Gun Runner’s Cyberknife Posts Mild Arkansas Derby Upset

Saturday's $1.25-million GI Arkansas Derby was supposed to be all about Secret Oath (Arrogate), who had so dominated her peers that trainer D. Wayne Lukas and owner/breeder Briland Farm decided to roll the dice and bypass what would have been a far easier task in the GIII Fantasy S. The betting public largely endorsed the idea, sending the chestnut off as the 7-5 favorite, but in the end, it was not meant to be, as Gold Square LLC's Cyberknife (Gun Runner) was the recipient of a cerebral ride from Florent Geroux and ran away in the final furlong to score an upset of the mildest variety. Barber Road (Race Day) snagged second on the wire from Secret Oath, who raced well behind a strong pace and made what appeared to be a winning bid on the turn, only to peak on the run and peter out in the final stages.

With the exception of Secret Oath, who was pinched back in tight between GII Rebel S. winner Un Ojo (Laoban) and Ben Diesel (Will Take Charge), the Arkansas Derby field was off to a level beginning and they lined up five across the track with a circuit to travel, with Chasing Time (Not This Time) ceding the advantage to the rail-drawn Kavod (Lea) as they raced into the first turn. 'TDN Rising Star' Doppelganger (Into Mischief) was part of the pace three or four wide, while Geroux tucked Cyberknife into fourth position.

Kavod had the call after a stiff opening half-mile in :46.54, at which point Geroux made a key decision to allow Cyberknife to take a gap one off the rail between Kavod and Chasing Time, a choice that looked that much better when the latter was one of the first to call it a day and began backpedaling with 3 1/2 furlongs to race. Cyberknife was asked to engage Kavod approaching the five-sixteenths marker and looked to have that one at his mercy, but Secret Oath was winding up with a marauding sweep into contention. But while the filly was being driven along to try to bridge the gap, Cyberknife was more or less on cruise control–albeit a bit green–as he rolled down towards the fence in upper stretch. Put to a Geroux drive at the eighth pole, Cyberknife weaved in and out, but was always maintaining a safe advantage to the line. Barber Road rallied from the back to complete the exacta, as Secret Oath ran out of gas in the final 50 yards.

“Great effort with some high hopes for him,” Geroux commented. “We always thought he was very talented. Looks like he finally put it together and he's probably not even 100%, as he was zig-zagging down the lane. I'm hoping he's going to be a little straighter on the first Saturday in May. But, a very talented horse.”

Demoted from an apparent debut victory sprinting at Churchill Sept. 25, Cyberknife was a green second at 2-5 beneath the Twin Spires Nov. 5 before graduating by a half-length at odds-on in his first go at two turns at the Fair Grounds Dec. 26. A well-beaten sixth with blinkers added for the GIII Lecomte S. in New Orleans Jan. 22, Cyberknife regrouped with a three-length allowance tally in the Big Easy Feb. 19 and targeted this event. His 'TDN Rising Star' stablemate Zozos (Munnings) shipped to the Fair Grounds off a 10 1/4-length Oaklawn allowance success to be runner-up to top GI Kentucky Derby hopeful Epicenter (Not This Time) in the GII Louisiana Derby Mar. 26.

Lukas was making no excuses for Secret Oath.

“We got outrun today,” the Hall of Famer said. “Made that big move [on the second turn] and I thought she would sustain it, but she didn't. The race didn't unfold like you'd hope it to. It just didn't come together. We got bumped at the start and that got her back too far and then she made that monster move. It's hard to sustain it. She might have run that quarter pretty damn fast.”

Pedigree Notes:

Cyberknife is yet another feather in the cap for his boom stallion, who has now sired 10 stakes winners and six graded scorers (now three at Grade I level) from his first crop that has already yielded 37 individual winners.

Cyberknife is the second of Saturday's three Kentucky Derby prep winners to emerge from the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Showcase, having hammered for $400,000. Hailing from the female family of G1 Dubai World Cup winner Well Armed (Tiznow), GSW Witty (Distorted Humor) and Grade I winner and Darley Japan sire American Patriot (War Front), Cyberknife is out of a six-time stakes-winning mare who is also responsible for a 2-year-old colt named Tapit Shoes (Tapit) and a colt by Horse of the Year Authentic foaled Mar. 4.

Saturday, Oaklawn Park
ARKANSAS DERBY-GI, $1,250,000, Oaklawn, 4-2, 3yo, 1 1/8m, 1:50.42, ft.
1–CYBERKNIFE, 119, c, 3, by Gun Runner
1st Dam: Awesome Flower (MSW & MGSP, $556,593), by Flower Alley
2nd Dam: Formalities Aside, by Awesome Again
3rd Dam: Well Dressed, by Notebook
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN, 1ST GRADE I
WIN. ($400,000 Ylg '20 FTKSEL). O-Gold Square LLC; B-Kenneth
Ramsey & Sarah K. Ramsey (KY); T-Brad H. Cox; J-Florent
Geroux. $750,000. Lifetime Record: 6-3-2-0, $860,000. Click for the
eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating: A+.
2–Barber Road, 119, c, 3, Race Day–Encounter, by Southern
Image. 1ST G1 BLACK TYPE. ($15,000 Wlg '19 KEENOV). O-WSS
Racing, LLC; B-Susan Forrester & Judy Curry (KY); T-John
Alexander Ortiz. $250,000.
3–Secret Oath, 117, f, 3, Arrogate–Absinthe Minded, by Quiet
American. 1ST G1 BLACK TYPE. O/B-Briland Farm, Robert
Mitchell & Stacy Mitchell (KY); T-D. Wayne Lukas. $125,000.
Margins: 2 3/4, 3/4, 4HF. Odds: 5.80, 10.00, 1.40.
Also Ran: Doppelganger, Kavod, Ben Diesel, We the People, Un Ojo, Chasing Time. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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Saturday Insights: Curlin Well Represented by Pricey Debuters

1st-FG, $65k, Msw, 3yo, f, 6f, 1:00p.m. ET

John Oxley's Catch Magic (Curlin) is unveiled here on the rail for trainer Norm Casse. The eye-catching half to Checkered Past (Smart Strike), MSW & MSP, $334,284 and three other multiple-winners of over $140,000 cost her connections $600,000 after breezing a quick :10 flat at OBSAPR last year. Right to her inside, Juddmonte will send out Patna (Into Mischief), the half-sister to Ducale (Twirling Candy) who is twice a winner and never off the board in five lifetime starts. Rounding out the field are the golden silks of Claiborne Farm, who send homebred Misread (Blame) to post for her sire's trainer Al Stall Jr. She is the first foal out of a daughter of multiple-graded stakes winner, Wend (Pulpit). TJCIS PPs

 

4th-FG, $65k, Msw, 3yo, f, 1mT, 2:31p.m. ET

Qatar Racing sends out $625,000 KEESEP procurement Forgotten Realm (Curlin) under the tutelage of Brad Cox. The half to two earners of over $165,000 will try her hooves on the turf for a career debut, breaking from the far outside of an experienced field. This is the family of their GI Longines Kentucky Oaks winner, and $5 million FTKNOV purchase Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) and MGISP Crafty C. T. (Crafty Prospector). TJCIS PPs

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Key Race for Turnerloose in Fair Ground Oaks

It's a tough spot, going up against Echo Zulu (Gun Runner) in the GII Fair Grounds Oaks, but as owner Ike Thrash puts it, it's not every day that you get to take on the Eclipse Award-winning champion 2-year-old filly.

So Ike and his wife Dawn are eager to make the two-hour trip from their home in Mississippi to Fair Grounds on Saturday to watch their filly Turnerloose (Nyquist) go up against a talented field of sophomore fillies vying for points on the road to the Kentucky Oaks. Thrash is confident in his filly's potential upside.

“It wouldn't surprise me if she improved in her second time on dirt,” Thrash said.

The Brad Cox-trained dark bay pulled the upset in the GII Rachel Alexandra S. last month, stalking along the inside with Florent Geroux aboard and digging in down the lane to win by half a length.

Turnerloose was successful on the grass as a juvenile. After winning on debut, she claimed the Aristocrat Juvenile Fillies S. and placed third in the GII Jessamine S. Following an unplaced finish in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and a brief layoff, she returned to the racetrack for her sophomore campaign in the Rachel Alexandra.

“Of all the crazy stuff we've tried, running for the first time on dirt after a layoff in a Grade II is not the recommended path, but it worked out this time,” Thrash joked. “She had to tap on the breaks a few times and I was just sitting there the whole time with one eye closed hoping that she would like the dirt, but she ran really well.”

Ike and Dawn Thrash have been involved in horse racing for 35 years. They've made it to the winner's circle with several Grade I winners, including GI Arkansas Derby winner Line of David (Lion Heart), who took them to the 2010 GI Kentucky Derby, 2015 GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup S. winner Her Emmynency (Successful Appeal) and 2010 GI Debutante S. victress Tell a Kelly (Tapit).

Ike and Dawn Thrash | Hodges Photography

Today, the Thrash racing stable includes eight horses at the track and another nine 2-year-olds training with Paul Sharp in Ocala . While the Thrashes were prominent owners in California for many years, they have since relocated their stable to circuits closer to home.

The couple takes pride in the fact that they pick out all of their racing prospects themselves, attending the various sales and making up their short lists together.

“I always say that I know a lot about horse racing and Dawn knows more about horses,” Thrash explained. “She zeros in on a couple and I just try to get a short list and pick the ones that the universe lets you have. For us, 99% of it is how they are physically. I'm sure that is the opposite of what other people with good sense do, but the last thing we look at is the page. I'm happy if they have a good family, but I'd rather buy a nice individual.”

Turnerloose was the exception to this rule. At the Keeneland September Sale, the Nyquist filly had a nice physical but also an impressive female family as the granddaughter of GISW Game Face (Menifee). They were expecting that she might be out of their budget, but were surprised when they had the winning $50,000 bid.

“You always think that you're paying too much or that the world knows more than you do, but this was one of those times where I looked at my wife when they brought the hammer down and thought that we must have missed something,” Thrash recalled.

Turnerloose was never a standout during her early training, so it wasn't until she made her debut that her connections realized her potential.

“Some of them just don't jump out of you,” Thrash said. “We had another Nyquist filly who we thought was prettier than Turnerloose, so every time we had a conversation [with Cox], it was about the other Nyquist filly. Now Turnerloose could beat her for fun, so it's funny how it worked out.”

As the daughter of an A.P. Indy mare, debuting the filly on the turf was far from the original plan.

“When she got to Ellis Park, the only choices we had were five furlongs on dirt or a mile on the grass,” Thrash explained. “People ask us why we ran her on grass, well it was the only thing there. Then when they had the race with the big purse at Kentucky Downs [the Aristocrat Juvenile Fillies S.], you feel silly not to go there.”

Rolling the dice to let the filly try the dirt paid off, and now Turnerloose could take her owners to their third Kentucky Oaks. Their first was with Dawn After Dawn (Successful Appeal), who ran fourth in the 2007 edition, and in 2018 they were represented by Kelly's Humor (Midnight Lute).

“The year before Dawn After Dawn ran in the Oaks the horse paid like $40 to win, but of course we picked to run our first Oaks when Rags to Riches was there and I don't think I could have beat her with my car,” Thrash said with a laugh. “I've always said that if we are going to win one of these, it's more likely to be the Oaks because we buy 10 fillies for every colt.”

Like all of the horses in the Thrash racing stable, Turnerloose is named after a member of the family.

“Turner is my grandson,” Thrash explained. “We have four children and their spouses and then 12 grandchildren, so we don't run out of names.”

Thrash said that if they can break even in this business while having some fun, campaigning the occasional standout runner is an added bonus.

“When our horse Her Emmynency sold for over $1 million a few years ago, my CPA called and told me that I almost did it. After 30 years in the business, I was only $8,000 behind. I told him that was great; it was a lot better than I expected. It's a tough business and we try as hard as we can to break even, but it's been a lot of fun. You don't win many of those big races. We've done well over the years, but it's always exciting to get there.”

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Another Million-Dollar Colt for Into Mischief at OBS

Not long after a son of Into Mischief broke the seven-figure barrier at $1.1 million, another colt by Spendthrift's sizzling sire summoned a cool million from the Brad Cox colt group, in which Spendthrift is a major player. The colt's breeder, Chester Broman, will stay in for 25%. Bred in New York, Hip 277 is out of Broman's MGISW Artemis Agrotera (Roman Ruler), whose first foal Chestertown (Tapit) topped this sale at $2-million in 2019.

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