Mott ‘Just Hoping For Good Weather’ With Title Defender Casa Creed In Fourstardave

LRE Racing and JEH Racing Stable's Casa Creed will take on a pair of multiple graded stakes winners in Annapolis and Emmanuel as he attempts to protect his title in Saturday's 39th running of the Grade 1, $500,000 Fourstardave Handicap going one mile over the Saratoga Race Course inner turf.

The Fourstardave is a “Win And You're In” qualifier, offering an automatic entry into the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Mile in November at Santa Anita Park.

Casa Creed, who sports field-high earnings of $2,185,308, boasts a 5-3-0-2 record over the Spa turf. The 7-year-old Jimmy Creed bay's winning form at Saratoga includes triumphs in the 2019 Grade 2 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame as well as the Grade 3 Kelso last out on July 15, where he raced to the outside of Annapolis down the backstretch before launching his bid around the far turn en route to a one-length victory. In last year's Fourstardave, Casa Creed bested eventual Champion Female Turf Horse Regal Glory by 1 1/2 lengths after finishing third in the prior two runnings.

A win in the Fourstardave would give Casa Creed a pair of dual victories in a Grade 1 on the NYRA circuit. He captured back-to-back editions of the Grade 1 Jaipur going six furlongs at Belmont Park in 2021-22 before finishing third to reigning Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner Caravel in this year's renewal on June 10.

Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott said Casa Creed, who finished a close second in the Group 3 1351 Turf Sprint in February at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in Saudi Arabia, continues to train with vigor.

“He hasn't missed any days. He's been to the track, he's had a couple of nice works. We're just hoping for good weather,” Mott said. “He's one of those horses that really takes good care of himself. He's just in a good cycle. I guess he likes this time of year.”

Bred in Kentucky by Silver Springs Stud, Casa Creed was a $105,000 purchase at the 2017 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. He is out of the unraced Bellamy Road mare Achalaya, whose New York-bred yearling filly by Authentic sold for $725,000 to Live Oak Plantation at Day 2 of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Yearling Sale.

Luis Saez will pilot Casa Creed, who will carry 125 pounds, from post 6.

Bass Racing's Kentucky homebred Annapolis will attempt to turn the tables on Casa Creed as one of two Fourstardave aspirants for Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher.

The 4-year-old son of War Front raced to the inside of Casa Creed and fanned 4-to-5 wide around the far turn but could not reel in the winner in deep stretch. He entered the Kelso from a triumphant seasonal debut when defeating stakes-winner Churchtown by a head in the May 4 Opening Verse at Churchill Downs.

Annapolis enjoyed a prosperous sophomore campaign, which included a victory against elders in the Grade 1 Coolmore Turf Mile in October at Keeneland, defeating Grade 1 winner Ivar and 2020 Breeders' Cup Mile winner Order of Australia. He won the Grade 3 Saranac prior to the Coolmore Turf Mile and was second to multiple Grade/Group 1 winner Nations Pride in last year's Grade 1 Saratoga Derby Invitational.

Pletcher expressed hope that Annapolis can work out a more favorable trip when attempting his second Grade 1 conquest.

“We just didn't get away great. We got bottled up in the first turn and Casa Creed got the jump on us,” Pletcher said. “We were able to get to him late. This time, we'd like to get free a little bit sooner.”

Annapolis is full-brother to stakes-placed Nevisian Sunrise and is out of the Grade 1-placed dual surface star My Miss Sophia, whose half-brother Materiality won the Grade 1 Florida Derby in 2015.

Pletcher will also saddle WinStar Farm and Siena Farm's Emmanuel, who enters from two month's rest after winning the Grade 3 Poker on June 10 at Belmont Park and earned a career-high 100 Beyer Speed Figure. The dual surface winning son of More Than Ready was previously a close third in the Grade 3 Dinner Party on May 21 at Pimlico Race Course.

The bay colt sports a consistent 5-3-0-1 record this season, which kicked off with victories in the Grade 3 Tampa Bay in February and the Grade 3 Canadian Turf in March at Gulfstream Park. His only off-the-board effort this year took place when a distant seventh in the Grade 1 Marker's Mark Mile in April at Keeneland.

“He's doing well. We ran him back in three weeks following the Pimlico race, so we wanted to give him a little freshening for this race,” Pletcher said. “He's pretty versatile in his running style so we'll see how the field shapes up.”

Emmanuel initially contested dirt, winning his first two career starts and finishing third in the Grade 1 Blue Grass last April at Keeneland behind Zandon and Smile Happy before capturing his turf debut in last year's Grade 2 Pennine Ridge at Belmont Park.

Emmanuel, a $350,000 purchase at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, is out of the unraced Hard Spun mare Hard Cloth – a half-sister to multiple Group 1 winner Hawkbill and Free Drop Billy, a Grade 1 winner on dirt.

Current meet leading rider Irad Ortiz, Jr. will pilot Annapolis [124 pounds] from post 4, while Emmanuel [121 pounds] will leave from post 1 in rein to Jose Ortiz.

Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse captured nonconsecutive runnings of the Fourstardave with multiple Grade 1-winning distaffer Got Stormy [2019, 2021] and will saddle three contenders for this year's running.

Gary Barber, Adam Wachtel and Peter Deutsch's Ice Chocolat [post 7, Joel Rosario, 118 pounds] brags the most graded stakes form of the Casse bunch and enters from a fourth in the Kelso. The Brazilian-bred Goldikovic 5-year-old was a close second in the Grade 3 Jacques Cartier on May 14 over the all-weather surface at Woodbine Racetrack three starts back and was runner-up in the Grade 2 Kennedy Road on November 27 over the same course.

Gary Barber's My Sea Cottage [post 3, Dylan Davis, 114 pounds] will see a boost in class, entering from a local starter allowance score on July 13 going the Fourstardave distance. The Irish-bred Shalaa 5-year-old has yet to contest a graded stake, but has finished no worse than third in his previous seven starts.

Pantofel Stable, Wachtel Stable and Gary Barber's Full Screen [post 2, Manny Franco, 115 pounds] will race with blinkers off in his second start for Casse, arriving from a fifth in a local one-mile allowance optional claimer on July 20. The Ontario-bred Big Screen dark bay won Woodbine's Elgin last August and Lake Ontario in November for his previous conditioner Julie Belhumeur.

Rounding out the field is the Naipaul Chatterpaul owned and trained So High [post 5, Ruben Silvera, 116 pounds], who races with cheek pieces off following a seventh-place finish in the Grade 1 United Nations on July 22 at Monmouth Park.

The Fourstardave honors the “Sultan of Saratoga” who was best known for winning at least one race at the Spa every year from 1987-1994 in a racing career that featured 100 starts. Trained by Leo O'Brien and owned by Richard Bomze and Bernard Connaughton, Fourstardave was a 10-time winner at Saratoga, with five of those races taking place on the turf, including two editions of the West Point and back-to-back editions of his namesake race in 1990-91, which at the time was run as the Grade 3 Daryl's Joy.

The Fourstardave is carded as Race 9 on Saturday's 11-race program, which also includes the $150,000 Galway in Race 7 and the Grade 2, $200,000 Herb Moelis Saratoga Special in Race 8. First post is 1:10 p.m. Eastern.

Saratoga Live will present live coverage and analysis of the Saratoga Race Course summer meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule/.

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Forte Now On Top Of Breeders’ Cup Classic Rankings

Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable's 3-year-old Forte is the new king of the hill in the latest Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings, while the dominant victory by White Abarrio in last Saturday's Whitney Stakes (G1) earned him second place in the poll. The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings are a weekly rating of the top 10 horses in contention for the $6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1), which will be run Nov. 4 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California.

Forte, winner of the Curlin Florida Derby (G1) and recent winner of the Jim Dandy Stakes (G2), rose from second place last week to the top of the rankings in Week #4. Trained by Todd Pletcher, Forte earned 301 votes, including 16 first-place votes. C Two Racing Stable and Antonio Pagnano's 4-year-old White Abarrio, unranked last week, zoomed to the No. 2 slot with a 6 1/4-length romp in the Whitney. Trained by Rick Dutrow, White Abarrio received 218 votes. By winning the Whitney, White Abarrio also earned an automatic berth into the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In.

Three-year-olds Geaux Rocket Ride, Mage, and Arcangelo fill the next three positions in the rankings. Pin Oak Stud LLC's Geaux Rocket Ride, winner of the TVG.com Haskell Stakes (G1), is third with 212 votes. Mage, who won the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (G1), is fourth with 210 votes, and Blue Rose Farm's Arcangelo, the Belmont Stakes (G1) winner, is fifth with 185 votes.

Godolphin's Cody's Wish, who had been No. 1 in the rankings for the first three weeks, dropped to sixth place (129 votes) following his third-place finish as the odds-on favorite in the Whitney.

Mike Pegram, Karl Watson, and Paul Weitman's Hollywood Gold Cup Stakes (G1) winner Defunded is seventh with 99 votes, and is followed in eighth by Lucky Seven Stable's Rattle N Roll, second in the Stephen Foster Stakes (G1), who received 94 votes.

Joining the top 10 for the first time is Jeff Drown's 4-year-old Zandon, who finished second in the Whitney. Zandon ranks ninth with 66 votes. Bruce Lunsford's Art Collector, winner of the Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes presented by Baccarat (G1), remains in 10th with 64 votes.

The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings are determined by a panel of leading Thoroughbred racing media, horseplayers, and members of the Breeders' Cup Racing Directors/Secretaries Panel. Rankings will be announced each week through Oct. 10. A list of voting members can be found here.

In the Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings, each voter rates horses on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 system in descending order.

Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings – Aug. 8, 2023*

Rank Horse Votes First-Place Votes Previous Week
1 Forte 301 16 2
2 White Abarrio 218 3 0
3 Geaux Rocket Ride 212 3 4
4 Mage 210 1 5
5 Arcangelo 185 1 6
6 Cody's Wish 129 3 1
7 Defunded 99 2 8
8 Rattle N Roll 94 3 7
9 Zandon 66 0 20
10 Art Collector 64 0 10

*Note – The Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings have no bearing on qualification or selection into the Breeders' Cup Classic.

The 2023 Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, which will be run at 1 1/4 miles on the main track at Santa Anita, is limited to 14 starters. The race will be broadcast live on NBC and Peacock.

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Brightwork Outshines Rivals In Adirondack, Keeps Record Perfect In Graded Debut

WSS Racing's Brightwork posted a victorious graded stakes debut to keep her record unblemished through three outings, rallying from off the pace to score an emphatic win in Sunday's $200,000 Adirondack (G3), a 6 1/2-furlong sprint for juvenile fillies at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by John Ortiz, the daughter of Outwork added to a debut maiden victory sprinting 4 1/2 furlongs in April at Keeneland and a last-out triumph when stretching out to six furlongs in the listed Debutante on July 2 at Ellis Park. The Sunday's win marked the first stakes triumph at Saratoga for Ortiz, who won his first Spa race on July 28 in a maiden claiming event with Urgent Fury.

“After she broke her maiden at Keeneland, we were very confident. We already targeted this race specifically,” Ortiz said of Brightwork. “Working backwards from there, we knew the Debutante at (Ellis Park) was going to be our second spot, so we gave her about 60 days in between races. Obviously, there's nothing else to run in during the meet after you break your maiden at Keeneland. So, we played the waiting game. Bill Simon [owner] has been very patient. He's a big supporter of the barn, and obviously it means a lot to come up here for him with his horses. The sky is the limit with this filly.”

Piloted to victory by meet-leading rider Irad Ortiz Jr., Brightwork exited post 3 and rated in midpack as the Brad Cox-trained Here U Come Again was asked by Florent Geroux to lead the field through an opening quarter-mile in :22.01 over the fast main track with Streaming Now, trained by Paulo Lobo, a half-length back in second.

“She broke so good. The outside horse, Paolo Lobo's filly went and the horse inside, Brad Cox's filly, she had speed, too,” said Irad Ortiz. “They went ahead of me and I sat right behind them and my filly relaxed. I waited for my time to go and tip her out in the stretch. No one was close to me. I tipped her out and she was ready. She responded. She deserves all the credit.”

Brightwork tracked in a battle for third between Copper Em to her outside and Magic Cross to her inside down the backstretch through a half-mile in :45.33 before Copper Em dropped out of contention midway through the turn. Brightwork drifted wide exiting the turn and had her sights set on Here U Come Again along the rail and Magic Cross in the center of the course, digging in deep under left-handed encouragement from Ortiz.

Brightwork swept past her rivals with ease at the eighth pole, and while she drifted back inside several paths, kept on well to post the victory by five lengths in a final time of 1:16.85. A stubborn Here U Come Again fought on bravely to hold onto place honors by 3 3/4 lengths over Streaming Now with a tiring Magic Cross in fourth. Princess Indy, Princesa Celina, Becky's Joker, and Copper Em completed the order of finish. Cara's Time and Saratoga Secret were scratched.

John Ortiz, who started his first horse in 2016, enjoyed the fourth graded score of his career. He praised the maturity of Brightwork and said her calm demeanor helps her excel on the racetrack.

“She blows me away every time. Not only in the mornings, but in the afternoons. It magnifies what I see in the mornings,” he said. “She comes out of every race with such class. We were walking her up here and she had a lip shank and I told my brother [and assistant trainer Daniel Ortiz] to take it off. She doesn't need that. She was cool and collected and very professional.”

Bill Simon of WSS Racing spoke highly of John Ortiz's skills, as well as his character.

“Racing is really interesting. The guys who keep getting [good] horses are wonderful trainers, we know they are. We could put our horses with them, but I think this sport needs good encouragement for good, young people if we want to sustain it,” said Simon. “Johnny is an incredibly intuitive horseman, a wonderful family guy, and we're so excited about the opportunity to help and encourage them and give them support where we can.”

Ortiz added that the $300,000 Spinaway (G1) sprinting seven furlongs on September 3 at the Spa could serve as a steppingstone to longer two-turn races down the road with an eye to the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) in November at Santa Anita Park.

“Eventually, we're going to try her two turns, but we're going to head to the next spot here in Saratoga,” he continued. “I'm feeling confident for that race right now. [The long-term goal] is the Breeders' Cup. We're looking for that purple saddle towel.”

Bred in Kentucky by Wynnstay and H. Allen Poindexter, Brightwork was produced by the Malibu Moon mare Clarendon Fancy. She banked $110,000 in victory. The $95,000 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale purchase returned $12.20 on a $2 win ticket.

Florent Geroux said he inherited the lead aboard Here U Come Again when no one else showed speed in the first 100 yards from the gate.

“Those young horses like this, you need to ride them the way it comes up. When you break good like this, you try to make sure she doesn't have dirt kicked in her face,” said Geroux. “We would've been content sitting second or third but that's the card I had been dealt, so I just played it by ear.”

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Veteran Horseman Kruljac Strikes Gold With Cal-Bred Star The Chose Vron

Eric Kruljac may not be a household name. In fact, he may not make many race fans' most-recognizable-trainers list. But if the star of his barn, California-bred The Chosen Vron, continues to win races like he did in the Bing Crosby (G1) July 29 at Del Mar, that will all change.

The veteran trainer with the perpetual smile turned 70 in February and his level of experience in horseracing is second to none. He grew up on a California ranch between Carmel and Salinas and spent many a day of his youth hanging out in the barn of his father's trainer, Hall of Famer Buster Millerick.

When a broken ankle ended a promising football career in college, he started a successful private detective business. It was not like the private detectives you see on TV.

“No, far less glamorous,” Kruljac said. “When an insurance adjuster feels a certain claimant is faking his injuries or cheating the system, they'll hire an investigator to go out and surveil the person. You take film that shows the person doing all sorts of things, playing football or baseball. We got 400 feet of film of a guy that was loading 125 pound bales of hay onto a truck hours after he left his doctor in a wheelchair wearing a neck brace.”

As a side, Kruljac bought and sold racehorses and his brother trained them. This went on for about 16 years until his brother decided to quit training. Kruljac, in turn, decided to quit the private detective business and took up training full time.

“I gave up the money to be a broke horseman,” he said with a smile. “Investigating workman comp claims provided me with the money to buy broodmares. When my brother quit training, I decided to train by myself and it's been that way for 30 years.

“There was no pressure because I had partnerships that I led,” Kruljac continued. “When I started training, the owners and partners went along with it. I became a seven days a week guy.”

Kruljac started with a small string at Turf Paradise in Phoenix in the winters, shifting to California the rest of the year. In 2008, he moved to the Golden State full time.

His first taste of Grade 1 success came in 2005 when his mare Leave Me Alone won the Test (G1) at Saratoga. Kruljac bought her for $35,000 at a sale not far from Del Mar.

“I had hooked up with a lawyer who had just made a killing on a big lawsuit,” Kruljac recalls. “He wanted to invest in horses.

“There was a sale out by Horse Park on the other side of the freeway east of Del Mar,” Kruljac continued. “I didn't think he'd be interested because he wanted Kentucky stock, but when we met at the races later I told him I had been at this little Cal-bred sale. He asked, 'Did you see anything you like?' and I told him there was this filly that is the most perfect, athletic thing I had ever seen but she's crazy and he said, 'Why don't you buy her for me.'”

Kruljac trained Leave Me Alone until 2006 when she was retired with $653,330 in earnings. The following year, Summer Wind Farm paid $1 million for the California-bred daughter of Bold Badgett in foal to A.P. Indy at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale.

Fast forward to 2023 and Kruljac is back in the catbird seat, training prospective Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) contender The Chosen Vron.

“He's doing great,” Kruljac said of the 5-year-old Vronksy gelding he co-owns with Sondereker Racing LLC, Robert S. Fetkin, and Richard Thornburgh. “He got three easy days (after the Bing Crosby) and we went back to the track yesterday (Friday) and jogged a mile. We did the same thing this (Saturday) morning. We'll give him a couple of easy weeks and then put a plan together.”

Overall, the ultra-consistent The Chosen Vron has a 13-1-2 record from 17 career starts and $1,032,678 in lifetime earnings.

Meanwhile, Kruljac has not lost his interest in breeding.

“I have pieces of five mares,” Kruljac said. “They're all up at Legacy Ranch and they're all going to Clubhouse Ride. Breeding is in my blood.”

Said the grandson of a Hall of Fame cattle breeder.

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