Lobo: Ivar In Fine Fettle For Pegasus World Cup Turf Bid

After Ivar encountered a couple of setbacks the past couple of years, trainer Paulo Lobo is happy that everything has been clicking for the 7-year-old Brazilian-bred horse heading into Gulfstream Park's $1-million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) Jan. 28.

Ivar had his penultimate Pegasus Turf work Saturday at The Thoroughbred Center in Lexington, Ky., tooling five-eighths of a mile in 1:02.

“Ivar is ready,” Lobo said. “His work [Saturday] was very good, in company nice and easy, like he likes to do. His final work will be next Saturday here, and then we're going to ship him either that Monday or Tuesday.”

Ivar has competed in the past three runnings of the Breeders' Cup Mile (G1) on turf. He finished fourth by a total of one length at Keeneland this past fall, third in 2021 at Del Mar and another good fourth at Keeneland in 2020. Six of the eight horses that finished in front of Ivar in those races came from Europe.

“I think his race was very good,” Lobo said of the 2022 Breeders' Cup Mile won by European standout Modern Games. “He lost to a very top horse. Javier Castellano was riding him for the first time. He rode a very good race, and since then we've pointed for the Pegasus Turf and we've never missed a day and never had a bad day. Everything that we planned is happening, no problems.”

Ivar won Keeneland's 2020 Shadwell Turf Mile (G1) in his fourth U.S. start after being a leading 2-year-old in Argentina. Lobo has had to adjust plans at times the past two years because of minor issues and turf cancellations. Ivar ran only three times in 2021 and four times last year, when he resumed competition off an eight-month layoff to win the Jonathan B. Schuster Memorial at Horseshoe Indianapolis. He was second in his two starts before the Breeders' Cup, in the Woodbine Mile (G1) won by Modern Games and Keeneland's Turf Mile (G1), a race Ivar won in 2020.

“We were ready to run last May and had a little foot problem that delayed his first race for 2022,” Lobo said. “But he's been doing very well since. If you look at his past performances, he's almost always running in Grade 1 races. It's always tough. The three times he ran in the Breeders' Cup, he ran very well. He has been representing America at a top level.”

Castellano will be back on board in the Pegasus, Lobo said.

Lobo said Grade 1 winner In Love will not run in the Pegasus Turf but that the 6-year-old Brazilian-bred mare Justify My Love will compete in the $500,000 Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G1) on the undercard. Like Ivar, Justify My Love is owned by Bonne Chance Farm LLC and breeder Stud RDI LLC and was sired by the Japanese-bred and -raced Agnes Gold.

Justify My Love was a Group 2 winner and Group 1 placed in Argentina before being sent to Lobo last year. Off a nine-month layoff, she was sixth in her first two starts before capturing a Churchill Downs' turf allowance race Nov. 19, her last start.

“She's a very nice filly,” Lobo said. “It took a little while for her to adjust here, but she had a very nice win at Churchill Downs. She's in top form now, physically and mentally. I think she'll run well over there. The race is very tough, but I think she's going to enjoy a mile and an eighth. She's training super, this filly. Super.”

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Kirstenbosch Scores Last-Gasp Nose Victory In La Canada

Kazushi Kimura, Eclipse Award-winning apprentice jockey of 2019, won his first-ever Santa Anita race in style on Sunday as he drove John Sadler-trained Kirstenbosch to a desperate nose victory over favorite Ganadora in the $200,000 La Canada Stakes (G3).

Owned and bred by Keith Abrahams, Kirstenbosch covered 1 1/16 miles in 1:44.19 on a track listed as good.

Attentive to the pace from her rail post, Kirstenbosch was about 2 ½ lengths off dueling leaders Ganadora and Angel Nadeshiko leaving the quarter pole. Three-deep through the lane, Kirstenbosch appeared to draw even with Ganadora, with John Velasquez aboard, inside the final sixteenth, but victory was very much in doubt as Kimura stayed busy with a powerful hand ride in a thrilling finish.

“It feels so amazing, my first win here and in a Grade 3; it's amazing,” said Kimura, 23, who was also Woodbine's leading rider this past season. “She's always a bit lazy, she always needs like a little bit of pushing. At the half mile last time I rode her in the La Brea ([G1] on Dec. 26), it was a seven-furlong race, and I was just pushing her to the wire. Today, I was more confident to say she would show up better than last time (when she finished third).

“John has given me opportunities since opening day. I'm really happy to win for him and I really appreciate it.”

Second in the Zia Park Oaks two starts back on Nov. 22, Kirstenbosch was off at 3-1 in a field of six older fillies and mares in the La Canada and paid $8.60 for the win.

“He just rode her beautifully, he tried hard until the end,” said Juan Leyva, assistant to Sadler, who watched the race today from London. “He is a really nice kid. I'd like to see him really get going because he is so polite and he's a good rider too. … Hopefully, this will open up some eyes and he can get a lot more opportunities.

“When she started running, I thought she was going to win by at least half a length, but then it looked like when she got to Ganadora, she kind of just hung with her and this filly just tends to do that. She does just enough to win, she's never been one to just pull away, so that's the only thing I was afraid of. … But she got the job done so that's the main thing. I'm really happy for Keith because they have been long-time clients of John and they are just good people.”

In notching her first stakes win, Kirstenbosch improved her overall race record to 3-3-1 from 10 starts. With the winner's share of $120,000, the 4-year-old Midnight Lute filly, increased her earnings to $334,480. Bred in Kentucky, she was produced by the Belong to Me mare Llandudno.

For her part, Bob Baffert-trained Ganadora did everything but win, as she was pressed early and late and just missed while finishing 2 ¾ lengths in front of Smoothlikebuttah.

Ridden by Tiago Pereira for Steve Knapp, Smoothlikebuttah rallied from last to pass a tiring Angel Nadeshiko by a half length.

Dating back to Santa Anita's opening day, Dec. 26, Kimura had been winless with his first 16 mounts through nine racing days.

Fractions on the race were :23.12, :47.18, 1:11.15, and 1:37.62.

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Gulfstream Park: Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Guaranteed At $400,000 Wednesday

The Rainbow 6 went unsolved at Gulfstream Park Sunday for the eighth racing day in a row following a single-ticket jackpot hit Jan. 5 for $533,783.63.

Wednesday's Rainbow 6 gross jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $400,000.

 The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Multiple tickets with all six winners Sunday returned $1,316.78.

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British Jockey Richard Kingscote Set for Gulfstream Debut Wednesday

British jockey Richard Kingscote is scheduled to make his Gulfstream Park debut Wednesday.

During Great Britain's off-season for flat racing, the 36-year-old Kingscote will ride during Gulfstream's Championship Meet. He has one mount, South Pointe Drive, in Race 5, a mile turf event for $35,000 claimers. The Michael Lerman-trained 8-year-old Quality Road gelding won for a $35,000 claiming tag at 40-1 three starts back.

Kingscote, who hasn't ridden in the U.S. since his fifth-place finish aboard Dr. Simpson in the 2018 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) at Santa Anita, won the 2022 Epsom Derby (G1) aboard Desert Crown.

Kingscote didn't grow up in a racing family but attended the British Racing School before beginning his career in 2004. He rode his first Group 1 winner, Brown Panther, in the 2014 Irish St. Leger at the Curragh.

In Wednesday's opener, a filly with a familiar name – Musical Romance – will make her Gulfstream debut. The Robert Falcone Jr.-trained daughter of Marcel, who was bred in Great Britain, shares a name with the Gulfstream-based 2011 Eclipse Award-winning female sprinter. The Florida-bred daughter of Concorde's Tune, who was trained by Bill Kaplan, captured the 2011 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1).

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