‘Weight Off The Shoulders’: Riley Mott Off The Duck At Oaklawn

Trainer Riley Mott recorded his first career Oaklawn victory in last Sunday's second race with House Wrecker ($5.40) under leading rider Cristian Torres. Mott, 31, went out on his own Nov. 1 after assisting his father, Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, for eight years.

House Wrecker, who captured the $6,250 claiming sprint for older fillies and mares by a half-length, marked Riley Mott's 15th starter of the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting. He had three seconds and three thirds before the breakthrough victory, his second overall.

“That felt like a weight off the shoulders, that's for sure,” Mott said Thursday morning.

Mott was already in Arkansas overseeing his Oaklawn stable when he recorded his first career victory Nov. 10 at Churchill Downs. Mott's first winner, Unifying, marked his third and final starter of the Churchill Downs Fall meeting. Mott's other 18 career starts have come at Oaklawn.

“The one in Churchill was, obviously, pretty meaningful, but it's a little different when you're not there in person,” Mott said.

House Wrecker was making her first start since Mott claimed the 5-year-old daughter of Congrats for $20,000 out of an eighth-place finish Dec. 18 at Oaklawn. A forward factor from the start last Sunday, House Wrecker led by two lengths in midstretch and held off a hard-charging Proud Victoria approaching the wire.

“We were in an aggressive spot,” Mott said. “It looked like the right spot because at the end of the day we won by a diminishing neck or head or whatever. But I felt that if we were going to win one that day that she was probably the one.”

Mott enters Friday with a 1-3-3 record from 18 starts and purse earnings of $118,168 at the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting that began Dec. 9.

Bill Mott recorded his first career Oaklawn victory Feb. 12, 1975, with Colorado Bay ($17) in an $11,000 claiming race for older horses. Mott was Oaklawn's leading trainer in 1986 with 35 victories.

The post ‘Weight Off The Shoulders’: Riley Mott Off The Duck At Oaklawn appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘We Can’t Do It Without The Team’: Saffie Joseph, Jr. Grateful For Opportunity With Three Pegasus Entrants

Evidence of Saffie Joseph Jr.'s rapid rise into the upper echelon of thoroughbred trainers in the U.S. will be on display Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where the Barbados native is scheduled to saddle three starters in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) presented by Baccarat.

“I'm just blessed to be in the position. Six years ago, if you told me I'd have one, I would have been very happy,” Joseph said. “I don't think we're bringing anyone that isn't a contender. We're bringing three legit horses. Things have gone well for them training up to the race. They're three live horses. I thank the owners for the opportunity.”

Joseph will be represented in the first multi-million-dollar stakes of the 2023 racing season by C2 Racing Stable LLC and La Milagrosa Stable LLC's White Abarrio, who captured last season's $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) at Gulfstream; Daniel Alonso's Skippylongstocking, the third-place finisher in the 2022 Belmont Stakes (G1) who is coming off a career-best effort in a Harlan's Holiday (G3) triumph at Gulfstream; and Fernando Vine Ode and Michael and Jules Iavarone's O'Connor, a Group 1 winner in Chile.

Six years ago, Joseph was coming off a career-best 19 wins with just over $400,000 in purses-won in 2016. In 2022, he saddled the winners of 174 races and $10.1 million in purses, a year after his stable banked $9 million and won 201 races.

“To be honest with you, I'm probably the smallest piece of the puzzle. The staff we've been able to acquire and the horses the owners have given us, if you took me out of the equation, I think the show would still run pretty good,” Joseph said. “I get a lot of the credit, but I'm probably the least important factor. We're strong in having a great team. There are not two ways about it, we can't do it without the team. Everybody has to do their part. I always tell the team, 'Not one person can make us, but one person can break us.' We need people with a positive attitude and try harder rather than doing their own thing.”

His growing success has been accompanied with mounting 'jealousy,' said Joseph, who credits his faith in allowing him to block out the outside noise and concentrate on building his stable.

“All glory to God, being my protector,” he said. “Seeing how things have happened in my career, and seeing the jealousy, he's the protector.”

Joseph deflects both credit and criticism, maintaining that Thoroughbred owners hold the key to any trainer's success.

“There's no superhero trainer out there. People may want to portray that's the reality,” said Joseph, who is currently at the top of the Gulfstream standings in his quest to defend his 2021-2022 Championship Meet title. “There's obviously good trainers out there, but when you get to the Top 10, Top 15 trainers, there's not much difference between them. What separates them is the horses.”

Joseph, who had regularly maintained a 20-percent strike rate while racing almost exclusively in South Florida since venturing from Barbados to the U. S. prior to the 2011 racing season, saw a significant boost in quality in his stable after saddling Math Wizard for a 31-1 upset victory in the 2019 Pennsylvania Derby (G1).

“It was our first Grade 1 winner and, obviously, being nationally televised on NBC, it was definitely a coming-out victory for us,” Joseph said. “When you win those kind of races, people have more confidence to give you higher quality horses. He took us to our first Breeders' Cup Classic. Being claiming for $25,000, he definitely started it all.”

Since Math Wizard's triumph, Joseph has saddled the winners of 22 graded stakes while balancing his career with his family, wife Morgan, daughter Sienna (8) and son Rocco (6). His wife's involvement in the business aspects of his stable has allowed him to concentrate on his racing operation.

“It's true, every successful man has a strong wife, woman, behind him,” Joseph said. “To see my wife raise our kids, being a mother has to be the hardest job in the world. All mothers out there, full respect to them. You can just see how hard it is. It's just pure love.

“She's a big part. Morgan deals with all the bills, billing for the owners,” he added. “If I had to do the billing and the bills, that's the part I dread. I get to concentrate on the horses, and she gets to concentrate on all the hard work.”

Joseph will be able to stay busy Saturday while waiting to saddle his three starters in the Pegasus World Cup, His stable will be represented in eight of the 13 races, including the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) presented by Qatar Racing in Race 12 (Master Piece) and the $500,000 TAA Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G3) presented by Pepsi in Race 11 (Artie's Princess).

The post ‘We Can’t Do It Without The Team’: Saffie Joseph, Jr. Grateful For Opportunity With Three Pegasus Entrants appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Southwest Stakes: Can Unbeaten Corona Bolt Carry Speed Around Two Turns?

The morning after winning the $250,000 Smarty Jones Stakes New Year's Day at Oaklawn, trainer Brad Cox was asked where he would be Jan. 28.

“I'll probably be in Miami,” Cox said. “Cyberknife's meant a lot to us. He's a good colt. I'm definitely sad to see him go because I feel like he's just hitting his best stride.”

Cyberknife, who won the $1.25 million Arkansas Derby (G1) last April at Oaklawn, will make his final career start in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes (G1) Saturday at Gulfstream Park in suburban Miami. The reference to Jan. 28 – almost four weeks earlier – was sparked by Cox revealing that he planned to run as many as three horses in Oaklawn's $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) for 3-year-olds.

Cox will be represented by three horses in Saturday's 1 1/16-mile Southwest, which is scheduled to be run approximately 20 minutes after the Pegasus. The trio includes unbeaten Corona Bolt (two for two), stakes winner Jace's Road, and Hit Show, a Dec. 17 entry-level allowance winner at Oaklawn.

The most intriguing of the trio is Corona Bolt, the country's top-rated Kentucky Derby prospect in Jeremy Plonk's weekly Triple Crown scouting report, “Countdown to the Crown.”

From the first crop of millionaire multiple Grade 1 winner Bolt d'Oro, Corona Bolt will be making his two-turn and 3-year-old debut in the Southwest, Oaklawn's second of four Kentucky Derby points races. Corona Bolt was a front-running 6 ¾-length winner of the $100,000 Sugar Bowl Stakes at six furlongs Dec. 26 at Fair Grounds. He came from just off the pace to win his Nov. 19 career debut at Churchill Downs going 6 ½ furlongs.

Florent Geroux will have his regular seat aboard Cyberknife in the Pegasus, but he also rode Corona Bolt in his first two starts. Corona Bolt, favored in both races, is 6-1 on the morning line for the Southwest.

“I think he's definitely a horse with talent,” Geroux said. “He's been winning going away both times, well in control in both races. Now, the question mark is if he's going to be able to carry his speed all the way around two turns. I don't see why not. It looks like the perfect race to get him started for the Kentucky Derby trail, for sure.”

A $225,000 purchase at the 2020 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale, Corona Bolt is campaigned by nationally prominent breeder/owner Barbara Banke (Stonestreet Stables). Corona Bolt is a half-brother to Proven Strategies, a stakes winner at a mile on turf at 3 in Canada for Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse.

“He's got speed,” Cox said of Corona Bolt. “He's a very fast horse.”

Corona Bolt will be ridden in the Southwest by Flavien Prat. Cox and Prat teamed to win the Smarty Jones with unbeaten Victory Formation (3 for 3), who was making his two turn, stakes and 3-year-old debut in the 1-mile race.

Cyberknife will be making his 13th and final career start in the Pegasus, a race Cox won in 2021 with Oaklawn allowance winner Knicks Go. Cyberknife, a millionaire multiple Grade 1 winner, will enter stud at Kentucky's Spendthrift Farm following the Pegasus. He's the 5-2 program favorite.

“Florent breezed him (Jan. 1) and was like, 'Man, it's a shame we're having to send him off to stud,' ” Cox said. “But look, it is what it is. We're going to do the best we can with him Pegasus Day and hopefully he goes out a winner.”

The Southwest will offer 40 points (20-8-6-4-2, respectively) to the top five finishers toward starting eligibility for the Kentucky Derby. Oaklawn's Kentucky Derby points series continues with the $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2) at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 25 and the $1.25 million Arkansas Derby (G1) at 1 1/8 miles April 1.

Cox also won the Smarty Jones in 2021 with Caddo River and the Southwest in 2021 with champion Essential Quality.

The post Southwest Stakes: Can Unbeaten Corona Bolt Carry Speed Around Two Turns? appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights