Total Of Eight Stakes Races To Comprise Breeders’ Cup Undercard On Friday, Saturday

Flawless Racing, Masino Racing Stable, Brian Flanagan and Michael Jarvis' Cupid's Claws, who is coming off a 7¼-length win in the 1½-mile Tokyo City Cup (G3) Sept. 27 at Santa Anita, is the 124-pound highweight in the 13th running of the $200,000 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (G2) on Friday, the first of the two-day Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland.

The TAA and seven other stakes will precede the Breeders' Cup, which Keeneland is hosting for the second time. The event debuted here in 2015.

Here is a rundown of the supporting stakes on Friday:

Race 1, post time 11:30 a.m. – first running of the $125,000 Nyquist, 2-year-olds, 6½ furlongs

The race is named for Nyquist, who won the 2015 Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) at Keeneland and was named champion 2-year-old male. The winner of his first eight races, Nyquist captured the 2016 Kentucky Derby (G1).

The nine horses entered in the Nyquist, from the rail out with riders and weights, are:

Highly Motivated (Javier Castellano, 118 pounds), Roderick (Irad Ortiz Jr., 118), Twilight Blue (Brian Hernandez Jr., 118), Upstriker (Joe Talamo, 118), Sir Wellington (Jose Lezcano, 118), Quick Tempo (Jose Ortiz, 118), Assertive Style (Florent Geroux, 115), Awesome Gerry (Tyler Gaffalione, 118), Saffa's Day (Ricardo Santana Jr., 118).

Race 2, post time 12:05 p.m. – first running of the $125,000 Songbird, 2-year-old fillies, 6½ furlongs

The race is named for Songbird, who opened her career with 11 consecutive wins including the 2015 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) at Keeneland. She was a champion at 2 and 3.

Fourteen horses and one also-eligible were entered in the Songbird. The field, from the rail out with riders and weights, is:

Lady Edith (Brian Hernandez Jr., 118 pounds), Off We Go (Luis Saez, 118), Roc's Princess (Jon Court, 118), Thinking (Jose Ortiz, 118), Mona Stella (Florent Geroux, 118), Joy's Rocket (Ricardo Santana Jr., 120), Novel Squall (Gabriel Saez, 118), Taylor's Tourist (Mitchell Murrill, 118), The Grass Is Blue (Irad Ortiz Jr., 118), Music City Star (Adam Beschizza, 118), Farsighted (Julien Leparoux, 118), Kela's Turn (Robby Albarado, 120), Guana Cay (Gerardo Corrales, 118), California Lily (Tyler Gaffalione, 118). Also-eligible: Princesstapiture (John McKee, 118).

Race 3, post time 12:40 p.m. – 16th running of the $150,000 Bryan Station, 3-year-olds, 1 1/8 miles (turf)

Fourteen horses and four also-eligibles were entered in the Bryan Station. The field, from the rail out with riders and weights, is:

Enforceable (Adam Beschizza, 118 pounds), No Word (Jose Ortiz, 118), Taishan (Julien Leparoux, 118), Angelus Warrior (Manny Franco, 118), Pixelate (Umberto Rispoli, 122), Fancy Liquor (Florent Geroux, 122), Spanish Kingdom (Corey Lanerie, 118), Vanzzy (Jose Lezcano, 118), Order of Australia (IRE) (Ryan Moore, 118), Reconvene (Joe Bravo, 118), Mo Ready (Irad Ortiz Jr., 118), Fighting Seabee (Brian Hernandez Jr., 118), Don Juan Kitten (Flavien Prat, 118), Bye Melvin (John Velazquez, 118). Also-eligibles: Ajourneytofreedom (Tyler Gaffalione, 118), Ever Dangerous (Javier Castellano, 118), Mud Pie (Luis Saez, 118), Bama Breeze (Joel Rosario, 118)

Race 4, post time 1:15 p.m. – first running of the $150,000 McConnell Springs, fillies and mares, 3-year-olds and up, 6 furlongs

The nine horses entered in the McConnell Springs, from the rail out with riders, are:

Bye Bye J (Ricardo Santana Jr.), Amy's Challenge (Jose Lezcano), Headland (Tyler Baze), Into Chocolate (Jose Ortiz), Harmless (Luis Saez), Unique Factor (Joel Rosario), Unholy Alliance (Tyler Gaffalione), Wildwoods Beauty (Joe Rocco Jr.), Royal Charlotte (Javier Castellano). All starters carry 120 pounds.

Race 5, post time 1:50 p.m. – 13th running of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (G2) (formerly known as the Marathon), 3-year-olds and up, 1 5/8 miles

The 14 horses entered in the TAA, from the rail out with riders and weights, are:

Muralist (Juan Hernandez, 122 pounds), Farmington Road (Javier Castellano, 118), Rocketry (Irad Ortiz Jr., 122), Militiaman (Joel Rosario, 122), Tenfold (Tyler Gaffalione, 122), You're to Blame (John Velazquez, 122), Signalman (Brian Hernandez Jr., 122), Ry's the Guy (Chris Landeros, 122), Mirinaque (ARG) (Gerardo Corrales, 122), Dack Janiel's (Declan Cannon, 118), Job Security (Adam Beschizza, 122), Plus Que Parfait (Jose Ortiz, 122), Cupid's Claws (Flavien Prat, 124), Danny California (Manny Franco, 122).

The supporting stakes on Saturday are:

Race 1, 10:15 a.m. – 12th running of the $125,000 Perryville, 3-year-olds, 6 furlongs

The seven horses entered in the Perryville, from the rail out with riders and weights, are:

Nashville (Ricardo Santana Jr., 118), Little Menace (Tyler Gaffalione, 120), Fore Left (Flavien Prat, 118), Bango (Florent Geroux, 118), Wild Wes (Mitchell Murrill, 118), Relentless Dancer (Irad Ortiz Jr., 120), Cajun Brother (Luis Saez, 118).

Race 2, 10:45 a.m. – 73rd running of the $150,000 Lafayette Presented by Keeneland Select, 3-year-olds and up, 7 furlongs

The 12 horses entered in the Lafayette, from the rail out with riders and weights, are:

Engage (Jose Ortiz, 120 pounds), Dinar (Tyler Gaffalione, 120), Absolutely Aiden (Chris Landeros, 120), Midnight Sands (Irad Ortiz Jr., 120), Edgemont Road (Declan Cannon, 120), Sleepy Eyes Todd (Joel Rosario, 124), Everfast (Julien Leparoux, 120), Strike That (David Cohen, 122), Ebben (Corey Lanerie, 120), Mind Control (John Velazquez, 124), True Timber (Jose Lezcano, 120), Phat Man (Javier Castellano, 124).

Race 3, 11:20 a.m. – 10th running of the $125,000 Qatar Fort Springs, 3-year-old fillies, 6 furlongs

The 11 horses entered in the Qatar Fort Springs, from the rail out with riders and weights, are:

Ain't No Elmers (Adam Beschizza, 120 pounds), Anna's Fast (Jose Ortiz, 118), Artie's Princess (Flavien Prat, 120), Wicked Whisper (Ricardo Santana Jr., 120), Miss T Too (John Velazquez, 120), Fair Maiden (Corey Lanerie, 118), Merneith (Luis Saez, 118), Boerne (Javier Castellano, 118), Rising Seas (Gerardo Corrales, 118), Motivated Seller (Irad Ortiz Jr., 118), Regal Beauty (Brian Hernandez Jr., 118).

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Big Day at the Office for Hamm Friday

With more than 1300 wins and $30 million in career earnings, a training center in Florida and a breeding operation in Ohio, Tim Hamm has already done plenty to prove his skills as a horseman and businessman. But on Friday, he’ll get a chance to showcase his program on the biggest stage when he sends out unbeaten and more or less untested Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) to take on the household barns in the GI Juvenile Fillies. It will be his first runner, as a trainer at least, in the World Championships.

Like many conditioners, the Ohio native grew up around horses–he had experience with Saddlebreds and Standardbreds, and his parents owned an Arabian farm. His father, who worked for General Motors, trained horses off the family’s farm and shipped them in to race at Mountaineer.

Hamm attended Youngstown State and earned a bachelor’s degree in business before immediately starting his own construction company upon graduation. Business must have been pretty good, as a few years into his construction career, Hamm ventured down to Ocala to shop the 1994 OBS April sale.

He purchased a Pennsylvania-bred filly by Proof for $13,500 and, after someone explained to him what her state-bred status meant, Hamm pointed his purchase towards a debut at Philadelphia Park that July. Named Willowy Proof, Hamm’s filly romped by 9 1/4 lengths in that initial outing.

“I was coming off the track, and the breeder approached me and asked if she was for sale. I said ‘No, I’m just kind of fiddling around here,'” Hamm recalled. “But they offered me $100,000. At that time, I didn’t realize that when they ran big you could make some money selling them. So, that spurred the thought that maybe I could make a business out of this. It was either beginner’s luck or not that hard–now I know it was beginner’s luck.”

Hamm went back to Ocala the following year and purchased four more horses, who he says all became stakes winners. He also bought a farm in nearby Williston around that time, and while he’s added and subtracted to that property over the years, the majority of Hamm’s runners since 1995 have gotten their start at that facility.

Hamm also preps some babies at his farm for the 2-year-old sales, and has sold under his Blazing Meadows Farm banner the likes of champion Wait a While ($50,000 KEESEP ’04 to $260,000 OBSFEB ’05) and Grade I-winning juvenile Sky Diva ($100,000 KEESEP ’07 to $250,000 FTFFEB ’08).

He’s been to the Breeders’ Cup before as an owner with flashy Ohio-bred Too Much Bling, who he sent out to a 19 1/2-length maiden-breaking score at Thistledown in 2005. Stonerside Stable subsequently purchased a majority interest in the colt and turned him over to Bob Baffert, for whom he took a trio of graded stakes before finishing sixth in the 2006 GI Breeders’ Cup Sprint.

Hamm said he typically breaks a crop of 40 to 50 on his farm, but had 75 last year and will have around 80 2-year-olds of 2021.

A significant part of his business comes from partnering with large commercial breeders. He has a close relationship with WinStar Farm, co-breeding and campaigning Ohio-breds together and standing the stallion National Flag at Blazing Meadows Ohio as WinBlaze. Hamm has also teamed up in recent years with the likes of Three Chimneys Farm, for whom his brother Tom is Director of Stallion Seasons, and Breeders’ Cup chairman Fred Hertrich III and John Fielding. Three Chimneys and Blazing Meadows race last year’s two-time Woodbine stakes winner Fast Scene (Fast Anna) together.

“They’re on an individual basis–some of them are on deals, some we partner on and some are from conception,” Hamm said when asked about the structure of his partnerships. “Most of the WinStar horses are ones we’re breeding together. Each horse is different, how it’s structured. Historically, what we started doing years ago, if they had one they really liked but maybe the sire wasn’t that hot or maybe there was a blip on the X-rays that might not hurt them to race but would hurt them at a yearling sale; or maybe their conformation wasn’t up to what would pass at a yearling sale to really get much, we took a lot of those [on deals] and we still do some of those.”

Hamm’s first time working with Dayoutoftheoffice’s breeder and co-owner, Anthony Manganaro, Ignacio Patino and David Pope’s Siena Farm, came in 2015 with eventual 2016 My Dear S. heroine Velvet Mood (Lonhro {Aus}).

“In our first experience with Siena, they gave me a Lonhro filly who was really crooked, not real big, but I took her and they called me a week later and said, ‘You know, we feel like we’re not giving you much of a shot with that filly. If you’re going to invest this time and money, we’re going to throw in this Ghostzapper colt–a more attractive horse,'” Hamm said. “It ended up that the Lonhro filly won her first three, including a stake at Woodbine and we sold her for pretty good money. The colt turned out to be a dud, but that’s how we get started with Siena.”

Hamm said he took an equity position in Dayoutoftheoffice in exchange for training her, and it didn’t take him long to figure out he had gotten a good one.

“It was probably late January or February,” Hamm said when asked when he first knew Dayoutoftheoffice was a runner. “There were three fillies who really stood out in our crop, and sure enough all three ended up really being runners. We always thought she was the best of the three based on the fact that she had a lot of size and scope along with being very athletic. The other two were [eventual Ohio-bred multiple stakes winners] Alexandria (Constitution) and Esplanande (Daredevil). Esplanade was second in the GI Spinaway S. to the filly who was second in the Frizette, and Alexandria was third in the GIII Pocahontas S. You can identify them pretty early, but what you can’t control is injury and sickness and all that.”

Dayoutoftheoffice got an early start to her career when she scored by 4 3/4 lengths at Gulfstream May 14. She was dismissed at almost 20-1 in Saratoga’s GIII Schuylerville S. two months later, but took another leap forward to air by six lengths.

“I was fairly confident that she would run very well [in the Schylerville]–whether she would win it or not, I think all those fillies that have just broken their maiden and are going into graded stakes at Saratoga for the first time, you really don’t know how they’re going to react when they meet the next level of horse,” Hamm said. “I was very skeptical about running her

4 1/2 furlongs at Gulfstream, but she was ready, and I didn’t want to keep training on her and waiting so we figured we’d get a race in her and see how she did. I knew she had a lot of ability early, and I guess she answered the question as to whether she could up her level.”

With the Breeders’ Cup circled on the calendar for quite some time now, Hamm has kept Dayoutoftheoffice’s races well spaced out. She didn’t make a start between the July 16 Schuylerville and Oct. 10 GI Frizette S. at Belmont, while posting seven drills back and forth between Thistledown and Belterra Park in the interim.

“When you start these horses in May, and she’d been in training since at least Oct. 1 [of 2019], we’d done a lot of 2-year-olds over the years and if you just drill them and drill them and don’t give them a little break, I just don’t see them lasting,” Hamm said. “We knew we had a horse who could possibly make the Breeders’ Cup, so we tried to space it so that would be a viable option if she proved to have the ability. We were slightly worried she would be short for the Frizette–she hadn’t run in 80-something days–but her last two works heading into the Frizette were pretty good. We thought she had a heck of a chance to be tight enough, and if we came out of there, we’d have a really fresh and good horse going into the Breeders’ Cup.”

Dayoutoftheoffice proved plenty fit for the next step, and bested GI Spinaway S. romper Vequist (Nyquist) by two lengths at Belmont with a chasm of 10 1/4 lengths back to third.

“I thought it was outstanding,” said Hamm. “Watching the race, it looked like she was in control of it the whole time. She never made me question if she was going to get it done. She just looked in command from the start.”

Dayoutoftheoffice is one of four unbeaten fillies set to square off in the Juvenile, along with pricey three-for-three Baffert trainee and ‘TDN Rising Star’ Princess Noor (Not This Time) expected to go favored; Ken McPeek-conditioned Simply Ravishing (Laoban) coming off a 6 1/4-length score in the GI Darley Alcibiades S. that was so impressive it played a major role in bringing her freshman sire from New York to Kentucky for 2021; and $500,000 yearling and ‘Rising Star’ Girl Daddy (Uncle Mo), last seen taking the Sept. 3 GIII Pocahontas S. by daylight for Dale Romans and the Albaugh Family Stable.

Dayoutoftheoffice owns a best last-out Beyer Speed Figure of 95, with Vequist having earned a 91 for her Frizette second. Princess Noor, meanwhile, only has a 79 Beyer top, Simply Ravishing an 89 and Girl Daddy an 82. But Dayoutoftheoffice seems to have garnered significantly less hype than either Princess Noor or Simply Ravishing.

“Probably because I’m not Baffert or McPeek and I haven’t been to the Breeders’ Cup before,” Hamm said matter-of-factly when asked about the seemingly underdog status of a filly with as impressive a set of past performances as Dayoutoftheoffice’s and who also happens to be by the world’s hottest stallion. “There’s no other reason.”

Hamm said he has been excited to see his charge race around two turns all summer, and he called her 1:00.40 breeze in the Keeneland mud last Friday “her best work.” Now it’s time to see what she, and he, can do against the big guns.

“It’s big for our whole operation–we’ve got the training center in Ocala, the breeding farm in Ohio. The thing that means the most to us is that it lets you know that you can get there,” Hamm said. “We hope that gets contagious. Sometimes the hardest thing is getting there, and sometimes you never get back there. We’re hoping that this won’t be the last time, and you realize it’s not an impossible dream you’re chasing–that it’s attainable. We’re hoping that our people kind of all buy in a little harder and stay on board, and it’s the same with our clients. It shows our clients that if we’ve got the right horse, we can get there. And hopefully it’ll allow us to keep building stronger relationships with them.”

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Breeders’ Cup Presents The News Minute: Let The Handicapping Begin

With 184 entries, including 48 Breeders' Cup Challenge Series Win and You're In victors, 37 international competitors and four returning champions, officials drew post positions for the Nov. 6-7 Breeders' Cup world championship races today at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky.

There are nine full fields in the 14 races, including four of the five Future Stars Friday Breeders' Cup races on Nov. 6, giving horseplayers a virtual feast of handicapping opportunities.

The three Bob Baffert horses in the $6-million Breeders' Cup Classic drew the three outside post positions in the field of 10, headed by 5-2 morning line favorite Improbable in post eight. Trainer Barclay Tagg had hoped his Tiz the Law would draw outside, but he was not so lucky, drawing the No. 2 post position.

View today's Breeders' Cup News Minute below:

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Baffert Trio Draws Outside, Tiz the Law Two in Loaded Breeders’ Cup Classic

Continuing a trend of favorites and short prices drawing outside at Monday’s Rood & Riddle Breeders’ Cup Post Position Draw, the potent trio of Bob Baffert contenders in the GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic drew next door to each other in the three widest posts in a loaded field for the 1 1/4-mile test.

Given a slight nod on the morning line at 5-2, Improbable (City Zip) was parked in the eight-hole when pills were pulled. The ‘TDN Rising Star’, who had an up-and-down 3-year-old season, has come into his own at four, scoring three straight Grade I tallies in the Gold Cup S., Whitney S. and Awesome Again S.

One slot to his outside is Baffert’s GI Kentucky Derby winner Authentic (Into Mischief). The last horse standing for his powerhouse barn in the Run for the Roses after several of Baffert’s top contenders dropped away through the season, Authentic went wire to wire and gamely repelled odds-on favorite Tiz the Law (Constitution) to score. He was then a narrow runner-up to the game Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) in the GI Preakness S.

Widest out is Maximum Security (New Year’s Day). The biggest lightning rod of a horse in recent memory, the Gary and Mary West homebred was famously disqualified from a victory in last year’s GI Kentucky Derby for interference, won a champion 3-year-old statuette and this year’s $20-million Saudi Cup, then was mentioned by name in an indictment of his trainer Jason Servis earlier this year that alleged widespread doping of Servis’s horses. Transferred to Bob Baffert since, he scored in the GII San Diego H. and GI TVG Pacific Classic before finishing a well-beaten second to Improbable in the Awesome Again.

Tiz the Law, victor of the GI Curlin Florida Derby, GI Belmont S. and GI Runhappy Travers S., seemed well on his way to a divisional title before coming up short in the Derby. Passing on the Preakness, he has trained up to the Classic for Barclay Tagg and drew post two. The only other horse in single digits on the morning-line is Tom’s d’Etat (Blame), who annexed the GII Stephen Foster S. earlier this year.

In the draw for the GI Longines Distaff, champion Monomoy Girl (Tapizar) took the worst of it, pulling the widest draw in a field of 10 as the 8-5 chalk. Victress of the 2018 Distaff at Churchill, she is set to clash with ascendant sophomore filly Swiss Skydiver (post five) as one of the most anticipated battles of the weekend.

Other notable horses who drew outside posts Monday include Complexity (Maclean’s Music). Made the 2-1 favorite for the GI Big Ass Fans Dirt Mile, the GII Kelso S. winner is in post 10, a highly disadvantageous starting point for a race that will feature an extremely short run before horses bend into the first turn. Golden Pal (Uncle Mo), the 8-5 favorite for the GII Juvenile Turf Sprint, drew widest of all in post 14. Got Stormy (Get Stormy, post 12 in the GI Turf Sprint, 7-2), Vekoma (Candy Ride {Arg}, post 14 in the GI Sprint, 3-1), and Ivar (Brz) (Agnes Gold {Jpn}, post 11 in the GI Mile, 4-1) are also in double-digit posts as the morning-line favorites in their respective races.

The shortest-priced favorite of the two days on the morning line is 7-5 Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music), who dodged a bullet in the GI Juvenile draw when pulling post seven while 13 and 14 were still unfilled with just five pills to go.

Overall, 184 horses were entered in the 14 races, seven of which feature overflow fields. The action kicks off Friday at 2:30 p.m. ET with the Juvenile Turf Sprint.

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