TDN Snippets: Week of March 7-13

Legacy pedigrees made their presence felt last week as debuters and Derby contenders alike took to the stage. Here's how things stand now that the dust has cleared.

One last hurrah for Giant's Causeway…
Classic Causeway flies his late sire's flag high as part of a very exclusive club. One of three members of Giant's Causeway's final crop–and all colts, the GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby winner is the third son of the 'Iron Horse' to conquer the race behind Carpe Diem and Destin. With two generations of Classic-winning dam sires in his pedigree, the chestnut seeks to fly in further rarified air in May.

An American in the Land of Oz…
LNJ Foxwood's Lighthouse (Mizzen Mast) might have shown a new light on US participation in Australian racing when the mare came home strongest of all to win the G1 Coolmore Classic at Rosehill on Saturday. She's the second US-bred in three years to win the Coolmore, joining Con Te Partiro in 2020. Con Te Partiro was purchased privately from Newgate SF (after RNA-ing at Keeneland November in 2020) by Sheikh Fahad's Qatar Racing for $1.6 million.

A strong Constitution
We the People declared himself a voice unable to be ignored when the Constitution colt dominated his allowance rivals at Oaklawn Park en route to declaration of rising stardom. The $230,000 FTFMAR snag by Winstar Farm, CMNWLTH, & Siena Farm became his sire's seventh 'TDN Rising Star' in two years. We the People was bred on the same Constitution/Tiznow cross as MGISW Tiz the Law. Picked up by Henley Farms for $40,000 at the 2019 KEEJAN sale with We the People in utero, his dam, Letchworth produced an Always Dreaming colt in 2020 and an Audible colt in 2021. Both are May foals. She was bred back to More Than Ready.

Team Valor sees green with inexpensive filly…
Green Up (Upstart) might be a bit immature with room to grow, according to Barry Irwin, but the filly has already shown the only path for her is up. Coming off a big figure second place effort for prior connections, the globetrotting silks flew home in a 6 3/4 length masterclass in Hallendale with 'TDN Rising Star' honors as icing. A modest $10,000 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic yearling, and a later private acquisition by Irwin's syndicate, Green Up claims the solid runner Just Call Kenny (Jump Start) in her female family. She is her sire's second Rising Star along with Reinvestment Risk last year and Upstart also claims Kentucky Oaks prospect Kathleen O.

The Curlin Factor…
Juddmonte homebred Obligatory began her 2022 campaign the same way she ended 2021: with a graded win. Curlin, who is the sire of this filly and 46 other graded winners, has 86 black-type winners to his name, representing just over 11% of his starters. Incredible numbers especially when considering 16 of those are Grade I winners. Obligatory is a third-generation Juddmonte homebred. Juddmonte bought her unraced third dam, Nijinsky Star, for $700,000 at the 1987 Keeneland November sale.

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The Week in Review: Classic Causeway Visually Impressive, but Still Light on Key Metrics

Sometimes when a film gets released, the reviews are great but box-office numbers are subpar. A rough parallel on the GI Kentucky Derby trail is when a prep race looks visually appealing, but the underlying metrics–final time, internal splits, speed figures, perceived quality of the field–give cause for pause when trying to assess just how good the performance actually was and what it will mean moving forward.

A case in point is Classic Causeway's GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby win Saturday. For the second straight stakes, this final-crop son of Giant's Causeway broke like a rocket and unleashed a grace-under-pressure wire job, kicking clear through the final furlong while wrapped up late by jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr., before galloping out with gusto. The victory was emphatic and gave the impression this Brian Lynch-trained homebred for Kentucky West Racing (Patrick O'Keefe) and Clarke Cooper has yet to scrape the bottom of his stamina reserves.

Classic Causeway has been No. 1 on TDN's Derby Top 12 since Feb. 23, and barring unforeseen circumstances, that's where I plan to rank him next week, too. But he's hardly a universal consensus as the kingpin of the crop, and being so highly rated also means Classic Causeway is fair game to be subjected to scrutiny that lesser-ranked, work-in-progress Derby contenders don't have to endure in mid-March.

Purely from a “how he did it” perspective, there's plenty to like about Classic Causeway's Tampa Derby score. Just like in the Feb. 12 GIII Sam F. Davis S., this energetic chestnut speed-popped the gate like a Quarter Horse, and Ortiz let him range out to the six path before swooping down into the clubhouse bend to tighten the lateral gap by claiming lane two through the first turn.

Classic Causeway was then allowed to drift back out to the four path on the backstretch after an opening quarter of :23.67, but none of his tightly packed pursuers took Ortiz up on his gambit by edging up the wide-open rail (it was a drying-out track over which the innermost paths might have been boggier).

Although Classic Causeway led under pressure, the mid-race tempo wasn't hot. After a second quarter in :24.50 and a third in :25.01, the field approached the top of the lane with a three-wide Classic Causeway motoring along comfortably with every rival in his wake being scrubbed on to keep pace.

Wandering to the five path in upper stretch, Ortiz hand-urged Classic Causeway for another gear and the colt kicked on willingly, his white-blazed face and attentive ears in metronomic rhythm with his efficient stride.

Some judicious stick work at the eighth pole elicited yet another level of torque, and once it became clear no one else was in it to win it, Ortiz let his colt coast home (:25.22 fourth quarter and :6.50 final sixteenth) without further asking, winning by a 2 1/2-length margin that could have been bigger had Classic Causeway been roused for more.

But as impressive as the effort seemed while watching it unfold, the numbers-driven post-race  perspective paints a less powerful picture of the victory.

Classic Causeway's final time for 1 1/16 miles was 1:44.90. Three races earlier, in that afternoon's only other race at that distance, older males in a Grade III stakes ran 1.37 seconds faster.

That comparatively slow clocking earned Classic Causeway a Beyer Speed Figure of 84, which represents a four-point regression off his 88 in the Sam F. Davis last month. That number is on par with the GII Rebel S. two weeks back at Oaklawn, which has been resoundingly panned as one of the weaker preps on this season's slate of Derby qualifiers.

In addition, being loose on the lead was a small plus on Saturday at Tampa. After a substantial rain soaking, the “good” track started out sealed before being opened up, and that afternoon's eight dirt races were won by three wire-to-wire leaders, three who vied for the lead, and two from farther off the tailgate.

Considering that speed is the universal bias in North American racing, such a pace profile is not really unusual. But it also brings up the legitimate question of whether Classic Causeway has been excelling over a surface that he absolutely relishes, and whether his undefeated sophomore season will continue when he races at another venue.

The “quality of competition” question is also germane. While Classic Causeway does, in fact, come out of one of the strongest Derby preps we've seen in a while (the Nov. 27 GII Kentucky Jockey Club S.), that key race is now 3 1/2 months in his rear-view mirror, and the company he's been keeping at age three is a cut below the heavy hitters he faced at Churchill. In his two Tampa tries this winter, Classic Causeway has roughed up no other horses currently ranked within the TDN Top 12.

A glance at social media in the aftermath of the Tampa Derby yields no shortage of prognosticators pointing out that Classic Causeway's ability to wrest control from a bunch of double-digit longshots is not the same thing as going head-to-head against the likes of A-level blazer Forbidden Kingdom (American Pharoah) or the battle-proven frontrunner Epicenter (Not This Time).

Again, these criticisms are all lobbed at Classic Causeway in the spirit of acknowledging that when you're ranked No. 1 in any endeavor, you go about life with a figurative target on your back.

A positive performance over nine furlongs (and it doesn't necessarily have to be a win) against tougher competition would make Classic Causeway a formidable foe heading to Louisville.

In that respect, it was refreshing to hear Sunday afternoon that Lynch hasn't been sipping from the less-is-more Kool-Aid punch bowl that some trainers indulge in every spring. There will be no two months of down time between the Tampa and Kentucky Derbies for Classic Causeway.

“It's eight weeks between now and the Derby,” Lynch told TVG's Andie Biancone. “I'd seriously consider the [GI Toyota] Blue Grass [S. at Keeneland Apr. 9]. I don't know if I can sit on him that long without getting a race in him. I think a mile-and-an-eighth race a month out from a mile-and-a-quarter race would be a pretty good way to take one in.”

Asked what impressed him the most about his colt, Lynch said, “Just the want-to that he has in his running style. He just looks so comfortable. He seems to be loving his job at the moment. He just seems to be a really happy horse who's bred to run and he loves to do it.”

And that stout gallop-out after the wire?

“That was something that we were looking at, too,” Lynch said. “Irad sort of geared him down, and when he geared him down he jumped up into the bridle and it was a powerful gallop-out. It always gives you hope that he can run on.”

There's not much arguing that Classic Causeway is strong on visuals but light on numbers. That combination can only carry a colt so far along the Derby trail. We'll just have to sit back and watch the movie a bit longer to see how the plot thickens as the cadence quickens.

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Classic Causeway Coast To Coast in Tampa Bay Derby

Where it comes to Kentucky West Racing LLC and Clarke M. Cooper's Classic Causeway (Giant's Causeway), mapping out race strategy is a fairly straight-forward undertaking. For the second time in as many starts as a sophomore, the handsome chestnut found the front after breaking like a shot and widened his advantage late to take the GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby and secure a berth in the starting gate in the GI Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in eight weeks' time.

“That early speed is a great asset to have because you're going to stay out of trouble when you can break fast and clear,” winning trainer Brian Lynch commented. “When you have a horse that can run them off their feet early, get a chance to take a breather and relax and still be able to finish, that is a great asset in a horse.”

Same as he did when wiring the field in the GIII Sam F. Davis S. Feb. 5, Classic Causeway hit the ground running beneath Irad Ortiz, Jr. and galloped them along in the two and three path.

Grantham (Declaration of War), fourth in what is becoming a productive renewal of the GIII Withers S. the same afternoon, was given a more positive ride this time from gate one and argued from the rail, while Giant Game (Giant's Causeway) and Trademark (Upstart) were also part of the early mix. Davis runner-up Shipsational (Midshipman) settled in about midfield while trapped out very wide from a high draw.

The first quarter was timed in a very manageable :23.67 and the half was up in :48.17 as Classic Causeway continued to show the way, content to chart a course at least three paths off the inside over a track that took plenty of rain earlier in the day and was rated 'good' for the Derby. Shipsational was the first to try to make a race of it as he loomed up four wide under a Manny Franco drive at the five-sixteenths, but Ortiz, Jr. was saving Classic Causeway for a bit of a finish and spurted clear again, despite drifting out a touch in upper stretch. Firmly in front as they hit the final furlong, the odds-on pop held sway and was actually going away at the wire, with a final sixteenth of a mile in a modest :6.50. Grantham plugged on gamely for second on what may not have been best part of the track, just holding off a game Shipsational for third. Golden Glider (Ghostzapper) showed some late interest to be a further neck back in fourth.

“He gave me the same performance again [as in the Davis],” Ortiz, Jr. reported. “He broke good. He gave me good position and I just went from there. He was traveling perfect all the way to the 3/8-mile pole. When I asked him, he was there. Getting close to the wire, he was looking around a little bit, but I felt I had a lot more horse. He's acting like he can carry his speed more. These last couple of races he's been acting after the wire like he still has more left. I don't want to jinx it, but I think there is something more there.”

One of the more impressive juvenile winners at Saratoga last summer, Classic Causeway had to be used from the 13 hole in the GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity and set a sharp pace before understandably retreating late to finish an excusable third. Beaten on the square by 'TDN Rising Star' Smile Happy (Runhappy) in the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. at Churchill in late November, he set a more pressured pace in the David, but had plenty left late and went on to best Shipsational by 3 3/4 lengths.

Pedigree Notes:

As has been widely reported, Classic Causeway is one of three members from the final crop of his sire–all colts. Giant Game finished eighth in Saturday's race, while the final member of the crop, Shadwell's Monaadah, was an impressive debut winner in a 1400-meter turf allowance when making his career debut at Meydan Mar. 3.

Classic Causeway is the third Tampa Bay Derby winner for the 'Iron Horse', joining Carpe Diem and Destin, the latter of whom was the last to complete the Davis/Derby double.

Classic Causeway has plenty of Classic influence close up in his pedigree. Dam sire Thunder Gulch caused a 24-1 upset in the Run for the Roses in 1995, while Temperence Hill, sire of the colt's third dam, won the 1980 Belmont S. for Loblolly Stable at a robust 53-1.

One of five winners from eight to race out of the multiple stakes-winning Private World, Classic Causeway has a 2-year-old half-sister by Lookin At Lucky and a yearling half-brother by Justify. Private World is due to the Triple Crown winner for 2022.

Saturday, Tampa Bay Downs
LAMBHOLM SOUTH TAMPA BAY DERBY-GII, $350,000, Tampa Bay Downs, 3-12, 3yo, 1 1/16m, 1:44.90, gd.
1–CLASSIC CAUSEWAY, 118, c, 3, by Giant's Causeway
1st Dam: Private World (MSW, $166,058), by Thunder Gulch
2nd Dam: Rita Rucker, by Dmitri
3rd Dam: Darlease, by Temperence Hill
O/B-Kentucky West Racing LLC & Clarke M Cooper; T-Brian
A Lynch; J-Irad Ortiz Jr. $210,000. Lifetime Record: GISP,
5-3-1-1, $511,100. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the
eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Grantham, 118, c, 3, Declaration of War–Darby Blush, by
Arch. 1ST BLACK TYPE, 1ST GRADED BLACK TYPE. ($100,000
Ylg '20 FTKOCT; $280,000 2yo '21 OBSAPR). O-Three Diamonds
Farm; B-Winter Creek Farm (KY); T-Michael J Maker. $70,000.
3–Shipsational, 118, c, 3, Midshipman–Regal Approach, by
Thunder Gulch. ($27,000 Wlg '19 KEENOV; $210,000 2yo '21
OBSMAR). O-Iris Smith Stable LLC; B-Bertram R Firestone
(NY); T-Edward R Barker. $35,000.
Margins: 2HF, NK, NK. Odds: 0.80, 37.90, 4.60.
Also Ran: Golden Glider, Trademark, Spin Wheel, Belgrade, Giant Game, Happy Boy Rocket, Major General. Scratched: Money Supply, Strike Hard. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

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This Side Up: A Model Flagship For Stormy Seas

There is always something especially shocking about the death of a stallion in his prime. Nature contains no more vivid an incarnation of vitality than this most literal of life forces, daily renewing the gift of existence. For a candle as bright as Get Stormy to be extinguished so abruptly, then, will leave a grievous void at Crestwood Farm.

Having spent five years in training, even at 16, Get Stormy's second career was only just entering its key phase. For not until the next year or two will his best stock start reaching the track, his books having soared in both quality and quantity after an early stakes barrage led, from his second crop, by triple Grade I winner Got Stormy. No less than her name implies, she was inlaid with the watertight genetic teak of her sire, matching his own record of graded stakes success through four consecutive campaigns.

It's all there in the McLean family slogan, “We raise runners.” In a business where so many horses are raised to do no more than stand and stroll, with breeders heading for the hills the moment the gavel comes down, that fairly rudimentary aspiration has an almost quixotic quality. But a trademark combination of blood and guts governs nearly the whole Crestwood roster: Jack Milton (War Front), for instance, won a Grade I at five and, much like Get Stormy himself with Moccasin (Nantallah), brings into play a Claiborne matriarch in Bourtai (Stimulus); while Heart To Heart (English Channel) won graded stakes annually from three to seven.

Get Stormy's nickname on the farm was Clyde, because he had so much brawn and timber that he evoked a Clydesdale. I've always had a mad theory (actually supported by the stats) that his reputation as a turf sire is self-fulfilling, and that his physical stamp, toughness, and speed-carrying style were ideally tailored for dirt. Be that as it may, despite nudging an initial fee of $5,000 no farther than $7,500, Get Stormy already leaves us half a dozen graded stakes winners. (That's as many as Maclean's Music, for instance, from the same intake.) And his two millionaires to date were respectively out of a $4,500 Malabar Gold mare, and a daughter of Brahms unsold at $18,000 on her only visit to the ring.

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Two days after Get Stormy's loss, on just the other side of Georgetown Road, the venerable heart of Go For Gin also gave out at the Kentucky Horse Park, his home since retiring from stud in 2011. At 31, he had been the oldest surviving Derby winner—and long enjoyed precisely the kind of dignified, pampered retirement everyone was someday anticipating, a few years down the line, for Get Stormy.

But while life's disasters seldom arrive with any rhyme or reason, perhaps we can glimpse some timely succor for Crestwood. Because any clients with mares booked to Get Stormy should certainly consider another stallion on the roster, also from the Storm Cat line, who only last weekend reiterated the striking promise he has shown from minimal opportunity to date.

Firing Line has mustered no more than 39 starters from his first couple of crops but 24 of them have already won and, having burdened him this winter with a place on a TDN “Value Podium”, I was delighted to see Venti Valentine confirm her candidature for the GI Kentucky Oaks with a seven-length romp in the Busher S. last Saturday. Other credits to Firing Line include Nakatomi's success in the Bowman's Mill S. at Keeneland last fall, after placing in the GII Saratoga Special S.; plus the recent Fair Grounds romp of his $210,000 2-year-old Oscarette.

Besides beating all bar a Triple Crown winner in the Derby, don't forget that Firing Line was only denied a juvenile Grade I by a head and broke the track record in winning the GIII Sunland Park Derby by 14 lengths. True to Crestwood principles, moreover, his talent was rooted in a mile-deep pedigree: his dam is a Grade I-placed sibling to the mothers of two Grade I-winning milers, their line extending to matriarchs Kamar (Key to the Mint) and Square Angel (Quadrangle).

Whether or not Firing Line can fill the breach, Get Stormy will undoubtedly be making posthumous additions to his legacy. After all, Giant's Causeway himself—perhaps the greatest conduit of all, for this sire-line—is not quite done yet, even though he bequeathed just three foals from a handful of final coverings before his death in the spring of 2018. Incredibly, two of them now line up together for the GII Langholm South Tampa Bay Derby with a total of 85 gate points on the line for the first Saturday in May.

Curiously, both were born on 22 February 2019. Classic Causeway is being brought along beautifully at Palm Meadows by Brian Lynch, with a foundation of longer breezes for his comeback before dialing up the speed since; while Giant Game has himself been working the house down after some running repairs on a displaced palate.

Still more remarkably, it was only last week that the final Giant's Causeway of all—born eight days after the other pair—made a winning debut for Shadwell in Dubai, charging clear by four and a half lengths. So the hope that the Iron Horse might “rust in peace”, which may sound irreverent but intends a wholly affectionate tribute to his ferrous qualities, is proving happily misplaced. This is not the dull shimmer of iron, but a last glint of genetic gold.

Perhaps Giant's Causeway is looking down in vexation after his son Protonico just had a Derby winner effaced from the record. Depending how things go at Tampa Bay, however, maybe this time he won't have merely a vicarious presence at Churchill, admirably though he is being represented by Not This Time.

Mind you, even giant steps must always be made one at a time. The card also features the resumption, at long last, of the colt who looked like the pick of his crop this time last year. Let's hope the patience of everyone involved with Greatest Honour (Tapit) finds due reward in his maturity.

Ironically, his own sire's frustrating sophomore career gave a quite misleading impression about the toughness he has tended to impart to his stock; and someday, no doubt, Greatest Honour will validly recycle one of the best pedigrees you will ever see.

Certainly he won't be one of those stallions, so corrosive to the breed, that teeter to market on a wafer-thin page and a whizzbang speedfigure or two. The Thoroughbred's vocation is not for the flimsy of limb, nor the faint of heart. So while Crestwood may have lost their flagship, they have not lost their bearings. They are navigating by the stars, by the fixed points of soundness and pedigree, and we would all do well to follow in their wake.

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