Unbeaten Hoosier Philly Set For 3-Year-Old Bow In Rachel Alexandra

After a perfect freshman campaign punctuated by her trainer Tom Amoss stating this is the most promising horse he has ever trained, Hoosier Philly's time to shine has come. She is set to make her much anticipated 3-year-old debut at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots in New Orleans, La., on Saturday in the $300,000 Rachel Alexandra Stakes (G2) presented by Fasig-Tipton. Gold Standard's Hoosier Philly, the ownership group's first and only racehorse to date, was entered to face a field of five rivals including Selective LLC's Chop Chop, the runner-up in both the locally run Silverbulletday and Keeneland's Alcibiades (G1).

The Rachel Alexandra was carded as the 12th of 13 races on the Louisiana Derby Preview Day card with a post time of 5:41 p.m. CT. Saturday's program also features the $400,000 Risen Star (G2). Both races for 3-year-olds are the first preps to offer 50-20-15-10-5 qualifying points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve and the Longines Kentucky Oaks. Along with the duo of 3-year-old stakes events, the program includes the $250,000 Mineshaft (G3) presented by Relyne GI by Hagyard, the $150,000 Fair Grounds Stakes (G3) presented by Horse Racing Nation, the $100,000 Albert M. Stall Memorial Stakes, and the $100,000 Colonel Power Stakes.

After winning all three of her juvenile starts, including the Golden Rod (G2) and the Rags to Riches – both by open lengths – Amoss sent Hoosier Philly for a freshening at Woodford Thoroughbreds in Florida, circling the Rachel Alexandra for Hoosier Philly's sophomore debut. When she returned to the Amoss barn, the daughter of Into Mischief (out of the Tapit mare Tapella) proceeded to fire three successive bullet workouts. Hoosier Philly has done everything a trainer could hope from a stand-out filly.

“We have a lot of expectations for her based on what she's done so far, so there's a lot of anticipation about how she's going to come back at three,” Amoss said. “Her morning preparation has been just as it was when she was two, so that gives us some feeling of confidence going into the race. But still, it is just her first race at three.”

Hoosier Philly's sensational 2-year-old season earned her a spot in Kentucky Derby Future Wager Pool 4 where she was bet to 11-1, the 3rd-favorite behind “All Other 3 Year Olds” and Forte. Trainer Tom Amoss has targeted the 1 1/16-mile Rachel Alexandra for his highly-lauded filly all along, but if she wins, then what? She'd need to earn points in a Kentucky Derby prep race like the Louisiana Derby (G1) to qualify for a spot in the starting gates on the first Saturday of May.

“That's just noise,” Amoss said. “We're not looking at anything other than this race right now. We're going to look out for her and do what's in her best interest in each race. Right now, it's the Rachel Alexandra, how she runs, and how she comes out of it.”

If Hoosier Philly continues her success and wins the Rachel Alexandra, it would be Amoss' third filly to win this race. First was the 74-1 longshot Venus Valentine winning in 2016. Next it was eventual 2019 Longines Kentucky Oaks winner Serengeti Empress.

“Serengeti Empress is the best horse I've ever trained and she won the Kentucky Oaks so there's a special place in not only my heart but the barn, my family, everybody's,” Amoss said. “We've got some things to still accomplish with a horse like this before we can start talking about how they compare.”

Currently ranked 15th with 10 points in the Kentucky Oaks points standings, Hoosier Philly will be guided from post No. 2 by jockey Edgar Morales.

The top rival to Hoosier Philly in the Rachel Alexandra is Selective LLC's Chop Chop. A nose shy of winning the Alcibiades (G1), the City of Light filly was sent off as the favorite in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1), but after a difficult trip around Keeneland's main track under Joel Rosario, she disappointed her backers and connections, finishing last of 13.

“The Breeders' Cup (Juvenile Fillies) is a throw out race with the trip she got,” Cox said. “Last time here (in the Silverbulletday), you could say maybe she needed the race a little bit, but from a fitness stand point I thought she looked really good. The works were great but she just really didn't go by (The Alys Look, winner of the Silverbulletday).”

Never leaving the barn and training forwardly ahead of her 3-year-old debut in January's Silverbulletday Stakes, Chop Chop ran well enough to put 13 lengths between her and five of her foes, but she was unable to bid past stablemate The Alys Look in the stretch, and ended up finishing second. Cox has decided to add blinkers for her run in the Rachel Alexandra.

“I'm hoping the blinkers can help her get over the top if she ends up eye-balling another horse late in the race,” Cox said. “Even when she won it was by a narrow margin, so I'm hopeful this is something that can get her over the top and get her in the winner's circle.”

With 12 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points to her name, Chop Chop will break from post No. 4 with Florent Geroux aboard the lone Cox filly in the field. Silverbulletday winner The Alys Look awaits her next run, possibly in the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2) on March 25.

Godolphin's Untapable winner Pretty Mischievous will make her 3-year-old debut in the Rachel Alexandra as well. Putting in three local works since last raced, the Into Mischief filly by the Tapit dam Pretty City has been training well, filling out, and maturing nicely for the Brendan Walsh barn.

“She's doing great,” Walsh said. “We just backed off her there after the Silverbulletday because she had run continuously since her first start and we figured we needed to give her some down time at some point. She's come back well, and her works have been good, so we're all set for Saturday.”

After winning her first two races at sprint distances, Pretty Mischievous finished third behind Rachel Alexandra foes Hoosier Philly and Knockyoursocksoff in November's Golden Rod. In her successful Untapable run, Pretty Mischievous was piloted by Brain Hernandez Jr. who placed her more forward than she had been previously under Tyler Gaffalione, who climbs back aboard on Saturday.

“She's a pretty easy filly to ride,” Walsh said. “If she ends up prominent she's prominent, if she ends behind, it won't take her out of her realm. We'll leave it to Tyler and wherever she finds herself.”

Pretty Mischievous will break from post No. 5, looking to add to her 13 Oaks qualifying points.

Another sophomore filly with potential star power that was entered in the Rachel Alexandra is Belladonna Racing, Edward Hudson, West Point Thoroughbreds, LBD Stable, Nice Guys Stables, Manganaro Bloodstock, Runnels Racing, Steve Hornstock, and Twin Brook Stables' Vahva. The daughter of Gun Runner broke her maiden by three lengths going seven furlongs on the “Stars of Tomorrow II” card at Churchill Downs in November. Trainer Cherie DeVaux stepped Vahva up against stakes company in the Untapable, but after stumbling out of the gate and spotting the field five lengths, she could only manage to run third, over eight lengths behind the winner and Rachel Alexandra foe, Pretty Mischievous.

With three Oaks points to her name, DeVaux sent Vahva to Palm Meadows in Florida, where she trained forwardly and began touting her fine health with her dappled-out bay coat. Vahva has continued to shine since returning to Fair Grounds, putting in one local drill on Sunday, Feb. 12, under exercise rider Irwin Rosendo. Luis Saez will retain the mount, looking for a clean break from the rail.

Here's the complete field for the Rachel Alexandra from the rail out (with jockey, trainer, and morning line odds): 1. Vahva (Luis Saez, Cherie DeVaux, 8-1); 2. Hoosier Philly (Edgar Morales, Tom Amoss, 6-5); 3. Knockyoursocksoff (Flavien Prat, Chris Block, 12-1); 4. Chop Chop (Florent Geroux, Brad Cox, 8-5); 5. Pretty Mischievous (Tyler Gaffalione, Brendan Walsh, 9-2); 6. Miracle (John Velazquez, Todd Pletcher, 12-1).

Fasig-Tipton has been named the title sponsor of Fair Grounds' 2023 series for 3-year-old fillies. The Fasig-Tipton Tremé Triple consists of the Silverbulletday Stakes (ran on Jan. 21), the Rachel Alexandra(G2), and the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2) on March 25. The name of the race series is a tribute to the historic Tremé neighborhood of New Orleans that borders Fair Grounds Race Course.

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‘She Makes My Heart Smile’: After Tough Luck, Former Racehorse Finds Her Way Home

Sometimes, you find the horse. And sometimes, the horse finds you.

Lili Kobielski and Amanda Halley both know this truism of horse ownership all too well. Halley is reminded of it when she comes to work each day and a dark bay mare nickers at her from her stall at Benchmark Sport Horses in Delaware. Kobielski remembers when she sees a certain blood bay gelding in her field at The New Hill Farm in New York.

Kobielski hadn't exactly been looking for a horse when she was scrolling through her Facebook feed four or five years ago, but when a sale ad for a mare named Blushing Royale popped up, she paused. The daughter of Orientate had a fairly modest resume as a producer but did have a 4-year-old named Mocito Rojo who had just picked up a win in a black-type stakes at Evangeline Downs.

“I thought, why not?” remembered Kobielski. “I called the people who had her. She'd been pasture bred and had been left to foal out on her own. He didn't want to deal with her anymore because he wanted to spend more time coon hunting.”

Blushing Royale wasn't pregnant, so Kobielski shipped her from her point of origin in Arkansas to Kentucky and bred her to Classic Empire, then brought her on home to New York. In the meantime, Mocito Rojo found his stride for trainer Shane Wilson and owner Wayne Davis, racking up wins in the Delta Mile Stakes, Owner Appreciation Cup and scored placings in other black type races in Louisiana and Oklahoma. In spring 2019, Wilson stepped him up and he won the Grade 3 Steve Sexton Mile. As Kobielski was counting down the months to arrival of a Classic Empire baby from his mother, she cheered on Mocito Rojo as he entered the Lukas Classic – then a Grade 3 — and won, defeating Grade 1-placed Quip and Mexican fan favorite Kukulkan.

When it came time for Blushing Royale to foal though, it seemed like the fairy tale was over.

“Unfortunately, when she foaled, the baby was hip locked quite terribly,” recalled Kobielski. “We're lucky to have farmer neighbors. It was literally the farmer neighbors, my dad and my husband (who are not horse people), the night watch, me, my manager's daughter and her boyfriend … I think we had eight people trying to get this baby out. We did. It was traumatic and awful and the baby was born dead.

“My husband decided he was going to will him to live. He sat on him and rubbed him and gave him oxygen and rubbed his ribs. He brought him back to life. The foal sat up and started breathing.”

Although both mother and baby seemed outwardly fine, Kobielski sent them to Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital in nearby Saratoga Springs for monitoring.

“They were great for two days,” she said. “And then the mare dropped dead. She'd hemorrhaged, which was horrible, because we thought we were good. There was nothing they could have done; it happened in like 15 minutes.”

Now, Kobielski was left with a foal and no mare. Luckily, the Rood and Riddle staff were aware of a mare at Hidden Lake Farm who had recently lost her foal. The mare was named Mme Belle Brezing, presumably after a nationally-famous Kentucky madam of the same name. The mare and foal were introduced, and the bond was instant.

Mme Belle Brezing with Treetop. Photo courtesy Lili Kobielski

“She loved the baby,” recalled Kobielski. “We literally did nothing. She ran into the stall like, Oh thank god you found my kid.”

Belle raised the little colt as if he were her own. Kobielski's son named the colt Treetop “so he could be high in the sky close to his mom.” When the time came, Treetop was weaned and Belle went back home. SJB Stables bought Treetop as a yearling for $45,000 out of the 2021 Fasig-Tipton October sale, unaware they'd just purchased the equine Lazarus.

Meanwhile, Kobielski found herself scrolling social media late one night again and came across a photo of another mare. She did a double take. This one was in a bail pen in Texas, and was being advertised as a last-chance sale before her owner claimed she would be shipped to Mexico for slaughter.

(Read more about “bail pens” and their economic drivers in this 2021 piece.)

As Kobielski looked closer at her identification, she saw a name she recognized.

“It was a daughter of Mme Belle Brezing,” she said. “Of course.”

Lucky Belle on her arrival to Benchmark from a bail pen. Photo courtesy Lili Kobielski

Although she'd never owned Mme Belle Brezing and had no contact with this mare, whose name was Lucky Belle, Kobielski felt compelled to help her. Lucky Belle had left the track after being pulled up and vanned off at Fonner Park in her last start in March 2020, and three months later looked anything but lucky.

“As far as they could tell, she was sound,” said Kobielski. “She had literally lost all of her hair. I don't know if it was a fungus or what, but she was a naked mole rat. She was 300 pounds underweight. It was a train wreck.”

Kobielski paid the fee, had the mare quarantined, and sent her to longtime friend Jessica Redman, who runs Benchmark Sport Horses, a well-known training and sales barn for off-track Thoroughbreds. When Lucky Belle arrived in a van to the operation's Delaware base in July 2020, Benchmark farm manager Amanda Halley took one look in the stall and texted Redman.

“I just about cried,” Halley said. “I remember texting Jessica and saying 'What did you just buy? This is the ugliest horse I've ever seen in this barn.'

“She was just so skinny. Her skin was so dry. Her feet were super, super tiny. She was the grumpiest thing in the stall. I thought, Oh, this poor horse.”

Halley hadn't exactly been looking for a horse, either. After a lifetime doing everything from pole bending to hunters to eventing to jumpers, Halley was feeling burned out on the horse show world – and maybe on horses in general. The job with Redman had been a way for her to remain in a barn while deciding whether she had lost her passion for horses. When Lucky Belle showed up, Halley had just lost her own horse a few weeks earlier and while she'd had a few favorites among the sale horse roster, she didn't consider herself “in the market” for another.

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Halley and Redman made a plan on how they would rehabilitate the angry, thin mare. She'd require additional feed and skin treatments. And then, a few days after her arrival, Redman texted Halley a picture of a swelling she discovered inside the mare's front legs. The swelling, which was accompanied by a fever, abscessed and ruptured, leaving a six-to-eight-inch wound under her chest. They could only guess she'd been injured at some point in the difficult-to-see area, possibly in the bail pen, and it had gotten infected. Now, she'd need numerous injectable medications and routine cleaning and flushing of her wounds.

“I ended up spending a lot of time with her,” said Halley. “I won't ever forget, Jessica had to do her medications on a weekend and said 'It took three of us, and we can't get this horse medicated.' I said I'd be out in about an hour, and I walked into her stall and gave it to her.

“I think she knew I was trying to help her, and she just wasn't going to trust anybody else.”

Under their management, Lucky Belle began to thrive. Halley started with ground work as they waited for the mare to add weight and heal. Two months into her time at Benchmark, Halley swung aboard for her first ride.

“I realized this horse was super athletic,” she said. “She wasn't fit, but she was really trying.

Lucky Belle on one of her first rides in Aug. 2020 (top) and in February 2022 (bottom). Photos courtesy Amanda Halley

“She made my heart smile. It made me cry, because I brought this horse along. I made this connection with her.”

As planned, Lucky Belle went up for sale through Benchmark once she was healthy and fit.

“We had several people come to look at her,” remembered Halley. “They wanted mares, they wanted fancy, they wanted this. Then they would see her and say, 'Oh she's not that fancy. We don't like her.' I kind of took offense to it, even though the first rule of horse sales is you can't take anything personally. So I did what Jessica calls 'spite-buying.' I walked in the barn one day and said, “Here's half of her price. I'll have the rest in a couple of months.'”

Halley continued Lucky Belle's training, adding fitness and experience. They have no ambitions to enter the show world, but Halley said the brave mare has given her the confidence she'd been lacking over bigger fences.

Lucky Belle after her new lease on life

“She can go from jumping three-six fences to giving my 3-year-old son a ride around the yard,” said Halley. “This horse has so much heart. I watched her race videos and you could see there was passion in what she wanted to do. She tried her heart out for somebody. I thought, that's what I want. Even if you're not the fanciest, not the most talented, I want you to try for me. I want a horse that's going to give everything they have. When I rode her [the first time], with everything she'd gone through … she still trusted me to get on her and do everything I asked her to do.”

Halley said the mare is still a one-person horse. She's no longer as defensive with new people, and now reserves pinned ears and grumpy faces for everyone but Halley – except now it's all bark and no bite. The one exception is Halley's son, who can summon her with a whistle and rely on her to stand like a statue as he sorts out her halter and lead rope.

“I say all the time, she lets me ride her, but that is his horse,” Halley said.

Kobielski was thrilled to hear that Lucky Belle had found her person without even having to leave Benchmark. Halley is thrilled, in hindsight, that none of the buyers who came to see her saw what Halley saw in the mare.

“She went from this skinny, what I thought would be a hard-keeper Thoroughbred to going on alfalfa and a balancer and she looks like a Warmblood,” said Halley. “In looking at her now, she was in the condition she was in because people were not feeding her. People were writing her off because of how she looked, but she didn't ask to be in the condition she was in.”

Before long, Redman and Halley will assist in finding a new home for another foal loved by Mme Belle Brezing. After entering training and missing some time due to tendon strains, Kobielski was pleased to hear from Treetop's connections that they were ready to retire him. He never made it to the track, but after his most recent setback, his owners didn't want to push him. She brought him back to his home in New York, where he is recuperating before he goes to Benchmark in search of his next chapter.

Treetop, all grown up. Photo courtesy of Lili Kobielski

It's almost certain Treetop will meet Lucky Belle whenever he heads to Delaware. Now, when people come horse shopping at Benchmark, they ask about Lucky Belle and Halley is proud to tell them she's not for sale.

“When I see her head over the door, she nickers, she looks happy to see me,” Halley said. “She just makes my heart smile, and that's all I need. I say all the time that even if something happened and I couldn't ride her anymore, she'd never go anywhere. She'll be with me forever.”

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‘Proud Of The Way He Battled’: O’Dwyer Hopes Sibelius’ Stakes-Record Victory Leads To Dubai Invitation

On the undercard of Saturday's Festival Preview Day at Tampa Bay Downs, 5-year-old gelding Sibelius won the 39th edition of the $100,000 Pelican Stakes in stakes-record time of 1:08.75 (.08 seconds off the track record) for the six-furlong distance. After the victory, winning trainer Jeremiah O'Dwyer danced an impromptu waltz with his 2-year-old daughter Adelaide in the Oldsmar, Fla. winner's circle.

Sibelius's performance under jockey Junior Alvarado was worthy of celebrating. They withstood a race-long duel with 4-year-old Minnesota-bred Doctor Oscar, who finished a length-and-a-quarter back, with Gatsby another length-and-a-quarter back in third.

Sibelius, who is owned by Jun H. Park and Delia Nash, paid $5.20 as the betting favorite in the 10-horse field. He is 6-for-18 lifetime, including a victory on Dec. 31 at Gulfstream in his previous start in the Grade 3 Mr. Prospector Stakes, and the winner's share of $45,000 raised his earnings to $488,889.

“I was hoping for an easier time out there today,” O'Dwyer said. “We knew that (Doctor Oscar) has speed, and he kind of took it to us. I leave it up to Junior when he rides this horse. You don't tell these good riders what to do – they play the break and see how it goes.

“He was on the lead the whole way, he got pressured the whole way and he was strong at the finish. I'm just very proud of the way he battled and held on to the wire.”

O'Dwyer said he is hopeful of getting an invitation for Sibelius to compete in the Dubai Golden Shaheen on March 25 in the United Arab Emirates.

Alvarado said he was impressed by how Sibelius fought throughout, despite being pressure through taxing fractions of 21.46 seconds for the first quarter-mile and 43.88 for the half.

“Sometimes he breaks very sharp and sometimes he's just OK out of the gate, but today he broke sharp and I wasn't going to take anything away from him,” Alvarado said. “It wasn't a real struggle for him. He was a fighter for me.”

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