‘It Was A Great Day’: Angel of Empire’s Arkansas Derby Win Caps Cox’s Big Day At Oaklawn

It was quite the late birthday celebration for trainer Brad Cox, who, two days after turning 43, saddled three stakes winners Saturday at Oaklawn, including Angel of Empire in the $1.25-million Arkansas Derby (G1), a result that stamped the colt one of the Kentucky Derby (G1) favorites.

Cox, honored with an Eclipse Award as the country's outstanding trainer in 2020 and 2021, also won the $600,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) for 3-year-old fillies with heavily favored Wet Paint and the $200,000 Hot Springs Stakes for 3-year-olds with Eyeing Clover.

“It was a great day,” Cox said during training hours Sunday morning at Oaklawn. “It was good. Big performance from that colt yesterday, Angel of Empire. We'll load him on Tuesday and ship to Kentucky and see what we can come up with.”

Ridden for the first time by Flavien Prat, Angel of Empire ($11.40) powered to a 4 ¼-length victory over King Russell before an estimated crowd of 65,000. A son of champion and 2017 Arkansas Derby winner Classic Empire, Angel of Empire covered 1 1/8 miles over a fast track in 1:49.68 to generate a preliminary Equibase Speed rating of 106, a career high.

Angel of Empire's ascending Equibase Speed ratings mirror his development the last five months. He had won an entry-level allowance race at one mile Nov. 14 at Horseshoe Indianapolis, finished second in the $250,000 Smarty Jones Stakes at one mile Jan. 1 at Oaklawn and won the Risen Star Stakes (G2) at 1 1/8 miles Feb. 18 at Fair Grounds before a dominating performance Saturday.

“I've said it several times,” Cox said. “He's a horse we thought would get better with time and, obviously, age as well. And you know, he's obviously gotten better throughout the winter and he looks amazing. I think distance is probably an equalizer. He's not blessed with a tremendous amount of speed. He just kind of breaks. And he's not void of speed, but he kind of finds his way and they get away from him a little bit. But he settles. He's a very smart horse. Probably the biggest thing with him. Pretty big crowd here. There was a lot of noise in the paddock. Stands there and really presented himself well yesterday in the paddock and in the infield when we legged the riders up. He was on his toes, but he wasn't hot at all. He was feeling good. You could tell he was ready to run. Loved how he was acting mentally.”

Seventh after a half-mile, Angel of Empire cruised toward the front with a four-wide bid on the second turn and seized command in the upper stretch. The margin, 2 ½ lengths in midstretch, ballooned in the run to the wire.

“Even in the gallop out, they weren't close to him,” Cox said. “Flavien had never sat on him and he came back said, 'Wow! This horse, the further, the better.' ”

Angel of Empire collected 100 Kentucky Derby qualifying points for his Arkansas Derby victory, which pushed his overall total to 154 (No. 2 on official rankings released Saturday night by Churchill Downs). The 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby, May 6 at Churchill Downs, is limited to 20 starters.

Angel of Empire has had five jockeys in his six-race career, including Florent Geroux in an allowance turf sprint last fall at Kentucky Downs, Joe Talamo in the Smarty Jones, and Luis Saez in the Risen Star. Cox said he doesn't have a commitment for the Kentucky Derby.

“They'll sort themselves out over the next several weeks, between the Blue Grass, Wood, and Santa Anita Derby,” Cox said. “We'll see what happens.”

Angel of Empire, a $70,000 Keeneland September yearling Sale purchase from consignor Warrendale Sales, races for Iowa-based Albaugh Family Stables LLC (Jason Loutsch). Angel of Empire surpassed $1-million in career earnings with the Arkansas Derby victory, his fourth overall from six starts and has banked $1,069,375.

The Arkansas Derby marked Cox's fifth victory in Oaklawn's last 12 Kentucky Derby points races. He also won the Arkansas Derby last year with Cyberknife.

Cox also notched his second career victory in the 1 1/16-mile Fantasy with Wet Paint, a homebred daughter of Blame who races for her breeder, Godolphin LLC.

Wet Paint, last of 10 early, rolled to a 2 ½ length victory over Taxed to become only the second horse to sweep what are now Oaklawn's three Kentucky Oaks (G1) points races. Wet Paint, the 3-5 favorite under Prat, also won the Martha Washington Stakes at 1 1/16 miles Jan. 28 and the Honeybee Stakes (G3) at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 25. Eight Belles won the Martha Washington (second division), Honeybee, and Fantasy in 2008.

Wet Paint is perfect in career four starts around two turns. But the first three victories, including the Martha Washington and Honeybee, were over off tracks. Wet Paint ($3.20) raced over a fast track Saturday.

“Listen, we don't know until we try,” Cox said. “We didn't know until we ran yesterday. But her works here have been awfully good on dry tracks, so I felt pretty confident we'd get a big run from her as long as we got pace to run at. We got it.”

Wet Paint's winning time was 1:44.08. She will carry a 4-1-0 mark from six lifetime starts into the $1.25-million Kentucky Oaks (G1) May 5 at Churchill Downs. The 1 1/8-mile Kentucky Oaks is the country's biggest race for 3-year-old fillies. Wet Paint has earned $689,000 and tops the Kentucky Oaks Leaderboard with 170 points, including 100 for her Fantasy victory.

“She's definitely one of the top fillies in the country,” Cox said.

Cox said next-race plans are pending for Ten Strike Racing's Eyeing Clover, who, in his two-turn debut, rebounded from a fourth-place finish in the Gotham Stakes (G3) for 3-year-olds at 1 mile March 4 at Aqueduct. Eyeing Clover, under Geroux, was a one-length winner over favored Gun Pilot in the one-mile Hot Springs. Eyeing Clover ($5.60) was racing without blinkers for the first time in his four-race career.

“I don't really know what to make of the race,” Cox said. “It was a short field. He had a little bit of a rough run in the first turn and boxed in up the backside, but Florent did a good job of getting him out and getting him to respond. He stayed on. I don't really know if it's something that we're wanting to build off of and go further around two turns or cut him back. We'll talk to the Ten Strike Group and come up with a plan shortly.”

Eyeing Clover's winning time over a fast track was 1:39.45. Eyeing Clover's third career victory increased his earnings to $230,650. A $55,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, Eyeing Clover won his Dec. 31 career debut at Oaklawn.

Saturday's triple pushed Cox's career Oaklawn victory total to 285, including 20 this season. Cox entered Sunday with 36 career stakes victories at Oaklawn, with a single-season career high eight coming at the 2022-2023 meeting.

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Angel of Empire On To Kentucky After Big Saturday For Brad Cox

Brad Cox saddled a trio of winners Saturday at Oaklawn with Angel of Empire (Classic Empire) taking the day's biggest prize in the GI Arkansas Derby. He also won the GIII Fantasy Stakes for 3-year-old fillies with heavily-favored Wet Paint (Blame) and the Hot Springs S. with Eyeing Clover (Lookin At Lucky).

“It was a great day,” Cox said during training hours Sunday morning at Oaklawn. “It was good. Big performance from that colt yesterday, Angel of Empire. We'll load him on Tuesday and ship to Kentucky and see what we can come up with.”

Ridden for the first time by Flavien Prat, Angel of Empire powered to a 4 1/4-length victory over longshot King Russell (Creative Cause) before an estimated crowd of 65,000.

“I've said it several times,” Cox said. “He's a horse we thought would get better with time and, obviously, age as well. And you know, he's obviously gotten better throughout the winter and he looks amazing. I think distance is probably an equalizer. He's not blessed with a tremendous amount of speed. He just kind of breaks. And he's not void of speed, but he kind of finds his way and they get away from him a little bit. But he settles. He's a very smart horse. Probably the biggest thing with him. Pretty big crowd here. There was a lot of noise in the paddock. Stands there and really presented himself well yesterday in the paddock and in the infield when we legged the riders up. He was on his toes, but he wasn't hot at all. He was feeling good. You could tell he was ready to run. Loved how he was acting mentally.”

Angel of Empire's eventual winning margin, 2 1/2 lengths in mid-stretch, ballooned in the run to the wire.

“Even in the gallop out, they weren't close to him,” Cox said. “Flavien had never sat on him and he came back said, 'Wow! This horse, the further, the better.'”

Angel of Empire collected 100 Kentucky Derby qualifying points for his Arkansas Derby victory, which pushed his overall total to 154, good enough for second on the leaderboard.

Cox said he doesn't have a jockey commitment yet for the Kentucky Derby.

“They'll sort themselves out over the next several weeks, between the Blue Grass, Wood and Santa Anita Derby,” Cox said. “We'll see what happens.”

Cox also notched his second career victory in the 1 1/16-mile GIII Fantasy S. with Wet Paint, a homebred who races for her breeder, Godolphin. Last of 10 early, Wet Paint rolled to a 2 1/2-length victory over Taxed (Collected) to become only the second filly behind Eight Belles to sweep what are now Oaklawn's three Kentucky Oaks points races. Wet Paint also won the Martha Washington S. Jan. 28 and the GIII Honeybee Stakes Feb. 25. Saturday's race marked the filly's first try around two turns over a fast track after catching off tracks in both the Martha Washington and the Honeybee.

“Listen, we don't know until we try,” Cox said. “We didn't know until we ran yesterday. But her works here have been awfully good on dry tracks, so I felt pretty confident we'd get a big run from her as long as we got pace to run at. We got it. She's definitely one of the top fillies in the country.”

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Rodriguez, Ward Secure Turfway Winter/Spring Meet Titles

Following Saturday's closure of the 49-day Winter/Spring Meet at Turfway Park, jockey Walter Rodriguez, trainer Wesley Ward, and owner Roy Jackson's Lael Stables were awarded with respective meet-leading titles.

Rodriguez, a five-pound apprentice, burst onto the Turfway scene in December and quickly found himself riding for some of the top connections on the backside. Represented by Cliff Collier, Rodriguez tallied 48 victories from 250 starts. Some of his most notable wins this meet were aboard Ocean Atlantique in the $125,000 Dust Commander Stakes and Opening Buzz, who was victorious in the $125,000 Wishing Well Stakes.

Collier's other rider, 2022 Winter/Spring Meet champion Gerardo Corrales, was second in the standings with 45 victories. He was followed by Fernando De La Cruz (35 wins), Luan Machado (35) and Joe Ramos (26).

Ward's 22 victories at the meet were seven more than Paulo Lobo and Bill Morey's 15.

Among Ward's biggest victories at the meet were from his trainees Eye Witness in the $250,000 Animal Kingdom Stakes, Sunday Shoes in the $125,000 Serena's Song, and Funtastic Again in the $125,000 Leonatus Stakes. Trainers Brad Cox and Mike Maker finished in a tie for fourth with 14 wins.

The race for leading owner came down to the final night at Turfway Park, and with Sunday Shoe's victory in the Serena's Song Stakes, Lael Stables moved into a three-way tie with Three Diamonds Farm and Wesley Ward for leading owner with six wins. Lael Stables won the tiebreaker with the most earnings of the three: $341,365.

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Keeneland Workers Prep For Opening Weekend Stakes

Several runners being pointed to opening weekend stakes turned in works Sunday morning over the fast main track.

Dixiana Farms' homebred Hayes Strike (Connect) along with Mendelssohns March (Mendelssohn), owned by Harold Lerner, Nehoc Stables, AWC Stables and Team Stallion Racing Stable, tuned up for expected starts in Saturday's GI Toyota Blue Grass S. by working 5 furlongs in 1:00.60 in company together.

Hayes Strike comes into the 1 1/8-mile Blue Grass off a victory in the Private Terms S. at Laurel March 18.

“I don't run many horses in Maryland,” trainer Kenny McPeek said of Hayes Strike. “His race at Turfway (in the Leonatus Stakes on Jan. 21 in which he finished ninth) … nothing went right. He didn't ship well, and he didn't handle the synthetic surface at all. I just needed to get him back on the dirt and get him back to winning.”

Mendelssohns March has two wins in two starts with victories on the turf at Fair Grounds and on a sloppy dirt track at Oaklawn Park.

McPeek is the most recent of six trainers to have swept the GI Central Bank Ashland and Toyota Blue Grass in the same year. McPeek, who first accomplished the double in 2002 with Take Charge Lady and Harlan's Holiday, is expected to send out Magdalena Racing, Colette Marie Vanmatre and James Ball's Defining Purpose (Cross Traffic) in the Ashland. Defining Purpose worked 5 furlongs in 1:00.20.

Half-mile workers included Mr. and Mrs. Tsunebumi Yoshihara's Yuugiri (Shackleford) who went in :48.80 in preparation for the GI Madison S. for trainer Rodolphe Brisset; Tom Durant's Run Classic (Runhappy) who worked a half in :47.80 for the GIII Commonwealth S. for trainer Bret Calhoun; and Michael J. Ryan's Be Your Best (Ire) (Muhaarar {GB}) in :49.80 for the GII Appalachian S. for trainer Horacio De Paz.

Also working Sunday morning was West Coast Stables' Pride of the Nile (Pioneerof the Nile), currently 28th on the Road to the Kentucky Oaks with 17 points, who drilled 6 furlongs in 1:16 on the main track under Ferrin Peterson for trainer Doug O'Neill in preparation for Friday's GI Central Bank Ashland S. Pride of the Nile shipped to Keeneland the middle of last month after a troubled trip in the GIII Santa Ysabel at Santa Anita March 5.

“I was glad to get her,” said Stephanie Murray, who oversees the O'Neill string at Keeneland. “Today was her third work here. The first time, she worked on the (all-weather) training track because of the rain.”

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