Get Smokin To Be Scratched From Turf, Point For 2024 Campaign

Mark Casse-trained Get Smokin, a multiple graded stakes-winning 6-year-old gelding by Get Stormy, will be scratched from Saturday's Grade 1, $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf. Ironhorse Racing Stable, who has campaigned Get Smokin in partnership with BlackRidge Stables, Saratoga Seven Racing Partners, and T-N-T Equine Holdings, posted on the X social media site the following:

“Unfortunately, Get Smokin had a very minor setback in his preparation for the Breeders' Cup Turf and Mark Casse and the owners have made the decision to scratch him. We will let him have a winter break and prepare for a 2024 campaign.”

Get Smokin was coming off a front-running victory in the G2, $1.7 million FanDuel Turf Cup Stakes at Kentucky Downs on Sept. 9. The win was his sixth from 27 lifetime starts. He previously won the G2 Hill Prince in 2020 and the G3 Tampa Bay  Stakes in 2021.

A 30-1 longshot on the morning line for the star-studded Turf, Get Smokin was to be ridden by Fernando De La Cruz.

Get Smokin was bred in Kentucky by Hurstland Farm and James Greene Jr.

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Catching Up with 2010 Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic Winner Unrivaled Belle

A homebred for Gary Seidler and Peter Vegso, Unrivaled Belle's Breeders' Cup win came at the expense of the following year's Horse of the Year Havre de Grace, who finished third. The two mares would eventually share common ownership, both being purchased by Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm, and live together at Timber Town before Havre de Grace's passing earlier this year.

The crown jewel among Unrivaled Belle's foals to date is two-time champion Unique Bella. Unrivaled Belle has a 2-year-old full-sister to Unique Bella named Tap My Belle, as well as yearling and weanling colts by Into Mischief. She was bred to Flightline for next term.

“Our time with Unrivaled Belle was amazing and super fun,” said Vegso, best known outside of racing as publisher of the “Chicken Soup for the Soul” series. “She was a wonderful horse and loved racing. Bill Mott did a super job with her; he's a special soul as is 'the Belle.' It's always so special when a horse we foal does so super well; makes having a farm and mares and mating–and the Mother Nature surrounding that comes with it–magical.”

Unrivaled Belle (2006 gray or roan mare, Unbridled's Song–Queenie Belle, by Bertrando)

Lifetime record: GISW, 14-6-6-1, $1,854,706

Breeders' Cup connections: B/O-Gary Seidler & Peter Vegso (KY); T-Bill Mott; J-Kent Desormeaux.

Current location: Timber Town Stable, Lexington, Ky.

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Europeans Unleashed as Santa Anita is Struck by Tragedy

ARCADIA, USA–Against the most stunning backdrop in world racing, just as the pre-dawn sky started to pinken with promise, a metaphorical dark cloud was cast across Santa Anita racetrack. Practical Move (Practical Joke), a leading contender for the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile, collapsed and died of an apparent heart attack on his way back in from exercise in front of onlookers on the apron. The screens arrived eventually, but not soon enough to remind those present of the occasionally desperate nature of the sport we love, and how such a scene threatens its very future.

This fatality, coming on the back of Saturday's serious injury to supposed Classic runner Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) and the withdrawal on Tuesday morning from that same race of Arcangelo (Arrogate), one of this season's feel-good stories, means that the 40th running of the Breeders' Cup will take place in less than auspicious circumstances.

Work continued on the track after a pause. It had to, of course. This was the morning when the international shippers were released from quarantine and into the big wide open expanse of the Santa Anita dirt, wrapped around the turf. Take your pick.

John Gosden, striding down the track alongside his long-term lieutenant Tony Proctor, chose the green grass of home for the first spin of Mostahdaf (Ire) and Inspiral (GB). It made perfect sense, as the son and daughter of Frankel (GB) are the leading lights in their respective targets, both on that surface. Gosden is of course more familiar with Santa Anita than his fellow travellers, having been based here for a time during the 1980s and among the winners of the inaugural Breeders' Cup at Hollywood Park in 1984, when Royal Heroine (Ire) landed the Mile for Robert Sangster. 

With the post-work debrief drifting from his own horses to the outstanding performance of Equinox (Jpn) (Kitasan Black {Jpn}) at the weekend, Gosden cast his mind back to that champion's great grandsire. 

“He is an absolute freak, isn't he, an extraordinary horse,” he said of Sunday's GI Tenno Sho winner. “When you look at him, he looks almost like a Stubbs painting, or a JF Herring Sr painting. He's not what we are used to. He's just one of those extraordinary athletes who can go at an incredibly strong pace and maintain and maintain it.

“The Japanese breed for this. Deep Impact went two miles, and what a star he was. Sunday Silence, such a great horse, trained by Charlie [Whittingham] right over there,” he added, gesturing across to the barns beyond the quarantine facility. “This aversion to horses who can win over a mile and a half, a mile six, we've gone too far the other way, and we have to be careful. Suddenly a mile and a half becomes a marathon.”

Of his own pair, Gosden added, “They're very happy, they were pleased to get out. They've been behind those screens [of the quarantine area] and they were thrilled to get out and have some fresh air. They flew on Saturday and they cleared quarantine at six o'clock last night.”

Frankie Dettori was aboard Inspiral for her morning exertions, ponied on and off the track by a companion, while Mostahdaf followed at a distance on his own, each of them having an easy stretch of a canter on the turf before taking several turns of the paddock. 

Once they and the trio of Japanese turf workers, Win Marilyn (Jpn) (Screen Hero {Jpn}), Shahryar (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and Jaspar Crone (Frosted), had made their way back to the barns, another wave of Europeans took to the track. The O'Brien clan was out in force. Led by Joseph and Lumiere Rock (Ire) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}), Donnacha took to the saddle of a quarter horse to accompany Porta Fortuna (Ire) (Caravaggio) and the Juvenile Turf Sprint reserve Asean (Ire) (Ten Sovereigns). Finally Aidan, along with a group including his wife Annemarie, owner Paul Smith and vet John Halley, made his way along the apron close to the winning post to watch his team of ten trot the reverse way round the track before turning and hack-cantering back. The dual Derby winner Auguste Rodin (Ire), himself from the final crop of the aforementioned Deep Impact, took in his surroundings with a keen eye, with the sturdy juvenile Mountain Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never) a little on his toes some way behind him, and the neat and composed Warm Heart (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) further back still and looking every bit as delightful as her name suggests. 

Ralph Beckett, who has enjoyed a tremendous season back home and notched another stakes win only a day earlier at Saint-Cloud, was on foot between his duo of State Occasion (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) and the youngster Starlust (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}) as they proceeded to the main track for an easy exercise. 

The riding skills of Robson Aguiar were on show aboard the Norfolk S. winner Valiant Force (Malibu Moon), a horse plucked from the Keeneland September Yearling Sale by him and Roger O'Callaghan and now trained by Adrian Murray for a partnership involving their two wives and Amo Racing. Aguiar has also been associated with Champion S. winner and Breeders' Cup Turf runner King Of Steel (Wootton Bassett {GB}) since his early days, having broken him in for the Amo team, of which he is a key part. He was back on board the giant grey on Tuesday morning and reported that he felt in good order after the exertions of Ascot less than a fortnight ago. “It is a short straight though,” he cautioned of the Santa Anita turf track.

When the sun has risen fully over Santa Anita, defining the contours of the San Gabriel mountains that set the stage for the unmistakable “Great Race Place”, the visual assault is so striking that it is hard to feel that there is much wrong with the world. Young Thoroughbreds appear from every which way, the equine players adorned here and there with colour-coded Breeders' Cup saddle cloths to identify the 'special ones'. But anyone involved closely with horses should know that they are all special, whether they make it to this exalted level, or perhaps just run with great heart in a bog at Catterick, as this correspondent's shared horse was doing, watched from a small screen in the palm of a hand, with the almost bizarre juxtaposition of Auguste Rodin striding alongside in the Californian sun. 

Even with such brilliant beauty close at hand, it was hard to revel in what should have been a joyful morning as the image of the prone Practical Move lingered on in the mind's eye.

 

 

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‘Tough As Nails’: Mark Casse Gets A Kick Out Of Breeders’ Cup-Bound Fev Rover

Mark Casse figured it would take some time for 5-year-old Fev Rover (IRE) to hit her best stride, but he felt certain that day would come.

An accomplished runner in Europe at 2 and 3, Fev Rover, the daughter of Gutaifan (IRE)-Laurelita (IRE) who will contest the $2 million Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1T) on November 4 at Santa Anita, unpacked a big personality when she arrived in North America.

Her first stop was owner Tracy Farmer's Shadowlawn Farm in Midway, Kentucky.

“Tough, she was ornery as she could be,” recalled Casse of the horse purchased by Farmer for nearly $1 million (U.S.) at the Tattersalls December 2021 Mares Sale. “When we first got her from Europe, we could hardly get to her go to the track. She went to Tracy's farm when she first came and on the first day there, when they turned her out, she cleared the fence, which no horse has ever done there before.”

The bay launched her career with 10 starts in Europe, highlighted by two stakes victories, including the Shadwell Prix du Calvados (G2T) on August 22, 2020. Another notable performance came the next May in the Qipco One Thousand Guineas (G1T) at Newmarket when she was third. Her final start across the Atlantic was a fourth in the 2021 running of the Bahrain International Trophy (G3T) in November.

Fev Rover's North American debut came last July at Woodbine in the Dance Smartly Stakes (G2T) when she was second to Wakanaka (IRE).

She went one better in her following engagement, taking the Canadian Stakes (G2T), and concluded her 2022 campaign with a third in the E.P. Taylor Stakes (G1T).

Pleased with how Fev Rover raced over the world-renowned E.P. Taylor Turf at 4, Casse felt the mare would be even better the following campaign.

His intuition proved to be correct.

“She's come a long way since her 4-year-old year,” said Casse. “She got better, and she got a little easier to train.”

This year, Fev Rover has been a force. In July, she won the one-mile Nassau Stakes (G2T) at Woodbine in her seasonal bow and then made her U.S. debut in the 1 1/8-mile Diana Stakes (G1T) in mid-July at Saratoga where she finished third.

On August 12, she went gate-to-wire for a 3 ½-length triumph in the 1 3/16-mile Beverly D. (G1T) at Colonial Downs. After a fourth in her September 9 return to Woodbine, in the Canadian Stakes (G2T), she came back with a superb 2 ¼-length win on October 8 in the 1 ¼-mile E.P. Taylor (G1T).

“When she won the Beverly D. and we brought her back to Saratoga, she started showing us a little bit of her old behavior,” said Casse. “When we sent her back to Toronto, she was back to her old self, not behaving well. I think that was one of the reasons why she didn't run her best in the Canadian. She is a terrible kicker and if she were to kick you, she would kill you. She kicks with a Mike Tyson power. She did it at Saratoga, then in the Beverly D. I kept her out of the way of walls before the Beverly D. so she wouldn't kick anybody, and she did pretty well.”

It was quite the opposite ahead of the Canadian.

“[Assistant trainer] David Adams and I talked about it, and I said, 'I think you should saddle her outside so she can't kick anything.' Well, that was a mistake. She didn't kick anything, but she got herself in a lather. I was watching post parade and she was in a sweat. That isn't like her. I said to David, 'Man, she's hot.' You saw it in her performance. So, we went back to saddling inside for the E.P. Taylor, in the rubber room, and she behaved. I called David as soon as she was walking out and asked if she was better. He said, 'A thousand times better. They better be tied on because they are going to see the real Fev Rover.' She was way more focused, and we saw what happened.

“I didn't say it much at the time, but I brought her back to Woodbine because she likes to train there,” Casse continued. “I also brought her back so that she could be eligible (horses must race three times during the given year) to be considered for Canada's horse of the year. She needed two more starts, so there was a method to our madness. That is important going forward as a broodmare prospect, being horse of the year. Unless somebody pulls off something special at the Breeders' Cup, I would say she has a pretty good chance.”

For now, Fev Rover, bred by Manister House Stud, will take her show on the road to face other top-level turf talents in California.

Casse, who has six Breeders' Cup victories on his resume, has every reason to believe his tenacious, well-travelled mare will be up for the challenge.

“She is doing very well. She just developed from 4 to 5 and she is one of the best-looking horses we have. She grew up and got stronger. She is a very talented, big, strong mare.”

Is there an athlete or athletes that Casse would liken Fev Rover to?

“I would say one of the Williams sisters, Venus or Serena,” he said of the tennis stars. “Both those athletes are tough as nails, so strong and powerful. And that's Fev Rover.”

Sporting a mark of 6-4-3 from 19 starts, along with over $1.2 million (U.S.) in earnings, Fev Rover (PP8, 8-1) will be ridden by Javier Castellano in the Filly & Mare Turf.

Note: Casse will also send out Lucky Score (Mile, Saturday), Get Smokin (Turf, Saturday), and My Boy Prince and Can Group (Juvenile Turf, Friday).

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