2-Year-Old Filly Becky’s Joker ‘Just So Level-Headed,’ Runs Back Off Three-Week Break In Sunday’s Adirondack

Lee Pokoik's Becky's Joker flew under the radar in her winning career debut in the Grade 3 Schuylerville in July, but enters the Grade 3, $200,000 Adirondack three weeks later as a prime contender in Sunday's 6 1/2-furlong main track test for juvenile fillies at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by Gary Contessa, Becky's Joker provided a stunning upset in the six-furlong Schuylerville, making her career debut off a series of local breezes and facing a seemingly impossible task in squaring off against graded competition for her first afternoon outing. The daughter of Practical Joke responded to the tall order with aplomb, rallying from one length off the pace to coast home geared down under returning Hall of Fame rider Javier Castellano and 3 1/4 lengths clear of returning rival Saratoga Secret.

“I didn't think anybody was better than her physically, and I really thought she could win that race,” said Contessa. “I just didn't know what to expect mentally, because we can't recreate a field of horses in the morning with her getting dirt in her face or a break in the flow or having to overcome traffic. You just don't know how a horse is going to handle that, but I had a very strong belief that mentally she was very sound, and physically she was very talented. It was a combination of the two.”

The $130,000 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale purchase has worked back twice since her Schuylerville coup, including a bullet half-mile in 47.40 seconds on July 26 over the Spa's Oklahoma dirt training track.

“She's incredible because we don't ask her to work,” said Contessa. “We just let her break off at the pole and I tell the rider to just sit on her. She does it all on her own and with her ears up. She's happy to train and her works are well within herself.”

Contessa expressed deep respect for the talented bay, who gave him his first graded score since Sippican Harbor won the Grade 1 Spinaway in 2018. Contessa had planned to wait for the $300,000 Spinaway on September 3 with Becky's Joker, but decided to give her another run after she exited the Schuylerville in exceptional form.

“She's just so level-headed about everything,” said Contessa. “She doesn't get stressed out about anything and she's very cool, calm and collected. She's the perfect horse and ready to run back. I was going to wait for the Spinaway, but she's doing so well and watching her train, I thought it would do well to run her. And, we still have 28 days until the Spinaway after this race, so it's not like we're for want of time.”

Becky's Joker will emerge from the outermost post 10.

Clearsky Farms' Kentucky homebred Here U Come Again [post 3, Florent Geroux] boasts a field-high 86 Beyer Speed Figure for a professional debut victory sprinting five furlongs on July 7 at Ellis Park.

Trained by two-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox, the Liam's Map grey tracked in second close to pacesetter Pinotslilgirl before taking charge at the three-eighths call and drawing off down the lane to cross the wire 2 1/4 lengths the best in a final time of 57.27.

“She's doing really good,” said Cox. “She ran really good in her first run and I think she's a good filly – fast filly. She's been pretty good out of the gate and we were hoping to have a bit of a target. She was able to break and sit a nice trip, get herself in good position and finish up well. It was five-eighths and she was meant to run three-quarters the week before but the race didn't go. We put her there and she obviously responded well. I'm pretty happy with what we've seen from her since.”

Cox said he expects Here U Come Again to relish the added ground in the Adirondack.

“I think it's a good thing for her,” said Cox. “I'm not saying she's a mile and a sixteenth filly, but I think she's got a good mind and can sit a good trip and finish up. I've liked her from Day One. The first time I saw her, she was one who stamped herself as really good.”

Here U Come Again is out of the multiple stakes-winning Euroears mare Euro K Shotgun, a half-sister to multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire Shotgun Kowboy. Her immediate family also includes Maysville Slew, a graded stakes-winning millionaire.

Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas vies for a record-extending eighth Adirondack victory and a successful title defense after taking last year's running with Naughty Gal. This year, the veteran conditioner saddles BC Stables' Saratoga Secret [post 6, Flavien Prat] as she attempts to turn the tables on Becky's Joker.

A daughter from the final crop of Arrogate, Saratoga Secret graduated on debut in a 5 1/2-furlong maiden tilt in June at Ellis Park before making the step up to the graded ranks for her first try against winners in the Schuylerville. There, she vied for early command under Luis Saez before racing three-wide into the turn and briefly had the lead before fading down the lane.

“She ran really well,” Lukas said. “I thought she may have needed that race and she's improved a little bit. But the winner was too much, let's be honest. I'd like to take mine out again.”

Lukas acknowledged the feat Becky's Joker accomplished to graduate on debut in a graded event.

“I really think that horse will be a legitimate favorite for her to rope down through there like she did in that last race, that was pretty impressive,” said Lukas. “Gary deserves a good one.”

The undefeated Brightwork [post 4, Irad Ortiz, Jr.] looks to keep her perfect record intact for conditioner John Ortiz after earning her first stakes coup with a narrow score last out in the six-furlong Debutante on July 2 at Ellis Park.

Campaigned by WSS Racing, the Outwork bay impressed on debut in a 4 1/2-furlong sprint in April at Keeneland, winning by three lengths over a field that included Crimson Advocate, who finished third ahead of wins in the Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies at Gulfstream Park and Group 2 Queen Mary at Royal Ascot. Brightwork stretched out to six furlongs in the Debutante and led at every point of call to gamely fend off V V's Dream.

A half-sister to the stakes-placed Quiet Company, Brightwork is out of the Malibu Moon mare Clarendon Fancy, a half-sister to graded stakes-placed Dubini and stakes-winner What a Catch. Clarendon Fancy is also a full-sister to Catch the Moon, who produced multiple graded stakes-winning millionaires Girvin and Midnight Bourbon, as well as graded stakes-winners Cocked and Loaded and Pirate's Punch.

Completing the field are debut maiden winners Cara's Time [post 1, Dylan Davis], Magic Cross [post 2, Jose Lezcano], Princesa Celina [post 5, Jose Ortiz], who races with blinkers off, Princess Indy [post 7, Manny Franco], Streaming Now [post 8, Joel Rosario] and Copper Em [post 9, Tyler Gaffalione].

The Adirondack is slated as Race 8 on Sunday's 10-race program. First post is 1:10 p.m. Eastern.

Saratoga Live will present live coverage and analysis of the Saratoga Race Course summer meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule/.

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Dutrow Shifts Gears With White Abarrio, Enters Whitney Due To ‘Lighter Field’

Trainer Rick Dutrow, Jr. will participate in his first Grade 1 at Saratoga since the summer of 2012 when he sends out C Two Racing Stable and Antonio Pagnano's multiple graded-stakes winner White Abarrio in Saturday's $1 million Whitney.

The nine-furlong test for older horses, which offers a “Win and You're In” berth to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic in November at Santa Anita, has come up tough with reigning Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile-winner Cody's Wish for red-hot Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott and the regally-bred Charge It for Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher as headliners.

White Abarrio joined Dutrow, Jr.'s barn this spring and enters from a troubled third in the Grade 1 Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan Handicap on June 10 at Belmont Park, overcoming a stumbled start to finish 3 1/4-lengths back of the victorious Cody's Wish while registering a career-best 106 Beyer Speed Figure.

The versatile 4-year-old Race Day colt captured the nine-furlong Grade 1 Florida Derby last year as part of a campaign that concluded with a close third-place finish in the Grade 1 Cigar Mile Handicap presented by NYRA Bets in December at Aqueduct Racetrack.

White Abarrio, previously trained by Saffie Joseph, Jr., launched his current campaign with a pair of starts at Gulfstream Park, finishing off-the-board in the nine-furlong Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January ahead of a cut back to seven furlongs in March to annex a talented optional-claiming group that featured next-out winners Weyburn and Collaborate before joining forces with Dutrow, Jr.

Dutrow, Jr., who said he has confidence his horse can step up in trip, acknowledged that White Abarrio has a big task ahead of him on Saturday.

“That's for sure, but he's doing good. Hopefully, he's up to it,” Dutrow, Jr. said. “I've been getting to know him better. On the track he is [laid back], not in the stable. He ran big last time going a mile and he just got beat in the [Cigar] Mile. He ran a pretty big race down at Gulfstream going seven-eighths. I guess it mostly depends on who he's in with because he can get those distances.”

White Abarrio, listed at 6-1 on the morning line from post 5, will be reunited with the Spa's leading rider Irad Ortiz, Jr., who was aboard for the Cigar Mile effort.

Dutrow, Jr. said he had initially planned to train White Abarrio into the seven-furlong Grade 1, $500,000 Forego on August 26, but saw an opportunity with a shorter field in the Whitney – and also a chance to sidestep the reigning Champion Male Sprinter Elite Power, who bested the talented Gunite in the Grade 1 Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap here last week.

“All the riders that have been around him really like the feel he gives them. Irad has breezed him a bunch of times and is very happy to get back on him,” Dutrow, Jr. said. “Irad thought he should have won the NYRA Mile, so we have confidence that he's going to run a big race.

“He's had plenty of time between races and after watching the sprint and knowing we'd have to tackle them two [in the Forego], we may as well take a shot for twice the money going a distance that he's won,” added Dutrow, Jr. “It makes sense to try this spot because he'd have to run his heinie off to catch those other two sprinters in the Forego. We're happy we landed in this spot.”

Although the Whitney is a change of plan for White Abarrio, Dutrow, Jr. said he is responding to his horse's cue.

“I'm just going to follow my horse. He's leading us there,” Dutrow, Jr. said. “If it wasn't here it would be the Forego and I love that race, too. We're just concentrating on the horse. He has all the t's crossed and all the i's dotted. He's just been on it. For me, to be back in the Whitney, it's a good race to be in and we're very excited about our horse.”

Dutrow, Jr. has made five previous starts in the Whitney, the last outing in 2012 with Trickmeister, who ran fifth, and the most memorable with Saint Liam, who ran second, by a neck to Commentator, as the mutuel favorite in 2005.

“I had so much confidence in Saint Liam winning that race. He was seen as the best horse in the race and we can't say that about White Abarrio when you have that other Mott horse hanging around,” Dutrow, Jr. said. “It's different. Saint Liam, after his Stephen Foster win, we were training him up to that race. This race, we we're training him for the Forego until we saw a lighter field in the Whitney and decided to go in there.”

Saint Liam finished off his 2005 campaign in style with a pair of Grade 1 wins at Belmont Park, taking the Woodward and Breeders' Cup Classic en route to honors as Champion Older Horse and Horse of the Year.

“I was disappointed when Saint Liam got beat in the Whitney because I felt like we blew an opportunity there, but if this horse gets beat, I'm not going to feel like we blew an opportunity. I feel like we're reaching up and reaching up, but our horse is telling us that we can,” Dutrow, Jr. said.

And while the odds are against White Abarrio finishing off his season with the same flourish as Saint Liam, Dutrow, Jr., who returned victorious from a 10-year suspension in July, said he already feels like a winner.

“He's such a nice horse to be able to be around and train, so I've already met what I wanted to come back for – to be around a nice horse in a big race. It's all good for us,” Dutrow, Jr. said. “We know we're going to be third or fourth choice in the race, but we feel very good about our chances.”

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Spooky Channel ‘Able To Stay Home,’ Use Ellis Park’s Preview Race As Stepping Stone To Kentucky Downs

Spooky Channel, running in Ellis Park's Kentucky Downs Preview Turf Cup for the second time, is an example of money talking.

NBS Stable's gelding, an $80,000 claim in April of 2021, finished second in his third start for his current connections in the KDP Turf Cup, then worth $125,000. As a Kentucky-bred, Spooky Channel will compete for the full $250,000 offered in Sunday's stakes.

Trainer Jason Barkley, who grew up in Evansville and is the son of retired trainer Jeff Barkley, has horses this summer at Ellis Park and Saratoga, with a few at Churchill Downs' Trackside Training Center. He kept Spooky Channel at Ellis with an eye on Kentucky Downs' $1.7 million FanDuel Kentucky Turf Cup, a Grade 2 race on Sept. 9 whose winner will get a free spot in the $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf at Santa Anita on Nov. 4.

“I don't like to ship him around too much,” Barkley said. “We were able to stay home and run here for $250,000 as a stepping stone to Kentucky Downs. And if he, hopefully, were to win that, then on to the Breeders' Cup.”

Spooky Channel comes into Sunday's 1 1/4-mile stakes off a three-month freshening since he was a rallying third in Churchill Downs' $1 million Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic, the Grade 1 race before the Kentucky Derby.

Naturally Barkley is a fan of what Kentucky Downs Preview Weekend has become, including serving as fees-paid qualifiers for the corresponding Kentucky Downs stakes.

“The locals, it gives them a shot to be ready for Kentucky Downs without having to ship around,” he said of the Ellis stakes. “It keeps horses in the state. Just like Spooky. He ran in a Grade 1 last time and we're staying here. We could have gone to the Bowling Green at Saratoga for the same $250,000, but why ship for the same money when you could stay home? If this race had been a $100,000, I think we'd have had to change our options. The added money definitely keeps people around.”

Spooky Channel had just given Barkley the first graded-stakes score of his career in Keeneland's Grade 3 Sycamore two races after the Ellis stakes in 2021 when the English Channel gelding suffered a tendon injury. While such soft-tissue injuries often send a horse into retirement or racing at a cheaper level, Spooky Channel has thrived since his return 14 months later this past Dec. 22. He won the Fair Grounds' $100,000 Buddy Diliberto Memorial in his first start back, was third in Sam Houston's John B. Connally Turf Cup (G3) then returned to New Orleans to take the Grade 2 Muniz Memorial Classic for his 13th career victory in 29 starts. Barkley said the three-month layoff since the Old Forester was planned.

“Win, lose or draw, we were going to give him two or three weeks at the farm and then set him up for the summer,” he said. “He had a long winter, coming off an injury. He shipped to New Orleans, then he shipped over to Houston, back to New Orleans and shipped back up here. He can get a little light, so we just wanted to let him get a few weeks in a paddock and have him ready for a summer-fall campaign.

“I think he's better than before he went out” with the injury, Barkley said. “He's doing really well. His last couple of works have been pretty sharp. Time-wise on him, he's never been a horse that's going to work in a minute. But a mile-and-a-half turf horse doesn't need to work a minute. But he's been finishing up well and his gallop-outs have been pretty strong.”

James Graham has the mount.

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Brick Fundraiser Launched At TRF Vocational Program

The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) has launched a brick pathway fundraising campaign at the Wallkill Correctional Facility in Wallkill, New York, the organization said in a release Thursday.

Honoring the flagship location of the TRF Second Chances Program and their partnership with the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, the fundraiser will commemorate 40 years of “Saving Horses and Changing Lives.”

To support its mission, a brick pathway will be constructed on the horse farm near the historical Walstein Childs House. Bricks will be available through the summer of 2024, with a planned installation and unveiling set for that fall.

Click here for more information and to purchase a brick.

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