‘I Think She’s Really Putting It All Together’: Cairo Consort Goes For Third Straight Win In Herecomesthebride

Town and Country Racing and Repole Stable's multiple stakes winner Cairo Consort, who earned graded credentials in dramatic fashion last time out, returns Saturday seeking her third straight victory in the $200,000 Herecomesthebride (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

The one-mile Herecomesthebride for 3-year-old fillies on the grass is the fourth of nine stakes, eight graded, worth $1.85 million in purses on a blockbuster 14-race card anchored by the $400,000 Fountain of Youth (G2) for 3-year-olds on the road to the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1).

Post time is 11 a.m. EST. The Herecomesthebride is carded as Race 9 with a post time of 3:01 p.m. EST.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, who previously won the Herecomesthebride with Pico Teneriffe in 1999 and Con Lima in 2021, has rarely had a more astonishing victory than that of Cairo Consort in the 1 1/16-mile Sweetest Chant (G3) Feb. 4 at Gulfstream. The Cairo Price filly threw her head in the air as the gates opened, spotted her rivals several lengths and trailed the field before uncorking a steady run through the stretch to win by three-quarters of a length.

“I thought it was a remarkable effort last time, when she got away the way she did, for her to be able to overcome that and do what she did and get up and win,” Pletcher said. “I think we learned a little bit about her and how she wants to be ridden. Obviously, we'd like to break with the field but then let her settle and make a run like she did that day.”

The Sweetest Chant was just the second start for Cairo Consort – winner of the 6 ½-furlong Catch a Glimpse last summer at Woodbine – since being purchased for $875,000 in November following her third-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G1). She won the one-mile Ginger Brew Jan. 7 at Gulfstream first time for her new connections.

Irad Ortiz Jr. was aboard for each of the last two starts, and gets the return call from Post 7 in a field of 12. Pletcher credited Ortiz – both recently named Eclipse Award champions for 2022 – for his ride in the Sweetest Chant.

“It was just horrible timing. She turned her head right when they sprung the latch. But, Irad rode an intelligent race. A lot of times riders will try to make up those lost lengths right away, where he just took his time and patience paid off,” Pletcher said.

“I think she's really putting it all together. Irad had commented in the previous race that when she made the lead she kind of idled a bit so he thought there was more in the tank that day,” he added. “I'd say after the last race that he was right.”

Pletcher will also be represented by Three Diamonds Farm's Tituba, a daughter of multiple Grade 1 winner Good Magic that will be making her turf and stakes debut out of a front-running neck triumph in a 1 1/16-mile maiden special weight Jan. 29 at Gulfstream, her second career start.

“It's a big step for her,” Pletcher said. “Just sort of looking at our options we felt like she's got some turf in her pedigree. She'll need to make a move forward, but we felt like it was worth a try.”

Julien Leparoux has the call on Tituba from Post 11.

Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse won back-to-back editions of the Herecomesthebride with Catch a Glimpse in 2016 and Dream Dancing in 2017. He returns this year with D.J. Stable, Medallion Racing, Barry Fowler and Parkland Thoroughbreds' Papilio, bred in Ireland and entered to make her U.S. debut. She won two of five races at home last year and was sixth in a pair of group stakes, her most recent start coming in the seven-furlong Moyglare Stud (G1) Sept. 11.

Trainer Chad Brown is also a two-time winner of the Herecomesthebride, finishing first with Cambier Parc in 2019 and Dayatthespa in 2012, and entered the French-bred duo of Anna Karenine and Revalita to make their North American debut. Madaket Stables, Michael Dubb, Seventh Sense Stable and e5 Racing Thoroughbreds' Anna Karenine posted two wins from five starts in France, where Revalita went two-for-three.

C2 Racing Stable and Stefania Farms' Blind Spot returns to South Florida for her sophomore debut after running ninth in the 1 1/16-mile Jessamine (G2) last fall at Keeneland in her first try on turf. She won two of her first three starts, each at Gulfstream, including back-to-back victories capped by the Our Dear Peggy going a mile and 70 yards on the Tapeta.

“She ran OK in the race at Keeneland,” Championship Meet leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. said. “Her training has been good. She's not an overzealous work horse and we need to get her back started. So, this is a good spot to get her back started and see where we are.”

Regular rider Edgard Zayas will get a leg up again from Post 5.

“It's a good draw. Hopefully she can tuck over and save some ground and Edgard can ride his race from there,” Joseph said. “It's a very competitive race and she'll have to improve a lot to get a piece of it, but we want to give her a chance.”

Also entered are American Rockette, fourth in the Spinaway (G1) and Frizette (G1) last year and yet to race on turf; 2022 Untapable winner Danse Macabre, third last out in the Oct. 8 Matron (G3) at Aqueduct; Malleymoo and 2022 Tepin winner Sweetlou'sgotaces, respectively sixth and ninth in the Sweetest Chant; Moonage Daydream, last out winner of the Stewart Manor against New York-breds in November; and Riding Pretty, an optional claiming allowance winner sprinting 7 ½ furlongs Jan. 12 at Gulfstream.

The post ‘I Think She’s Really Putting It All Together’: Cairo Consort Goes For Third Straight Win In Herecomesthebride appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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At 1-Month Mark For Drug Control, HISA Braces Industry For Changes

Four weeks out from the anticipated effective date for the Anti-Doping and Medication Control Program (ADMC), the Authority overseeing the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is stepping up its awareness campaign so industry participants can be properly prepared for a sweeping change in regulatory protocols.

“We are officially on the one-month countdown to what we are confident will be the launch of our ADMC program on Mar. 27,” Lisa Lazarus, the chief executive officer for the HISA Authority, said during a Monday video press conference.

“Everyone is sort of on the same page of wanting uniformity and wanting consistency,” Lazarus continued. “And we're excited for the chance to actually show the industry what that looks like. I think once we get past Mar. 27, we'll be able to convert some doubters into believers.”

Part of what Lazarus and Ben Mosier, the executive director for the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU), are trying to get across to industry entities is that the looming ADMC implementation date is a very real deadline that they believe will not be affected by any current court action.

Mosier underscored that the ADMC launch is “what my team is focused on right now until somebody tells us otherwise.”

Added Lazarus: “One of the challenges for us, and why we are beating the drum as much as we possibly can, is to make sure stakeholders realize this is actually coming on Mar. 27. The moment the Federal Trade Commission [FTC] approves the [ADMC] regulations, they are effective.”

That date represents the last day of the FTC's  60-day review period for the ADMC rules, and Lazarus said “all indications” are that the FTC will greenlight them.

“The minute they approve them, state racing commissions are out of the drug-testing business, and we're the sole entity responsible in those states where HISA is operating,” Lazarus said.

Lazarus did note an exception: “The [federal] court in Louisiana has enjoined HISA from operating in Louisiana and West Virginia, so we will not be administering the ADMC program in those states, and yes, state regulations will continue to be in effect there.”

Lazarus also noted that the four federal lawsuits aiming to try to derail HISA were all initiated prior to the December 2022 rewrite of the HISA law that amended the act's operational language with the aim of quelling legal allegations of anti-constitutionality.

“I really don't think there is anything” in the courts that can stop the FTC's approval from happening, “which is why I'm so confident,” Lazarus said. “There is no pending legal action that is on the schedule to be resolved ahead of Mar. 27, [and] no party, no person, no entity has mounted any challenge to that [rewritten] law.”

Asked about immediate changes that horse owners and trainers might notice on Day 1 of implementation, Mosier noted several examples. One involved exactly who-HISA personnel or the existing track stewards-would be responsible for selecting horses for post-race testing.

“All testing is managed and directed by HIWU,” Mosier explained. “But what we're doing, and don't want to lose, is the ability for local personnel to inform testing selections. And what I mean by that is currently [in] the industry, the stewards [select horses for post-testing]. And we're not going to lose that ability. But we have to ensure that their selections are done in compliance with the rules, so we're working very closely with the stewards to make sure that they are educated and understand the rules and are essentially certified to now do this under our direction.”

Mosier continued: “We can also still hear information actively from veterinarians, or other personnel, on the ground [regarding factors] they see on the backstretch that typically flow up to the stewards on a daily basis.”

But, Mosier added, the flow of “nationwide intelligence” will also work in the other direction, meaning that local testing protocols might be triggered by information that flows downward from higher-up Authority entities, including from tips that come via HISA's whistleblower program.

Lazarus put it this way: “I think having a nationwide strategy that is intelligence-driven is going to be an opportunity for the industry to see how clean [or not]” the sport is.

Lazarus added that participants will experience “far higher levels of out-of-competition testing that the industry's ever seen, [instead of] almost-exclusive reliance on post-race testing to manage integrity.”

Mosier said when a horse is brought to a test barn, for example, the chain of custody will be paperless.

Mosier said horsemen can expect to have to electronically sign off on testing via an iPad (with instructions available in both English and Spanish), and that this system will assign unique markers that will accompany the specimen samples to the testing lab. Horsemen will then be electronically forwarded receipts from the test-barn process to streamline and provide proof of testing.

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2023 Kentucky Derby Hopeful Snapshots: Confidence Game

Welcome to 2023 Kentucky Derby Prospect Snapshots, where we’ll take a look each week at a recent winner on the Triple Crown trail, usually from the Road to the Kentucky Derby schedule from which the racehorses earn points toward qualifying. The 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve will be held May 6, 2023, at Churchill Downs.

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TERF Announces 2023 Grant Availability

The Thoroughbred Education and Research Foundation (TERF) has opened their 2023 grant awards cycle. With the mission of bettering the life of Thoroughbreds, TERF primarily aims to support students in pursuit of education in equine industry careers and to fund research efforts which better the life of the Thoroughbred racehorse. The missions and programs of the organizations selected to receive this year's grant awards will reflect TERF's strategic focus and vision to support and promote equine education and research. Information regarding the grant award program can be found here.

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