Practical Move Edges Japan’s Mandarin Hero, Skinner In Runhappy Santa Anita Derby

Practical Move emerged a nose best after a thrilling three-horse stretch duel with Japanese invader Mandarin Hero and Skinner in Saturday's Grade 1 Runhappy Santa Anita Derby at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.

Ridden by Ramon Vazquez and trained by Tim Yakteen, Practical Move saved ground throughout the 1 1/8 miles of Santa Anita's big 200-point Kentucky Derby prep, moved to the lead at the five-sixteenths pole, then held off a furious challenge down the stretch from Kazushi Kimura and Mandarin Hero, with Skinner and Victor Espinoza just to their outside.

Practical Move put his nose down on the wire first after drifting out into Mandarin Hero in the final yards. Mandarin Hero had a half-length on Skinner, who made a bold bid rounding the turn and into the stretch. National Treasure, a former Bob Baffert runner currently trained by Yakteen, finished  2 1/4 lengths back in fourth, with pacesetter One in Vermillion fifth in the field of eight 3-year-olds. Geaux Rocket Ride, runner-up to Practical Move in the G2 San Felipe, was scratched after spiking a fever.

The top five finishers earned 100-40-30-20-10 points.

Practical Move, winning for the fourth time in seven lifetime starts for Yakteen, ran the 1 1/8 miles on a fast track in 1:48.69. He paid $4.00 as the even-money favorite. The son of the Into Mischief sire Practical Joke from the Afleet Alex mare, Ack Naughty, races for Leslie Amestoy, Pierre Amestoy Jr., and Roger K. Beasley. He was bred in Kentucky by Chad Brown and Head of Plains Partners and sold for $230,000 at the OBS April Sale of 2-year-olds in training where he was consigned by Eisaman Equine.

Breaking just a tad slowly, Practical Move found a good spot on the rail as longshots One in Vermillion and Low Expectations sped to the front. One in Vermillion won that race, going the opening quarter miler in a zippy :22.30 and opening up in the run down the backstretch, the half in :46.30. When the field reached the far turn after six furlongs in 1:11.25, Vazquez guided Practical Move toward the lead as the front-runners began to retreat. Mandarin Hero and Kimura followed the eventual winner down the backstretch and around the turn, then came off the rail at the top of the stretch to challenge. Skinner made it three horses across the track after rallying wide on the turn, and they raced to the wire as a team, with Practical Move narrowly prevailing.

“I made the move a little early because I saw Berrios (Hector Berrios, aboard One in Vermillion) look at me from the inside,” said Vazquez. “I knew he wanted to put me inside a little bit tight, so I just moved my horse to the outside take a new position., made him relax a little bit and when I asked him the last quarter he responded really well. The other horse (Mandarin Hero) is a nice horse too and ran really well. I'm feeling amazing. When you ride a good horse like that, that's your dream always to go to the Kentucky Derby.”

Tim Yakteen with Runhappy Santa Anita Derby winner Practical Move

Practical Move came off a 2 1/2-length win in the San Felipe March 4, his 2023 debut. The Yakteen runner concluded his 2-year-old campaign with a 3 1/4-length win in the G2 Los Alamitos Futurity.

“It's a great feeling to go back-to-back in this race,” said Yakteen, who won the 2022 Santa Anita Derby with Taiba – a horse transferred to his care from Bob Baffert after Churchill Downs banned Baffert from its races through this year's Derby. “The rush you get — that's why you get in the game! You're calling wire when you're on the lead, and you're looking for more when you're closing ground.”

Mandarin Hero, by Shanghai Bobby, came to Santa Anita from Japan's National Association of Racing circuit – considered inferior to the Japan Racing Association tracks. He won four of five races – all at Tokyo Ooi – with his most race his only defeat.

Mandarin Hero is trained by Terunobu Fujita, who said after the race: “We're going to the Kentucky Derby! I'm so proud of him. I thought he would not handle the early pace, but he did. I believed he would have a good acceleration in the final stretch as usual. And he did it. Kazushi Kimura gave a really good ride. He made him accelerate at the final stretch. I thought he was going to win. I'm just so excited right now.”

Kimura added: “I thought we got him (Practical Move) at the wire.  I was on this horse since he got here and he was very comfortable.  Today he was a totally different horse.  He was very aggressive in company.   It looks like we'll be headed to the Kentucky Derby.  I've never been in the race, so I'm really looking forward to this opportunity.”

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It’s Practical Move Narrowly in Santa Anita Derby

Even-money favorite Practical Move (Practical Joke) solidified his role as California's best GI Kentucky Derby hope as he parlayed a ground-saving trip into a narrow victory in Saturday's GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby over fast-charging Japanese raider Mandarin Hero (Jpn) (Shanghai Bobby).

Seeking his third-straight victory off of clear-cut successes in both the Dec. 17 GII Los Alamitos Futurity and Mar. 4 GII San Felipe S., Practical Move was unhurried early and worked his way down to the fence and into a joint third around the first bend. He tugged his way up a wide-open rail and into second after a :46.30 half, and was quietly handled at that point by Ramon Vazquez as Skinner (Curlin) launched a sweeping move and Mandarin Hero caught the eye in behind Practical Move.     Having left a sliver of daylight to his inside while cornering, Practical Move and Vazquez angled back down to the rail in upper stretch, forcing Mandarin Hero to the two path with Skinner keeping that one hemmed in slightly. Mandarin Hero kept grinding away as Practical Move called out for the line, and the former got there just in the time, stopping the clock in 1:48.69. Skinner was another half-length back in third.

San Felipe runner-up and morning line co-second choice Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) was forced to scratch due to a fever.

“I made the move a little early because I saw [Hector] Berrios [on pacesetter One In Vermillion {Army Mule}] look at me from the inside. I knew he wanted to put me inside a little bit tight, so I just moved my horse to the outside take a new position, made him relax a little bit and when I asked him the last quarter he responded really well. The other horse (Mandarin Hero) is a nice horse too and ran really well. I'm feeling amazing. When you ride a good horse like that, that's your dream always to go to the Kentucky Derby.”

While conditioner Tim Yakteen has seen a number of flashy colts enter his barn due to trainer Bob Baffert's current Kentucky Derby ban, Practical Move has been his from the start. The $230,000 OBSAPR acquisition was a well-beaten second by brilliant Baffert trainee and future MGISW Cave Rock (Arrogate) in a Del Mar sprint last August that also produced recent 'TDN Rising Star' Ultimate Gamble (Medaglia d'Oro). He was third to future stablemate National Treasure (Quality Road) next out at the end of that meet, graduated via DQ over a local mile Oct. 10, and was third in Del Mar's seven-furlong GIII Bob Hope S. Nov. 20 before putting it all together at Los Al.

Yakteen won last year's Santa Anita Derby with Taiba (Gun Runner), who was transferred back to Baffert after finishing 12th in the Kentucky Derby.

“It's a great feeling to go back-to-back in this race,” said Yakteen. “The rush you get–that's why you get in the game! You're calling wire when you're on the lead, and you're looking for more when you're closing ground.”

With the victory, Practical Move now owns 160 Kentucky Derby qualifying points and is second in the standings.

“We were a little worried that he didn't get through early enough, but he finally made it through,” Practical Move's co-owner Jean-Pierre Amestoy, Jr. said. “He opened up a little bit, but those are good horses. They came up to him in the end but he was tough enough. Got his head in front and won the race. I think we are confident. I think we will catch the distance and he's proven he's a fighter, he's a winner, so we're going to go to Kentucky with our heads high and hope to bring the trophy back to this side of the country.”

As for the runner-up, trainer Terunobu Fujita said, “We're going to the Kentucky Derby! I'm so proud of him. I thought he would not handle the early pace, but he did. I believed he would have a good acceleration in the final stretch as usual. And he did it. [Jockey] Kazushi Kimura gave a really good ride. He made him accelerate at the final stretch. I thought he was going to win. I'm just so excited right now.”

Saturday, Santa Anita
RUNHAPPY SANTA ANITA DERBY-GI, $751,500, Santa Anita, 4-8, 3yo, 1 1/8m, 1:48.69, ft.
1–PRACTICAL MOVE, 124, c, 3, by Practical Joke
                1st Dam: Ack Naughty (MSP, $310,450), by Afleet Alex
                2nd Dam: Dash for Money, by General Meeting
                3rd Dam: Hot Lear, by Lear Fan
1ST GRADE I WIN. ($90,000 RNA Ylg '21 KEESEP; $230,000 2yo
'22 OBSAPR). O-Leslie A. & Pierre Jean Amestoy, Jr. and Roger
Beasley; B-Chad Brown & Head of Plains Partners (KY);
T-Tim Yakteen; J-Ramon A. Vazquez. $450,000. Lifetime
Record: 7-4-1-2, $884,200. Werk Nick Rating: A.
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Click for the
free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Mandarin Hero (Jpn), 124, c, 3, Shanghai Bobby–Namura
Nadeshiko (Jpn), by Fuji Kiseki (Jpn). 1ST BLACK TYPE,
1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE, 1ST G1 BLACK TYPE. O-Hiroaki Arai;
B-Hirano Bokujo (JPN); T-Terunobu Fujita. $150,000.
3–Skinner, 124, c, 3, Curlin–Winding Way, by Malibu Moon.
($40,000 Ylg '21 KEESEP; $510,000 2yo '22 OBSAPR). O-C R K
Stable LLC; B-Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC (KY);
T-John A. Shirreffs. $90,000.
Margins: NO, HF, 2 1/4. Odds: 1.00, 8.10, 3.60.
Also Ran: National Treasure, One in Vermillion, I Don't Get It, Dazzlemesilver, Low Expectations. Scratched: Geaux Rocket Ride.
Click for the Equibase.com chart and the TJCIS.com PPs. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:

Practical Move, a :10 1/5 OBSAPR breezer, is one of four Northern Hemisphere graded winners for his sire (13 overall). Practical Joke had a solid OBS March sale, led by a $925,000 colt. Practical Move is one of nine worldwide graded/group winners out of a mare by GI Preakness S. and GI Belmont S. hero Afleet Alex. Also among that group is 2019 Belmont winner Sir Winston.

Dam Ack Naughty was just a $20,000 SARAUG RNA, but racked up more than $310,000 in New York turf events for Sol Kumin and partners and trainer Chad Brown, who had Practical Joke in the barn at the same time. Ack Naughty produced a Complexity colt in 2022 before selling to Chester and Mary Broman for $500,000 at this year's Keeneland January sale. The Upstart foal she was carrying at the time was unfortunately stillborn. Ack Naughty hails from the family of champion older horse Vino Rosso.

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Citing Surface Concerns, Laurel Cancels Saturday’s Card

In a press release sent out just 50 minutes before the post time for the day's first race, Laurel Park management announced that the Saturday card had been postponed. The reason given was an “abundance of caution to do a full evaluation of the racing surfaces.”

According to multiple sources, two horses broke down during training hours Saturday. One of the horses had to be euthanized and the other did not. There were no incidents during racing on Thursday and Friday.

Maryland Jockey Club Acting President Mike Rogers sent a group text to horsemen Saturday at 11:10 a.m, which read: “I have received feedback from some of the horsemen that they have concerns about the track, and we are going to take the next couple of days to investigate those concerns.”

The track will be closed Sunday and Monday, but is expected to re-open for training on Tuesday. Live racing resumes Thursday.

The condition of the main track at Laurel has been an issue in recent years. In 2021, seven horses died at Laurel over a four-week period after a new racing surface was installed.

According to the Racingbiz.com, Rogers addressed concerns horsemen had with the track in an April 4 meeting of the Maryland Racing Commission, saying the company was in the midst of repairs to a spot near the first finish line.

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Tapit Trice Denies Verifying In Blue Grass Thriller

Tapit Trice got the best of Verifying in a thrilling stretch-long battle in the $1-million Blue Grass (G1) then withstood a foul claim to prevail Saturday at Keeneland.

Ridden by Luis Saez, Tapit Trice covered 1 1/8 miles in 1:50 flat but had to wait out claim of interference lodged by Verifying's rider Tyler Gaffalione before stewards let the result stand. The two horses had lightly brushed in the final sixteenth.

As Verifying pressed pacesetter Clear the Air early, Saez had Tapit Trice ideally positioned in midpack down the backstretch. Verifying moved to lead around the second turn and Tapit Trice was soon to engage, throwing down a unrelenting challenge as the two matched strides toward the finish line. Tapit Trice made a powerful lunge and scored the victory by about a neck.

Blazing Seven was third, Sun Thunder was fourth, and Raise Cain fifth in the field of 11 3-year-olds.

Sent off at 8-5, the Tapit colt was following up on his March 11 victory in the Tampa Bay Derby (G3) and with Saturday's triumph stayed perfect in all three starts this year for Todd Pletcher, who trains the colt for Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill and breeder Antony Beck's Gainesway Stable.

Pope purchased the son of Tapit for $1.3 million at the 2021 Keeneland's September Yearling Sale from the Gainesway consignment, which subsequently bought back in as a partner.

Tapit Trice ($5.28) is out of the stakes-winning Dunkirk mare Danzatrice, a half sister to champion Jaywalk.

The race awarded Kentucky Derby (G1) qualifying points on a 100-40-30-20-10 basis to its top five finishers.

Tapit Trice now has 150 points, good for fourth place on the Kentucky Derby Leaderboard. The Derby is limited to the top 20 point earners and invitees that pass the entry box.

Verifying picked up 40 points and increased his total to 54. Blazing Sevens earned 30 points for finishing third to boost his total to 46. Sun Thunder picked up 20 points for finishing fourth to give him 54 points, and Raise Cain added 10 points for fifth and a total of 64 points. The current cut line is 45 points.

Blue Grass Quotes:

Todd Pletcher (winning trainer of Tapit Trice): “He didn't jump well, but then he gained a little momentum. It got a little hairy going into the first turn, but when he was able to secure that spot (jockey) Luis (Saez) was able to take him out in the clear down the backside. That was the position we hoped to get into, and once he got into that stride I thought we were in good shape. Yeah (slow out of the gate), that's him. We're not going to make him into a quick horse. The distances, as they stretch out, we always felt like would make him better. I think (the 1¼ miles of the Kentucky Derby-G1 Presented by Woodford Reserve) is right in his wheelhouse.”

Mandy Pope (whose Whisper Hill Farm co-owns Tapit Trice with Gainesway Stable): “It is so awesome (to get Tapit Trice a Grade 1 win). It's unbelievable for me. It's dreams come true and a lot of hard work from a lot of people.”

On the motivation behind her commitment to Thoroughbred sales and racing

“It's the determination that quality does pay off and quality is worth all the effort. From pedigree to the physical to the trainers to the barn crew at each of our farms who raise the horses and break them – they're all quality people and it's a quality effort. Hopefully quality continues up the road.”

On being ready to have one of the favorites for the Kentucky Derby

“We'll have one of the favorites.”

Antony Beck (owner of Gainesway, which bred Tapit Trice): “He's absolutely outstanding. It's wonderful to be partners with Mandy (Pope). It's a great friendship. We both love, love horses; we both love the sport. Tapit (sire of Tapit Trice standing at Gainesway Farm) has been an incredible stallion and this is another one of his incredible horses. I also want to thank John Fort (of Peachtree Stable), who selected Danzatrice (dam of Tapit Trice) for me as a 2-year-old. Without that, we wouldn't be here.”

Luis Saez (winning rider):

On the objection from jockey of runner-up Verifying: “I just feel like I was riding Tapit Trice perfectly. We came and passed the other horse (runner-up Verifying) clear and then when I was in front I felt like somebody hit my horse from behind. I feel like the other guy (jockey Tyler Gaffalione) tried to look for a chance and look for a foul. That's what I feel. I didn't feel like we would come down. I kept the horse straight and he won the race.

“Yes, definitely (the early move to get clear down the backside was key). First of all, we had a tough (post one) position, especially with him, because he takes a little while to get going. In the first turn we had an opportunity to put him in the clear. I made a little move early, because the pace was pretty slow, so I could get behind the horse we were supposed to beat. I know we have to beat everybody, but that was the horse (Verifying) to follow, so we were right there, and when he made his move we were right on top of him.”

Tyler Gaffalione (rider of runner-up Verifying): “He really ran a huge race and tried very hard. (Tapit Trice) kind of came in on me in the stretch, but my horse really tried hard today, especially in the stretch. He dug in and almost got it done.”

Irad Ortiz Jr. (rider of third-place finisher Blazing Sevens): “I got a good trip. I was a step slow trying to get into position, and then (found) a perfect spot going into the first turn beside the winner. Then I let him go and I sat right behind him. After that everything was perfect. He stayed (running) and can go farther for sure. Didn't work out for him today. He's a nice horse.”

Florent Geroux (rider of fourth-place finisher Sun Thunder): “I was at the back of the pack and I weaved my way through traffic. We took fourth place, all went great but he was really out of reach from the first two.”

Brian Hernandez Jr. (rider of sixth-place finisher Mendelssohns March): “We had a really good trip and a good position going into the first turn. I thought we were in a good spot coming down the backside, but Tapit Trice (got the) jump on us early. He started to make his move and we just got kind of pinned in there. He seemed like he stepped up for only his third race. (Mendelssohns March) was there for me the entire way. The other horses were just a little more seasoned and got the better of him today.”

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