The Week in Review: Arazi’s ‘Move’ Long Outlives His Hype

Off the top of your head, how many Thoroughbreds can you name who have been immortalized by having their characteristic in-race “move” named after them?

Only three leap to mind for me: The “Silky Sullivan move” was coined in the late 1950s in honor of a California fan favorite who made a career out of lagging far behind and closing with a flourish, sometimes from more than 40 lengths off the pace. This phrase made its way into the lexicon of other sports and even American politics to signify an improbable victory under last-to-first circumstances.

A generation later, Secretariat's audacious seizure of the lead, rocketing from sixth to first through the first turn in the 1973 GI Preakness S., stood out so emphatically as a display of raw-torque dominance that inhaling the field with an outside rush on the clubhouse bend became known as the “Secretariat move.” This tactic is not often attempted, primarily because of how difficult the move is to execute successfully to win a race.

And then there was the “Arazi move” unleashed in the 1991 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile.

Right up until he died peacefully last week in Australia at age 32, the compact chestnut with the jagged white blaze and offset right knee managed to carry outsized cachet here in the States on the basis of our collective respect for one of the most jaw-dropping, sluice-through-the-pack winning runs ever uncorked in a race for 2-year-olds.

That widespread appreciation wasn't always so. Initially, when the dual-continent juvenile champ fell underwhelmingly short of international Classics expectations at age three, Arazi was roundly criticized as an overhyped flop.

Yet when Arazi retired late in 1992 after finishing well-beaten in his career finale, Joseph Durso of the New York Times hinted at a lasting legacy by writing, “So, they won't have Arazi to kick around anymore as a media superstar. But the mystique and the mystery will linger.”

Phenoms who don't follow through generally don't get remembered kindly–if they get remembered at all–in our sport. Arazi couldn't live up to his premature stamp as the defining Thoroughbred of his era. But he retained iconic status in America almost entirely on the basis of that one sublime, sustained run at Churchill Downs Nov. 2, 1991.

When the France-based colt (who had never before raced on dirt or over a counter-clockwise layout) blasted into contention at the head of the lane in the Juvenile after dropping far back from the undesirable 14 post, even Breeders' Cup announcer Tom Durkin seemed taken aback by the “menacing rush” that left America's top 2-year-olds “stunned…with the move here of Arazi, and he's pouring it on! Just an incredible move as they come to the top of the stretch!”

As Arazi kicked clear, widening by five lengths under wraps, Durkin speculated that the son of Blushing Groom (Fr) out of a Northern Dancer mare could have easily won by 10, exuberantly punctuating the performance by exclaiming, “Here, indeed, is a superstar!”

It's impossible to recall Arazi's aura without placing into proper context the outlandish hype he generated in that pre-internet era. He became the immediate winter-book favorite for the 1992 GI Kentucky Derby (back when you had to actually go to a Las Vegas casino to get down a futures wager on America's most important horse race). His odds were as low as 8-5 even though it was well-reported that Arazi had undergone arthroscopic surgery in Kentucky to remove bone spurs on both knees four days after the Breeders' Cup.

Three weeks later, the colt returned to France, where old-school trainer Francois Boutin was not overly enthused about providing the detailed status reports about Arazi's progress that American turf writers constantly craved.

Prepping his star in private on the wooded trails of Les Aigles, Boutin legged up Arazi by training him five miles a day at differing gaits and speeds. In the weeks prior to Arazi's one and only pre-Derby prep race, Boutin unintentionally created a media frenzy by criticizing the decision by co-owners Allen Paulson and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum to have Arazi undergo the knee surgeries.

“Personally, I don't think that his knees are any better now than they were before,” Boutin allegedly said (later claiming he was mis-translated). “If anything, they are more of a problem than they were….  At the time of the operation, I didn't think it was necessary…. He does not need to do better to win the Kentucky Derby.”

Then in mid-March, a different controversy broke in the press: Arazi's connections were apparently already looking past a presumed win on the first Saturday in May, and were at odds over whether Arazi would pass up the final two U.S. Triple Crown races to try to become the first winner of both the Kentucky Derby and the Epsom Derby. “This is where we may have a problem,” Boutin said at a press luncheon. “If it was left to me as trainer, if I was to arbitrate, my preference would be for the Epsom Derby.”

On Apr. 7, 1992, Arazi easily won the listed Prix Omnium at Saint-Cloud. With 25 days to the Kentucky Derby, the fervor intensified, with Arazi drawing rave comparisons to Secretariat. Bear in mind that even though Secretariat was followed in the late 1970s by a string of elite Triple Crown aspirants like Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Alydar, and Spectacular Bid, none of them had been seriously or widely compared to him. Arazi was different, though.

Even Daily Racing Form's Joe Hirsch, the ultra-conservative dean of American turf scribes, couldn't resist the hyperbole.

“[Arazi] is such an extraordinary animal that he makes other great horses look like hacks,” Hirsch wrote. On the eve of the Derby, sports media columnist Richard Sandomir of the New York Times previewed ABC's Derby broadcast as a “90-minute Arazi Show” that would use 24 cameras and 164 microphones “to show Arazi's expected coronation.”

Arazi, though, was essentially a no-show for his own Derby party.

Trying to mimic his move in the Breeders' Cup, jockey Patrick Valenzuela parked the 9-10 favorite at the back of the pack. The colt began to unwind approaching the far turn, with announcer Dave Johnson intoning that “Arazi is flying…gaining ground with every stride!” He ranged up to challenge the leaders off the far turn, then suddenly had nothing left to give. Arazi backpedaled to eighth through the stretch, weakening behind 16-1 upsetter Lil E. Tee.

Deflated, Arazi flew back to France. He lost at Ascot in June and at Longchamp in September prior to winning the Oct. 4 G2 Prix du Rond-Point at Longchamp. He was aimed for another stateside run in the Breeders' Cup, with his European-based rider, Steve Cauthen, angling for the mount in the GI Mile on the grass at Gulfstream Park.

Valenzuela, who had absorbed more than his fair share of flak for Arazi's Derby defeat, ended up retaining the ride in the Mile, with Paulson promising him the gift of a Rolls-Royce if he won with all four of Paulson's Breeders' Cup entrants (P-Val won with two and presumably did not get half a Rolls). He tried to put Arazi closer to the early action, but the phenom faded to 11th as the 3-2 favorite. “No excuse, no rally” was the chart caller's comment. Three weeks later, Arazi was retired to stud in Newmarket with nine wins from 14 starts and earnings of $1.2 million.

While Arazi spent the next several decades traveling the globe in a workmanlike stallion career that took him from England to Three Chimneys Farm in Kentucky and later Japan, Switzerland and Australia, his human connections spiraled off in different directions.

Boutin was diagnosed with liver cancer around the time Arazi retired. He died in 1995 and always maintained that Arazi was the best horse he had ever seen.

Paulson, incredibly, got a rare second chance at a “horse of a lifetime” two years after Arazi's last start when Cigar captivated America with his 16-race winning streak. Paulson died in 2000.

Sheikh Mohammed is still chasing that elusive first Derby win. His Godolphin racing operation is now 0-for-12 in the Run for the Roses. In 2021, 29 years after Arazi's odds-on loss, another Godolphin color-bearer, 'TDN Rising Star' Essential Quality (Tapit), also went down in defeat as the Derby favorite.

Valenzuela, considered one of the continent's premier riders at age 30 when he piloted Arazi, never sustained long-term success in the saddle because of a decades-long litany of substance-abuse problems. But P-Val has repeatedly said Arazi was the best horse he ever rode.

Arazi himself never was able to leap that grand chasm of hype between his stellar juvenile season and a puzzling, physically compromised sophomore campaign.

But the “Arazi move” has stood the test of time for nearly 30 years.

In fact, Independence Day weekend came to a close Sunday night with a 6-year-old gelding named–believe it or not–Arazi Like Move (Graydar) entered in the seventh race at Mountaineer Park in West Virginia.

The ambitiously named 7-for-38 sprinter has a seemingly impossible moniker to live up to (the 9:30 p.m. post time for that allowance/optional claimer was scheduled too late for the results to be included in this column).

But you can bet Arazi Like Move always has fans rooting for that spark of sensation that was once so boldly embodied by his namesake.

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Kentucky To European Horsemen: We Want You

It's easy to see why so many top American stables have made a point of circling the Kentucky Downs meet on their calendars. It mainly comes down to the money. During the unique European-style six-day meet, $10 million alone will be paid out in stakes purses, there are three $1 million races, maiden races go for $125,000 and the purses for allowance races range from $135,000 to $145,000. This year, Chad Brown will be there and so will Wesley Ward, Brad Cox, Bill Mott, Steve Asmussen and many other top stables.

Yet, the story of Kentucky Downs and its purses, among the best in the world, has apparently not traveled across the Atlantic Ocean. From Europe, there has been little to no participation at the annual meet that runs through the early part of September.

“We're the track they've never heard of,” said Kentucky Downs Director of Racing  Rick Hammerle.

It's something Kentucky Downs management is hoping to change.

The Kentucky Downs team has decided to make a concerted effort to attract European horsemen, which includes a post COVID-19 trip in 2022 to meet top trainers in person. In the meantime, they're doing everything they can to get their story out, and they have a long list of talking points. It starts with the purses.

A new record will be set this year with $14,903,000 in purse money, which averages out to $2,483,833 a day. It must be noted that, due to funds provided by the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF), only Kentucky-breds run for the full listed purse. But even absent that contribution to the purse, the pots are still huge. Generally, about 50 to 60% of the total purse is available to all horses.

“It's kind of surprising that more European horses haven't come over for the Kentucky Downs meet,” said Fergus Galvin, the U.S. racing advisor for Qatar racing, which has been a big supporter of Kentucky Downs. “Quite a bit of the money is tied in with the KTDF money that is built into the purses, but, leave that aside, and the purses are still tremendous, especially when you compare them to what these horse might be running for in Europe. They have races for every category and at every distance, for sprinters, for milers, for route horses. There are a lot of opportunities.”

Hammerle hopes European stables will focus in not on a single race or two but the entire meet. It would make perfect sense for a stable to bring over six or seven horses.

“There are a lot of reasons why people put horses on a plane,” he said. “It's not always for the Breeders' Cup or for a certain race for a certain caliber of horse. It would be great to have Breeders' Cup horses, but there is a whole caliber underneath. You can think of this as something like the Dubai Carnival. Those horses run for a lot of money and not all of them are horses you'll see back on the World Cup card. Historically, people in Europe don't think of a race meet as something to point towards. We'd like to change that.”

There have been a number of horses to win at Kentucky Downs that have started their careers in Europe before moving into U.S. stables. Many of them would not have been considered top-tier horses overseas, but, like many Europeans horse before them, have found that the competition in U.S. grass races is not as strong as it is in England, Ireland and France. Kentucky Downs has also been held back by the graded stakes committee's slow response to its ascendancy. Even with those purses, there are no Grade I races at the meet and only six of the 16 stakes are graded.

Galvin said you wouldn't necessarily need to bring a star over to come away with a lucrative stakes win.

“You wouldn't have to bring over the cream of the crop to be very competitive down there,” he said. “Obviously, the best turf horses in the world are normally based in Europe. So there is a great opportunity for maybe a second-tier type horse to be competitive in any type of race.”

For those who have the ability to perform in the Breeders' Cup, Kentucky Downs also make sense. They can make just one trip to the U.S., run at Kentucky Downs, maybe at Keeneland in the following weeks, and then go to the Breeders' Cup. That will be a particularly attractive option in 2022 when the Breeders' Cup will be just up the road at Keeneland.

It's usually fairly warm and dry in southern Kentucky in September, so Kentucky Downs may also present an opportunity for European horses that like the firm going, something that is often not available overseas at that time of the year. The layout of the track is another factor that should help European shippers. With its undulations, sweeping turns and long stretch, Kentucky Downs is the closest thing the U.S. has to a typical European race course.

Hammerle understands that there won't be an influx of horses overnight, but he's confident that once a handful come over the word will start to get out and others will follow.

“If we start with one or two coming over and a few people experiencing it, they are going to go back and share their experience with people,” he said. “That can only help us. Maybe in five years or so we can be lucky enough to have, say,10 shippers on a card. If they come over, I can't imagine they'll regret it. Not with the money we have for our purses.”

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Firenze Fire Looks to Stay Hot in Nerud

Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior) has scored half of his 14 lifetime victories at Belmont and looks to add to that Saturday as the favorite in the GII John A. Nerud S., a “Win and You're In” for the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint S. Victorious in this event last year in his second start for the Kelly Breen barn, the Mr. Amore Stable homebred was off the board in his next two attempts in the GI Alfred G. Vanderbilt H. and GI Forego S. at Saratoga. Returning to winning ways back at Belmont in the GII Vosburgh Invitational S. in September, the bay checked in third in the Breeders' Cup in November and closed out 2020 with a close second in Gulfstream's GIII Mr. Prospector S. Making his 2021 bow at Belmont, he captured the GIII Runhappy S. May 8 and followed suit in the GII True North S. June 4.

Previously trained by Greg Sacco, MGISW Mind Control (Stay Thirsty) makes his first start for the Todd Pletcher barn here. He hasn't seen the winner's circle since March 2020 when he captured the GIII Tom Fool H. at Aqueduct. Runner-up in the GI Carter H. in April, he failed to fire when seventh in the GI Churchill Downs S. last time May 1.

American Power (Power Broker) enters off a third-place finish in the True North. He captured the GIII Toboggan S. earlier this term. Also exiting the True North is fourth-place finisher Wicked Trick (Hat Trick {Jpn}), who finished a solid second in the GIII Westchester S. in his prior start May 1.

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‘Matured’ Hot Rod Charlie Could Run Without Blinkers In Haskell

Third in the Kentucky Derby and second in the Belmont Stakes, Hot Rod Charlie has been confirmed for the G1 Haskell Invitational on July 17 after a six-furlong work in 1:11.60 this Friday, reports bloodhorse.com. The 3-year-old son of Oxbow will breeze at Santa Anita again on July 9, then fly east the following day.

Trainer Doug O'Neill was extremely pleased with the colt's penultimate breeze, for which jockey Flavien Prat was aboard. Hot Rod Charlie went without blinkers, as he has several times this year, and O'Neill is strongly considering removing the equipment for the Haskell.

“It's one of those deals where the blinkers helped him focus and become the racehorse he's become, but as he has matured, Flavien says he seems very happy without them,” O'Neill told bloodhorse.com. “We're hoping that obviously with some of these stretch duels that racing without them will tip us over onto the winning end of a stretch duel. We just wanted to try it in the mornings. So far, it's been a good experience. As it stands right now, more than likely 'Charlie' will run without blinkers in the Haskell.”

The Haskell is a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Classic this fall at Del Mar. Other top 3-year-olds under consideration for the nine-furlong contest include Mandaloun and Rombauer.

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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