Sunday Insights: No Shade on Hollywoodland at Gulfstream

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7th-GP, $84K, Msw, 3yo, f, 6f, 3:07 p.m.
Debut filly HOLLYWOODLAND (Quality Road) was a $500,000 KEESEP purchase as a yearling by owner Joseph Allen, who bred and campaigns recent GIII La Prevoyante S. winner Personal Best (Tapit). This filly's dam, Union City, is a sister to MGSW Dixie City, whose own offspring Reef Point (Giant's Causeway) produced MGSW Bubble Rock (More Than Ready). Not to be outdone, Union City is responsible for GII Peter Pan S. hero Unified (Candy Ride {Arg}). Breaking from the three hole on Sunday, Hollywoodland will get the services of Tyler Gaffalione. TJCIS PPS

9th-GP, $84K, Msw, 3yo, f, 1m, 4:06 p.m.
SHADE (Street Sense) was a $500,000 KEESEP purchase by now-retired agent Frank Brothers for Star Ladies Racing, LNJ Foxwoods and Gainesway Stable. Jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. will be in the irons aboard the Todd Pletcher trainee, who breaks from the outside. Second dam Carolina Sunrise (Awesome Again) has a pair of stakes winners to her credit, including Reveron (Songandaprayer) and Steal Sunshine (Constitution). Shade's dam Simply Sunny produced G3 UAE Two Thousand Guineas winner Fore Left (Twirling Candy), and is responsible for an unnamed colt by Flatter who fetched $360,000 at KEESEP in 2021. TJCIS PPS

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‘He’s A Really Professional Horse’: Unbeaten Drew’s Gold Streaks To Front-Running Jimmy Winkfield Score

Keeping an unbeaten record intact, Drew's Gold utilized a front-running trip to earn his first stakes victory in Saturday's $100,000 Jimmy Winkfield for 3-year-olds going six furlongs at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by James Chapman who co-owns the Violence colt in partnership with Stuart Tsujimoto, Drew's Gold is  unscathed in three lifetime starts, arriving off a sharp 3 3/4-length conquest against winners on January 28 at Laurel Park.

Drew's Gold broke his maiden in May going five furlongs at Churchill Downs, defeating next out winners Undalay and Top of My Game. He was away slowly in both previous outings but broke alertly Saturday and built on his advantage through the stretch drive to win by 4 1/4 lengths under Jose Gomez.

Breaking from post 4, Drew's Gold surged to the lead in tandem with Kool Kathmandu, who overcame a stumbled start, to mark the opening quarter mile in :23.47 over the fast main track. Gomez nudged his charge around the far turn as Kool Kathmandu dropped out of contention with 5-2 second choice Clubhouse looming from third to the outside as the half-mile elapsed in :47.81.

At the top of the stretch, Drew's Gold began to draw away as Clubhouse tried to launch a rally from the outside with Joey Freshwater looming in between horses. But neither horse was able to catch the winner, who completed the journey in a final time of 1:13.09.

Clubhouse completed the exacta by three-quarters of a length over Joey Freshwater with Daydreaming Boy and Kool Kathmandu rounding out the order of finish.

Gomez said he rode Drew's Gold with confidence.

“He's won two back-to-back, both breaking not the best. I just wanted to make sure he was standing right and let him do whatever he wanted to do,” Gomez said. “He came out strong today and I just tried to nurse him along.

“I knew I was banging heads, but I didn't want to take too much out of him,” he added. “I just let him do his own thing.”

Chapman credited Gomez for an effective ride.

“I loved seeing that [the good break] because what he was doing is he was getting himself left and then he was taking off up the backside. Whenever you've got to grab a horse like that, it takes a lot out of them,” Chapman said. “He was able to ride him with one rhythm today, which I think helped him. He likes to sit with horses and watch horses, so when he broke good, I figured we had a really good chance.”

In addition to being undefeated, Drew's Gold's three victories have each come at different racetracks.

“He's a really professional horse, it's just little things,” Chapman said. “We had a setback after the first race and those little things that babies usually get through, it takes him a little bit longer. He could be spooking at a sign on the way to the paddock. It's nothing major, and he's an easy horse to get along with.”

Chapman said Drew's Gold will likely target the seven-furlong  $200,000 Bay Shore (G3) on April 8 at the Big A.

Returning $5.50 for a $2 win wager as the 8-5 post time favorite, Drew's Gold banked $55,000 in victory which brought his earnings past the six-figure mark to $140,120.

Bred in Kentucky by Woodford Thoroughbreds, Drew's Gold is out of the dual surface multiple stakes-winning Vindication mare Frolic's Revenge and is a half sibling to American Frolic, a stakes winner on grass.

The post ‘He’s A Really Professional Horse’: Unbeaten Drew’s Gold Streaks To Front-Running Jimmy Winkfield Score appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Learning To Fly ‘Justifys’ The Hype

by TDNAus/NZ

The Annabel Neasham-trained Learning To Fly (Aus) (Justify) turned heads when she broke her maiden in the G3 Widden S. last month and she more than justified that hype when overcoming a wide barrier to win the Inglis Millennium (Listed Restricted) at Sydney's Randwick Race Course on Saturday.

After breaking cleanly from gate 15, the filly was settled on the outside by Chad Schofield, who was happy to sit on the wide outside. As the field rounded the turn, Learning To Fly showed she was aptly named, storming down the outside to swoop the A$2-million honours and come away with a 0.27l win over Blanc De Blanc (Aus) (I Am Invincible {Aus}). Kundalini (Aus) (I Am Invincible {Aus}) ran another solid race to finish third (video).

Kia Ora paid A$900,000 for the filly at the Inglis Australian Easter Yearling Sale last year when she was offered by Coolmore, who retained a share in the youngster.

“To the staff's credit back at the farm, they earmarked this filly from day one as the best of all of them and from what we've seen so far, she looks extremely special and possibly the filly of her time,” Coolmore's Tom Magnier said.

“What Annabel has done with her is nothing short of extraordinary. She's weaved her magic and turned this filly into the star she is today. “She's in the [G1 Longines Golden] Slipper [A$4.92 million, Rosehill, Mar. 18] now, with some of this Inglis prize money counting toward qualification so we'll set out a path now toward there and hopefully become the first Millennium winner to win the Slipper.”

Kia Ora's Shane Wright said he always thought the filly had star quality.

“We knew she was an exceptional filly so while you never expect to see that, it's always a delight to sit back and watch a win like that with a very, very special filly,” Wright said. “When we drew barrier 19 I think everybody was a bit flat, but once we looked at things and decided to run, we knew we'd need a great ride by Chad [Schofield] and while he was obviously wide, he always had cover and just let the filly come into the race.

“At the top of the straight, she was still a way off them but I always thought deep down she was good enough to round them up and it's amazing to see her do it.”

In winning the Millennium, Learning To Fly earned her connections a new Ferrari, as part of a Coolmore promotion at last year's yearling sales for the first progeny of Justify to one of 16 races they earmarked, and the A$2 million-event was one of them.

“The keys are in my pocket at the moment but we'll work out the next few days who gets the car,” Wright said.

Learning To Fly is out of Group 3 winner Ennis Hill (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), who is herself a daughter of Hips Don't Lie (NZ) (Stravinsky), the dam of Listed scorer Lake Geneva (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) and Acrobat (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), who won the 2020 Inglis Nursery and now stands at Coolmore Stud.

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Good Magic Son Golden On Debut At Gulfstream

3rd-Gulfstream, $70,000, Msw, 2-11, 3yo, 6f, 1:10.35, ft, 2 3/4 lengths.
GOLD MAGIC (c, 3, Good Magic–Golden Amber, by Gemologist), dismissed on the board at 9-1 in a field of majority first-time starters, tracked off the pace in third as Mr. Peeks (California Chrome) led the field through an opening quarter in :21.91. Still third but just off as the field swung around the bend, he began to move up to take command inside the final eighth of a mile. With the most left late, Gold Magic gained separation close to home to defeat Etnico (Practical Joke) by 2 3/4 lengths. His dam's first foal, the winner now has a yearling half-brother by Maclean's Music while Golden Amber returned to that same stallion for the 2023 season. Sales History: $170,000 Ylg '21 FTKJUL. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $42,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-Al & Bill Ulwelling; B-Saintsbury Farms Inc. (ON); T-Kevin Attard.

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