Steward Luis Jauregui, Brother Of Dreamfyre’s Trainer, Will Recuse Himself From Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf

Santa Anita Park steward Luis Jauregui will recuse himself for this year's edition of the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf, reports bloodhorse.com, because his brother, O.J. Jauregui, will saddle Dreamfyre in Friday's contest in Arcadia, Calif.

For that race, Luis Jauregui will be replaced in the officials' both by David Nuesch, safety steward.

“Luis is going to recuse himself from that particular race, given the magnitude of the Breeders' Cup,” California Horse Racing Board executive director Scott Chaney told bloodhorse.com. “But I want to be clear—it is not a practice that will continue on a Thursday afternoon if his brother has horses running.

“It's why we have three stewards. They do an excellent job. And I think the implication that he could somehow (influence) the other two and affect the outcome in favor of his brother is unfair to Luis.”

Dreamfyre won the Grade 3 Surfer Girl Stakes by a neck at Santa Anita on Oct. 8, staying up despite a claim of foul. Luis Jauregui did not recuse himself in that instance, drawing “some negative feedback from the wagering public,” Chaney said.

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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Classic: Dreamlike Still A Work In Progress, Miss The Cut Out To Make The Cut

After Six Starts for Hall of Famer Pletcher, Dreamlike Remains a Work in Progress

Patience has been key for Dreamlike, a son of Gun Runner, who most recently was second in the Pennsylvania Derby (G1) with blinkers off. Jockey Jose Ortiz will replace his brother Irad in the irons Saturday for the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1). After pre-entering in the Classic and the Big Ass Fans Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1), Pletcher and his owners, Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable, opted for the Classic.

“He's a horse that we've always had high hopes for,” Pletcher said. “He's a beautiful, expensive yearling, very well-bred, a very good-looking horse. A little bit temperamental when he first came in, very studdish. We tried to get him going at 2. Then ended up having to give him a little time off. He came back and he was training exceptionally well. Couldn't quite break through with that win. We took a shot in the Wood Memorial (G2), which he ran very well in (finishing third by a head).”

After the April 8 Wood, Dreamlike did not race again until July 14 at Saratoga. He broke his maiden impressively, but stumbled at the start of an Aug. 13 allowance race and was beaten 13 lengths.

“We regrouped in Pennsylvania Derby,” Pletcher said. “We made an equipment change, took the blinkers off after getting some feedback from Irad. He felt like maybe we're asking the horse to stay a little closer early in the race than he wanted to. So our strategy in the Pennsylvania Derby was just let him relax settle where he's comfortable and make one run, which he did very well. Unfortunately for him, the horse to beat got an easy pace up front and didn't have anyone going with him.”

Pletcher said the expected pace challenge to Saudi Crown never materialized.

“I thought, despite that, that Dreamlike ran very well to close into those fractions against a good horse like that. He has trained well since. He and Bright Future have been pretty much workmates the last few times and it seems like they are pretty evenly matched up there.”

Considering the Pennsylvania Derby performance, Pletcher said the Classic looked to be a better spot for Dreamlike.

“It seems like on paper that the Classic, at a mile and a quarter, actually has more pace in it than the Dirt Mile does, which you wouldn't expect. I just felt like if we're going to allow him to run the way he wants, so he'll make one run, that wasn't going to be very effective in the mile if there's not a real pace. It felt like the additional quarter and hopefully an honest pace makes a difference. He obviously needs to step up and run better than he ever has in his life.”

Missed the Cut Looks to Make the Cut in Breeders' Cup Classic 

The word was out that a son of Lane's End Farm stallion Quality Road named Missed the Cut was making some noise in Great Britain – and the word reached Bill Farish.

“He got off to a strong start and he's a Quality Road and we don't miss too many of those,” said Farish, a two-time Chairman of the Breeders' Cup Board and whose family owns Lane's End Farm.

Missed the Cut won three of his first four starts on the grass for owner Edward Babington and trainer George Boughey with two of the victories coming at a mile and a quarter.

“He jumped out at us and it looked like he could run well on the dirt as well,” Farish said. “We got a call and we got in touch with Ed Babington, who kept a share, then a lot of people got together … Vinnie (Viola of St. Elias Stables) was interested and the Hudsons (Edward and Lynne), so we went and did it.”

Off-the-board finishes in two Group 2 grass tests sandwiched a minor stakes victory over an all-weather surface at Lingfield in the first three starts for the new ownership group. After Missed the Cut finished fourth in the Neom Turf Cup (G2) in Saudi Arabia at the end of February, trainer John Sadler got a call.

“They told me after he ran in Saudi that he would be coming,” said Sadler, who just months before had savored the moment of Flightline's tour de force in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) at Keeneland.

The success of Flightline was one reason Missed the Cut came to Sadler in April.

“Coming on the heels of Flightline, plus John does a great job and we thought he always does well with older horses and it matched up well,” Farish said of sending Missed the Cut to California.

Missed the Cut made his debut for Sadler at Santa Anita on June 11, finishing second in a mile race on the dirt.

“He was a nice colt,” Sadler said of his initial impressions, “and he ran well in his debut.”

A seventh-place finish behind Senor Buscador in the San Diego Handicap (G2) going a mile and a sixteenth followed.

“In the San Diego, the setup was not good and he was too close to the pace,” Sadler said. “Then we ran him on grass at Del Mar, but when we came back up here, he really liked the dirt track here at Santa Anita.”

Missed the Cut responded to the return on dirt by posting a 5 1/2-length win in the Tokyo City (G3) on Oct. 1 at Santa Anita going a mile and a half. Going forward, Sadler said the plan is to stay at a mile and a quarter on the dirt.

Which is the test that awaits Missed the Cut on Saturday in the Longines Breeders Cup Classic (G1) and a chance to give Sadler back-to-back wins in the $6 million race. Luis Saez has the mount Saturday.

“I am an optimist,” Sadler said. “I look forward to the 2-year-olds coming in and I am not wondering if this is the next Flightline. I am optimistic about our 2-year-olds and the ones coming in.”

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Auguste in November as O’Brien Team Goes Sunny Side Up

ARCADIA, USA — In case you're wondering, Aidan O'Brien had scrambled eggs for breakfast. That was just after he had watched his squad of ten take a stronger turn around Santa Anita's dirt track and before he had a chance to consider a second course at the lavish buffet by politely stepping outside to answer questions from a few annoying hacks, this one included.

Ryan Moore has been aboard Friday's GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint contender Cherry Blossom (Ire) (No Nay Never) these last two mornings. “Is that a tip?” we enquired. “No, someone asked me that already. I'll show you,” replied O'Brien, digging his phone from his pocket and flicking past his selfies (just kidding) to find a photo of said filly throwing shapes worthy of the rodeo.

“She's not for kids,” said the trainer with a grin. “You need a parachute to ride her.”

Moore, evoking thoughts of the Man from Snowy River, never shifted in his seat, his kid gloves deployed with aplomb to ensure that there were no repeat antics from Cherry Blossom. She whipped them in as the dependable Broome (Ire) (Australia {GB}) led them all around the cambered turn of the main track, pretty much in age-descending order. 

As ever, the Ballydoyle horses on tour have been one of the highlights of a morning at the track. No other visitors have as many to go out together, and horses trained at Santa Anita tend to appear for exercise solo or in pairs. It is an arresting sight then, with the sun fully up as if to light the group to full effect, to witness this spectacle of almost synchronised breezing.

“They might have got a bit of a shock this morning,” said O'Brien, referring to the kickback for those in behind Broome, which included his fellow Longines Breeders' Cup Turf runners Bolshoi Ballet (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Auguste Rodin (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). “We didn't want to go on the grass today as it's plenty quick and [the dirt] opens up their mind anyway.”

Five of the pack, the youngsters at the back, will face the starter on Friday; the other half take their chances come Saturday.

With Cherry Blossom finding what O'Brien believes could be her optimum conditions in the Turf Sprint, she reverts to five furlongs for the first time since her debut, and is the first of the team to jump into action, hopefully not literally.

“She's a fast filly and wasn't really getting six at home, and this flat track should suit her, as well as the ground,” he said.

Content (Ire) is out of a fast filly in Mecca's Angel (Ire) but as her sire is Galileo (Ire), the mile of the Juvenile Fillies Turf seems more her go.

“She'll definitely get the trip, the fast ground will suit her better and she has a nice draw,” the trainer added. Tick, tick, tick for the last-start winner of the G3 Staffordstown Stud S. “Ryan will probably take his time on her and ride her for a little bit of luck. She needs to relax a little bit early and then she should run well.”

Ballydoyle is mob-handed in the final race of Friday's card, the Juvenile Turf, with the first two favourites, both by Wootton Bassett (GB), being River Tiber (Ire) and Unquestionable (Fr), ridden by Moore and Frankie Dettori. They are joined by Mountain Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never), the imposing mount of Dylan Browne McMonagle.

Of River Tiber, O'Brien said, “We think he's come right since Newmarket and he's rated 3lbs below the other horse but he was always a very classy horse. He should get a mile around here; it's a nice draw and a flat track and I'm looking forward to seeing what he does.”

There's something for everyone in Saturday's team. The three-year-old Aesop's Fables (Ire) (No Nay Never), who was just a length off Highfield Princess (Fr) when third in the Prix de l'Abbaye, is perhaps a little overlooked in the Turf Sprint, especially since the defection of Bradsell on Wednesday evening. 

“Ryan felt in France that if he had challenged the winner a little earlier he might have been even closer but it was a huge run from him,” said his trainer. 

Before that there's the intriguing puzzle of Cheveley Park Stud's Inspiral (GB) (Frankel {GB}) stepping up in trip while O'Brien's Warm Heart (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) comes back in distance for the Filly & Mare Turf after her victories in the Yorkshire Oaks and Prix Vermeille.

And it must be said, having been lucky to see her at close quarters over the last few days, it's hard not to fall in love with Warm Heart. Her demure demeanour clearly masks her warrior instincts, however, as O'Brien said of the three-year-old, “She doesn't lie down, she does fight. She has a nice draw and I imagine that Ryan will probably go forward on her. She has tactical speed and will get the trip very well.”

There's no doubting that the race most of the huge European contingent now camped out at Santa Anita is looking forward to the most is the Breeders' Cup Turf.

Shadwell's stud plans for Mostahdaf (GB) (Frankel {GB}) were confirmed on Thursday morning, while we already know that Onesto (Ire), also by Frankel, is joining Haras d'Etreham and King Of Steel (Wootton Bassett {GB}) will remain in training next year. What then for Auguste Rodin? If he knows, O'Brien ain't telling, but it is a safe bet that plans are to an extent contingent on what happens this weekend. 

Would American breeders appreciate another chance at the sire-line of the Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic winner who got away, Sunday Silence? Or is Ireland the natural home for a dual Derby and Irish Champion S. winner? Could we even see Auguste Rodin race on next year? Time will tell, maybe as soon as Saturday night, but in the meantime, there is the prospect of an almighty tussle between four of the best horses in Europe and some smart Japanese and American runners. 

“Obviously we'd love to have him but it will be whatever the boss decides,” said O'Brien, ever the diplomat, on the subject of Auguste Rodin's post-Breeders' Cup future.

Of the immediate matter in hand, he said, “Rachel [Richardson] rode him this morning and was very happy with him. He cruised around on the dirt; he's a lovely long-striding horse. The plan was always for him to go to Leopardstown and then to come here. This is what we've been looking forward to all year. He's won two Derbys and a Champion Stakes and he's only a three-year-old. He really has done well since Leopardstown.”

O'Brien added, “Did you see him on the dirt this morning? He looks like a dirt horse. If you look at Sunday Silence and look at him they are almost identical.”

It certainly was a sight to behold, as Auguste Rodin stretched out over the track where Sunday Silence was trained more than 30 years ago. The colt, who can appear on the small side in the company of burlier sprinters, looks an entirely different animal unleashed at full stretch. The image of him extending past King Of Steel down the hill at Epsom is still vivid in the mind but there have been good days and head-scratching days since then in the career of Auguste Rodin. 

With no disrespect to his stable-mates Bolshoi Ballet and Broome, he's the one on whose near-black shoulders the hopes are resting. Maybe we'll get the chance to see if Auguste Rodin really is a dirt horse in next year's Classic, but for now his sole aim is to emulate another Ballydoyle star, High Chaparral (Ire), in taking the Derby, Irish Derby and Breeders' Cup Turf in the same season. Game on.

 

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‘An Absolute Gift’: The Chosen Vron Gives 70-Year-Old Trainer Eric Kruljac Second Breeders’ Cup Starter

In 2009 at Santa Anita, veteran Southern-California based trainer Eric Kruljac had his one and only Breeders' Cup starter, 17-1 longshot La Nez, who finished off the board in that year's Juvenile Fillies turf.

Kruljac holds a much stronger hand for his second go-around at the Breeders' Cup. On Saturday, the 70-year-old conditioner will saddle one of the top contenders in the Breeders' Cup Sprint, The Chosen Vron.

Listed at 5-1 on the morning line, The Chosen Vron will attempt to become just the sixth California-bred to win a Breeders' Cup race. Three of those previous winners prevailed in the Sprint – Thor's Echo (2006), Dancing In Silks (2009) and Amazombie (2011).

“This is really the highlight of my career,” said Kruljac, who has won 1,241 races and trained seven graded-stakes winners in a career that began in 1986. “At my age, to have a horse like The Chosen Vron, it's an absolute gift.”

The Chosen Vron has been a win machine for Kruljac and co-owners Sondereker Racing, Robert S. Fatkin and Richard Thomburgh. A 5-year-old gelding by Vronsky, The Chosen Vron has won 13-of-17 starts including eight straight entering the Breeders' Cup. Most recently, he provided Kruljac with his second career Grade I victory when taking the six-furlong Bing Crosby at Del Mar. Finishing two heads back in third that day was Dr. Schivel, who is also entered in Saturday's Sprint.

“He's doing absolutely fabulous,” Kruljac said of his Breeders' Cup hopeful. “We freshened him up after the Bing Crosby and he couldn't be training any better.”

The Chosen Vron's win in the Bing Crosby pushed him over $1 million in career earnings ($1,032,678). He has worked seven times for the Sprint, all on the Santa Anita training track. Last Saturday, he drilled a half mile in 47.20 seconds, which was the second-fastest of 19 moves at the distance.

“In the Bing Crosby there were a couple of really formidable horses with (runner-up) Anarchist and Dr. Schivel,” Kruljac said. “But this race, you look at the field and it's just like, wow.”

Bred by Tiz Molly Partners, The Chosen Vron is out of allowance winner Tiz Molly, by Tiz Wonderful. He will break from post six in a nine-horse field set for the Sprint. Jockey Hector Berrios, who has been aboard for the entirety of The Chosen Vron's current winning streak, will again be in the irons.

“The Chosen Vron always gives us everything he's got,” Kruljac said. “We just hope he's good enough.”

In the first race on Saturday, Kruljac will saddle Kiss Today Goodbye in the marathon G3 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance going 1 5/8 miles on the main track. Installed at 5-1 on the morning line, Kiss Today Goodbye most recently was second behind Breeders' Cup Classic contender Missed the Cut in the G3 Tokyo City at 1 ½ miles here Oct. 1.

Kiss Today Goodbye will have a new rider Saturday. Berrios, who has been aboard for his last four, is being swapped out for Hall of Famer Victor Espinoza. Kruljac noted Kiss Today Goodbye can be tough on a jockey.

“He's a horse you have to ride the entire way around,” he noted. “I wanted to give Hector a break so he would be at his best on The Chosen Vron.”

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