Loyalty Kicks Clear To First Graded Win In Woodbine’s Hendrie

Loyalty put on another stellar showing, this time in Saturday's $150,000 Hendrie Stakes (G3), a 6 ½-furlong Tapeta sprint for fillies and mares at Woodbine.

Trained by Josie Carroll for owners Gainesway Stable and LNJ Foxwoods, Loyalty, a 4-year-old daughter of Hard Spun out of Slew's Quality, by Elusive Quality, was making her second start of the year after a 3¼-length win on June 25 to kick off her 2023 season.

The duo of Clitheroe and Hard Edge dueled for the early lead, as Loyalty was positioned along the rail in third through an opening quarter reached in :22.92. The front-runners continued their front-end tussle while Kazushi Kimura, aboard the even-money choice, was content to watch the proceedings from just off the pace.

Around the turn, Miss Speedy loomed a menacing presence to the outside, but Kimura and Loyalty came charging along the inside and took command just after the stretch call.

At the wire, Loyalty was a 2½-length winner in 1:15.61. Clitheroe was second and Talk to Ya Later rallied to best Miss Speedy by a head for third.

“I would say that she was the best in the field,” Kimura said. “She's quite easy to ride. She was able to stay close and also if there's space, she's able to go in the lead. There were so many options for me. She was feeling comfortable, so comfortable behind the frontrunner. She was able to take a step outside and find a hole and just showed me an amazing race. It was perfect.”

Bred in Florida by Best A Luck Farm LLC and Godolphin LLC, the dark bay is now 6-0-1 from eight starts. Her victories include the Lady Erie Stakes at Presque Isle last August, and the Duchess Stakes last October at Woodbine.

Loyalty, who debuted with consecutive victories in the spring of 2022, both at Woodbine, paid $4.30 for the win.

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“Maturing In The Right Direction’: Late-Surging Mohawk Trail Wins Ontario Colleen

Mohawk Trail was full of run late to take the $150,000 Ontario Colleen Stakes (G3)  Saturday at Woodbine.

Fresh off a score in the Alywow Stakes on June 25, Mohawk Trail, a bay daughter of Pioneerof the Nile out of Iroquois Girl, by Indian Charlie, looked right at home again on the E.P. Taylor turf in the one-mile Ontario Colleen for 3-year-old fillies.

Sent off at 11-1, the dark bay, trained by Kelsey Danner for NBS Stable, was seventh through opening splits of :24.68 and :47.87, as Queen Picasso, undefeated in two starts, looked in control traveling over the ground listed as good.

Rounding the turn for home, 6-5 choice Queen Picasso, making her first appearance at Woodbine, dashed away from her eight rivals, but Adam Beschizza aboard Mohawk Trail began to cut into the lead of the front-runner midway down the lane and eventually struck front in the late going to notch a 1½-length win. Queen Picasso was second, a head in front of Love to Shop. Ryder Ryder Ryder finished fourth.

The final time was 1:34.68.

Beschizza, who was aboard for the win in the 6½-furlong Alywow, felt confident the filly could handle the longer distance at tougher competition.

“I had a discussion with Kelsey, and she said, 'Do we stay where we are or do we stretch her out a little bit?' And the discussion was to go, obviously, a mile. She's starting to mature a lot more. She has a great will to win which stacks up in her favor, so that's half the battle with these horses.

“When she had a target in front of her there the last eighth of a mile, she dug deep. Like I said, she is definitely maturing in the right direction. Good on Kelsey. She's done a great job with her and congrats to NBS as well.”

With the victory, Mohawk Trail, bred in Florida by Westbury Stables LLC, is now 4-1-1 from nine starts. She broke her maiden last December over one mile on the Gulfstream turf.

Mohawk Trail paid $25.60 for the win.

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Valentine Candy Flashes Impressive Speed to Win Loaded Saratoga Maiden

by Bill Finley & Patrycja Szpyra

On paper, Saturday's seventh race at Saratoga looked wide open and loaded with talent. All the major players had horses in the race, Wayne Lukas, Chad Brown, Steve Asmussen, Brad Cox , Bill Mott and Todd Pletcher, who had two starters in the six furlong maiden special weight event. The race figured to be fought all the way to the wire.

Instead it was the Asmussen horse, Valentine Candy (Justify), who ran them off their feet right out of the gate. Sent off at 5-2 and ridden by Ricardo Santana Jr. he exploded off the blocks and was three lengths in front in what announcer Frank Mirahmadi called “the blink of en eye.”

The fractions were 22.10 and 45.94, but Valentine Candy was still cruising on the lead as the field turned into the stretch. The Todd Pletcher-trained Protective (Medaglia d'Oro) made a solid late bid to cut into the winning margin, but it was a case of too little too late. The final time for the six furlongs run over a fast track was 1:11.74 and Valentine Candy won by three-quarters of a length.

“I had a good talk with Steve two days ago,” Santana said. “He said he really liked this horse. When the gate opened, he broke so fast. Then I just sat chilly with him. When turning for home, I asked him and he gave me a good kick. I have a lot of respect for Steve. Basically, he and his family are part of my family. Thanks to him, I am Ricardo Santana.”

Valentine Candy is owned by Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt in partnership with Jackpot Farm, Whispering Oaks Farm, and Keith and Ginger Myers. He was purchased for $250,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale.

“I love 2-year-olds and I loved the way he ran,” said Bill Heiligbrodt. “He ran like a Heiligbrodt, Asmussen, Santana horse, especially with the way he broke out of the gate. This is a really nice horse.”

“This was very exciting and we are excited about his career. We thought he would win and he did,” said Corrine Heiligbrodt.

 

Valentine Candy's dam is Taste Like Candy (Candy Ride {Arg}), who won the GI Hollywood Starlet S. in 2013. The 2-year-old was bred by Pine Creek LP. He is her first to race in the States behind lone, elder half-brother King Happy (Street Sense), who campaigned in Europe. The mare most recently had a 2023 Mitole colt and hails from the extended female family of GSW Wonderwherecraigis (Munnings); MGISW Affirmed Success; GISW & G1SP Exbourne; and GISW Expelled.

The Heiligbrodts, Asmussen and Santana have gone down this road before with a quick, classy horse. After he broke his maiden in his third start at Oaklawn, the same connections went on quite the roll with Mitole (Eskendereya), a four-time Grade I winner who wrapped up the 2019 sprint championship with a win in the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint.

Daily Grind (Medaglia d'Oro), a $1.35 million Fasig-Tipton August finished eighth for trainer Wayne Lukas and BC Stables LLC.

7th-Saratoga, $105,000, Msw, 7-22, 2yo, 6f, 1:11.74, ft, 3/4 length.
VALENTINE CANDY (c, 2, Justify–Taste Like Candy {GISP, $286,205}, by Candy Ride {Arg}) Sales history: $250,000 Ylg '22 FTKOCT. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $57,750. O-L. William and Corinne Heiligbrodt, Jackpot Farm, Whispering Oaks Farm LLC,  Keith and Ginger Myers; B-Pine Creek LP (KY); T-Steven M. Asmussen. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

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‘Spectacular Turn Of Foot’: Roses For Debra Pounces For Caress Victory

John O'Meara's Roses for Debra brought her win streak to three in a row with a smart off-the-pace victory in Saturday's $200,000 Caress (G3), a 5 1/2-furlong Mellon turf sprint for older fillies and mares at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by Christophe Clement, the daughter of Liam's Map has now won six of her last seven starts, including the Malvern Rose last July over the synthetic at Presque Isle Downs. She made her graded stakes debut a winning one under Irad Ortiz Jr., who executed a well-timed ride to pounce on a swift pace set by Bubble Rock and land the 2 1/4-length score.

“Roses for Debra has a spectacular turn of foot and when you have that kind of turn of foot in the straight, it's very dangerous,” said Clement.

Roses for Debra exited post 3 in the five-horse field cleanly while Our Flash Drive bobbled from the inside post and Bubble Rock sprinted to the front under Flavien Prat to lead the bunched-up field down the backstretch over the good footing.

Roses for Debra tracked one length back in second heading into the turn with Wakanaka keeping close watch in third while racing widest of all. Bubble Rock was asked for more from Prat as the field rounded the turn and Roses for Debra came within striking distance with Wakanaka looming large three-wide and full of run after a half-mile in 45.29.

A valiant Bubble Rock clung to a precarious lead into the stretch before Roses for Debra swept past her pacesetting foe at the eighth pole and drew clear from the advancing Wakanaka, who stormed home with giant strides but ran out of racetrack as Roses for Debra crossed the wire first in a final time of 1:02.39.

Wakanaka edged Bubble Rock out of place honors by a neck with Poppy Flower finishing another head back in fourth. Our Flash Drive completed the order of finish. Main track only entrant Bank On Anna was scratched.

Roses for Debra made her first five outings for trainer Michelle Brafford with four of them coming over the Presque Isle synthetic. This spring, Roses for Debra was moved into the care of Clement, who switched her to turf where she is now undefeated in three starts. Her other two starts for Clement were optional-claiming victories at Pimlico Race Course in May and at Belmont Park on July 3.

“She's very good. She was impressive at Pimlico. She was very impressive at Belmont. She came out of the race at Belmont in great shape,” said Clement. “When you run at Belmont you don't have to ship, you take them straight from the stalls to the paddock and back. I know it was ambitious, but why not have a look. It worked out. It's nice when you're aggressive and it works out.

“When they have that form on the synthetic, usually it translates really well on the turf,” Clement added. “After the way she won on the turf at Pimlico, I was convinced she was a grass filly. This is fun.”

Ortiz said having one target to track worked to his advantage.

“She broke well. I thought there was going to be a little more speed in the race, but she broke so well so I just sat on her,” he said. “When the other horse [Bubble Rock] went, I just followed the leader. After that, I just let her do her thing from the quarter pole.”

The Caress was the fourth win on the card for Ortiz, who said Saratoga's fans make each win even more meaningful.

“It's great. When you have four in a day, it's an amazing feeling,” he said. “We're looking forward to keep on going. It's special to do it here. Just seeing the crowd today, and little kids asking for pictures giving you high-fives and looking so happy when they see you. It makes it just much more special.”

Bred in Pennsylvania by Blackstone Farm, Roses for Debra was produced by the Bernardini mare Essential Rose. She banked $110,000 in victory and improved her lifetime record to 8-6-1-0. She returned $5.50 for a $2 win ticket as the 8-5 post-time favorite.

Junior Alvarado, aboard the Bill Mott-trained runner-up Wakanaka, said he had a good trip.

“She broke good today,” said Alvarado. “She put me in a beautiful spot. By the five-sixteenths pole, I tried to take my shot at the winner and she kind of went on with me and opened up a little bit at the end. But you know, I thought my filly ran a great race. Second best today for sure, but like I said, I loved the way she ran for me.”

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