Alva Starr Emulates Half Sister In Winning Prioress, Provides Brinkman First Graded Score As Trainer

Alva Starr, bred by owner P. Dale Ladner and trainer Brett Brinkman, utilized a prominent trip engineered by Jose Lezcano to secure a powerful 8 3/4-length victory in Saturday's $250,000 Prioress (G2), a six-furlong sprint for sophomore fillies, at Saratoga Race Course.

It was the second Prioress score for Ladner, who won this event in 2021 with Alva Starr's half-sister by California Chrome, Cilla, who raced that day in trainer Charlton Baker's care when Brinkman didn't take out his New York license.

Alva Starr, a Lord Nelson bay, is out of the graded stakes-placed Into Mischief mare Sittin At the Bar, who was campaigned by Brinkman and Ladner. Alva Starr is also a half-sibling to multiple graded stakes-placed Club Car, and stakes-winner Jack the Umpire, all campaigned by the same connections.

Alva Starr arrived at her graded stakes debut from a 6 3/4-length romp in the six-furlong Dashing Beauty on July 8 at her Delaware Park base.

“This filly had not missed a beat since the Delaware race and we just felt really good coming into the race. It doesn't put us into the winner's circle, but we felt good about it,” said Brinkman, who secured both his first official graded win and first Spa score. “A lot of times good horses make it look easy, but they are running fast and she's got a quick turn of foot from a high cruising speed and that's all I told Jose when he worked her and when he got on her today. I said, 'Let her be who she wants to be, she is very manageable and use her assets.'”

Alva Starr emerged from a three-pronged battle for the lead with Jersey Pearl and Unified Alliance to mark the opening quarter-mile in :21.73 over the fast main track with Unsung Melody and 3-5 mutuel favorite Dazzling Blue tracking their early foot.

Alva Starr led to the turn as Joel Rosario rushed Dazzling Blue into second position through a half-mile in :44.64 and Jersey Pearl remained in contention while saving ground in third. Alva Starr opened up by 5 1/2-lengths at the stretch call to put away Dazzling Blue and drew off to a comfortable score in a final time of 1:09.14. Jersey Pearl completed the exacta by 2 1/2-lengths over Dazzling Blue with Unsung Melody and Unified Alliance completing the order of finish.

Lezcano worked Alva Starr a half-mile in 48.21 Sunday over the Spa main track in her final Prioress prep.

“I thought I worked her too slow, but when I checked the time she went :48 and change. She did it so easily and I felt I just galloped her out there,” Lezcano said. “The trainer told me to go like :49. I grabbed the bridle and she did it so easily. I knew she was very nice. Today, I watched her replays and she looked like a very fast filly. I was very impressed with her today. She's a very nice filly.”

Alva Starr graduated on debut last September at Delaware Park and returned to action in May with a runner-up effort to next-out stakes winner Unifying in an optional-claimer at Oaklawn Park. She followed with a close runner-up effort to Jersey Pearl in May in an optional claimer at Churchill Downs ahead of her recent stakes score.

The Darrin Miller-trained Jersey Pearl, who was fifth last out in the Test (G1) at the Spa, was game to the wire to complete the exacta under leading rider Irad Ortiz Jr.

“The winner ran away from me and was much the best today,” Ortiz said. “She felt great. We had three horses with speed, so I expected to be forwardly placed and I go from there.”

Brinkman said he could potentially point Alva Starr to the seven-furlong Raven Run (G2) on October 21 at Keeneland — a race Cilla finished third in following her Prioress score.

“We have a couple races marked out. We will go into Keeneland and see. I feel like she can get seven-eighths. The pedigree, you know, we'll see,” Brinkman said.

Alva Starr banked $137,500 in victory while improving her record to 5-3-2-0. She returned $9 for a $2 win bet.

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Life’s an Audible Pounces, Graduates at Second Asking

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — Different surface. Different distance. Different pace scenario. Far different outcome for Life's an Audible (Audible) Saturday in the opener at Saratoga Race Course.

When her career debut at 1 1/16 miles on turf on July 30 was switched to the main track at one mile due to wet conditions, Life's an Audible was prominent for six furlongs, but weakened and ended up 21 lengths behind her Todd Pletcher stablemate Miz Sense (Street Sense.

Running 5 1/2 furlongs over a turf course rated as firm in her second start Saturday, the Repole Stable chestnut came from off the pace under Irad Ortiz, Jr. and beat the maiden special weight field by 1 1/4 lengths. Sent off at 7-1 in the field of 10 fillies, she reached the wire in 1:03.29 and paid $16.40.

It was the second consecutive day that Pletcher watched one of his 2-year-olds flourish in its second start. On Friday, Locked (Gun Runner), turned in a very professional performance for Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Walmac Farm.

Bayare (Midshipman), the 2-1 favorite, and Echo Baybe (IRE) (Cable Bay {IRE}) set the early pace through fractions of :21.54 seconds and :45.38. Starting from Post 9, Ortiz worked Life's an Audible toward the inside. She got the job done in the stretch.

“Shortening up from an off-the-turf race; got some experience in there,” Pletcher said. “They went pretty fast early. She got out-footed a little bit in the beginning but picked it up nicely around the turn came with a good run down the lane.”

Repole purchased Life's an Audible for $200,000 at the OBS March sale. She was bred in Kentucky by Susan Moulton.

Ortiz was aboard for the July 30 race and figured that Life's an Audible would again be part of the pace scenario. Instead, she was about six lengths back after a quarter mile.

“She was quick last time, so I knew that she was going to be close, but they ran away from me early on,” he said.

Ortiz guided the filly closer to the rail and had her in position to make a late run.

“When she hit the clear she took off,” he said.

 

1st-Saratoga, $105,000, Msw, 9-2, 2yo, f, 5 1/2fT, 1:03.29, fm, 1 1/4 lengths.
LIFE'S AN AUDIBLE (f, 2, Audible–Catkins, by Data Link) was an early factor on debut but faded to be a well-beaten fourth at Saratoga in a rained-off one-mile event July 30. On the turf in a true sprint Saturday, the 7-1 shot took her time getting into stride and race in the back half of the field before moving up into the turn. Fanned out to be six wide past the quarter pole, the $200,000 OBS March grad rallied to the front inside the final sixteenth and got a bit of separation late to score by 1 1/4 lengths over first-time starter Tammy Lynn (Distorted Humor). Life's an Audible becomes the sixth winner for her freshman sire (by Into Mischief). Catkins has a yearling Tom's d'Etat colt, reported a Liam's Map filly this year, and visited Nashville for 2024. Sales History: $25,000 Wlg '21 KEENOV; $90,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP; $200,000 2yo '23 OBSMAR. Lifetime Record: 2-1-0-0, $64,050. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.
O-Repole Stable; B-Susan Moulton (KY); T-Todd A. Pletcher.

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Broken Hearts and Fatalities: Letter to the Editor

I have been following with interest the past week's articles, letters and commentaries in the TDN and while I agree that track surfaces need to be looked at, I feel like it's all a bit deja-vu and that if racing had stayed the course and adapted following the initial introduction of synthetic surfaces 20 years ago, we might be in a better position today. But anyway…

The truth is that everything in the modern “thoroughbred industry” needs to change if racing is to survive as a sport. But still people complain about HISA and fight against any kind of change.

So, more and more, it looks like nothing significant will change because nobody wants to get off the commercial juggernaut…I mean, It's easy to shout and scream about track surfaces because it distracts from addressing the wider issues:

Racing and breeding have become so commercialized that horses are now almost exclusively bred, raised, sold, resold, resold again, trained, run and maybe resold yet again, not as athletes but as financial commodities and nearly everybody is playing the numbers game.

Furthermore, in the last 30 years, the Overton Window for use of PMs (I'm not even going to mention PEDs) has shifted so much that medications are considered standard and necessary and alarmingly often, the reasons for administering tend to be more about our plans, deadlines and expectations than the welfare of the horse. As Bart Cummings was wont to say, “Patience is the cheapest and least used thing in racing.”

It breaks my heart to say that I think in another 30 years, racing will either be banned or reduced to a behind-closed-doors, ultra-niche activity like polo, show-jumping or eventing.

Eric Ward grew up in Ireland and spent nearly 30 years in stud farming all over the world including a decade with Coolmore. He managed studs in Ireland, China and Turkey. Now based in Gaillac, France he assists his winemaker wife, writes novels and is also a volunteer fire-fighter/first responder.

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French Import Beaute Cachee Notches Stakes Breakthrough In Violet

All it took was a trans-Atlantic change of venue to get Beaute Cachee to start living up to her potential.

After 12 races in France with modest success, Beaute Cachee extended her form spree in the United States, drawing off to win Saturday's $104,000 Violet Stakes at Monmouth Park by a widening 3¼ lengths.

Bred in France, the 4-year-old daughter of Literato now has two wins and a near-miss second in her three U.S. Starts. Saturday's triumph marked the first stakes win for the Chad Brown-trainee, who was ridden by Nik Juarez.

“She shipped in from Saratoga this morning so I have not been around her here, but I worked with her at Payson Park (in Florida),” said Luis Cabrera, who oversees Brown's division at Monmouth Park. “She has a lot of ability. She has been running very well since she came to this country. All of her races here have been good races.”

After winning her U.S. debut at Belmont Park on May 26, Beaute Cachee was second, beaten a neck, in an optional claimer at Saratoga on July 27. She had been just 1-for-12 during her racing career in France.

The winning time for the 1 1/16 miles over a turf course listed as firm was 1:42.92.

Beaute Cachee paid $4 to win as the favorite in the field of eight fillies and mares. But there were some anxious moments early, with the filly fighting Juarez and being rank in the opening quarter mile.

“I had an opportunity to watch the replays of her two races in the United States and both replays showed me she does what she did early (today),” said Juarez. “The chart mark in her last race said she was rank, so I went back to watch it and it seems like she has a very light mouth to her. I knew that going into the race so I was prepared for what she might do.

“I was waiting for her to settle behind the speed and she did eventually. It really wasn't a matter of her fighting me early. Really it was more a case of trying to find a mutual agreement to get her to settle down.”

With Join the Dance setting early fractions of :24.85, :49.08 and 1:12.22 to three quarters, Beaute Cachee sat a stalking third, with Miss Carol Ann just off the early leader.

Miss Carol Ann made her move for the lead coming out of the final turn, with Beaute Cachee collaring her in mid-stretch before drawing off late.

“I wanted to sit right behind the speed, exactly where we were,” said Juarez. “When (Join the Dance) started to back out I was able to target (Miss Carol Ann). When she made her move by that one she didn't open up by much but she has a really quick burst when you ask her. That's the thing with trying to get her settled early – you can't lose your patience because you know the run is coming.”

Beaute Cachee, who has raced exclusively on the grass during her 15-race career, is owned by Madaket Stables LLC, Michael Dubb and Louis Lazzinnaro. Bred by Gregor Vischer, Beaute Cachee was produced by the Hurricane Run mare Sign and Seal.

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