Champion Do Deuce Punches Ticket to Dubai

Despite running a forgettable 19th when last seen in the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe last October, last season's G1 Japanese Derby scorer Do Deuce (Jpn) (Heart's Cry {Jpn}) launched the 2023 season the right way, coming from far off the pace to take Sunday's G2 Kyoto Kinen at Hanshin. Named Japan's 2021 juvenile champion following an undefeated season that included a victory in Hanshin's G1 Futurity S., the 4-year-old is expected to make his next start in the G1 Dubai Turf at Meydan Mar. 25.

Unhurried near the back early, the bay gradually closed the gap from his outside perch through the opening mile, began to narrow the gap on front-running Pradaria (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) rounding the final turn and blew by that rival midstretch en route to a geared-down 3 1/2-length victory over Mantenro Leo (Jpn) (Heart's Cry {Jpn}). Japanese Horse of the Year Efforia (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) was pulled up and was later determined to have suffered from atrial fibrillation.

Pedigree Notes:
A winner of six starts, including the GII Gallant Bloom H. and GIII Sugar Swirl S. and runner up in the GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint, Dust and Diamonds realized $1 million when offered at the 2016 Keeneland November sale after producing black-type performer Much Better (Pioneerof the Nile) earlier that season. In Japan, she dropped full-brother named Fulleren (Jpn), an earner of $699,654, before producing a 2018 Deep Impact colt of modest success. A May foal in 2019, Do Deuce is the sole black-type winner for his dam.

Sunday, Hanshin, Japan
KYOTO KINEN-G2, ¥119,800,000, Hanshin, 2-12, 4yo/up, 2200mT, 2:10.90, fm.
1–DO DEUCE (JPN), 128, c, 4, by Heart's Cry (Jpn)
1st Dam: Dust and Diamonds (MGSW & GISP, $496,260), by Vindication
2nd Dam: Majestically, by Gone West
3rd Dam: Darling Dame, by Lyphard
O-Kieffers Inc.; B-Northern Farm; T-Yasuo Tomomichi;
J-Yutaka Take; ¥62,910,00. Lifetime Record: Ch. 2yo Colt-Jpn,
MG1SW-Jpn, 9-5-1-1. *1/2 to Much Better (Pioneerof the
Nile), MGSP, $313,571. Werk Nick Rating: C. Click for the
   eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Matenro Leo (Jpn), 123, c, 4, by Heart's Cry (Jpn)–Saratoga
Venus (Jpn), by Brian's Time. O-Chiyono Terada; B-Inoke Farm;
¥25,260,000.
3–Pradaria (Jpn), 126, c, 4, Deep Impact (Jpn)-Chasse' Roll (Jpn),
by Kurofune. O-Nagoya Yuho Inc.; B-Orient Farm; ¥16,130,000.
Margins: 3 1/2, NK, 1 1/2; Odds: 1.50, 14.20, 7.80.
Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. Click for the JRA chart and video.

 

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‘I’d Rather Just Keep Taking It Step By Step’: Drew’s Gold Could Aim For Bay Shore Instead KY Derby Points In Gotham

Drew's Gold, trained and co-owned by James Chapman with Stuart Tsujimoto, remained undefeated through three career starts with a 4 1/4-length score in Saturday's $100,000 Jimmy Winkfield, a six-furlong sprint for sophomores, at Aqueduct.

The Kentucky-bred Violence colt overcame slow starts in his first two outings, but was away alertly under Jose Gomez and disputed the pace on Saturday, leading through splits of :23.47 and :47.81 over the fast main track.

The $25,000 Keeneland September yearling sale purchase opened up by 2 1/2-lengths at the stretch call and stopped the clock in a final time of 1:13.09. The emphatic score matched a career-best 83 Beyer Speed Figure.

Chapman said a trip to the starting gate the day before the race was beneficial for the improving dark bay.

“Instead of just taking off, he'd watch the doors and they'd spook him,” explained Chapman. “But the gate crew is so good in New York, they let us take him to the gate the day before and instead of backing him out, we opened up the doors by hand and let him walk out the front to take a breath and chill out. It really helped him relax. With racing, he's only going to get better.”

Drew's Gold also benefitted from reuniting with Gomez, who had worked the horse multiple times at Belmont Park in advance of his prior scores. Drew's Gold ultimately shipped to Churchill Downs in May to win his debut sprinting five furlongs after breaking a step slow under Ricardo Santana, Jr.; and returned to action on January 28 at Laurel Park to defeat winners going 5 1/2-furlongs despite leaping in the air at the start with Jeiron Barbosa up.

“Jose's known the horse from way back,” Chapman said. “He breezed the horse the work before he won at Churchill when he was supposed to run at Belmont. We had that horse schooled and ready to go in behind horses. And then he worked him here once before he went to Laurel when the race didn't go here.

Drew's Gold could step up to graded company next out with an eye towards the seven-furlong $200,000 Bay Shore (G3) on April 8, which Chapman said is preferable to trying the one-turn mile $300,000 Gotham (G3) on March 4, which awards 50-20-15-10-5 Kentucky Derby qualifying points.

“I'd rather just keep taking it step by step with him and run him in the seven-eighths race,” Chapman said. “He's doing super. He came out of the race like he didn't even run.”

Chapman didn't rule out stretching Drew's Gold out in distance down the road.

“Who knows until you run around two turns, but it doesn't seem like the distance has affected him. The further that he goes, he just wins by more,” Chapman said.

Chapman and Tsujimoto attempted to complete a Saturday stakes sweep at the Big A in the Withers (G3), but their 80-1 longshot Prove Right settled for a distant fifth after attending the early pace with Gomez aboard.

The Justify bay, a $15,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, was a strong third in the one-turn mile Nashua (G3) here in November ahead of an off-the-board effort in the nine-furlong Remsen on December 3 which was contested over a sloppy and sealed Aqueduct main track.

He would capture an optional-claiming tilt at 5 1/2-furlongs just eight days later at Laurel Park before finishing last-of-5 in the Turfway Prevue sprinting 6 1/2-furlongs on synthetic on January 7.

Prove Right was initially under consideration for the Jimmy Winkfield but when Drew's Gold exited his Laurel win in good order and was able to wheel back on two week's rest, Chapman decided to give Prove Right one more shot at nine furlongs.

“I wanted to make sure I wasn't missing something and that maybe the horse didn't like the mud,” said Chapman. “Obviously, he's better sprinting than routing, but I wanted to take a chance with a short field. I thought he ran OK. He had a little mucus and snot coming out of the race. He just missed finishing fourth and picking up $15,000.”

Chapman credited Tsujimoto for his patience in campaigning young horses.

“We own the horses together and he's the best guy you could have as a partner,” Chapman said. “It's the reason we're able to do so well with the horses we buy because there's no heat with him on anything. If I tell him we need to give a horse 30 days, he's fine.”

Chapman said Prove Right will turn back in distance next out and could come under consideration for the Grade 3 Gotham if the field comes up light, but will keep all his options open.

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The Week in Review: At Tampa Bay Downs, An Unlikely Win for the ‘Little Guy’

As the field turned for home in Saturday's Suncoast S. at Tampa Bay Downs, Dreaming of Snow (Jess's Dream), trained by Gerald Bennett, had the lead, but it sure looked like she'd never hold on. It wasn't just that she was 38-1 and had been pressed most of the way, it was who was chasing her, monsters from the stables of super trainers Mark Casse and Todd Pletcher in Wonder Wheel (Into Mischief) and Julia Shining (Curlin). Could a horse from the barn of a 78-year-old claiming trainer who had won all of two graded stakes in his career and none in 33 years, possibly pull this off?

She could and she did.

In what was arguably the biggest upset of the year in a major race, Dreaming of Snow, who was a tiring fourth in the seven-furlong Gasparilla S. in her previous start, defeated champion Eclipse Award winner Wonder Wheel by a neck in the Suncoast. It was another 1 1/4 lengths back to Julia Shining in third. In what has become more and more rare in this sport, a David beat not one, but two Goliaths.

“To win a race like this, that's what you dream of,” Bennett said.

Though Bennett, entering Sunday, had 4,090 winners, 14th best among all North American trainers, he has always operated well outside the spotlight. Born in Nova Scotia, he began training in his native Canada in 1976 and in 2021 became the winningest Canadian-born trainer of all time. He moved on to the now-defunct Michigan circuit, where he became a force at places like Detroit Race Course and Hazel Park and, later on, Great Lakes Downs. In the late eighties and in 1990, Bennett got a brief taste of what it was like to win at the highest level when he campaigned Beau Genius (Bold Ruckus), whose 13 career stakes wins included victories in the GI Philip H. Iselin H. and the GII Michigan Mile and One-Eighth H. He has not won a graded stakes since Beau Genius's win in the 1990 Iselin at Monmouth Park.

At an age when a lot of trainers would be slowing down, Bennett has been enjoying some of his best years. He is leading the current standings at Tampa Bay Downs, where he will be seeking his eighth straight training title. He has won 830 career races at Tampa, where, when it comes to the higher-class races, it's not unusual to see shippers from the top stables based at Gulfstream.

“Those guys ship in here all the time,” Bennett said. “You have to have a nice horse who can compete with them. It was a great thrill to do that, to beat those guys. The last time it happened for me was quite a few years ago, in 2002, in the Super S. Mark Casse had a horse named Exciting Story, who had just won the Met Mile. We beat him and set a track record. That was another great thrill.”

On paper, Dreaming of Snow didn't appear to have much of a chance. She had never run beyond seven furlongs or around two turns and she was coming off what looked like a lackluster effort in the Gasparilla. In Wonder Wheel and Julie Shining, she would be facing two of the best 3-year-old fillies in training. But Bennett was convinced she could win this race.

“When we ran her in seven-eighths race [the Gasparilla], she sat back and we tried to make a run with her,” he said. “The track here, they had a lot of rain and they hadn't bladed it for a while. The track got biased favoring the outside. The inside was extremely deep for a while and that's where she was in that race. Anybody who was down on the inside couldn't finish. She ran an even race last time. But we have been high on this filly from the start and always thought she'd be a nice horse. I thought she had a shot [in the Suncoast].”

Dreaming of Snow was purchased for $60,000 at the 2022 OBS March sale. It was more than Bennett usually pays.

“I go to the sale and buy these horses for $17,500, for $25,000,” he said. “We paid $60,000 for this one. I like going to the June sale in Ocala. It seems like you get more value there and don't have to overpay for them. If they run well and get a big number, usually I'll sell them.”

Some, no doubt, will consider the Suncoast result to be a fluke. Bennett doesn't see it that way. He believes that Dreaming of Snow is a legitimate contender for the GI Kentucky Oaks and is looking to run her next in the GIII Fantasy S. at Oaklawn Apr. 1.

“When she turned for home, she drew off a bit,” he said. “She's a fighter and she wouldn't let them pass her. Wonder Wheel was the class of the race and had all the hype. [Casse] had been preparing for this race for a while. He said she got tired, but the jockey was whipping on her well before the wire. You can't take anything away from our horse. She ran a monster race and she wasn't tired. In the winner's circle, she wouldn't have blown out a match.”

Asmussen Vs. Suarez

Steve Asmussen was bearing down on the 10,000-win milestone last week. Entering Sunday's races, he had 9,996 career wins, a remarkable total and one that will surely keep growing for many years to come as Asmussen is just 57. But he still has a way to go before he can be crowned as the winningest trainer in the history of the sport.

That title still belongs to Peruvian trainer Juan Suarez. As of Saturday, Suarez had 10,328 wins. However, Asmussen is gaining on him. Since Aug. 8, 2021, when Asmussen moved past Dale Baird to become the winningest trainer in the history of North American racing, Asmussen has had 440 winners while Suarez has had 332. While Asmussen is always active at several tracks in the U.S., Suarez's opportunities are limited since there is only one track in Peru, Hipodromo de Monterrico.

A Slow Race Or Not, Hit Show Impressed

The loaded Brad Cox-barn won another stakes race with a 3-year-old colt when Hit Show (Candy Rude {Arg}) captured Saturday's GIII Withers S. at Aqueduct. But what should we make of the time? He covered the mile-and-an-eighth in 1:54.71 and the final three furlongs were run in a leisurely :41.36.

That's not a reflection on Hit Show, but how slow the Aqueduct main track has been over the last few weeks. On the same card as the Withers, 3-year-old sprinters needed 1:13.09 to complete the Jimmy Winkfield S. On the day before the Withers, a mile-and-an-eighth race went in 1:59.04. Granted it was an $8,000 claiming race, but that very well could be the slowest time for the distance ever at a NYRA track.

Hit Show was given a 91 Beyer figure for his effort.

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Promising 3YOs Slip Mahoney, Everso Mischievous New Blips On Cox’s Radar For Classics

Among trainer Brad Cox's 38 Triple Crown nominees are Gold Square's Slip Mahoney and Qatar Racing's Everso Mischievous, who each look to have promising futures.

Slip Mahoney, a gray Arrogate colt, broke his maiden on January 21 going a one-turn mile at the Big A with Dylan Davis in the irons while making his third career start. He kept good company in his first two outings, finishing fourth in his November debut at Aqueduct, a race won by the Todd Pletcher-trained Litigate, who captured Saturday's Sam F. Davis (G3) at Tampa Bay Downs.

Slip Mahoney followed that effort in December at Aqueduct with a runner-up effort to the Pletcher-trained Tapit Trice, who exited that race to romp by eight lengths in an allowance/optional claimer Feb. 4 at Gulfstream Park that garnered a 92 Beyer.

Cox said Slip Mahoney is on target for the one-turn mile $300,000 Gotham (G3) on March 4 at Aqueduct, a Kentucky Derby (G1) qualifying race that awards 50-20-15-10-5 points to the top-five finishers.

“He ran against some really good horses in his last two races,” Cox said. “He held his own and he's a nice colt. He's marching towards the Gotham. That's where he'll start next, and we're excited about him.

“He showed some heart and determination in his last two and I think he's one that will get better with doing it in the afternoon. He's been a little tough to get to the races but once he got there, he's shown up and run every time.”

Slip Mahoney breezed a half-mile in :49.77 over the Belmont training track on Saturday.

“He came back great. He looked good yesterday,” said Cox's Belmont-based assistant Dustin Dugas. “[In addition to Cox-trained Withers (G3) winner Hit Show] he's another one who ate up everything last night and was ready to go this morning. Dylan was on him yesterday and he was happy with it, too.”

Slip Mahoney is out of the Grade 1-winning A.P. Indy mare Got Lucky. His third dam, Get Lucky, produced Grade 1 winner Girolamo and graded stakes winners Daydreaming and Accelerator as well as Supercharger, who is the dam of 2010 Kentucky Derby winner Super Saver. All are direct descendants of influential matriarch La Troienne.

Lightning almost struck twice for Cox on Saturday at Aquedcut when Qatar Racing's Everso Mischievous was a close second on debut in a six-furlong maiden event for sophomores.

Sent to post as the favorite, the Into Mischief colt dueled in the stretch to the inside of longshot Toxic Gray and came up a head shy of victory. He earned a 90 Beyer for the solid runner-up effort.

Dugas indicated that Everso Mischievous, who also is Triple Crown-nominated, will likely get better with more distance.

“He's a nice horse. I think he's going to be one that goes a little further. Looking back, he needed that race yesterday,” Dugas said. “The horse who won ran on and got the jump on us. Being a first-time starter, our horse didn't have the kick to jump right back into the bridle, but he came back big. He thinks he won, so we'll take it.”

Bred in Kentucky by Clearsky Farms, Everso Dangerous is out of the graded stakes-winning Medaglia d'Oro mare Ever So Clever.

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