‘We’ll Let The Horse Decide’: Manhattan, Belmont Gold Cup Options For Red Knight

At 9-years-young, seasoned veteran Red Knight earned his first Grade 1 victory in Saturday's $600,000 Man o' War at Belmont Park, and trainer Mike Maker said the Pure Prize gelding could be back for more high caliber action during the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival with the  $750,000 Manhattan (G1) at 1 1/4 miles on June 10 and the $250,000 Belmont Gold Cup (G2) at two miles on June 9 under consideration.

“We'll let the horse decide,” Maker said. “He came out of the race well and ate up last night. If I had to enter today, he'd be a go. He's doing really well.”

Owned and bred in New York by Tom Egan's Trinity Farm, Red Knight became only the third 9-year-old horse to win a Grade 1 flat race on the NYRA circuit according to stats provided by Equibase. In doing so, he joined the great John Henry who captured the 1984 Turf Classic at Belmont for Hall of Famer Ron McAnally and John's Call, who won the 2000 Sword Dancer and 2000 Turf Classic. Additionally, Red Knight's Man o' War triumph marked the 14th straight year that a New York-bred horse has won a Grade 1 event.

Previously conditioned by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, Red Knight has now won four times since Maker took over training duties last summer. After emerging from an 11-month layoff to capture his Maker debut in July's Colonial Cup at Colonial Downs, he parlayed his winning form to Kentucky Downs for the Grade 2 Kentucky Turf Cup before a pair of unplaced efforts at Keeneland in the Grade 3 Sycamore and Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf to close out the year.

He returned to action with vigor, coming from last-of-11 to win his 2023 debut in the Grade 3 William L. McKnight on January 28 at Gulfstream Park. He entered the Man o' War off a narrow runner-up finish in the Grade 2 Elkhorn on April 22 at Keeneland, missing a head to fellow Man o' War contestant Verstappen, who finished seventh.

Red Knight was also possible for next Saturday's Grade 3 Louisville at Churchill Downs, but Maker opted for another try at Grade 1 success.

“You don't get too many opportunities at a Grade 1, so we chose to run in the Man o' War and we're glad that we did,” Maker said. “He's always run well fresh and he came out of his race at Keeneland in very good shape.”

The well-traveled Red Knight has found the winners' circle over seven different racetracks, but has garnered the most success at Belmont where he has won five times.

“We've been to Colonial Downs with Red, to Kentucky Downs, Keeneland, Gulfstream Park, back to Keeneland. But here, Belmont Park, seems like home to me. And I know Red has raced here 10 times himself so it's like home to him also,” said Egan on Saturday.

Red Knight endured a lengthy hiatus after finishing sixth in August 2021 in the John's Call at Saratoga. The chestnut spent extended time with Chad Stewart in Ocala, Florida, before returning victorious in July.

“At the beginning of September [2021], he was laid up with Chad and he said, 'Tom I don't know, I think horse could be done,'” Egan recalled. “So, we turned him out for 90 days and we put him back in training to see if there was anything there. Chad, after a week, said, 'He's not doing it, Tom,' so we tried one more week and he said, 'Tom, he wants to be a racehorse.'”

Egan got in touch with Maker to see if he would take up training duties for Red Knight, who had bested the conditioner's Grade 1-winning turf stayer Zulu Alpha on more than one occasion.

“I had observed that he does very, very well with older grass horses. He's made all the difference in the world with this horse, so I'm very appreciative of him,” Egan said.

Egan said he let Maker make the call on Red Knight's next outing.

“The Manhattan is obviously a great race,” Egan said. “The thing about having a 9-year-old is – does he need to go to a farm for 2-3 weeks just to clear his head?”

Red Knight is out of the Skip Away mare Isabel Away and has amassed $1,717,763 in earnings through a 34-12-9-1 record.

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Eleven To Take On Unbeaten Faiza In Black-Eyed Susan

Michael Lund Petersen's undefeated Faiza will try to extend her perfect record and win her fifth graded stakes in Friday's $300,000 Black-Eyed Susan (G2) at historic Pimlico Race Course.

Faiza and regular rider Flavien Prat will start from Post 9 in the field of 12.

The 99th running of the 1 1/8-mile Black-Eyed Susan for 3-year-old fillies highlights a spectacular 14-race program that includes six stakes, three graded, worth $1 million in purses and serves as an exciting prelude to Saturday's 148th Preakness Stakes (G1), middle jewel of the Triple Crown.

Other graded stakes on the Black-Eyed Susan program are the $250,000 Pimlico Special (G3) for 3-year-olds and up at Preakness distance of 1 3/16 miles and the $150,000 Miss Preakness (G3) for 3-year-old fillies sprinting six furlongs.

Rounding out the stakes action are the $100,000 Allaire DuPont Distaff and a pair of turf events, the $100,000 Hilltop for 3-year-old fillies at one mile, and $100,000 The Very One, a five-furlong dash for females 3 and older. First-race post time Friday is 11:30 a.m. (ET). Post time for the Black-Eyed Susan, which is carded as Race 13.

Faiza broke her maiden sprinting at Del Mar on Nov. 12 and promptly won the Starlet (G1) at Los Alamitos on Dec. 10 under Prat. This year, she has reeled off victories at Santa Anita in the Las Virgenes (G3), the Santa Ysabel (G3) and the Santa Anita Oaks (G2).

Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert noted that this will be her first race outside of California, where his stable is based. Faiza could give Baffert a record-tying fourth victory in the Black-Eyed Susan. He has a 3-0-1 record from seven starters. His wins were with Hall of Famer Silverbulletday in 1999, Yearly Report (2004) and Fiftyshadesofhay (2013). The three trainers with four wins are all in the Hall of Fame, too: “Sunny Jim” Fitzsimmons, D. Wayne Lukas, and Todd Pletcher.

“She's very professional. She's got a really good mind,” Baffert said. “Every time Prat rides he says there is so much more in the tank because she doesn't win by a lot. I think it's going to be a step up. She will be running against more horses, so you never know. But she's doing really well.”

Faiza broke out of her win-by-a-little-bit mode in the Santa Anita Oaks with a 6½-length score.

“She was really on when he asked her to go. I trained her a little bit stiffer for that one because I figured it was going to be a tougher race,” Baffert said. “She looks great. She's healthy. She's really in the zone right now. I think she would have been tough in the (Kentucky) Oaks, but we'll find out in the Black-Eyed Susan.”

Petersen's Adare Manor finished second by 1¼ lengths as the 2-1 favorite in last year's running of the Black-Eyed Susan. It continued a recent trend of favorites losing in the Black-Eyed Susan. It's a remarkable statistic: Royal Delta in 2011 is the only favorite to win in the past 17 runnings of the race.

Gold Standard Racing Stable's Hoosier Philly had a sensational 2-year-old season for trainer Tom Amoss, sweeping three races at Churchill Downs. The gray/roan daughter of leading sire Into Mischief out of the Tapit mare Tapella sold for $510,000 as a yearling. She broke her maiden on Sept. 22, won the Rags to Riches in the slop by 7 ½ lengths and took the Golden Rod (G2) by five lengths. This year, though, her fortunes changed at Fair Grounds. She was third, 8½ lengths behind the winner in the Rachel Alexandra (G2), and fourth, 15 ¼ lengths back in the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2)

She trained very well all along,” Amoss said. “Having said that, it's a bit of a puzzle that we've been trying to correct to get her to run back to her 2-year-old races. It's safe to say each time we've run her, I thought she would run her race. And we haven't seen that to this point.

“Having said that, we like the way she's doing and we're looking forward to competing in what's going to be a very tough race.”

Hoosier Philly and jockey Edgar Morales drew Post 3.

Cats Inthe Timber, trained by Brittany Russell, picked up her first stakes victory in the Weber City Miss on April 15 at Laurel. The Haymarket Farm homebred daughter of Honor Code has won three of six career starts and finished off the board just once.

“She's done everything she's need to do,” Russell said. “Obviously, we would be delighted if she can be competitive in there.”

Jevian Toledo, who ride in the Weber City, has the return call in the Black-Eyed Susan. He and Cats Inthe Timber drew Post 11.

Trainer Todd Pletcher, a four-time winner of the race, entered two fillies: Frosty O Toole and Miracle, who landed in adjoining stalls. Frosty O Toole and Joel Rosario drew Post 5, while Miracle and jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. will leave from Post 6.

Eclipse Thoroughbreds' Frosty O Toole turned in back-to-back wins at Tampa Bay Downs in two-turn dirt races. She was moved to Pletcher's barn and was well-beaten her first try in a graded stakes in the Gazelle (G3) on April 8 at Aqueduct.

In her last start, the New York-bred Miracle was the beaten favorite in the Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2), her second start for Pletcher. She was bumped at the start and never was able to use her speed. Miracle, by Mendelssohn out of the Smart Strike mare Good Omen, spent last year with trainer Rodolphe Brisset in New York. Co-owners Siena Farm and WinStar Farm moved her to Pletcher's barn this year and she opened competition for him by finishing second by three-quarters of a length in the Rachel Alexandra (G2) at Fair Grounds on Feb. 18 to Pretty Mischevious, who went on to win the Kentucky Oaks.

The Don Alberto Stables homebred filly Merlazza has had a strong start to her career with trainer Brad Cox. Wearing blinkers in her debut in Janaury at Fair grounds, she just missed, losing by a head. The blinkers have been off since and she has won three in a row, most recently the Valley of the Vapors at Oaklawn Park on April 22. Cox said that the Black-Eyed Susan looks to be a good fit for the daughter of Medaglia d'Oro.

“She's coming off a stakes win at Oaklawn,” Cox said. “She's probably better suited for a mile and an eighth as opposed to a mile.”

Merlazza and Maryland-based jockey Feargal Lynch drew Post 4.

The Mike Maker-trained Pate was not a threat in the Fantasy (G3) at Oaklawn on April 1, her first try beyond six furlongs. The Virginia-bred daughter of Kentucky Derby winner Super Saver is co-owned by Agave Racing Stable and Living the Dream Stables. Maker will also saddle Towhead, who finished second by a nose as a maiden in the Juvenile Fillies at Kentucky Downs on Sept. 3. She was off the board in her two most recent starts, both Grade 3 races, the Honeybee and the Fantasy.

Jose Ortiz will ride Pate for the first time. They will start from Post 3. Towhead and Tyler Gaffalione landed on the outside in Post 12.

Jockey Manny Franco has been up for all three of Balpool's victories in five career starts and will be her pilot in the Black-Eyed Susan. They drew Post 8. Balpool, trained by Rob Atras for Madaket Stable, has won her last two starts, both at Aqueduct, an optional claimer/allowance and the off-the-turf Memories of Silver on April 29.

Astras was puzzled when Balpool followed her maiden victory on Feb. 5 at Aqueduct with a clunker fourth at Laurel on March 10.

“We were kind of scratching our heads as to what kind of filly she was,” Atras said. “That allowance race came up so we figured we'd give her another shot in there and she really handled that field well that day. She really finished up good and kind of ran away from them. We got a little lucky with the stake (coming off the turf) but she still beat a couple decent fillies in there so, to me, it looks like she's progressing and getting better with every start. We're kind of excited about her and we're hoping that if we do run that she'll take another step forward.”

The Black-Eyed Susan will be Balpool's first try at 1 1/8 miles. The Laurel race is her only one around two turns. Since that setback, she was has dominated in her two wins.

“I guess time will tell,” Atras said. “It's a different ballgame going two turns but she's a big filly. She's got a nice big stride on her. I don't see why she wouldn't get the distance. Obviously, you don't know sometimes until you run but she definitely looks like she's got the tools to do it.”

Sacred Wish, co-owned by Black Type Thoroughbreds, Swinbank Stables, Steve Adkisson, Christopher Dunn and Anthony Spinazzola, started her career this year with Lynn Chleborad at Oaklawn Park. After she broke her maiden in her second start, the Not This Time filly was transferred to the care of George Weaver, who saddled her to a second-place finish in the Gulfstream Park Oaks.

Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez takes the mount on Sacred Wish. They will leave from Post 1.

Richard Bahde and trainer Randy Morse claimed Taxed, a daughter of Collected, for $50,000 in November and she has emerged as a stakes runner at Oaklawn Park with a pair of seconds behind Wet Paint, the beaten favorite in the Kentucky Oaks (G1). She ended up two lengths behind Wet Paint at 27-1 in the Martha Washington and two races later was 2 ½ behind the star filly at 33-1. Rafael Bejarno retains the mount on Taxed, who drew Post 10.

First run in 1919 as the Pimlico Oaks, the Black-Eyed Susan was renamed in 1952 to honor the Preakness and Maryland's state flower. Nine of its winners have gone on to be named champion 3-year-old filly including Hall of Famers Davona Dale, Real Delight, Royal Delta, Serena's Song, Silverbulletday, and Twilight Tear.

Among other prominent Black-Eyed Susan winners are Hall of Famer Gallorette; Nellie Morse, the only filly to also win the Preakness, in 1924; But Why Not, Caesar's Wish, High Voltage, Vagrancy, Wide Country and Wistful.

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Win Big at the Jersey Shore: Tips and Trends to Help Bet Monmouth Park’s 2023 Season

The 2023 Monmouth Park summer race meet is up-and-running, and the focus will be on daily quality racing and wagering from opening day on May 13 through Sept. 10. Live racing will be on weekends and on Memorial Day in May, and starting in June will continue on a mostly Friday through Sunday schedule.

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Secretariat In The Preakness: ‘…And He Was Gone’; Jockeys Recall Chasing A Triple Crown Legend

By Mike Kane

Even after Secretariat unleashed a jaw-dropping rush from last to the lead on the first turn of the 1973 Preakness (G1), jockey Laffit Pincay Jr. figured he could win the middle jewel of the Triple Crown with Sham.

Pincay was 26 on that third Saturday of May, in the midst of a fabulous career that carried him to the Hall of Fame just three years later. He was well aware of Secretariat's brilliance. Two weeks earlier, Secretariat and jockey Ron Turcotte had stormed past Sham in the stretch at Churchill Downs to win the Kentucky Derby (G1) by 2 ½ lengths.

Fifty years following Secretariat's epic stakes record-shattering sweep of the Triple Crown series, Pincay recalls being confident that Sham could upset the Meadow Stable star at Pimlico. Secretariat and Sham were the standouts in the 13-horse Kentucky Derby and had moved on to Baltimore. Our Native, third under jockey Don Brumfield, eight lengths behind Sham, was entered, too, a few days before the race. The Derby veterans comprised half of the Preakness field.

Since Secretariat had emphatically answered questions about whether a son of Bold Ruler could handle the 1 ¼ miles distance of the Derby, Pincay plotted a different strategy in the 1 3/16th miles Preakness. Rather than aggressively press the pace as he did in the Derby pursuing speedy Shecky Greene, Pincay planned a more tactical ride to have Sham better rested for Secretariat's expected run coming off the second turn.

“I thought probably that less distance would benefit my horse,” Pincay said. “That is what I went into the race thinking, that a shorter distance would be better.”

Pincay paused for a split second for emphasis. “Well, you saw what happened,” he said.

“Going to the first turn, I was just going to try to lay second or third and save as much as I could for the stretch,” Pincay said. “Secretariat moved prematurely in the first turn, really fast. When I saw that, I liked it even more, because you don't see horses do that. You don't see horses make a move like that in the first turn and last.

“So, I just said, 'well, I'm just gonna lay close to him and at the head of the stretch I'll get him.' At the head of the stretch, when I asked my horse, he responded. I could feel he was trying, but he just couldn't get to Secretariat. That's the type of horse he was, that he could do something like that in the first turn and still have enough to win the race. That was fantastic race for him.”

Brumfield, whose fine 35-year career earned him a place in the racing's Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. in 1996, has a vivid memory of how the Preakness unfolded.

“I remember going up there and going to the first turn I was laying right alongside Secretariat,” Brumfield, 84, said. “And Ronnie just moved his hands on him and he was gone. And that was the end of that. As far as catching him or anything, I didn't have any idea of doing that. I would have liked to, but he was just too much for everybody in the race.”

Our Native was bred by Dr. Edwin Thomas, who was a co-owner with Elizabeth Pritchard and trainer Bill Resseguet Jr. A closer, he did make his rally in the final few furlongs of the Preakness to secure third place. Remarkably, just like the Derby, the first three to the wire in the Preakness were Secretariat, Sham and Our Native, separated by the identical 2½ and eight lengths.

Pincay had reason to be optimistic about Sham's chances in Maryland. While the bay colt did not have the star power Secretariat earned as Horse of the Year as a 2-year-old, he had a very strong pedigree and a terrific race record. Like Secretariat, Sham's roots were at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky. Secretariat, a son of Claiborne's renowned stallion Bold Ruler, was born in Virginia at the Chenery family's Meadow Stable farm. Sham was a member of the first crop of the Claiborne stallion Pretense. The dams of both colts were sired by Claiborne's important late stallion Princequillo.

Sham started his career with trainer Woody Stephens in the colors of Claiborne Farm, but he was sold at Belmont Park in November 1972 at the dispersal of the racing stock following the death of Claiborne owner Arthur “Bull” Hancock. New York real estate developer Sigmund Sommer, the nation's leading owner in 1971 and 1972, purchased Sham, still a maiden with a third and two seconds, for $200,000 and turned him over to top trainer Frank “Pancho” Martin. The native of Cuba put blinkers on Sham and he promptly won by six lengths. Martin shifted the colt to California and on Jan. 1 in his first race under Pincay he won an allowance race by 15 lengths.

On March 31, Sham handled the favorite Linda's Chief by 2½ lengths in the Santa Anita Derby, equaling the nine-furlong stakes record of 1:47 set by 1965 Kentucky Derby winner Lucky Debonair. In an unorthodox move, Martin brought him back to New York for the Wood Memorial, where he was second by a head to Angle Light and four lengths in front of Angle Light's famous stablemate Secretariat. Pincay did not ride in the Wood because he had business commitments in California but was back up on Sham at Churchill Downs.

In the Derby, Pincay and Martin opted to try to take the race to Secretariat and challenge him to deliver in the stretch. Sham banged his head in the starting gate, losing two teeth. Despite that incident, he was never more than a few lengths behind Shecky Greene early. Pincay had Sham second by a length after six furlongs in :47 2/5 seconds. He and his colt had a half-length lead after a mile in 1:36 1/5, but Secretariat was looming.

Through the years, analysts have said that Sham couldn't withstand Secretariat's rally because Pincay had been too anxious to tackle Shecky Greene. Pincay disagrees.

“I tell you, I was going beside him, but I was going very easily,” he said. “My horse was doing it so easily, even though he was fighting there. I moved a little bit sooner because Shecky Greene with Larry Adams was trying to get out really bad. It didn't show in the movie that he was fighting him, but I saw him and he was really, really trying to hold him on the rail. I said, 'if he bolted, if he goes out, he's going to take me with him.' So, I kind of put pressure on him, to try to keep him inside.

“As soon as I kind of nudged my horse to go by him a little bit and keep him inside my horse just went on. He was doing it very easily, so I didn't feel like he was taking a lot from him. At the head of the stretch, when I asked him, he just responded again. He was really reaching out.”

In front with less than a quarter mile to go and feeling his colt running well under him, Pincay had reason to believe he was on his way to his first win in the Derby. The situation changed quickly.

“It surprised me when I saw Secretariat right beside me and he started going by me,” Pincay said. “I just couldn't believe it. As hard as my horse was trying, he was still going by me very easily.”

Secretariat and Turcotte went on and reached the wire in a spectacular 1:59 2/5, eclipsing Northern Dancer's record 2:00 set in 1964. Sham was next at 1:59 4/5

“You saw the time. These two horses both broke the track record,” Pincay said. “Only Secretariat was better.”

Though he was a loser at Churchill Downs, Pincay felt Sham had shown he had the ability to reverse the outcome if they met again.

“That's why going to Baltimore, I thought that if I could save a little bit for in the stretch, I could beat him,” Pincay said.

The public was eager for the third meeting of Secretariat and Sham, and the Preakness drew a record crowd of 61,657, a 26.5-percent increase over the record set the previous year. Secretariat drew Post 3 and was the 1-5 favorite. Sham started on the rail as the second choice at 3-1. Secretariat got away last, but Turcotte said that he sensed the pace was slow and let the chestnut run. The dynamic of the race changed in about a quarter of a mile. Instead of Secretariat pursuing Sham, as Pincay had hoped, Sham was doing the chasing.

“Once he made that move, I wanted to kind of just stay close to him,” Pincay said. “I let my horse run a little bit and he responded and I got right where I wanted to. The race was shaping up the way I thought it would. I placed my horse in a beautiful position that if I had enough, and he would've been a better horse, he would have gone by.”

Sham did make up a little ground between the quarter pole and the three-sixteenths pole, but Secretariat extended his advantage without any urging from Turcotte. There was a malfunction of the teletimer and his winning time was initially listed as 1:55, a second off the track record. Two days later, the stewards changed the time to 1:54 2/5, which the track clocker had on his stopwatch. Two other independent clockers, including the Daily Racing Form clocker Frenchy Schwartz, had the time as 1:53 2/5. The debate continued for decades until the state racing commission reviewed the video of the race in 2012 and made the winning time 1:53.

Pincay and Sham went on to the Belmont Stakes (G1) and once again tried to take the race to Secretariat, who had no problem with his rival. Secretariat won by a record 31 lengths in a time of 2:24 that is still the benchmark at Belmont Park. Prominent early, Sham ended up last in the Belmont, which was his 13th and final race. He was injured in training and retired with a record of 5-5-1.

“Sham could have been the best horse I ever rode, if he would've won more races,” Pincay said. “If we would have been traveling around the country and winning here and winning there I probably would've called him the best horse that I ever rode. But I couldn't call him that because I rode Affirmed, and Affirmed could do anything. Affirmed won in Hollywood Park, in Santa Anita, in New York. Every place. And carrying a lot of weight so he was very, very consistent. But when it comes to speed, and, I've said this before, if Affirmed had run in the Kentucky Derby that year he would have finished third. Definitely. That's how much I thought of Sham.”

Brumfield agrees with Pincay that Secretariat is the unquestioned standout of the horses he has competed against and seen in his lifetime.

“None better,” Brumfield said. “He was the best.”

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