Saturday Insights: Pair Of Pricey Pletcher Colts Tackle The Big A

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

6th-AQU, $85K, Msw, 2yo, 1m, 2:10 p.m.

Picked up for $975,000 as a Keeneland September grad, ABSTRACT (Curlin) takes to the track in the afternoon for the first time for Repole Stable and St Elias Stable under the direction of Todd Pletcher. His dam, a half-sister to three stakes horses in Mom'z Laugh (Leroidesanimaux ({Brz}), Cajun Breeze (Congrats), and Peace At Dawn (Peace Rules), took a trio of Florida-bred stakes and ran second in the GIII Delta Downs Princess S.

Looking to improve second-time out after a third-place effort at Aqueduct Nov. 6, Tapit Trice (Tapit) brought a final bid of $1.3 million at the same Keeneland September Sale last year. Out of a half-sister to champion 2-year-old filly Jaywalk (Cross Traffic), Tapit Trice is the second of Pletcher's entries for owners Whisper Hill Farm LLC and Gainesway Stable. TJCIS PPS

8th-OP, $104K, Alw, 3yo/up, 1 1/16m, 4:46 p.m.

A consistent force on the Derby Trail earlier this year, BARBER ROAD (Race Day) returns Saturday for his first race since trailing Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) home in the GI Belmont S. Already at home over the Oaklawn surface, he was second in the Smarty Jones S., GIII Southwest S., and GI Arkansas Derby and third in the GII Rebel S. to earn his slot in the GI Kentucky Derby starting gate. Sixth behind Rich Strike (Keen Ice) at Churchill Downs, Barber Road went to the sidelines after the Belmont and enters off a six-month layoff. He will race with Lasix for the first time for trainer John Ortiz. TJCIS PPS

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T. D. Thornton’s Belmont Predictions, Sponsored by Fasig-Tipton

This week's TDN Triple Crown feature examines the GI Belmont S. entrants listed in “likeliest winner” order.

1) Mo Donegal (c, Uncle Mo–Callingmissbrown, by Pulpit)
O-Donegal Racing & Repole Stable. B-Ashview Farm & Colts Neck Stables (KY). T-Todd Pletcher. Sales History: $250,000 yrl '20 KEESEP.
You could argue that Mo Donegal lost the GI Kentucky Derby at the post draw after getting stuck with the dreaded rail gate. But his fifth-place effort, beaten 5 3/4 lengths in a stretch finish that featured the 1-2-3 horses all running full-tilt to the wire, is actually quite a bit better than it appears on paper. This $250,000 KEESEP son of Uncle Mo was too patiently handled by Irad Ortiz, Jr., who didn't ask this athletic colt for his best run until 2 1/2 furlongs out, and Mo then had to float 12 wide off the turn to find clear passage. But he still uncorked with his characteristic acceleration inside the eighth pole, and that type of late-race torque has been evident throughout Mo's career. This colt simply keeps gaining ground in deep stretch, even when the final furlongs are quick, and his company lines are far more robust than any of his Belmont S. foes. Don't be tempted to stamp him as strictly an off-the-tailgate type, because Mo is agile and nimble enough to take up the running from a sweet stalking spot in an eight-horse field where he's not as likely to meet up with the trip trouble that he often encounters.

2) We the People (c, Constitution–Letchworth, by Tiznow)
O-Winstar Farm, LLC, Bobby Flay, CMNWLTH, & Siena Farm, LLC.
B-Henley Farms Inc (KY). T-R Brisset. Sales History: $110k wnlg '19 KEENOV, $220k yrl '20 KEESEP, $230k 2yo FTFMAR.
We the People possesses both a very high cruising gear and a reputation for being difficult to handle. His brief past performance block features a pair of open-length wins at Oaklawn and a blowout, 10 1/4-length, tour-de-force romp in the GII Peter Pan S. four weeks ago (103 Beyer Speed Figure). But sandwiched in between was a hot-and-bothered effort in the weak GI Arkansas Derby in which this Constitution colt couldn't make the lead, then got hooked wide around both turns, beating only two horses. Which We the People will show up as the morning-line fave for the third leg of the Triple Crown? Sure, he's won with authority over Belmont's main track. But that was a sealed, post-rain surface rated “good,” and the field contained only one horse who had ever won a stakes (a minor one at that). Still, the raw power of that victory will be enough to sway pari-mutuel supporters to this colt's side. We the People was always in control in the Peter Pan, and it's hard to shake the visual of him turning for home under a hand ride from Flavien Prat while everyone else in his widening wake was desperately whipping and driving. He also had a nice spurt of extra acceleration in upper stretch-the kind of move where Prat was probably just gauging what was under the hood for future reference.

3) Rich Strike (c, Keen Ice–Gold Strike, by Smart Strike)
O-RED TR-Racing, LLC. B-Calumet Farm (KY). T-Eric Reed.
When a horse wins a race at 80-1 odds, you can usually point to evidence that the favorites didn't fire, the pace blew up, or a number of logical contenders ran into trip trouble. None of those things happened in the Derby. Sonny Leon sliced and diced his way to a clear inside path through the far turn, and Rich Strike did the rest, taking aim with purpose and reeling in two favorites who weren't quitting. Is the effort replicable? This connections of this former $30,000 maiden-claiming son of Keen Ice defied convention and skipped the GI Preakness S. with the aim of having a tighter fighter at 12 furlongs, a distance trainer Eric Reed believes is within this colt's scope. His 101 Beyer in Louisville represents a 17-point jump off his best career effort, and Rich Strike is going to have to come up with a similar or better fig if he is to be draped in a blanket of white carnations.

Rich Strike poses for every photo before Saturday's Belmont Stakes. | Sarah Andrew

But you have to wonder if he's going to be tactically forced out of his sweet spot, because dropping far behind the field against this crew is likely going to leave him too much work to do.

Then again, this is a colt who wasn't too far off the action going a one-turn a mile at Churchill at age two (a 17 1/4-length upset), so maybe he's a touch more versatile than critics give him credit for. A bigger concern might be Leon's inexperience riding over Belmont's vast, sweeping main-track configuration, which has been known to stymie riders unfamiliar with its 1 1/2-miles circumference. Leon is named to ride in only one race (on the grass) at Belmont on Friday, then will have what will seem like an interminably long wait on Saturday (7 1/2 hours) between his only main-track mounts in the opener and in the Belmont S. itself.

4) Barber Road (c, Race Day–Encounter, by Southern Image)
O-WSS Racing, LLC. B-Susan Forrester & Judy Curry (KY).
T-John Ortiz. Sales History: $15,000 wnlg '19 KEENOV.
Despite having to rally from last and getting parked in the 14 path turning for home, this Race Day gray ($15,000 KEENOV) put in a fairly decent sustained run over the final three furlongs of the Derby. Barber Road gets a jockey change to Joel Rosario for the Belmont, and will race without blinkers for the first time since his career debut at Colonial Downs last August. He's winless since Nov. 10, but has amassed a bankroll north of $650,000 by chipping away with minor awards in graded stakes. Longer distances certainly appear within the scope of his pedigree. His paternal grandsire is Tapit, the sire of four Belmont S. winners, and damsire Southern Image won two Grade I routes at Triple Crown distances in 2004 (the Santa Anita H. and the Pimlico Special). But the big question for Barber Road isn't staying power-it's whether he's fast enough. His best Beyer tops out at 94, seven points below the par for this race.

5) Nest (f, Curlin–Marion Ravenwood, by A.P. Indy). O-Repole Stable, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, & Michael House.
B-Ashview Farm & Colts Neck Stables (KY). T-Todd Pletcher. Sales History: $350,000 yrl '20 KEESEP.
Nest's family tree is replete with distance-centric influences. Her sire, Curlin, lost the 2007 Belmont by a head, barely coming up short behind the gallant filly Rags to Riches (who was trained by Nest's trainer, Todd Pletcher). Nest's damsire, A.P. Indy, won the '92 Belmont. This filly is also a full sister to Idol, last year's winner of the Santa Anita H. She was most recently a grinding second in the GI Kentucky Oaks, incrementally gaining on the winner, and before that, she popped for an 8 1/4-length victory in the GI Ashland S. in April. That score was notable for a prolonged, 4 1/2-furlong bid over Keeneland's short-stretch configuration in which Nest drove past the front four leaders with authority midway on the far turn. Jose Ortiz picks up the mount for the first time, as his brother, Irad, sticks with Nest's uncoupled stablemate, Mo Donegal.

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Some Derby Day Fact ‘N Figs

You've all done the donkey work. Maybe you've resigned yourself to the skinny prices about Zandon (Upstart) and Epicenter (Not This Time) and there's a good chance you've debated–internally or otherwise–whether Mike Battaglia got it right from the perspective of the morning line. Or, you argue, 'It's a 20-horse field, there isn't a snowball's chance in hell I am betting one of the favorites when there is value to be found elsewhere.'

Surely, you reason, there isn't much that separates the market leaders from horses like 'TDN Rising Star' Messier (Empire Maker), whose sire couldn't quite get to Funny Cide (Distorted Humor) here some 19 years ago. You contend that, despite his obvious lack of experience, Taiba (Gun Runner)–named a 'TDN Rising Star' as recently as Mar. 5–has as much or more or even much more talent than the 19 fellow sophomores that will gather at the top of the Churchill stretch just before 7 p.m. Eastern time Saturday.

You have likely marveled at the boundless energy displayed by Crown Pride (Jpn) (Reach the Crown {Jpn}), just the second Japanese-bred horse to make a Derby appearance, and you have struggled trying to figure out how he fits into your betting strategy. Many will deem him a must-use for exotics, while others will take a stand based on a starting price that figures to be pretty short, a whole lot less than his 20-1 morning line in any case.

There is also the Florida form to be considered, represented by GI Curlin Florida Derby hero White Abarrio (Race Day) and Simplification (Not This Time), the second of two runners in the race for his boom sire and the idea of many of a very live longshot.

T.D. Thornton has done a yeoman's job over the last six months laying out his Derby pecking order–his final assessment can be reviewed here–and we strongly encourage you to use the TDN's Kentucky Derby Special Edition, with a great Steve Sherack cover story on Steve Asmussen's Derby quest, as a resource for Saturday's big race. But to lighten things up just a bit, here is a bit of Derby Day whimsy.

Letter (Im)perfect…

Zandon is joined in Saturday's field by fellow 'Z' horse 'TDN Rising Star' Zozos (Munnings), but they'll have to 'overcome' history, as no 'Z' horse since Zev in 1923 has been draped with the roses. Believe it or not, this isn't the first time a Derby has had more than one 'Z' horse, as Z Fortune and Z Humor were 10th and 14th, respectively, behind Big Brown in 2008. And if you're backing Simplification, 'TDN Rising Star' Smile Happy (Runhappy) or even Summer Is Tomorrow (Summer Front), take heart. Horses that begin with the 20th letter of the alphabet have won the Derby on 19 occasions, most recently with double 'S' Super Saver back in 2010.

Minnesota Front and Center on Derby Day…

The popularity of racing in Minnesota has continued to grow over the past several years, owing in large part to some forward-thinking execs at Canterbury Park who have increasingly focused on the customer experience. Those tuning into Saturday's broadcast from the 'Land of 10,000 Lakes' will have plenty of rooting interest, as Zozos is owned and bred by Minnesota's own Barry and Joni Butzow, while native son Jeff Drown campaigns morning-line pick Zandon. And Minnesotan Bob Lothenbach will be watching when Bell's the One (Majesticperfection) runs for the third straight season in the GI Derby City Distaff. She defeated 2019 GI Kentucky Oaks heroine Serengeti Empress (Alternation) in a thriller in the COVID-delayed renewal in September 2020.

O Canada…

Two-time graded winner and GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby runner-up Messier would become the third Kentucky Derby winner bred north of the border were he to get home first Saturday afternoon. The $470,000 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Showcase grad was bred by Sam-Son Farm in Ontario, also the birthplace of Sunny's Halo, who took down the 1983 Derby when total purse money was, wait for it, a whopping $250,000. E. P. Taylor's Northern Dancer is the third of the trio, having broken ground for Canada in 1964. Only one Canadian-bred has placed in the race since–eventual Triple Crown spoiler Victory Gallop was second in 1998.

Will It Be A Day for the Grays?…

The Derby has drawn a trio of gray colts for the third time in four years, with Florida Derby runner-up Charge It (Tapit) and Barber Road (Race Day) joining White Abarrio. Since 1930, grays in the Derby have a record of 8-3-10 from 112 starters. There were three gray winners between 1997 and 2005 (Silver Charm, Monarchos and Giacomo).

Five Thrives in Derby…

Since the use of the starting gate for the Derby began back in 1930, the post with the highest strike rate has been gate five (smile happy, Smile Happy), with 10 winners from 92 starters (10.9%). The second most prolific winning barrier is the 10 hole, with nine winners from 85 runners (10.6%). As has been widely noted, post position 17 has yet to toss up a Derby winner (apologies to any Classic Causeway fans out there) and just three horses to have started from there have run in the first three. Next worst is gate six, with two winners.

A Reason to Root for Rich Strike…

The unfortunate 11th-hour defection of the Wayne Lukas-trained Ethereal Road (Quality Road) means that Rich Strike (Keen Ice) draws into the Derby in gate 20. We don't need to point out that the handsome chestnut is hopelessly overmatched on paper, but it is not hard to be happy for trainer Eric Reed. About a week before Christmas in 2016, Reed and his wife Kay suffered an unspeakable loss when their Mercury Training Center went up in flames, with a reported 23 horses–mostly yearlings–perishing. But he has persevered–his runners won 80 races in 2021, his best result since 2014–and it does the heart good to see him on a stage such as this one.

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Cyberknife Fine after Arkansas Derby Win

Gold Square LLC's Cyberknife (Gun Runner) exited his win in Saturday's GI Arkansas Derby in fine shape and is expected to ship to Louisville Tuesday to continue preparations for the May 7 GI Kentucky Derby. The colt, who was making his second stakes appearance after a sixth-place effort in the Jan. 22 GIII Lecomte S., continued a trend of frisky behavior Saturday at Oaklawn when dumping jockey Florent Geroux in the post parade.

“I was too far away to do anything about it, but Florent was able to jump up on him by himself,” Cox said. “He's feeling good [Sunday]. It's a nice, crisp morning and if you watched him walk around here, you definitely wouldn't think he ran a mile and an eighth yesterday. He's got a lot of energy.”

Cox also trains lightly raced Zozos (Munnings), who earned a spot in the Kentucky Derby with a runner-up effort in the Mar. 26 GII Twinspires.com Louisiana Derby at Fair Grounds.

Arkansas Derby runner-up Barber Road (Race Day) is on target to be the first Kentucky Derby starter for trainer John Ortiz, but the colt will remain at Oaklawn for the time being.

“Right now, we don't have any plans of moving him,” said Ortiz. “He sprung a shoe, so we're going to get that fixed first and address that. He got banged around there down the stretch, but he's just a tough little horse.”

Secret Oath (Arrogate), third while facing colts for the first time in the Arkansas Derby, will return to her own division for the May 6 GI Kentucky Oaks.

Secret Oath made a sweeping six-wide move on the second turn to reach contention before weakening late to finish three-quarters of a length behind Barber Road.

“She was tired,” trainer D. Wayne Lukas said Sunday. “That move she made was a terrific move for a filly at this stage of her career, to keep going. Watching it live, I thought she's probably going to hang a little bit here. She almost had to. It was a monster move. But when she came back, she was tired. The beautiful thing is we've got five weeks now. I said that before the race and now it gives us some direction. We're not thinking Derby. Now, we're focused on what we should be–the Oaks–and we've got five weeks to get back in form.”

Lukas said Secret Oath and stablemates Ethereal Road (Quality Road) and Ignitis (Nyquist) will ship Tuesday to Churchill Downs. Ignitis, third in the Smarty Jones S., is pointing for the Apr. 8 $400,000 Lafayette S. at Keeneland. Ethereal Road, the GII Rebel runner-up, is scheduled to make his next start in the Apr. 9 GI Toyota Blue Grass S. Ethereal Road has 20 points to rank 24th on the Kentucky Derby leaderboard.

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