Saturday’s Cross Country Pick 5 Offers Action From Belmont, Woodbine, Delaware

The New York Racing Association Inc. [NYRA] will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Saturday featuring racing action from Belmont Park, Woodbine Racetrack and Delaware Park.

Free Equibase past performances for the Cross Country Pick 5 sequence are available for download at https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/cross-country-wagers.

Saturday's sequence kicks off in Race 7 at 4:21 p.m. Eastern with a 1 1/16-mile allowance event for 3-year-olds and up on the Woodbine Tapeta.

A talented field of 11 will see the 2020 Coronation Futurity-winner Stephen commence his path to the Queen's Plate for trainer Kevin Attard against a group of older horses led by the Josie Carroll-trained Belichick, who finished second in last year's Queen's Plate in September ahead of a four-length score in the Breeders' in October at Woodbine, the third and final leg of the Canadian Triple Crown.

Action switches to Belmont for the second leg [Race 8, 4:40 p.m.], a 1 1/16-mile optional-claiming event on the inner turf for sophomores featuring the grass debut of Woodslane Farm's Wolfie's Dynaghost, a half-brother to multiple graded stakes winning turf specialist Sadler's Joy. A deep field of contenders includes the graded-stakes placed Shawdyshawdyshawdy, who finished third last out in the off-the-turf Grade 3 Pennine Ridge; and the stakes-placed Space Launch, the third-place finisher in the Awad in October over yielding turf at Belmont.

The middle leg begins the stakes portion of the sequence with the Grade 3, $300,000 Delaware Oaks [Race 8, 4:45 p.m.], a 1 1/16-mile test for sophomore fillies topped by 6-5 morning-line favorite Crazy Beautiful for trainer Kenny McPeek. The Liam's Map gray captured the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks in March and last out won the Grade 2 Summertime Oaks on May 30 at Santa Anita Park.

The penultimate leg will mark the seasonal debut of Juddmonte Farms' Viadera in the $100,000 Perfect Sting [Race 9, 5:12 p.m.], a one-mile Widener turf test for older fillies and mares at Belmont. Trained by four-time Eclipse Award-winner Chad Brown, Viadera won 3-of-4 starts last year, including a nose score in the Grade 1 Matriarch last out in November at Del Mar.

Closing out the sequence is a 1 1/16-mile optional-claiming event [Race 9, 5:22 p.m.] for fillies and mares 3-years-old and up on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course at Woodbine. Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse sends out a trio of contenders in multiple graded stakes placed Art of Almost [21-3-5-5, $239,448], the improving Tappitty Tappitty [9-2-3-1, $98,246] and the consistent Preferred Guest [17-3-5-3, $232,809].

The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is also available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country. Every week will feature a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5 will continue each Saturday throughout the year. For more information, visit NYRABets.com.

Cross Country Pick 5 for Saturday, July 3
Leg A: Woodbine – Race 7 (4:21 p.m.)
Leg B: Belmont Park – Race 8 (4:40 p.m.)
Leg C: Delaware Park – Race 8 – Grade 3 Delaware Oaks (4:45 p.m.)
Leg D: Belmont Park – Race 9 – Perfect Sting (5:12 p.m.)
Leg E: Woodbine – Race 9 (5:22 p.m.)

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Jockey Club to Court: Baffert Alone Bears Responsibility for Banishments

The Jockey Club (TJC) on Wednesday told the judge in Bob Baffert's federal lawsuit against the New York Racing Association (NYRA) that in deciding whether or not to lift the trainer's banishment from Saratoga, Belmont Park and Aqueduct, it is imperative to consider the larger issue that tracks should be entitled to bar anyone “credibly responsible for the administration of medication resulting in a substance violation” in order to “protect the health and safety of the sport's participants.”

Using a “friend of the court” brief, which is a legal document filed by an entity not named in a suit but interested in influencing the outcome of the case in alignment with one of the parties (in this case, defendant NYRA), Susan Phillips Read, an attorney for TJC, wrote that the court should deny Baffert's motion to prevent his exclusion from those tracks because Baffert “has not demonstrated the irreparable injury necessary to support [the] issuance of a preliminary injunction.”

Separately on Wednesday, attorneys for NYRA filed 238 pages of supporting documents, including a memorandum in opposition to that same injunction based on three assertions: “First, Plaintiff fails to demonstrate that he will suffer irreparable injury in the absence of emergency relief…. Second, Plaintiff fails to establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits of his claims….Third, the public interest and balance of equities weigh clearly in favor of NYRA.”

Baffert was told May 17 that he was not welcome to stable or race at NYRA's three tracks in the wake of his disclosure that Medina Spirit (Protonico) had tested positive for betamethasone after winning the GI Kentucky Derby. That revelation by Baffert was later confirmed by split-sample testing at two different labs approved by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, but no ruling has yet been issued over those findings.

On June 14, Baffert filed a civil complaint against NYRA, alleging that the association's ban violates his Fourteenth Amendment constitutional right to due process. A hearing is scheduled July 12 in United States District Court (Eastern District of New York).

“The source of damage to Mr. Baffert's reputation is not the NYRA temporary suspension,” Read wrote in the June 30 brief. “Rather, the cause is a record of repeated drug testing failures, including most recently after American racing's most famous and highly visible race, the Kentucky Derby.”

The filing continued: “This is a high-profile dispute, involving, as it does, whether Mr. Baffert, a well-known figure whom many of the public identify with Thoroughbred racing, is entitled to immediate access to two of the sport's most iconic venues, Saratoga and Belmont, despite repeated drug violations…

“Equine medication rules are intended to protect health and safety and to ensure a level playing field for racing and wagering. Whether through malfeasance, carelessness or a cavalier attitude toward the medication rules, horses in Mr. Baffert's custody and care have proved to be significantly embroiled in medication violations. He alone bears responsibility for this state of affairs.”

The betamethasone finding in the 2021 Derby was the fifth positive drug test in a Baffert trainee within the past year (two others were for lidocaine, one was for dextrorphan, and another also for betamethasone). It was the trainer's third during that time frame in a Grade I stakes, and it led to a June 2 banishment from the entire Churchill Downs corporate family of tracks for a period of two years.

Simultaneously, Baffert has been embroiled in a drawn-out court battle in California over whether to disqualify 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify (Scat Daddy) from that year's GI Santa Anita Derby because of a scopolamine finding.

And in 2013, after seven sudden horse deaths in Baffert's Hollywood Park barn, a California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) investigation concluded that although “the blanket prescribing of thyroxine to all horses in Baffert's barn does appear unusual” the fatalities remained “unexplained [and] there is no evidence whatsoever CHRB rules or regulations have been violated or any illicit activity played a part.”

Read wrote in the brief that TJC's interest in this case “is broader than any particular personality or racetrack. From TJC's perspective, in order to protect the health and safety of the sport's participants and retain the public's confidence in the integrity of racing and wagering, racetrack governing officials should be entitled to suspend immediately a trainer or anyone else credibly responsible for the administration of medication resulting in a substance violation.

“These decisions will almost always have to be made swiftly to be meaningful. In this case, the data… belie Mr. Baffert's protestations that the NYRA temporary suspension will cause him to lose his business, as his livelihood does not depend on access to NYRA tracks.

“In the run-up to the [GI] Belmont S. NYRA acted in the best interests of New York racing to temporarily suspend Mr. Baffert from entering horses in races and occupying stall space at NYRA tracks. In TJC's view, NYRA had no choice under the circumstances, created entirely by Mr. Baffert, which undermined public confidence in the treatment and well-being of the sport's equine and human athletes…”

Baffert had alleged in his civil complaint that the current NYRA suspension will cause him to lose the “ability to pursue and practice in his chosen profession and livelihood” while damaging his reputation and causing a “mass exodus from his care of horses worth tens of millions of dollars as owners cannot allow themselves to be excluded from participation in the lucrative Belmont/Saratoga race meets.”

Read countered that those allegations “are conclusory and speculative” and that Baffert's suit failed to provide a foundation of evidence to support those claims.

“Here again, Mr. Baffert provides no evidentiary support for his assertion that the NYRA temporary suspension has damaged his reputation,” Read wrote. “Mr. Baffert does not say how many horses this might involve; he does not say that [an owner who moved out horses] attributed the transfer to the NYRA temporary suspension, as opposed, for example, to his record of substance violations or the two-year Churchill Downs suspension…

“Further, Mr. Baffert has typically entered very few horses in races held at Saratoga: during the past 10 years, his starts there have ranged from a low of one (2015) to a high of eight (2011 and 2020), with an annual average of five,” the brief stated.

“To the extent that Mr. Baffert brings horses to NYRA tracks, he usually does so to race in graded stakes races…. [T]here are many alternative graded stakes races available to Mr.

Baffert at racetracks in the United States other than those operated by NYRA…. [O]ver 95% of Mr. Baffert's starts annually for the past 10 years have been at non-NYRA tracks, and the lion's share of his horses' earnings in graded stakes races derive from his successes at those non-NYRA tracks,” the brief stated.

W. Craig Robertson, an attorney representing Baffert in this case, did not reply to an emailed request for comment on Wednesday's filings by TJC and NYRA prior to deadline for this story.

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Grade 1 Winner Viadera Headlines Saturday’s $100,000 Perfect Sting Stakes

Multiple graded stakes-winners will comprise an accomplished field in Saturday's $100,000 Perfect Sting for fillies and mares 4-years-old and up competing at one mile on the Widener turf course at Belmont Park.

The Perfect Sting is one of two stakes on the Saturday card, including the Grade 2, $400,000 Suburban Handicap that is a “Win and You're In” qualifier to the Grade 1, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic in November at Del Mar.

While the eighth edition of the Perfect Sting is not graded, the resume of the participants provides a big-race pedigree, highlighted by Juddmonte's Grade 1-winner Viadera.

The Chad Brown trainee will be making her 5-year-old debut after capping 2020 with three consecutive stakes scores by slim margins, starting with a win by a neck in the one-mile De La Rose in July at Saratoga Race Course in her second North American start.

The British-bred daughter of Bated Breath posted another victory by a neck in the Grade 3 Noble Damsel going one mile on the Belmont turf in September and concluded her successful year by edging Blowout by a nose in the Grade 1 Matriarch going one mile in November at Del Mar, earning a career-best 98 Beyer Speed Figure.

Viadera, who has been training at Saratoga leading into the Perfect Sting, won three of her first nine starts in Ireland and Great Britain before being shipped to the United States and transferred to Brown's care.

Joel Rosario will ride from post 9.

Susan and John Moore's Princess Grace also will be making her seasonal bow off graded-stakes success, with the 4-year-old Karakontie filly concluding her sophomore year with a 2 3/4-length win in the Grade 2 Mrs. Revere moved off the turf in November at Churchill Downs.

Princess Grace has won three of her four starts, getting her picture taken in her first two outings before earning a personal-best 88 Beyer for a runner-up effort in her stakes debut when she finished just a half-length back to Stunning Sky in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 3 Valley View in October at Keeneland.

“She's a small, feminine looking filly but she runs huge in her races and everything she does is game and all heart,” Stidham said. “Those kind don't have to be big and powerful, they just have what it takes inside and she seems to have that.”

Luis Saez will have the call from post 3.

Piedi Bianchi has won three stakes on dirt but earned black type going seven furlongs on the turf last out, finishing just 1 1/2 lengths back to Change of Control in a strong runner-up finish in the Grade 3 Intercontinental on June 3 as part of the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival.

Owned by Jay Oringer, Jack Bick, Al Bianchi Racing, Adam Bayroff and Mike Maturo, Piedi Bianchi, whose experience at Belmont includes a third-place finish in the 2020 Grade 2 Ruffian on Big Sandy, put in a strong breeze going five furlongs in 1:01.55 on June 20 over the Belmont inner turf. Trainer Carlos Martin said her workout sustained her progress after earning an 86 Beyer for her Intercontinental effort.

“She showed another dimension last time and ran her best turf race. She really ran a terrific race,” Martin said. “We only got beat by Change of Control, who is one of the better turf fillies out there. She's keeping the momentum and I'm optimistic. We'll see. It just came up a very tough race for a listed stakes. This looks like a Grade 2 field.”

Piedi Bianchi, who won her first stakes in the Frances Slocum in 2018 before adding wins last year in the Correction at Aqueduct Racetrack and another in the 2020 edition of the Frances Slocum at Indiana Grand Race Course, will be seeking her first turf win in five starts.

The Overanalyze grey will break from post 4 under Flavien Prat.

Augustin Stable's Honey Cake, an Irish-bred daughter of Siyouni who last raced in November when winning the seven-furlong Prix Ceres at the Fontainebleau in France, will make her first start in the United States.

Transferred into the care of Jonathan Thomas, the 4-year-old Honey Cake has been breezing at Belmont, including a five-furlong work in 1:01.80 on the inner turf Sunday.

Honey Cake will look to return off a seven-month layoff and show the form that led to four wins in eight starts in France to begin her career.

“She came with a nice resume,” Thomas said. “We're just hoping to pick up where it left off. She's a beautiful filly and seems to have a lot of class and had some good works on the turf. She's shown a very nice turn-of-foot.”

Manny Franco will ride from the inside post.

Team Valor Racing and Everything's Cricket Racing's Madita, the runner-up in the One Dreamer in September at Kentucky Downs, will make her first start in more than eight months for trainer Arnaud Delacour, drawing post 7 with Hall of Famer John Velazquez in the irons. The German-bred Madita, making her 6-year-old bow, will be looking for her second win in seven starts since arriving from her native country in 2019.

Rounding out the field are Hogans Holiday [post 2, Irad Ortiz, Jr.] and Sunset Kiss [post 6, Jose Lezcano]. Truth Hurts and Velvet Crush are entered for the main-track only.

The Perfect Sting is carded as Race 9 on Saturday's 10-race program. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

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Undefeated Happy Saver, Dubai World Cup Winner Mystic Guide Top Saturday’s Suburban

Wertheimer and Frere homebred Happy Saver puts his undefeated record on the line in Saturday's Grade 2, $400,000 Suburban, a 10-furlong test for 4-year-olds and up at Belmont Park.

The 135th renewal of the Suburban, which is a “Win and You're In” qualifier to the Grade 1, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic in November at Del Mar, will be televised live on NBC as part of a show airing from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern.

The Suburban will feature the one-two finishers of October's Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup won by Happy Saver by three-quarters of a length over Godolphin homebred Mystic Guide, who enters from a win in the Group 1 Dubai World Cup at Meydan.

A rail-riding Happy Saver, with Irad Ortiz, Jr. up, tracked Tacitus from third position with Mystic Guide to his outside in the Jockey Club Gold Cup, contested over a fast Belmont main track.

Mystic Guide moved outside of the pacesetter late in the turn as Happy Saver waited for racing room behind rivals that finally emerged when Tacitus came off the rail on the turn for home. Mystic Guide put a nose in front inside the final eighth, but Happy Saver squeezed up the rail to secure the win.

Trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, Happy Saver won four starts in his sophomore season, including the Federico Tesio in September at Laurel Park. The Super Saver chestnut launched his 4-year-old campaign on May 28 with a one-length score in an optional-claiming mile on Big Sandy.

Pletcher said Happy Saver, who worked a half-mile in 49.26 seconds Sunday on the Belmont dirt training track, has returned bigger and better as a 4-year-old.

“I think as an older horse he's a little more laid back in some of his works. He always performs well and he's really filled out and matured,” said Pletcher, who won the 2017 Suburban with Keen Ice.

Pletcher said the stretch out in distance will suit Happy Saver.

“For the way he ran in the Jockey Club Gold Cup last year, he's proven he likes that distance and that race looks even stronger now with what Mystic Guide has done,” said Pletcher.

Pletcher will also saddle Repole Stable and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Moretti.

A 5-year-old son of Medaglia d'Oro, out of the Grade 1-winning Concerto mare Rigoletta, Moretti is a half-brother to 2017 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile-winner Battle of Midway.

The consistent bay, who sports a record of 12-4-4-2 with purse earnings of $304,150, launched his current campaign with an even third in the Grade 2 Brooklyn presented by Northwell Health on Belmont Stakes Day.

Last June, Moretti captured the 11-furlong Flat Out over a sloppy Belmont main track by 5 1/4-lengths ahead of a distant second to Tacitus in last year's Suburban. He completed 2020 with a 1 1/2-length win in the 1 3/4-mile Birdstone in August at Saratoga, a title Pletcher said Moretti will have a chance to retain on August 5.

“The further the better for him,” said Pletcher. “He ran OK in here last year and this would be a nice bridge to the Birdstone to try and defend his title there.”

Ortiz, Jr. retains the mount on Happy Saver from post 6, while Flavien Prat picks up the mount on Moretti from the inside post.

Mystic Guide, trained by Mike Stidham, will be making his first appearance since capturing the Dubai World Cup on March 27 at Meydan.

The Ghostzapper chestnut, out of the multiple Grade 1-winning A.P. Indy mare Music Note, made the grade in the Grade 2 Jim Dandy in September at Saratoga ahead of his runner-up effort to Suburban rival Happy Saver in the Jockey Club Gold Cup to close out his sophomore season.

Mystic Guide, who has paired with Belmont Stakes-winning rider Luis Saez for his two starts this season, opened his current campaign in impressive fashion with a six-length win in the Grade 3 Razorback Handicap on a sloppy track on February 27 at Oaklawn Park, garnering a career-best 108 Beyer Speed Figure.

“Obviously, we don't really know how much the sloppy track played into that number,” said Stidham. “He came back in the Dubai World Cup and made the number look like it was real, which was good. We've given him plenty of time and he's had three months since that race to bounce back. Looking at him train and his weight and his coat, he's an absolute picture right now.”

Stidham said Mystic Guide will need to improve to turn the tables on Happy Saver.

“He needs to be faster. The bottom line is that they're both very good horses,” said Stidham. “I'm not taking anything for granted. I know Happy Saver has never been beaten and it won't be an easy race for us. I just hope we have the best horse.”

Stidham said Saez, who will pilot Mystic Guide from post 4, could be a difference maker on Saturday.

“Luis has ridden him in both races this year and he has a tremendous amount of confidence in the horse and that will play a big part,” said Stidham. “I couldn't ask to have a more talented rider on him. We have things set up for as good an effort as he's ready for.”

Informative, trained by Uriah St. Lewis for his family's Trin-Brook Stables, enters from a last-to-first score in the Grade 3 Salvator Mile at odds of 79-1 on June 12 at Monmouth Park.

The 4-year-old Bodemeister chestnut has racked up 25 career starts with three wins and three seconds, and picked up his first graded black type last out when besting Ny Traffic by one-length, garnering a career-best 99 Beyer.
Manny Franco has the call from post 2.

William L. Clifton, Jr.'s multiple graded stakes placed Prioritize, a 6-year-old Tizway gelding, finished a closing fifth last out in the Grade 3 Pimlico Special on May 14 at Pimlico Race Course.

Prioritize made his first nine starts on turf, including a third in the 2018 Grade 2 Hill Prince at Belmont, before trainer Jimmy Bond switched the bay to dirt for his last seven efforts.

The versatile Prioritize ran third in the Grade 1 Woodward Handicap in September at Saratoga ahead of a fourth in the Jockey Club Gold Cup to close out his campaign.

Joel Rosario retains the mount from post 3.

George E. Hall and SportBLX Thoroughbreds' Max Player, trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, is in search of his first win since capturing the Grade 3 Withers on February 1, 2020 at Aqueduct Racetrack.

The 4-year-old Honor Code colt ran third in both the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes and Grade 1 Runhappy Travers following his Withers win for former conditioner Linda Rice.

Transferred to Asmussen for a fall campaign, Max Player finished fifth in both the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby and Grade 1 Preakness in a Triple Crown campaign schedule which was readjusted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Max Player opened his season with an off-the-board effort in the Group 1 Saudi Cup at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in February and ran sixth last out in the Pimlico Special.

Ricardo Santana, Jr. has the call from post 5.

The Suburban is carded as the closing race on Saturday's 10-race program. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

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