Hayes Strike Surges Clear Late In Private Terms; Lady Lowery Wires Beyond The Wire

Dixiana Farms' homebred Grade 2-placed homebred Hayes Strike, back on dirt after a failed attempt on the synthetic, cruised up to front-running Coffeewithchris at the top of the stretch and outran the multiple stakes winner to the wire to capture Saturday's $100,000 Private Terms at Laurel Park.

The 34th running of the Private Terms at about 1 1/16 miles anchored five stakes worth $450,000 in purses as the latest step in Laurel's series of stakes for 3-year-olds leading up to the 148th Preakness Stakes (G1), middle jewel of the Triple Crown, May 20 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

Hayes Strike ($18.20), dismissed at odds of 8-1, completed the distance in 1:45.46 over a fast main track to snap a six-race losing streak going back to his maiden triumph last August at Ellis Park. It was the first Private Terms victory for both Kentucky-based trainer Ken McPeek and veteran Maryland jockey Horacio Karamanos.

“We couldn't be more pleased,” McPeek said. “He's had some races that were tosses, and the last race was a toss. He didn't handle the synthetic and the travel, and in this case we were able to regroup. He really wanted to run on the dirt. The jock did a great job, just stalking out there, so we're real pleased.”

Last of nine in the one-mile Leonatus Jan. 21 at Turfway Park, a race that produced next-out Gotham (G3) winner Raise Cain, Hayes Strike found himself racing in the clear in fourth as New York shipper Register jumped out to the front, going the first quarter in :24.95, chased by Feb. 18 Miracle Wood winner Coffeewithchris, both trying two turns for the first time.

Howgreatisnate, who stumbled and lost rider J.D. Acosta out of the gate in the March 4 Gotham after winning each of his first four races, two of them in stakes, raced in third along the rail and had to steady in traffic rounding the clubhouse turn but moved up to second following a half in :49.16.

Coffeewithchris was the first to go after Register, moving up alongside on the far turn and taking over the top spot entering the stretch. Karamanos had tipped Hayes Strike further out to make a run and set him down once straightened for home, coming with a steady run to pass a gutsy Coffeewithchris inside the eighth pole and edge clear by 1¾ lengths.

Finishing a decisive second was Coffeewithchris, 3 ¾ lengths in front of late-running Circling the Drain, making his stakes debut. It was three-quarters of a length to Howgreatisnate in fourth, followed by Feeling Woozy, Riccio, Register, and Marty's Magic.

“This horse likes to sit behind wherever he's comfortable. Today I was able to sit out of the gate and put him right behind the speed,” Karamanos said. “The speed didn't go much, really. I saw [Howgreatisnate] in trouble and [Coffeewithchris] was going nice and comfortable in front of me. I got a good position outside and at the three-eighths pole my horse wanted to go so I let him pick it up a little bit.

“In the straight, we went head-to-head with [Coffeewithchris] and he drifted out but my horse didn't care. He took the lead and gave me a nice even kick to the wire,” he added. “He galloped out through the wire. If they had another sixteenth of a mile, he'd win again.”

Hayes Strike ran second in the Street Sense (G3), third in the Kentucky Jockey Club (G2) and fourth in the Iroquois (G3) and Gun Runner as a 2-year-old. By Lane's End sire Connect out of the Deputy Commander mare Plaid, he is a half brother to Senior Investment, who McPeek trained in 2017 to a win in the Lexington (G3) and a third in the Preakness. Senior Investment would later come back to win the 2020 Harrison E. Johnson Memorial at Laurel for trainer Scott Lake.

Laurel's next stakes for 3-year-olds is the $125,000 Federico Tesio going 1 1/8 miles April 15, a 'Win and In' qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated horses to the Preakness. McPeek said it was likely Triple Crown-nominated Hayes Strike would stay closer to home.

“We'll probably bring him back in the Blue Grass [G1 April 8 at Keeneland],” he said. “He's got a Kentucky-based owner. Dixiana will probably give him a shot back home.”

Private Terms raced in the colors of Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Janney's Locust Hill Farm, winning 12 races, nine stakes and more than $1.2 million from 1987-89 including the 1988 Federico Tesio (G3) and Wood Memorial (G1) and 1989 Mass Cap (G2). His track record of 1:47 1/5 in winning the 1989 Never Bend Handicap at Pimlico still stands. He sired Grade 1-winning millionaires Soul of the Matter and Afternoon Deelites.

Lady Lowery Goes The Distance In Beyond The Wire

Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Gary Barber, and Wachtel Stable's Lady Lowery, making just her third career start and first in a stakes, led every step of the way pulling clear of her rivals late to register a three-length victory in the $100,000 Beyond The Wire for 3-year-old fillies.

Ridden by Jack Gilligan for trainer William Walden, Lady Lowery ($5.60) was racing for both the first time on dirt and around two turns after a pair of sprints over the all-weather surface at Turfway Park. Unraced at 2, the Munnings filly out of the Revolutionary mare Last Dance graduated by 2¾ lengths Feb. 15.

“To be honest, we were actually looking at this race for a different filly in our stable. We worked them both last week and just felt like Lady Lowery was doing a little bit better and this spot would fit her well,” Walden said. “It's five weeks from her last run. We wanted to answer the dirt and the distance question. We didn't necessarily know how it would go, but we were confident that it would go well.”

Favored at 9-5 in a field of six, Lady Lowery broke running and found herself comfortably on the lead through a quarter-mile in 24.54 seconds and a half in 48.10 pressed by Cairo Sugar, a winner of her two previous starts including the Feb. 19 Maddie May last out. The top two entered the stretch together before gaining separation down the lane, finishing up in 1:39.29.

Happy Clouds was a clear second, 2½ lengths ahead of Cairo Sugar, who edged Cats Inthe Timber by a nose for third. Voodoo Mama Juju and We'll See completed the order of finish, while Pharoahs Baby Gyal was scratched.

Walden said Lady Lowery, who was bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm, could come back in the seven-furlong Eight Belles (G2) May 5 at Churchill Downs.

Run as the Caesar's Wish through 2017, the Beyond the Wire was renamed to recognize the founding of an industry-wide initiative between the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, Maryland Jockey Club, Maryland Horse Breeders Association and Maryland jockeys to facilitate safe and enriching placements for retired Maryland-based racehorses.

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Downtown Mischief Stays Unbeaten In Cicada

Downtown Mischief (Into Mischief) brought another stakes win home for super sire Into Mischief on Saturday afternoon at Aqueduct Racetrack. The New York-bred filly is now a perfect three-for three after her victory in the Cicada S.

Breaking her maiden on-track Jan. 14, the Linda Rice trainee won that debut by a sparkling 7 3/4-lengths at six panels and followed that up at Ozone Park Feb. 17 by clearing the next optional claiming hurdle in the slop by 1 1/4-lengths over the next-out winner, Midtown Lights (Redesdale).

Supported at the windows to the hilt, the 1-2 favorite tracked leader Fabulously Funny (Practical Joke) briefly from the fourth position down the backstretch, but decided to make her move for the front as Hot Little Thing (Army Mule) tried to make up ground after a slow start. As the trio dueled around the far turn, the chalk poked her head in front and past the eighth pole dug down to find enough in the end to win by 1 1/2-lengths over the late charging Tappin Josie (Anchor Down).

“I told Jose [Lezcano, aboard Downtown Mischief] that I thought the little filly on the inside of us had tremendous speed. She looked fast in the paddock. I was also a little concerned about the four-horse on the outside, but Jose had ridden her before and he said she's not that fast. I said, 'OK, you're going to be sitting second to the two.' And he said, 'that's probably where we'll be, sitting right outside.' It totally went upside down. The two doesn't break and then she comes rushing up through, but Jose is such a pro and he never loses his cool. When he needed to hold his ground, he did–and I think that makes a difference.”

Second dam Alpha Mama (Unbridled's Song) is a sister to GISW Marylebone, and she is also responsible for GSW Alpha Kitten (Tale of the Cat). The winner is Downtown Mama's first progeny, but she does have a yearling filly by Maclean's Music and was bred to Violence last year.

CICADA S., $100,000, Aqueduct, 3-18, 3yo, f, 6f, 1:13.72, ft.
1–DOWNTOWN MISCHIEF, 118, f, 3, by Into Mischief
          1st Dam: Downtown Mama, by Speightstown
          2nd Dam: Alpha Mama, by Unbridled's Song
          3rd Dam: Desert Queen, by Wavering Monarch
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O/B-Lady Sheila Stable LLC (NY); T-Linda
Rice; J-Jose Lezcano. $55,000. Lifetime Record: 3-3-0-0,
$133,100.
2–Tappin Josie, 122, f, 3, Anchor Down–Homemaker, by
Afternoon Deelites. ($15,000 Ylg '21 EASOCT). O-Darryl E.
Abramowitz; B-Charles Blanford (PA); T-Horacio De Paz.
$20,000.
3–Fabulously Funny, 119, f, 3, Practical Joke–Just Fabulous, by
Include. ($210,000 Ylg '21 KEESEP). 1ST BLACK TYPE. O-Harold
Lerner LLC, AWC Stables, Nehoc Stables, Scott K. Akman and
Paul Braverman; B-International Equities Holding, Inc. (KY);
T-Anthony W. Dutrow. $12,000.
Margins: 1HF, 3HF, 3HF. Odds: 0.50, 9.30, 9.20.
Also Ran: Fancy Azteca, Hot Little Thing, Musicmansandy.
Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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‘Now We Know He’s Got Grit’: Super Chow Shows New Dimension In Hutcheson Romp

Lea Farms LLC's Super Chow's dominating triumph in Saturday's $100,000 Hutcheson came as a surprise to no one, but the way the 1-5 favorite got to the Gulfstream Park winner's circle did open a lot of eyes.

Super Chow had built and impressive career record while employing his abundant early speed that carried him to five wins, including three straight stakes, in seven starts. Saturday, the son of Lord Nelson broke a step slowly from his inside post position in the starting gate allowing Two of a Kind and Youbetterbejoking to get the jump on him. Instead of rushing Super Chow along the rail in pursuit of the early speedsters, jockey Chantal Sutherland eased the Kentucky-bred colt off the rail to gain a more advantageous stalking position.

“Chantal, all the credit to her for Plan B. It wasn't expected, but that's why you have a professional rider on the horses. They're able to make changes,” trainer Jorge Delgado said. “I definitely didn't want to be on the rail. When I saw her go outside in the middle of the track, I loved that. I knew we had the best horse and he was training good. It was just a matter of how he was going to handle it.”

Super Chow handled the new scenario just fine, advancing on the leaders along the backstretch before making a three-wide sweep on the turn into the homestretch and drawing clear to win the six-furlong race by 5¼ lengths.

“I work him, all his works. I know his personality; we know each other. I know when to ask him to do stuff. Today was a little different,” Sutherland said. “We're usually in front, but he broke a little slower today, and it was kind of shocking, being on the rail. But he overcame all adversity, so that shows us a little bit more about him because I didn't know if he was that versatile.”

Super Chow remains undefeated in his six starts at the six-furlong distance. After winning three straight stakes at the distance with Sutherland aboard, he came up just horse after setting the pace in the seven-furlong Swale (G3), defeated by highly regarded Shug McGaughey-trained General Jim by just a half-length.

Saturday, Super Show kicked in through the stretch to complete six furlongs in 1:09.95. Lea Farms-owned and Delgado-trained Live Is Life closed from last in the field reduced to four by three morning scratches to finish second. Two of a Kind, who set fractions of :22.09 and :45.18 for the first half mile, faded to third, another 3¼ lengths back. Youbetterbejoking finished last.

“He's really super competitive and we never seen him beside another horse, kind of first time,” Sutherland said. “Now we know he's got grit. It's fun to see his tenacity.”

Super Chow will be pointed toward the six-furlong Chick Lang (G3) on the Preakness Stakes (G1) undercard in May at Pimlico. Lea Farms-owned, Delgado-trained Lightening Larry won the 2022 Chick Lang with Sutherland aboard.

Delgado said a possibility exists that he will enter Live Is Life in the $1-million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) April 1 at Gulfstream if the field comes up light due to the imposing presence of champion and Fountain of Youth (G2) winner Forte.

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Street Sense Colt Romps to ‘TDN Rising Star’ Performance at Fair Grounds

First Mission (c, 3, Street Sense–Elude, by Medaglia d'Oro), a strong second on debut behind his highly regarded Brad Cox-trained stablemate Bishops Bay (Uncle Mo) with a gaudy 96 Beyer sprinting at Fair Grounds Feb. 18, ran to the money as the 1-5 favorite with a 'TDN Rising Star' performance in his two-turn debut in New Orleans Saturday.

Fractious in the gate, the Godolphin homebred shot out to front and bobbled slightly shortly after the start. The blinkered dark bay recovered nicely and tracked in the garden spot in second. He struck the front 2 1/2 furlongs from home and ran up the score in the stretch to win under a hand ride by 6 3/4 impressive lengths over St. John's (Hard Spun).

First Mission becomes the 15th 'Rising Star' for Street Sense. He was produced by the winning Medaglia d'Oro mare Elude, a daughter of Argentinian champion 3-year-old filly and MG1SW Forty Marchanta (Arg) (Roar). Elude, purchased by International Equities Holding for $105,000 at the 2022 KEEJAN sale, produced a full-brother to First Mission in 2022 and was bred back to Protonico.

The aforementioned Bishops Bay returns in an optional claimer going two turns at Fair Grounds Sunday.

Featured earlier this week in Steve Sherack's 'Second Chances' series, click here for more on First Mission, including comments from Godolphin's Michael Banahan.

7th-Fair Grounds, $50,000, Msw, 3-18, 3yo, 1 1/16m, 1:44.55, ft, 6 3/4 lengths.
FIRST MISSION, c, 3, by Street Sense
                1st Dam: Elude, by Medaglia d'Oro
                2nd Dam: Forty Marchanta (Arg), by Roar
                3rd Dam: Marcha Toss (Arg), by Egg Toss
Lifetime Record: 2-1-1-0, $44,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG. Click for the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
O/B-Godolphin (KY); T-Brad H. Cox.

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