‘So Much Luck Involved’: So Far, So Good As Golden Pal Aims For Breeders’ Cup Three-Peat

Trainer Wesley Ward is leaving nothing to chance this week as he prepares Golden Pal for his career finale in Saturday's Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint with what could be a record-tying third victory in the World Championships. Rather than getting him out of the track at Keeneland as soon as it opens in morning, Ward is committed to having him take to the track for his daily exercise at the very end of training hours.

“I like to gallop him really, really late when no one's on the track,” Ward said Tuesday. “He's very, very relaxed when no one's out there when he's got the track to himself, as most horses are. You take him up there when horses are breezing and lots of gallopers, he kind of wants to go. In the next few days we're going to take him real, real late when essentially he'll be the only one galloping out there.”

Ward has often described the 4-year-old son of Uncle Mo as the best horse he has trained. Golden Pal, owned by the Coolmore partnership of Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith, Mrs. John Magnier and Westerberg, is 8-2-0 in 12 career starts. He snagged his first Breeders' Cup victory in the 2020 Juvenile Turf Sprint at Keeneland. Last year, he added the Turf Sprint to his resume. Should he repeat Saturday, he will join Hall of Famers Goldikova and Beholder as the only horses with three victories in the World Championships.

Breeders' Cup week started well for Ward when Golden Pal and jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. drew post eight in the field of 14 going 5 ½ furlongs.

“I was very happy with his post,” Ward said. “Post eight, we're out there a ways to where he can break and this way Irad will get a sense of what he wants to do. If he breaks as sharp as he usually does, he can kind of ease over to the rail. Or, if somebody catches a flyer and breaks like him Irad will be able to ride his race from there. I was really happy with his post.”

Golden Pal has raced at six tracks during his career and is unbeaten in four starts at Keeneland, where Ward's stable is based. Ward said Golden Pal is doing well.

“We're ready to roll,” Ward said. “He's been pointing for this since last year's race. This is a race that I asked Michael Tabor right after the horse crossed the finish line, we're heading to the winner's circle, if we could get one more year. Before we got on camera, I kind of wanted to pin him down a little bit. He didn't see why not. So here we are today.”

Golden Pal has won five of his last six starts. The only blemish this year was in June in the King's Stand at Royal Ascot. Typically, quick out of the gate, Golden Pal missed the break because Ortiz was distracted by a horse acting up behind the gate. It left him 0-for-3 tries in high-profile stakes in England, where Ward has a strong record of success.

“Just bad luck. It just goes to show you that in racing there's so much luck involved that everything has to go right,” Ward said. “Unfortunately, this year when we went and that was going to be very big for him as a stallion, is if he could do it at Ascot in front of all the European breeders. I've never had anything like that happen to me and all these 30-plus years of training, Irad and I walked the course with Steve Cauthen. Steve gave him all the insights of Ascot Racecourse and The King's Stand and everything that happens being a rider that this was brand new to him running there.

“I told him, 'Look, you've got to be ready, almost like the Kentucky Derby. Like when those horses are in the gate the starter just pushes it, no matter if it's a horse rearing up.' What I've seen so many times that I've been over. It wouldn't happen in the States, the way that the starter runs the course over there. So there was an unruly 99-1 shot in the back of the gate and Irad was looking back. What he did not know is that, the starter, at any time, can deem the horse out and just push the button and go. As Irad was looking completely back the starter pushed the button, ruled the horse as scratched. All the other riders know the rules and they were ready and Irad wasn't. He almost fell off the horse, we broke dead last and that was it.”

The post ‘So Much Luck Involved’: So Far, So Good As Golden Pal Aims For Breeders’ Cup Three-Peat appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents The News Minute: Post Position Post-Mortem

“Good draw. We would've been happy with any draw,” Flightline's trainer John Sadler said after post positions were assigned for the $6-million Breeders' Cup Classic and the 13 other championship races to be contested at Keeneland racecourse in Lexington, Ky., on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4-5.

Flightline drew the No. 4 post and was made the 3-5 morning line favorite in the Grade 1 Classic run at 1 1/4 miles.

“We think at a mile and a quarter you have a good run into the turn to get your position so for him it's just fine,” Sadler added.

But a number of the Breeders' Cup races do not have a long run to the turn, and in today's Breeders' Cup News Minute Ray Paulick outlines some of those challenges, including the G1 Dirt Mile and the two G1 dirt races for 2-year-olds on Friday, the Juvenile and Juvenile Fillies, run at 1 1/16 miles. All three of those races also have a shorter stretch run, with the finish line at the sixteenth pole. Outside posts are disadvantageous in those three dirt races, as well as one-mile turf contests.

Watch today's News Minute, below.

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‘I Tell Her That I Love Her Before And After Every Race’: Moira, Devoted Groom Take On World Championships

Whenever the doting groom and the bay filly are together, time seems to always stand still.

It's a scene that plays out nearly every evening at Barn 28 on the Woodbine backstretch, the one that starts with Peter Lopez pulling into trainer Kevin Attard's barn and then listening for the familiar sound emanating from the shed row.

The multiple stakes winner, the one set to take the Breeders' Cup stage, knows he is here for her.

“Every night, around 7:30, I come to take Moira to the grass outside of the barn and she is so happy to see me,” said Lopez. “I can tell she is waiting for me. But I am just as happy to see her. Whenever I come to see her at that time, she pokes her head out of her stall and nickers.”

Lopez then gently guides the daughter of Ghostzapper to a patch of grass just a stone's throw from her stall, where the two will stand for the next 30 minutes or so.

But there are times, more often than not, when the pair is out there longer.

One look from this year's Queen's Plate winner is enough to make Lopez stay put, and happily so.

“All she wants to do is eat her grass. As much as she can. Sometimes, she doesn't want to go back in her stall. I'll say, 'Okay, Moira, it's time to go back now.' She'll walk about two yards and look at me as if she's saying, 'No, I don't walk to go in yet. Let's stay a bit longer.' When she gives me that look, I just can't say no to her. I could stay out there all night with her. She loves me and I love her. When I go to the barn at night, she's looking for me and I can't wait to see her so we can spend some time together, maybe about half an hour to 45 minutes. I love it. When she lowers her head and eats the grass, she's so happy. I love to see that because I know she's happy.”

Moira, bred in Ontario by Adena Springs, has made plenty of others happy over her six-race career, including her connections and the legion of fans she has attracted along the way.

Owned by X-Men Racing, Madaket Stables and SF Racing, Moira was a $150,000 yearling purchase by X-Men's Donato Lanni from Hidden Brook's consignment to the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

She won her debut last October when she took the Princess Elizabeth Stakes at Woodbine by 4 ¼ lengths and closed the curtain on her rookie season with a solid second in the Mazarine Stakes. She launched her 3-year-old campaign in June with a gutsy head victory in the Stella Artois Fury Stakes, prior to an outstanding 10 ¾-length triumph in the Woodbine Oaks Presented by Budweiser on July 24.

The victory was even more impressive considering what happened prior to Moira reaching the racetrack when she had to have her hind shoes removed after she acted up in the walking ring, nearly twisting both shoes off her feet.

“We're trying to work on her antics,” Attard noted in the lead-up to the Queen's Plate. “She always schools pretty decently. Obviously on race day, it is a bit of a different story.”

Just as it is on the Woodbine backstretch.

“She does have two personalities,” offered Lopez. “She can get a little excited after the races, like in the winner's circle, but in the barn, she's very quiet. She's one of the quietest horses in the barn. When you are walking her, she puts her head down and you can lead her to where she needs to be, and she doesn't do a thing. She's a sweetheart.”

Three weeks after her mighty Oaks performance, Moira loaded in the gate for the 163rd running of the Queen's Plate. Sent on her way as the 9-5 second choice in the betting, Moira was positioned mid-pack along the backstretch in the 1 ¼-mile classic before gliding up on the far turn and breezing past her rivals en route to a seven-length score. She also set a track record for the distance of 2:01.48 on the Tapeta.

“The only race I was actually very nervous was the Plate,” recalled Lopez of the performance that gave Attard his first victory in the “Gallop for the Guineas.” “The other races, I was okay. When she was coming down the stretch in the Plate, I think that was the only race where I was screaming. After the race, I said, 'I love you.' She gives her heart every time and when I watch her, she makes me smile. I tell her that I love her before and after every race.”

A troubled trip in the Grade 1 E.P. Taylor Stakes at Woodbine on October 8 resulted in Moira being demoted from second to seventh.

Now, Moira will test her mettle against a tough group in the $2 million Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf, traversing two turns in the 1 3/16-mile Grade 1 event on Saturday at Keeneland.

Lopez knows she'll be ready for the challenge.

“I love everything about her, to be honest. The way she carries herself, the way she competes… I just love everything about her. She is always a force when she runs, and I know that she will give it her all at the Breeders' Cup.”

“You can see the bond the two of them share,” Attard shared. “I wish people could see that, the love and care the grooms have for the horses. The work they put in is one thing, but the genuine love they have for the horses is amazing.”

In the days before she departed for her date in the Filly & Mare Turf, Moira was quietly standing on the green grass of home, head down, enjoying the moments spent with her devoted companion.

Time is of no concern for those when it comes to the queen of the Attard barn, whether it's grazing or doing anything else for that matter.

“Of course she knows that she's special,” said Lopez with a smile. “She's spoiled, and she loves it too.”

Her groom is always happy to oblige.

“I love her. To be honest, I love her. I don't know any other way to say it, but I know that's how I feel.”

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Owner-Breeder Predicts Dreamloper To Bow Out With A Bang At Breeders’ Cup

Dreamloper's owner-breeder Olivia Hoare has admitted to being overcome with emotion ahead of a trip of a lifetime to the Breeders' Cup to see her dual Group 1-winning homebred bow out from racing on the biggest stage of all.

Trained by Ed Walker to win two top-flight races at ParisLongchamp this season, Dreamloper (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) is likely to race for the final time in the GI Breeders' Cup Mile given the 5-year-old is entered up in the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale next week.

The decision to allow Dreamloper to go under the hammer after Saturday's race, for which she is as short as 6-1 with most firms, was one of the most difficult ones Hoare has ever faced, according to the enthusiastic owner.

However, she will retain a major interest in the family and reports Dreamloper's dam Livia's Dream (Ire) to be in foal to Lope De Vega (Ire), meaning a full-sibling is expected on the ground in the spring.

Hoare, who is in her mid-70s, said, “I'm excited and terrified at the same time. I get very nervous when she races. We watched the draw for the Breeders' Cup Mile the other night and, as the outside stalls had been filled by the time her name was called out, I grew in confidence.”

She added, “It's been incredibly exciting following Dreamloper. The highlights were unquestionably the two races in Paris this summer. I was there with my step grandchildren and step granddaughter and the children could not believe that the adults were jumping up and down and screaming their heads off. They were greatly entertained. That was tremendously exciting.”

The Dreamloper story began in 2010 when Hoare purchased her dam, Livia's Dream, from Luke Lillingston's Mount Coote Stud at Book 1 at Tattersalls for 45,000gns.

Lillingston, who boards many of Hoare's mares and has acted as an agent on behalf of the Roscommon native for over a decade, was not present when she viewed the then diminutive yearling by Teofilo (Ire).

However, Hoare remembers how Lillingston's father provided her with some inspiration ahead of the sale, and she hasn't looked back since.

She recalled, “Dreamloper always had a remarkable walk. I'm not very good at judging foals but, when she was a yearling, I said, 'you've got your mother's walk and, if you have her gumption, you'll be fine.'

“I love Lope De Vega. I went with Luke, who looks after a lot of my mares, to see a few stallions and thought he was the business down at Ballylinch Stud. With her mother's determination and her father's talent, I expected things from her.”

Hoare added, “Luke is also my agent and I went out of politeness to see his horses at Tattersalls in 2010. He would never tell me anything about the offerings of Mount Coote Stud and is very professional with things like that.

“But when he was on his lunch break, I went to see the horses and, while Luke's father told me that Livia's Dream was very small, he also told me that she was the fastest of the yearlings. I thought, 'well, that's good enough for me.' I got a friend of mine to bid on her while I hid and we got her for 45,000gns.”

Livia's Dream was then sent to Ed Walker who, along with John Murphy in Ireland, trains the majority of Hoare's horses. The filly was talented, winning four times, including at listed level but Dreamloper has exceeded all expectations.

Hoare explained, “Livia's Dream was one of the first outside horses Ed trained. It was the first year he was training. Ed is a wonderful communicator and is an awfully nice young man.

“I own her outright now. I leased her to my son for a couple of years and that lease ran out last month. I share her with my sister but I am the major owner.

“The dam is in foal to Lope De Vega so I am hoping, please God, to have a full-sibling next year. It was a heartbreaking decision to offer Dreamloper for sale at Keeneland's November Breeding Stock Sale but there will potentially be a lot of money on offer and things can go wrong in this game.”

She added, “I've had my share of ups and downs with horses and risking not getting her in foal or missing a year is too much for me right now. She has become too valuable. I took this on as a hobby but it has turned into a business. My business brain tells me that now is a good time to get out and concentrate on the rest of the family. Livia's Dream is still quite young at 13 and I am hoping that she can deliver a few more for us.”

Before then, there is that trip of a lifetime to the Breeders' Cup negotiate, and Hoare is predicting her star filly to bow out with a bang.

“Ed is very positive. We are all very positive, I'm delighted to say. We were all on the phone together last night and we think stall three should be perfect for her. I think she's in with a good chance. Let's hope she can be bang there.”

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