Obligatory Flies Late To Snatch Eight Belles Victory From Dayoutoftheoffice

“Pace makes the race.”

So said jockey Jose Ortiz, who figured going into Friday's Grade 2 Eight Belles Stakes at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., that the early fractions were going to be fast.

Aboard Juddmonte Farms homebred Obligatory in the seven-furlong race for 3-year-old fillies, Ortiz could see all but one of the 12 runners ahead of him as the field rounded the turn into the stretch.

But, as Ortiz surmised, the pace was fast: 21.89 for the opening quarter mile and :44.46 for the half mile. Dayoutoftheoffice – the 3-1 favorite making her first start since finishing second in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies last Nov. 6 at Keeneland – had chased the early leaders and was moving to the lead with just under a quarter mile to go.

The Into Mischief filly looked home free after six furlongs in 1:09.16, but a gray blur on the outside in the form of Obligatory – a daughter of Curlin – was closing relentlessly. She seized command in the final sixteenth and drew off to win by a length. Time for the seven furlongs on a fast track was 1:21.89.

Dayoutoftheoffice finished second, with Make Mischief 1 3/4 lengths back in third and Souper Sensational fourth. She was followed by Abrogate, Li'l Tootsie, Caramel Swirl, Slumber Party, Cantata, Euphoric and Windmill. Kalypso, according to the Equibase chart, bled and was eased in the stretch.

Obligatory, trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, who was winning the Eight Belles for the third time, paid $35 for the upset.

Longshot Euphoric jumped out to the early lead, with Windmill breathing down her neck in the long run down the backstretch. Dayoutoftheoffice raced in third, three wide, just behind the leading pair. Ortiz allowed Obligatory to trail the field.

Jockey Gerardo Corrales made his move to the lead on Dayoutoftheoffice as the top pair began to fade, opening a 2 1/2-length advantage with a furlong to run. But his filly was not able to hold off the late-running winner.

“She ran her heart out,” said Corrales. “I thought my filly was in a good position turning for home but could not hold off the winner.”

“They were going very fast,” said Ortiz. “It looked on paper, too, before the race they were gonna go pretty fast. I just tried to sit chilly and make one run on her. That's what I did and she gave it to me. The pace makes the race.”

Obligatory was coming off a fourth-place finish going two turns in the Grade 2 Fair Grounds Oaks on March 20, and Ortiz thinks the cutback in distance also helped the filly. Plus, he pointed out, the top two finishers that day – Travel Column and Clairiere – were two top-class fillies who would be competing later Friday in the Kentucky Oaks.

The Eight Belles was Obligatory's second win in four starts and first in a stakes. She left the maiden ranks in her second start going a one-turn mile at Gulfstream Park on Feb. 7.

“I think she was a little confused when she ran two turns in New Orleans (Fair Grounds Oaks),” said Mott. “She ran a very big effort at Gulfstream, had a little trouble, had to check coming around, you could see visually it was a very good effort. We thought she was good enough to go to the Fair Grounds Oaks, I think she's good enough, but she's green and the two turns confused the heck out of her. Maybe we could find out down the road that she's a better one-turn horse. I think five weeks away, they run the Acorn. I have no reason to believe she can't get a mile. And sometimes the two-turn deal could be a greenness thing. The pace today turned out good. We both knew there was a tremendous amount of speed in the race. She was able to close into it. She had a good kick. You just hope it didn't take too much out of her, she got the win and I think she earned a ticket into a good race like the Acorn.”

Trainer Bill Mott and jockey Jose Ortiz fist bump after the Eight Belles win by Obligatory

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Curlin’s Obligatory Comes From the Clouds to Upset the Eight Belles

Longshot Obligatory cut back and came flying to run down come-backing GISW Dayoutoftheoffice Friday. Fourth on debut after a rough start sprinting at Belmont in October, the Juddmonte homebred donned cap and gown over a one-turn mile at Gulfstream Feb. 7. She was last seen finishing a somewhat one-paced fourth in the Mar. 20 GII Fair Grounds Oaks behind Travel Column (Frosted), Clairiere (Curlin) and Souper Sensational (Curlin).

Obligatory dropped straight to the back early as last year's GI Frizette S. heroine and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies runner-up Dayoutoftheoffice chased a quick pace from third that yielded opening splits of :21.89 and :44.46. The favorite took over heading for home and looked on her way to victory, and Obligatory swung very wide but still had plenty to do. Like a grey blur, Obligatory inhaled foes down the center of the track and blew by Dayoutoftheoffice in the final strides.

“It was just like I planned it,” said winning jockey Jose Ortiz, who had piloted Maxfield (Street Sense) to victory earlier on the card in the GII Alysheba S. “I told [Juddmonte general manager] Garrett [O'Rourke] and [trainer] Bill [Mott] that there was going to be a lot of speed on the rail on paper. I was going to sit on her and give her one good move. The first part was nice and easy. The second part she came running. According to the numbers, and I don't know numbers, but they said she could win the race and they were right. She's a filly that is improving a lot.”

This was the third victory in this event for Mott.

“I think she was a little confused when she ran two turns in New Orleans,” the Hall of Famer said. “She ran a very big effort at Gulfstream, had a little trouble, had to check coming around, you could see visually it was a very good effort. We thought she was good enough to go to the Fair Grounds Oaks, I think she's good enough, but she's green and the two turns confused the heck out of her. Maybe we could find out down the road that she's a better one-turn horse. I think five weeks away, they run the [GI] Acorn. I have no reason to believe she can't get a mile. And sometimes the two-turn deal could be a greenness thing. The pace today turned out good. We both knew there was a tremendous amount of speed in the race. She was able to close into it. She had a good kick. You just hope it didn't take too much out of her, she got the win and I think she earned a ticket into a good race like the Acorn.”

Friday, Churchill Downs
EIGHT BELLES S. PRESENTED BY SMITHFIELD-GII, $300,000, Churchill Downs, 4-30, 3yo, f, 7f, 1:21.89, ft.
1–OBLIGATORY, 118, f, 3, by Curlin
1st Dam: Uno Duo (SW, $171,300), by Macho Uno
2nd Dam: Willstar, by Nureyev
3rd Dam: Nijinsky Star, by Nijinsky II
1ST BLACK TYPE WIN, 1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. O-Juddmonte; B-Juddmonte Farms Inc (KY); T-William I Mott; J-Jose L Ortiz. $172,980. Lifetime Record: 4-2-0-0, $217,780. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating: A++.
2–Dayoutoftheoffice, 122, f, 3, Into Mischief
Gottahaveadream, by Indian Charlie. O-Blazing Meadows Farm & Siena Farm LLC; B-Siena Farms LLC (KY); T-Timothy E Hamm. $55,800.
3–Make Mischief, 118, f, 3, Into Mischief–Speightful Lady, by Speightstown. ($285,000 Ylg '19 SARAUG). O-Gary Barber; B-Avanti Stable (NY); T-Mark E Casse. $27,900.
Margins: 1, 1 3/4, 2 1/4. Odds: 16.50, 3.10, 23.60.
Also Ran: Souper Sensational, Abrogate, Li'l Tootsie, Caramel Swirl, Slumber Party, Cantata, Euphoric, Windmill, Kalypso.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

Pedigree Notes:

The late Khalid Abdullah's operation paid $700,000 for Obligatory's third dam Nijinsky Star at the 1987 Keeneland November sale. Already the dam of that year's GI Kentucky Oaks runner-up Hometown Queen (Pleasant Colony), Nijinsky Star would later become the grand dam of Hometown Queen's GSW/GISP son Bowman's Band (Dixieland Band) and of the Grade I winners Sightseek (Distant View) and Tates Creek (Rahy). Second dam Willstar produced French Group 1 winner and graded producer Etoile Montante (Miswaki), as well as the dam of last year's GII Fair Grounds Oaks heroine and recent GIII Doubledogdare S. winner Bonny South (Munnings).

Obligatory is the second foal to race out of Uno Duo, who never raced beyond seven furlongs and was a restricted stakes winner on the Aqueduct inner track. Uno Duo has a 2-year-old filly by Arrogate and a yearling colt by the same late superstar. She most recently visited Into Mischief.

Obligatory is the 41st graded winner and 79th stakes winner for top sire Curlin. She is the third graded winner, second in the Northern Hemisphere, out of a mare by Macho Uno–2015 Eight Belles winner Promise Me Silver (Silver City) was the other.

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King Fury to Scratch from Derby

Fern Circle Stables, Three Chimneys Farm and Magdalena Racing's King Fury (Curlin) will be forced to scratch from Saturday's GI Kentucky Derby after spiking a fever Friday, his trainer Ken McPeek announced via a video on twitter. The $950,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga yearling and last-out GIII Stonestreet Lexington S. winner was drawn in post 16 and was 20-1 on the morning line.

“King Fury spiked a 104 fever this afternoon after he galloped this morning. He went off his feed. We obviously have to do the right thing–I feel gutted for [owners] Paul Fireman and Goncalo Torrealba and [jockey] Brian Hernandez and all the people who have worked so hard to get him to this race, but unfortunately, he is not 100%,” McPeek said. “This is a horse who has been doing well all week–anyone who watched him train had to be impressed, I know I was. We felt pretty confident going into this race. We had a big chance. We're obviously going to scratch him, on veterinarian advice–which is an easy one. We'll take him out, regroup and point to another race. I think you'll probably see this horse pointed for the [Aug. 28 GI] Travers, which I think is a great spot.”

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Bandoroff’s Dream of a Denali Exacta

If anyone sees Conrad Bandoroff on the Churchill Downs backside Friday morning, be sure to check in on him.

With the possibility of a Denali-consigned exacta in the GI Kentucky Oaks, the farm's vice president said the flutter of butterflies in his stomach will probably have doubled in size by the dawning of Oaks Day.

“During the lead up throughout the week, there's always so much going on that you can kind of keep yourself distracted,” he said. “I imagine that Thursday night, that's when it might start to set in, or during the drive from Lexington to Louisville on Friday morning.”

The Denali exacta will be popular amongst handicappers, and if it were to win the payout certainly wouldn't be too extraordinary. While 'TDN Rising Star' Malathaat (Curlin) is the expected favorite, Travel Column (Frosted),the second Denali representative and another 'Rising Star,' was given 3-1 morning line odds as the co-second choice.

“Just to have a horse in the starting gate is a huge accomplishment,” Bandoroff said. “It's not an easy thing to do, but we pride ourselves in raising Saturday afternoon horses, or in this case Friday afternoon horses. We're very grateful that we're going to get to be there for the ride and we'll hope for the best.”

Travel Column with stakes-winning dam Swingit at Spring Ridge Farm. | Mathea Kelly

Bandoroff's connection to Travel Column runs deeper than her success at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Sale. The OXO Equine colorbearer was co-bred by Denali Stud.

Chris Welker, the owner and operator of Spring Ridge Farm along with her husband, Fasig-Tipton's Executive Vice President Bayne Welker, purchased Travel Column's dam Swingit (Victory Gallop) for $50,000 from the Denali consignment at the 2016 Keeneland November Sale. A full profile on breeder Chris Welker can be viewed here.

“We knew Swingit well,” Bandoroff said. “We had all the foals out of her up until the point that the Welkers bought her and she always threw a really nice foal.”

When Bandoroff and his father couldn't get the mare out of their heads after the sale, they called up the Welkers and suggested a foal share with Frosted. The Spring Ridge Farm owners agreed, and Travel Column was foaled in April of 2018.

“We thought a good Frosted out of this mare would be a very commercial prospect,” Bandoroff explained. “We always had her pegged for Saratoga. Every time we would go out to Spring Ridge and see her, she just kept looking better and better. Chris did so much work with her and the filly really blossomed coming into the sale.”

Bandoroff has a vivid memory of Travel Column's time at the Saratoga sale before she was purchased by OXO Equine's Larry Best.

“We were at the consignment on the first day of showing, standing  with Larry and [advisor] John Dowd. Larry had said his game plan for the sale was that he was looking for colts by proven stallions.”

Denali had two Curlin colts in their consignment, both of which would later hit the seven-figure mark at the sale, so Bandoroff said they had assumed Best was on one of the colts.

“As the show went on, Larry would just kind of hang around the consignment,” Bandoroff recalled. “But every time he came, there was this gray filly that kept catching his eye. And that's a lot of how Travel Column was. She had this presence on her. I remember even myself, we would be showing and I'd just look across the way, and there was that Frosted filly. She had that way of capturing your attention. So sometimes you have to call an audible, and Larry ended up buying a filly by a freshman sire.”

Travel Column's $850,000 hammer price was the most expensive sale for her first-crop sire that year and she left Saratoga as the co-fourth highest-priced filly of the sale.

“We knew she was going over well, but for her to bring $850,000 was incredible,” Bandoroff said. “Honestly, we were going to be thrilled if she brought half of what she did. It was one of those where it was the Saratoga magic. But that was just the start of it. She's been a lot of fun from the start of it and it's been a great ride.”

Tabbed a 'Rising Star' on debut, Travel Column has gone head to head with Stonestreet's Clairiere (Curlin) in her three most recent starts, besting her rival twice including a victory in the GII Fair Grounds Oaks in her final prep before the Kentucky Oaks.

“Her Fair Grounds Oaks was her most impressive performance,” Bandoroff said. “Coming off her defeat to Clairiere [in the GII Rachel Alexandra S.], this was just a different filly. You could tell going into the turn, she said I'm not getting beat today. So we're as optimistic as we can be that she's going to put in a big effort on Friday.”

Travel Column will depart from the sixth position in the Oaks for trainer Brad Cox, who took last year's edition of the same race with Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) and who also has the top choice in the GI Kentucky Derby with champion Essential Quality (Tapit).

“For a period of time at Fair Grounds, Travel Column's workmate was Essential Quality,” Bandoroff shared. “From watching some of the breezes, I can say that she's a pretty tough workmate. She's given him as much as he can handle.”

Shadwell Stables' Malathaat is one of three Stonestreet-bred fillies in this year's Oaks, but she's the only one to have gone through a sales ring.

“I remember when we went out to Stonestreet to look at the horses we would be selling for them,” said Bandoroff. “That filly walked out and it was just like, wow. Sometimes a horse can take two steps out of the barn and you know they're the goods My dad and I were standing there with [Stonestreet yearling manager] Robert Turner and [advisor] John Moynihan and we looked at them and asked what the chances were of that filly actually coming to the sale, because we thought Barbara [Banke] would probably keep her. She was just a queen.”

Malathaat looks to get a fifth straight victory in Friday's GI Kentucky Oaks while making her first start under the Twin Spires. | Coady

Malathaat is the third foal out of Stonestreet homebred Dreaming of Julia (A.P. Indy), a Grade I winner for the farm. She sold as a yearling for $1.05 million to Shadwell Stable at the 2019 Keeneland September Sale through the Denali consignment.

The speedy bay is now undefeated in her first four starts, most recently taking the GI Central Bank Ashland S. for Todd Pletcher, who also took her dam to the Kentucky Oaks for a fourth-place finish.

“She had so much class and quality at the sale and she obviously lived up to that,” Bandoroff said. “Todd Pletcher has handled her brilliantly. She has grit, and while I think some people will knock her and say she hasn't won with that great of speed figures, she does what she needs to do to win. She's a perfect example of the Stonestreet breeding program and how successful they've been.”

Bandoroff said that having a connection to an Oaks winner would be a first for Denali Stud, fulfilling a goal that's been in the back of their minds for many years.

“We've been fortunate to have had graduates win some very big races, but we haven't won an Oaks yet,” he noted. “It's a bucket list race that we would love to win. Being a nursery and having so much of our business focused on mares and their foals, I know the Oaks has been a dream of my dad's and it's a big dream of mine. To have potentially sold, or co-bred and sold, an Oaks winner is, you know, pinch me.”

Denali Stud will have more to look forward to after the new Oaks winner is crowned on Friday with a connection in the GI Kentucky Derby the following afternoon.

O Besos (Orb) was bred by Barrett Bernard and then foaled and raised at Denali. The GII Louisiana Derby third-place finisher will represent his breeder as well as fellow co-owners Tagg Team Racing, West Point Thoroughbreds and Terry Stephens.

“We always liked him as a foal and a yearling,” Bandoroff recalled. “He was a big, strong, solid colt. It's been fantastic for [Bernard] because this is a guy who owns one or two mares at a time, so from a very small group to have a Derby horse, that's what it's all about. We've raised one Kentucky Derby winner in Animal Kingdom and it would be amazing if we could do it again.”

 

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