Cody’s Wish Garners Triple-Digit Beyer Speed Figure For Forego Upset

Godolphin's homebred Cody's Wish garnered a career-best 112 Beyer Speed Figure for his 1 1/4-length score in Saturday's seven-furlong Forego (G1) for older horses at Saratoga Race Course.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott and piloted by Junior Alvarado, the 4-year-old Curlin colt settled in sixth position as reigning champion male sprinter Jackie's Warrior dueled with Pipeline through splits of :22.75 and :45.10 before rallying wide down the lane to overtake his rivals and notch a 1 1/4-length score in a final time of 1:20.95, just 0.55 seconds off the track record. Fellow Mott-trainee Baby Yoda finished fourth for his first defeat at the Spa in four starts.

Cody's Wish is named for teenager Cody Dorman, who suffers from the genetic disorder Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome. Dorman met Cody's Wish as a foal during a farm tour via the Make A Wish program and developed a special bond with the then four-month old horse, inspiring the eventual name.

A six-time winner from 10 starts, Cody's Wish entered the Forego from a neck score in the Hanshin on July 4 at Churchill Downs with Alvarado in the irons.

“I'm very aware [about the backstory] and it makes it even more special,” Alvarado said. “Last time in Kentucky I got to meet Cody in person and you wouldn't believe the way this horse acted towards him. It's an unbelievable bond they have together, and it gives me even more confidence to ride a horse like that because the horse is extra smart and knows what he's doing.”

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Connections Pondering Breeders’ Cup Classic Or Dirt Mile For Travers Runner-Up Cyberknife

Brad Cox didn't win the Eclipse Award as North America's leading trainer the past two years by settling for second, but he couldn't have been more pleased with multiple Grade 1 winner Cyberknife's runner-up effort in Saturday's Runhappy Travers (G1).

Cyberknife set a demanding pace for six furlongs in the 1 1/4-mile Travers before being overtaken by eventual winner and race favorite Epicenter leaving the far turn, then dug in and fended off both Zandon and Grade 1 Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike the length of the stretch to hold second by a nose.

“It was a super race. We don't run second very often and we're content, but I was fairly content with his performance,” Cox said. “There could be some what-ifs, but he had the one-hole. There was no one looking for the lead, and I thought [jockey] Florent [Geroux] gave him every opportunity to win. The winner sat right behind us on the rail and kind of got the same trip as us. I watch a lot of races and I could tell at the quarter pole we were in for a battle, and he fought on very, very well.

“I'm very proud of him,” he added. “He's come a long, long way in a year. He was up here training last year and we didn't know where he was going to end up or what kind of horse he was going to be. [Owner] Al Gold has been patient with him. It wasn't the result we were looking for, but we cannot be disappointed in his effort. He fought very hard.”

Cox was pleased with the way Cyberknife exited the Travers, and he and Gold have begun discussions about what the plan is for the rest of the year including the Breeders' Cup in November at Keeneland.

“He came out of it very good and looked fantastic this morning. I'm very happy with the way he looked,” Cox said. “Al Gold and I talked about it this morning. We may look at the Dirt Mile (G1) and the Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) as well. If we have a race in between, I don't know what race it would be, if we feel like we need one.

“He's been non-stop. He hasn't missed any training at all since we've started with him,” he added. “We don't feel like we have to have a race. We'll kind of see how things play out over the next couple weeks and we ship him back to Kentucky in probably a week or so.”

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The Week in Review: 32 Years Ago, a Spark of Kismet at Saratoga

It was a relatively quiet Thursday last week when jockey John Velazquez registered his 1,000th victory at Saratoga, extending his record as the winningest jockey in Spa history.

Sifting through the archives to get a feel for what was going on in the sport when Johnny V. won his first career race at Saratoga back on Aug. 5, 1990, yields a heady mix of nostalgia tinged with kismet.

Although not considered a truly “historic” day of racing at the Spa, there are enough intriguing nuggets buried within the charts and news clippings from that day to earn it “historical footnote” status.

The date was a drizzly Sunday on the opening weekend of what would end up being the last four-week race meet at Saratoga. A throng of 51,769 would be announced as the second-largest crowd in Spa history, but that was just the turnstile count. You own a very rare collector's item if you still have the souvenir T-shirt from that afternoon's giveaway.

Velazquez, who had only started riding on the New York circuit earlier that year, was under the tutelage of Hall of Famer Angel Cordero, Jr., who is credited with first recognizing and then helping to develop the talent of the then-18-year-old.

But as fate would have it, Velazquez's first win at Saratoga came in a race in which Cordero got slammed to the grass course back-first when his mount veered in toward the hedge at the three-eighths pole in a turf route.

Velazquez, who was pressing the pace when the spill happened well behind him, ended up winning by a neck at 5-1 odds aboard a filly named Color Blue. The young apprentice's post-race celebration must have been muted, with his 48-year-old mentor prone on the course and being attended to by the ambulance crew.

Cordero ended up walking away from the scary-looking accident even though he was down for a good 12 minutes. Published accounts stated that he flashed the “OK” sign to onlookers, and was seen peering at a program while being assessed for injuries. Perhaps liking the mounts he saw later in the day, the wily veteran missed only the next race on the card before returning to action.

Another item that stands out from that first Spa score for Velazquez is that the race featured no fewer than seven (out of a field of 10) eventual Hall-of-Fame jockeys.

Beyond Velazquez and Cordero, the others in the second race on Aug. 5, 1990, were Craig Perret, Eddie Maple, Chris Antley, Jerry Bailey and Mike Smith.

That's quite a collection of race-riding royalty–all at varying rising and falling points on their career arcs–competing in a $25,000 claimer.

Bug-boy Velazquez, the youngest of that bunch, roared right back in Race 6, pouncing from off the pace to steal a maiden turf route by a nose with Busy as a Bee, igniting the tote board with a $127.60 winner.

Despite a two-win afternoon and the massive mutuel, the rookie rider's first trips to the Saratoga winner's circle (then still a ring of chalk drawn on the main track near the finish) didn't merit a mention in the press.

The racing coverage that day was devoted to the featured GII Jim Dandy S. (in which Johnny V. didn't have a mount), plus sidebars about Cordero's spill.

For anyone believing today that four-horse fields in Saratoga graded stakes are an entirely modern phenomenon, or that slow-paced tactics are frustratingly novel to 21st Century race-riding, we have Steve Crist's New York Times description of a “bizarrely weak” renewal of the Dandy to set us straight:

“Only four starters turned up, and their riders were apparently so worried about their mounts' being able to go the distance–a mile and an eighth–that they virtually walked most of the way,” Crist wrote. “The slow early fractions [:26.22 and :51.73] reduced the race to a three-furlong sprint to the wire.”

Chief Honcho (Smith aboard) was the winner of that dawdling Dandy in a final time 1:51.74.

Jennie Rees of the Louisville Courier-Journal seemed to be the only turf writer who noticed that “the victory was the first in a Saratoga stakesa” for Chief Honcho's trainer, a 37-year-old up-and-comer from the Midwest named Bill Mott.

It's doubtful that anyone in 1990 recognized those same-day accomplishments for Velazquez and Mott as the launch-pad milestones they would prove to be.

Over the next three decades, both jockey and trainer would become well-respected synonyms of Saratoga success, both on and off the track.

So it was fitting that when Velazquez rode Precursory (Kantharos) to victory for his 1,000th Spa win on Aug. 25, 2022, Mott was the trainer.

Travers Takeaways…

The ceremonial maroon and white paint wasn't yet dry on the GI Runhappy Travers S. canoe Saturday when speculation about the next start for Winchell Thoroughbreds colorbearer Epicenter (Not This Time) began to swirl.

With little doubt that the GI Breeders' Cup Classic is the ultimate season-ending goal, the main post-Travers question was whether or not Epicenter (112 Beyer Speed Figure) would have another race in the 10-week interim until the Classic. Trainer Steve Asmussen didn't commit either way in the immediate aftermath of the win, but he did indicate such a layoff wouldn't be considered problematic.

The marquee for the Classic is already being prepared as a highly anticipated Epicenter-vs.-Flightline (Tapit) showdown, but the undefeated 4-year-old 'TDN Rising Star' must first sail through Saturday's GI Pacific Classic at Del Mar before his Breeders' Cup status is confirmed.

Now that Saratoga's so-called Midsummer Derby is in the books, there's not much debate over Epicenter being at the top of the totem pole among sophomores aiming for two-turn glory. He manhandled the GI Kentucky Derby, GI Preakness S., and GI Haskell S. winners in the Travers, meaning the best chances for a late-summer bloom within the 3-year-old division now rest with 'TDN Rising Stars' Charge It (Tapit) and Taiba (Gun Runner).

Charge It ran second in the GI Florida Derby, then was a no-impact 17th when wide in the Kentucky Derby. But the Todd Pletcher trainee rebounded with a gaudy 23-length win in the GIII Dwyer S., and was aiming for the Travers before a foot abscess derailed his training last week. The GI Pennsylvania Derby Sept. 24 could end up being his next start.

Taiba was a surprise nomination for the Pacific Classic, but trainer Bob Baffert said Saturday that the GI Santa Anita Derby winner will probably not go in the race. After eating a ton of dirt and running into a wall of horseflesh on the far turn of the Kentucky Derby, Taiba rallied with interest in the Haskell, coming up just a head short for the win.

“I nominated him just in case,” Baffert said. “Things happen and you never say never, but the complexion of the race would have to change.” (Read: Flightline would have to go missing in action prior to the draw on Tuesday.)

Taiba is also nominated for the ungraded Shared Belief S. on the Pacific Classic undercard.

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‘He’s Just A Remarkable Horse’: Yet To Be Determined Breeders’ Cup Race Goal For Jack Christopher

After getting back in the win column in Saturday's H. Allen Jerkens Memorial (G1) at Saratoga Race Course, Jim Bakke, Gerald Isbister, Peter Brant, and Coolmore Stud's Jack Christopher now has dead aim on the Breeders' Cup on November 5 at Keeneland Race Course. But which Breeders' Cup race the son of Munnings will contest is still unknown.

Trained by Chad Brown, the three-time Grade 1-winner utilized his typical stalking tactics down the backstretch, sitting just off pacesetter Conagher and taking command at the top of the stretch to win by 1 1/4 lengths under Jose Ortiz. The victory garnered a 104 Beyer Speed Figure and came following a third-place finish in his two-turn debut in the Grade 1 Haskell Invitational on July 23 at Monmouth Park.

“It was great to see him bounce out of the Haskell and get another Grade 1 win, he's just a remarkable horse,” Brown said.

Bradley Weisbord, racing manager for the ownership group, said a decision regarding the Breeders' Cup will be left up to Brown. He will either contest the six-furlong Grade 1, $2 million Sprint or the two-turn Grade 1, $1 million Dirt Mile.

“I'm grateful that Jim Bakke and Gerald Isbister and his family were here. They flew in from Wisconsin and it's great when the owners show up,” Weisbord said. “Hopefully we keep on track for the Breeders' Cup. It's up to Chad whether he runs once before the Breeders' Cup, but the Breeders' Cup will be the goal.”

Weisbord credited bloodstock agent Liz Crow for picking out the talented chestnut at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Yearling Sale, where he was bought for $135,000 from the Paramount Sales consignment.

“She leads our team there and always does a great job at the sale year after year,” Weisbord said. “She continues to find horses like Jack and we're thankful that she's on our team.”

Brown went on to speak of Jeff Drown's Zandon, who kept his perfect in-the-money record intact when an even third to Epicenter in the Grade 1 Runhappy Travers. The son of Upstart was sixth down the backstretch and was called on by Flavien Prat in upper stretch. He made an inside rally in the stretch drive and battled for place honors in between respective second and fourth-place finishers Cyberknife and Rich Strike.

“He ran a good race. He made up quite a bit of ground on Cyberknife and nearly got him for second,” Brown said. “The race to win was not going to be for anyone the way Epicenter ran. Of the other horses that ran, he probably ran the second best race. He's a very consistent horse and we'll just have to see how he comes out the race.”

Boasting a record of 2-2-3 from seven starts and earnings in excess of $1.25 million, Zandon was third in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby following a victory in the Grade 1 Blue Grass at Keeneland.

Brown also saddled stakes-winner Artorius and Grade 1 Preakness winner Early Voting to a respective seventh and eighth in the Travers. Artorius launched a bid around the far turn but flattened out in the stretch, while Early Voting was third down the backstretch and threw in the towel around the far turn, finishing last-of-8 and beaten 63 3/4 lengths.

“We're still evaluating them. No major issues,” Brown said.

Brown also saddled Klaravich Stables' Technical Analysis to a victory in the Grade 2 Ballston Spa, the first of six graded stakes races on Saturday's blockbuster program. The 4-year-old Irish-bred daughter of Kingman secured her third graded stakes win at the Spa following wins in last year's Grade 3 Lake George and Grade 2 Lake Placid. She arrived at the Ballston Spa off a runner-up to sable mate In Italian in the Grade 1 Diana on July 16 at Saratoga.

“She definitely loves Saratoga. She ran super,” Brown said.

Brown mentioned the Grade 1, $750,000 First Lady on October 8 at Keeneland as a possible next start for Technical Analysis.

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