Harlan Estate Gives Beckman First Stakes Win In FanDuel Tapit At Kentucky Downs

When the horses came out on the track for the $500,000 FanDuel Tapit Stakes at Kentucky Downs on Thursday, trainer Whit Beckman had to do a double take.

He knew his 5-year-old gelding Harlan Estate would not be one of the favorites in the field of 11. But he didn't think the son of Kantharos would be the longest shot on the board, either.

That's exactly what he saw as Harlan Estate was 37-1.

“That surprised me.” Beckman said. “We knew it was going to be a gamble, but I didn't think the odds would be that big. He has had some good races the past three or four months.”

His horse then went out and showed the betting public had made a big mistake as he took control of the mile and 70 yard race at the eighth pole and then rolled home to a 1 ¾-length win.

Ridden by Declan Cannon, Harlan Estate won for the first time this year in his seventh start.

For Beckman, a former assistant to Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher and perennial New York champion Chad Brown, as well as a stint in Saudi Arabia, this was his first stakes win since he went out on his own on Sept 11, 2021.

“This is a huge day,” Beckman, who is from Louisville, said. “We brought a horse that was ready to run.”

Harlan Estate last raced in an allowance at Colonial Downs on Aug. 3 and finished fifth, beaten by 7 ¾ lengths. Three starts before this race, he finished third in the Grade 3 Arlington Stakes at Churchill. The horse that won that, Set Piece, would go on to win the Grade 1 Arlington Million at Colonial on Aug. 12.

After a sixth-place finish in the Grade 2 Wise Dan at Ellis Park on July 1, Hidden Estate was off until the Colonial allowance.

“We felt that was not a true test of his ability,” Beckman said. “We felt with Kentucky Downs being a different kind of setup, it was worth taking a shot down here.”

Harlan Estate was in mid-pack early on and began moving on the outside to upper stretch.

He was full of run when he came into the stretch, not looking anything like a horse wearing 37-1 odds.

“Once I tipped him out and got some daylight, he ran hard all the way to the line,” Cannon said. “I was never really in doubt from there.”

Harlan Estate has won five of 24 career starts. On grass, he has three wins in 12 tries. Beckman said he was not sure what would be next for the gelding.

English Bee, ridden by Tyler Gaffalione and trained by Graham Motion, finished second at 10-1 and were a head in front of Yes This Time, who was 8-1 for trainer Peter Miller and jockey Gerardo Corrales.

Gaffalione and jockey Jareth Loveberry, who was fifth with Speaking Scout for Motion, filed jockey objections. They were disallowed by the stewards.

“I didn't see anything that was outside of normal race running,” Beckman said. “I have to watch it again. I really have no idea what happened.”

Cannon also said he was surprised at the claims.

“This track, you kind of turn and you turn again,” he said. “I stayed on my line. Horses can kind of look around a little bit. It's just a different configuration for them. For a half million dollars, jocks aren't going to just give it to you.”

The final time was 1:38.47. Harlan Estate paid $76.52, $33.20 and $16.60.

Strong Quality finished fourth. Portfolio Company, the 5-2 favorite, was sixth followed by Kitodan, Play Action Pass, Flavius, Tiberius Mercurius and Whisper Not.

Harlan Estate is owned by Mary Roberts and Adam Ainspan of Clifton, Va. This was their first trip to Kentucky Downs.

“It's beautiful,” Ainspan said.”We both grew up just outside of Saratoga Springs, so we know what a beautiful racetrack looks like. This is certainly up there with the best of them.”

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Friday’s Racing Insights: Miss Temple City’s First To Race Hits The Turf

1st-DMR, $82K, Msw, 2yo, f, 5fT, 6:00 p.m.
PERSIA (War Front), making her juvenile debut for breeder Ramona Bass and her son Perry, is the first offspring to race out of Miss Temple City (Temple City), who posted two of her three career Grade I wins against the boys. Purchased by Steve Young for $2.5 million at Fasig-Tipton November in 2017, Miss Temple City is a full-sister to GSW Pricedtoperfection, herself a $775,000 FTKNOV grad. Trained by Richard Mandella, Persia will have the services of Hector Berrios.

Also entered is SF Racing homebred Gerwig (Kitten's Joy), who counts GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint hero Bobby's Kitten and MGSW Camelot Kitten as full-brothers. SF paid $350,000 for dam Celestial Woods (Forestry) in foal to Candy Ride (Arg) at FTKNOV in 2018  The chestnut filly will be ridden by Ramon Vasquez for trainer Tim Yakteen. TJCIS PPs

1st-SAR, $136K, Msw, 2yo, 5 1/2fT, 1:10 p.m.
Robert and Lawana Low import Irish Gent (Ire) (Ten Sovereigns {Ire}) heads to the post in Saratoga's lidlifter, who they purchased at the Goffs September Yearling Sale for $479,645 after he sold as weanling for $147,155 at Goffs the previous November. The dark bay is the first to race for dam Indigo Butterfly (Fr) (Le Harve {Ire}), a half-sister to English SW & GSP So Will I (GB) (Inchinor {GB}) and to Group 2 winner Sand Vixen (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), the dam of GIII Saratoga Oaks and G2 Cape Verdi S. heroine With the Moonlight (Ire) (Frankel {GB}). TJCIS PPs

5th-SAR, $136K, Msw, 2yo, 1m, 3:26 p.m.
Tornado Road (Quality Road), a $1.15-million Keeneland September buy last year for BC Stables, debuts for D. Wayne Lukas with Tyler Gafflione in the irons. The dark bay colt's dam has produced two winners from three other foals to race, including GIII Dogwood S. victress and 'TDN Rising Star' Carribean Caper (Speightstown). Tornado Road's extended female family includes Horse of the Year A.P. Indy (Seatlle Slew) and champion older horse Lemon Drop Kid (Kingmambo). TJCIS PPs

6th-DMR, $82K, Msw, 3yo/up, f, 6 1/2, 8:37 p.m.
Back out at Del Mar, another first to the races homebred will be making her debut in Amerman Racing's Smell the Coffee (Arrogate). Produced by GI Longines Just a Game S. heroine Coffee Clique (Medaglia d'Oro), who is a half-sister to MGSW Admission Office (Point of Entry), the David Hofmans trainee will be ridden by Ramon Vazquez. TJCIS PPs

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Brightwork Brings Perfect 3-For-3 Record Into Sunday’s Grade 1 Spinaway

WSS Racing's undefeated Brightwork brings a perfect 3-for-3 record into Sunday's 132nd running of the Grade 1, $300,000 Spinaway for 2-year-old fillies going seven furlongs at Saratoga Race Course.

The Spinaway has been won by subsequent Champion 2-Year-Old Fillies Before Dawn [1981], Family Style [1985], Meadow Star [1990], Flanders [1994], Golden Attraction [1995], Countess Diana [1997], Vequist [2020], and Echo Zulu [2021]. In its earlier years, the Spinaway was won by Hall of Famers such as Miss Woodford [1882], Maskette [1908], Top Flight [1931], Cicada [1961], Affectionately [1962], La Prevoyante [1972] and Ruffian [1974].

Brightwork, by fourth-crop sire Outwork, announced her presence as a major force to be reckoned with in the 6 1/2-furlong Grade 3 Adirondack on August 6 at Saratoga. She stalked a swift pace in between horses from third down the backstretch before tipping out wide around the far turn en route to an easy five-length score under Irad Ortiz, Jr., who retains the mount from post 9. The win garnered an 89 Beyer Speed Figure.

Brightwork has seen added ground through each of her starts for trainer John Ortiz. After breaking her maiden by three lengths in a 4 1/2-furlong maiden test on April 26 at Keeneland, she captured the six-furlong Debutante on July 2 at Ellis Park.

Since her Adirondack conquest, Brightwork has engaged in interval training which puts emphasis on the post-work gallop out.

“She came out of her last race in great shape,” Ortiz said. “In her last work, we gave her some interval training where we broke off from the half-mile pole nice and steady and then came home from the quarter pole out a half-mile. She went 49 flat and continued to gallop out almost to the three-eighths pole again. She got plenty of distance that day, nice, slow and steady. I gave her a target last week, and she did a half-mile from the pole in 48 and change. That's just exactly what we needed.

“The thing about her works is that she's only getting better and better,” Ortiz continued. “Her heart rate is showing that she's asking for more distance and so we're going in there as confident as can be.”

A Spinaway win would give Ortiz, who opened his stable in 2016, his first Grade 1 victory as a trainer.

“That's life goals right there, isn't it? When you become a trainer, that's your number one goal,” Ortiz said. “I told Elliott Walden [CEO of WinStar Farm] one day that if I become a trainer, I don't want to just be a trainer, I want to be a Champion trainer. That's the whole purpose of doing this – being in the big leagues and making it to the top. It looks like this filly is looking to take us that way and I'm enjoying the ride.”

Bought for $95,000 as a weanling from the 2021 Fasig-Tipton November Sale, Brightwork is out of the unraced Malibu Moon mare Clarendon Fancy, who also produced stakes-placed Quiet Company.

Four-time Eclipse Award winning trainer Chad Brown will send out highly impressive maiden winner Ways and Means for Klaravich Stables.

The bay daughter of third-crop stallion Practical Joke, who also was campaigned by Brown and Klaravich, displayed talent in her August 6 debut when tracking in fifth before taking the lead in upper stretch.

Jockey Flavien Prat, who retains the mount from post 8, was described as “poised like a statue in the irons” by the Equibase chart as Ways and Means strolled home a 12 3/4-length winner while earning a 90 Beyer for the win.

Ways and Means has registered two breezes over the Oklahoma training track since her phenomenal maiden coup, including a last out half-mile in 49.77 seconds on August 27.

“She's had two easy works since, and she looks fine. I'm excited to see her run again. We've been training easy,” Brown said.

A Kentucky homebred, Ways and Means is out of the Ontario-bred stakes winner Strong Incentive, who also produced Brown-trained and Klaravich-owned graded stakes-winners Highly Motivated and Surge Capacity.

Hall of Famer Bill Mott will saddle CJ Thoroughbreds' Sugar Hi [post 3, Junior Alvarado], who impressed in her Opening Day debut at the Spa with a six-length win. The daughter of Twirling Candy earned an 80 Beyer from her first-out graduation going 5 1/2 furlongs, where she sat a close second off a pace set by returning rival Lady Moscato before dueling with her foe in upper stretch and kicking clear to victory.

CJ Johnsen of CJ Thoroughbreds said the ultimate goal with Sugar Hi is to go two turns, which is one reason they bypassed the Adirondack.

“With her pedigree, I think the longer the better. I know she won at 5 1/2 [furlongs], but then going 6 1/2 in the Adirondack is a whole different animal,” Johnsen said. “I don't think there was any real reason to push her to get to [the Adirondack] because it was a three-week turnaround. She came out of her race great and probably could have easily made the race, but we wanted to make sure to develop her properly. The last thing you want to do with a filly like this is throw them into a race when they aren't 100 percent and they get crushed and get their spirits broken. She's so mentally smart, that we wanted to make sure we did the right thing for her.”

Bred in Kentucky by Fred W. Hertrich, III and John D. Fielding, Sugar Hi is out of the unraced Medaglia d'Oro mare Laughing Matters, whose second dam Justenuffheart produced 2006 Champion 2-Year-Old Filly and black type producer Dreaming of Anna as well as turf graded stakes winner Justenuffhumor and multiple graded stakes winner Lewis Michael.

Trainer Kenny McPeek will saddle Wonder Ride [post 7, Julien Leparoux] following a winning debut on August 13 at Saratoga. There, the daughter of leading third-crop stallion Gun Runner rated a close third down the backstretch and won by a half-length in an effort which garnered a 72 Beyer.

McPeek mentioned targeting either the Grade 1, $400,000 Frizette going a one-turn mile on October 7 at Belmont at the Big A or the previous day's Grade 1, $600,000 Alcibiades at Keeneland following the Spinaway.

“She was probably only 80-85 percent first time out. She did everything I asked of her and trained like a very good horse,” McPeek said. “Anytime you can run first, second or third in these kind of races with a filly is good. We'll see how she runs there and then come back in either the Frizette or the Alcibiades.”

McPeek also campaigned her New York-bred dam Wonderment, a daughter of Cosmonaut who won the 2016 Grade 3 Bourbonette Oaks at Turfway Park as well as three state-bred stakes.

“She's bigger, stronger and more talented than her mother and her mother was a very good horse,” McPeek said. “This filly seems to have an aura about her. Her mother was a Grade 3 winner, can this filly be a Grade 1 winner? Fingers crossed.”

Gary Contessa, who trained 2018 Spinaway winner Sippican Harbor, will send out Lee Pokoik's Becky's Joker [post 5, Javier Castellano], who won her career debut at 21-1 odds in Opening Day's Grade 3 Schuylerville going six furlongs. There, Becky's Joker raced from one length off the pace down the backside and pounced to a 3 1/4-length score. The daughter of Practical Joke was a lackluster seventh in the last out Grade 3 Adirondack, where she finished 15 1/4 lengths back off Brightwork.

Hall of Famer and three-time Spinaway winner Steve Asmussen will saddle Douglas Scharbauer's Closing Act [post 4, Jose Lezcano] following a third-place finish in the Schuylerville. The Texas homebred Munnings chestnut previously captured the Astoria on June 11 at Belmont Park following a triumphant neck score on debut on May 11 at Churchill Downs.

Completing the field are Miz Sense [post 1, Manny Franco] for Hall of Famer and six-time Spinaway winner Todd Pletcher; Lady Moscato [post 2, John Velazquez] for Hall of Famer and six-time Spinaway winner D. Wayne Lukas; the Tom Amoss-trained Alys Beach [post 6, Dylan Davis]; and Lemorian [post 10, Fernando De La Cruz] for conditioner Michelle Elliott.

The Spinaway is named in honor of George Lorillard's talented chestnut who won seven of her nine starts, including stakes wins at the defunct Jerome Park and Sheepshead Bay Park. Successful in her career as a broodmare, Spinaway was the granddam of Tanya, who won her grandmother's namesake race in 1904 before defeating males in the following year's Belmont Stakes.

Other prominent descendants of Spinaway include multiple Champion producing stallion Giant's Causeway, prolific broodmare Hasili and European Champion Gleneagles.

The Spinaway is slated as Race 9 on Sunday's 10-race program, which offers a first post of 12:40 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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Pick 6 Carryover Of $111,629 On Friday At The Spa

Friday's card at Saratoga Race Course will be bolstered by a Pick 6 carryover of $111,629 after the multi-race wager went unsolved on Thursday's 10-race card.

The $1 Pick 6 returned $1,200 to bettors who selected 5-of-6 winners correctly.

The sequence kicked off in Race 5 – a seven-furlong $20,000 maiden claimer for 3-years-old and upward – when the Kendrick Carmouche piloted Disappearance [No. 10, $9.60] rallied to a three-length score for trainer Robert Falcone, Jr.

Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen saddled West Point Thoroughbreds, Pine Racing Stables and Titletown Racing Stables' Speakinofthedevil [No. 9, $5.60*] to victory in an off-the-turf 5 1/2-furlong $35,000 claimer for 3-year-olds and upward in Race 6. Irad Ortiz, Jr. piloted the Daredevil gelding.

Arnmore Thoroughbreds and Even Keel Thoroughbreds' Gala Brand [No. 1, $7.80], trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and ridden by Jose Ortiz, defeated males in the featured Race 7 – the Grade 3, $175,000 With Anticipation for juveniles going 1 1/16 over the inner turf.

Trainer Derek Ryan saddled the Javier Castellano-piloted Cicciobello [No. 3, $6.40] to victory in Race 8 – a one-mile allowance tilt for New York-breds 3-years-old and upward over the main track.

In Race 9 – a seven-furlong starter allowance for 3-year-olds and upward over the main track – the Jamie Begg-trained Locke and Key [No. 8, $36.40] sprung a massive upset with Ricardo Santana, Jr. in the irons.

With four horses covered in Race 10 – a $35,000 claimer for fillies and mares 3-years-old and upward going 1 1/16 miles over the inner turf – the Jimmy Ferraro-trained and co-owned More Mango [No. 3, $90.50] picked up a third lifetime win. Jaime Torres was aboard for the 44-1 score.

Friday's Pick 6 will kick off in Race 5 at 3:26 p.m. Eastern. First post for the 10-race card is 1:10 p.m.

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/.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Saratoga Race Course, and the best way to bet every race of the summer meet. Available to horse players nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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