Bauyrzhan Murzabayev Named Retained Rider For Andre Fabre

Bauyrzhan Murzabayev, a four-time champion jockey in Germany, will become the retained rider for French trainer Andre Fabre, according to published reports.

Murzabayev, who formerly rode for Peter Schiergen, will have first call on all of Fabre's horses barring those of Godolphin and Wertheimer et Frere, as they have their own retained jockeys.

“For me, this is the next step,” Bauyrzhan Murzabayev told Galopp Online. “Last year, when Francis-Henri Graffard's offer came, I stayed. I know what I owe to Peter Schiergen. We were a very good team and I know that it will be different in France now. But I'm a competitive athlete, my time is short and it's a huge opportunity to develop myself. I would like to thank Peter and Gisela Schiergen for an extraordinary cooperation. They were like family to me and the decision to switch is hard for me.”

Schiergen has replaced Murzabayev with Rene Piechulek as his first call jockey, however Piechulek will also retain his engagement with Hans-Gerd Wernicke's Stall Salzburg, the owner of Group 1 winner Mendocino (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}). Sibylle Vogt will remain the second call jockey for Schiergen.

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Frosted Colt Gets Grade I Off to a Fast Start at OBS

A colt by Frosted (hip 247) got Nellie and Chetley Breeden's new Grade I Investments consignment off to an auspicious start when he was one of four horses to earn the furlong bullet of :9 4/5 during the second session of the under-tack show for the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's March Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training in Central Florida Wednesday.

Nellie Breeden is no stranger to the sales scene, having spent time as assistant trainer to her father, legendary pinhooker Jimmy Gladwell, as well as pinhooking through the Top Line Sales consignment of her brother, Jimbo and his wife Torie, but she did admit to some nerves as she and her husband sent out the first horse to work under their own banner.

“We've gotten horses ready for the sales previously and they've sold with my brother and sister-in-law, so [the colt] doing his job, we were prepared for that,” Breeden said. “But when he came down the lane and they said, 'Grade I Investments,' I think my heart was going to come out of my chest. I just wanted him to do a good job. I was so proud of him.”

While 10 horses worked in :9 4/5 during Tuesday's first session of the under-tack show, no horses broke :10 during Wednesday's first set. Hip 342, a filly by Brethren consigned by Goldencents Thoroughbreds, was first to hit the :9 4/5 mark during the day's second set and was followed just minutes later by Grade I Investments lone offering of the March sale.

“We knew he was fast. He had prepped well,” Breeden said. “Today it seemed like the track was maybe a tick off or something this morning. Going into it, we thought he would do :10 flat and then you hope for a :9 4/5. It sounds good leading into it, but then when he gets on the track, you think, 'Gosh, am I crazy? Can he really do it?' But we thought he was fast, so he did what he was supposed to do.”

Hip 247 is out of the unraced Ananda (Scat Daddy), a full-sister to multiple graded stakes winner Daddy Nose Best. A partnership of family members purchased the colt for $50,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale.

“The first thing we liked about him was his physical,” Breeden said of the colt's appeal as a yearling. “And that has stayed superior. The only thing that has changed is that Frosted has really gotten hot in the last eight weeks or so. That's really been in our favor, but as far as the colt, he has never had to take a day off. He's maintained his physique throughout the training, so he's just gotten stronger and stronger.”

Consigning was just the natural next step for the Breedens, who lease Two Springs Farm in Micanopy from Dean and Patti Reeves.

“I had previously been working under my dad and so we have been training the horses and then sending them over to Top Line,” Breeden said. “In the 2-year-old game, most people who train their horses, sell them. So we just thought it was a natural progression for us to take that step and showcase some of the horses that we train and try to bring them to the buyers.

“We were actually going to sell last year and then Mr. Reeves purchased the farm, so we started bringing that farm back to life and it was just too much of an undertaking to sell at the same time. This year, we had our wits about us and decided it was time to take the plunge.”

The current plan is to keep the consignment small, but Grade I Investments will have horses at the OBS April and June sales.

“We buy [yearlings] as a group,” Breeden said. “It's my brother, Raymond and his wife Megan and then my mom and dad and some of our other family has bought in on other horses that are going to other sales. But it is usually a group effort, which makes it a lot of fun. Chetley and I will get the opportunity to sell a few of those, but not all of the horses that we are pinhooking will sell with us. Some will go to Top Line as well. The horses that we own a majority of or a bigger piece of, we will sell. We don't intend to grow the consignment as a major source of income for us. It's more to showcase our horses and will be a more boutique style. That's our goal. Just to showcase our horses really well and bring them to the buyers.”

With just one horse in its inaugural consignment, things are off to a good start for Grade I Investments.

“Everyone asks, 'Are you nervous?'” Breeden said. “We've gotten horses ready for the sales for years, so honestly, that hasn't been the nerve-wracking part. The nerve-wracking part is, 'Do I have all of my paperwork in?' 'Do I have this?' Just the logistics of the sale, that's been the biggest learning curve so far.”

The couple has plenty of support right nearby on the OBS barn area should they need it.

“I am neighbors with my Uncle Robby [Harris from Harris Training Center] and my cousin J.R. [Boyd] from Brick City, so if I need something, they are right there to help,” Breeden said. “And of course Jimbo and Torie, any question I have, they are right on the spot to help out. It's really nice to have it be a family affair. It's been a good experience so far.”

The bullet furlong workers at OBS Wednesday also included: a filly by Mitole (hip 312, video) consigned by S B M Training and Sales; and a colt by War Front (hip 392, video) consigned by Kings Equine.

A colt by Bucchero (hip 406) turned in the fastest quarter-mile breeze of the day–and of the week so far– when working in :20 3/5 for Tom McCrocklin.

The under-tack show continues through Friday with sessions beginning each day at 8 a.m. The OBS March sale will be held next Monday through Wednesday and bidding commences at 11 a.m. each day.

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Equibase Analysis: Silver Prospector Can Shine In Essex Handicap

This Saturday's $500,000 Grade 3 Essex Handicap at Oaklawn Park brings together a field of 10 sprinters with nine million dollars in career earnings between them.

Leading the field in that category is 2022 Essex winner Rated R Superstar at $1.8 million, entering the race off a fourth place finish in the Grade 3 Razorback Handicap last month. The Razorback was won by Last Samurai, which boosted his earnings to $1.6 million. Next is Silver Prospector, no slouch with $1.1 million in career earnings including the 2020 G3 Southwest Stakes at Oaklawn. Classic Causeway has banked $1.1 million, the bulk of that when winning the G1 Belmont Derby on the grass last summer.

Call Me Fast enters a stakes for the first time and while trying for his third straight win at the meeting. Also entering graded stakes competition for the first time is Vittorio, who finished second in his most recent race which followed eight months off. Forza Di Oro led from the start in the G3 Louisiana Stakes at Fair Grounds in late January before fading to third and attempts to improve off that effort in his third race off a layoff.

The remaining three entrants appear a bit overmatched. They are Keystone Field (seventh in the Razorback in his most recent race), Necker Island (third in an allowance race last month) and Tawny Port, whose last win came in the G3 Ohio Derby last June.

Main win contenders:

Silver Prospector has won more than one-quarter of the main track races he's entered, six of 23 to be exact, including two at Oaklawn. Those two wins are the reason he may be the one to beat in this year's Essex Handicap. The first of the pair of wins over the track came in the 2020 Southwest Stakes at the distance of the Essex when he earned a then career-best 107 ™ Equibase® Speed Figure. Following poor efforts in the Rebel Stakes and Arkansas Derby, Silver Prospector skipped the Kentucky Derby and took five months off. Winning his first start back, it appeared the horse was ready for the big time but then he went on a nine race losing streak. That ended in the Steve Sexton Mile Stakes last May where Silver Prospector earned a career-best 113 figure. He then lost three straight to end his 2022 campaign and took three and one-half months off.

Trainer Steve Asmussen added blinkers for the Fifth Season Stakes in January of this year but coming back from that time off, Silver Prospector wasn't ready to run his best. However, in his most recent start on February 11, Silver Prospector bounced back with a fine effort to win by nearly four lengths under Ricardo Santana, Jr., who rides again. Making his third start off a layoff and having improved to a 103 figure last month, it appears Silver Prospector is in line to repeat his big 113 figure from last year's Steve Sexton Mile effort and that could be good enough to win the 2023 Essex Handicap.

Last Samurai won the Razorback Handicap last month and did so authoritatively with a career-best 119 ™ figure. As a 5-year-old it is quite a feat to run faster than at any previous point in his career, so we might not expect that fast a race to be repeated. However, considering Last Samurai won the Oaklawn Handicap last April with a 108 figure and just missed in the Tinsel Stakes this past December, with a 106 figure, either of those efforts repeated here would give him a strong chance to win a stakes race for the second time at the meeting.

Rated R Superstar enters this year's Essex on a very similar pattern to when winning the race last year. In 2022, he finished fifth of eight in the Razorback Handicap one month earlier with a 104 figure before earning a career-best 115 figure winning this race. This year Rated R Superstar finished fourth of eight in the Razorback last month with a 100 figure. If he shows the same improvement as last year we can expect him to run fast enough to earn a 111 figure. That would be very competitive with both Silver Prospector and with Last Samurai if both run as expected, leading to a very close, and very exciting finish in this year's Essex.

The rest of the field, with their best representative ™ Equibase® Speed Figures, is Call Me Fast (103), Classic Causeway (112 – on turf), Forza Di Oro (105), Keystone Field (103), Necker Island (108), Tawny Port (105) and Vittorio (107).

Win Contenders:

Silver Prospector
Last Samurai
Rated R Superstar
Note: For any exacta tickets played, consider Vittorio for the second (runner-up) position.

Essex Handicap – Grade 3
Race 9 at Oaklawn Park
Saturday, March 18 – Post Time 5:54 PM E.T.
One Mile and One Sixteenth
Four Year Olds and Upward
Purse: $500,000

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Four-For-Five Together, Chantal Sutherland And Super Chow Ready For All Comers In Saturday’s Hutcheson

Lea Farms LLC's Super Chow and jockey Chantal Sutherland have been making a great team, winning four of five races, including three stakes, before having to settle for a graded-stakes placing in their most recent outing.

“He's done a lot in such a short time,” the multiple Grade 1 stakes-winning jockey with more than 1,200 career wins said. “Just don't get in his way. I'm quiet as can be on him, which is probably the best thing for him. Just let him do what he wants to do, and that's to go fast.

The 3-year-old son of Lord Nelson and Sutherland will team up again in Saturday's $100,000 Hutcheson Stakes at Gulfstream Park. The history-laden six-furlong sprint for 3-year-olds will co-headline Saturday's 12-race program with the $100,000 Silks Run, a five-furlong turf dash for older horses.

Super Chow debuted July 2 at Gulfstream with a front-running 1 ¾-length victory under Sutherland. The $75,000 purchase at the OBS April 2-year-olds-in-training sale made his graded-stakes debut in his next start under Luis Saez, finishing third in the Saratoga Special (G2) after veering in at the start. He came back to capture a Sept 10 allowance at Pimlico under Jorge Ruiz, drawing away to a 6 ¼ -length triumph after fighting off heavy pressure into the stretch. With Sutherland back aboard, he rolled to a five-length victory in the $200,000 Bowman Mill Oct. 29 at Keeneland. The Jorge Delgado-trained colt and Sutherland came right back to register front-running scores in the Dec. 3 Inaugural Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs and the Jan. 1 Limehouse Stakes at Gulfstream Park.

After winning three straight stakes at six-furlongs, Super Chow was asked to carry his abundant speed for seven furlongs in the Feb. 4 Swale Stakes (G3) at Gulfstream. He fought off early pressure to open a three-length lead on the turn into the stretch, only to come up a length short of going all the way, finishing second behind the highly regarded Shug McGaughey-trained General Jim.

“I think six furlongs is his strength. I think six furlongs is always going to be better. We tried something a little different last time. It didn't go completely wrong, but it didn't go like we expected. We're going to stay at six furlongs,” Delgado said. “We got beat fair and square by a nice horse that day. I'm looking forward one to face him again at six furlongs, but I don't see that happening.”

Super Chow will seek to rebound from his tough loss in the Swale at his favorite six-furlong distance Saturday, when he is expected to be heavily favored to outrun six rivals in the Hutcheson.

Sutherland, whom Delgado has credited with being a key player in the development of Super Chow, is confident that he will be at the top of his game Saturday.

“He's really matured. He looks amazing. He's doing everything right,” Sutherland said. “I love him so much and I'm so proud of him.”

Delgado and Lea Farms LLC will also be represented in the Hutcheson by Live Is Life, a son of War Chant, who finished a distant third in his last start, 12 lengths behind Tapit Trice, who went on to win the Tampa Bay Derby (G3) last Saturday.

K and R Racing Stable and Town Branch Racing's Two of a Kind, who finished third, 11 lengths behind Super Chow, returns in the Hutcheson. Joel Rosario has the return call aboard the Brian Lynch-trained son of Overanalyze.

Soler and Soler Thoroughbred Corp.'s Mooncapture, Diamond 110 Racing Club LLC, Amy Dunne, and trainer Patrick Biancone's Diamond Cool, Dan Cook and trainer George Weaver's Youbetterbejoking, and Larry Todd Racing LLC's Certain, are also entered in the Hutcheson.

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