Power Squeeze Rallies Past Rivals To Post Cash Run Surprise

Lea Farms' Power Squeeze closed stoutly down the center of the track to sweep past horses through the stretch and spring an 8-1 upset of her stakes debut in Monday's $150,000 Cash Run at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

The fourth running of the one-mile Cash Run for newly turned 3-year-old fillies, first step on the road to the $250,000 Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2) March 30, shared top billing on a New Year's holiday program with the $150,000 Mucho Macho Man for 3-year-olds.

Ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr. for trainer Jorge Delgado, Power Squeeze ($18.80) was making just her fourth start and first since a 4 ½-length triumph in an off-the-turf maiden special weight Oct. 7 at Delaware Park.

Ortiz kept the late-running daughter of Belmont Stakes winner Union Rags in the clear four wide as Done Enough, back on dirt after a failed turf try in the 7 ½-furlong Wait a While Dec. 9 at Gulfstream, cruised through an opening quarter-mile in 24.16 seconds and a half in 46.75, pressed to her outside by Sweet Hazely, with multiple stakes winner Chi Chi racing in between De Regresso on the rail and 9-5 favorite Queen's Martini.

When Queen's Martini moved up to launch a bid three wide rounding the far turn, Ortiz tipped further out to follow suit and set Power Squeeze down for a drive once straightened for home, soaring to the front and going away to win by five lengths in 1:37.19 over a fast main track.

“It's always a plus to have Irad on her back. He did everything right today,” Delgado said. “The filly was very good today. I think we'll have a nice filly moving forward.”

Queen's Martini, an eye-catching winner of her lone prior start July 19 at Saratoga, was a clear second, 2 ¾ lengths ahead of Done Enough, who held off Sweet Hazely for third. Chi Chi and De Regresso completed the order of finish.

Power Squeeze was racing for the first time at Gulfstream after making three starts at 2, running fourth and second in six-furlong maiden special weights at Delaware and Monmouth Park before her graduation.

“We've been trying to find races to stretch her out,” Delgado said. “In her last race, it was the first time she had a chance to develop her stride like the run she had today.”

Delgado said he would likely target the next race in Gulfstream's series for 3-year-old fillies on dirt, the $125,000 Forward Gal (G3) sprinting seven furlongs Feb. 3.

The post Power Squeeze Rallies Past Rivals To Post Cash Run Surprise appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Road To Kentucky Derby: Drum Roll Please, El Grande O To Meet In Jerome

Gold Square LLC's graded stakes-placed Drum Roll Please will look to rebound from a last-out third in the Remsen (G2) when taking on four rivals in Saturday's $150,000 Jerome, a one-mile test for sophomores at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The Jerome is the first Kentucky Derby prep race of the year on the New York circuit and offers qualifying points on a 10-5-3-2-1 scale to the top-five finishers, respectively.

Trained by Brad Cox, Drum Roll Please faced winners for the first time last out in the nine-furlong Remsen on December 2 at the Big A. There, he raced in seventh-of-10 under Javier Castellano and made up ground late in the turn to come within one length of the lead at the stretch call. The top duo of Dornoch and Sierra Leone drew clear from Drum Roll Please down the lane and finished 4 3/4 lengths ahead of him as he finished a clear third. Drum Roll Please earned a career-best 84 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort.

“He's training really good,” said Dustin Dugas, Cox's Belmont Park-based assistant. “He's always been one that trains well and he's a good keeper – a good doer.”

The Hard Spun chestnut graduated at third asking two starts back in a one-mile maiden tilt at Aqueduct, earning the victory with a more prominent trip under Castellano and challenging the top flight with a four-wide bid at the top of the lane. He was met with a bid from Hunt Ball in the stretch, but shook clear of his rival to draw away to a two-length score in a final time of 1:36.46.

Dugas said he expects the cutback will benefit Drum Roll Please.

“He's one that you just play the break. He can be a little sluggish sometimes, but once he grabs the bridle, he'll get in there for you,” said Dugas. “We'll see what the pace is and where he'll be.”

A $250,000 purchase by agent Joe Hardoon at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, Drum Roll Please is out of the multiple stakes-winning E Dubai mare Imply. His fourth dam, Sharon Brown, produced Hall of Famer and 1994 Horse of the Year Holy Bull.

Castellano has the call from the inside post.

Barry Schwartz's New York homebred El Grande O [post 4, Kendrick Carmouche] brings a seasoned resume that includes two stakes victories against fellow state-breds for trainer Linda Rice.

The dark bay son of Take Charge Indy was last seen scoring a front-running victory in the one-mile Sleepy Hollow over a muddy and sealed Big A main track on October 29. There, he battled for the early lead with Solo's Fury before drawing clear with ease to take a 5 1/2-length advantage at the stretch call. He faced a late challenge from stablemate B D Saints, but had plenty left to stave off his rival and post the 1 1/4-length victory in a final time of 1:37.98.

El Grande O was given a one-month freshening following the Sleepy Hollow and returned to the work tab in early December. He most recently worked five furlongs in 1:02.31 on Sunday over Belmont's training track.

“He's doing well,” said Rice. “He got a little break, so hopefully he's as good a 3-year-old and he was a 2-year-old.”

El Grande O's Sleepy Hollow victory came after an uncharacteristic sixth-place finish in the Champagne (G1) in October, which he had entered off a dominant 8 1/4-length romp in the state-bred Bertram F. Bongard in September at Aqueduct. His lone other start against open company came with a game runner-up effort to Ship Cadet in an off-the-turf edition of the Skidmore in August at Saratoga Race Course.

Through a record of 8-3-3-1, El Grande O boasts field-best earnings of $319,000. He is a half-brother to the graded stakes-placed Malibu Moon mare Meal Ticket.

“[Seasoning] is always helpful,” said Rice. “Bottom line is, if someone is just better than him, that's usually where it [helps].”

Goodfella's LLC's Regalo [post 5, Sheldon Russell] streaks in off back-to-back wins at Laurel Park for trainer Brittany Russell.

The son of Maximus Mischief was last seen passing his first test against winners in a 1 1/16-mile optional claimer on December 9 where he engaged in an early battle with Masakado before taking the lead at the stretch call and powering home a 4 1/2-length winner in a final time of 1:46.40.

The consistent bay finished second in his September debut sprinting six furlongs at the Maryland oval before graduating by 5 1/4 lengths when stretched out to seven furlongs. A $280,000 purchase by agent Frank Alosa at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, Regalo's second dam, Referendum, is a half-sister to multiple Grade 1 winner and Grade 1-producer Jersey Girl.

Built Wright Stables' Kentucky homebred Sweet Soddy J [post 3, Dylan Davis] will look to secure his third stakes win for trainer Raymond Ginter, Jr.

Sweet Soddy J was a three-length winner of the 6 1/2-furlong Timonium Juvenile in September and arrives from a frontrunning six-length romp in the seven-furlong Heft on December 30 at Laurel Park.

The Bee Jersey gelding is cross-entered in Saturday's 6 1/2-furlong Turfway Prevue, but owner Norman “Lynn” Cash said Sweet Soddy J is most likely to contest the Jerome.

“We're 85 percent to run there [at Aqueduct],” Cash said. “The horse is in Maryland and it looks like he can handle a little distance.

“It's a longer ship to Turfway,” added Cash. “I'd actually entered him at Turfway before the race ran at Laurel. I didn't realize then we had a six-length winner there, but the way he ran it just feels like he can go long. There's a lot more money going long than going short, so if he can take the long I'd much rather have him going that way.”

The well-traveled chestnut has competed at seven tracks through a record of 8-3-0-1, which includes a debut maiden-claiming score in August at Colonial and a third-place finish in the Fitz Dixon Jr. Memorial Juvenile in September at Presque Isle Downs.

Cash said Sweet Soddy J's win at Timonium was even better than it looked on paper.

“He broke decent in the first race [at Colonial] and he took the lead going around the corner and drew off a little bit. The next one [at Timonium] – where he came off the pace – he stumbled coming out of the gate and almost hit the rail,” Cash said. “A horse came in and he reacted and almost hit the rail coming through the gap. The whole race he sat behind them because he couldn't get through. He finally got through at the top of the short stretch. He was eight or 10 lengths better than everybody that day.”

Sweet Soddy J has made one previous start at a one-turn mile finishing a distant eighth after pressing the pace in the Champagne in October. But Cash said Sweet Soddy J has improved with racing and could have been a three-time stakes winner had he switched leads after putting a head in front at the stretch call in the six-furlong James F. Lewis III in November at Laurel.

“He had the race won but he wouldn't switch leads. That's been his issue in his earlier races,” Chapman said. “He made the lead at the head of the stretch, but he didn't switch leads and we ended up running fourth. If he switches leads that day, he'd have won three stakes.”

Cash said Sweet Soddy J switched leads perfectly last out and he is hopeful that Dylan Davis can work out a patient trip.

“Just let him break and get where he wants to. If he makes the lead, I don't need him way out in front,” Cash said. “I hope we push towards the lead coming around the corner. We don't have to have the lead, but get him running down the lane.

“He looks like he wants to go long. He's a big horse,” added Cash. “If he had another furlong to go last time he'd make that easily, he was pulling away from everybody.”

Rounding out the field is Calumet Farm's maiden winner Khanate [post 2, Manny Franco] for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher.

The Hightail colt, a $35,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, drew off to win by 10 1/2-lengths in a restricted seven-furlong maiden sprint in October at Keeneland. He arrives from a pacesetting sixth in a 1 1/16-mile optional-claimer on November 9 at Churchill Downs.

The post Road To Kentucky Derby: Drum Roll Please, El Grande O To Meet In Jerome appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Fresu Enjoying Strong Start At Santa Anita Meet

Eight months after arriving in the U.S. via Dubai, Italian jockey Antonio Fresu has solidified his position as one of the top riders in California.

Through the first four days of the Santa Anita Classic Meet, Fresu leads all jockeys with four stakes wins. In the eighth race Sunday, the 32-year-old from Sardinia earned his sixth win overall at the stand aboard Ghost of Midnight ($3.80) for trainer Mark Glatt, which puts him in a tie for leading rider with Santa Anita's perennial top jockey, Juan Hernandez.

“Obviously I'm very pleased with how things are going,” said Fresu, who is represented by veteran agent Tom Knust. “I haven't been here long. Every time you change places you start from zero again and it takes a while to get to know all the different people. But my agent has done a good job. Now we're getting better horses with better chances.”

Fresu's quartet of stakes wins included a two-bagger on opening day last Tuesday with Watsonville ($11) in the Mathis Mile (G2) for Mark Glatt and Easter ($3.40) in the San Gabriel (G2) for Phil D'Amato. Fresu also won the Blue Norther Stakes on Friday with Medoro ($6.80) for Peter Eurton and the Robert J. Frankel (G2) on Saturday with longshot Angel Nadeshiko ($39.60) for trainer Patrick Gallagher.

Fresu acknowledged it has taken time to adjust to racing in the U.S. He has previously ridden all over the world. Prior to arriving at Santa Anita last April, he was plying his trade in Dubai.

“Obviously it's a different style of racing and different style of riding than Europe,” Fresu said. “You have to adapt. It took a little time, but now I'm getting more used to things here. It's been a good experience. I'm still learning and always want to learn more.”

The post Fresu Enjoying Strong Start At Santa Anita Meet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

What You Read: Horse Care Stories Of Mishaps, Medical Breakthroughs, And Explainers You Didn’t Know You Needed

One of our favorite year-end traditions at the Paulick Report is to take a look back at some of the most popular stories on the website from the previous calendar year. These have proven very popular. (You can find this year's here.)

Recently, we've done a separate rundown of the most popular Horse Care stories as we continue to grow our Horse Care section.

Horse Care, for us, includes a wide range of topics, from new research to recurring veterinary and farrier topics to coverage of ex-racehorses in new jobs. It's not uncommon to see a story in these subject areas take off on social media, sometimes well after it's been published, and we saw that again this year.

Here are the most-read Horse Care stories from the Paulick Report for 2023:

  1. 1/ST Issues Statement After Dead Horse Found On Bowie Property

Readers reacted, much as we did, with horror and surprise when word got out in October that the body of a Thoroughbred had been found on the property of the old Bowie Training Center. The facility hasn't been used for training or stabling for a number of years, and backs up to a park. 1/ST Racing and Gaming, which owns Bowie, indicated it was launching an investigation into the situation. We requested an update on that investigation while compiling this list, but had not heard back at press time.

  1. Horse Breaks Loose In Cargo Hold Of Boeing 747, Forces Flight's Return To JFK

This story got a lot of attention nationally after it was first reported by mainstream media outlets. The plane was supposed to go from New York to Belgium but had to return to JFK after a horse escaped its stall in the cargo area of the plane and crew on board were unable to capture it. The flight crew requested a veterinarian come check the horse out, but we were unable to get official word on the horse's condition.

Horses are commonly transported in cargo planes, both for racing and sport purposes, without incident. Jet-setting racehorses typically have dedicated caretakers who ride with them and check them frequently in the cargo area, ensuring they have adequate resources throughout the trip.

  1. Secretariat's Last Known Daughter Dies at Age 34

The legacy of Secretariat continues to hold strong for race fans in this, the 50th anniversary of his historic Triple Crown. Readers responded with sad nostalgia to this report noting the death of Trusted Company, who was believed to be the last living daughter of Big Red, in September. According to a report from the Louisville Courier-Journal, Maritime Traveler is the last known surviving offspring of Secretariat.

We wrote about Maritime Traveler in 2022. Despite grand expectations for his racing career, he failed to break his maiden and was retired in short order and made a teaser in Ocala, Fla. Today he lives at Bridlewood Farm and has been pensioned for several years. He is set to turn 34 on New Year's Day.

  1. 'He Was So Much Fun': Champion Amazombie Euthanized At Old Friends

    The unfortunate reality of running a large retirement facility for aging equine stars is that you lose a few each year. Two obituaries from Old Friends made our most-read list this year – this one, for 2011 Eclipse Award-winning sprinter Amazombie, and this one for 2022 Belmont Stakes winner Sarava. Both succumbed to complications from fractures.

    The retirement of barn fire survivor Bold and Bossy to Old Friends was also one of our best-read stories. The filly attracted national attention after she threw her rider at Ellis Park ahead of her first career start and went racing down a Kentucky highway. Later the same day, a fire broke out in the receiving barn where she was stabled, but quick-thinking bystanders were able to save Bold and Bossy and the other horses in the building.

  2. Veterinarians Respond To Findings Of Large-Scale Study Into Radiograph Findings At Thoroughbred Auctions

For years, consignors and breeders have expressed frustration at how quickly buyers have moved to reject a horse at auction because of something on their radiographs. Finally, after a long-term, multi-year study, academic research exists to show some of the most common types of stifle and sesamoid findings don't seem to change the likelihood a horse will make it to the racetrack.

Veterinarians discussed the findings at a panel hosted by the Consignors and Commercial Breeders Association. It's likely that cultural change around the perception of sale radiographs will take some time, but many in the industry are hoping this data will restore some reason to the market, which has increasingly penalized horses for even minor changes.

  1. This OTTB Went From Kissing Spines Diagnosis To Makeover With Physical Therapy Instead Of Surgery

This story is from 2022, but remains relevant for a lot of Thoroughbred owners today. As radiographing imaging technology has improved, veterinarians say it's more and more common to see horses diagnosed with a condition called kissing spines. This happens when the fin-like dorsal spinous processes on a horse's vertebrae are missing the normal spacing at the top, which can create painful pinching and friction.

This feature traced the case of one ex-racehorse diagnosed with significant kissing spines who was rehabilitated with targeted stretching exercises to slowly lift his mid-back and strengthen his core muscles, which can correct the hyperlordosis one veterinarian believes is the root cause of kissing spine.

  1. American Horse Council Encourages Caution When It Comes To Kill Pen Bail-Outs

 Bail pens, which purport to offer the public “one last chance” to buy a horse before they're shipped internationally for slaughter, have become increasingly-powerful businesses in recent years, thanks to social media. This summer, the American Horse Council released an explainer reviewing the potential these operations have to exploit well-meaning horse lovers and the animals themselves. Bottom line: bailing one out just feeds the system.

  1. American Quarter Horse Association Implements New Mandatory Necropsy Rule For Sanctioned Shows

If a horse dies at a sanctioned racetrack in North America, it's standard practice for veterinarians to perform an autopsy (known in animals as a necropsy) to learn what happened. This fall, the American Quarter Horse Association announced this will now also be true at its sanctioned horse shows, too.

Racing Quarter Horses that suffer a fatality on state-sanctioned grounds were already possibly subject to a necropsy, depending on that state's regulations. The procedure is required for all Thoroughbreds under the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act.

  1. Jess's Dream, Son Of Rachel Alexandra, Pensioned From Stud Duty With Sights On A New Career

After a short career at Ocala Stud, Jess's Dream, one of two foals from the great Rachel Alexandra, has been pensioned and will move on to a third career. The announcement came from Stonestreet in October. The farm is hopeful he will become a stable pony, and he's scheduled to be restarted under saddle in the new year.

  1. Bramlage: Racing And Training 2-Year-Olds Reduces Their Risk Of Injury – Here's Why

We've frequently dusted off this three-year-old explainer to help people understand the often-counterintuitive notion that waiting to start young Thoroughbreds under saddle until age three or four would actually be harmful to their safety. Dr. Larry Bramlage, renowned equine surgeon at Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital, explained back in 2020 that bone modeling in horses (and other species, including humans) happens in response to the forces placed on those bones. Bone modeling and remodeling takes place throughout an animal's life, but is especially vigorous when the animal is young. If you wait to train a horse for high-intensity work until later in life, the blood supply and needed cell populations in those bones will have atrophied, and the modeling/remodeling will not be as robust, leaving the horse vulnerable to injury. This has been proven out in data from the Equine Injury Database.

The post What You Read: Horse Care Stories Of Mishaps, Medical Breakthroughs, And Explainers You Didn’t Know You Needed appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights