One Year Later, Rich Strike Looks to Get Back to the Top

After it had finally sunk in that he had won the 2022 GI Kentucky Derby with an 80-1 shot named Rich Strike (Keen Ice) that no one gave a chance, trainer Eric Reed started looking forward to when he would have his next taste of glory. Five races and 364 days later, he's still waiting. The year following the Derby has not been particularly kind to Rich Strike. He ran second in the GII Lukas Classic, but was out of the money in his four other starts. His 3-year-old campaign ended with a dull sixth-place finish in the GI Clark S. Nov. 25.

But a new year and a new race bring new opportunities and a clean slate. Rich Strike will make his 4-year-old debut Friday in the GII Alysheba S., a day shy of a year and at the same track where he stunned the racing world with his 3/4-length win in the Derby. There's a lot of karma there, but karma isn't going to get him into the winner's circle. Reed knows this, but remains optimistic that Rich Strike will be competitive throughout the year in top-class races.

“He's smarter and he's stronger and he's more mature,” Reed said. “He knows what's going on. He's turned out to be what we expected at four, stronger and smarter. He's ready. Last year, he was running on adrenaline and raw talent. This year, he's had the chance to mature out. He's a better horse this year. I think he'll run well in all his races and if he doesn't, we will be disappointed.”

It's not that he was terrible last year after the Derby. He just wasn't good enough.

“Since the Derby, he ran well in every race except for the Belmont and I still say that was my fault,” Reed said. “In the Clark, he was sick and we had no knowledge of that beforehand. He always showed up. He was a head away from beating Hot Rod Charlie in the Lukas Classic and had he won, that would have ended a lot of the talk.”

Reed said the main problem Rich Strike will face this year is the same problem he faced last year. He has no early speed and can find himself in a hopeless position if the pace up front isn't fast. His Derby win came after there was a pace meltdown in which they flew through early fractions of :21.78, :45.36 and 1:10.34.

“He's not going to win a lot of races because of his running style,” Reed said. “Even when everything goes right, it's hard for him to win because of the way he wants to run. We want him to do good and I think he will. I don't know how many races he will win this year, but he'll have to find a way to put himself into the races a little earlier to win.”

The Alysheba is run at a mile-and-a-sixteenth and Rich Strike probably needs more distance. He'll also be facing a tough group of rivals. Art Collector (Bernardini) won the GI Pegasus World Cup Invitational, Last Samurai (Malibu Moon) has won a pair of graded stakes this year and West Will Power (Bernardini) is coming off a win in the GII New Orleans Classic. This may be the deepest group of older dirt males assembled so far this year. Rich Strike is 7-2 in the morning line, but that seems like an underlay.

“It's his first start back,” Reed said. “I don't have high expectations for a win, but it would be great if he did. We just need to get in the first start and get ready for his next start, the Stephen Foster. I think that's where our season will really start to take off.”

In the meantime, Reed said he plans to enjoy the week and treasure the memories. He said he has the same crew back from last year and they are going to gather for a barbecue on Thursday. Despite Rich Strike's losing streak, Reed is still focused on how great that accomplishment was one year ago.

“I do tend to relive it, probably a couple of times a week,” he said. “It's one of those things that will never go away. You have days when you get frustrated and then you take a step back and think about the Derby and everything is good.”

Everything would be even better if Rich Strike were to win another race, preferably a big one. Reed will give him his chances this year. No excuses. Now he just needs to show that he's good enough.

The post One Year Later, Rich Strike Looks to Get Back to the Top appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Equibase Analysis: Angel Of Empire Gets Slight Edge Over Deep Kentucky Derby Field

The 149th running of the Grade 1, $3 million Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve drew a field of 20, plus three also-eligibles which may run if any of the first 20 withdraw by 9 am on the morning of Friday, May 5. This is what happened in 2022, allowing eventual upset winner Rich Strike to run.

Leading the deep and talented field in terms of accomplishments is last year's champion 2-year-old, Forte, who has won six of seven career starts including the Grade 1 Florida Derby in his most recent race. Tapit Trice has won four races in a row since losing in his first start last November, with his most recent victory coming in the Grade 1 Blue Grass Stakes. Another recent major Kentucky Derby prep race winner is Angel of Empire, who captured the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby last month with a visually impressive burst of speed on the far turn.

Winners of other major races this season include Practical Move, who has won three in a row including the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, and Confidence Game who won the Grade 2 Rebel Stakes in late February, but who has not run since. Skinner finished a close third, beaten just a half-length for the win, in the Santa Anita Derby, and might improve. Then there's Lord Miles, coming off a 59 to 1 upset in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial Stakes four weeks ago.

Two Phil's won the Grade 3 Jeff Ruby Steaks on an all-weather surface near the end of March following a third place effort behind Angel of Empire in the Grade 2 Risen Star Stakes on dirt. Kingsbarns brings a perfect three-for-three record into the Derby, having drawn off to win by three and one-half lengths in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby in his most recent race. Derma Sotogake (JPN) earned his way into the Derby starting gate with an impressive five length win in the Group 2 United Arab Emirates Derby on March 25.

After this group are a number of horses which have run well but not won in the major preps. This group includes Mage (second in the Florida Derby), Hit Show (second in the Wood Memorial) and Verifying (second in the Blue Grass Stakes). Others hoping to improve off recent efforts are Jace's Road (third in the Louisiana Derby). Reincarnate (third in the Arkansas Derby) and Disarm (third in the Grade 3 Lexington Stakes and second in the Louisiana Derby). Rounding out the main body of the field are Continuar (JPN), who was third behind Derma Sotogake (JPN) in the U.A.E. Derby, Raise Cain (fifth in the Blue Grass), Rocket Can (fourth in the Arkansas Derby) and Sun Thunder (fourth in the Blue Grass).

The also-eligibles are Cyclone Mischief (third in the Florida Derby), Mandarin Hero (JPN) (second in the Santa Anita Derby) and King Russell (second in the Arkansas Derby).

Top contenders:

Angel of Empire ticks all the boxes to be a win contender in this year's Kentucky Derby. In the first race of his career back in August 2022, Angel of Empire showed a lot of talent by winning at the distance of one mile on dirt and around two turns, which is no easy task as horses normally need to work up to a race of a mile or more with a shorter one-turn race first. After a totally irrelevant race where he tried running on grass, Angel of Empire returned to the dirt and dominated by six lengths over the runner-up. Next tried in a stakes race for the first time this past January, Angel of Empire finished second, once more at a mile. When asked to run a mile and one-eighth for the first time in February in the important Risen Star Stakes in Louisiana, Angel of Empire showed a big burst of speed when making up four lengths with a quarter mile to run, also going from seventh to third while racing wide on the far turn, then was drawing off at the end to win by a length. Bettering that once more in the $1 million Arkansas Derby on April 1, Angle of Empire once again showed a tremendous response when asked to quicken his stride as he went from sixth with a quarter mile to run, three lengths behind the leader, to first within an eighth of a mile, then drew off by four lengths. That fast acceleration on the turn occurred while the colt was racing four paths wide as well. Throughout his three year old campaign, Angel of Empire has run faster, as evidenced by ™ Equibase® Speed Figures (which normalize for things we can't see) of 80, then 92, then 96, then a 106 figure which is the highest (fastest) last race North American figure in the field. A quick burst of speed like the one this colt possesses is often the key to Kentucky Derby success as it allows a horse to move by many horses in a short time on the far turn, at the same time many are figuratively hitting the wall. Getting in front in the stretch in the Derby with that kind of acceleration can make it difficult for other horses to pass in the late stages and that could be the key to Angel of Empire succeeding in the 149th Kentucky Derby. Angel of Empire is trained by Brad Cox, who also trains Hit Show, Jace's Road, and Verifying. Cox trained Mandaloun and Essential Quality, who finished second and fourth, respectively, in the 2021 Derby.

Tapit Trice lost the very first race of his career back in November and is undefeated in four races since then. Like Angel of Empire, Tapit Trice has improved in his last few races, going from a 96 ™ figure in February, to 98, then to 103 in his most recent race. That recent win came in the Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland and in that race Tapit Trice showed a lot of mental toughness as he had to battle head-and-head with Verifying for the length of the stretch. At one point during that battle Verifying was in front by a head but Tapit Trice refused to yield and prevailed. Although that effort didn't show the quick acceleration Angel of Empire displayed in the Arkansas Derby, Tapit Trice did demonstrate a big burst of speed one race before last in March when winning the Tampa Bay Derby, in which he moved from eighth to first in the final eighth of a mile. Just like Angel of Empire, Tapit Trice is on a pattern of improvement which suggests he can peak in this race and that makes him a formidable contender. Tapit Trice is trained by Todd Pletcher, who won the 2010 Derby with Super Saver and the 2017 Derby with Always Dreaming. Pletcher also saddles two other contenders in Forte and Kingsbarns.

Forte will likely enter the gate for the 149th Kentucky Derby as the betting favorite and for good reason as he has won six of seven career races including five in a row. He scored a 100 on every test starting with the Hopeful Stakes last summer, then the Breeders' Futurity and Breeders' Cup Juvenile last fall. Given three months off to grow up physically, Forte returned in March as if he had never been away from the races when easily winning the Fountain of Youth Stakes by four lengths. Next, Forte then won the Florida Derby in April. The 102 speed figure Forte earned last October in the Futurity, followed by a 105 figure in the Breeders' Cup, were exceptional for a two year old, so it was a bit of a happy surprise when he returned with a 106 figure effort in the Fountain of Youth. It was not a surprise, and of no real concern, when Forte earned a 104 figure in the Florida Derby because historically horses can run just a tad slower in their last prep before the Kentucky Derby and still win, as occurred with Derby winners I'll Have Another, California Chrome and eventual Triple Crown winner Justify. Similar to the late kick Tapit Trice demonstrated in the Tampa Bay Derby, Forte put in a big kick in the stretch of the Florida Derby when going from fifth to win by a length in the final eighth of a mile. Although I am ranking Forte slightly below Angel of Empire and Tapit Trice on my list of win contenders, this is only due to the tremendous talent and strength among this year's Derby field.

Derma Sotogake (JPN) is one of two likely Derby entrants who were born and raised in Japan. He is a grandson of 1989 Kentucky Derby winner Sunday Silence, who was sold to Japanese interests in 1991 and who has become one of the dominant sires in that country. Now Sunday Silence is a grandsire and his genes continue to create great horses. Derma Sotogake (JPN) won a very important race in Japan last November at the distance of one mile and one eighth, on the same week Forte won the Breeders' Cup Juvenile at one mile and one sixteenth. Derma Sotogake (JPN) ended his two year old season by beating 13 other horses then took three months off to mature. Shipped to Saudi Arabia, Derma Sotogake (JPN) finished third of 13 in the $15 million Saudi Derby then one month later when sent to Dubai the colt decimated a field of 13 in the United Arab Emirates Derby. In that race Derma Sotogake (JPN) established the lead from the start and after taking on some challengers early drew off to win by five lengths while geared down in the final stages, earning a very strong 116 figure in the process. Although he led from the start in that race, Derma Sotogake (JPN) put in a very strong late kick to win his final start of 2022 so it appears no matter the pace scenario in the Derby this colt could be a big threat to succeed.

Kingsbarns, yet another Todd Pletcher trainee, is one of the most lightly raced horses in the field, having run just three times. He's undefeated to date and it must be noted that among 34 horses to enter the gate in the Kentucky Derby undefeated, nine exited the gate in the same fashion. That warrants tremendous respect, as does the fact Kingsbarns won the first two races of his career while sitting in third or fourth position early, while in his most recent victory in the Louisiana Derby, he led from start to finish and didn't give any of the other 11 competitors a chance in the stretch while coasting to an easy win. Even though the time was slower than average, the fact is that Kingsbarns actually ran faster in the last eighth of a mile than many of the other entrants in this year's Derby and that's notable. Having improved from an 84 figure in his debut to 100 figures in his last two races, and being as lightly raced as he is, there is a lot of upside for Kingsbarns to take a big leap forward and to post a mild upset to win this year's Derby.

Skinner rounds out the group of six that I feel have the best chance to win, but he appears less probable than any of the previous five mentioned. However, his high odds will make up for that, so don't hesitate to bet him given the return potential for the risk. Unlike the previous five contenders I talked about, Skinner hasn't won any of the fall or spring prep races for the Derby, and he was not scheduled to ship from trainer John Shirreffs home base in California unless one more of the main 20 horse likely to run withdrew from consideration, which happened earlier this week. Shirreffs saddled Giacomo to a $102 payoff winning the 2005 Derby. Giacomo had finished fourth in the Santa Anita Derby prior to the upset win and similarly Skinner finished third in the 2023 Santa Anita Derby in his most recent race. Although Skinner has just one win to his credit in six lifetime races, only the three this year are notable, and in those races he's run faster and faster, from a 94 speed figure in February (following four months off), to 103, then to 104. So although the third place finish isn't as good as the wins the top five contenders all have coming into this race, the 104 figure compares favorably with the 100 to 106 figures as those other horses. Skinner is a son of Curlin, who finished third in the 2007 Derby, and whose son Good Magic finished second in the 2018 Derby. With the breeding to run the Derby distance of a mile and one-quarter and with a bit of a pattern similar to the trainer's huge upset in the 2005 Derby, Skinner is an interesting longshot we may want to bet so we are not found kicking ourselves after the race has been run.

The rest of the Kentucky Derby field, with their best ™ Equibase Speed Figures is Confidence Game (104), Continuar (JPN) (102), Cyclone Mischief (101), Disarm (95), Hit Show (99), Jace's Road (101), King Russell (99), Lord Miles (100), Mandarin Hero (JPN) (105), Mage (102), Practical Move (108), Raise Cain (93), Reincarnate (103) Rocket Can (99), Sun Thunder (94), Two Phil's (97), Verifying (102).

Win contenders in preference order:
Angel of Empire
Tapit Trice
Forte
Derma Sotogake (JPN)
Kingsbarns
Skinner

You can get Ellis' full card detailed analysis (about 10 pages in all), including more detailed comments on Kentucky Derby entrants, as well as and betting recommendations for all the races at Churchill Downs on Derby Day, Saturday May 6, at Equibase.com

The post Equibase Analysis: Angel Of Empire Gets Slight Edge Over Deep Kentucky Derby Field appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Justify Commands Au$77,000 at Coolmore Australia

From TDN AusNZ

Two winners in the space of a few days made it timely on Wednesday for Coolmore Australia to reveal its 2023 Australian fee for Triple Crown winner Justify. The big chestnut will return for the spring at an all-time local high of AU$77,000 inc. GST ($51,271).

Justify is part of Coolmore's 15-strong roster this spring, returning after a 2022 hiatus when he didn't shuttle to Jerrys Plains. Previous to that, he had covered books in 2019, 2020 and 2021 at fees ranging from private to AU$55,000 inc. GST ($36,622) and AU$66,000 inc. GST ($43,947).

Justify's fee release coincided with a very good week for the stallion.

At Warrnambool on Wednesday, his 2-year-old son Scentify won on debut for Ciaron Maher and David Eustace. Last weekend, his smart filly Legacies maintained her unbeaten run for Peter Moody and Rosemont Stud when winning the Listed ANZAC Day S. at Sandown.

Both of these results follow a vintage start for Justify in Australia. The chestnut stallion is currently leading the first-season sires' table by earnings, with close to AU$1.8 million banked across 11 runners. His obvious star has been the Annabel Neasham filly Learning To Fly, who won the G2 Reisling S. and G3 Widden S. through the autumn.

As of Wednesday afternoon, Justify's Australian stats sit at two stakes winners from just 11 horses to the track, with four winners for seven wins. It's a very respectable record in a sharp amount of time. While Learning To Fly recovers from injuries sustained during the G1 Golden Slipper, Legacies has been put out with an eye to the G1 Thousand Guineas at Caulfield in the spring.

In the meanwhile, Justify's return is very welcome to everyone at Jerrys Plains.

“We look forward to welcoming Justify back to Australia this season at a fee that we believe represents great value for breeders,” said Coolmore Australia's Colm Santry. “All the leading breeders want to use him and he will cover a select book of mares this spring.”

“Coolmore's confidence in Justify has been well-documented and it hasn't taken long for his progeny in Australia to hit the ground running, just like they did in the Northern Hemisphere.”

The post Justify Commands Au$77,000 at Coolmore Australia appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights