Authentic Puts in Final Derby Tune-Up

Spendthrift Farm, MyRaceHorse Stable, Madaket Stables and Starlight Racing’s Authentic (Into Mischief) completed his final work ahead of Saturday’s GI Kentucky Derby, covering six furlongs in 1:12.40 (1/9) at Del Mar Sunday morning.

“Authentic is really doing well. I see him turning the corner,” trainer Bob Baffert said. “Both of my horses [Authentic and Thousand Words], I think they’re live. We just need some luck, you never know what is going to happen with that many horses in there.”

Authentic, second behind Honor A.P. (Honor Code) in the June 6 GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby, is coming off a narrow victory in the July 18 GI TVG.com Haskell S. at Monmouth Park. He is scheduled to arrive at Churchill Downs Monday on a flight from Southern California.

Jim Bakke and Gerald Isbister’s Attachment Rate (Hard Spun) tuned up for the Derby with a five-furlong work in 1:01.20 (17/47) at Churchill Downs Sunday. The chestnut colt is coming off a runner-up effort behind Art Collector (Bernardini) in the Aug. 9 Runhappy Ellis Park Derby.

“I thought his race at Ellis made him worthy of trying the Derby,” trainer Dale Romans said. “This was his second work back from that race and we wanted to put a nice five-eighths move in him. He ran well over the winter in both the Gotham and the Unbridled. He hung in there pretty well to finish second behind Art Collector at Ellis.”

Attachment Rate was third in the Mar. 7 GIII Gotham S. and second in the Unbrided S. at Gulfstream Park Apr. 25. He was fourth in the May 23 GIII Matt Winn S. and fifth in the July 11 GII Toyota Blue Grass S.

Jim and Donna Daniell’s Rushie (Liam’s Map) will skip the Derby in favor of Saturday’s GII Pat Day Mile, while trainer Todd Pletcher confirmed Sunday that Bob LaPenta and Bortolazzo Stable’s Money Moves (Candy Ride {Arg}) will start in the Run for the Roses. The bay colt opened his career with a pair of wins at Gulfstream Park this past spring and missed by just a neck when stretched to nine furlongs in a Saratoga optional claimer July 25. He worked five furlongs at Saratoga Friday in 1:00.14 (10/17).

“The horse ran well last time and he’s been training sharply,” Pletcher said. “I felt like this is an opportunity that you don’t get very often, so we’re taking a shot.”

The expected field for the Derby is: Tiz the Law (Constitution); Authentic; Art Collector; Honor A. P.; Ny Traffic (Cross Traffic); King Guillermo (Uncle Mo); Thousand Words (Pioneerof the Nile); Max Player (Honor Code); Enforceable (Tapit); Major Fed (Ghostzapper); Storm the Court (Court Vision); Attachment Rate; Sole Volante  (Karakontie {Jpn}); Finnick the Fierce (Dialed In); Winning Impression (Paynter); Necker Island (Hard Spun); Money Moves (Candy Ride {Arg}).

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Gleneagles Colt Strikes at Group Level in Japan

Second choice on the board at 3-1, Shock Action earned his first black-type badge in the G3 Niigata Nisai S. at Niigata on Sunday. Positioned in the center of the track in fifth for the backstretch run, he began to inch into contention on the bend despite still racing wide. In a contested third 600 metres out, he motored up toward the leaders inside the final quarter mile, seized command a furlong from home and won going away by 1 3/4 lengths. Blue Symphony closed to take second, a half-length better than Phrase d’Armes in third.

Third in a Hanshin newcomer affair on July 18, Shock Action handled good ground to take his second start over course-and-distance on Aug. 8.

Pedigree Notes

He is the seventh black-type winner and third group winner for his sire, who won four times at the highest level including both the G1 QIPCO 2000 Guineas and the Irish equivalent. The first foal from his dual Italian listed-winning dam who would run third in the G3 Premio Elena E Sergio Cumani, Schock Action has a yearling half-brother by Australia and a half-sister by Intello (Ger) born on Mar. 24. Reset in Blue is a half-sister to Italian GSW & G1SP Romantic Wave (Ire) (Rock of Gibraltar {Ire}), as well as SW Dematil (Ire) (Orpen).

Sunday, Niigata, Japan
NIIGATA NISAI S.-G3, ¥59,150,000 (US$561,442/£420,500/€471,573), Niigata, 8-30, 2yo, 1600mT, 1:34.60, fm.
1–SHOCK ACTION (IRE), 119, c, 2, Gleneagles (Ire)
                1st Dam: Reset In Blue (Ire) (MSW & GSP-Ity, $162,553),
                                by Fastnet Rock (Aus)
                2nd Dam: Eurirs (Fr), by Indian Ridge (Ire)
                3rd Dam: Anna Grassi (Ity), by Bound for Honour
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN. 1ST GROUP WIN. (65,000gns Wlg ’18
TATNOV). O-Godolphin; B-Scuderia Effevi Srl & Dioscuri Srl
(Jpn); T-Ryuji Okubo; J-Keita Tosaki. ¥31,385,000. Lifetime
Record: 3-2-0-1. *7th SW for his sire (by Galileo {Ire}). Click for
   the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating:
   A+++. *Triple Plus*.
2–Blue Symphony (Jpn), 119, c, 2, Screen Hero (Jpn)–
Bluestone (Jpn), by Commands (Aus). O-Godolphin; B-Darley
Japan Farm (Jpn); ¥12,110,000.
3–Phrase d’Armes (Jpn), 119, f, 2, Kizuna (Jpn)–Coup de Grace
(Jpn), by White Muzzle (GB). O-Katsumi Yoshida; B-Northern
Farm (Jpn); ¥7,855,000.
Margins: 1 3/4, HF, 4. Odds: 3.30, 2.90, 3.50.
Also Ran: Fervore (Jpn), Chevalier Rose (Jpn), Seiun Deimos (Jpn), Lord Max (Jpn), Blue Bird (Jpn), Havasu (Jpn), Giuramento (Jpn), Tiger Lily (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart or video or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

 

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The Week in Review: Remember the Context of 2019 Derby DQ

After a federal appeals court on Friday upheld a district court’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit that sought to reverse the disqualification of Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) from first place in the 2019 GI Kentucky Derby, co-owner Gary West told TDN that even though he disagreed with the ruling, “it is time to move on and the decision will not be appealed.”

Country House (Lookin At Lucky), of course, has been considered the winner of the 2019 Derby ever since he was elevated from second to first via the DQ process. So this latest judgment changes nothing regarding the already-official results.

The court ruling also does not mean that the Churchill Downs stewards got the call right. The three-judge panel simply affirmed that the plaintiffs had no legal basis to challenge the outcome.

What the ruling does mean is that another precedent will get entered into the law books underscoring how hard it is (and should be) to get a judge in a court of law to overturn a field-of-play ruling by an umpire, referee, or board of stewards.

And the decision by Gary and Mary West to not pursue further legal action does finally lift the miasma of litigious dread that descends whenever sports and the courts collide.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (whose members and executive director Marc Guilfoil were defendants in the lawsuit along with chief state steward Barbara Borden, state steward Brooks “Butch” Becraft, and Churchill Downs steward Tyler Picklesimer), issued a statement after the Aug. 28 judgment in which Guilfoil said the stewards’ decision to DQ Maximum Security was “an easy call to make, but a tough day to make it on.”

An “easy” call? I respectfully disagree.

Easy DQ calls in stewards’ booths don’t take 22 minutes to adjudicate. Nor do they customarily keep getting debated 16 months after the fact.

To this day you can find a balanced mix of supporters and detractors on both sides of the Derby DQ decision. It was a difficult call then and it remains difficult now even with the benefit of hindsight. Let’s not revise history to make it seem otherwise.

As the 2019 Derby gets nudged into the rear-view mirror, it’s important not to lose focus of what was happening on the macro level within our industry when the Churchill stewards decided to make the first disqualification of a winner for an in-race foul in 145 runnings of the Derby.

No sports official (or board of stewards) ever wants to be the arbiter whose judgment call alters the outcome of a big game or race. In America, there’s always been an unwritten rule that officials “let the players play” in crucial contests, even though referees, umpires, and stewards rarely admit it.

Coupled with that, the Kentucky Derby itself has always had a high bar when it comes to whether or not the stewards could or should step in to alter the running order. This dates at least back to the 1933 “Fighting Finish” in the pre-replay era, when Brokers Tip nosed Head Play after their jockeys grabbed and whipped each other in the stretch run. A foul claim by the runner-up rider was dismissed and the result stood, although both jockeys were later suspended 30 days each.

In more modern times, the 20-horse Derby has become known as an anything-goes cavalry charge into the first turn in which jockeys know they have considerable leeway to ride with more assertiveness because the stakes are so high.

But 2019 was the year when the Derby was run under shell-shocked circumstances because the sport was reeling in the wake of the 30-horse fatality crisis that shut down racing at Santa Anita Park. Tracks nationwide were under intensified scrutiny, and in the week leading up to the Derby, the sport was being called out and protested against over equine safety issues.

   It was impossible to ignore the national headlines that blared “Horse Deaths Are Haunting the Racing World Ahead of the Kentucky Derby” (Time magazine), “At the Kentucky Derby, Prayers for a Safe Race” (New York Times) and “Horse Safety at the Kentucky Derby has officials ‘On the Edge of a Razor Blade'” (Louisville Courier-Journal).

In fact, Guilfoil himself told the Courier-Journal the day before the before the 2019 Derby that, “We realize we’re under a microscope.”

So while a subconscious “Let ’em play” mindset might have previously been the unspoken norm for officiating a big race, the over-arching context of the 2019 Derby was rooted in the hyper-aware context of safety.

As the nation watched slo-mo replay after replay of the narrowly averted pile-up off the far turn in the Derby, the Churchill stewards surely, at some level, must have recognized that if they didn’t make a call that doled out punishment for the near-disaster, it wouldn’t mesh with the safety-centric image the industry had been trying to hammer home on many levels.

Did they get the call correct? That’s always going to be up for debate.

But let the record reflect that Maximum Security’s historic DQ was as much a product of the sport trying to come to grips with the enormous pressures of maintaining safety in an inherently dangerous setting as it had to do with the colt’s shifting and drifting while leading the pack off the final turn in the Derby.

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