Recent Claim Feast Steps Up And Wins Rumson In Stakes Debut

Five weeks after being claimed for $25,000, Feast became a stakes winner in his first try against loftier company.

The speedy 5-year-old ridgling out-broke the field in Sunday's $100,000 Rumson Stakes, was passed by 7-10 favorite Hollis at the one-eighth pole, and then dug in along the rail, surging back for a half-length victory in the feature race on the Monmouth Park card.

Hollis, who looked well on his way to victory after swinging off the turn with full momentum, opening a half-length lead at the eighth poll, ran out of gas in the five-furlong dirt dash.

Baytown Bear was another 2¾ lengths back in third.

The winning time was :57.47 on a fast track.

“The reason we claimed him (on July 31) was because of his form and the fact that he's a Florida-bred,” said winning trainer Gerald Bennett. “There are a lot of spots for him (at Tampa Downs). He's eligible for starters, the claiming crown, so we have options with him.

“There were a lot of claims in for him that day. We were lucky to get him. I saw he runs good fresh so I freshened him up, and he's a horse that always tries. That's all you need with horses if they're tryers. You just have to keep them right and they give you a good effort.”

Though a consistent sprinter throughout his career, Feast had not tried stakes company until Sunday – doing so exactly five weeks after being claimed. The victory was his third straight and fourth in his last five starts.

“I had no doubt I would make the lead, especially when he broke so sharply out of the gate,” said jockey Jose Ferrer. “(Hollis) is a fast horse but my horse is pretty fast, too. The last eighth of a mile (Hollis) went by me, then all of a sudden it seemed like he put the brakes on and started looking around. I just kept riding because you never know what is going to happen. I think when my horse saw (Hollis) outside of him he dug in again.”

Breaking from the outside post in the six-horse field of 3-year-olds and up, Feast asserted himself immediately, setting fractions of :22.27 and :45.35 with Hollis tracking him the entire time.

Ferrer had the rail coming out of the turn with Hollis angling outside. Hollis seemed to the race won when he surged to the lead at the one-eighth pole, but Feast responded determinedly.

“When (Hollis) came to him he dug in again because it looked like he was beat at the eighth pole,” said Bennett.

Now owned by Winning Stables, Feast recorded his sixth victory in 16 career starts. He has four wins and a third in five starts at Monmouth Park.

The son of Twirling Candy out of the Corinthian mare Corinthian Luck returned $11.60 to win.

“The last eighth of a mile (Hollis) went by me, then all of a sudden it seemed like he put the brakes on and started looking around,” said Ferrer. “I just kept riding because you never know what is going to happen. I think when my horse saw (Hollis) outside of him he dug in again. He's a nice horse. And we know he likes Monmouth Park. So this was a good set-up for him, especially being able to break from the outside.”

Feast was bred by Farm III Enterprises.

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Midnight Memories a First SW for Mastery in Torrey Pines

Midnight Memories made her two-turn and stakes debut a winning one when resolutely holding off favored Desert Dawn to capture the GIII Torrey Pines S. Sunday at Del Mar.

Scoring first out at 4-5 with a 95 Beyer going 6 1/2 furlongs Apr. 30 at Santa Anita, the homebred repeated by a neck after stumbling at the start in an allowance/optional claimer there June 5 before disappointing when a well-beaten third as the chalk with blinkers added here July 28.

Taking the blinkers off for this test, the dark bay made the lead without much resistance under Ramon Vazquez and showed the way through a :23.25 quarter. Desert Dawn, third at the rail, moved off the fence to take up the chase as the half went up in :46.95. The favorite picked up the pressure around the turn and she and Midnight Memories passed three-quarters in 1:11.23 on even terms. Midnight Memories never relinquished the lead however, and started to do the better work around the eighth pole, holding firm from there to score.

Pedigree Notes:
Midnight Memories is the first stakes winner for Claiborne Farm's second-crop stallion Mastery, who retired with a perfect four-for-four record, three of those wins coming in graded stakes company. She is the second foal to race out of Tiz Midnight, who broke her maiden by 11 1/2 lengths with a 102 Beyer in her fourth career start and later won the GII Bayakoa S. Second dam Tough Tiz's Sis was a six-time stakes winner who ended her career with a 12 1/4-length romp and 113 Beyer in the 2008 GI Ruffian H. Tiz Midnight is responsible for a yearling colt by Collected and foaled a filly by Maximum Security this season before being bred to McKinzie.

Sunday, Del Mar
TORREY PINES S.-GIII, $125,500, Del Mar, 9-4, 3yo, f, 1m, 1:36.32, ft.
1–MIDNIGHT MEMORIES, 120, f, 3, by Mastery
                1st Dam: Tiz Midnight (GSW & GISP, $339,800), by Midnight Lute
                2nd Dam: Tough Tiz's Sis, by Tiznow
                3rd Dam: Leaseholder, by Taylor's Falls
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. O/B-Michael
Pegram, Paul Weitman & Karl Watson (KY); T-Bob Baffert;
J-Ramon A. Vazquez. $75,000. Lifetime Record: 4-3-0-1,
$166,680. Werk Nick Rating: B.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Desert Dawn, 124, f, 3, Cupid–Ashley's Glory, by Honour and
Glory. ($32,000 RNA Ylg '20 OBSOCT). O/B-H & E Ranch (AZ);
T-Philip D'Amato. $25,000.
3–Grace Adler, 120, f, 3, Curlin–Our Khrysty, by Newfoundland.
($700,000 Ylg '20 FTKSEL). O-Willow Grace Farm & Michael
Lund Petersen; B-Blue Heaven Farm (KY); T-Bob Baffert.
$15,000.
Margins: 3/4, 4 1/4, 7 1/4. Odds: 5.50, 1.20, 6.10.
Also Ran: Cinnamon Cat, Under the Stars, Malibu Marie. Scratched: Kirstenbosch.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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‘He Looks Perfect’: Flightline Emerges From Pacific Classic In Good Order, Sadler Lays Out Plans For Immediate Future

It was a busy Sunday morning at Barn K on the backside at Del Mar.  That's where trainer John Sadler keeps his horses, though only one in particular, Flightline, seemed to be getting all the attention.

Groups of visitors stopped by to get a glimpse of racing's newest superstar, Sadler engaging many of them.

Flightline, however, couldn't be bothered. Every once in a while he'd poke his head out of his stall to see what all the fuss was about but otherwise he stayed tucked away, out of sight.

Sadler said his undefeated son of Tapit and winner of the G1 TVG Pacific Classic Saturday came out of the race good with no problems.

“We're literally talking 14-hours, but this early, he looks perfect,” he said.

You can add that to Flightline's developing legacy. He puts in a near-record performance, wins by the largest margin ever in the Pacific Classic (19 ¼ lengths) and 14-hours later he's back to his old self.

For Sadler, the most impressive aspect of Flightline's race Saturday was the way he opened up on the rest of the field.

“Obviously, I was thrilled about him putting them away on the turn,” Sadler said. “That was really exciting, probably the funnest part.

“I was just so happy to see him good and clear,” he added. “He was always going to have a clear trip once he got going a little bit. A little bump at the start but once he got clear I knew it was going to be good from there.”

So what's in the immediate future for Flightline?

“He'll walk for three days and then he'll probably go back and jog a little bit this week,” Sadler says. “Then ship up to Santa Anita and we'll start finalizing our plans for Breeders' Cup.”

Trainer Bob Baffert exclaimed soon after the Pacific Classic that runner-up Country Gammer thinks he won the race.

The Hall of Famer said Sunday morning his Dubai World Cup (G1) winner came out of the race great and looks good.

“He likes a deeper race track,” Baffert said. “That was a little bit too fast for him. He wasn't going to win but he would have been closer.”

Baffert said he and the horse's connections are going to wait and see how Country Grammer is doing in the next couple of days before deciding where to go with him next.

Trainer Richard Mandella had two words for how his horses came out of the Pacific Classic: “Shell shocked.”

He said Royal Ship, who finished third, and Extra Hope, who finished fifth, came out of the race well.

“We'll probably look at the Awesome Again (G1) at Santa Anita (for Royal Ship),” Mandella said, “and the Tokyo City (G3) for Extra Hope at a mile and a half.”

Rounding out the field, Express Train, trainer John Shirreff's Santa Anita Handicap (G1) winner, finished fourth in the Pacific Classic.

Stilleto Boy, from the Ed Moger Jr. barn, was wide in both turns and finished last.

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