Mage ‘Quiet, Relaxed’ At Pimlico; Blazing Sevens ‘Grabbed The Bridle A Little Better’ Wearing Blinkers

Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mage stretched his legs while jogging and galloping at Pimlico Race Course` Monday morning in preparation for a highly anticipated start in Saturday's 148th running of the Preakness Stakes (G1).

The Gustavo Delgado-trained 3-year-old, who went to the track shortly after 8:30 a.m., jogged in the company of a pony once around the mile oval before galloping once around under exercise rider J.J. Delgado.

“He looked good, quiet, relaxed,” said Gustavo Delgado Jr, his father's assistant. “There were only one, two, three horses on the track the same time he was. He was getting to know the track mainly.”

Mage, who will be installed as the Preakness favorite following the post-position draw late Friday afternoon, arrived at Pimlico early Sunday morning following a van ride from Churchill Downs.

The son of Good Magic, who is owned by OGMA Investments LLC, Ramiro Restrepo, CMNWLTH and Sterling Racing LLC, rallied from 16th in a field of 18 under a masterful ride by Hall of Famer Javier Castellano to register a length victory in the May 6 Derby while making only his fourth career start. His connections waited until Friday to commit Mage to the Preakness, in which the lightly raced colt will run in the 1 3/16-mile Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown off just two weeks rest. Mage is expected to be the only Derby competitor to be entered in the Preakness.

“Personally, I think he came back from his last race in better shape than his previous race,” Delgado Jr. said.

Just a year ago, Delgado Jr. and Restrepo ventured to the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-olds-in-training sale at nearby Timonium, MD, where they purchased Mage for $290,000.

“It's amazing when you look back, but right now I'm just trying to be not too high, not too low, in emotions. We have a big race coming. We just want to focus on the horse and make him the happiest he can be,” Delgado Jr. said.

Mage at Pimlico

Blazing Sevens Gets Acquainted with Pimlico Surroundings

Rodeo Creek Racing LLC's Blazing Sevens got his first look at the track at Pimlico Race Course Monday as he jogged once around with exercise rider Peter Leiva aboard.

Blazing Sevens, a son of Good Magic, will run in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) for trainer Chad Brown, who will be looking for his third win in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. Brown won the race last year with Early Voting and in 2017 with Cloud Computing.

Under the watch of assistant trainer Jose Hernandez, Blazing Sevens went to the track at 7 a.m. Monday.

“Just once around,” Hernandez said. “He liked it out there; he was happy. He went out there, stood a little bit, looked around and was back in about 15 minutes. So far, so good,”

Blazing Sevens, who will be ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr. in the Preakness, last raced April 8 when he finished third in the Blue Grass (G1) at Keeneland. That came after an eighth-place finish in the Fountain of Youth (G2) at Gulfstream Park in his seasonal debut.

In the Blue Grass, Brown equipped Blazing Sevens with blinkers for the first time.

“I liked him with the blinkers,” Brown said. “They are going to stay on him. He grabbed the bridle a little better and was more consistent (in the Blue Grass).”

Hernandez said Blazing Sevens will return to the track at Pimlico Tuesday morning and gallop.

National Treasure Gallops Monday Morning for Preakness Run

Shortly after sunrise, Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert's National Treasure got a feel for the surface and a look around Pimlico Race Course Monday morning when he went out for his routine daily exercise at 6 a.m.

National Treasure and three other Baffert stakes horses shipped to Baltimore from California Saturday for the 148th Preakness Stakes (G1) and the festival of supporting stakes. As is typically the case, Baffert's longtime assistant Jimmy Barnes supervised the trip and is managing the operation at the stakes barn at Pimlico.

“It's our first day to hit the track,” Barnes said. “We walked yesterday. Just galloped about a mile and quarter.”

Barnes said that the horses left Baffert's barn at Santa Anita at 3 a.m. and were flown from Los Angeles to Newark, N.J. The final leg to Pimlico was a four-hour van ride.

“That's why we came on Saturday because it's a long ship,” he said. “It all went smooth and we're looking forward to Saturday.”

National Treasure, a son of Quality Road, is owned by SF Racing LLC, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables LLC, Robert E. Masterson, Stonestreet Stables LLC, Jay A. Schoenfarber, Waves Edge Capital LLC and Catherine Donovan. He has one win in five career starts but has three graded-stakes placings. In his last race, he was fourth in the Santa Anita Derby (G1).

National Treasure at Pimlico accompanied by assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes on pony

Red Route One to Go it Alone for Preakness

Red Route One will be the sole representative for owner Ron Winchell and trainer Steve Asmussen in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course, with stablemate Disarm now pointing toward Saratoga's Travers Stakes.

Red Route One earned a fees-paid spot in the 1 3/16-mile Preakness by virtue of winning Oaklawn Park's $200,000 Bath House Row Stakes for his first stakes victory. Joel Rosario, who rode Red Route One last year in his racing debut on turf and then again in the Bath House Row, will be back aboard. Rosario has never won the Preakness, finishing second four times, including his runner-up finish aboard favored Epicenter for Winchell and Asmussen last year.

A son of the Asmussen-trained, Winchell co-owned 2017 Horse of the Year Gun Runner, Red Route One was third at 59-1 odds in last fall's Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1) at Keeneland won by eventual Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) and 2-year-old champion Forte. It was Red Route One's first dirt start after two grass races, including a maiden victory at Kentucky Downs, the all-turf course in which Winchell is co-managing partner.

This year, he closed from well back to take second in both Oaklawn Park's Southwest (G3) and Rebel (G2). He broke slowly and finishing sixth in the Arkansas Derby (G1) to thwart his Kentucky Derby aspirations and reroute him to the 1 1/8-mile Bath House Row Stakes.

“Red Route One is a horse that ran decent in the preps leading up to the Kentucky Derby until the Arkansas Derby,” Asmussen said. “That didn't go his way that day. He rebounded with a nice win in the 'win-and-you're-in' Bath House. He is a horse that will appreciate more ground, (but) we're very concerned about the lack of pace that is obvious in the Preakness.”

The stable's Pimlico-bound horses are scheduled to leave Louisville early Tuesday morning.

The final decision was made Monday morning to give Disarm, who would have been making his fourth start in eight weeks, more time before his next race.

“Just like him being fourth in the Derby, we're close to where we want to be but not there yet,” Asmussen said.

Also at Churchill Downs Monday morning, First Mission, who won the Stonestreet Lexington Stakes (G3) at Keeneland last time out, jogged once around the track on his first morning back training after working five-eighths of a mile Saturday in a lively 59.20 seconds in preparation for the Preakness. First Mission and trainer Brad Cox's other horses headed to Baltimore for Preakness Weekend stakes were scheduled to leave Churchill Downs at 9 a.m. Monday.

Perform Performing Up to McGaughey's Standards

Perform continues to perform the way Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey wants the 3-year-old colt to as he heads into the 148th running of Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course .

Owned by Woodford Racing LLC, Lanes End Farm, Phipps Stable, Ken Langone and Edward J. Hudson Jr., Perform is scheduled to leave McGaughey's barn at Belmont Park Tuesday morning at 8 and van to Baltimore. McGaughey will arrive on Wednesday.

Perform had his final Preakness breeze on Sunday, working a half-mile in 48.09 seconds, the second-fastest clocking of 42 works at the distance.

“I thought his work was excellent,” McGaughey said. “I thought it was the best I had ever seen him go. His work last Sunday (five furlongs in 1:00.56) was good, but this one was better.”

The son of Good Magic will be making his graded-stakes debut in the Preakness. In his last start, he overcame a stumble at the break and made up 10 lengths to win Laurel's Federico Tesio Stakes on April 15 by a head under jockey Feargal Lynch.

That was the first time Lynch, a Maryland veteran, was aboard Perform. He will ride the horse back in the Preakness.

When asked if he thought the game Tesio performance, a Preakness win-and-in event, was a confidence builder for Perform, McGaughey chuckled.

“I don't know about the horse, but it made me feel like he overcame a lot and still won,” he said. “He had to wind his way through those horses and ate the dirt. I think that all kind of contributed to why we are going there.”

Perform has two wins in seven career starts along with a second- and third-place finish. In three starts this year, he has two wins. He was supplemented to the Preakness for a fee of $150,000.

Chase the Chaos Slated to Ship Tuesday

Bill Dory and Adam Ference's Preakness Stakes (G1) candidate Chase the Chaos came out of his final timed work in good shape, trainer Ed Moger Jr. said and will ship from Northern California to Baltimore on Tuesday.

Chase the Chaos worked five furlongs in 1:00.80 on Friday, walked Saturday and went back to the track Sunday.

“He couldn't be better,” Moger said.

Chase the Chaos earned a fees-paid berth in the Preakness with his victory in the El Camino Real Derby on Feb. 11. Moger said the gelding will leave his barn at Golden Gate Fields near San Francisco at 5 a.m. Tuesday for a flight to Newark, N.J. He will compete the journey to historic Pimlico Race Course with a van ride.

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Mage Co-Owner Ramiro Restrepo Planning A Different Party At Preakness 148

Ramiro Restrepo showed up at the 2005 Preakness Stakes (G1) in a rented yellow school bus with a bunch of friends from the University of Maryland.

“From College Park to Baltimore,” recalled Restrepo of the '05 Preakness, won by Afleet Alex. “We loaded on that thing. Tons of beer.”

This year?

“I won't be in that party,” Restrepo said with a laugh.

As one of Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mage's four core owners, Restrepo will likely show up in something a little fancier to see if his colt can win the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown.

“I've been to at least a dozen Preaknesses,” Restrepo said. “But my favorite was the Sunday Silence-Easy Goer one in 1989, which I watched on TV.”

Restrepo, 44, is a lifelong racing fan who attributes his interest in the sport to a long list of family members who were involved in racing. A grandfather rode horses in Colombia in the 1930s and two uncles served as grooms and hotwalkers in New York.

“I was born in Jersey and my first memories going to the track were going to Belmont Park, and my grandfather showing me Kelso and Forego when they were paraded,” he said.

When Restrepo was a young child growing up in Miami, his parents took him to Hialeah Park on weekends, even though Florida law at that time prevented minors from attending. They got around the ban by parking their red Volvo outside the fence at the first turn, plopping the young Restrepo up on the hood, and watching from a distance.

In 1988, on the first day when the racing ban involving minors was lifted, Restrepo was one of the first through the turnstiles at Gulfstream Park. The track photographer gathered the kids in the winner's circle after the first race and took their picture.

“It was my playground,” Restrepo said of the tracks.

Restrepo went to the University of Miami and after graduating in 2000, went to work the nightlife scene on Miami Beach.

“We promoted, we marketed, we managed, and we owned nightclubs,” he said.

But Restrepo couldn't resist the allure of racing, and it was about this time a year ago that he and Gustavo Delgado Jr. were high-bidders on a Good Magic colt at the Mid-Atlantic May Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale. They paid $290,000 – above their budget – for the horse they would eventually name Mage.

They sold part of their ownership interest in Mage to Sterling Racing LLC and Commonwealth, then turned the colt over to Delgado's father, Venezuelan-born trainer Gustavo Delgado. The colt made his debut on the Jan. 28 Pegasus World Cup Handicap undercard at Gulfstream, winning his maiden by 3 ¾ lengths, returned in February to finish fourth in the Fountain of Youth Stakes (G2), and punched his Kentucky Derby ticket on April 1 with a strong second-place finish behind Forte in the Florida Derby (G1).

Restrepo said it's been the ride of a lifetime.

“Nothing prepares you,” Restrepo said of watching Mage win the Kentucky Derby and then reveling in the aftermath. “The feeling of crossing the wire first, and then the explosion of things that comes after.”

Restrepo said getting from the grandstand to the winner's circle at Churchill Downs was a surreal feeling.

“I was getting tackled by buddies like it was a rugby match, mosh-pitting and whooping and hollering,” he said. “Then the horse comes over, he's got the roses, (jockey Javier Castellano) is throwing roses in the air. People are screaming. People are crying. You're thinking, 'Where am I?' It's like you're floating out of body. You're being feted like we're celebrities. It's like you're Mick Jagger.”

It was nothing like riding a yellow school bus to Pimlico Race Course. This time, he'll come first class.

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Diodoro Suspended, Fined For Oaklawn TCO2 Positive

Robertino Diodoro, currently fifth for wins in this year's North American trainer standings, has been suspended 30 days and fined $1,000 after a colt under his care, Aristocracy (Tapit), tested positive for elevated total carbon dioxide (TCO2) in the blood after finishing sixth in the Apr. 22 $200,000 Bath House Row S. at Oaklawn Park.

According to two rulings issued by the Arkansas Racing Commission on Monday, May 15, Aristocracy is disqualified from purse winnings, and Diodoro will have 15 days of his suspension stayed “on the condition that no Class A or Class B medication violations occur in any racing jurisdiction within 365 days from the date of this ruling.”

Aristocracy's sample revealed a TCO2 blood reading of 42.3 mmol/L, a penalty category B violation in Arkansas.

The suspension is to be served Dec. 8, 2023, through December 22, 2023, which coincides with the expected start of the next Oaklawn meet. The current season ended May 6, and Diodoro was the leading trainer in victories and third in earnings.

The rulings stated Diodoro waived his rights to both a stewards' hearing and the appeal of both rulings.

TCO2 testing is designed to deter the practice of “milkshaking,” which involves administering a liquid solution of baking soda via nasogastric tube in an effort to prevent lactic acid buildup and stave off muscular fatigue.

The Paulick Report first reported the penalties, quoting Diodoro as denying Aristocracy was milkshaked. The trainer also said he had no idea how the colt's TCO2 level registered beyond the permitted limit of 37 mmol/L.

Some amount of TCO2 occurs naturally in the blood of horses.

The Bath House Row S. was the 3-year-old's first start for Diodoro and owner Gordon Christoff.

Aristocracy had previously raced for his breeders, Gary and Mary West, under the care of trainer Brad Cox.

His previous race for those connections was a ninth-place try in the John Battaglia Memorial S. at Turfway Park Mar. 4.

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