Keeneland in a few days' time will be contesting a legacy that has very quickly evolved, from an unsurprisingly slow start, via the charismatic endeavors of Secret Oath and now Artorius.

(Listen to this column as a podcast.)

 

 

For the time being, at any rate, Artorius does feel like quite a good example of the way we tend to look into the future through the prism of the past. He brings a fairly irresistible narrative into the Travers, being even more lightly raced than was his sire when picking up the pieces against exhausted Triple Crown protagonists. And, being out of an elite Ghostzapper racemare, he does look tantalizingly eligible to salvage Arrogate's legacy, if only he can cope with this steep elevation in grade. Yet it's almost as though those high emotional stakes have somehow been loaded into odds that imply some ordained destiny.

Yet who would presume to predict the future, when even the past can take so long to separate itself into coherence? Nobody, of course, could have foreseen the tragic denouement of Arrogate's tale. But most of us were pretty sure of where we stood with Gun Runner, when he staggered into third in the Travers, fully 15 lengths behind Arrogate: a horse that had shown his hand, precocious enough to run third in the Derby but apparently tapering off by this point. Gun Runner persevered, however, and after observing Arrogate reach the bottom of the barrel–presumably an oil barrel–in Dubai, he ran up to that sequence of five Grade Is by an aggregate 27 1/2 lengths.

And now here he is, poised to seal one of the most remarkable stud debuts of recent times with two runners–and don't forget that he would have a third, but for the local prohibition of Taiba's trainer–in a race that offers a pretty instructive snapshot of the shifting landscape among Kentucky stallions. Another young gun, Upstart, fields a son who has had this race in mind ever since that fleeting flirtation with an uncontested coronation on the home turn in the Derby; while Not This Time, consolidating his own outstanding start, matches Gun Runner with two: Epicenter, whose candidature for divisional honors makes a Grade I feel pretty imperative, and Ain't Life Grand.

Of the established elite, indeed, only Medaglia d'Oro can muster a candidate to emulate his 2002 success in outsider Gilded Age. To be fair, he also has a stake in proceedings through the dam of Ain't Life Grand, Cat Moves. This is the only mare owned by Peggy and Ray Shattuck, whose homebred GII Iowa Derby winner would hardly be as stupefying a result here as Rich Strike, himself of course by a Travers winner in Keen Ice, back at Churchill in May. While expectations for Rich Strike seem pretty much back to what they were on Derby day, Ain't Life Grand announced himself at Saratoga with a molten 45.88 workout last week, fastest of 79 clocked that morning.

Ain't Life Grand with Tammy Fox aboard | Sarah Andrew

Certainly the game could do with another fairytale. There's no need to dwell on the potential for awkwardness, in showcasing our best to the outside world, when three of eight runners are saddled by a trainer currently subject to such uncomfortable attention. Having been raised locally, this race is one he would prize perhaps beyond any other. But there you go: all of us have to accept that human capacity for anticipation is distinctly finite; and that fulfilment belongs to the complex, unpredictable realm of outcomes.

Setting all that aside, my own anticipations remain stubborn as ever. As Chad Brown would agree, he is only one of many whose dreams are centered on these three horses. And our community could seek no more flattering representation, to those beyond, than Brereton C. Jones and his family at Airdrie Stud, breeders of Zandon. And if this colt can mark the 50th anniversary of the farm's foundation by finally getting it all together here, even greater laurels would be on the line just down the road at Keeneland in the fall.

Yes, I know: all I'm doing is choosing a different script from the one that appears to favor Artorius so inexorably. I'm shoehorning Zandon's ostensible need for a particular tactical scenario, and a different kind of race from the cat-and-mouse of his latest start, into a storyline of far greater neatness and symmetry than tends to be indulged by this unsentimental, unpredictable world. But we're all sports fans first. We all enjoy our anticipation while it lasts. And we can leave dealing with all those business outcomes until such time as we know what they actually are.

The post This Side Up: Will Travers Stars Stick to Script? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Caravaggio’s Agartha Back To Winning Ways In The Fairy Bridge

Bouncing back from a disappointing effort when last in the July 9 GI Belmont Oaks Invitational, Scott Heider's G2 Debutante S. and G3 Silver Flash S. winner Agartha (Ire) (Caravaggio) was at her dynamic best as she made all under Declan McDonogh to capture Friday's G3 Coolmore Stud No Nay Never Fairy Bridge S. at Tipperary. Dropping back from a mile and a quarter to 7 1/2 furlongs here, the Joseph O'Brien-trained 6-4 favourite had only stablemate Night Of Romance (GB) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) to worry about in the straight but stayed on in typically tenacious fashion to score by a length.

“They thought the style of training in America didn't suit her and when she came home Pat McCabe, who rides her out, and I thought she was back working really well and we were proved right,” McDonagh said. “She was lugging out off the fence and was pulling up a bit in the straight, but it is a good confidence-booster. She loves Leopardstown and maybe she'll go to the Matron or something like that now.”

Agartha, who had the misfortune to encounter Homeless Songs (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) when second to that star performer in Leopardstown's G3 Ballylinch Stud 1000 Guineas Trial Apr. 2 and when fifth behind her in the May 22 Irish 1000 Guineas itself, was also runner-up in the G1 Moyglare Stud S. at two. From the O'Briens' Whisperview operation, she is the first foal out of the strong-staying Listed Stanerra S. winner and G3 Irish St Leger Trial third Arya Tara (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}) from the Aga Khan family of the G1 Prix Ganay hero Astarabad (Alleged), the high-class Azamour (Ire) (Night Shift) and the six-times group 1-winning The Autumn Sun (Aus) (Redoute's Choice {Aus}). Arya Tara's 2-year-old son of Churchill (Ire) named Agathon (Ire) was a €360,000 purchase by Justin Casse at Goffs Orby, while her 2021 and 2022 colts are by Ten Sovereigns (Ire).

Friday, Tipperary, Ireland
COOLMORE STUD NO NAY NEVER FAIRY BRIDGE S.-G3, €55,000, Tipperary, 8-26, 3yo/up, f/m, 7 1/2fT, 1:34.62, gd.
1–AGARTHA (IRE), 128, f, 3, by Caravaggio
     1st Dam: Arya Tara (Ire) (SW & GSP-Ire), by Dylan Thomas (Ire)
     2nd Dam: Anadiyla (Ire), by Barathea (Ire)
     3rd Dam: Anaza (Ire), by Darshaan (GB)
O-Scott C Heider; B-Whisperview Trading Ltd (IRE); T-Joseph O'Brien; J-Declan McDonogh. €33,000. Lifetime Record: G1SP-Ire, 13-3-5-2, $273,516. Werk Nick Rating: A+. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Night Of Romance (GB), 133, f, 4, Night Of Thunder (Ire)–Shohrah (Ire), by Giant's Causeway.
1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GROUP BLACK TYPE. (45,000gns Ylg '19 TATOCT; 50,000gns HRA '21 TATTJU; 30,000gns RNA HRA '21 TATMA). O-E & S Racing; B-Llety Farms (GB); T-Joseph O'Brien. €11,000.
3–Spring Feeling (Fr), 128, f, 3, Buratino (Ire)–Royal Memory (GB), by Invincible Spirit (Ire).
1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GROUP BLACK TYPE. O/B-Robert Ng (FR); T-Ken Condon. €5,500.
Margins: 1, 2 1/4, HF. Odds: 1.50, 8.50, 6.00.
Also Ran: Sh Boom (GB), Galleria Borghese (Ire), Honey Girl (GB), Prettiest, Improvised (Ire), West Coast (Ire), Illuminazione (Ire). Scratched: Statement (Ire). Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

 

The post Caravaggio’s Agartha Back To Winning Ways In The Fairy Bridge appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights