Eyeing a Championship with War Like Goddess

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY–With a sterling race record that befits her very distinctive name all wrapped in an engaging story, War Like Goddess (English Channel) is an impossible-to-ignore race mare bidding for a championship.

Though her late sire was a champion on the track and a top turf stallion for many years, the first foal out of Misty North (North Light {Ire}) brought a mere $1,200 at auction as a weanling and did not draw a single bid at the 2018 Keeneland September yearling sale. At the June 2019 OBS sale, bloodstock agent Donato Lanni purchased the 2-year-old for $30,000 for longtime client George Krikorian.

“I bought her with that name and I told Donato 'I don't like that name,'” Krikorian said. I didn't see the horse then because he was in Florida and I was out here in California when he called me about the horse. I didn't get to see her for maybe four months or five months later. When I saw her, I looked at her and I said, 'Hey, we don't need to change her name. She's beautiful. She is a War Like Goddess.'”

Some 38 months after Lanni identified her as a budget-priced project, War Like Goddess is certain to be the race favorite for the seventh-consecutive time when the 5-year-old goes to the post Saturday in the $600,000 GII Flower Bowl S. on the inner turf course.

Unbeaten in her three starts at Saratoga Race Course, War Like Goddess has won eight of 10 lifetime starts and earned over $1.2 million in the care of Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. She took the 2021 Flower Bowl by 2 1/4 lengths when it was run at Saratoga for the first time at the new distance of 1 3/8 miles. Long a Grade I, it was dropped to a Grade II this year.

After War Like Goddess won the GII Glens Falls S. by 1 1/4 lengths at 2-5 Aug. 6, Mott said he was considering running her against males in the Sword Dancer on Aug. 26 to give her another shot at a Grade I win and keep her at 1 1/2 miles. He opted for the Flower Bowl, where she drew post four in the field of seven.

In the Glens Falls, she won by a narrower margin than in 2021, but Mott said it was just the result of a patient ride by Joel Rosario.

“This year, she was sitting there and he rode her from about here to that wash rack,” Mott said, point to a spot fewer than 40 yards away. “It looked like to me that she was sitting, sitting, sitting and he got her going, he scrubbed on her a little bit.”

The final words of chart notes describing the Glens Falls win were “as rider pleased.”

“He took her back in his hands, it looked like,” Mott said, “as he was approaching the wire.”

Lanni recommended that Kirkorian ask the ever-patient Mott to train the filly. Mott agreed and said he doesn't recall there being any expectations about her when she joined his stable.

“You just kind of wait and see,” Mott said. “You just train them and do the best you can. We had to give her a fair amount of time. She didn't run until September of her 3-year-old year. It took that long to kind of get her ready. She had baby stuff, shins, stuff like that.”

In that first start at Churchill Down, War Like Goddess rolled into contention from far back and won the nine-furlong by three-quarters of a length. Mott said it is an obvious strength that has her batting .800 in her career.

“She can run,” he said. “She's got a very good turn a foot. That's what it takes. She's quick.”

Krikorian, the president and CEO of Krikorian Premiere Theatres, has a lifetime of experience with Thoroughbreds. His father, George Krikorian Sr., was a trainer on the New England circuit and he was raised near Rockingham Park in New Hampshire. As his entertainment venue businesses grew, he became an owner and then a breeder. Equibase stats show him with 290 victories–24 in graded stakes –from 1,729 starts in his name since 2000.

With the $323,500 she has earned this year, War Like Goddess has leaped over Grade I winners Starrer (Dynaformer) and Hollywood Story (Wild Rush) to the top spot on the Krikorian career stable list. Her ability to unleash a late run has made her Kirkorian's third millionaire and fifth Grade I winner.

“It's amazing when she just puts it on, how fast she accelerates,” he said. “It's just amazing to watch her do that. She's very competitive, as you can see. She does not want to lose a race. She'll fight hard.”

The first horse Lanni recommended that Krikorian buy was Starrer, who was picked up for $35,000 at the 1999 Fasig Tipton Fall Sale. In 2002, they bought Hollywood Story for $130,000. Krikorian said that when Lanni–now a well-known advisor–calls he listens.

“We have a bloodstock agent in Donato Lanni who has an eye for a horse that most people don't have, most of the bloodstock agents don't have, for sure,” Krikorian said. “We've known each other and been friends and have done business for years now. And when he tells me he sees something that he likes. I'm really happy to hear that because he's usually right, for sure.”

War Like Goddess won her first-level allowance in late October in her second start and launched her 4-year-old year with a fifth in the 1 3/16ths miles the GIII Very One S. at Gulfstream Park on Feb. 21. She rebounded from that setback and rang up four graded-stakes wins before finishing third by a half-length as the favorite in the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf. Mott thought that over all she ran well in the Breeders' Cup.

“She did it maybe a tick wide and maybe a tick early,” he said.

This year with Rosario replacing Julien Leparoux, she returned to the races in April with a second victory in the GIII Bewitched at Keeneland. A minor physical issue kept her out of the GI New York in June and the River Memories S. on July 10 at Belmont Park did not fill. She handled the field of seven in the Glens Falls off a three-month layoff and heads into the fall in the Flower Bowl toward the 12-furlong GI Breeders' Cup Turf against males.

Mott said he is inclined to run in the Turf because the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf will be contested at 1 3/16 miles instead of the 1 3/8 miles due to the configuration of Keeneland turf course. He believes she at her best at 12 furlongs, where she is 4-for-4, and that he is not concerned about her having a bit of a lighter schedule this summer.

“Maybe it'll help,” he said. “She's not a great big, stout filly. Although she can run, I don't think she's one you want to be leading over there every three weeks. Of course, the way the races are, we wouldn't be able to do that anyway. We would have had one more race in her, I guess. And maybe they did us a favor. Sometimes those things work out. Maybe the fact that we didn't have a race down at Belmont, maybe that's to her advantage later in the year. We always use the term 'they happen for a reason…,' you know.”

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American Pharoah’s Carnaby Street Rolls In Kentucky Downs Opener

1st-Kentucky Downs, $156,000, Msw, 9-1, 2yo, f, 6 1/2fT, 1:16.89, fm, 4 1/2 lengths.
CARNABY STREET (f, 2, American Pharoah–Sloane Square {GSP}, by Giant's Causeway), favored at 7-5 in the opening event of the meet, settled patiently and stalked from good position in third behind the leading pair of Master Som (Mastery) and Fabulosity (Exaggerator). With a ton of run but little room, she waited for a break to open between rivals down the stretch, split them into the final furlong, and easily cleared late to score by 4 1/2 lengths. 42-1 longshot Miss Peabody (Anchor Down) surged late to fill out the exacta as the early leaders faded in the final sixteenth. Sloane Square produced back-to-back foals by Munnings–a colt in 2021 and a filly in 2022, and was bred back to the Coolmore stallion for 2023. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $90,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG. O-Michael B. Tabor; B-Chelston (KY); T-Wesley A. Ward.

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Equibase Analysis: Flightline Has Questions To Answer In TVG Pacific Classic

The Grade 1, $1 million TVG Pacific Classic Stakes, a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Classic, didn't draw a big field but it drew a very strong field of six, with three millionaires and a budding superstar who can go over the $1 million mark in career earnings with a victory.

That horse is Flightline, who is undefeated and untested in four starts to date, winning by a combined margin of 43 1/2 lengths. Still, there are questions, as this talented colt is being asked to run around two-turns for the first time and to run the mile and one-quarter distance for the first time.

One of those in the field already proven at the distance is Country Grammer, who has banked $10 million in his career, most of it when winning the Group 1 Dubai World Cup in March. Country Grammer also won the Grade 1 Hollywood Gold Cup Stakes in May of 2021 at the distance of the Pacific Classic. Royal Ship missed by a head in last year's Gold Cup behind Country Grammer and enters the race off an easy win in the Grade 2 San Diego Handicap over the track. Express Train proved he belongs with these horses by winning the Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap at the distance this past March. Extra Hope has never run this far and his best career effort came when winning the Grade 3 Native Diver Stakes at Del Mar in the fall of 2020. Stilleto Boy earned his biggest win in the Grade 2 Californian Stakes in April, beating Express Train, but has only managed fourth- and third-place efforts since and has never finished better than third at this classic distance. 

Top Contenders to win: 

Before I get to Flightline, I want to talk about Royal Ship and Country Grammer. These two have met three times previously, with Country Grammer coming out on top once (in the 2021 Hollywood Gold Cup) and with Royal Ship coming out on top twice. The first of those two occasions was in the 2021 Californian Stakes, where the two horses battled head-and-head for the entire last eighth of a mile, and the second was at the end of July, where Royal Ship drew off with authority in the San Diego Handicap. In the 2021 Gold Cup as well as in the recent San Diego, Royal Ship earned and then tied career-best 110 Equibase Speed Figures, the same figure as Country Grammer earned in his Gold Cup victory. Country Grammer bettered that figure this February when second in the Saudi Cup with a 117 figure then earned one of the top figures this year, 128, when winning the Dubai World Cup one month later. However, he only managed a 106 figure in the San Diego Handicap.

One of the more important considerations is that in the San Diego, both horses were coming back from layoffs, with Royal Ship having been off two months and Country Grammer having been off four months. Given that both are making their second starts off layoffs, it is reasonable to assume they can improve at the same rate.

That being the case, Royal Ship will be my top selection to win this year's Pacific Classic, particularly as his three workouts since the San Diego Handicap have been nothing short of spectacular. Considering Hall-of-Fame trainer Richard Mandella is not known for fast workouts, the fact the horse put in a :46.20 half-mile drill (best of 30) on August 11 and a :47.40 workout on August 28 (sixth best of 77) strongly suggests Royal Ship is going to run even better than he did earlier this summer at Del Mar.  That being said, I also expect Country Grammer to run strongly, which could lead to a head-and-head battle down the length of the stretch as occurred when they met in the Hollywood Gold Cup in 2021. 

Now, about Flightline. There is no doubting his innate athletic ability and in four races he has not given another horse even the slightest chance to win in the last quarter mile. He won the Malibu Stakes in December with a 126 figure which is pretty unheard of for a 3-year-old, and when coming back from nearly six months off in the Metropolitan Handicap in June, Flightline earned a 114 figure which could have been higher as he coasted home easily. Still, he has never run around two turns and the farthest he has run is one mile around one turn.

There's an old maxim in handicapping that one should never bet a favorite (which Flightline will be) trying something for the first time, and I plan to stick to that rule. As a son of Tapit there is little doubt a mile and one-quarter is in his pedigree, but when I consider the 127 and 126 figures he earned last September and December are the same as the 128 figure Country Grammer earned winning the Dubai World Cup in March, and that the World Cup was run at the mile and one-quarter distance of the Classic, I have to believe Country Grammer is more likely to win than Flightline. As I also believe Royal Ship is more probable to win than Country Grammer, I am left with no other choice than to believe no matter how talented Flightline is, he has his work cut out for him in the Pacific Classic.

The other three Pacific Classic entrants, with their best figures, are Express Train (110). Extra Hope (111) and Stilleto Boy (117).

Win Contenders in preference, handicapper's probability order:
Royal Ship
Country Grammer
Flightline

TVG Pacific Classic Stakes – Grade 1
Race 10 at Del Mar
Saturday, September 3 – Post Time 8:30 PM E.T.
One Mile and One Quarter
3-Year-Olds and Upward
Purse: $1 Million

Ellis Starr is national racing analyst for Equibase

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Woodbine: Forester’s Fortune Hunts Vice Regent Gold

Multiple stakes placed Forester's Fortune, a 5-year-old son of Old Forester-Nursery Song, takes on six rivals in Saturday's $150,000 Vice Regent Stakes at Woodbine.

Trained by Rodney Barrow, the chestnut arrives at his latest engagement, a race for Ontario-bred 3-year-olds and up at 5 panels on the Toronto oval's Inner Turf, sporting a record of 4-2-4 from 22 starts and a 2-2-1 mark from nine turf races.

In his last two races, Forester's Fortune posted a second on July 17, and was most recently third in a 5-furlong dash over the Inner Turf on August 11.

“He's doing really well,” said Barrow. “He just needs a little luck. The last two races, he's had bad trips. But this horse, he always tries. The thing with him is that he needs the trip. Usually, when he kicks, he's coming from off the pace. The way he kicks in, if he gets stopped, then it's tough for him to get started again.”

Forester's Fortune launched his career in 2019 with a pair of third-place finishes, including in his second appearance, the Victoria Stakes.

Owned by Claudia Evelyn Silvera and Archie Lee, he broke his maiden in his first start of 2020, following that effort up with another trip to the winner's circle next time out.

Bred in Ontario by John Carey, the gelding was sixth in last year's Vice Regent.

A lifetime earner of $249,997 (U.S.), Forester's Fortune will look to strike stakes gold for the first time.

Barrow likes what he sees from his hard-knocking horse ahead of Saturday's race.

“Hopefully, it's a better result this time around. He's coming into the race in good order. I've always liked him. He's cool. He's older and he's wiser now. He has a good head on his body. As a baby, he was pretty crazy. Now, he's matured and he's good.”

Good enough, Barrow hopes, to break his stakes maiden.

“There is a lot I like about him, but the one thing that stands out for me is that he tries every race. Like I said, he just needs the trip. If he can get that, then I think he'll have a very good race.”

The Barbados-born Barrow, who won his first race with Pierian on June 11, 2020, will have friends and family back home cheering for Forester's Fortune on Saturday.

He's appreciative of the widespread support.

“I'm very lucky to have so many people back home and here in Canada who want to see me succeed. It would be nice to get a stakes win with this guy. He deserves it.”

Other starters include multiple graded stakes winner Silent Poet, along with five-time winner and Ontario Jockey Club Stakes victor Mason's Gamble.

The Vice Regent goes as race four. First post is 1:00 p.m. Fans can watch and wager on all the action through HPIbet.com and the Dark Horse Bets app.

$150,000 VICE REGENT STAKES

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Mason's Gamble – Rafael Hernandez – Josie Carroll

2 – Forester's Fortune – Daisuke Fukumoto – Rodney Barrow

3 – Silent Poet – Justin Stein – Nicholas Gonzalez

4 – Warp Ride – Eswan Flores – Andrew Smith

5 – Four Aces High (S) – Emma-Jayne Wilson – James Smith

6 – Wedgewood – Jason Hoyte – Mike Keogh

7 – Rockcrest – Keveh Nicholls – Nigel Burke

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