Practical Move Draws Eight Rivals In Santa Anita Derby

Trainer Tim Yakteen's Practical Move, fresh off impressive scores in a pair of graded stakes, heads a field of nine sophomores going a mile and one eighth in this Saturday's Grade 1, $750,000 Runhappy Santa Anita Derby—a race that has produced 20 Kentucky Derby winners.

With a total of 200 Kentucky Derby qualifying points at stake, 100 will be awarded to the winner, with 40, 30, 20 and 10 points going to the remaining top five finishers.

Yakteen, a former assistant to both Bob Baffert and Charlie Whittingham, eyes his first victory in what will be the 86th renewal of the Santa Anita Derby. Owned by Leslie Amestoy, Pierre Jean Amestoy, Jr. and Roger Beasley, Practical Move was attentive to the pace in the G2 San Felipe Stakes at 1 1/16 miles on March 4 while full of run at the rail in the run to the far turn.

With pacesetter Hejazi in front of him and Geaux Rocket Ride just to his outside, Practical Move unleashed a tremendous turn of foot, leaving his rivals in his wake en route to an emphatic 2 ½ length score and in a performance that certainly suggests he'll relish added distance, he daylighted the field galloping out into the Club House turn.

Practical Move's San Felipe score followed an impressive followed 3 ¼ length romp at the same distance in the G2 Los Alamitos Futurity Dec. 17. A Kentucky-bred colt by the Into Mischief stallion Practical Joke out of the Afleet Alex mare Ack Naughty, Practical Move raced as a maiden at Los Alamitos, earning an 88 Beyer Speed Figure, and followed that with a 100 Beyer in the San Felipe.

With Ramon Vazquez back aboard for the third consecutive time on Saturday, Practical Move, who is already assured of a starting position in the Run for the Roses with 60 qualifying points, will again face Geaux Rocket Ride as well the San Felipe third place finisher Skinner, with all three horses rating solid chances.

Second or third in all four of his maiden starts prior to the Los Alamitos Futurity, Practical Move is now 6-3-1-2 with earnings of $434,200.

Although he's late to the Triple Crown party, Richard Mandella's Geaux Rocket Ride, in just his second career start and first time around two turns, ran lights-out in the San Felipe, sitting a measured second to Hejazi to the far turn and battling gamely at the rail through the lane to finish second, 1 ¼ lengths in front of an on-coming Skinner.

A galloping first-out maiden six furlong winner here Jan. 29, Geaux Rocket Ride was the 5-2 favorite in the San Felipe, a race in which he earned a 96 Beyer. Owned by Pin Oak Stud, LLC, Geaux Rocket Ride, who picked up 20 KY Derby qualifying points in the San Felipe, is by Candy Ride out of the Uncle Mo mare Beyond Grace.

Like Geaux Rocket Ride, C R K Stable's Skinner would appear to have considerable upside. Far back at the half mile pole in the San Felipe, Skinner made an eye-catching move while wide-out around the far turn but with Practical Move powering home, he wasn't able to make up the necessary ground, finishing third by 3 ¾ lengths but looking like a horse who could excel at longer distances.

Trained by John Shirreffs, Skinner, a Kentucky-bred colt by Curlin out of the Malibu Moon mare Winding Way, has improved dramatically here this winter and appears set for his best in what will be sixth career start and fifth pairing with Victor Espinoza.

Unraced since a disappointing third, beaten one length as the 3-5 favorite going one mile in the G3 Sham Stakes Jan. 8, National Treasure has been transferred from Baffert to Yakteen in an effort to receive qualifying points to the Kentucky Derby.

Third, beaten 3 ¾ lengths by Eclipse Award Juvenile Colt champ Forte in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Nov. 4 at Keeneland, National Treasure was second to highly regarded stablemate Cave Rock two starts back in the G1 American Pharoah here Oct. 8 and is obviously a colt with immense class, but with a lack of recency, he no doubt faces a tall order on Saturday.

Owned by SF Racing, LLC, Starlight Racing, LLC, et al, National Treasure is 4-1-1-2 with earnings of $300,000.

Although he'll likely be a double digit longshot at post time, Japan's Mandarin Hero is nonetheless a compelling story given the fact Japanese-based horses have done extremely well competing around the globe the past three years—winning a pair of Breeders' Cup races at Del Mar in 2021 and most recently, the Dubai World Cup and UAE Derby on March 25 with Usheba Tesoro and Derma Sotogake.

Raced exclusively at Japan's Ooi Racecourse, Mandarin Hero was unbeaten in four starts at age two and in his lone start this year, finished second, beaten a neck going a mile and one eighth on Feb. 23. The first Japanese-based horse to ever run in the Santa Anita Derby, Mandarin Hero, a colt by Shanhai Bobby, is owned by Hiroaki Arai and trained by Terunobu Fujita.

Mandarin Hero will be ridden by Kazushi Kimura, a 23-year-old Japanese native who has been Canada's leading rider for the past two years at Woodbine Racecourse and who was North America's Eclipse Champion Apprentice in 2019. Kimura, who will be leaving to return to ride full time in Toronto following this weekend, has three stakes wins at the current Classic Meet.

THE GRADE 1 RUNHAPPY SANTA ANITA DERBY WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 6 of 12 Approximate post time 2:45 p.m. PT

  1. I Don't Get It—Mario Gutierrez—124 20-1
  2. Dazzlemesilver—Kent Desormeaux—124 50-1
  3. Geaux Rocket Ride—Flavien Prat—124 3-1
  4. One in Vermillion—Hector Berrios—124 50-1
  5. Practical Move—Ramon Vazquez—124 8-5
  6. National Treasure—John Velazquez—124 3-1
  7. Skinner—Victor Espinoza—124 4-1
  8. Mandarin Hero—Kazushi Kimura—124 8-1
  9. Low Expectations—Umberto Rispoli—124 30-1

First post time for a 12-race card that will also include five other stakes on Saturday is at 12 noon with admission gates opening at 10 a.m.

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Cox, Pletcher Bring Loaded Arsenals For Wood Memorial

A field of 13 sophomores have entered for their final shot to earn Kentucky Derby qualifying points in Saturday's 98th running of the Grade 2, $750,000 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino at Aqueduct Racetrack. The nine-furlong test is the final local qualifier for the Grade 1, $3 million Kentucky Derby on May 6 at Churchill Downs, awarding 100-40-30-20-10 points to the top-five finishers.

A total of four graded stakes are carded for Saturday's action-packed program, which also includes the Grade 3, $200,000 Bay Shore for 3-year-olds at seven furlongs in Race 6; the Grade 1, $300,000 Carter Handicap presented by NYRA Bets in Race 8 for 4-year-olds and upward at seven furlongs; and the Grade 3, $250,000 Gazelle in Race 3, a 100-40-30-20-10 qualifier for the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks for sophomore fillies going nine furlongs. First post on the 11-race card is 12:15 p.m. Eastern.

The Wood Memorial, slated to close out the card in Race 11, will air on FOX from 6 – 6:30 p.m. Eastern. Coverage and analysis of Saturday's lucrative undercard from Aqueduct will air across the FOX Sports family of networks beginning at noon. For the complete America's Day at the Races schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

Last year saw an exciting renewal of the Wood Memorial when Mo Donegal – eventual winner of the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets – mowed down next-out Grade 1 Preakness winner Early Voting. This year's edition will be headlined by Gary and Mary West's Hit Show, who will seek to back up a decisive 5 1/2-length victory in the Grade 3 Withers on February 11 at the Big A for trainer Brad Cox.

Hit Show will also strive to give his owners a second Wood Memorial triumph after their pink and black colors saw the Jimmy Bond-trained Buddha score in 2002. The son of Candy Ride earned a career-best 91 Beyer Speed Figure in the nine-furlong Withers, where he settled a close fifth down the backstretch and took command around the three-sixteenths to draw off to an in-hand victory under Manny Franco.

“He's already been up to New York and won a race up there. He proved shipping wasn't a concern and he's familiar with the surroundings going on the road,” Cox said. “I think he's a horse that does like a mile and an eighth and beyond. We think he's a two-turn horse. We brought him back to Fair Grounds and trained him. We had our options of where to run next after the Withers – the Louisiana Derby, the Arkansas Derby or the Wood Memorial. Since he's already shown success in New York, we decided that would be the best spot for him.”

Hit Show graduated at first asking in October at Keeneland ahead of a troubled fourth in November at Churchill Downs. He defeated winners in January at Oaklawn Park en route to his Withers coup.

A Kentucky homebred, Hit Show is out of the graded stakes-winning Tapit broodmare Actress. His second dam, Milwaukee Appeal, was a dual Grade 1-placed millionaire and 2009 Champion 3-Year-Old Filly in Canada.

Franco will retain the mount from the outermost post 13.

Cox will also be represented by Gold Square's Slip Mahoney, who makes his two-turn debut after finishing a late-rallying second over muddy and sealed going in the Grade 3 Gotham on March 4 at Aqueduct. Although slow from the starting gate in the one-mile test and forced to go nine wide in the stretch, the son of Arrogate hit his best stride late and went from eighth-to-second in the last two points of call to collect 20 qualifying Kentucky Derby points.

Slip Mahoney, who has made all four of his lifetime starts here, broke his maiden at third asking going a one-turn mile on January 21 after finishing behind eventual graded stakes winners Litigate and Tapit Trice in his first two starts.

“I'm excited to get him around two-turns. I think he's bred for it and, how he's run, I think he'll handle it well,” Cox said. “He obviously needs to get better in the Wood than he was in the Gotham. He ran a good race in the Gotham when he was compromised at the start, but this should be a tougher race.”

Bred in Kentucky by Hill 'n' Dale Equine Holdings and Phillip J. Steinberg, Slip Mahoney is out of the Grade 1-winning A.P. Indy mare Got Lucky and is a direct descendant of influential broodmares Get Lucky, Numbered Account and La Troienne. He was a $150,000 purchase at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Dylan Davis, the pilot in Slip Mahoney's first three starts, will be reunited with the gray colt from post 5.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher currently shares the record for most Wood Memorial victories with the late Hall of Famer Sunny “Jim” Fitzsimmons. He will be in pursuit of a third consecutive and eighth overall Wood Memorial conquest when sending out Whisper Hill Farm's Classic Catch as well as Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable-owned maidens Crupi and Dreamlike.

Classic Catch, a dark bay or brown Classic Empire colt, enters from a two-length victory against winners going nine furlongs on March 2 at Gulfstream Park. A perfect 2-for-2 at the Wood Memorial distance, Classic Catch was a second-out maiden winner going 1 1/8 miles on November 20 at the Big A before finishing third in his sophomore debut at Tampa Bay Downs.

“He looks good. He shipped in [Tuesday] and his energy level is good. His coat looks well and we're right on track,” said Pletcher's Belmont-based assistant Byron Hughes.

Classic Catch will be ridden by Trevor McCarthy from post 11.

After watching their reigning Champion 2-Year-Old Colt Forte assert his dominance on the Kentucky Derby trail in last Saturday's Grade 1 Florida Derby at Gulfstream Park, owners Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola [St. Elias Stable] will be playing the longshot role in the Wood Memorial with Crupi and Dreamlike.

Named in honor of the late horseman J.J. Crupi – who owned Crupi's New Castle Farm in Ocala, Florida – the equine Crupi has kept quality company through the maiden ranks, finishing behind fellow Wood Memorial aspirants Classic Catch and Slip Mahoney as well as graded stakes winner Instant Coffee and graded stakes placed Disarm. The son of Curlin, who produced previous Wood Memorial winners Vino Rosso [2018] and Irish War Cry [2017], comes into the Wood Memorial off his lone off-the-board result when seventh in the Grade 2 Risen Star on February 18 at Fair Grounds Race Course.

Crupi is out of the Malibu Moon mare Don'tforgetaboutme – a half-sister to graded stakes winners Red Ruby and Mo Tom as well as multiple Grade 1-placed Beautician. Bred in Kentucky by Claiborne Farm, Crupi was bought for $275,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Dreamlike, who adds blinkers, has finished second in his pair of career outings, both taking place at Gulfstream Park. Following a debut effort going a one-turn mile on February 11, the son of Gun Runner replicated the same result one calendar month later when stretching out to a two-turn 1 1/16 miles to finish three-quarters of a length behind impressive winner Empirestrikesfast. The effort garnered a 91 Beyer, which is tied for the field-best figure.

A $975,000 acquisition at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, Dreamlike is out of the Tapit mare Time to Tap who is a full-sister to 2014 Champion 3-Year-Old Filly Untapable.

“They both have talent and either one of them could step up and run a big race on Saturday,” Hughes said.

Kendrick Carmouche – who piloted the Pletcher-trained 2021 longshot Wood Memorial winner Bourbonic – will ride Crupi from post 9; while Jose Ortiz pursues his second Wood Memorial victory aboard Dreamlike from post 1.

Trainer Saffie Joseph, Jr. will saddle a pair of contenders in maiden winners Lord Miles [post 8, Paco Lopez] and Knox [post 3, Jose Gomez].

A Vegso Racing Stable homebred, Lord Miles was fifth last out in the Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby on March 11 at Tampa Bay Downs. The effort came two starts after the son of Curlin was a close third in the January 1 Mucho Macho Man at Gulfstream Park. Both efforts earned Lord Miles a total of five points on the Kentucky Derby trail heading into Saturday's race. He is currently 56th on the leaderboard.

Joseph, Jr. has started three horses in the Wood – all of them longshots – finishing fourth in 2019 with Math Wizard [64-1], while Skippylongstocking [17-1] and A.P.'s Secret [49-1] ran third and fourth, respectively, in last year's running.

“He's normally a very handy work horse, that's why it's been a bit weird that in his races he's been off the bridle. I think the longer distance will work well for him,” Joseph, Jr. said of Lord Miles. “We've tried to put him in the race earlier, but he has different ideas. He's slow early in his races, but in the morning he's not that kind of horse. We just have to let him decide where he wants to sit.”

Knox, a Florida homebred for Arindel, seeks his first win since June when he won on debut by 1 1/2 lengths over a sloppy and sealed Gulfstream Park main track. The Brethren bay was third in his lone two-turn effort in the FTBOA Florida Sire In Reality on October 1. He enters the Wood Memorial off a late-closing second in a seven-furlong starter optional claimer at Gulfstream Park.

Last week, Knox's full-brother Clapton captured the Grade 3 Ghostzapper going two turns at Gulfstream Park. Both horses are out of the stakes-winning Afleet Alex mare Alexandra Rylee.

“He's not an overly big horse. He's a compact colt but he's built strong,” Joseph, Jr. said. “We've been trying to stretch him out for a while and we're going to take a chance with him. His full-brother won the Grade 3 at Gulfstream last week. Two turns is definitely in his pedigree, so we'll give a chance and see how he gets on.”

Trainer Brittany Russell will send up emphatic maiden winner Uncle Jake [post 10, Jevian Toledo]. The son of Uncle Mo, who finished third in the 2011 Wood Memorial and also sired last year's winner Mo Donegal, was a 9 1/2-length winner at second asking on March 10 going a two-turn mile at Laurel Park.

Uncle Jake drilled five furlongs in 59 seconds flat on Friday at Laurel Park.

“He ran really well last time. He got a little lost late, but I think he was out front on his own for some time,” Russell said. “I think he wants the ground. He needs racing and he still has some maturing to do mentally. He's a big, lovely horse who's trained really well and had a really good work. If you're going to ask for things to click on the right day, this Saturday would be it.”

Uncle Jake is owned by SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Robert E. Masterson, Stonestreet Stables, Jay A. Schoenfarber, Waves Edge Capital, and Catherine Donovan. He was purchased for $675,000 from the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale and is out of the multiple graded stakes winning Harlan's Holiday mare Tasha's Miracle.

Three New York-breds will line up in the starting gate for the Wood Memorial, including Chester and Mary Broman's homebred Arctic Arrogance [post 7, Jose Lezcano], who has never finished worse than second in six lifetime starts for trainer Linda Rice.

Arctic Arrogance, who will race with blinkers off, captured last year's Sleepy Hollow on October 30 at Belmont at the Big A before a string of runner-up placings on the local Kentucky Derby trail in the Grade 2 Remsen on December 3, the Jerome on January 7 and the Grade 3 Withers on February 11. He is currently 37th on the leader board with 16 points.

Arctic Arrogance is a son of 2015 Wood Memorial winner Frosted. A victory would provide a three-generation sequence of Wood Memorial winners as Frosted's sire is 2004 Wood Memorial winner Tapit.

Peachtree Stable's New York-bred Shadow Dragon [post 2, Eric Cancel] will attempt to give Hall of Famer Bill Mott his second Wood Memorial victory after saddling 2019 winner Tacitus. Bred by AJ Suited, the dark bay Army Mule colt enters off a distant fifth in the Grade 2 Fountain of Youth on March 4 at Gulfstream Park, which came following a close second to stablemate Rocket Can in the Grade 3 Holy Bull one month prior. He is currently 42nd on the leaderboard with 13 points.

Seacoast Thoroughbreds of N.E.'s New York homebred General Banker [post 4, Frankie Pennington] has been knocking on the door in the last three local Kentucky Derby prep races and will take a swing at the Wood Memorial for trainer Jimmy Ferraro. Third in each of the Jerome, Withers and Gotham, the son of Central Banker has 26 points and is currently 24th on the leaderboard. He enters as the most seasoned horse in the field with a record of 1-3-3 through 11 lifetime starts.

Completing the field are Victoria's Ranch's Mr. Swagger [post 12, Carlos Olivero] – a first out maiden winner at Parx Racing, who finished a distant sixth in the last-out Gotham; and Turfway Park maiden winner and Gotham fifth-place finisher Clear the Air [post 6, Heman Harkie], who is cross-entered in Saturday's Grade 1 Blue Grass at Keeneland where he is expected to run.

First run in 1925, the prestigious prep race for the Kentucky Derby has had 11 winners go on to capture the 'Run for the Roses'. The event honors the late Eugene D. Wood, a New York state politician who was responsible for the establishment of the now defunct Jamaica Racetrack, where the Wood Memorial was originally run. Since its inception, the Wood has been captured by over 20 eventual American classic winners, including Triple Crown winners Gallant Fox [1930], Count Fleet [1943], Assault [1946] and Seattle Slew [1977]. Other prominent American classic winners to have previously won the Wood Memorial include Twenty Grand [1931], Johnstown [1939], Hill Prince [1950], Native Dancer [1953], Nashua [1955], Bold Ruler [1957], Quadrangle [1964], Damascus [1967], Foolish Pleasure [1975], Bold Forbes [1976], Easy Goer [1989] and Empire Maker [2003].

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‘I Feel Strong’: Journeyman Sheldon Russell Embarks On Latest Comeback At Laurel

Jockey Sheldon Russell, who returned to riding over the weekend, will be favored to pick up the first win of his latest comeback when live racing returns to Laurel Park Thursday.

Russell, 35, is named on SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Robert Masterson, Jay Schoenfarber, Waves Edge Capital and Catherine Donovan's Langlee Avenue in Race 3, a maiden special weight for 3-year-olds sprinting seven furlongs.

Bred in Kentucky by Shadwell Farms, Triple Crown-nominated Langlee Avenue is the 6-5 program favorite breaking from outermost Post 6. He has breezed three times at Laurel for Russell's wife, trainer Brittany Russell, since mid-March after arriving from California and shares similar ownership as that of 3-year-olds Fort Warren and Uncle Jake, both nominated to Laurel's $125,000 Federico Tesio April 15.

“I've been on him a few times. He's at that stage now where he's ready to make his debut. He does everything good in the mornings,” Sheldon Russell said. “I'm really looking forward to it. I appreciate the owners giving me the chance. I'm very excited to ride him. It's nice because he's done everything that we've asked of him in the morning. He's done all his homework, so now he's just got to sort of put it all together in the afternoon. We're hoping he runs a good race.

“I think he was actually going to be my first ride back. He was due to run on Sunday, but the race didn't go and they brought it back,” he added. “I'm just excited. Hopefully he shows up. He's ready to run.”

An eight-time meet champion in Maryland represented by agent Marty Leonard, Russell finished second on 4-year-old Maryland-bred filly Thunder Boss in a maiden claimer April 2 at Laurel, his first race in 94 days since running third on Hybrid Eclipse in the Carousel Dec. 30.

Russell's latest absence was far shorter than the 10 months between races from mid-September 2021 to July 1, 2022, when he piloted Heldish to a debut triumph at Laurel after having surgery and rehab to recover from a Lisfranc injury to his right foot and a broken collarbone suffered on the comeback trail.

Rather than being forced out of action, Russell voluntarily placed himself on the sidelines to deal with his nagging left shoulder. Russell missed nearly eight months in 2015-16 with a torn labrum and fractured shoulder.

“I've had some problems with the left shoulder before. I'd had surgery on it. We'd done the routine checks with Dr. [James] Dreese there at MedStar, and it was either go back in and fix it up or take some time off and just see if the physical therapy would help,” Russell said.

“I didn't really want to do the whole surgery process again so I opted to just pull the plug. I ended up doing like 2 ½ months of physical therapy,” he added. “I was going up there two or three times a week and I feel like the rest has helped.”

Russell worked with physical therapist Steve Luca, the clinical director at Bel Air Athletic Club in Bel Air, Md., and began getting on horses again last month.

“I just sort of took my time. I got it strong enough to where we were feeling good in the physical therapy. I was doing everything else that I could do except get on a horse,” Russell said. “Obviously, we have the mechanical horse here at home. I think I had done like two weeks, maybe three, in the mornings. I just wanted to be ready.

“It wasn't going to heal itself if I was just going to keep racing and keep using it. I really had no choice but to just sort of take care of myself. If I still want to keep doing it then I needed to take care of it now before it got any worse,” he added. “Looking back now I feel good, I feel strong. Hopefully we can get some mounts and get some winners.”

Russell's time away coincided with the slower Maryland winter schedule where racing was conducted three days a week during the calendar year-opening winter meet that ended March 31. Brittany Russell finished second in the trainer standings with 30 wins, 24 of those with jockey Jevian Toledo, also represented by Leonard.

“Before I had pulled the plug and just stopped I had said, 'Look, if we're going to stop, let's stop now and hopefully we can have a busy summer together and go from there,'” Russell said. “It's never a good time to stop because you kind of always feel like there's live horses running week in and week out, but wintertime is sort of slower and there's no turf racing. Hopefully, we can stay healthy and enjoy this run.”

Starting Thursday, racing will be conducted four days a week at Laurel's spring meet which runs through Sunday, May 7, with the exception of Easter Sunday, April 9. Post time remains 12:25 p.m.

The feature on Thursday's eight-race program come sin Race 7, a six-furlong allowance for fillies and mares 3 and up that drew a field of seven led by SAB Stable Inc.'s Haleigh B, a 5-year-old mare that has two wins, a second and a third in four starts since mid-December after joining Brittany Russell's string. Jeremy Rose rides from outermost Post 7, while That's Some Kiss breaks from the rail under regular rider Forest Boyce exiting back-to-back runner-up finishes Feb. 11 and March 3 at Laurel.

Samuel Davis-owned and trained Wicked Prankster, unraced since extending his win streak to two races in the Maryland Million Turf last October, is entered to make his 5-year-old debut in Race 6 Friday, an optional claiming allowance for 3-year-olds and up going about 1 1/16 miles. In Race 7 Shackled Love, winner of the 2021 Private Terms, is entered to make just his second start since August 2021 in second-level optional claiming allowance for 3-year-olds and up, also at about 1 1/16 miles. The 5-year-old gelding was last of eight in his comeback Jan. 16 at Laurel.

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Classic Clues At Deauville

Against the backdrop of the news that Maisons-Laffitte could be on the way back, it is up to Deauville to continue to stage the two key seven-furlong trials that used to be the preserve of that Parisian venue and help light the way to the upcoming mile Classics on Thursday. In the G3 Prix Djebel, the colts who could be either 2000 Guineas or Poule d'Essai des Poulains-bound include the G1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere hero Belbek (Fr) (Showcasing {GB}) with Andre Fabre set to weigh up the correct target. Also successful over six furlongs in Chantilly's G3 Prix du Bois in June, Nurlan Bizakov's homebred would be one of the faster types taking part in either Classic but he does have Sangarius (GB) (Kingman {GB}) in his pedigree.

 

Has He Reached His Limit?

Third and beaten two necks in the Lagardere, TDN Rising Star Breizh Sky (Fr) (Pedro The Great) is back for another tilt at Belbek and add to his prior black-type win in the Listed Prix Roland de Chambure over this trip on the round course here in July. Whether he can build on a solid juvenile campaign and progress at three or whether he has already hit his ceiling is the question and both he and White Birch Farm's G3 Prix des Chenes-winning homebred Kubrick (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) have to put unplaced efforts behind them in Saint-Cloud's G1 Criterium International.

 

An Imprudence To Savour…

Seventy minutes after the Djebel, the likely 1000 Guineas and Poule d'Essai des Pouliches protagonists get their opportunity to shine in a numerically stronger prep which is probably also deeper in terms of competition and quality. Despite there being a total of seven listed or group winners in the line-up headed by Mohamed Saeed Al Shahi's Wed (Fr) (Profitable {Ire}), who captured the G2 Prix du Calvados over this course and distance in August, the presence of Ballydoyle's TDN Rising Star Beginnings (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}) and Godolphin's Polytrack course winner Quickstep (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) make it a fascinating affair. Also in the mix is Jean-Pierre-Joseph Dubois's impressive Chantilly conditions scorer Sauterne (Fr) (Kingman {GB}), whose dam is a half to Stacelita (Fr) (Monsun {Ger})

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