New York Showcase Day Features Six Stakes On Monday’s Holiday Card At Belmont

A special Memorial Day card will have state-breds take center stage, with six stakes worth a combined $900,000 highlighting New York Breeders' Showcase Day on Monday at Belmont Park.

The New York Racing Association, Inc. [NYRA] will see state-breds compete for high purses, rewarding the owners and breeders in the Empire State who help sustain racing in New York throughout the year.

“The New York-bred program is full of tremendous opportunities for breeders and owners,” said Thomas J. Gallo, President of New York Thoroughbred Breeders, Inc. “We're grateful in continuing to partner with NYRA in highlighting our top athletes on our New York Showcase days with lucrative purses and competitive fields. Especially at the Belmont Spring meet, as the New York Breeders' Showcase Day on Memorial Day will have fans in attendance to help celebrate and watch the best our Empire State has to offer.”

Those fans in attendance will see trainer John Kimmel saddle a trio of stakes contenders, including the popular millionaire Mr. Buff, who will make his fourth appearance in the $200,000 Commentator in Race 4 for trainer John Kimmel, in search of his first win in the one-turn mile for 3-year-olds and up over Big Sandy.

Kimmel will also send out Secret Love in the $125,000 Bouwerie and Dr. Blute for the $125,000 Mike Lee.

“It's a great day of racing and there's big purse money to be had. I'm hoping all three of my horses show up and have a good day,” Kimmel said.

Mr. Buff, an 11-time stakes winner, finished third last out in the Grade 3 Westchester, setting a moderate pace under Edgard Zayas before Dr Post – who is bound for the Grade 1, $1 million Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan Handicap on Belmont Stakes Day – took over en route to a 1 3/4-length win.

Junior Alvarado, who has guided Mr. Buff to 7 of his 17 career wins, will return to the irons. The duo will break from post 3.

“I think having his regular rider back aboard will help him,” said Kimmel. “Last time, the rider didn't really know him and for him to go a half in 48 and not open up on the field when he can go 45; I'm not sure why he didn't open up. He got pressured on the outside and before he asked him to change leads, he went to the stick and this horse, when he gets to his outside lead, has a whole other gear.”

Waterville Lake Stable homebred Sea Foam, who won back-to-back races against optional claimers last year before running third in the Empire Classic in October, will make his 6-year-old debut for trainer Christophe Clement. Sea Foam will be looking for his first stakes win since capturing the 2018 New York Derby and Albany.

“He's been doing well, it's just been a tough division with Mr. Buff the last couple of years, but that's just the way it is,” Clement said. “He's been training well and we'll see what happens.”

Seafoam, with Jose Ortiz aboard from the outermost post 7, will face a talented field that includes four-time stakes-winner Bankit, who has finished on the board in his last six starts. Trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, Bankit started his 5-year-old year with a victory in the John B. Campbell in February at Laurel Park before running second in his last stakes appearance in the Haynesfield in March at Aqueduct Racetrack. Bankit, owned by Winchell Thoroughbreds and Willis Racing, will have the services of Jose Lezcano from post 5.

Captain Bombastic, who ran fifth in the Affirmed Success in April at Belmont, will be making his second start since Chad Brown took over the training duties [post 1, Irad Ortiz, Jr.]. Trainer Rudy Rodriguez will send out Yankee Division [post 4, Saez] and Danny California [post 6, Franco] while Horaco DePaz saddles Winners Laugh, who will exit post 2 with Hall of Famer Javier Castellano aboard.

Merrylegs' Farm homebred Timeless Journey will be looking to make the step in class in the $200,000 Critical Eye for fillies and mares 3-years-old and up going the one-turn mile on Big Sandy in Race 9. Timeless Journey, 3-0-1 in seven starts, ended her sophomore year with a December victory against allowance company at Aqueduct before running fourth in her 2021 bow on May 7 at Belmont for Clement. Manny Franco will ride from post 3.

“It's a little ambitious, but why not? It's a good day to be ambitious,” Clement said. “She's been training well.”

The hard-luck Mrs. Orb broke a stretch of five consecutive runner-up finishes with a one-length win in January's La Verdad at Aqueduct for trainer Michael Miceli. The Orb mare, owned by Ruggeri Stable, Richard Coburn, Script R Farm and Miceli, ran second by a neck in last year's Critical Eye to Ratajkowski, part of a trend of competitive efforts as the 6-year-old has compiled a 6-8-3 record in 23 starts with earnings of $439,520. Jose Ortiz will have the call from post 4.

Espresso Shot, the winner of the one-mile Biogio's Rose in March at Aqueduct, will return to the same distance for trainer Jorge Abreu. That victory netted the Mission Impazible filly a personal-best 90 Beyer. Eric Cancel will pick up the mount, drawing post 6.

Also competing in the Critical Eye will be Ruggeri Stable's Love and Love, runner-up in the Biogio's Rose, who will break from post 7 with Ortiz, Jr.; Singular Sensation, third in the 1 1/8-mile Bay Ridge in December at Aqueduct, for trainer Mark Hennig [post 2, Jose Lezcano]; Eloquent Speaker, making the jump to stakes company in her 10th career start, for trainer Tony Dutrow [post 5, Luis Saez]; Bank Sting, a winner of three in a row for conditioner John Terranova [post 8, Kendrick Carmouche]; Dancing Kiki [post 1, Javier Castellano]; and Good Credence [outermost post 9, Alvarado].

The Bouwerie, for 3-year-old fillies going seven furlongs in Race 3, will see Laobanonaprayer looking to make amends for an off-the-board effort last out in the NYSSS Park Avenue, when she squares off against stakes winner Secret Love.

Laobanonaprayer, bred by Christina Deronda and owned and trained by Danny Velazquez, graduated at third asking in the Maid of the Mist in October at Belmont providing Velazquez his first stakes win. She followed with an eight-length score in the seven-furlong NYSSS Fifth Avenue in December at Aqueduct ahead of a good second in the Franklin Square in January on a muddy Big A main track. After two off-the-board efforts, including a head-scratching sixth in the NYSSS Park Avenue last out on April 18 at Aqueduct, Laobanonaprayer will look for a return to form from post 3 under returning pilot Carmouche.

Nedlaw Stable's Secret Love, a Not This Time chestnut bred by Sequel Stallions NY and Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holding, captured the Franklin Square in January on a muddy Big A main track. After a distant seventh in the Maddie May, Secret Love closed to finish second last out in an optional-claiming sprint on April 15 at the Big A. Hall of Famer John Velazquez, aboard for her debut maiden win in September at Belmont, has the call from post 5.

“Secret Love is doing really well and we're looking forward to seeing her run,” Kimmel said. “She'll be reunited with Johnny Velazquez.”

Rounding out the field are Betsy Blue [post 1, Ortiz, Jr.], Beach Banker [post 2, Julio Hernandez], Pay Grade [post 4, Ortiz] and Rainbow Gal [post 6, Saez].

Robert Hahn's homebred River Dog will look to build on a stellar seven-length debut maiden win when tackling a field of eight in the Mike Lee, a seven-furlong sprint on the main track for sophomores, in Race 7.

Trained by Jeremiah Englehart, the dark bay Twirling Candy colt earned a field-best 96 Beyer when dominating a state-bred field of 12 in his six-furlong debut over Big Sandy on May 2. Jose Ortiz retains the mount from post 6.

Madaket Stables, Michael Dubb and Wonder Stable's Excellent Timing, bred by Sequel Stallions New York and Lakland Farm, captured the Damon Runyon by 6 3/4-lengths on March 14 at the Big A in his first start for trainer Chad Brown. The dark bay was eased last out in his grass debut in the Grade 2 American Turf on May at Churchill Downs. Franco, aboard for the Damon Runyon score, has the call from post 3.

Rounding out the field are stakes winners Thin White Duke [post 7, Castellano], and Devious Mo [post 5, Ortiz, Jr.], as well as Dr. Blute [post 1, Velazquez], Market Alert [post 2, Lezcano], Lobsta [post 4, Cancel], and Here's Waldo [outermost post 8, Julio Hernandez].

“Dr. Blute should bounce back in the Mike Lee,” Kimmel said. “He should be 2-for-2 but he had a rough trip in his last start. He should have won for fun.”

Michael Dubb and Bethlehem Stables' Classic Lady seeks redemption after finishing second beaten a nose in last year's $125,000 Mount Vernon for older fillies and mares going one mile over the inner turf in Race 6.

Never worse than third in her past nine starts, the dark bay daughter of Jimmy Creed makes her 2021 debut after a lightly raced 5-year-old campaign for Clement, which included a victory in Saratoga's Dayatthespa. Bred by Seth Gregory and Robert Barney, Classic Lady boasts a consistent 18-4-5-4 lifetime record.

Classic Lady leaves from post 10 under Castellano.

Myhartblongstodady, trained by Jorge Abreu, will look to have her picture taken for owner Lawrence Goichman. The New York-homebred was a last out third to Regal Glory in the Plenty of Grace at Aqueduct on April 11, while attempting her third stakes victory. After a four-length allowance victory at Saratoga in her 2020 debut, Myhartblongstodady logged two stakes wins utilizing the same frontrunning tactics when capturing the Yaddo at Saratoga and the Ticonderoga at Belmont Park.

Myhartblongstodady [post 8] will have Lezcano in the irons.

Completing the field are Dancingwthdaffodls [post 1, Luis Cardenas], Giacosa [post 2, Saez], Robin Sparkles [post 3, Ortiz], Kilkea [post 4, Alvarado], Two Cent Tootsie [post 5, Dylan Davis], Light in the Sky [post 6, Franco], Vienna Code [post 7, Cancel], and Pecatonica [post 9, Ortiz, Jr.].

Eight-time stakes winner Therapist will try to make amends in his second start this season in the $125,000 Kingston in Race 8 after sixth in the April 24 Elusive Quality at Belmont.

Trained by Clement, the son of Freud captured six of his eight stakes triumphs against open company, dating all the way back to 2017 when taking the Laurel Futurity and the Awad at Belmont during his 2-year-old season.

Therapist breaks from post 8 under Alvarado.

Clement will also saddle City Man, who comes off a runner-up in the Grade 2 Fort Marcy on May 1. Also a stakes winner against open company, the son of Mucho Macho Man won the Gio Ponti on November 14 at Aqueduct over the grass. He kicked off his campaign on the main track when breaking his maiden at Saratoga before winning the Funny Cide at The Spa. He is bred by Moonstar Farm.

Ortiz will ride City Man from post 4.

Veteran conditioner Jimmy Bond sends out Rinaldi off a close second against open company in the Danger's Hour, where he led throughout until being run down at the wire by Delaware.

Owned by Bond Racing Stable, the 5-year-old Posse gelding defeated multiple stakes-winner Funny Guy twice at stakes level during his 3-year-old season. Last year, Rinaldi led at every point of call to win the West Point at Saratoga.
Rinaldi will leave from post 2 under Saez.

Three Diamonds Farm's graded stakes winner Cross Border looks to build on a nice season that began with a third-place finish in the Grade 1 Pegasus Turf Cup at Gulfstream Park. Trained by Mike Maker, the veteran English Channel ridgling won last year's Lubash at Saratoga before being elevated to first in the Grade 2 Bowling Green at The Spa.

Cross Border, breaking from post 3, will have Franco ride.

Completing the field are Dot Matrix [post 1, Cancel], Mo Ready [post 5, Ortiz, Jr.], Graded On a Curve [post 7, Castellano], and Sanctuary City [post 9, Carmouche].

Monday's 10-race card will have a first post of 1 p.m. Eastern.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Belmont Park, and the best way to bet every race of the 48-day spring/summer meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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Hot Rod Charlie ‘Getting More And More Confident’ For Team O’Neill

Idle since a close third in the Kentucky Derby on May 1, Doug O'Neill's Hot Rod Charlie drilled five furlongs before Friday's first race at Santa Anita in 1:00.48, his final prep for the Grade I Belmont Stakes at a mile and one half a week from Saturday, June 5.

With Flavien Prat aboard, Hot Rod Charlie, who was accompanied by O'Neill's Hall of Fame gelding Lava Man and workmate Liam's Pride, came on Santa Anita's main track via the quarter mile chute at 12:14 p.m. PT, jogged by the Grandstand and was then set down for his work at the five furlong pole with Liam's Pride positioned about two lengths in front of him as a target.

With Prat sitting still, Hot Rod Charlie rattled off splits of 24.06 and 48.32 while gaining the advantage an eighth of a mile from the wire. With Prat remaining motionless, Hot Rod Charlie galloped out six furlongs in 1:13.62.

“Very happy with his breeze today,” said O'Neill. “Flavien was happy with the way he did it and that makes me happy. He had a good strong gallop going into this work and now he's got a strong work and gallop-out going into the race.

“We just want to stay injury-free and we're pumped up and optimistic about a week from tomorrow. This horse is getting more and more confident and he's starting to separate himself from the others. He'll leave Saturday morning at about 3 a.m., along with Lava Man, who's going to take him to the post for the Belmont.”

A winner of the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby two starts back on March 20, Hot Rod Charlie, who broke his maiden at Santa Anita going a flat mile in his fourth start on Oct. 2, was third, beaten a neck three starts back by eventual Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit in the Grade 3 Robert B. Lewis Stakes here on Jan. 30.

Owned by Roadrunner Racing, Boat Racing, LLC, Strauss Bros Racing and Gainesway Thoroughbreds, Ltd, Hot Rod Charlie, who is a Kentucky-bred colt by Oxbow, out of the Indian Charlie mare Indian Miss, is 8-2-1-3, has earnings of $1,305,700.

Prat, who won the Grade 1 Preakness Stakes on May 15 aboard the Santa Anita-based Rombauer, made the decision to stick with Hot Rod Charlie, who skipped the Preakness, for racing's third and final jewel of the Triple Crown.

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Pletcher Triumvirate Log Final Workouts For Belmont

Friday morning was a busy one for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher as he worked Known Agenda, Bourbonic and Overtook in their final moves for the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets.

The trio of runners completed their preparations for the third leg of the Triple Crown under partly cloudy skies and temperatures in the 60s, while dodging heavy rain expected for the Nassau County region on Friday evening.

Arriving at the main track around 8:45 a.m. in the first set after the break, Known Agenda, with Irad Ortiz, Jr. up, breezed in tandem with stablemate and fellow St. Elias Stable color-bearer Dr Post, ridden by exercise rider Hector Ramos.

NYRA clockers caught the pair through splits of 24.60 and 36.00 with Known Agenda, to the inside, finishing off ahead of his workmate in 1:01.00 while Dr Post completed his five furlongs in 1:01.20.

There were some slightly anxious moments during the breeze as the pair found themselves in behind another pair of workers. Despite the unexpected close company, Pletcher said that neither he nor Ortiz, Jr. were fazed.

“We got caught in behind a couple of horses and they were kind of off the rail and spread out a bit which made it a little tricky,” Pletcher said. “In the end, Irad thought it was good. He said that Known Agenda had more of a target, jumped into the bridle and was on the muscle. He finished up and galloped out well. Dr Post had to eat a little bit of dirt, that's just kind of the way it worked out. After the break it can be a little bit busy.”

Ninth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby last out, Known Agenda won the Grade 1 Florida Derby on March 27 at Gulfstream Park with a ground-saving trip from fifth before drawing clear in upper stretch to a 2 ¾-length win. A maiden winner at second asking defeating eventual graded stakes winner Greatest Honour by a head, Known Agenda was fifth in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis at Tampa Bay Downs before defeating winners at Gulfstream Park by 11 lengths.

“He's obviously an experienced horse,” Pletcher said. “He's unfazed. Irad was able to place him where he wasn't getting much kickback. Dr Post got more of the kickback, so I told Irad to get away from that and hold him out at that point. In his case, it worked out very well. Dr Post, I would have preferred not to take much kickback, but he seemed to handle it fine. Irad liked the way he handled it and so did I. He thought it was a positive. He took a bit [of kickback in the Derby], but not a ton. With the trip he got in the Florida Derby and in Tampa, he's got plenty of experience, so we aren't worried about that.”

While Known Agenda targets the Belmont Stakes, Dr Post, second in last year's running, will point to the Grade 1, $1 million Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan Handicap.

About ten minutes later, Bourbonic and Overtook put the final touches on their Belmont Stakes preparations when caught through an opening quarter-mile in 23.60 before completing the half-mile work in 48.49. The pair galloped out five furlongs in an authoritative 1:00.80. Jockey Manny Franco was aboard Overtook while exercise rider Amelia Green piloted Bourbonic.

A winner of the Grade 2 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino at 72-1 odds, Bourbonic finished 13th in the Kentucky Derby and will attempt to give historic Calumet Farm their first Belmont Stakes triumph in 73 years since Citation swept the Triple Crown in 1948.

Pletcher indicated that Bourbonic typically displays a strong gallop out in his works.

“He's a horse that at times will work like he's capable of stepping up,” Pletcher said. “The one thing he does is gallop out strongly. He's always given indications that the distance would suit him.”

Pletcher said he has been particularly impressed with Overtook since his late-closing third in the Grade 3 Peter Pan and that the regally bred son of Curlin has been showing improvement into his next engagement.

“Overtook is historically not an overly ambitious work horse, but I thought he went well this morning,” Pletcher said. “I was looking for him and Bourbonic to just show they have some decent energy. I think his two breezes since the Peter Pan have been better than what we were seeing beforehand, so I'm happy with that.”

Both Bourbonic and Overtook boast pedigrees that should suit the 12-furlong distance, being out of mares sired by Belmont Stakes winners. A son of Bernardini, Bourbonic is out of graded stakes winner Dancing Afleet who is by 2005 Belmont Stakes winner Afleet Alex. Overtook, by Curlin, is out of Grade 1-winner Got Lucky, a daughter of 1992 Belmont Stakes winner A.P. Indy.

“The one thing they both have going for them is that they're bred for the distance. It seems like that should be helpful,” Pletcher said. “[Bourbonic is by] Bernardini and out of an Afleet Alex mare, so there are a lot of Belmont wins in that pedigree. Same thing with Overtook, being by Curlin out of an A.P. Indy mare, it seems that his breeding also should be helpful with the distance.”

A $1 million purchase from the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, Overtook is a direct descendant of prestigious broodmares Numbered Account and La Troienne. He is owned by Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable in partnership with Coolmore triumvirate Michael Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier and Derrick Smith.

A victory with any of his three runners would give Pletcher a fourth Belmont Stakes triumph, putting him on even terms with fellow Hall of Fame inductees Max Hirsch, R.W. Walden and former boss D. Wayne Lukas. Pletcher previously saddled Rags to Riches [2007], Palace Malice [2013] and Tapwrit [2017] to Belmont scores.

Earlier in the morning, Robert and Lawanna Low's Colonel Liam logged his final work for the Grade 1, $750,000 Resorts World Casino Manhattan over the Belmont training track. The two-time Grade 1-winning son of third-crop sire Liam's Map went in company with Promise Keeper as the pair finished off their four-furlong breeze in 48.62 seconds.

“I was very happy with both of them,” Pletcher said. “It was a good, steady breeze for them both. I was particularly pleased with the gallop out. They went well in hand and very relaxed. It's kind of what we have come to expect from Colonel Liam. It was a good breeze from Promise Keeper as well.”

Woodford Thoroughbreds, WinStar Farm and Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds' Promise Keeper, a winner of the Grade 3 Peter Pan on May 8, is not in pursuit of the Belmont Stakes, “unless there is a major defection.” Pletcher plans to ship the son of third-crop sire Constitution to Thistledown for the Grade 3, $500,000 Ohio Derby on June 26.

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Rombauer ‘In A Nice Rhythm’ Ahead Of Belmont Stakes

John and Diane Fradkin's homebred colt Rombauer, a decisive winner of the Grade 1 Preakness Stakes on May 15 at Pimlico Race Course, worked a half-mile in company Friday on the Belmont Park main track in preparation for the Grade 1, $1.5 million Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets.

The Belmont Stakes Racing Festival runs from Thursday, June 3 through Saturday, June 5, and is headlined by the 153rd running of the Belmont Stakes. The festival will encompass 17 total stakes, including eight Grade 1s on Belmont Stakes Day, capped by the “Test of the Champion” for 3-year-olds in the 1 1/2-mile final leg of the Triple Crown.

Trained by Michael McCarthy, Rombauer garnered a career-best 102 Beyer Speed Figure for his rallying 3 1/2-length score under jockey Flavien Prat in the 1 3/16-mile Preakness.

With Prat slated to ride Belmont Stakes rival Hot Rod Charlie, Hall of Famer and two-time Belmont Stakes-winner John Velazquez, has picked up the mount on Rombauer, who is stabled at trainer Jonathan Thomas' barn at Belmont.

With Velazquez up for the first time, Rombauer worked outside of Thomas-trained maiden winner That Quality, edging past his rival at the wire and galloping out strong through the turn. Rombauer was clocked in 50.01 seconds over the fast main track with That Quality finishing up in 50.07.

“I was very happy with the work,” said McCarthy, who watched the breeze from the Belmont grandstand. “I just wanted him to go ahead and get familiar with Johnny. He went in 13.2, 25.4 and 50 and 2. He came through the lane nicely and galloped out from the wire to the mile and three-eighths pole in 12 and 2, so I'm happy with everything I saw.

“It seemed like he was well in hand at all times,” added McCarthy. “Johnny asked him to gallop out a little bit going underneath the wire and the horse seemed to respond nicely. I'm very happy with what I saw today.”

Velazquez said he was pleased with his first time aboard the Twirling Candy bay.

“We hooked up at the half mile pole and we started breezing together really nice through the first part and then I let him gallop out after the wire. It was a very good gallop out,” said Velazquez.

The versatile Rombauer, a winner on turf, dirt and synthetic, captured the El Camino Real Derby on the Golden Gate Fields Tapeta in February. He entered the Preakness from a good third in the Grade 2 Blue Grass in April, won by Belmont rival Essential Quality at Keeneland.

Rombauer arrived at Belmont the Monday after the Preakness and McCarthy said the talented colt has settled in well.

“One of the nice things about him is his mind is very good and he's very comfortable wherever he's at,” said McCarthy. “He'll have an easy day tomorrow and a walk day here in the shed row and get back to it again on Sunday.”

McCarthy said he's looking forward to what is shaping up to be a competitive Belmont Stakes field with as many as 11 starters.

“I'm just hoping for a good six or seven days here,” said McCarthy. “The horse is in a nice rhythm and I hope all the participants get into the starting gate as well as they can and we just settle it on the racetrack. That's all you want in any of these big races. You just want everybody to get there in good shape.”

And, ideally, McCarthy would love to see his first Classic winner add to an already impressive ledger. Rombauer is looking to notch the first Belmont Stakes-Preakness only double since Afleet Alex in 2005.

“He's a very cool horse,” said McCarthy. “He's special. He's a classic winner and every classic winner is special.”

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