Maker: United Nations Winner Therapist, Third Red Knight Will Point To ‘Win And You’re In’ Kentucky Turf Cup

Therapist, the 8-year-old winner of Saturday's Grade 1 United Nations at Monmouth Park, will be pointed for Kentucky Downs' $1.7 million, Grade 2 FanDuel Kentucky Turf Cup, trainer Mike Maker said. So will his 9-year-old stablemate Red Knight, the United Nations third-place finisher who won the Kentucky Turf Cup last year.

U.N. runner-up Catnip is likely for Kentucky Downs' $2 million Mint Millions (G3) at a mile, trainer Michael Stidham said.

Money talks, and Maker long has been fluent in Kentucky Downs, which offers among the most lucrative purses in the world. Last year he won a record 12 races while his record 66 starters ran out more than $2.3 million in purses en route to a record seventh meet title.

Maker said Monday that he's targeting the 1 1/2-mile FanDuel Kentucky Turf Cup — a race the trainer has won a record five times since 2015 — for both Therapist and Red Knight.

“He finished strong, and I loved his gallop-out,” Maker said of Therapist. “Red Knight would appreciate a faster pace, and he had a pretty wide trip as well. But both horses ran very well.”

A significant chunk of Kentucky Downs' stakes purses comes from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF) restricted to registered Kentucky-breds. Therapist and Red Knight were both born in New York. Maker doesn't look at the money left on the table by racing a non-Kentucky-bred at Kentucky Downs. Rather, he looks at the money left on the table by not running a horse at Kentucky Downs, with the track's base stakes purses by themselves among the highest in the world.

The FanDuel Kentucky Turf Cup's $1.7 million pot includes $400,000 in KTDF. Even so, the stakes' $1.3 million base purse forms the most lucrative stakes for which any turf horse in America can run outside the Breeders' Cup. A Kentucky-bred winner will earn more than $1 million; a non-Kentucky-bred winner will earn about $800,000.

On top of it, the winner gets a fees-paid spot in the $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf Nov. 4 at Santa Anita as part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series program.

Besides Red Knight winning last year's Kentucky Turf Cup, Maker's huge 2022 meet included another New York-bred, Somelikeithotbrown, winning the Mint Million Mile. That Grade 3 stakes has been renamed The Mint Millions, reflecting its new $2 million purse that features a $1 million base purse and $1 million in KTDF.

Therapist, the 12-1 fifth choice ridden by Hall of Famer Javier Castellano in the 1 3/8-mile United Nations' field of nine, closed from seventh to wear down the forwardly placed Catnip to prevail by 1 1/2 lengths. Red Knight, who two races earlier won Belmont's Grade 1 Man o' War, also closed well to finish another three-quarters of a length back in third.

Maker claimed Therapist for $50,000 in January for prominent New York owner Michael Dubb. The gelded son of the New York stallion Freud had raced farther than 1 1/16 miles only once in 37 prior starts, finishing fourth in a 1 1/8-mile New York-bred stakes in 2019.

“This is Mike Maker's sweet spot,” Dubb said, referring to distance racing. “When we got him, the horse hadn't been racing this long, and I asked Mike why he wanted to go this long. He said, 'I see it in the breeding.'”

Maker has made a career out of claiming horses and turning them into stakes-winners. Therapist is his seventh former claiming horse to win a Grade 1 race; his first was $35,000 claim Furthest Land, who a year later won the 2009 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile over what was then Santa Anita's synthetic surface. Therapist is Maker's 16th individual horse to win a Grade 1.

Therapist, now a 13-time winner, ran at Kentucky Downs last year, finishing fourth in an allowance race.

Stidham said the logical objective for Catnip is Kentucky Downs' $2 million Mint Millions at a mile. Catnip had the lead in mid-stretch of the United Nations but couldn't hold off Therapist.

“We felt that probably the mile and a half over that course might be a little too far based on Saturday,” Stidham said Sunday. “We thought he ran well, but with the course configuration at Kentucky Downs and a mile and a half, that might be a little outside of his best distance.”

With the Mint Millions being Kentucky Downs' richest of 11 stakes worth at least $1 million for Kentucky-breds, “I like everything about it,” Stidham said cheerfully, adding, “now we've just got to win.”

While Catnip also is nominated to the 1 1/4-mile Arlington Million (G1) at Colonial Downs on Aug. 12, “right now, if you put a gun to my head, I'd say we'd be running at Kentucky Downs,” the trainer said.

The Kentucky-bred Catnip is a half-brother to Princess Grace, who won the 2021 Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf (G3) and was a narrow second in the stakes last year. Like Catnip, Stidham trained Princess Grace and their mother, Masquerade, for owners Susan and John Moore. Catnip is a son of Kitten's Joy, while Princess Grace was sired by Japanese-bred Karakontie, the 2014 Breeders' Cup Mile winner.

“The part Catnip reminds me of Princess Grace is just like Masquerade, the mother,” Stidham said. “They all just have a really big heart. They go out there and run hard every time.”

John O'Meara's Roses for Debra, winner of Saturday's Grade 3, $200,000 Caress Stakes at 5 1/2 furlongs on turf for older fillies and mares at Saratoga, could run in Kentucky Downs $1 million, Grade 2 AGS Ladies Sprint on Sept. 9.

Trainer Christophe Clement, who is 3 for 3 with Roses for Debra, listed the 6 1/2-furlong Kentucky Downs stakes among the options for the 4-year-old filly's next start. By the Kentucky stallion Liam's Map but foaled in Pennsylvania, Roses for Debra would race for the Ladies Sprint's $600,000 base purse, still far more than the other options Clement mentioned to the Saratoga media team. Those are the $150,000 Start N Fancy at 5 1/2 furlongs on Aug. 25 at Saratoga and the Grade 2, $300,000 Presque Isle Downs Masters at 6 1/2 furlongs Sept. 18. The filly is 4 for 4 at six or 6 1/2 furlongs on synthetic and turf.

“We've got a lot of options,” said Clement, who won the 2017 Kentucky Downs Ladies Sprint with Claiborne Farm and Adele Dilschneider's Lull.

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‘Still In Top-Class Form’: Champion Nest Returns From Layoff To Score Shuvee Win

Reigning champion 3-year-old filly Nest came back from a nearly nine-month layoff with aplomb to score in Sunday's $200,000 Shuvee (G2) for trainer Todd Pletcher, turning back the challenge of multiple Grade 1 winner Clairiere to capture the 1 1/8-mile test for older fillies and mares at Saratoga.

Owned by Repole Stable, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, and Michael House, the 4-year-old daughter of Curlin stalked and pounced to victory under Saratoga's current meet-leading rider Irad Ortiz Jr. to earn the sixth graded score of her career and third at Saratoga, adding to Grade 1 triumphs last year in the Coaching Club American Oaks and Alabama to boast a perfect 3-for-3 record at the Spa.

“More than worth the wait,” said Mike Repole, who had to wait a bit longer than planned for Nest's return after she missed the Ogden Phipps (G1) in June at Belmont Park. “At the end of the day, you want a horse like this best for the last four races of the year, not the first four. She had a huge 3-year-old campaign. We wanted to get her back in June on Belmont Day, but Todd just thought she needed a little bit more time.

“Going a mile and an eighth after eight, nine months off against a horse like Clairiere, that was real impressive,” Repole continued. “They could have gone around two more times, she wasn't going to be passed. Todd did an amazing job, give him credit. Irad is just Irad. No one better than him right now.”

Nest emerged from post 2 in the compact four-horse field and led to the first turn before Ortiz took hold and let the Kendrick Carmouche-piloted Pistol Liz Ablazen coast up the rail and take command through an opening quarter-mile in :24.82 over the fast main track while the Joel Rosario-piloted Clairiere was on even terms with Skratch Kat at the rear of the field.

“I was in a perfect position from the first turn and after that just sit on her,” said Ortiz. “She's waiting for me. I was ready to go by the half-mile. If he [Rosario] gets close to me, maybe I go with him, because it was like a match race.”

The running order remained unchanged down the backstretch with the half-mile in :49.87 before Ortiz roused Nest for more approaching the turn and opted for the outside path around Pistol Liz Ablazen to make her bid for the lead. The two matched strides midway through the turn before Nest swept past with ease and opened a one-length advantage on the advancing Clairiere, who followed her run to the top of the lane.

Clairiere attempted to move up to the inside of Nest before the latter ducked down inside for the drive to the wire with an all-out Skratch Kat and a tiring Pistol Liz Ablazen left in their wake. Clairiere dug in under urging from Joel Rosario to make one final surge outside of Nest in the final sixteenth, but Nest had plenty left in the final strides to cross the wire first in a final time of 1:50.72.

Clairiere finished 10 lengths ahead of Skratch Kat with Pistol Liz Ablazen completing the order of finish.

Pletcher, who tied fellow Hall of Famer Allen Jerkens' record five Shuvee wins, said Nest's trip was influenced by the pace set by Pistol Liz Ablazen, who inherited the role of pacesetter after the defection of the often-prominent Grade 1 winner Played Hard earlier this week for trainer Phil Bauer.

“I'm super proud of the filly. She's all class and it's nice to see her come back and get back on track. We got a bit of a delayed start, but she showed she's still in top-class form,” Pletcher said. “I think the first half-mile was critical. We wanted her to get some position. We thought Kendrick would likely be the pacesetter, but he waited a little while to go. Irad held his position until she cleared him and then got into that comfortable rhythm. From that point, it was just seeing where and when Clairiere was going to make her move.”

Ortiz the pilot in all but one of Nest's career starts, said his mount ran strongly through the final quarter-mile.

“She finished good. She finished great,” said Ortiz. “She finished great all the way to the wire. I don't hit her. Joel's filly is a nice filly, with respect. I mean I don't like to talk about that but they are two nice fillies. So, we got lucky we got the trophy today and we are happy, everyone is enjoying the win.”

In addition to her Grade 1 triumphs at Saratoga, Nest's championship season included an 8 1/4-length romp in the Ashland (G1) at Keeneland and another open-lengths score in the Beldame (G2) at Belmont at the Big A, as well as gutsy runner-up efforts in the Kentucky Oaks (G1) and Belmont Stakes (G1) against males. She completed her year with a fourth-place effort as the favorite in the Breeders' Cup Distaff )G1) in November at Keeneland.

Pletcher added the $500,000 Personal Ensign (G1) on August 25 at the Spa could serve as the next stepping stone toward another year-end trip to the Breeders' Cup Distaff at Santa Anita Park.

“We'd like to run back in the Personal Ensign if we think that's enough time,” said Pletcher. “The ultimate decision will be what we do for a prep for the Breeders' Cup. Do we go back to New York like we did last year or possibly the Spinster at Keeneland? Obviously, we have to suss out how she comes out of it. My initial assessment is she came back with pretty good energy.”

Bred in Kentucky by Ashview Farm and Colts Neck Stables, Nest is out of the A.P. Indy mare Marion Ravenwood. She banked $110,000 in victory and improved her lifetime record to 8-2-1 from 12 starts.

Nest returned $3.70 for a $2 win ticket as the 4-5 post-time second choice.

Steve Asmussen, trainer of Clairiere, said the lukewarm fractions did not help that daughter of Curlin, who entered from back-to-back Grade 1 triumphs in the Apple Blossom at Oaklawn and Ogden Phipps at Belmont.

“She's a great mare. Just getting caught up in these races that have zero pace in them,” Asmussen said. “She just needed to do more early and get involved.”

Third-place finisher Skratch Kat earned the first black type of her career, giving trainer Phil Bauer slight consolation after Played Hard spiked a fever and was unable to make the race.

“A little glimmer of light there at the end of the story,” said Bauer. “That was fun. I'm glad it worked out and we got the filly some black type. Usually, I'd be worried with a 1:14 third quarter with this filly, but you could tell she had something left in the tank. Mission accomplished for that filly.”

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The Week in Review: How was this Colt 12-1 in the Haskell?

In hindsight, the victory by Geaux Rocket Ride in Saturday's GI Haskell S. was not at all difficult to predict. The real puzzler is how this top-tier Candy Ride (Arg) colt was let go at 12-1 in the betting.

A pari-mutuel post-mortem points to a “perfect storm” anchored by two factors:

The 2-for-2 'TDN Rising Star' Arabian Knight (Uncle Mo), the highly hyped sophomore from last winter, absorbed overzealous 11-10 favoritism despite not having raced in six months, with the Bob Baffert training factor (nine Haskell wins) contributing mightily to the colt's top-heavy price.

Monmouth Park's premier race also included the GI Kentucky Derby winner Mage (Good Magic). His status as a “headline horse,” though, was tempered to 4.3-1 in the betting, largely because his connections had telegraphed for weeks in advance that the Haskell would be used as a stepping stone to the Aug. 26 GI Travers S. at Saratoga.

But beyond those two favorites, it's hard to imagine why three other horses received more wagering support in the Haskell than Geaux Rocket Ride, who up until early April had been one of the West Coast's top Triple Crown threats before a fever on the morning of the GI Santa Anita Derby knocked him out of contention for the Classics.

Maybe you could figure on 'TDN Rising Star' Tapit Trice (Tapit), taking his share of the Haskell action at 4.8-1 off a third-place try in the GI Belmont S. Not so easy to fathom was the 4.9-1 support thrown to Salute the Stars (Candy Ride {Arg}) off his neck win over the track in the not-very-deep Pegasus S., or the 8-1 price on another 'TDN Rising Star,' Extra Anejo (Into Mischief), who entered the Haskell off an Ellis Park allowance romp over four foes.

Monmouth bettors must have also missed the memo on the decades-in-the-making training reputation of Hall-of-Famer Richard Mandella, who is known as a conditioner who doesn't ship horses cross-country for major races unless he believes he has an outsized chance of winning. Mandella had only started one previous colt in the Haskell, which was 23 years ago when he won the race with Dixie Union.

Jockey Mike Smith was in from Del Mar to pilot Geaux Rocket Ride for the first time, aiming for his fourth Haskell win. His last victory in that stakes was in 2020 aboard Authentic, who was 3-5 against a field of six and had secured an easy lead through tepid fractions. Home free by three lengths at the eighth pole, Authentic wilted badly in the final furlong before being reawakened by a desperate flurry of right-handed stick work from Smith to salvage a nose victory.

On Saturday, despite being aboard a 12-1 shot, Smith deftly rode Geaux Rocket Ride like the colt deserved to be odds-on. Next time out, he will be.

It's also conceivable that Geaux Rocket Ride could use the Haskell as a springboard to winning the GI Breeders' Cup Classic and being named Horse of the Year and/or champion 3-year-old colt, like Authentic did three years ago.

Geaux Rocket Ride, who started his career as a speed-centric sort but has adeptly transitioned into dangerous stalking colt, came out cleanly from the inside stall. Arabian Knight broke quicker from post eight, and it was evident right from the outset that Smith wanted no part of fighting for the lead. Arabian Knight hooked up with–and then backed off from–the 61-1 Awesome Strong (Awesome Slew), who cemented his status as a sacrificial pacemaker before the field hit the first turn.

Smith also wasn't too keen on getting bogged down on the rail. In two-turn dirt races, it's often his method of operation to try and get to the outside and establish trouble-free positioning before the field straightens away on the backstretch, even if it means giving up ground. He let Geaux Rocket Ride settle in about the four path through the turn, then was content to be parked six deep and about three lengths behind the five-wide Arabian Knight, whose jockey, John Velazquez, was also avoiding the inside fence like it was strung with barbed wire.

Arabian Knight was toying with Awesome Strong at that point, and Velazquez decided to seize the lead after an up-tempo opening quarter in :22.80 before slowing down the second and third fractions to :24.31 and :24.54.

The field started to bunch approaching the far turn, and while it's not fair to say that the triple-teaming of Awesome Strong, Salute the Stars, and the 37-1 Howgreatisnate (Speightster) were the cause of Arabian Knight's unraveling, they all contributed pesky, mid-race pace pressure at the same time Geaux Rocket Ride was winding up for a confrontation three-eighths from home.

It took Geaux Rocket Ride a full furlong to crack a stubborn Arabian Knight at the quarter pole. But by that time, the Derby winner had them both within his striking sights and was cresting toward top momentum.

Looking like the horse to beat, Mage snatched the lead off the turn, but only for a brief instant. Geaux Rocket Ride needed only one left-handed crack of the crop to re-assert his presence, and while the small-but-scrappy Mage never quit, the two months off since his third-place try in the GI Preakness S. began to show.

Ridden out while extending his margin through the stretch with every stride, the lankier Geaux Rocket Ride strode home to win by 1 3/4 lengths through a final quarter timed in :25.42 and a last eighth clocked in :12 45.

The Pin Oak Stud colorbearer's winning time of 1:49.52 for nine furlongs translated to a 100 Beyer Speed Figure.

The Haskell yielded two key takeaways for the Travers: 1) Geaux Rocket Ride won't contest it. Not a surprise considering the conditioner–another cross country trip would be “pushing” it, as per Mandella, who was non-committal about the colt's next start; 2) Mage will be a tighter fighter in a month with a very useful runner-up try under his belt and an extra furlong to work with.

Geaux Rocket Ride got a late start this season with respect to the Triple Crown trail. He debuted with a 92 Beyer in 5 3/4-length six-furlong shellacking at Santa Anita Jan. 29, then earned a 96 when second and transitioning to two turns and against winners for the first time in the Mar. 4 GII San Felipe S.

Somewhat surprisingly, he was narrowly favored at 2.7-1 in that 1 1/16-miles stakes over the more experienced winner, Practical Move (Practical Joke). Despite not winning, Geaux Rocket Ride actually uncorked the more powerful performance, forcing a legit pace and finishing with purpose in one of the more impressive prep-race defeats on the 2023 Derby trail.

That positive glow was enough to vault Geaux Rocket Ride all the way to fourth in TDN's Derby Top 12 at the time. In the Mar 14 edition of those rankings, I wrote that such a “combination of raw, front-end torque matched with still-developing staying power is an attribute you don't see often in second-time-starters.”

Because of the fever and missed start in the Santa Anita Derby, Geaux Rocket Ride didn't make start number three until the June 4 Affirmed S. at Santa Anita, which he won with a 90 Beyer after stalking three wide on both turns.

Seven weeks later, Mandella was in the Haskell winner's circle, telling FanDuel TV's Caton Bredar in his typically understated way how half a year ago, he wasn't quite sure what type of prospect he had.

“He didn't train exceptional going into his first race. He trained just good enough to give us hope. But when he left the gate the first time with his ears back and fight on his mind, you could just see [the talent] was there.”

Asked how confident he was about his 12-1 shot's chances during the running of the Haskell, Mandella put it this way:

“Everything looked great, other than I looked at [Arabian Knight] on the far turn and the rider was sitting there with a heck of a hold. And I thought, 'Oh, boy, when he turns him loose…'

“But,” Mandella said, his wry smile evident in his voice, “The Rocket turned it loose.”

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Mandella Rules Out Travers; Mulling Options with Geaux Rocket Ride

Pin Oak Stud's Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) exited his victory in the GI TVG.com Haskell S. in good order, trainer Richard Mandella reported Sunday. The victory earned the lightly raced colt an automatic berth in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic and Mandella said he has several routes to consider to get to that Nov. 4 race at Santa Anita.

The Sept. 23 GI Pennsylvania Derby at Parx, the Sept. 2 GI Pacific Classic at Del Mar and the Sept. 30 GI Awesome Again S. at Santa Anita are all on the table. While Geaux Rocket Ride would be facing just 3-year-olds at Parx, he would face older horses in both California options.

“I'll think about all of those races and about running against older horses,” Mandella said.

Mandella has ruled out another trip east for the Aug. 26 GI Travers S. at Saratoga.

“I think it's too much to think about, taking him to Saratoga,” Mandella said. “He's young and he's not raced very much and we've pushed him along to get to this point. I don't like the idea of bringing him to Monmouth, bringing him back to California, and then coming back for the Travers. We pushed him to this point and we don't want to keep pushing. The Travers doesn't seem like the right thing to do.”

A debut winner at Santa Anita in January, Geaux Rocket Ride was second in the Mar. 4 GII San Felipe S., but was knocked off the Triple Crown trail when a fever caused him to miss the GI Santa Anita Derby. He returned with a win in the June 4 Affirmed S. and was earning his first graded score in the Haskell.

Asked if having the Breeders' Cup at his home track of Santa Anita would give Geaux Rocket Ride an advantage in November, Mandella said, “It does if you're fast enough. We think he's fast enough and so far he's passed every test. But that's another step up to get to the Classic and it's against older horses so we'll just have to wait and see if he leads us there.”

Geaux Rocket Ride and the Bob Baffert-trained Arabian Knight (Uncle Mo), the third-place Haskell finisher, were scheduled to ship back to Southern California Tuesday.

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