Maracuja Gets Break, Targets Spring/Summer 2021 Return

Trainer Rob Atras reported that Maracuja, winner of the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks in July at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., will get about 60 days of rest and relaxation at Jim and Susan Hill's Margaux Farm in Lexington, Kentucky.

Atras said he is targeting a spring-to-summer return for the sophomore daughter of Honor Code, who handed leading 3-year-old filly Malathaat her only loss in the CCA Oaks three starts back. Maracuja was previously seventh in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks following a second-place finish in the Grade 3 Gazelle at Aqueduct.

“She'll get roughly 60 days and start some light training before coming back,” Atras said. “She hasn't had a break since late in her 2-year-old year, so we decided to give her one.”

Owned by Beach Haven Thoroughbreds, Medallion Racing, Parkland Thoroughbreds, and Barry Fowler, Maracuja was a troubled fourth last out in the Grade 1 Cotillion on September 25 at Parx Racing in Bensalem, Pa., finishing 3 ¼ lengths behind Clairiere.

“Things just didn't work out her way,” Atras said. “Unfortunately, she got bumped at the break forcing her down to the rail and she doesn't like to be there. She ran a good race, but she just didn't quite have it.”

The post Maracuja Gets Break, Targets Spring/Summer 2021 Return appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Maracuja Hindered By Inside Trip in Alabama, Sadie Lady To Get Freshening For Fall Campaign

Beach Haven Thoroughbreds, Medallion Racing, Parkland Thoroughbreds, and Barry Fowler's Maracuja stutter-stepped at the start of Saturday's Grade 1 Alabama and endured a difficult inside trip over a good and harrowed track en route to finishing seventh at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

The Honor Code bay, who upset the previously undefeated Malathaat in the Grade 1 CCA Oaks in her prior start under a brilliant ride by Ricardo Santana, Jr., was hemmed in by that rival in the Alabama before coming up empty in the stretch run.

“She got pinned down on the inside, taking dirt. It was kind of a rough trip,” trainer Rob Atras said. “Ricardo tried to get her outside a couple times and wasn't able to.

“I think if we'd got a good outside trip, she'd probably have run a lot better, but Ricardo said she struggled the whole way around,” he added. “I don't want to make any excuses. That's racing. She came out of it good.”

The Canadian-born conditioner is enjoying a formidable summer campaign at the Spa with a record of 33-10-4-0, highlighted by his first Grade 1 win last month.

Atras said he'll consider a number of options for his star filly's next start.

“I think the filly is a little better off with five or six weeks between races,” Atras said. “We'll see. I won't make plans for another week or so after we see how she comes out of it.”

Atras said Dennis Narlinger's graded-stakes placed Sadie Lady will enjoy a freshening following her fourth-place finish in the Union Avenue on August 19 at the Spa.

“Last year, around this time of year, she just wasn't the same kind of horse,” Atras said. “We'll send her down to Florida for 30-60 days and freshen her up and bring her back in the fall.”

The 5-year-old Freud mare won 4-of-7 starts last season and added to her ledger this year with stakes scores in the six-furlong Correction in March at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y., against open company and the Dancin Renee for state-breds in June at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. Bred in the Empire State by JMJ Racing Stables, Sadie Lady was a game second in the 6 1/2-furlong Grade 3 Vagrancy in May at Belmont Park.

The post Maracuja Hindered By Inside Trip in Alabama, Sadie Lady To Get Freshening For Fall Campaign appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Maracuja Breezes In Preparation For Alabama At Saratoga

Beach Haven Thoroughbreds' Maracuja completed her preparations for Saturday's $600,000 Grade 1 Alabama with a solid half-mile breeze Sunday on the Spa main track.

Trained by Rob Atras, the daughter of third crop sire Honor Code went to the track at 6:00 a.m. and breezed in :49.61. This was her second work back since upsetting Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks-winner Malathaat in the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks on July 24 at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

“She worked a half-mile in 49 and change and galloped out nicely,” Atras said of the work. “She went in company with an unraced 2-year-old. They just went head-and-head.”

One start prior to the CCA Oaks, Maracuja exited post 2 in a 13-horse field in the Kentucky Oaks in April at Churchill Downs and closed up the rail for seventh in a race won by Malathaat by a neck over Search Results.

In a compact field of four assembled for the CCA Oaks, Maracuja tracked closer to the pace in third under Ricardo Santana, Jr. and battled gamely to the wire to best Malathaat, who was pressed throughout, by a head.

“The way Malathaat had to run last time compromised her, I thought,” Atras said. “It won't be an easy task to run against her again. Ultimately, I'll leave it up to Ricardo. Hopefully, she will get the same kind of break and see how the race sets up. You never know how tricky it can be with a short field with not much pace.”

Boasting a consistent 6-2-2-1 record and $407,100 in lifetime earnings, Maracuja broke her maiden at third asking going 6 ½ furlongs at Aqueduct Race Track in Ozone Park, N.Y., before finishing second in the Grade 3 Gazelle on April 3 at the Big A.

The post Maracuja Breezes In Preparation For Alabama At Saratoga appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Maracuja Brings Sakkos A Graded Stakes Winner With His Fourth Starter

John Sakkos can count on one hand the number of horses that have carried the colors of his Beach Haven Thoroughbreds stable into the starting gate. The answer is four — one for as many years as he's been in the industry.

If Thoroughbred racing has taught fans and participants anything, it's that the size of Sakkos' stable and the age of his operation should hardly warrant him a trip to the winner's circle at the highest level of play.

But that's exactly what has happened.

When 3-year-old Maracuja crossed the wire a head in front of the previously undefeated Malathaat during the July 24 Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks, the filly became the fourth winner from four to race for Sakkos and brought home his first, coveted G1 win.

“The reality hit the next morning when my wife (Tracy) and I woke up, looked at each other, and said, 'Did we really win a Grade 1?'” said Sakkos. “We were all crazy excited. My wife even lost her voice. It was a natural high and when you think of our short career in racing history, it was just great.”

Beach Haven Thoroughbreds was born out of the friendship of Sakkos and his partner, Ara Aprahamian, who named their still fledgling operation after the island of Beach Haven, a small hamlet in New Jersey and favorite vacation spot of the pair and their families. A longtime fan of racing who had dabbled in partnerships since the early 2000s, Aprahamian — who runs a pharmaceutical company — approached Sakkos about forming a small racing syndicate of their own. Sakkos, who also has a professional background in the medical field, said he more or less agreed to the proposition on a whim.

“The joke between us is that I got involved in horses purely by accident,” joked Sakkos.

While Sakkos traces his ancestral roots to Greece, where his family were traditionally farmers, his limited experience with horses came from the occasional encounter as a child while visiting his grandparents' farm. Horse racing, he admits, was outside of his educational purview.

With that in mind, the plan from the start was to keep Beach Haven small. Partners were pulled from a ring of close friends looking to share in the action without overcommitting to the often-exorbitant expenses that come with campaigning Thoroughbreds.

Tracy Sakkos and Maracuja. Photo courtesy the Sakkos family

 

Beach Haven's first runner was Uncle Benny, a Declaration of War colt purchased for $185,000. The colt — who was named for Aprahamian's late uncle — proved a competent turf runner, notching a stakes victory next in the six-furlong Futurity on the grass at Belmont Park in 2018 before running second in that year's G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf.

Next on the roster came Sassy Agnes, a New York-bred daughter of Central Banker who earned three consecutive stakes wins in 2018 when she took the Lady Finger and Shesastonecoldfox Stakes followed by the Key Cent Stakes for trainer Linda Rice. Rice would also take over of Newly Minted, another daughter of Central Banker, who herself banked four stakes wins on the way to amassing a 6-3-1 record from 12 starts and $516,738 in purses.

It's a strike rate even the most experience horseman would envy.

While Newly Minted was burning up the tracks on the New York circuit, Sakkos and his partners went to $200,000 — more than they'd ever spent previously — to secure Maracuja, a daughter of Honor Code. Trained by Rob Atras, the filly impressed early, and plans were made to debut her talent in the summer of 2020 at Saratoga.

But with the COVID-19 pandemic raging on the racing calendar upended, the decision was made to start the filly at three. The filly broke her maiden in February at Aqueduct before taking second in the G3 Gazelle next out. That race would be a springboard to the G1 Kentucky Oaks, where she finished off the board. Three months later she would redeem herself in the CCA Oaks, defeating the Oaks victress at odds of 14-1 and stamping herself one to watch for the G1 Alabama at the Spa.

“Rob didn't want to push her which I'm glad he didn't,” said Sakkos. “We're very proud but she's getting better and better with every race. Newly Minted did well, and 'Sassy' also did well, but she has done the best so far. She's it. It's all credit to Rob and his wife Brittney and his team. We were just lucky enough to buy her.”

With the pandemic still looming and with it, economic uncertainty, Sakkos said Maracuja will likely remain the only Beach Haven runner for the time being.

“With everything going on, we didn't mind keeping it all close. I still think we're not totally out of the woods yet unfortunately, so we're just enjoying the moment and focusing on Maracuja,” said Sakkos. “She loves the attention, she loves her carrots, and after the races I go back to the barn and give her a big hug and a kiss. She has a great personality and everyone at the barn loves her, but when it comes down to being on the track, she changes gears.

“Seeing the way Rob and his team, especially Mario, her groom, and Christian, the [exercise rider] and the love they give to their animals is just phenomenal. Mario, Maracuja's groom, has totally spoiled her. She's not happy when he's not there and he never left her side at the Oaks. They're attached at the hip.”

Win or lose, Sakkos said the most important thing now is that he's able to enjoy the ride with is partners and family.

“I still think there is a lot more for me to learn. I'm becoming more familiar with things, asking a lot of questions,” said Sakkos. “But I have a way to go to catch up with those folks that have so much more experience in this industry than I do. We enjoy it and our kids enjoy it. It's been a great hobby and so fun when the family can participate. It's all about the animals for us.”

The post Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Maracuja Brings Sakkos A Graded Stakes Winner With His Fourth Starter appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights