Weekend Lineup Presented By Monmouth Park: Haskell Preview Day

This Saturday's Haskell Preview Day at Monmouth Park features four stakes races, including three graded and two on the turf. Louisiana Derby winner Kingsbarns and recent Long Branch Stakes winner Howgreatisnate head a field of eight 3-year-olds for the Pegasus Stakes, a prep for the Haskell, while multiple Grade 1-winner Tribhuvan headlines the Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes, a prep for the G1 United Nations.

Last year's Champion Female Sprinter Goodnight Olive headlines Saturday's G2 Bed o' Roses at Belmont Park, facing rival Wicked Halo who finished ahead of the champ last out.

A pair of 2-year-old stakes highlight the West Coast action at Santa Anita Park, while a pair of overnight stakes are on tap at Ellis Park Saturday.

Santa Anita closes out the Spring Meet Sunday with the G3 San Juan Capistrano over 1 3/4 miles, while Sunday's co-features at Belmont Park are a pair of New York Stallion Series races.

Next week, the highly-anticipated Royal Ascot meeting launches on Tuesday and runs through Saturday. Another mid-week highlight is the Northern Stars Turf Festival at Canterbury on Wednesday, featuring five turf stakes.

Saturday

4:44 p.m. – Pegasus Stakes at Monmouth Park

Louisiana Derby winner Kingsbarns and recent Long Branch Stakes winner Howgreatisnate head a field of eight 3-year-olds for Saturday's Pegasus.

Kingsbarns (Uncle Mo) was most recently 14th in the Kentucky Derby for trainer Todd Pletcher, and has recorded two half-mile works at Belmont Park in preparation for his return in the Pegasus. New rider Luis Saez will aboard the 8-5 favorite.

Pletcher also trains the 3-1 second choice Classic Catch (Classic Empire), last-out fourth in the G3 Peter Pan behind recent Belmont Stakes winner Arcangelo. Classic Catch will be ridden by Paco Lopez.

Pegasus Entries

5:12 p.m. – Grade 3 Eatontown Stakes at Monmouth Park

The 52nd running of the Eatontown Stakes, at a mile and a sixteenth on the turf for fillies and mares, 3 and up, drew a field of eight as well. The Eatontown Stakes, which carries a purse of $150,000, serves as the prep for the Grade 3, $300,000 WinStar Matchmaker Stakes on the Haskell undercard.

Trainer Chad Brown trains the top two choices on the morning line, 3-1 favorite Gina Romantica and co-7-2 second choice Consumer Spending. The former won the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth Challenge Stakes at Keeneland last out, while Consumer Spending was most recently second in the G3 Beaugay.

Also returning from the Beaugay is third-place finisher Surprisingly, trained by Shug McGaughey. Surprisingly finished just a neck back of Consumer Spending in the Beaugay.

Eatontown Stakes

5:19 p.m. – Grade 2 Bed o' Roses Stakes at Belmont Park

Reigning Champion Female Sprinter Goodnight Olive headlines a talented field of older fillies and mares in Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Bed o' Roses, a seven-furlong main-track sprint. Trained by four-time Eclipse Award-winner Chad Brown, the 5-year-old Ghostzapper mare was a perfect 4-for-4 last year, taking a pair of seven-furlong Grade 1s in the Ballerina Handicap at Saratoga Race Course and the Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint at Keeneland on her way to Championship honors.

Goodnight Olive made her seasonal debut a winning one in the seven-furlong Grade 1 Madison on April 8 at Keeneland, but endured a troubled trip last out on May 6 at Churchill Downs in the Grade 1 Derby City Distaff when she lacked racing room while boxed in along the rail by returning rival Wicked Halo

Wicked Halo [post 3, Jose Ortiz] boasts a record of 13-7-1-4 for purse earnings in excess of $1.1 million. The 4-year-old Gun Runner grey, trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, won 4-of-8 starts last year, capturing the Grade 2 Prioress at Saratoga and the Grade 2 Raven Run at Keeneland en route to a closing third-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint.

Bed o' Roses Entries

5:40 p.m. – Grade 3 Salvator Mile at Monmouth Park

The 76th running of the Salvator Mile, with a purse of $150,000, attracted a field of 10. The Salvator Mile is the prep for the Grade 3 $400,000 Monmouth Cup on the Haskell day undercard.

Chad Brown trainee Artorius is the 3-1 morning-line favorite, returning off an eight-month layoff under jockey Florent Geroux. The colt won last year's Curlin Stakes before finishing sixth in the G1 Travers.

Pennsylvania-bred Nimitz Class has won five straight races and bids to give trainer Bruce M. Kravets his first graded stakes victory, while Petulante enters off a two-race win streak for trainer Victor Barboza. Robert Reid's Ridin With Biden will make his first start since finishing 12th in the G1 Pegasus World Cup in January.

Salvator Mile Entries

6:08 p.m. – Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes at Monmouth Park

Tribhuvan, who won the Grade 1 United Nations at Monmouth Park in 2021, will likely try to repeat in that race as a 7-year-old, making his seasonal debut in the $150,000 Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes at a mile and an eighth on the turf. The Monmouth Stakes is the prep for the United Nations.

Tribhuvan, who also won the Grade 1 Manhattan Stakes at Belmont Park in 2022, has not raced since Aug. 27. The Chad Brown trainee was fourth in the United Nations a year ago.

Monmouth Entries

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Patience Breeds Success for Murphy’s Emerging Stable Star

GIII Louisville S. winner and Saturday's Chorleywood Overnight S. morning-line favorite Foreign Relations (Karakontie {Jpn}) very easily could have been retired from racing not long after his debut had it not been for the patience and perspective of his connections.

A $1,500 short yearling-turned-$25,000 2-year-old, Foreign Relations was not the biggest physical standout when he first arrived at trainer Conor Murphy's barn. While he did run a promising second in his debut the summer of his 3-year-old season, he incurred a minor injury soon after and his owner Double O Racing had to make a decision. They could either cut their losses and move on to the next horse or give Foreign Relations the time he needed to return to the racetrack.

Fortunately, they chose to give the maiden a year off and when the gelding returned to training last year as a 4-year-old, he took an upward trajectory that led him to the winner's circle in the GIII Louisville S. on May 20.

“The owners just gave him time,” explained Murphy. “And that was the big thing, giving him time and patience to help him get over it. The more we trained him, he showed that he had some potential. I don't think we ever thought he was as good as he has turned out to be, so it's always a nice surprise when they keep improving.”

In February, Foreign Relations broke his maiden at Turfway in his third start off the layoff. He later crossed the wire first in a Keeneland first-level allowance in his first start on turf since his debut at Ellis Park nearly two years earlier, but was disqualified after an incident in the stretch.

Murphy describes Foreign Relations as a bit of a quirky trainee, but said that the 5-year-old is finally putting the pieces together this summer.

“Even in his first couple of races back at Turfway, he raced behind the bridle a bit and he was still quite green,” he said. “I think he's finally got the hang of it. Physically as well, he has really filled into his frame. He's a big, strong horse and now we're seeing the best of him.”

Murphy initially planned to send the gelding to an allowance at Churchill Downs, but after drawing the outside post position in a 12-horse field, he opted to take a chance and go for the Grade III.

With Declan Cannon aboard, Foreign Relations stalked three wide for the mile-and-a-half turf contest before driving clear in the stretch to earn a career-best 92 Beyer Speed Figure.

The win gave Murphy his first graded stakes score at his home track. It was also the first graded win for Declan and Cassandra Orpen's Double O Racing, whose current stable roster includes the four-for-five Tom Morley trainee Grannys Connection (Connect).

“This is my first horse for them, so a good start,” noted Murphy. “They're getting their reward for giving the horse time and being patient with him. Same as any horse, if we can keep him in one piece and keep him on the right track, hopefully he can keep improving.”

While Murphy said that Foreign Relations came out of the Louisville in top form, he felt that the 5-year-old needed one last race under his belt before jumping into Grade I company. Saturday's nine-horse $175,000 Chorleywood field at Ellis Park also includes the Mike Maker-trained trio of Therapist (Freud), who was eighth in the Louisville but won the GII Pan American S. in his prior start, as well as Pan American runner-up Bay Street Money (Street Sense) and GSP Media Blitz (Medaglia d'Oro).

“This race was originally a mile and three-eighths at Churchill, so that probably would have suited him a little better but I don't think a mile and a quarter will be an issue for him,” Murphy explained. “It's a tough field again, but he's in good form.”

Murphy said that if all goes as planned on Saturday, the GI United Nations S. at Monmouth on July 22 is penciled in for the gelding's next start.

Foreign Relations and Declan Cannon take the GIII Louisville S. | Coady

Murphy could be gearing up for a big summer with Foreign Relations and another potential stable star in Dark Shift (GB) (Dark Angel {Ire}).

Raced in his home continent at two through four, the horse was a winner at Ascot for Charles Hills last summer before arriving at Murphy's barn soon after. Now campaigned by Craycroft Racing and Riverside Bloodstock, the 5-year-old broke a step late in the GIII Thunder Road at Santa Anita on Feb. 4, but still got up to show the way through most of the mile-long contest before yielding late to run fifth in a tight finish. Kept from the starting gate since due to a quarter crack, Dark Shift is now back in training and looking to return to the races this summer.

“There's the GIII Connaught Cup S. at Woodbine going seven furlongs and the GIII Kelso S. at Saratoga, so they'd be two [to consider],” Murphy said. “But if he's not ready for those, we'll give him a little longer. I think he'll be worth the wait.”

Patience is a defining quality of Murphy's operation, but a parallel trait is his stable's knack for bringing out longevity in their top-level trainees.

When Murphy, who is a native of Cork, Ireland, moved to the U.S. to open his stable in 2012, he brought with him a 4-year-old named Dimension (GB) (Medicean {GB}). The gelding raced for Murphy from four through 10. From 32 starts in the States, he produced five stakes wins including three Grade II contests and he took Murphy to two Breeders' Cups.

The 15-year-old now lives across the street from Murphy's base at Tyrone Thoroughbred Training Center (formerly Skylight Training Center) and can often be seen grazing from Murphy's barn.

Just when Dimension was retiring, another European import in Great Wide Open (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) began to make his mark for Murphy. The gelding also made his first start in the U.S. at age four and brought home several wins over the next four years including a stakes score in the 2018 Buddy Diliberto Memorial S. He was also second in the 2018 GI Shadwell Turf Mile S.

Murphy said he is hopeful that perhaps Foreign Relations could be the next longstanding star for his stable.

“The good thing with him is that he has only run seven times,” Murphy noted. “He's a 5-year-old, but I feel like there is a lot of improvement to come from him. He's an exciting horse and he loves what he does. He stands in his stall every day just looking out at the track. Fingers crossed we can win some nice races with him.”

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Canterbury: Wednesday’s Northern Stars Turf Festival Features Five Stakes On Grass

Entries have been taken for the Northern Stars Turf Festival, Canterbury Park's most prominent night of racing which will be conducted Wednesday, June 21. A nine-race program that begins at 5:07 p.m. central is headlined by the $100,000 Canterbury Derby at one mile on the turf and includes four additional $75,000 turf stakes: the Curtis Sampson Oaks, Dark Star Turf Sprint, Brooks Fields Mile and Lady Canterbury Stakes.

The races attracted horses stabled at the Shakopee, Minn. racetrack as well as several that most recently raced at the top tracks in the country including Belmont Park, Churchill Downs, Gulfstream Park and Santa Anita.

Jonathan Thomas trains six of the horses shipping in to race Wednesday including two in the Lady Canterbury, Regal Realm and Mouffy. Thomas, a multiple graded stakes winner, is sending horses to Canterbury for the first time.

“I like what they've done [at Canterbury] putting all those turf stakes on one night,” he said. “Every horse that we entered is training well and in a decent spot. They all have upside but will have to bring their best effort.”

Thomas is using rider Florent Geroux on four mounts and Adam Beschizza on two. Both know their way around the Canterbury turf course.

“Certainly better than I do,” Thomas said. “We're fortunate to get them.”

Geroux won the 2015 and 2022 Canterbury Derby and the 2021 Curtis Sampson Oaks and Brooks Fields Mile. Beschizza won last year's Dark Star Turf Sprint and the 2018 Oaks.

Jockey Jareth Loveberry will ride all five turf stakes, three for trainer Mike Maker and two for Chris Block. He is no stranger to Canterbury as Loveberry was leading rider in 2017 and has regularly shipped in for and won stakes races since leaving the local colony in 2020. He is currently riding in Kentucky. Loveberry finished second in the 2023 Kentucky Derby aboard Two Phils, a colt that he rode to victory in the 2022 Shakopee Juvenile. He has the mount Wednesday on 9 to 5 morning line favorite She Can't Sing for Block in the Lady Canterbury. That trio won the same stake last year for Canterbury's leading owner Bob Lothenbach's Lothenbach Stables Inc. Lothenbach also has Midnight Current, Canterbury's 2022 horse of the meet, and Let's Skedaddle in the Lady Canterbury. Both are trained by Joel Berndt.

Mac Robertson, Canterbury's all-time leading trainer by wins and purses earned, has entered six horses, four in the turf stakes and two in the undercard $50,000 MTA Stallion Auction Stakes.  He will saddle Tonka Warrior, owned by Xtreme Racing Stables LLC, in the Brooks Fields Mile. The 4-year-old won two races this spring racing on the main track at Oaklawn but won on the Canterbury turf last year and finished second in the $100,000 Hawthorne Derby also on the grass. Eduardo Gallardo has the mount.

More information is available at www.canterburypark.com .

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