Brown Trio Faces GI Veterans in Manhattan

Rare is the high-caliber turf contest in New York that doesn’t go through Chad Brown and the GI Manhattan S. is no exception. The reigning four-time Eclipse winner as outstanding trainer has the favorite, multiple graded stakes-winning Instilled Regard (Arch). Last seen getting a 102 Beyer when winning Belmont’s June 6 GII Fort Marcy S. at a furlong shorter, Instilled Regard has won graded stakes three years running and looks to remedy the lack of a Grade I victory on his resume here.

Instilled Regard’s reopposing stablemate Devamani (Fr) (Dubawi {Ire}) was a neck behind in the Fort Marcy, also notching a 102 Beyer, and a nose away from the win in his other 2020 start, the Feb. 8 GIII Tampa Bay S. He looks to be an improving sort who has a previous win over this distance at Belmont. The third of the Brown entries, Rockemperor (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}), placed in last year’s GI Belmont Derby at this distance in his first U.S. start and was last seen a nose behind United (Giant’s Causeway) in the May 23 GII Charles Whittingham S. at 10 furlongs, although he was disqualified to third. He’s looking for his first Stateside win in four starts, but has three graded placings in that time.

The Brown trio may be favored, but they’ll have to get by Grade I veterans Sadler’s Joy (Kitten’s Joy) and Channel Maker (English Channel) first. The 7-year-old Sadler’s Joy, a Tom Albertrani trainee, placed in two previous editions of the Manhattan and has won over this distance at Belmont, but generally prefers a little longer, as seen in his four graded wins which include the 12-furlong GI Sword Dancer S. He and the Bill Mott-trained Channel Maker both used the ungraded Tiller S. over 1 3/8 miles at Belmont June 4 as their wake-up call after brief freshenings with neither proving a threat that day. Channel Maker hasn’t won in 13 months since taking the GI Man O’ War S., but has a mountain of back class.

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McKinzie Headlines Loaded Runhappy Met Mile

A talented and deep field of eight will line up for Saturday’s highly anticipated 127th renewal of the GI Runhappy Metropolitan H. at Belmont Park.

An unlucky second behind the mighty Mitole (Eskendereya) in last year’s contest, ‘TDN Rising Star’ McKinzie (Street Sense) figures to vie for favoritism. He was first or second in all seven of his starts in 2019, led by a win in Saratoga’s GI Whitney S. and a runner-up finish in the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic.

The four-time Grade I winner made up for a dismal performance in the inaugural $20-million Saudi Cup Feb. 29 with a good-looking victory in the seven-furlong GII Triple Bend S. at Santa Anita June 7. Hall of Famer Mike Smith makes the trip from Southern California to guide the 2-1 morning-line favorite.

“I think any time you win a Grade I on the East Coast it’s pretty important, especially at Belmont and Saratoga. It’s like hitting a home run in Yankee Stadium, it means something,” Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert said.

“His comeback race was just perfect. If he brings his ‘A game,’ that’s what we’re looking for. He’s doing really well.”

Code of Honor (Noble Mission {GB}), winner of last year’s GI Runhappy Travers S. and GI Jockey Club Gold Cup S. over subsequent Classic hero Vino Rosso (Curlin) via disqualification, kicked off his 4-year-old campaign with a well-timed decision over Endorsed (Medaglia d’Oro) in the GIII Westchester S. in the Belmont mud June 6.

“He just grew up physically in his body and his mind,” Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey said. “He’s gotten more aggressive and he’s caught onto what it’s all about now. He was still figuring things out last year, especially earlier in the year. Everything he’s done this year has been good. He acts like he’s ready to run.”

Moved up to second via disqualification in the GI Kentucky Derby, Code of Honor is three for four at Belmont Park, including a track-and-trip score in last July’s GIII Dwyer S.

Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg}), well-beaten in last year’s Kentucky Derby, has found his niche racing around one turn this term. A sharp winner of Gulfstream’s Sir Shackleton S. Mar. 28, the chestnut realized a career high while earning a gaudy 110 Beyer Speed Figure with a jaw-dropping victory over Network Effect (Mark Valeski) in a sloppy renewal of the GI Runhappy Carter H. in Elmont June 6. Both wins were at seven furlongs.

The Runhappy Met Mile offers a free berth to the GI Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile in November at Keeneland.

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‘Stormy’ Outlook in the Poker

The only female in Belmont’s GIII Poker S. field Saturday, Gary Barber’s Got Stormy (Get Stormy) enters the eight-furlong test packing top credentials as one of only two Grade I winners in the field of nine. Victorious in last summer’s De La Rose S. against fillies at Saratoga, she returned a week later to score by 2 1/2 lengths over the boys in the GI Fourstardave H. Not ducking anyone when second in the GI Woodbine Mile and GI Breeders’ Cup Mile last fall, she came from off the pace to take the Dec. 1 GI Matriarch S. at Del Mar. Winless in three starts this season, Got Stormy’s best effort came when second by a neck in the GI Frank E. Kilroe Mile Santa Anita Mar. 7. Last out, she ran fourth in the June 3 GIII Beaugay when chasing frontrunning Rushing Fall off a near three-month layoff at Belmont.

“The California race was very good,” said trainer Mark Casse. “Her last race was disappointing, but we took her out of her element. There was no speed in the race and we tried to keep her closer and that was to her demise. We won’t do that again, we’ll let her settle.”

Got Stormy scratched out of last Saturday’s GI Just a Game after persistent rainstorms soaked the Belmont green. Casse said he made the call after watching Monkeyseemonkeydo (Twirling Candy) win a seven-furlong turf maiden June 27 in 1:24.15.

“After watching them run seven-eighths in :24 and change, I said this turf is not for us,” explained Casse. “She didn’t get really good until last summer and her best races are on hard ground. I think the soft turf got her beat in the Woodbine Mile and she was just beat by a better horse at the Breeders’ Cup.”

“We’re just trying to find her top form and I believe it has to do with a harder turf course,” added Casse. “She won’t get it this weekend at Belmont, but she also likes the sharper turns at Saratoga and Santa Anita because she has a quick turn of foot when you ask her to go.”

Trainer Chad Brown is responsible for the only other Grade I winner in the Poker field, Valid Point (Scat Daddy), who will be accompanied by stablemate Value Proposition (GB) (Dansili {GB}) in the gate Saturday. Owned by eFive Racing Thoroughbreds and Michael J. Ryan, Valid Point won his first three career starts, including a one-length score in the GI Secretariat S. at Arlington last August. The colt completed his 3-year-old campaign with an off-the-board effort in October in the GI Shadwell Turf Mile at Keeneland. Klaravich Stables’ Value Proposition recorded a career-best 100 Beyer Speed Figure last out when capturing an optional-claiming turf mile at Belmont June 3. Hall of Famer Javier Castellano will pilot Valid Point from post 2 while Value Proposition will exit post 9 under Irad Ortiz, Jr.

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This Side Up: Derby and Met Mile: Two Sides of the Same Coin

We are increasingly familiar with the kind of traction even the most brazen untruth can achieve in the era of social media. I guess people either no longer believe in hell, or they’ve decided they’re headed there anyway.

But let’s not kid ourselves that we were ever especially diligent in authenticating what we read in the Good Old Days of hot-metal print. How apt, for instance, that a highly pertinent observation long credited to Mark Twain–that “a lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes”–should instead turn out to have a convoluted ancestry extending three centuries. Sure enough, perhaps the most famous quotation of the Turf is still almost universally misattributed.

The G1 Investec Derby may be a month later than usual, and with hardly anyone present, but you can guarantee one thing won’t have changed. Round the world, people will again be recycling the “famous” dictum of Federico Tesio: “The Thoroughbred racehorse exists because its selection has depended not on experts, technicians or zoologists, but one piece of wood: the winning post of the Epsom Derby.”

While that was evidently Tesio’s belief, the words actually belong to his business partner and biographer, Marchese Mario Incisa della Rocchetta. It’s a typical instance of how Don Mario, with his charm and elegant prose, managed to render accessible the inscrutable genius of his late friend. Few who today profess reverence for Tesio have much sense of the idiosyncrasies that governed his unarguable legacy to the breed. Certainly some of his less scientific instincts could never have warranted general application.

But his faith in the Derby, as the definitive test of the assets we should replicate in the breed, is unimpeachable. And if we owe the axiom itself to Don Mario–whether paraphrasing some remembered exchange, or just giving felicitous expression to observed behaviour–then it is one that has united breeders across the centuries.

In fact, the Derby and the breed evolved almost in tandem. The first Derby over a mile and a half was run in 1784; the first attempt at some formal registration of what evolved into the Thoroughbred was the Introduction to a General Stud Book, just seven years later. And we have long grasped why this should be: how the track configuration and the race distance together demand an optimal equilibrium–both between speed and stamina, and also in the more literal sense of athletic balance.

The 2001 winner is certainly doing his bit for the Derby as the ultimate genetic signpost. True, Galileo (Ire) must this time settle for just the five runners in his quest for that fifth winner, to secure outright a record he shares with five others.     Nonetheless his own sire Sadler’s Wells still casts a long shadow. Montjeu (Ire)’s son Camelot (GB) is the sire of English King (Fr), whose discovery for €210,000 at Arqana is only the latest proof of Jeremy Brummitt’s flair for tasks that baffle so many other prospectors. High Chaparral (Ire)’s son Free Eagle (Ire) has outsider Khalifa Sat (Ire) while Kameko, as a Classic winner already, shows how scandalous has been the general European neglect (David Redvers an honorable exception) of Kitten’s Joy.

That’s a point I have labored sufficiently for now, though it’s also good to see George Strawbridge’s home-bred Point of Entry colt Worthily fast-tracked from a debut success only three weeks ago. Albeit both are by pretty unequivocal turf stallions, success for either of these U.S.-breds would have me banging with renewed insistence on the same drum as in this space last week.

I had lots of interesting feedback on the observations I made then, including some inspired guesses regarding the anonymous European agent with such infuriating misapprehensions about the American Thoroughbred. If he (or his patrons!) have also managed his identification, then let me add a fresh provocation–which is that a future Derby winner might more feasibly be sired by the winner of the GI Runhappy Metropolitan H. than by the winner of the GI Manhattan S., over turf and a longer route on the same card.

That’s because pretty much the same attributes have helped to make the reputation of both the Met Mile and the Derby as “stallion-making” races. Both put a premium on carrying speed–which, as I said last week, is the defining hallmark that should again interest European breeders in dirt stallions generally. This Sadler’s Wells hegemony at Epsom, after all, started with the son of a Kentucky Derby winner.

And few horses carry speed like a Met Mile winner. Because there’s no doubt that a mile round a single turn showcases very different merits. Two turns relieve a horse from flat-out commitment (besides also introducing an extra crapshoot quality in the draw). The Met Mile is an extended sprint, with zero opportunity for a breather. It brings together dashers and Classic types in a challenge that discloses precisely the versatility, toughness, lungs and class we should be breeding to.

It will be fascinating, in this whole context, to see how Noble Mission (GB)’s son Code of Honor gets on today. He is, on paper, turf-bred-but Noble Mission, just like his brother Frankel, always ran in a fashion ideally tailored to dirt. Having shown Classic caliber round two turns, Code Of Honor now bids to make a renewed nuisance of himself to Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg}): they were foaled in the same Lane’s End barn, within 24 hours, and Code of Honor has finished ahead in both of Vekoma’s career defeats.

Eventually a race’s reputation for making stallions will become self-sustaining. Everyone sees the resonant names strewn across the Met Mile roll of honor–from Native Dancer to Buckpasser to Fappiano to Ghostzapper to Quality Road–and wants to earn a share of that legacy at stud. That’s why, for instance, recent Belmont winners Palace Malice and Tonalist each returned to New York the following summer for the Met Mile (finishing first and second, respectively).

Of course, there will be the occasional dud. But you have to ask what else might have been lost to the American breed in the export of Eskendereya, responsible for two of the last three winners (graduating from his first three crops). Because a race that permits no hiding place will tend to disclose something authentic.

It’s rare even for an elite race to be quite so unrelenting, so unsparing. Yet Saturday we have one staged either side of the ocean. They could not look more different, but neither will compromise in making their conflicting demands. There can be no half-measures; just a perfect blend. And that, you might say, is the long and the short of it.

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