Coffeewithchris Wins Miracle Wood, Stonewall Star Takes Wide Country On Laurel’s Winter Carnival Card

John Salzman Jr., Fred Wasserloos, and Anthony Geruso's Coffeewithchris, given a perfect trip from jockey Jaime Rodriguez, got the jump on favored Prince of Jericho and held off his rival in deep stretch to capture Saturday's $100,000 Miracle Wood by 1 ¼ lengths at Laurel Park.

The 28th running of the one-mile Miracle Wood and 30th edition of the Wide Country for 3-year-old fillies sprinting seven furlongs led of a lineup of six stakes worth $900,000 in purses on a Winter Carnival program headlined by the $250,000 General George (G3) and $250,000 Barbara Fritchie (G3).

Coffeewithchris ($9.40), sent off as the 7-2 second choice in a field of seven, completed the distance in 1:37.54 over a fast main track for his second stakes win in three races following a 2 ½-length triumph over Prince of Jericho in the Dec. 26 Heft. Coffeewithchris ran second to Prince of Jericho in the Jan. 21 Spectacular Bid.

The Miracle Wood is the second of Laurel's series of stakes for 3-year-olds leading up to the 148th Preakness (G1), Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown, May 20 at historic Pimlico Race Course. It is followed by the $100,000 Private Terms March 18 and $125,000 Federico Tesio April 15, the latter a 'Win and In' qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated horses to the Preakness.

“I didn't think he'd go a mile. I had to take the chance. There was nowhere else to run him unless I wanted to ship him,” Salzman said. “He ran a big race.”

Feeling Woozy, exiting a one-mile optional claiming allowance victory Jan. 29 at Laurel, broke sharply from the rail and led through a quarter-mile in :23.79 and a half in :46.79, while Rodriguez pressed in second. Multiple stakes-placed Ricco and Triple Crown-nominated Seven's Eleven and B West comprised the second flight with Price of Jericho in the clear outside.

Coffeewithchris pounced on Feeling Woozy approaching the stretch and took over the top spot once straightened for home as Rodriguez set down for a drive to the second finish line. Jockey Carol Cedeno swung Prince of Jericho widest of all off the turn and made a determined run at the leader but could not get by.

“He's a tough horse to ride. If it was a mile to the first wire, I wouldn't have been as concerned as I was a mile to the second wire. I told Jaime that in the paddock, and he saved a little bit and got him to the second wire,” Salzman said. “It worked out. I really didn't think [Feeling Woozy] would be in front of me but we had talked about taking a little hold of him and just laying a little off the pace to try to get him to get the mile.”

Feeling Woozy was 2 ½ lengths behind Prince of Jericho in third, with another 3 ¼ lengths back to B West in fourth, followed by B West, We Don't Need Roads and Seven's Eleven. Salzman, who trains Coffeewithchris, also won the Miracle Wood last year with Local Motive.

“I told John I'm just going to let him break, get comfortable, and I'm going to ask him once I get to the quarter pole, I'm going to ask him if I got something left,” Rodriguez said. “Today, he surprised me because when I asked him he responded right away. He never gave up.”

Bred in Maryland by Thomas Rooney, Salzman purchased Coffeewithchris for $2,000 as a yearling in October 2021. The Ride On Curlin gelding graduated in his second start last May, a maiden claimer at historic Pimlico Race Course where he was promoted to first following a troubled trip. He became a stakes winner in the Heft, and was clearly second best in the Spectacular Bid 22 days later.

“Last time he was pressed the whole way. They were running and [Prince of Jericho] was sitting right behind him, kind of stalking, and didn't give me a breather. The girl rode a smart race. As soon as my horse made a move, she made a move, and she was right on him,” Salzman said. “What really screwed me up in that race was we canceled a week, so we had to get him ready off the biggest race of his life, get him back to running another big race in three weeks, and that's hard to do when a horse gives his best effort.”

The Miracle Wood was Coffeewithchris' first race beyond a sprint. The Private Terms, at about 1 1/16 miles, is contested around two turns.

“Sometimes that's easier for a speed horse, at least the first time. It's not out of the question, but I want to see how this works out,” Salzman said. “I'll talk to Jaime a little more and I'll watch the replay a few more times. He got the mile. I want to see how he comes out of this. Knock on wood he's been very sound, no issues. I'll have to talk and think about it a little bit whether I want to go the next sixteenth or not.”

At ages 2 and 3, Maryland-bred Miracle Wood won or placed in 13 stakes including seconds in the Jim Beam (G3) and Woodlawn (G3) prior to a fifth behind Snow Chief as the longest shot on the board (20-1) in the 1986 Preakness Stakes (G1). He was retired in 1992 after winning 14 of 117 starts and nearly a half-million dollars in purse earnings.

Stonewall Star Shines Bright In Wide Country Victory

Barry Schwartz's homebred Stonewall Star, already a two-time stakes winner over New York-breds, turned in a career-best performance in her third try against open company with a front-running 11-length triumph in the $100,000 Wide Country.

Ridden by Angel Cruz for trainer Horacio DePaz, Stonewall Star ($5.60) covered seven furlongs in 1:24.33 over a fast main track for her fourth win from seven career starts and first outside of New York.

“She's pretty straightforward. She likes to run on the lead, just try not to go too quick too early,” DePaz said of the Flatter filly. “She's just in good form right now.”

Cruz, aboard for the first time, was able to guide Stonewall Star to the front from outermost Post 6 and sailed through splits of :23.07 and :46.42 seconds chased by Jan. 21 Xtra Heat winner L Street Lady on the inside along with multiple stakes-placed Gormley's Gabriela and Maryland Million Lassie winner Chickieness.

L Street Lady began to drop back midway around the far turn as Chickieness and Gormley's Gabriela tried to make up ground, but Stonewall Star had plenty left to gain separation from her rivals and keep going, opening up impressively through the lane.

Chickieness was second, 1 ¾ lengths ahead of Gormley's Gabriela. We'll See, 2022 Golden Gate Debutante winner Sally's Sassy and L Street Lady completed the order of finish.

“She's definitely filled out much more than what she was,” DePaz said. “Mentally she's just really in the zone right now.”

Stonewall Star won the six-furlong Key Cents last fall and came out of a 6 ¼-length triumph in the 6 ½-furlong Franklin Square Jan. 22, both at Aqueduct. She tried seven furlongs once before in her only prior trip to Laurel, where she led into the stretch before tiring to third behind then-undefeated Malibu Moonshine in the Dec. 30 Gin Talking.

“I thought they would press her a little bit more,” DePaz said. “That was my concern because the last time with the seven-eighths she was on the lead and took everybody on and just came up short that last sixteenth. But today, she was right.”

The Wide Country is the next step in Laurel's 3-year-old filly stakes series that began with the Xtra Heat and continues with the $100,000 Beyond the Wire going one mile March 18 and $125,000 Weber City Miss April 15, a 1 1/16-mile 'Win and In' qualifier for the 99th Black-Eyed Susan (G2) May 19 at Pimlico.

“The question is how far she would go, and she handled the seven [furlongs] perfectly fine. We'll continue to let her tell us,” DePaz said. “We'll go back to New York and maybe back to Maryland. She's got options, that's for sure.”

Wide Country was Maryland's Horse of the Year in 1991 when she won eight of 13 starts as a 3-year-old, each of her victories coming in stakes, led by the Black-Eyed Susan (G2) and Pimlico Oaks (G3). She placed in four other graded-stakes including the Barbara Fritchie (G2) and Go for Wand (G1) in 1992 and was retired with 12 wins and $819,728 in purses earned from 26 starts.

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Into Mischief Colts Shoot For Derby Points in Hyacinth

Tokyo Racecourse is the site of the third leg of this year's Japan Road to the Triple Crown, the $273,301 Listed Hyacinth S. going the one turn mile. A field of 14, including a pair of expensive American-bred sons of Into Mischief, look to capitalize on the fact that the winners of the first two legs of the four-race series–Continuar (Jpn) (Drefong) and Derma Sotogake (Jpn) (Mind Your Biscuits), have hit the road for a significantly more valuable test in next Saturday's G3 Saudi Derby in Riyadh.

Great Sand Sea (Into Mischief) is the least-experience of those signed on, having made just one previous appearance, but the $385,000 Keeneland September yearling turned $825,000 OBS April breezer made the most of it. The bay colt sat a three-wide, no-cover trip before fighting on gamely to score a narrow victory over Holonic Path (Jpn) (Just a Way {Jpn}) in a 1400-meter maiden over this surface Nov. 19 (see below, SC 8) and the latter franked the form of the race when graduating by nearly 10 lengths in his next start. Joao Moreira, who rides Shirl's Speight (Speightstown) in the G1 February S. two races later, takes the call.

The other Into Mischief colt is Meta Max, a $180,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga grad who fetched $1.1 million at OBS March and broke his maiden when trying the dirt for the first time over five furlongs Jan. 21.

Perriere (Jpn) (Henny Hughes) is the overnight favorite, having defeated next-out romper Yuttitham (Jpn) (Justify–Zipessa) on Sapporo debut in August and adding a Tokyo allowance before finishing third to to the aforementioned Derma Sotogake and Omatsuri Otoko (Jpn) (Vittorio d'Oro) in the Listed Zen-Nippon Nisai Yushun Dec. 14.

The Hyacinth offers Kentucky Derby points on a 30-12-6-3 scale for the top four finishers. The final race on the Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby is the Fukuryu S. (allowance) going nine furlongs at Nakayama Mar. 25.

 

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Uncle Mo’s Bishops Bay Gives Trainer Brad Cox Win #2,000

5th-Fair Grounds, $70,000, Msw, 2-18, 3yo, 6f, 1:10.07, ft, 3/4 length.
BISHOPS BAY (c, 3, Uncle Mo–Catch My Drift {SW & GISP, $280,540}, by Pioneerof the Nile) was a popular wagering choice for his career bow, breaking from the gates as the 1-2 chalk under jockey Florent Geroux. With good early speed from mid pack, the $450,000 Keeneland yearling moved between rivals to just sit just off the flank of pacesetter Ocean City (American Pharoah) through a quick opening quarter in :22.14. Applying consistent pressure to that early leader into the far turn, Bishops Bay took over under his own power as the top pair swung into the turn. A game First Mission (Street Sense) made a late run down the stretch but Bishops Bay had enough of a gap built up to hold off his stablemate by three-quarters of a length for a Brad Cox exacta. Ocean City came home fourth while Unload (Gun Runner) and St. John's (Hard Spun) were the last two home. Catch My Drift, herself an accomplished race mare, is also responsible for Strava (Into Mischief), MSP, $282,340. Her 2-year-old Constitution colt brought $575,000 at last year's Keeneland September Sale and she dropped a filly by Improbable last year before visiting Not This Time for the 2023 season. Sales History: $450,000 Ylg '21 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $42,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-Spendthrift Farm LLC, Steve Landers Racing LLC, Martin S. Schwartz, Michael Dubb, Ten Strike Racing, Jim Bakke, Titletown Racing, LLC, Kueber Racing, LLC, Big Easy Racing LLC, Winners Win, Michael Caruso & WinStar Farm, LLC; B-WinStar Farm, LLC (KY); T-Brad H. Cox.

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‘It Was Pretty Easy’: Regally Bred Frost Point Scores Convincing Stakes Breakthrough In Heavenly Prize

Godolphin's Kentucky homebred Frost Point secured her first career stakes win with a prominent effort in Saturday's $125,000 Heavenly Prize Invitational, a one-turn mile for older fillies and mares, at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and expertly handled by Jorge A. Vargas Jr., the regally bred daughter of Frosted out of Grade 1-winner Balletto, by Timber Country, rushed up the rail from her inside post to take command from the Jose Lezcano-piloted Falconet and drew away to win by 6 1/4-lengths.

“I saw there was no pace in the race and only Lezcano could make some pace,” said Vargas. “I didn't want to be too far from it [the pace]. I warmed her up [well] and she opened the gate and came out of there running. We went from there and it was pretty easy.”

The Heavenly Prize was billed as a rematch between Falconet and Battle Bling, who ran one-two last out in the nine-furlong Ladies on New Year's Day here in which the former took command at the stretch call and powered away to win by two lengths over a muddy and sealed main track.

Falconet broke alertly from the outermost post 4 in the Heavenly Prize and was briefly in front before allowing Frost Point to take charge through splits of :25.31, :49.07, and 1:13.14 over the fast main track.

Frost Point maintained her advantage through the turn as Falconet surged to her outside with Battle Bling angling off the rail to make her bid, but there would be no catching a rampant Frost Point, who powered away and stopped the clock in 1:37.24. Falconet completed the exacta by 1 3/4-lengths over Battle Bling with Piece of My Heart completing the order of finish. Mommasgottarun was scratched.

The victory provided Mott a record third Heavenly Prize score, adding to past success with Isabelle [2017] and Lake Avenue [2021].

“There wasn't any speed, so I told Jorge to break and see what happens. They were walking up front,” said Leana Willaford, assistant to Mott.

Frost Point, a winner on debut in December 2020 at Tampa Bay Downs, was winless in three sophomore starts. She boasted a perfect in-the-money record last year of 5-2-1-2, besting winners on two occasions as well as completing the trifecta twice at nine-furlongs in the Top Flight Invitational in April at Aqueduct and the Allaire DuPont Distaff (G3) in May at Pimlico Race Course.

“She had a little break after the race at Pimlico last spring and she's been doing well since. She just needed a bit of a break,” Willaford said. “Now, she's moving really well and handling things really well. Her weight and her coat is probably the best I've ever seen it.”

Falconet, unraced as a 2-year-old, enjoyed a productive sophomore season, winning twice and placing second on three occasions, including in the Iowa Oaks (G3) at Prairie Meadows and the Seneca Overnight at Churchill Downs. She completed her 2022 campaign with a fourth-place finish after stumbling at the start of the nine-furlong Grade 3 Comely in November at the Big A.

Lezcano, who guided Falconet to her Ladies score, said his filly may have been hampered by the turn back.

“The other filly is a nice filly. My filly might want more distance – she's kind of one-paced,” Lezcano said. “We went very easy in the first part but when I asked her, she stayed the same and the other filly took off.”

Bred in Kentucky by her owner, Frost Point banked $68,750 in victory, while improving her record to 10-4-3-2. She returned $9.10 for a $2 win bet.

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