Japan: Cafe Pharoah Earns BC Classic Berth With Repeat Score In February Stakes

Koichi Nishikawa's 5-year-old Cafe Pharoah surged to the front in the final furlong and captured Sunday's US$2.2 million, one-mile February Stakes (G1) on dirt at Tokyo Racecourse for the second consecutive year with a 2 ½-length win over T M South Dan (JPN) in track record time. With this victory, Cafe Pharoah, ridden by Yuichi Fukunaga, becomes the first horse to earn an automatic starting position into this year's US$6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

Now in its 15th season, the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series is an international series of stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, which is scheduled to be held at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Kentucky, on Nov. 4-5.

Cafe Pharoah, a son of 2015 U.S. Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup Classic winner American Pharoah, is the first horse to win the February Stakes title consecutively since Copano Rickey (JPN) in 2014 and 2015.

Trained by Noriyuki Hori, Cafe Pharoah bounced back remarkably after going winless in his three previous starts last season which included an 11th-place disappointment in the other JRA-G1 dirt event, the Champions Cup (dirt, 1,800m) last December. Cafe Pharoah now has four wins out of four starts in dirt mile races at Tokyo Racecourse. This triumph marked Hori's 14th JRA-G1 title—his latest was last year's February Stakes victory, and jockey Fukunaga's 33rd overall JRA-G1 title following the Japan Cup (G1) triumph last autumn with Contrail (JPN). Fukunaga claimed the 2005 February Stakes title with Meisho Bowler (JPN).

Cafe Pharoah, who was bred in Kentucky by the late Paul Pompa, completed the mile in 1:33.8 over a muddy track, establishing a stakes and course record.

Last year, Cafe Pharoah became the first son of American Pharoah to win a Graded/Group 1 race on dirt, when he won captured the February Stakes by three-quarters of a length. Today's win improved his record to six wins in 11 starts.

Under drizzling conditions for the 39th February Stakes, the 16-horse field broke evenly in the corner of the backstretch with T M South Dan eventually taking over the lead to set the pace. Running in sixth, Cafe Pharoah, the 5-1 second choice, made headway from the third corner and hit the straight three wide and in third place, a half-length behind the 4-year-old filly Sodashi  (JPN), who was in second. Promptly putting away Sodashi and then inheriting the lead from the  pacesetter right after the furlong marker, the defending champion romped to the line for the victory.

“Mr. Hori and I went over the tactics before the race and everything went as planned,” commented winning rider Fukunaga. “Cafe Pharoah's start wasn't that sharp, but he recovered well and we were able to sit in a good position in third, where he didn't have to bear too much sand in his face. After that I just tried to keep him focused, especially after taking over the lead in the final stages. I'm grateful to the connections who offered me this ride even before I had fully recovered from the fall in Hong Kong [Hong Kong Sprint (G1), Dec. 12] and am happy that I was able to do a good job.”

Fifth pick T M South Dan made headway after breaking from the 15th post, set the pace with 1,200 meters to go and sustained his lead. Although succumbing to the winner's speed in the last furlong, he held on well to secure the runner-up position by half a length. Fourth choice Sodashi tracked the leaders in third, advanced to second rounding the final corner, ran willingly inside the eventual winner but was caught 300 meters out and while failing to pin T M South Dan, rejected the challenges by the late chargers to finish third by a neck. Red le Zele (JPN), the 3.9-1 favorite, was ridden most of the way in midpack, found himself in tight quarters in early stretch and was unable to fire thereafter, finishing sixth.

As a part of the benefits of the Challenge series, the Breeders' Cup will pay the pre-entry and entry fees for Cafe Pharoah to start in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, which will be run a 1 ¼ miles on the main track at Keeneland. Breeders' Cup will also provide a US$40,000 travel allowance for all starters based outside of North America to compete in the Championships.

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‘Pharoah’ Doubles Up in February S.

Café Pharoah (American Pharoah) returned to the winner's circle for the first time since landing the 2021 G1 February S. in the 2022 version, and became the second horse to win two editions after Copany Rickey (Jpn) (Gold Allure {Jpn}) in 2014/15. A “Win And You're In” for the GI Breeders' Cup Classic in November, the 1600-metre race saw the Noryuki Hori-trained runner draw off by 2 ½ lengths from T M South Dan (Jpn) (South Vigorous), with the popular white filly Sodashi (Jpn) (Kurofune) ran third, another half-length back.

In touch with the first flight as Sunrise Hope (Jpn) (Majestic Warrior) cleared the field, the 4-1 shot perched in between horses in fifth. The bay edged closer to the vanguard once Yuichi Fukunaga relaxed his hold as T M South Dan took over pacesetting duties from Sunrise Hope and hit the half-mile pole in :46.80. Sunrise Hope began a gradual retreat and Sodashi had dead aim on T M South Dan. Surging three deep, Café Pharoah began to let down strongly as Sodashi tired at the quarter pole, and took over the lead from T M South Dan with 200 metres to travel. He maintained the advantage all the way to the line, covering the 1600 metres in a snappy 1:33.80 in the mud, tying the track record.

“Mr. Hori and I went over the tactics before the race and everything went as planned,” said pilot Yuichi Fukunaga, who was returning from an injury sustained during the Longines Hong Kong International Races. “Cafe Pharoah's start wasn't that sharp but he recovered well and we were able to sit in a good position, in third, where he didn't have to bear too much sand in his face, which was what I was hoping for. After that I just tried to keep him focused especially after taking over the lead in the final stages. I'm grateful to the connections who offered me this ride even before I had fully recovered from the fall in Hong Kong and am happy that I was able to do a good job.”

Knocked down for $475,000 to Narvick International, agent, after breezing a quarter in :21.1 at the OBS March Sale in 2019, the 5-year-old entire won his first three starts at two and three, with stakes victories in the Listed Hyacinth S. and G3 Unicorn S. Later that year, he added the G3 Sirius S. and, after a sixth-place run in the G1 Champions Cup in December fo 2020, put it all together in the 2021 February S. The Paul Pompa, Jr.-bred bay was off the board in his next three starts, among them the Champions Cup at Chukyo on Dec. 5 when last seen.

 

Pedigree Notes
One of three Grade/Group 1 winners for his American Triple Crown-winning sire, Café Pharoah is also the first of the trio to win twice at the highest level. Of the Coolmore Ashford resident's 24 stakes winners, 13 have been grade/group winners.

Since his February S. win last year, Café Pharoah's year-older half-sister Regal Glory (Animal Kingdom) became a Grade I winner herself with an 2 1/2-length win in the GI Matriarch S. at Del Mar in the colours of Peter Brant's White Birch Farm. Also a winner of four other graded stakes including Saratoga's GII Lake Placid S. over her career, she had sold for $975,000 out of the Paul Pompa, Jr. Dispersal at Keeneland January in 2021, while their dam, Mary's Follies had been knocked down to BBA Ireland on a bid of $500,000 at the same sale. The first foal out of the dam was the GIII Dania Beach S. and GIII Transylvania S. hero Night Prowler (Giant's Causeway). Mary's Follies's 4-year-old colt by Uncle Mo died, while she also has a 3-year-old colt by Candy Ride (Arg) and a juvenile colt by Connect. She aborted after being bred to Curlin in 2020, and re-visited Coolmore Ashford's American Pharoah last spring.

 

Sunday, Tokyo, Japan
FEBRUARY S.-G1, ¥232,980,000, Tokyo, 2-20, 4yo/up, 1600m, 1:33.80, my.
1–CAFE PHAROAH, 126, h, 5, by American Pharoah
                1st Dam: Mary's Follies (MGSW-US, $338,889),
                                by More Than Ready
                2nd Dam: Catch the Queen, by Miswaki
                3rd Dam: Wave to the Queen, by Wavering Monarch
($475,000 2yo '19 OBSMAR). O-Koichi Nishikawa; B-Paul P.
Pompa (KY); T-Noryuki Hori; J-Yuichi Fukunaga. ¥123,486,000.
Lifetime Record: 11-6-0-0. *1/2 to Night Prowler (Giant's
Causeway), MGSW-US, $475,682; and Regal Glory (Animal
Kingdom), GISW-US, $1,529,884. Werk Nick Rating: A++. Click
   for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–T M South Dan (Jpn), 126, h, 5, South Vigorous–Moving Out
(Jpn), by Langfuhr. 1ST GROUP 1 BLACK TYPE. (¥17,280,000
Ylg '18 JBBAAUG). O-Masatsugu Takezono; B-Grand Farm
(Jpn); ¥48,996,000.
3–Sodashi (Jpn), 121, f, 4, Kurofune–Buchiko (Jpn), by King
Kamehameha (Jpn). O-Makoto Kaneko Holdings; B-Northern Farm (Jpn); ¥30,498,000.
Margins: 2HF, HF, NK. Odds: 4.10, 7.90, 7.20.
Also Ran: Soliste Thunder (Jpn), Time Flyer (Jpn), Red le Zele (Jpn), Arctos (Jpn), Sunrise Nova (Jpn), Air Spinel (Jpn), Mutually (Jpn), Inti (Jpn), Sunrise Hope (Jpn), Suave Aramis (Jpn), Teorema (Jpn), Daiwa Cagney (Jpn), K T Brave (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart & video or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Cafe Pharoah To Defend G1 February Stakes Title, Aim For Berth In The Classic

Defending champion Cafe Pharoah and multiple graded-stakes winner Red le Zele (JPN) headline 16 runners entered for Sunday's US$2.25 million February Stakes (Group 1) at Tokyo Racecourse, with the winner receiving the first automatic berth into this year's US$6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

Now in its 15th season, the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series is an international series of stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, which is scheduled to be held at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Kentucky, on Nov. 4-5.

The February Stakes, run at 1 mile on dirt, will be televised live on TVG at 10:40 p.m. PT on Saturday, Feb. 19.

The 2021 Breeders' Cup World Championships at Del Mar was historic for Japanese racing when Loves Only You (JPN) in the Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1) and Marche Lorraine (JPN) in the Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) became the first two Japanese based horses to win races at the World Championships. Last week, Loves Only You became the first Japanese horse to win a North American Eclipse Award, as she was voted the Champion Female Turf honor.

In 2015 at Keeneland, U.S. Triple Crown winner American Pharoah won the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic to close out a brilliant career. Last year, Koichi Nishikawa's Cafe Pharoah became the first son of American Pharoah to win a Graded/Group 1 race on dirt, when he captured the February Stakes by three-quarters of a length over Air Spinel (JPN) as the 2-1 favorite.

Trained by Noriyuki Hori, Cafe Pharoah, bred in Kentucky by the late Paul Pompa, is unbeaten in three starts at Tokyo, including the Unicorn Stakes (G3) in 2020 and the listed Hyacinth Stakes. Cafe Pharoah went winless in three starts following his February Stakes win, including an 11th-place finish in the 1 1/8-mile Champions Cup (G1) at Chukyo on Dec. 5. Now a 5-year-old, Cafe Pharoah, a winner of five races in 10 starts, will be making his 2022 debut on Sunday. Yuichi Fukunaga has the mount, breaking from post six.

“He came back to the stable on January 13, and that's been the usual pattern with him, returning early from the farm,” said Hori to the Japan Racing Association website. “About two weeks ago he worked smoothly, without moving his head around and playing with the bit, and ran well right up to the end.”

Tokyo Horse Racing Co. Ltd.'s 6-year-old Red le Zele, fourth in last year's race, has eight wins in 19 starts, including his final race of last year, the 7-furlong JBC Sprint at Kanazawa on Nov. 3. Trainer Takayuki Yasuda, who won the February Stakes with Transcend (JPN) in 2011 and Grape Brandy (JPN) in 2013, feels that Red le Zele's recent win is a sign of more good things to come.

“It was a bold run last time, when he got a clear run up the inside, where the dirt was deep, to win impressively,” said Yasuda to JRA. “He has been at the farm since, but this has been his target, and things have been fine with him. He is the type that's good in winter.”

Last January, Red le Zele won the Negishi Stakes (G3) at Tokyo, and after the February Stakes the son of Lord Kanaloa (JPN) finished second in the six-furlong Dubai Golden Shaheen (G1) at Meydan. He finished third in the Tokyo Hai at Ohi on Oct. 6 prior to his win in the JBC Sprint. Yuga Kawada will ride Red le Zele, starting from post five.

One of two fillies in the field is Kaneko Makoto Holdings Co.'s 4-year-old homebred Sodashi (JPN), who defeated Loves Only You in last year's Sapporo Kinen (G2) by three-quarters of a length. Noted for her distinctive white color, Sodashi, trained by Naosuke Sugai, won her first five races, including the Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas) (G1) at Tokyo last April. After an eighth-place finish in the Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) (G1), the daughter of Kurofune rebounded with her win in the 1 ¼-mile Sapporo Kinen against older horses in August. However, her next two starts were disappointing. She finished 10th as the 9-5 favorite in the 1 ¼-mile Shuka Sho (G1) at Hanshin in October, and making her first start on dirt, finished 12th in the Champions Cup after leading the field through the top of the stretch. Breaking from post 11, Sodashi will be ridden by Hayato Yoshida.

“In recent training, she's been showing plenty of power, particularly at the finish,” said Sugai to JRA. “She just wasn't able to keep things going in the Shuka Sho and Champions Cup last year, but I'm pleased enough with the way she's been moving recently, and running on dirt seems suitable for her.”

In January, Masatsuga Takezono's 5-year-old T M South Dan (JPN) came from off the pace to win the seven-furlong Negishi Stakes (G3) by a length and earned his ninth win in 18 starts. Trained by Yuzo Iida, T M South Dan also won two seven-furlong sprints last year, taking the Tele Tama Hai Oval Sprint in September and the Hyogo Gold Trophy at Sonoda in December.  T M South Dan will be ridden by Yasunari Iwata from post 15.

NICKS Co. Ltd.'s  7-year-old Suave Aramis (JPN) has also notched a win this year, taking the 1 1/8-mile Tokai TV Hai Tokai Stakes (G2) by a half-length at Chukyo on Jan 23. Trained by Naosuke Sugai and ridden from post 10 by Daisaku Matsuda, Suave Aramis captured one race in 2021, registering a half-length win in the Elm Stakes (G3) at Hakodate last August.

Minoru Murakami's Soliste Thunder (JPN) was favored in last month's Negishi Stakes, but did not make a serious bid and finished ninth of 16 runners. A 7-year-old son of Toby's Corner, trained by Daisuke Takayanagi, Soliste Thunder won the Tokyo Chunichi Sports Hai Musashino Stakes (G3) prior to the Negishi. Keita Tosaki will ride from post 13.

Last year's runner-up, Lucky Field Co. Ltd.'s 9-year-old Air Spinel, finished second to Soliste Thunder in the Musashino Stakes. A four-time winner, trained by Kazuhide Sasada and ridden from post 16 by Mirco Demuro, Air Spinel closed out 2021 with a ninth-place finish in the Champions Cup.

Koichiro Yamaguchi's 7-year-old Arctos (JPN) is a 10-time winner, who won his last two races of 2021, taking the Sakitama Hai at Urawa in June and the Mile Championship Nambu Hai in October at Morioka. Trained by Toru Kurita, Arctos finished ninth in last year's February Stakes as the 4-1 second choice. Arctos will be ridden by Hironobu Tanabe from post four.

Also of interest is Shigeo Takeda's homebred Inti (JPN), who won the 2019 February Stakes for trainer Kenji Nonaka. The 8-year-old son of Came Home finished 14th in the 2020 edition and was sixth in last year's race. Inti will be ridden by Yutaka Take, a five-time February Stakes winner, from post three.

As a part of the benefits of the Challenge series, the Breeders' Cup will pay the pre-entry and entry fees for the winner of the February Stakes to start in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic. Breeders' Cup will also provide a US$40,000 travel allowance for all starters based outside of North America to compete in the Championships. The Challenge winner must be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program by the pre-entry deadline of Oct. 24 to receive the rewards.

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Japan’s Breeders’ Cup Wins Voted ’21 Moment of the Year

The performances by Japanese-based Loves Only You (Jpn) and Marche Lorraine (Jpn) at the Breeders' Cup World Championships at Del Mar last November has been voted the 2021 FanDuel Racing-NTRA Moment of the Year based on the results of 3,000 votes cast via Twitter and an online poll, according to the National Thoroughbred Racing Association Thursday.

The FanDuel Racing-NTRA Moment of the Year will be recognized at the 51st Annual Eclipse Awards presented by 1/ST Racing, FanDuel Racing Group and the NTRA at Santa Anita Park at 8:30p.m. Feb. 10.

In addition to TVG and RTN, the ceremony will be streamed live on NTRA.com, americasbestracing.net  (ABR), Bloodhorse.com, DRF.com, Equibase.com, MyRaceHorse.com (YouTube), santaanita.com/live, Thoroughbred Daily News (www.theTDN.com), TOBA.org and XBTV.com.

In voting that concluded Feb. 2, fans voted for #JapaneseDuo as the top Moment of 2021. On 13 previous occasions, Japanese-based horses had failed to win a race at the Breeders' Cup World Championships, but that changed at the Nov. 6 Breeders' Cup when DMM Dream Club's Loves Only You won the GI Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf, giving Japan its first-ever Breeders' Cup triumph. Two hours later, U. Carrot Farm's Marche Lorraine shocked the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff, winning by a nose at 49-1.

Moment of the Year voters had the opportunity to choose from 11 occurrences in 2021.

Following #JapaneseDuo in second place was #DiversityStepForward when George Leonard became the first African American trainer to compete in the Breeders' Cup World Championships.

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