Mohawk Trail Finds Breakthrough Stakes Success In Alywow In Woodbine Debut

Mohawk Trail made her first start at Woodbine a winning one after taking Sunday's $100,000 Alywow Stakes in impressive fashion.

After making six starts in Florida and another in Indiana, the daughter of Pioneerof the Nile out of Iroquois Girl, by Indian Charlie, was sent to Canada to contest the 6-½-furlong turf race for 3-year-old fillies.

She now heads home a first-time stakes winner. ​ ​

Under Adam Beschizza, Mohawk Trail broke alertly from the gate and held an early lead before longshot Collecting Flatter assumed control with tote board choice Ryder Ryder Ryder sitting just to her outside through an opening quarter of :24.41 over firm E.P. Taylor Turf Course.

Collecting Flatter, at 26-1, and 8-5 favorite Ryder Ryder Ryder continued their front-end duel through :47.02. Fearless Angel sat third while Mohawk Trail watched the proceedings from fourth.

As the field of seven came out of the turn for home, Beschizza called upon the Kelsey Danner trainee, who responded with a quick burst to move into second at the stretch call before seizing the lead and then holding off a late inside bid from Up and Down to notch a three-quarter length score in a time of 1:15.65. Last Call was third with Ryder Ryder Ryder fourth. Secret Money, Fearless Angel and Collecting Flatter rounded out the field. Star Candy and Renegade Rebel were both scratched.

“She was doing everything a lot more forward than I really wanted to or anticipated,” said Beschizza, who was making just his second appearance at Woodbine. “She broke right on top of the gate and was almost vying for the lead for the first furlong. Kelsey had her perfect for today and she's really done a good job with her. She was in perfect condition coming into this, almost too ready. All she wanted to do was please. She was there very early from the beginning and almost there too soon. So, at the last eighth of a mile there, she was almost easing up, waiting for company.” ​

The win was also the first Woodbine score for Beschizza, who is closing in on 600 career wins.

“It's an absolutely remarkable turf course. The turf is like a carpet to ride on.”

The NBS Stable filly arrived at the race off a second in the Horseshoe Indianapolis Handicap on May 17.

“I was told the turf was beautiful and I knew she liked the surface,” said assistant trainer Sadie Jenkins. “I thought this filly was coming up here to win or try her hardest anyway. And she did.”

Bred in Florida by Westbury Stables LLC, Mohawk Trail ($23.10) is now 3-1-1 from eight starts and earnings of $136,839.

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Letter To The Editor: Racing Needs Casual Fans, Too

I became a fan of the Thoroughbred industry as a young teen.  Someone gave me some back editions of the Thoroughbred Record magazine, and I was hooked.  Soon I began subscribing to the Thoroughbred Record.  I bought stallion books.  I would save my money to subscribe to the Daily Racing Form in April so I could follow horses on the Derby Trail.  I would be glued to the television when Derby prep races were aired.  The Triple Crown was a must watch for me.  I studied everything I could about thoroughbreds.

I recall many weeks when I could not wait to get home from school to see if the latest edition of the Thoroughbred Record arrived, so excited to see who won the Gravesend at Aqueduct, the Donn Handicap in Florida, or if Spectacular Bid won the next leg in the Strub Series.  Those days are long gone, but my status as a “casual lifelong fan” remains today.  Can you imagine having to wait a whole week the get the results of the biggest races?  It didn't deter me, or cause me to lose interest, so imagine the avenues by which to keep the casual fan interested today!

The Thoroughbred industry needs to tap into a segment of the population that may be pivotal for securing the well being of the business.  The “casual lifelong fan” can play a key role in offsetting the negativity that surrounds the industry today.  Is there not a need for the casual fan to be able to give a truer perspective of racing at their workplace, or on their social media platforms, to counter the ravings of individuals who react so harshly when they learn of more racetrack equine fatalities?  Can the casual fan not provide an attractive target group for advertisers on television or the internet?  Would attracting young people by letting them know the history of the sport, and learning the stories behind the horses and people help change the negative perception within the culture?

I recall reading those old back-dated Thoroughbred Record issues from the 1970s, and articles from racing insiders lamenting the fact that attendance at baseball games had surpassed horse racing.  My how times have really changed!  Other sports have surpassed horse racing by far when it comes to attendance levels.  Racing needs to promote itself and attempt to reach the casual fan.  People would grow to love the sport if you could get them to the races.  If they could meet the people in the industry and know the heart of some person who loves to clean stalls and “rub” horses for a living they would come away with a different perspective.  I strongly encourage industry leaders to make the horse industry more accessible to the casual fan.

When the focus is on the gambling aspect rather than the beauty and splendor of the sport, the horses and the people who care for them don't matter much.  Targeting only the gambler won't sustain horse racing in this generation.  It's too easy to remain detached and only concerned about the wagering aspects.  If the casual fan is not targeted, racing will suffer.  Gamblers can always find another avenue with which to gamble.  But when the wonder of the horse and the human stories surrounding them are presented, you create a true fan base.

You can't pay the bills that way, with the casual fan, right?  If the current trend continues, who knows if racing will survive.  Give the pure beauty of the Thoroughbred industry a chance.  Perhaps some gung ho teen like I was will go to vet school and develop something to improve animal health.  Perhaps some great young mind will be a whiz at marketing, and another a genius at improving safety.  The key to racing's survival may well be in capturing the imagination of some young child whose parents take him or her to Presque Isle or Lone Star, or Fonner Park where they see the animals and people.  Perhaps  a visit to the farms, and laying their hands on a foal might spawn a lifelong joy for the horse.

I am not interested in betting on horse racing, but I enjoy going to a race track occasionally.  I love going to the paddock to see these magnificent animals.  I enjoy the sights and sounds, and watching the people take in the scene.  Can the industry not benefit from the casual fan?  I love to watch baseball, but I only attend a game or two a year.  Racing would benefit from attempting to attract casual fans to the track or the farms.  They may never gamble as I choose not to gamble, but they might buy refreshments, or find an outlet to write letters to the editor hoping to contribute something to the cause of changing public perception or the thinking of those in the industry.  They might visit a track museum, and their children might be mesmerized like I was and become a lifelong casual fan who would advocate for the sport of kings, or as I prefer to call it, the sport of the casual lifelong fan.

Brett Beasley
Casual (Lifelong) Fan of Thoroughbred Breeding and Racing
Creal Springs, Illinois

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‘Two Good Maryland Horses’: Coffeewithchris, Prince Of Jericho To Renew Rivalry In Concern

Stakes winners Coffeewithchris and Prince of Jericho, who battled each other in stakes races throughout the winter and spring, will meet up again for the first time since mid-April in the $100,000 Concern on Saturday at Laurel Park.

The seventh running of the seven-furlong Concern for 3-year-olds, honoring the first Maryland-bred winner of the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1), headlines an Independence Day weekend program that includes the $100,000 Laurel Dash for 3-year-olds and up and $75,000 Jameela for Maryland-bred fillies and mares 3 and older, both scheduled for six furlongs on the grass.

Post time for the first of 10 races is 12:25 p.m. (ET).

The Concern, Laurel Dash and Jameela are the first of 11 stakes worth $1.075 million in purses during the month of July at Laurel, where the 33-day summer meet began June 9 and runs through August 20.

Both Coffeewithchris and Prince of Jericho last raced on Preakness Day, May 20, at historic Pimlico Race Course. Coffeewithchris, owned by trainer John Salzman Jr., Fred Wasserloos, and Anthony Geruso, was seventh in the 148th Preakness Stakes (G1), middle jewel of the Triple Crown, while Michael Dubb and Morris Bailey's Prince of Jericho ran second in the Chick Lang (G3) for sophomore sprinters.

The Concern will be the fifth meeting between the two horses. Prince of Jericho was second to Coffeewithchris in the seven-furlong Heft last December and one-mile Miracle Wood Feb. 18; was sixth in the 1 1/8-mile Federico Tesio, a neck behind Coffeewithchris; and beat Coffeewithchris by four lengths in the Jan. 21 Spectacular Bid, also sprinting seven furlongs.

“These two have been banging heads sort of all spring. It's good. They're two good Maryland horses, so they should be running against each other,” Prince of Jericho's trainer Brittany Russell said. “Honestly, it's good to see 'Chris' back from the Preakness. We've become quite good friends with the Salzmans. I want to win the race, of course, but if you lose to those guys, it's OK.”

Salzman said Coffeewithchris emerged from the Preakness, his graded debut, with some scrapes but no issues. He has worked three times since the race with back-to-back bullets in :48 for four furlongs June 17, fastest of 49 horses, and :35 for three-eighths June 24.

“My horse never cuts himself up. He shows up every time. He never got hold of that racetrack [at Pimlico] at all. He ran the worst number of his life. I said to myself, 'Why does he wait until I put him on national TV to do that?'” Salzman said. “The track was very deep. It's the only thing I could figure.”

Coffeewithchris, who does his best running on or near the front, pressed a moderate early pace of :23.95 and :48.92 seconds in the Preakness set by eventual winner National Treasure. Coffeewithchris was still within a length of the lead after six furlongs went in 1:13.49 before gradually dropping back.

The Preakness eve scratch of Lexington (G3) winner First Mission left the field at seven, its smallest since 1986, one that included Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Mage.

“When that race came up and was there like it was, I said there was no better chance in the world to win the Preakness than it is today,” Salzman said. “It was one of the most wide-open with only one horse out of the Derby, and he sort of got hurt maybe he didn't show up as 100 percent. The other speed horse of Brad Cox's scratched. I couldn't have written it up any better to give myself a chance to run a big race in the Preakness.

“I just shook my head and said I guess I didn't belong. But when they went :24 and :48, my horse can do that. Maybe he makes a big move at the quarter pole and opens up or gets head and head for the lead, maybe he gets tired and can't go a mile and three-sixteenths,” he added. “But he doesn't run like that to the three-eighths pole and just fold up. That's just not him. But he cut himself all up behind because he wasn't getting hold of the racetrack, and I guess it was hurting him or scaring him because he just said, 'Hey, I ain't gonna do it today.'”

Jaime Rodriguez returns to ride Coffeewithchris from Post 4.

“The horse handled it all well. He handled the cameras and the crowds, and he trained OK. I was as happy as I guess could be going into it. It just didn't quite work out for me that day,” Salzman said. “He's won going seven-eighths and he won going a mile. To me I think I'm going back to where he probably belongs in distance. Every time I kept saying, 'Well, I don't think he'll go further,' but he just kept giving me that effort that he would.”

Following the Miracle Wood, the connections opted to wait for the Tesio where Prince of Jericho wound up beaten less than three lengths in his first try around two turns. He cut back in the Chick Lang to six furlongs, a distance where he had won his previous two tries by 17 combined lengths, and rallied under jockey Sheldon Russell to get within two lengths of winner Ryvit and be four lengths clear of Frosted Departure in third.

“We went in there and he ran with some good horses that day. There were some unfortunate circumstances in that race and Sheldon came back and said that, honestly, he had to sit on him longer than he wanted to,” Brittany Russell said. “I don't know that he wins, it's hard to say, but we were really proud of his effort. Regardless of where he ended up, we were super proud.”

Sheldon Russell will be back aboard Prince of Jericho for his wife, Maryland's leading trainer, from outermost Post 5.

“He ran really good last time. He's good. He's been really consistent,” she said. “Every time we put him in, he shows up and runs his race. We're happy to kind of get him back going seven-eighths at home, and hopefully this is what he really wants.”

Lynch Racing and Nick Sanna Stables' Recruiter is entered to make his return to Laurel for the first time since winning a 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance and six-furlong James F. Lewis III in successive starts last fall, his only previous tries over the surface. The Florida-bred has won two of four starts this year including the Parx Juvenile Jan. 3, and exits a fourth in the Penn Mile (G2) June 2 in his turf debut.

Tiz No Clown will be making his fifth stakes appearance, all at Laurel, for owner-trainer William Earl Atkins. Fifth in the Lewis and Spectacular Bid, he ran fourth behind Maryland's 2-year-old champion and Prince of Jericho's stablemate, Post Time, in the Maryland Juvenile and sixth in the Maryland Million Nursery. Tiz No Clown has faced older horses in his past two starts, finishing third last out in a six-furlong starter optional claimer June 2 at Delaware Park.

Also coming out of the Chick Lang is A A C Racing Inc.'s Bristol Channel, who finished sixth. Owned and trained by Andrea Covello, the English Channel colt returned to be third in a 6 ½ furlong optional claiming allowance against older horses June 9 at Charles Town, where each of his two wins have come from eight starts.

Concern, trained by the late Dickie Small, won seven of 30 career starts and more than $3 million in purse earnings from 1993-95. His 1994 season included wins in the Breeders' Cup and Arkansas Derby (G2), seconds in the Travers (G1), Super Derby (G1), and Ohio Derby (G2) and thirds in the Preakness (G1), Haskell (G1), Molson Export Million (G2),Con and Round Table (G3).

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Plans Outlined for Shadwell Runners

After missing the G2 Hardwicke S. at Royal Ascot due to fast ground, Shadwell's Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) is expected to make his next start in the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S. July 29. Victorious at the Royal meeting last season in the G1 Coronation Cup, the 6-year-old returned after almost a year on the sidelines following a hind leg fracture to defeat Derby hero Desert Crown (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) in May 25 G3 Brigadier Gerard S.

“Hukum will run if and when we get some rain,” confirmed Shadwell's racing manager Angus Gold. “It was a touch and go situation Saturday. We were longing to run him, but [trainer] Owen [Burrows] just felt in the end that, while we could run him and he could win it, he might come back a bit sore after it and we'd all look silly.”

He continued, “We kept him in training and spent a lot of time getting him right again after his injury last year and he just felt it was too big a risk. It is frustrating but sensible.

“Very much the idea is the King George. If the ground was good or even if it was good to firm, we might have to take a chance. That's the big day. We will see how we are going nearer the time.”

Gold also confirmed that G1 Prince of Wales's victor Mostahdaf (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) will miss next week's G1 Coral-Eclipse S., a race that has been earmarked for G1 Prix d'Ispahan winner Anmaat (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}).

“Mostahdaf has come out of it very good, said Gold. “I spoke to [trainer] John Gosden [Saturday] and he says he is bouncing.”

“The Eclipse is off the cards for Mostahdaf. We still have Anmaat in, ground permitting. If he's in good form and conditions look suitable, hopefully, we will go there with him.”

“I think we will be sitting still with Mostahdaf and, hopefully, get him to York in the same form in August.”

Listed winner Al Asifah (GB) (Frankel {GB}), who finished sixth after being supplemented to Thursday's G2 Ribblesdale S., will also be given some time off, according to Gold.

“We'll give her a break now and get her back in the autumn,” he said. “I still think she will be a very nice filly. We haven't even discussed targets. We will give her some gentle downtime, three weeks or so, then bring her back and take it from there.”

Dual Group 2 winner Mutasaabeq (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) will also be given a freshener following an eleventh in the GI Queen Anne S. Tuesday. Victorious in the G2 bet365 Mile at Newmarket May 5, the 5-year-old came home fifth in Newbury's G1 Lockinge S. May 20.

“We'll see what there is for him, but we will just give him a bit of time now,” he explained. “He's had three runs relatively quickly, but he's the sort of horse who could easily come out and win another Group 2 later in the year.”

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