Blea on Del Mar’s Churchill Shippers, Wakanaka Scratched from Matriarch

In the midst of the Equine Herpesvirus (EHV-1) outbreak at Churchill Downs, Del Mar had accepted three shippers from the Louisville track Tuesday, Nov. 29, the same day a horse at Churchill first showed symptoms of the contagious disease. One of the horses, Bill Mott's MGSW Wakanaka (Ire) (Power {GB}), had a suspicious test and will not be permitted to start in Sunday's GI Matriarch S. She was 5-1 on the morning line.

Dr. Jeff Blea, the equine medical director for the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), released the following statement Saturday:

“Three horses arrived at the Del Mar Race Track from Churchill Downs on Tuesday, Nov. 29. Due to the recent EHV-1 issue identified at Churchill Downs, the horses were placed in a quarantine barn with biosecurity measures implemented upon arrival, which continue to remain in place. Since their arrival, all three horses remain healthy and show no clinical signs of illness. Furthermore, bloodwork has been and continues to remain normal.

“The horses were tested for EHV-1 at UC Davis and all horses were negative for EHV-1 in blood. However, one horse, Wakanaka, was mildly positive on a nasal swab sample with a very low viral load. The viral load was too weak to differentiate between neuropathogenic and non-neuropathogenic EHV-1. This is only one test at a single time point, so we will continue to monitor the situation. Out an abundance of caution, Wakanaka will not be allowed to compete in the Dec. 4 Matriarch S. as planned.”

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‘Maybe We’ll Be Somewhere In May’: Dubyuhnell Gamely Prevails In Stretch-Long Duel For Remsen Win

West Paces Racing and Stonestreet Stables' Dubyuhnell dug in gamely down the lane to out finish the pacesetting Arctic Arrogance and win Saturday's $250,000 Remsen (G2), a nine-furlong test for juveniles at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Danny Gargan and piloted by Jose Ortiz, the chestnut son of Good Magic was a determined winner of the two-turn test over a sloppy and sealed main track that offered 10-4-3-2-1 Kentucky Derby (G1) qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

Dubyuhnell entered from a second-out graduation traveling one-mile over a sloppy and sealed main track on October 2 at Belmont at the Big A. Gargan said he was impressed with the effort from the $400,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, who he believes can be a contender for the 2023 Kentucky Derby (G1) on May 6 at Churchill Downs.

“He was drawing off,” Gargan said. “I think we were pretty lucky he does want to get the distance. We just have to stay sound and stay lucky and keep picking the right races. Maybe we'll be somewhere in May.

“This colt here I think is more of the Derby type of horse because he wants to get the distance,” Gargan added. “A mile and an eighth suits him and he came running at the end. They were going fast. He was up towards the lead and they went three-quarters in 1:12 and change and that's running today.”

The New York-bred Arctic Arrogance, last-out winner of the Sleepy Hollow here against fellow state-breds, broke alertly under Jose Lezcano and took command through splits of :24.31 and 48.13 with Dubyuhnell keeping close watch to his outside from second. The previously undefeated Tuskegee Airmen, who entered from a win in the Rocky Run at Delaware, settled in third position along the rail under Luis Saez with Prove Right and Quick to Accuse directly to his outside as three-quarters elapsed in 1:12.23.

Arctic Arrogance and Dubyuhnell got away from the field through the final turn, opening up seven lengths on their rivals at the stretch call and fought it out tooth and nail the length of the lane. But there would be no denying Dubyuhnell, who pulled clear in the final strides to secure the half-length win in a final time of 1:50.88. It was another 11 1/4-lengths back to Tuskegee Airmen in third with Quick to Accuse, Midnight Trouble, Il Miracolo and Prove Right rounding out the order of finish.

Ortiz, who has guided Dubyuhnell through all three career starts, said he put together a more prominent trip than expected.

“He broke good. Initially, we thought we were going to lay a little bit farther back than that because it looked like it was going to be a lot of speed in the race,” Ortiz said. “I told Dan, 'I'm just going to break forward and see what happens going into the first turn.' Surprisingly, it was only Lezcano there with Arctic Arrogance who I thought was one of the speed, but I was able to lay next to him every step of the way. I was very happy. On the backside, we hit the second turn and I knew it would be me or him.”

Lezcano said he was hoping for a bigger kick down the lane from the Linda Rice-trained Arctic Arrogance.

“My horse gave me a very good race. He ran hard and did everything right. The other horse kept running. I don't know what happened with my horse because when I asked him, he didn't take off like last time,” Lezcano said.

Gargan said Dubyuhnell will head to Florida but could return to the Big A in February for the 1 1/8-mile $250,000 Withers (G3), which offers 20-8-6-4-2 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the top five finishers.

“We'll take him down to Florida because of the weather and we won't have to miss as much training,” Gargan said. “I'm not ruling out that he couldn't come back for the Withers, we don't know yet. I'd love to win the Wood Memorial, it's one of my favorite races. There's no plans for where he'll go next, but we could see him here for the Withers.”

Out of the multiple gradedstakes-winning Forest Wildcat mare Wild Gams, Dubyuhnell is a half sibling to multiple graded stakes winner Cazadero. Bred in Kentucky by Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings, he banked $137,500 in victory while improving his record to 3-2-0-0. He returned $10 for a $2 win bet.

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Mind Control Goes Out In Style In Cigar Mile

Red Oak Stable and Madaket Stable's Mind Control (Stay Thirsty), who has competed in 27 stakes since his debut in 2018, closed out his career in style Saturday, scoring his 11th black-type victory and third at the highest level in Aqueduct's GI Cigar Mile.

With GI Pennsylvania Derby runner-up Zandon (Upstart) bet down to 3-5, Mind Control was dispatched as the 3-1 second choice, a gift to his faithful fans in his career finale. Away quickest of all, the bay was outrun by 58-1 shot Outlier (Not This Time) and was content to stalk that rival from second through a :23.26 first quarter. The 6-year-old veteran was patiently handled by John Velazquez through a :46.55 half-mile with Get Her Number (Dialed In) tracking intently to his outside in third and White Abarrio (Race Day) not far behind. Mind Control sidled up beside Outlier at the three-quarter pole with Get Her Number joining him on the outside and White Abarrio sneaking up the fence to join the fray, making it four across the track turning for home.

Zandon ranged up five wide just off their heels, looking like he might join the group as Outlier threw in the towel and retreated. Mind Control, White Abarrio and Get Her Number locked horns, battling down the lane as Zandon unsuccessfully tried to play catch up. Mind Control forged clear in the final sixteenth to complete his career on high note with a head success over Get Her Number. It was a half-length back to White Abarrio in third and another two back to Zandon in fourth.

“If you like horse racing, you've got to love this horse,” said winning trainer Todd Pletcher. “He's cool. He's done it consistently year after year at multiple distances. He's a great horse to be able to train. He's remarkably consistent and shows up every morning.”

He continued, “When he broke well, I was happy and there was a moment in the first sixteenth of a mile where I wasn't so sure if he was liking the surface, which a couple of times in the past he hadn't cared for. But then once he got into a good rhythm down the backside, I was confident. He's the type of horse that if you get into a battle with him, he's going to fight.”

Pletcher added, “Stay Thirsty won [the 2012 Cigar Mile] in probably one of the best head bobs we've ever had in racing, so it's kind of cool that his offspring was able to win it.”

“The last two times he ran over a track like that, he was out of the pack,” Velazquez said. “The first sixteenth of a mile, he broke good and I was like, 'Oh, please. Don't do this to me.' He seemed like he was going to go, but he came out of the bridle. So, I passed the chute and kind of put him into the bridle and he got comfortable. I felt much better the way he was going towards the turn and when the other horse [Get Her Number] came to him, he got competitive. So then I felt like he was going to fight. When that horse put his head in front of me and didn't pass me, I was like, 'This is going to be a fight here.' And sure enough, I went left handed on him, he responded and put his head in front and it was a really good fight to the wire.”

On what Mind Control means to him, the Hall of Fame pilot said, “I've been around this horse for five years and he's been a really decent horse and shows up to the big dances with really tough horses–and he does it all the time. I'm a little sad to see him go because he's one of the horses that kind of keeps me in the game and kind of looking forward to these kinds of races. He's gone, so I'll have to start looking for something else to keep me in the game.”

Scoring his first Grade I win in the 2018 Hopeful S. at Saratoga, Mind Control took the Jerome S. and GIII Bay Shore S. in 2019, and captured his second Grade I that year with a gutsy score in Saratoga's GI H. Allen Jerkens Memorial S. Opening 2020 with wins in the GIII Toboggan S. and GIII Tom Fool H., both at the Big A for former trainer Greg Sacco, the homebred did not visit the winner's circle again until July of 2021, taking the GII John A. Nerud S. in his first start for Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher. He won the Parx Dirt Mile two starts later and was third in this year's GI Carter H. Off the board in the GI Churchill Downs S. in May, Mind Control scored a gritty victory over Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow) in Monmouth's GIII Salvator Mile June 18. Completing the trifecta in the GII Charles Town Classic Aug. 26, he crossed the line a neck second in the Sept. 24 Parx Dirt Mile, but was promoted to first via DQ.

Pedigree Notes:

Mind Control is one of five graded winners by Stay Thirsty, who now stands in California, and is his only North American Grade I winner. He is also the sire of a Group 1 winner in South America. The winner is out of fellow Red Oak homebred Feel That Fire (Lightnin N Thunder), a stakes-winning half-sister to MSW & GSP King For A Day (Uncle Mo) and a full to MSW Ima Jersey Girl. Her 3-year-old filly Goddess of Fire (Mineshaft), retained by Red Oak and trained by Pletcher, ran second in both the GII Rachel Alexandra S. and GII Gulfstream Park Oaks this term. Feel That Fire's juvenile filly White Hot Gold (Candy Ride {Arg}) debuted at Tampa Saturday just eight minutes before her half-brother's swansong, finishing sixth. The 15-year-old mare failed to get in foal to Uncle Mo for 2021, but had a filly that sire in February of this year. She visited both Curlin and Uncle Mo this spring.

Saturday, Aqueduct
CIGAR MILE H. PRESENTED BY NYRA BETS-GI, $750,000, Aqueduct, 12-3, 3yo/up, 1m, 1:35.53, sy.
1–MIND CONTROL, 122, h, 6, by Stay Thirsty
                1st Dam: Feel That Fire (SW, $147,280), by Lightnin N Thunder
                2nd Dam: Ubetwereven, by French Deputy
                3rd Dam: Raysor Lake, by Private Account
O-Red Oak Stable (Brunetti) & Madaket Stables, LLC; B-Red
Oak Stable (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher; J-John R. Velazquez.
$412,500. Lifetime Record: 29-12-3-6, $2,185,834. *1/2 to
Goddess of Fire (Mineshaft), GISP, $335,875. Werk Nick
Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Get Her Number, 120, c, 4, Dialed In–Fancier, by Bernstein.
($45,000 2yo '20 OBSAPR). O-Gary Barber; B-Philip & Brenda
Robertson (KY); T-Peter Miller. $150,000.
3–White Abarrio, 118, c, 3, Race Day–Catching Diamonds, by
Into Mischief. ($7,500 Ylg '20 OBSWIN; $40,000 2yo '21
OBSMAR). O-C Two Racing Stable & Antonio Pagnano;
B-Spendthrift Farm LLC (KY); T-Saffie A. Joseph, Jr. $90,000.
Margins: HD, HF, 2. Odds: 3.15, 8.50, 3.65.
Also Ran: Zandon, Outlier, Double Crown. Scratched: O Besos.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Julia Shining Emulates Champion Full Sister Malathaat In Winning Demoiselle

Put to a drive on the backstretch by jockey Luis Saez, odds-on favorite Julia Shining didn't make it look easy but got the job done nonetheless in the $250,000 Demoiselle (G2) on Saturday at Aqueduct Racetrack, narrowly defeating the maiden Affirmative Lady in the nine-furlong race for 2-year-old fillies.

The Demoiselle, run for the 101st time, kicked off a sequence of four graded stakes races on the program led by the Grade 1, $750,000 Cigar Mile Handicap presented by NYRA Bets. As part of the Road to the Kentucky Oaks, the Demoiselle also awarded qualifying points of 10-4-3-2-1 to its top-five finishers.

In victory, Julia Shining, a full sister to reigning champion 3-year-old filly Malathaat, replicated her older sister's success in this event in 2020.

A runaway maiden winner at Keeneland's Fall Meet, Julia Shining was making just her second career start in the Demoiselle for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher and Stonestreet Stables, who also bred the Curlin filly out of Dreaming of Julia, by A.P. Indy. Dealing with rainy conditions over a sloppy and sealed track, her inexperience was really put to the test after she broke near the back of the field of seven as Tribal Queen went out to lead through honest splits of :24.61 for the opening quarter-mile and :49.35 for the half.

Not satisfied with his position exiting the first turn, Saez began imploring Julia Shining for run on the backstretch and continued to work on her while the pair went wide around the far turn through three-quarters in 1:14.31. It wasn't until the field turned for home that the two were able to level off and make up appreciable ground, but by then Affirmative Lady had surged to the front and was loath to relinquish the lead. These two battled head and head in the final furlong, however, Julia Shining, despite making a wide rally that lasted the better part of the race, would not be denied and hit the wire a neck in front of her stubborn rival, completing the distance in 1:53.05.

“She was clearly not handling things [down the backstretch] and Luis was trying to encourage her to improve position and finally did it around the quarter pole,” said Pletcher. “Once she found a rhythm down the lane, she started to close and Luis said she kind of got her head in front and then wanted to wait a little bit.

“Clearly she has tons of natural talent and is still putting it all together,” the trainer added. “We knew from her debut that she didn't like the kickback, and you add the sloppy track into that today, so that was our biggest concern was trying to get her into the clear. Unfortunately, the only way to get her into the clear was to go pretty wide, but she's got so much natural stamina that we felt the mile and an eighth was really going to play to her strengths.”

The win was Julia Shining's second from two career starts, with her earnings now at $194,075. She returned $3.10 on a $2 win wager as the heavy favorite.

Trained by Graham Motion for AMO Racing USA, Affirmative Lady fought doggedly under Hall of Famer John Velazquez but remained a maiden when the dust settled. Her runner-up finish in the Demoiselle actually represents her best placing to date, with the gray Arrogate filly having previously gotten a third and a fourth to begin her career at Keeneland.

“The dirt was hitting her and I saved ground the best I could,” said Velazquez. “I put her in the clear and I heard the winner all the way from the half-mile pole right outside of me. I knew it was one of Todd's, either or. I'm thinking that I'll just hold my position where I was and hopefully when they come to me, she goes. She put up a good fight though. I'm very proud of her.”

The Pletcher-trained Gambling Girl finished third, three-quarters of a length behind Affirmative Lady, while Royal Spa and La Vita Sofia rounded out the top five. Foggy Night and Tribal Queen completed the order of finish.

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