Ramiro Restrepo Joins The TDN Writers’ Room

Ramiro Restrepo has done a little bit of everything in the racing industry and now he has something else to add to his resume, GI Kentucky Derby winning owner. Restrepo is one of the owners of Mage (Good Magic), the winner of the 149th Derby. To share his thoughts on the race and what it meant to him, Restrepo joined this week's TDN Writers' Room podcast, presented by Keeneland. He was this week's Green Group Guest of the Week.

“I still can't sleep,” said an emotional Restrepo. “I keep watching the race. I can't believe that we won. We won it. It's incredible. The emotion is totally raw. I haven't really been able to put it behind me. I'm still just soaking it up.”

Restrepo has been there from the start. Along with Gustavo Delgado, Jr, the assistant to his father, Gustavo Delgado, Sr., he picked Mage out at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale 2022, where he was purchased for $290,000. (He sold the prior year as a yearling at Keeneland September for $235,000). From there he was sent to the Delgado barn and made the quick transition from being a first-time-starter on Jan. 28 at Gulfstream to the Kentucky Derby winner.

“We knew we had a talented colt,” Restrepo said. “He had shown flashes of being really fast. But I didn't know anything back in January. And anyone who ever says I knew I was buying a Derby winner when it happened is just doing it for pomp and circumstance. In reality, you always try to buy just a nice horse, whether that means a champion sprinter or a monster turf horse or whatever. You're over the moon with that. But what happened with this horse, it is just like a Hollywood ending.”

The GI Preakness will be next and for Mage, it may only be a matter of holding his form from the Derby. But for a horse who is coming back in two weeks and had only three races to prepare him for the Derby, will that happen?

“That's what makes this such a hard series to compete in,” he said. “And that's what adds to the special mystical flair of the two-week turnaround and of the Triple Crown. You have to deal with the cards that are in front of you. The horse was never really pushed to get ready for his maiden. So it's not like he ran 20 races in the morning. The races are making him, and he is evolving physically and mentally. We keep waiting, much like everybody else, for signs that the races have gotten to him physically or mentally. He's flesh and blood and at some point it's just the natural way of the animal, those things catch up to them.  No one can answer that question, but the horse at the moment came out of the race as good as one could ever ask for. What you have to do is ride the wave and see how long you can ride it.”  .

Elsewhere on the podcast, which is also sponsored by Coolmore,https://lanesend.com/  the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders1/st Racing, WinStar Farm, XBTV, Lane's End and https://www.threechimneys.com/ West Point Thoroughbreds, podcast regulars Zoe Cadman, Randy Moss and Bill Finley dealt with the unpleasant aspects of this year's Derby. Seven horses died in the lead up to the race, including two on Derby day. There was an agreement that it was a very difficult couple of days for the sport and that the message sent out by the mainstream press shed racing in a very bad light. Did we have all the answers? Not really. It doesn't seem that anyone does.

Click for the video of the latest podcast or the audio-only version.

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Preakness Notes: Light Racing Schedules Could Be A Positive For First Mission, Mage

Five years after he won his first Grade 1 stakes, Louisville-based trainer Brad Cox has the opportunity to complete a personal lifetime Triple Crown with Godolphin's First Mission in the 148th Preakness Stakes May 20 at Pimlico Race Course.

“He's doing very well,” Cox said of First Mission, winner of Keeneland's Stonestreet Lexington (G3) under Luis Saez in his most recent start on April 15. “He had a good breeze here Derby morning (five-eighths of a mile in 59.80 seconds). He bounced out of it in great shape. We really like what we've seen from him all winter and into the spring. He's obviously stepped up. He's lightly raced but he's got a lot of talent. We're looking forward to giving him a swing at a Grade 1.

First Mission has raced only three times, finishing second in his Feb. 18 debut at Fair Grounds, before graduating in his first start around two turns by 6 ¾ lengths a month later at Fair Grounds and winning the Lexington (G3) at Keeneland.

“I really believe this horse is one of the top 3-year-olds in the country. Like I said, he's lightly raced but a lot of talent. A very intelligent horse; sound horse; does everything right. I think he's only going to get better the more he does it.”

Cox earned his first Grade 1 victory in Keeneland's 2018 Ashland Stakes with Monomoy Girl, who became a two-time Breeders' Cup Distaff winner and a champion. If he wins the Preakness, First Mission would be the 13th individual horse to win a Grade 1 stakes for Cox.

Cox's first Triple Crown victory came with Mandaloun in the 2021 Kentucky Derby, albeit after the First Saturday in May. That's when first-place finisher Medina Spirit was disqualified from the Derby victory for a minor medication infraction. That result is still being litigated, but Churchill Downs recognizes Mandaloun as the winner.

The 2020-2021 Eclipse Award-winning trainer's first Triple Crown race winner to cross the wire in front was Godolphin's 2-year-old champion Essential Quality in the 2021 Belmont Stakes.

Cox has only been in the Preakness once, finishing third with Owendale and fourth with Warrior's Charge in 2019.

“It would be cool to win that jewel of the Triple Crown,” he said. “It's a very fun week there in Baltimore. They really put on a good show. A lot of history there; it's an older racetrack. It's a really cool experience.”

Even if he's only been in the headliner once, Cox has enthusiastically embraced the Preakness weekend stakes.

“We've had a lot of luck over there in undercard races, such as the Dinner Party and the Black-Eyed Susan,” he said. “(Champion female sprinter and 3-year-old filly) Covfefe ran there. I love going over there. It's a great atmosphere. Baltimore is a very cool city and I'm looking forward to going back next week.”

For the seventh-straight year, the Maryland Jockey Club is offering bonus money totaling $100,000 to trainers who run a minimum of five horses in the 15 Thoroughbred stakes races during Preakness weekend, May 19 and 20, at Pimlico. Points are accumulated for finishing first (10 points), second (seven), third (five), fourth (three) and having a starter (one). First place is worth $50,000, a prize Cox earned in 2019, with Steve Asmussen winning the bonus the past two years.

“I'm not sure we're going to have enough horses to compete for the title, but who knows?” Cox said. “I honestly don't really look at that. Whatever you take there, you send with intent. You don't put them on the van if you think they're going to be an also-ran. If everything works out and they run the way they can, maybe we'll be in contention.”

Mage's Four-Race Experience Could be a Plus for Preakness

OGMA Investments, Ramiro Restrepo, Sterling Racing and CMNWLTH's Mage became only the second horse to win the Kentucky Derby (G1) without racing at age 2 since Apollo in 1882. The other was 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify. Mage also was only the third Derby winner since the filly Regret in 1915 to prevail in its fourth lifetime start, following Justify and Big Brown in 2008.

With four races, including the 1 ¼-mile Derby, behind Mage, the light schedule now could work into his favor in the Preakness Stakes.

“Yes,” Gustavo Delgado Jr., son of and assistant to trainer Gustavo Delgado, said earlier in the week. “What happened to be the opposite side coming into the Derby – if the horse is feeling good enough to pursue the Preakness and Triple Crown – now we are on the good side of it. Because he's lightly raced, and everything seems in order for him to continue to improve.”

Mage had a second day of galloping at Churchill Downs Wednesday after two days off following the Kentucky Derby. Delgado Jr. gave the “so far, so good” update while reiterating that final plans have not been made.

Confidence Game Resumes Training for Preakness

Confidence Game, 10th in the Kentucky Derby in his first race since winning Oaklawn Park's Feb. 25 Rebel Stakes (G2), resumed training Wednesday with a gallop at Churchill Downs. Trainer Keith Desormeaux would like to run in the Preakness, a race he won in 2016 with Exaggerator, but wants to make sure the colt's energy level has returned.

Desormeaux said the 10 weeks between races “had nothing to do” with Confidence Game's placing. That said, he thinks having that time off between the Rebel and the Derby will play in Confidence Game's favor in the Preakness.

“You want me to just lay down the law, the truth?” he joked earlier in the week before returning to California to check on his Santa Anita barn. “I used the Derby to prep for the Preakness. A $50,000 (in entry fees) workout. We got to party, got a saddle towel, got a lot of good pictures, prep for the Preakness. Now all I've got to do is jog him, light gallop, and we're ready.”

Desormeaux said the Derby field doesn't get the respect it merits, starting with Mage's late rally to edge the gritty Two Phil's by a length.

“I heard some rumbling that it was a great year to win with a lesser horse. That's B.S.,” he said. “Those are some good horses. I thought it was high quality, even with (Florida Derby winner) Forte out and (Santa Anita Derby winner) Practical Move. How much better is it with those guys? But I still think it was an awesome race.”

Chase the Chaos 'a Picture of Health'

Even though Chase the Chaos was far behind the winner in his last two starts, trainer Ed Moger Jr. said the gelding is showing him he is ready for the May 20 Preakness at Pimlico Race Course.

“He's a picture of health. He looks great,” Moger said. “I know he didn't run very good the last couple of times, but I still really like the horse. I really think he could have a shot. He's a talented horse. Real strong.”

After finishing in the top three in the first five starts of his career, including a pair of wins, Chase the Chaos earned a fees-paid berth into the Preakness Stakes (G1) with a victory in the El Camino Real Derby on Feb. 11 at Golden Gate Fields. Off that success, Moger sent him from his base at Golden Gate to Santa Anita Park for the San Felipe (G2) on dirt on March 4. He finished seventh in the nine-horse field, beaten 16 ¾ lengths, and was found to have an exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage.

Moger opted for a little freshening for the Pennsylvania-bred and brought him back in the California Derby on the synthetic track at Golden Gate. Sent off as the 2-1 favorite, he hopped at the start and ended up eighth of nine.

“He couldn't look any better, so we're kind of throwing those out and we're going to work him this weekend,” Moger said. I'm sure he will work really, really good.”

Chase the Chaos is scheduled to ship from California to Baltimore on Tuesday.

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Pletcher Sends Two In Search Of Record-Extending Fifth Peter Pan Victory

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher will have two chances to secure a record-extending fifth victory in the Grade 3, $200,000 Peter Pan as he saddles Victorious Racing's Go Soldier Go and Whisper Hill Farm's Classic Catch in Saturday's nine-furlong test for sophomores at Belmont Park.

The Peter Pan is the traditional local prep for the Grade 1, $1.5 million Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets on June 10. For information and details on hospitality offerings, ticket packages and pricing for the 2023 Belmont Stakes Racing Festival, which features 16 stakes events from Thursday, June 8 through Saturday, June 10, visit BelmontStakes.com.

The talented Go Soldier Go, previously trained by Fawzi Nass, makes both his North American debut and first start for Pletcher off a fifth-place finish to Derma Sotogake, a next-out sixth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby, in the Group 2 UAE Derby on March 25 at Meydan where he failed to fire and was defeated 15 lengths. It marked the only off-the-board finish for the chestnut son of Tapiture, who broke his maiden at allowance level in impressive fashion on February 5, closing from near the back of the six-horse field to take command with 250 meters to the finish and draw away to a 5 1/2-length score in the 1 3/16-mile route.

Go Soldier Go followed with a determined head victory in the Al Bastakiya going the same distance and landed the narrow win over Mr Raj. The $45,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase has breezed four times over the Belmont Park dirt training track since mid-April, most recently covering a half-mile in 48.81 seconds on Saturday.

Byron Hughes, Pletcher's Belmont-based assistant, said Go Soldier Go has made a good first impression.

“He's doing good and has settled in well,” said Hughes. “He's put in some good solid breezes and we're excited to see what he can do in the afternoon. He's a big, scopey horse and has a big, long stride to him. He's a good-looking horse and a good galloper. We're happy with him.”

Flavien Prat has the call from post 6.

Classic Catch adds blinkers as he looks to build off a closing fifth-place finish last out in the nine-furlong Grade 2 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino on April 8 at Aqueduct Racetrack where he made his stakes debut.

The Classic Empire colt, who has been on the board in 4-of-5 lifetime outings, stalked in 11th-of-12 through the first three points of call before advancing under urging from Trevor McCarthy in the turn and improving to sixth at the stretch call. He made up ground down the lane to finish 5 1/2 lengths behind the bunched up top trio of the victorious Lord Miles, runner-up Hit Show, and third-place stablemate Dreamlike. He was bested out of fourth by a head by Arctic Arrogance.

“He came out of the Wood in good shape and has been breezing steadily,” said Hughes. “We're excited about him and I thought he closed well to run a sneaky good race in the Wood. We're hoping he puts it all together in the Peter Pan. His coat and weight look good.”

The $110,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase broke his maiden at second asking going the Peter Pan distance in November at Aqueduct. He followed with a close third-place finish in a first-level allowance optional claimer going one mile and 40 yards at Tampa Bay Downs before finding the winner's circle again when stretching back out to nine furlongs in a March 2 optional claimer at Gulfstream Park.

Irad Ortiz, Jr. will ride from post 5.

Two-time Eclipse Award-winning conditioner Brad Cox has also entered two contenders in the undefeated Bishops Bay [post 9, Florent Geroux] and graded stakes-placed Slip Mahoney [post 2, Joel Rosario], who is cross-entered in Saturday's Long Branch at Monmouth Park.

Spendthrift Farm, Steve Landers Racing, Martin Schwartz, Michael Dubb, Ten Strike Racing, Jim Bakke, Titletown Racing, Kueber Racing, Big Easy Racing, Winners Win, Michael Caruso and WinStar Farm's Bishops Bay makes his stakes debut off a prominent win in a one-mile and 70-yard optional claiming tilt on March 19 at Fair Grounds Race Course where he posted a neck victory over stablemate Demolition Duke.

The son of Uncle Mo was an impressive debut winner on February 18 over the same course when he scored a three-quarter-length victory over stablemate First Mission, who exited that race to win next out and take the Grade 3 Lexington two starts later. Bishops Bay earned a field-best 97 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

“He came in yesterday and had a gallop over the training track this morning,” said Dustin Dugas, Cox's Belmont assistant. “You couldn't ask for a horse to ship in any better. He got over the track well and they say he's been training very well down in Kentucky. He seems like a very kind horse and is easy to get along with.”

The $450,000 Keeneland September Yearling sale purchase is out of the multiple graded stakes-placed Pioneerof the Nile mare Catch My Drift, who also produced the multiple stakes-placed colt Strava.

Gold Square's Slip Mahoney was last seen finishing a troubled sixth in the Wood Memorial. The son of Arrogate was checked hard heading into the first turn and was forced to steady before making up ground down the backstretch and into the final turn before being defeated 7 1/4 lengths.

Slip Mahoney graduated at third asking in a one-mile maiden in January at Aqueduct and followed with an impressive runner-up effort to Raise Cain in the Grade 3 Gotham where he broke slow and tracked 11 lengths off the pace before showing a strong turn of foot under Trevor McCarthy and earning place honors.

Dugas said he was particularly impressed with Slip Mahoney's breeze on Saturday over the Belmont training track when he covered a half-mile in 47.29 in company with stakes-placed Capella.

“He had a huge breeze here this past week and I was very happy with it,” said Dugas. “I'm pleased with the way he came out of the work and the way he is coming into this race. He's always a high energy horse and he's hitting the track with good energy.”

The Del Mar Group's Henry Q makes his return to the barn of Doug O'Neill after a pair of stakes starts for trainer Todd Fincher. The Blame colt graduated in his third outing for O'Neill in a February maiden claimer at Santa Anita Park before heading to Sunland Park in New Mexico for a try at stakes company. He posted a dominant score in the February 28 Mine That Bird Derby when setting the pace for the 1 1/16 miles and drawing away to the 14 3/4-length victory geared down under Edwin Maldonado. He was awarded a 93 Beyer for the effort.

Henry Q stretched out to nine furlongs for his next outing in the Grade 3 Sunland Park Derby almost one month later and set the pace again under Maldonado, but could not fend off the bids of Low Expectations to his inside and the victorious Wild On Ice to his outside. He swung to an outside path mid-turn and faded to finish third.

Henry Q has worked back four times since at Santa Anita, most recently covering five-eighths handily in 1:02.20 on Saturday.

Frankie Dettori has been tasked with the ride from post 8.

Waterford Stable's stakes-placed Kentucky homebred Summer Cause finished a close third last out when making his stakes debut in Laurel Park's nine-furlong Federico Tesio for conditioner Christophe Clement. The bay son of Summer Front closed well under Victor Carrasco from 6 1/2 lengths off the pace to make a four-wide bid and come up 1 1/4 lengths shy of winner Perform. The effort came on the heels of a fourth-out graduation by a half-length going the Peter Pan distance on February 26 at Gulfstream.

Manny Franco picks up the mount from post 4.

Completing the field are a trio of impressive maiden winners in Arcangelo [post 1, Javier Castellano] for conditioner Jena Antonucci; Game Change [post 3, Jose Ortiz] for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey; and the William Morey-trained Asmodeus [post 7, Trevor McCarthy].

The Peter Pan is slated as Race 6 on Saturday's 11-race card, which co-features the Grade 1, $600,000 Man o' War in Race 5 and the Grade 3, $175,000 Runhappy in Race 9. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present live coverage and analysis of the Belmont Park spring/summer meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule/.

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Asmussen, Winchell ‘Gunning’ For Preakness Stakes With Pair Of Gun Runner Offspring

Gun Runner, the 2017 Horse of the Year who retired with earnings of just under $16 million, sired a Preakness Stakes (G1) winner from his first crop of 3-year-olds last year in Early Voting.

The only downside to that for Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, who trained Gun Runner, and Ron Winchell, who still co-owns the $15.98 million-earner and superstar stallion, is that Early Voting, in the process, beat their favored colt Epicenter. Epicenter came flying fast but ran out of ground trying to collar Early Voting, having to again settle for second after being run down in the final yards of the Kentucky Derby (G1) by 80-1 Rich Strike two weeks earlier.

Now Winchell and Asmussen are scheduled to return to the 1 3/16-mile Preakness armed with not one but two sons of Gun Runner. Asmussen said Wednesday that both Kentucky Derby fourth-place finisher Disarm and Oaklawn Park's Bath House Row Stakes winner Red Route One will run in the 149th Preakness as long as they continue to do well.

Disarm resumed training Wednesday after three days off following the Kentucky Derby, jogging once around the Churchill Downs track. Red Route One visited the starting gate for a routine session of standing before having an easy gallop. Red Route One is scheduled to work Sunday and Disarm on Monday before shipping to Pimlico on Tuesday.

Like their dad, Disarm and Red Route One are chestnuts. If they turn out to be half as good as Gun Runner, they'll make their team proud.

Disarm has yet to win a stakes but was second in the Louisiana Derby in his stakes debut and then third in Keeneland's Stonestreet Lexington (G3), an additional race tucked in to get him enough points to qualify for the Kentucky Derby field. Red Route One is more experienced, with nine career starts, his first victory coming on grass at Kentucky Downs (for which Winchell is co-managing partner) and with graded-stakes placings in the Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1) and Oaklawn's Southwest (G3) and Rebel (G2). A sixth-place finish in the Arkansas Derby (G1) rerouted Red Route One from the Kentucky Derby to the Bath House Row, where a fees-paid spot in the Preakness came with the victory.

“Disarm carries more weight. Red Route One might be a little taller but doesn't carry as much mass,” Asmussen said when asked to compare the colts. “Both of them have unbelievably good attitudes and are very happy to train – just two that we are very fortunate to have. They are very much Gun Runner's personality. Both of them let you know that they are men and will talk to you a little bit. They are extremely sound horses that look beautiful on the racetrack.

“Red Route One looks like Gun Runner and Disarm just might actually be Gun Runner –the markings, the exact red color. The similarities between Disarm and Gun Runner, physically and personality-wise are carbon copies.”

Asmussen has won the Preakness twice, both coming with Horses of the Year and future Hall of Famers Curlin (2007) and the filly Rachel Alexandra (2009). He opted to skip the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown after Gun Runner finished third in the Kentucky Derby.

“With the accomplishments of Gun Runner going into the Derby and where he obviously ended up proving who he was, I think it was way too much to risk at that stage (to run back in two weeks). He was unique and special. We look up and about six years later, we have options [with his offspring],” Asmussen said.

“It's kind of like going into the Louisiana Derby with Disarm off being second in an (allowance race),” he continued. “The word was 'This horse is working like Gun Runner did around here.' My comment was 'to everybody who didn't have Gun Runner.' Gun Runner is the only thing I could put in the ballpark with Curlin as far as physical ability.”

By the way, Kentucky Derby winner Mage is from the first crop sired by Good Magic, who is a son of Curlin. Curlin, a two-time Horse of the Year, was represented in his first crop by 2013 Belmont Stakes winner Palace Malice and then three years later had 2016 Preakness winner Exaggerator (second in Gun Runner's Derby won by Nyquist).

“Curlin and Gun Runner are going to be in the pedigrees at the highest levels of racing in the world for the rest of my life,” Asmussen said. “I couldn't be any more proud of that.”

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