O’Neill: Hot Rod Charlie ‘Ready To Go’ In Dubai World Cup

With Advance Wagering offered this Friday, there will be a strong sense of Santa Anita when the $12 million Dubai World Cup (G1) is run Saturday at Meydan Racecourse.

The two favorites for the 26th edition of the Group 1 event at about 1 1/8 miles, Hot Rod Charlie and Life Is Good, both have an intrinsic connection to Santa Anita, which is Hot Rod Charlie's home base.

Life Is Good displayed his world-class potential at the historic Arcadia, Calif., oval as a 3-year-old when trained by Bob Baffert, winning the Grade 3 Sham Stakes and the Grade 2 San Felipe Stakes.

“We're optimistic,” said Doug O'Neill, trainer of Hot Rod Charlie, a 4-year-old son of Oxbow who already has earned $2,721,200 with a 4-3-3 record from 14 career starts. He most recently won the Maktoum Challenge Round 2 (G2) Feb. 4 at Meydan.

O'Neill is well aware Hot Rod will have something to pursue in Life Is Good, now trained by Todd Pletcher and winner of six of seven races, including a dominant front-running score over reigning Horse of the Year Knicks Go in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream Park Jan. 29.

“Flavien (Prat, who rides Hot Rod Charlie) knows the horse well, so we're optimistic for a good run,” O'Neill said from Santa Anita Sunday morning prior to leaving for Dubai on Tuesday.

“Our staff has been showing Hot Rod a lot of love every day they've been with him in Dubai,” O'Neill added. “He's ready to go.

“It's going to be a great race.”

The Dubai World Cup offers the winner $7.2 million. The entire World Cup program airs Saturday on TVG starting at 7:30 a.m. ET.

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Dr. Marbooz Romps Away To Victory At Aiken Trials

An authoritative victory by Sisu Racing Stable's Dr. Marbooz in the City of Aiken Trophy was a highlight among five Thoroughbred races Saturday at the 79th annual Aiken Trials at the Aiken Training Track in Aiken, South Carolina.

The Aiken Trials are a rite of spring in the area, and an estimated crowd of 10,000 were on hand for the festivities, which were canceled in 2021 due to COVID-19. The day also included pony races, a ladies sidesaddle race, tailgaiting, and the induction of the late Arlington Park owner Richard L. Duchossois into the Aiken Training Track Ambassador's Club.

New York-bred Dr. Marbooz, ridden by Kathleen Hogan, won by a wide margin from his lone rival, Fearless Kitten, Dede Biles of the Aiken Standard reported. He finished 4 ½ furlongs in :57 4/5. The two squared off after the scratch of So You Are.

A 5-year-old Bourbon Courage gelding, trained by Brad Stauffer, is a homebred Carolyn Karlson of Saratoga Springs, N.Y. His win was especially meaningful.

“I was there when he was foaled,” Karlson told the publication about Dr. Marbooz, who has won races at Belterra Park and Finger Lakes. “I toweled him off.”

Trainer Peter Pugh sent out two winners Saturday: Livingstone and Say It Loud, both guided by Bernie Dalton.

Livingstone, a 3-year-old Pioneerof the Nile gelding, won the 4 ½ furlong Coward Trophy in :59 2/5, and Say It Loud, a 3-year-old Midnight Storm gelding took the Iselin Hall of Fame Trophy in :54 1/5. Both are owned by Cherry Knoll Farm.

Two-year-old filly Time for Ta Kela, owned by Allen Poindexter, captured the Von Stade Trophy under Ismael Gonzalez. The Iowa-bred daughter of Not This Time, trained by Cary Frommer, finished a quarter mile in :25 4/5.

Jett North Racing's Shinook, a 2-year-old Protonico filly, captured the quarter-mile Gaver Trophy with Crystal Ryan aboard for trainer Marcus Ryan. Time was :23 2/5.

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King For A Day, Lookin At Lee Lead Youth Movement At Irish Hill And Dutchess Views Stallions

Keeping a roster replenished with fresh faces is a must in today's commercial Thoroughbred marketplace. Buyers at auction have shown they'll flock to them in the sales ring, and breeders have taken note with their mating choices.

Irish Hill and Dutchess Views Stallions in Stillwater N.Y., understood that market edict and stocked its stud barn accordingly, with a pair of stallions seeing their first foals born in 2022: Kentucky Derby runner-up Lookin At Lee and Grade 3-placed multiple stakes winner King for a Day.

Both stallions received a solid base of broodmare support from breeders in 2021, and now that they're in the midst of their second seasons at stud, stallion manager Bill Leak said they each have solid foundations to compete for spots among New York's top sires in the years to come.

“I've always felt there's been room for the right horse in this state all the way through,” he said. “They've both been received very well in the state, and we think they'll have the opportunity to do it, because we do think they are the right horses.”

King for a Day, a 6-year-old son of Uncle Mo, covered 73 mares in his debut season, which was the fifth-most among New York stallions in 2021, and third-highest among first-year stallions.

He is best known for chasing down eventual champion 3-year-old male Maximum Security in the listed Pegasus Stakes at Monmouth Park, following a victory in the Sir Barton Stakes at Pimlico. He also added a runner-up effort in the Grade 3 Challenger Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs, retiring with three wins in seven starts for $260,550.

“You don't get any hotter than Uncle Mo right now, with him having three of the four top freshman sires in 2020,” Leak said. “King for a Day is the typical Uncle Mo: a lot of leg, stands very tall, and he stands downhill. He looks like he's ready to go forward constantly, even when he's standing still. He looks like he's ready to go, and that's just how he's built, even though his frame is very balanced. He just looks like speed. All the positives of Uncle Mo are in King for a Day.”

A homebred for the Brunetti family's Red Oak Stable, King for a Day is out of the French Deputy mare Ubetwereven, whose other runners of note include stakes winners Ima Jersey Girl and Feel That Fire. The latter is the dam of multiple Grade 1 winner Mind Control.

Rick Burke, owner of Irish Hill Century Farm, said the horse's connections approached the farm about standing King for a Day in New York.

“They felt he was a better fit here than trying to go to Kentucky,” Burke said. “They thought there was enough Uncle Mo sons out there with Nyquist, Outwork, and Laoban, they didn't want to try to start another one at the same time. They thought it was a better fit to come to New York.”

Lookin At Lee, an 8-year-old by Lookin At Lucky, saw 22 reported mares in his debut season, which ranked him 13th among the state's most active stallions.

“He's more of a classic-looking horse,” Leak said. “He's got the classic angles, the classic lines, very well balanced, not too leggy, not too short, good, long back. It all fits perfectly for the classic distance.”

Lookin At Lee was competitive against the top 3-year-olds of the 2017 racing season. In addition to finishing second to Always Dreaming in that year's Kentucky Derby (G1), he also registered in-the-money efforts in the G1 Arkansas Derby, and the G3 West Virginia Derby and G1 Southwest Stakes. He also missed picking up black type in that year's Preakness Stakes by a half-length, finishing fourth.

At two, Lookin At Lee won the Ellis Park Juvenile Stakes and was second in the G1 Breeders' Futurity and G3 Iroquois Stakes. He retired with four wins in 35 starts and earnings of $1,343,188.

“If he'd won the Derby, he wouldn't be here,” Burke said. “I would say breaking from the one-hole against all those horses, to come in second was a phenomenal ride. That's why he's here. He just didn't win one of those big races.”

Unlike King for a Day, Burke said he reached out to owner L and N Racing to pitch them about standing Lookin At Lee in New York.

“When I'd heard he was retiring to stud and his owners didn't think he would be as well received in Kentucky as a regional market, I called them and they agreed New York was the place to go, with the purse structure and the breeders' awards,” he said. “The nice thing with these two stallions is the owners race horses in New York, so they want to be in New York, running at Saratoga and Belmont, so that does help in attracting stallions.”

Lookin At Lee is out of the Grade 3-placed stakes-winning Langfuhr mare Langara Lass, whose produce record also includes multiple Grade 3 winner Blended Citizen and Grade 1-placed stakes winner Battlefield Angel, who is also a stakes-producing mare.

“Every mare that we got to our stallions last year felt like a win,” Leak said. “We had to fight hard for every mare, and we're thankful that we got them, and I thought they both performed very well.”

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Eddie’s New Dream Nails Favorite On Line In Irish O’Brien

It took every inch of Santa Anita's 6 ½-furlong hillside turf course, but Reddam Racing's homebred Eddie's New Dream was indeed to up to nail previously unbeaten Becca Taylor right on the money in Saturday's $100,000 Irish O'Brien Stakes.

Trained by Ben Cecil and ridden by Mario Gutierrez, Eddie's New Dream, a 4-year-old filly by Square Eddie, got the official distance of about 6 ½ furlongs on turf in 1:13.63.

The Irish O'Brien, for older fillies and mares bred or sired in California, is part of the lucrative Golden State Series, which is sponsored by the CTBA.

Forwardly placed throughout, Eddie's New Dream was a joint third, about two lengths off pacesetter Becca Taylor at the half mile pole and she had a half-length disadvantage to overcome with about 70 yards to run, but found a way and was up by the thinnest of noses on the wire.

“I didn't think she was going to get there to be honest, but Mario gave her a great ride and she's such a tough, consistent filly,” said Cecil. “This is not her trip, she is a mile-plus (type of filly) and she got sick a week ago and missed about a full week of training, so I knew she'd be kind of fresh in here…I think that might've helped her a little bit. She deserves a stakes win…I'm glad we got it done.”

Most recently third behind multiple stakes winner Leggs Galore in her first career try down the hill in the Sunshine Millions Filly & Mare Turf Sprint Jan. 15, Eddie's New Dream was off at 3-1 in a field of seven and paid $8.

“I didn't know if I was (going to be) able to catch that filly…She was fighting pretty good in the end, so I was hoping we did,” said Gutierrez, who has been aboard for all 12 of Eddie's New Dream's starts. “Thank goodness is worked out. I think the key is the distance. We sprinted her seven furlongs on the dirt and then down the hill once before too. So I think those two kind of let her adjust to the pace of the shorter races, I think that was the key for her.

“I was hoping I got up. Sometimes you think you got the head bob and you come back and they've got the other horse's number up. So you never know.”

Three-times stakes placed, Eddie's New Dream knocked down her first stakes win today, improving her overall mark to 5-3-2 from 13 starts.

Out of Reddam's Tapit mare Walkingonadream, she picked up $60,000, increasing her earnings to $346,760.

For Becca Taylor, a two-time stakes winner who brought a six-game winning streak into the Irish O'Brien, she lost nothing, in terms of stature, in defeat as she led every jump while coming up a millimeter short. Trained by Steve Miyadi and ridden by Flavien Prat, she was off at 4-5 in her first hillside appearance while finishing two lengths better than Sensible Cat.

Ridden by Juan Hernandez, Sensible Cat was reserved off the early pace but never threatened late, finishing one length in front of She's Devoted.

Fractions on the race were :22.49, :45.17 and 1:07.65.

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