Cypress Creek Equine, Arnold Bennewith, and Spendthrift Farm's Keepmeinmind, with exercise rider Walter Davila up, worked a half-mile in 46.92 seconds from the gate over a sloppy Belmont dirt training track Monday morning.
Initially under consideration for the Belmont Stakes, Diodoro said the Laoban colt will have his next work on turf with an eye towards a start in the Grade 1, $1 million Belmont Derby Invitational at 10 furlongs on turf for sophomores. The first leg of NYRA's lucrative Turf Triple series is slated for July 10.
“He worked great this morning, but thinking about it some more, I think he needs a little more time,” trainer Robertino Diodoro said. “We were always 50-50 for the race, but I think as soon as we arrived at Belmont people got the impression we were leaning towards that race and it really wasn't the case.”
NYRA clockers caught Keepmeinmind, who was a step slow out of the gate, through an opening quarter-mile in 23.40 and out five furlongs in 59.98.
“He went pretty well this morning. He always trains really well. The track was a little wet,” said Davila.
Diodoro said the nine-furlong Grade 3 Ohio Derby on June 26 at JACK Thistledown is still a possibility, but he would like to see Keepmeinmind work on the Belmont grass and continue to hone his gate skills.
“The gate crew has been really good with us up at Belmont on working with him breaking from the gate, but he still broke a step slow this morning,” said Diodoro. “I don't know if he's ever going to change that, but the gate crew will get to know him better and we're not rushing him into next Saturday. We'll work him on the grass and go from there.”
The Kentucky-bred graduated in style with a rallying effort to win the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club at fourth asking in November at Churchill Downs to close out his juvenile campaign.
Winless in four sophomore starts, including a fifth in the Grade 2 Blue Grass in April at Keeneland, the late-running bay finished seventh in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby and closed to finish fourth last out in the Grade 1 Preakness after a troubled start.
Diodoro said Keepmeinmind's regular rider David Cohen suggested turf as a possibility for the colt.
“Cohen mentioned that this horse could be a grass horse and a couple of the gallop boys have said the same thing. I'm curious to see what happens,” Diodoro said. “He's a big 3-year-old and he's a big baby, still. I think with time he's only going to get better. We'll take a step back and let him develop.”
Diodoro will also be represented on the Belmont Stakes Day undercard by Flying P Stable's Lone Rock in the Grade 2, $400,000 Brooklyn Invitational presented by Northwell Health, a 12-furlong test for 4-year-olds and up on Big Sandy.
The 10-time winner from 32 career starts posted a half-mile breeze in 48.11 on Saturday over the sloppy Belmont main track.
“He's doing great. He worked great up there the other day and he's ready to go,” said Diodoro.
Ron Winchell, who campaigns Louisiana Derby (G2) runner-up Midnight Bourbon in the name of his family's Winchell Thoroughbreds, said he's trying to keep his enthusiasm in check about their chances in Saturday's 146th Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico.
“It's hard not to be overly optimistic,” Winchell, the Las Vegas entrepreneur and co-owner of Kentucky Downs as well as an internationally prominent owner and breeder, said by phone. “He's doing great. The Derby didn't seem to take a lot out of him.”
Midnight Bourbon finished a late-running sixth in the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1) after an awkward start took the strapping, nearly-black colt out of his normal up-close running style.
His connections knew the son of Tiznow was in trouble early on in the Derby. With the scratch of King Fury, the Steve Asmussen trainee went from being one of the last horses to load to one of the first, having to stand in the gate while the others were led in. When the gate's stall doors sprung open, his hind end slipped out from under him, taking Midnight Bourbon out of a preferred position up on the pace or just off the leaders. Instead, he found himself as far back as 14th and wide on both turns before rallying.
“I said it before the race, 'If he doesn't come by the first time and he's not in the first five or six spots, we're pretty much toast,'” Winchell said. “That's just how the Derby seems to be working out now.”
Winchell doesn't have to look back very far to appreciate how difficult it is to win an American Classic. He knows that no matter how fabulous your horse looks or trains that luck is involved – including the misfortunate of running into horses who are simply faster. Winchell's best finish in the Kentucky Derby was a third in 2016 by Gun Runner. He would go on to win the $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) in 2017, earning the Horse of the Year title, and the $16 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) in 2018 to cap his career before heading off to stud duties with earnings just shy of $16 million.
Gun Runner, owned by Winchell and Three Chimneys Farm, did not run in the Preakness and progressed from being a very good 3-year-old into a dominant champion at 4. Winchell is hoping Midnight Bourbon likewise will improve with age, though quicker the better, preferably Saturday.
Midnight Bourbon, winner of the Lecomte (G3) whose only finish worse than third in eight starts came in the Kentucky Derby, is the third choice in the Preakness morning line at 5-1 in a field of 10 3-year-olds. He will break from Post No. 5. With two-at-a-time loading, he'll go into the gate next to last.
“If you had said, 'Here's 10 spots. Put all the horses where you want them to be,' it would be pretty close to how it turned out. Which never seems to happen,” Winchell said.
In fact, it's making him nervous how things so far have fallen into place.
“I've got people calling me, 'I really like your horse,'” he said, adding with a laugh, “It's like, 'No. Stop it! Stop it!'”
Winchell has built upon the high-quality breeding and racing operation that his late father Verne started in the 1950s. With Ron taking over Winchell Thoroughbreds in partnership with his mother, Joan,
Upon Verne's death in 2002, the Winchell Thoroughbreds stable has campaigned Gun Runner, 2014 Kentucky Oaks (G1) and Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) heroine Untapable, 2012 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) winner Tapizar, 2008 Louisiana Derby victor Pyro, 2005 Kentucky Oaks winner Summerly, and Cuvee, one of the top 2-year-olds of 2003, along with many other stakes winners.
The last horse Winchell purchased with his father was a silver-hued yearling bought two months before Verne's death at age 87. That colt named Tapit captured the 2004 Wood Memorial (G1) to emerge among the favorites for the Kentucky Derby. Tapit finished ninth in the Derby, but his real fame has come as a breed-shaping stallion and one of the sport's best sires of the last half-century.
“Winning the Derby has always been a focus,” Winchell said. “However, when my dad was around, we focused a little more on probably the speed element than the Derby distance. It's kind of two different horses: the ones who are going to win as 2-year-olds at Saratoga and Del Mar. That's a different set-up traditionally than the guy who is going to win the Derby.
“I've changed that focus to a certain degree in probably the last five to 10 years,” he added. “It's reflective in the amount of starts we've had in the Derby.”
Verne Winchell had four Kentucky Derby starters, the best finish being Classic Go Go's fourth in 1981. Midnight Bourbon became the eighth Derby runner for his son.
“We're getting to the Derby; we're just not performing in the Derby,” Winchell said. “However, Kentucky Oaks starters, we've started four with two winners. A little better record there. But it's one of the categories that has been very elusive for our stable, winning Classic races. Breeders' Cup races, yeah, we've won a number of those. We've brought some pretty good horses to the Derby. I think Gun Runner had a pretty good chance, but at that stage of his career, he couldn't get to the finish line first. I mean, it is what it is.”
Midnight Bourbon will be Winchell's third Preakness starter, following Tenfold's close third in the fog to eventual Triple Crown champion Justify three years ago and Pneumatic's 10th last year when the COVID-delayed race was in October. His dad finished fourth in the 1991 Preakness with Arkansas Derby (G1) winner Olympio.
Though he hasn't had as many starters as in the Derby, Winchell said the Preakness is a race he very much covets, along with its iconic Woodlawn Vase, of which the winning owner gets a replica.
“It is one of those great races you grow up hearing about,” Winchell said. “I'd love to win. I'd love to get it behind me, honestly, because we've performed well in all sorts of races. There's probably not a lot that we haven't won over the course of my involvement in racing and my dad's. These are ones that have eluded us. It's a super cool race to win. The trophy is one of the best. I've love to have a spot for it on the mantel somewhere.”
Midnight Bourbon schooled at the starting gate, followed by a routine gallop, Thursday at Pimlico. He was scheduled to school in the paddock during the races.
Asmussen is pursuing a third Preakness victory, having won his first Triple Crown race in 2007 with two-time Horse of the Year Curlin and then two years later with the filly and 2009 Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra.
“It is the Preakness and a great opportunity, being an American Classic and having a quality horse like this for Winchell Thoroughbreds,” said Asmussen. “If you've ever seen him, you realize the potential that's there.”
Asmussen's parents, Keith and Marilyn, raised and prepared all of Verne Winchell's young horses for the races at their Laredo, Texas, training facility. That decades-long association has continued into the next generation, strengthened even more by Steve Asmussen being Ron's primary trainer.
“I'm extremely proud of the Winchell and Asmussen connection,” Asmussen said. “Ron's father and my father did business and had a lot of success before they let me or Ron make any decisions. So it's extremely exciting for us.”
Barnes Pleased with Preakness Preparation of Medina Spirit, Concert Tour Medina Spirit and Concert Tour took different paths to the Preakness Stakes (G1), but assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes is using a similar approach while preparing the Bob Baffert-trained colts for Saturday's Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown at Pimlico Race Course.
After a Wednesday morning schooling session in the indoor paddock, where Baffert horses are typically saddled for the Preakness, both colts galloped 1 ½ miles Thursday morning one after the other, with Medina Spirit going first.
Since Zedan Racing Stables' Medina Spirit is coming to the Preakness from the Kentucky Derby, where he led the way from start to finish, Barnes has been on the lookout for any signs of fatigue. He has not found any.
“He had no wear and tear,” Barnes said. “He came out in excellent shape and moved right ahead, forwardly. We only walked him three days and went right back to the track and jogged. That's usually a sign, how soon we get back to the track, of how happy we are with the recovery from the race.”
Gary and Mary West's Concert Tour emerged as a top Kentucky Derby prospect with victories in the seven-furlong San Vicente (G2) on Feb. 6 and the 1 1/16-mile Rebel (G2) on March 13. After he finished third in the Arkansas Derby (G1) on April 10, Concert Tour was taken off the Derby trail. Barnes said the Street Sense colt “looked awesome on the track” Thursday and is well-prepared for the Preakness.
“We have seen what we expected to see,” Barnes said. “He was a little on the light side after the Arkansas Derby and Bob and Gary West opted to pass on the Derby and run a fresh horse in the Preakness. We've basically seen everything you'd want to see. No hiccups at all. His coat is beautiful. He's eating well. He should be ready for Saturday.”
Barnes said he is drawing a line through Concert Tour's Arkansas Derby.
“I know which direction he's heading and it's the one we want to see him in,” Barnes said. “He'll show up on Saturday.”
Baffert returned home to California from Kentucky this week and sent Barnes, a key member of his team since the late 1990s, to manage the operation at Pimlico. It's a familiar role for Barnes.
“I'm used to it. I travel all the time. I'm always on the road,” he said. “If Bob is there sometimes, that's great. If he can't make it, I just have to pick up the slack, just march on, try to do my best and try to produce a win.”
Rombauer Brings 'Wonderful Mechanics' into Saturday's Preakness Trainer Michael McCarthy is a Triple Crown series veteran and rookie at the same time. While he gained loads of experience in the Spring Classics during his long tenure as an assistant to Hall of Famer-elect Todd Pletcher, John and Diane Fradkin's Rombauer will be his first Triple Crown starter when he goes to post Saturday in the 146th Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course.
McCarthy, 50, went out on his own in January 2014. He has had plenty of success during those seven-plus seasons, most notably City of Light's triumphs in the 2019 Pegasus World Cup (G1) at Gulfstream Park and the 2018 Breeders' Cup Mile (G1) at Churchill Downs. Versatile Rombauer has delivered him to the Triple Crown.
“Anytime you can compete in any big race it feels pretty good, but to be able to participate in something like the Triple Crown, always makes it special,” McCarthy said. “It's a wide-open race; anything can happen. These are the kind of races you want to participate in. It's pretty neat.”
Rombauer earned a fees-paid entry into the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown by winning Feb.13 El Camino Real Derby, a Preakness 'Win & In' event, at Golden Gate Fields. The son of Twirling Candy most recently finished third in the April 3 Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland.
McCarthy said Rombauer has settled in easily at Pimlico since shipping in from Santa Anita Tuesday. Rombauer galloped 1 1/8 miles Thursday morning.
“He's lightly raced this year. He travels well. He doesn't need to take his racetrack with him,” McCarthy said. “He seems to me to be doing as well as he could be. The horse is himself here and that's a good thing.”
Rombauer has won on turf and synthetic surfaces and is Grade 1-placed on dirt after finishing second in last fall's American Pharoah at Santa Anita.
“He seems to get over every surface,” McCarthy said. “It's a feather in his cap that he can adapt the way he does. He's got wonderful mechanics. He is just light on his feet, very athletic.”
Flavien Prat will ride Rombauer for the first time in the Preakness.
Cohen Makes Preakness Debut with High Hopes for Keepmeinmind Jockey David Cohen will ride in his first Preakness Stakes (G1) Saturday at Pimlico Race Course expecting a better result fromKeepmeinmind, who closed from 19th to finish seventh in the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1).
“We were extremely happy with his performance in the Derby,” said Cohen, who was provided his first Kentucky Derby appearance by the Robertino Diodoro-trained son of Laoban. “I think he finally got back to his 2-year-old form as far as relaxing early on and coming and finishing up with a nice, strong finish that we know he likes to do. Being such a big field, we got shuffled back a little farther than I'd have liked to have been. But at the same time, with the removal of the blinkers and getting him to relax, I was happy just for him to get back to his running style that we know he wants to run. To see him finish up was definitely encouraging.”
The 36-year-old jockey has ridden Keepmeinmind in six of seven races, only missing out on the Breeders' Cup because he was riding another horse for Diodoro. He hasn't been just Keepmeinmind's regular jockey, he has been aboard for many of the colt's workouts.
“Some horses you fall into prior to their last start prior to getting to the Derby,” he said. “This guy, I was getting on him for his first quarter-mile at the track. I've really had a lot of foundation with him. That much was pretty special. Doing it with Robertino and my supporters made it even more special…. Just blessed that the horse made a good effort, came out of it healthy and feeling good and sound. I'm definitely looking forward to the Preakness.”
Riding in the Preakness is the latest chapter in Cohen's comeback story.
Cohen, who has ridden 1560 winners since beginning his career in 2004, was among the sport's rising stars when he was kicked by his mount in his lower right leg in the paddock at Aqueduct on Feb. 1, 2014. His badly fractured fibula and tibia required surgery involving a plate and six screws to repair.
The cancer-related death of his father, California horse owner Morry Cohen, several months after the paddock mishap had the jockey struggling to heal, not only physically but emotionally. He rode six races in late 2014 but was discovered to have a torn meniscus in his right knee. Cohen suffered another personal loss a year later with the death of his sister, Dana. He did not ride again until Nov. 30, 2017.
“Coming off an injury in 2018, I received the [JockeyTalk 360] Comeback Award,” he said. “In 2019, I had a bang-up year and won the Oaklawn Park title. To be here in 2021, I'm definitely very blessed for these opportunities.”
Keepmeinmind jogged a mile and galloped a mile Thursday at Pimlico for Saturday's Preakness Stakes. As delighted as Diodoro was with Keepmeinmind's training session Wednesday during the colt's introduction to the Pimlico surface, he was even happier with the second day at the track.
“Yesterday, he seemed happy and relaxed,” Diodoro said. “Today, he was very sharp, a lot sharper but still very happy. I think he likes the track. I'm really impressed with the surface. Even the [exercise rider] says it seems like a very kind track.”
Brown: Risk Taking Gets 'Endurance from His Dad' During his time (2002-2007) as an assistant to the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, Chad Brown had the opportunity to work with a number of wonderful racehorses.
Tops on that list would be Medaglia d'Oro, winner of eight of 17 career starts, including the 2003 Whitney Handicap (G1) at 2002 Travers Stakes (G1), both at Saratoga.
“He is definitely one of the best horses I worked with in my time with Bobby,” Brown said, “if not the best horse.”
Brown sees a lot of Medaglia d'Oro in Seth Klarman's Klaravich Stables' Risk Taking, one of the two horses Brown will run in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course. And that makes sense since Risk Taking is a son of Medaglia d'Oro.
That is not meant to say that Risk Taking is the second coming of his successful sire.
“Medaglia d'Oro was quicker, faster than this horse,” Brown said. “But there are some similarities. The way he looks … you can definitely tell he is an offspring of him. He certainly looks like a son of his.”
Brown began his own training career in 2007 and will be looking for his second win in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. He got his first Preakness in 2017 when Cloud Computing ended up in the winner's circle.
Risk Taking has won two of five career starts and does his best running late. Two starts ago, he won the 1 1/8-mile Withers (G3) at Aqueduct on Feb. 6. He disappointed when he was a non-factor in the Wood Memorial (G2), finishing seventh as the 2-1 favorite.
“I think (Risk Taking) has gotten a lot of endurance from his sire,” Brown said.
Risk Taking and Crowded Trade, also owned by Klaravich Stables, went through their Preakness preparations Thursday, the second day they both went to the track. Under the supervision of Brown's assistant, Jose Hernandez, the two colts galloped about 1 ¼ miles separately.
Exercise rider Kelvin Perez rode both of the horses.
“They looked pretty good,” Hernandez said. “(Wednesday) they were a little in the bridle because they had walked two days in a row. They were more relaxed today and they galloped beautifully. They have a shot.”
Hernandez said that both horses will gallop another 1 ¼ miles Friday morning. One horse will go out at 6 a.m. and the other a half hour later.
Brown is expected to arrive at Pimlico early Friday afternoon.
France Go de Ina's Camp in Fine Spirits after Wednesday's Mishap Things were back to normal for Yuji Inaida's France Go de Ina Thursday morning.
A day after exercise rider Masaki Takano fell off the colt after completing a four-furlong breeze in preparation for a start in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1), his small entourage was able to joke about what happened.
“They were all laughing immediately after,” Kate Hunter, the Preakness field representative for the Japan Racing Association, said outside the Isolation Barn. “We are laughing about it today.”
Takano, who will celebrate his 31st birthday next week, was complaining of some soreness, but that was the only issue remaining from the Wednesday fall after his foot slipped out of the left stirrup.
Hunter said she went out shopping for the rider and brought back a heating pad, Icy Hot and some Advil.
“The only casualty from the fall was a pair of Oakley sunglasses,” she said. “His pride was the only thing that was broken. When he passed the finish, (Takano) was switching his weight to do the gallop out and he lost his balance. He tried to regain it, which is why the horse looked a bit wobbly and he just fell.”
Takano was back on the job Thursday, leading France Go de Ina around the barn for an hour's worth of walking. Trainer Hideyuki Mori was there, too. The horse did not go to the track Thursday following Wednesday's workout.
Hunter said France Go de Ina will be back on track Friday, the last horse to do so, because of quarantine regulations. Training hours are from 5 to 8 a.m. because of the 11:30 a.m. first-race post time for Friday's Black-Eyed Susan (G2) card.
France Go de Ina is scheduled to do his normal walk around the track and then canter around the Pimlico oval Friday. He then will stand in the gate and get a look at where he will be saddled for the Preakness on the turf course.
“We want to let him get accustomed to having someone stand in the gate with him,” Hunter said.
Unbridled Honor Seeks First Stakes Win in Middle Jewel Whisper Hill Farm's Unbridled Honor, second in the Lexington (G2) and fourth in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2), will be seeking his first stakes victory in the Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course. Only three horses dating back to at least 1976 have earned stakes credentials in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown: Cloud Computing in 2017, Shackleford in 2011 and Gate Dancer in 1984.
The day that newly-elected Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher ran four horses in the Kentucky Derby (G1), Unbridled Honor worked in company with stablemate Promise Keeper at Churchill Downs. Pletcher takes it as a positive sign for Unbridled Honor that a week later, Promise Keeper earned his first stakes victory in the Peter Pan (G3) at Belmont Park.
“I feel like he's moving forward, but he needs to make that jump to get it done in this race,” he said. “I think he fits the profile well of a horse who has good spacing between his last prep and this. It seems like he's improving gradually. But historically, the horses coming out of the Derby are the ones you have to beat.”
Pletcher is hoping that the fact that one length separated Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit and fourth-place Essential Quality is a sign of parity.
“It appears to be kind of a wide-open group,” he said. “Until someone steps up and wins a couple of these in a row, it seems like it's the kind of year that you could see three different winners [in the Triple Crown series].”
Unbridled Honor will be ridden for the first time by Luis Saez, who was available because 2-year-old champion Essential Quality is not running back in the Preakness.
“Luis is a good positional rider, and he tends to get horses out of the gate well and he'll get good position,” Pletcher said. “This horse could benefit from that. It's a fine line between taking them out of their natural element and also getting them into a better position. Luis hopefully can effectively do that.”
Ram (in his stakes debut), Crowded Trade and the Japanese-based France Go de Ina are the other Preakness horses that have yet to win a stakes.
Unbridled Honor had a routine gallop at Pimlico Thursday morning.
Lukas: 'I've Made a Living Running Where I Don't Belong' Preakness Stakes (G1) stalwart D. Wayne Lukas didn't quibble when Ram was rated the longest shot on the morning line at 30-1 for Saturday's Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown at Pimlico Race Course. The son of 2015 Triple Crown Champion American Pharoah has won his last two races, but he has the tough task of making his stakes debut in the Preakness.
With six wins from 44 starters, Lukas, 85, knows the Preakness well and readily admits his colt will have to improve again to be competitive in the 1 3/16-mile Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. Lukas, who once again quipped that you can't win a race unless you enter, has been known to drop a longshot winner into Triple Crown races. His last Preakness winner, Oxbow, in 2013, went off at 15-1 and paid $32.80. He won the 1999 Derby with Charismatic and he paid $64.60 after being ignored at 31-1.
Lukas said he pulled off the biggest major-race upset of his career with Commendable, who won the 2000 Belmont Stakes (G1) at 18-1. The Hall of Fame trainer said that he was surprised by Commendable's score that paid bettors $39.60
“I have also won with a few favorites,” Lukas said. “But I have been really lucky. I've made a living running where I don't belong.”
Ram had a routine gallop of 1 3/8 miles Thursday. Lukas said the colt will stand in the starting gate on Friday.
“We're done,” Lukas said. “Now we're just trying to get an energy level and keep him happy.”
Jockey Ricardo Santana Jr. has picked up the mount on Ram, who drew the rail for the Preakness.
His owner, trainer and jockey will be different, but the scenery will be the same for Harpers First Ride when the defending champion returns to the site of his biggest victory in the historic $250,000 Pimlico Special (G3) Friday at Pimlico Race Course.
The 51st running of the Pimlico Special, on the eve of the 146th Preakness Stakes (G1), is one of six stakes, four graded, worth $1 million in purses on a spectacular 14-race card headlined by the 97th running of the $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan (G2) for 3-year-old fillies.
Other graded stakes on the program are the $150,000 Miss Preakness (G3) for 3-year-old fillies sprinting six furlongs, and $150,000 Allaire du Pont (G3) for fillies and mares 3 and up going 1 1/8 miles. Rounding out the stakes action are a pair of turf events, the $100,000 Hilltop for 3-year-old fillies at one mile, and $100,000 The Very One, a five-furlong dash for females 3 and older.
First race post time is 11:30 a.m.
Harpers First Ride had raced five straight times in Maryland with wins in the Deputed Testamony, Pimlico Special, Richard W. Small and Native Dancer to cap his 4-year-old campaign when he was sold by owner-trainer Claudio Gonzalez prior to a start in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) Jan. 23 at Gulfstream Park, won by Knicks Go.
GTMP Stables, Arnold Bennewith and Cypress Creek Equine moved the Paynter gelding to trainer Robertino Diodoro in the Midwest, where he finished fourth in the March 13 Essex Handicap and third in a 1 ½-mile allowance April 11, both at Oaklawn Park under Diodoro's go-to rider, David Cohen.
“We had some issues with his feet, and we got those fixed up,” Diodoro said. “To be honest, this is the best he's been doing since we've had him. He's doing really well. He worked really good at Churchill. Ever since we got some different shoes on him, the last couple of weeks he's been like a completely different horse. We're actually pretty excited about next Friday.”
According to Diodoro, the 1:03 official time for Harpers First Ride's five-furlong work May 7 was misleading. The trainer said the horse actually worked seven-eighths of a mile, a move designed to continue past the wire and into the turn.
“David Cohen and I were talking that the time is definitely deceiving,” he said. “He did it very well. I would read absolutely nothing into the time.… I think we had the horse maybe 80, 90 percent the last couple of times. I feel like we've got him 100 percent now.”
Cohen will ride back from Post 7 in a field of 11 at 122 pounds.
Also returning from last year's Pimlico Special are Forewarned and Cordmaker.
Trin-Brook Stables, Inc.'s Forewarned, a 6-year-old Flat Out gelding, is a three-time stakes winner against fellow Ohio-breds who ran third in the Westchester (G3) last summer at Belmont Park and was fifth in the 2019 Whitney (G1) and Woodward (G1) as well as the Pimlico Special. He carries topweight of 126 pounds including 2020 Eclipse Award-winning apprentice Alexander Crispin from Post 3.
Hillwood Stable's multiple stakes-winning Maryland-bred Cordmaker is making his third straight appearance in the Pimlico Special, having run third by two necks in 2019 and 2 ½ lengths in 2020. Last year's race came during a career-long winless drought for Cordmaker of 10 races spanning more than 17 months. Second or third in six of those starts, all of them in stakes, he returned to the winner's circle with a front-running one-length triumph in the 1 1/8-mile Harrison E. Johnson Memorial March 13 at Laurel Park.
“It had to be good for him because it got him more confidence. He ran a really nice race. We hope between that and the way he's been training that he's up to this,” trainer Rodney Jenkins said. “He's doing really well. The horse is probably has never done better in his life than he's doing now … I hope he runs as good as he's training.”
Regular rider Victor Carrasco has the call from Post 8.
Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen won the 2019 Pimlico Special with Tenfold, who ran fourth last year in his title defense. Asmussen returns this year with George Hall and BLX Thoroughbreds Corp.'s Max Player, racing for the first time since running 11th in the $20 million Saudi Cup Feb. 20.
Max Player won the Withers (G3) in his third career start last February, then ran third in the Belmont (G1) and Travers (G1) and fifth in the Kentucky Derby (G1) during a Triple Crown trail reshuffled amid the coronavirus pandemic. He came to Baltimore for the Preakness (G1), where he rallied to be fifth behind filly Swiss Skydiver.
“Physically, he's as good as he's ever been,” Asmussen's assistant, Scott Blasi, said. “His works have been solid. It should be a good spot for him. And, the Special has been good to us.”
Ricardo Santana Jr. will be aboard from Post 5 for Asmussen, who also won the then-Grade 1 Pimlico Special with Student Council in 2008.
Newly elected to the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame, trainer Todd Pletcher will be going after his third Pimlico Special victory after winning previously in successive years with Revolutionary (2014) and Commissioner (2015). His candidate this year is WinStar Farm and CHC Inc.'s Fearless, winner of the Gulfstream Park Mile (G2) Feb. 27 in his first start in eight months. Last time out, he rallied to be second by a half-length to Silver State in the 1 1/8-mile Oaklawn Handicap (G2) April 17.
“[He's doing] very good,” Pletcher said. “He was very good in his first start and just missed in his second. He seems to be in good form.”
Three-time defending Eclipse Award-winning jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. has the assignment from Post 2.
Trainer Mike Maker will send out the pair of Last Judgment and Treasure Trove. Michael Dubb, Steve Hornstock, Bethlehem Stables and Nice Guys Stables' Last Judgment has two wins from four starts this year, both in Florida – the 1 1/8-mile Sunshine Classic Jan. 16 at Gulfstream and the 1 1/16-mile Challenger (G3) March 6 at Tampa Bay Downs. Most recently he was second after setting the pace in the 1 1/8-mile Ghostzapper (G3) March 27 at Gulfstream.
Paradise Farms Corp. and David Staudacher's Treasure Trove was claimed for $40,000 out of a win last fall at Indiana Downs. Though he has gone winless in five tries since, three of his losses have been by less than three lengths including a three-quarter-length loss when fifth in the 1 1/8-mile Ben Ali (G3) April 10 at Keeneland, his most recent start. He was fourth by 2 ¼ lengths in the 1 ½-mile Temperence Hill March 13 at Oaklawn.
“We should be well-represented there,” Maker said. “Treasure Trove got beat maybe three-quarters of a length in the Ben Ali and ran last, had a wide trip … He ran fourth in the mile-and-a-half at Oaklawn, got beat a couple of lengths. The race before in an allowance race there, he came up the rail and had to take up a little and wait and just got beat.”
Jose Ortiz will ride Last Judgment from outside Post 11, while Luis Saez has the call on Treasure Trove from Post 9.
Pam and Martin Wygod's Modernist is a two-time graded-stakes winner, having taken the 2020 Risen Star (G2) and the 1 1/8-mile Excelsior (G3) April 3 at Aqueduct last time out. Junior Alvarado rides from Post 1 for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, whose lone previous Pimlico Special victory came with Hall of Famer Cigar in 1995.
Completing the field are multiple stakes winner Alwaysmining; 2020 Lecomte (G3) winner Enforceable, third by a half-length in the New Orleans Classic (G2) March 20; and Prioritize, third in the 2020 Woodward (G1) and unraced since running fourth in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1) last October.
The Pimlico Special was created in 1937 by Alfred Vanderbilt, the master of Sagamore Farm, as the first major stakes in the United States set up as an invitational, and was won by Triple Crown champion War Admiral. The following year, War Admiral was upset by Seabiscuit in what Sports Illustrated called the 'Race of the Century.'
Revived in 1988 by late Maryland Jockey Club president Frank De Francis, the Special's illustrious roster of winners also includes Triple Crown winners Whirlaway, Citation and Assault, and modern-day Horses of the Year Criminal Type, Cigar, Skip Away, Mineshaft and Invasor.
For jockey David Cohen, winning last Saturday's second race at Oaklawn was a sign of things to come for the jockey.
Cohen said after Canadian Ginger crossed the finish line first in the starter-allowance sprint for females, her trainer, Robertino Diodoro, received a call from Churchill Downs officials, informing him that Get Her Number had been removed from consideration for the Kentucky Derby. The defection moved Keepmeinmind into the projected 20-horse field, meaning Cohen and Diodoro, both Oaklawn meet champions, will be making their Kentucky Derby debuts Saturday at Churchill Downs.
“For us, it was a nice surprise,” Cohen said Sunday afternoon at Oaklawn. “We had somewhat of an idea it was going to happen, early on, through the grapevine. For me, it was the start of a great day, obviously, to ride six and win four of them.”
The four-bagger was a career high at Oaklawn for Cohen, 36, who was Oaklawn's leading jockey in 2019. He had previously won three races on an Oaklawn card 12 times, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. In addition to Canadian Ginger ($6.20), Cohen won the fifth race aboard Greeley and Ben ($8.40) for trainer Karl Broberg, ninth race aboard American Dubai ($31.20) for Diodoro and the 11th race aboard Livingmybestlife ($5.60) for trainer John Sadler.
Cohen is Diodoro's go-to rider and the regular pilot of the yo-yo-like Keepmeinmind, who was among the country's top 2-year-olds of 2020 after finishing second in the $400,000 Breeders' Futurity (G1) Oct. 3 at Keeneland, third in the $2 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) Nov. 6 at Keeneland and breaking his maiden in the $200,000 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes (G2) Nov. 28 at Churchill Downs.
It's been a deflating 2021, for the most part, however.
Keepmeinmind had been set to make his 3-year-old debut Feb. 15 at Oaklawn – the $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) – before severe winter weather led to multiple postponements of the race and interrupted the late-running colt's training schedule. Oaklawn lost eight live racing dates and 11 days of training (Feb. 12-22) because of heavy snow and arctic temperatures. Keepmeinmind also was entered in the $400,000 Risen Star Stakes (G2) Feb. 13 at Fair Grounds, but Diodoro opted to remain at Oaklawn, where the colt had been based since late December.
Keepmeinmind, in his 3-year-old debut, finished sixth in the $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2) March 13 at Oaklawn, then fifth in the $800,000 Blue Grass Stakes (G2) April 3 at Keeneland in his last start.
Following the final round of Kentucky Derby points races April 10, including Oaklawn's $1 million Arkansas Derby (G1), Keepmeinmind was 30th on the leaderboard with 18 points – all collected as a 2-year-old – and needed 10 defections to be guaranteed a spot in the Run for the Roses, which is limited to 20 starters. Using a musical analogy, Keepmeinmind was number one with a bullet, climbing to No. 28 (April 12), No. 27 (April 15), No. 24 (April 17), No. 22 (April 19), No. 21 (April 23) and No. 20 (April 24) in official rankings compiled by Churchill Downs. Points earned in designated races like the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, Rebel and Blue Grass are used to determine starting preference.
“It's been such an emotional ride with him because he was a horse that started the year with 18 points,” Cohen said. “Then we miss out because of the weather and he missed both races. He missed the Fair Grounds race and he missed the Southwest, so that hurt us. He obviously didn't perform to the way we felt he was training, even though we know he's better than that. He's really developed over his 3-year-old year, even though he hasn't shown it on paper. On paper, it doesn't look like he deserves to be in there. We know he's talented enough. We're happy for the horse, that he gets the chance that he does deserve, in our eyes.”
Following Oaklawn's April 22 card, Cohen flew privately to Kentucky to work Keepmeinmind and stablemates Ava's Grace and Dreamer's Disease the next morning at Churchill Downs. Keepmeinmind, in company, recorded a half-mile bullet (:46.20). Keepmeinmind breezed without blinkers last week and will remove the equipment Saturday At that time, Keepmeinmind was 21st on the points list.
“The owners and us, we made a big decision to send me out there,” Cohen said. “It's not cheap. For them to still have faith in the horse and not give up on him and keep him in Kentucky after the Blue Grass, they could have easily said, 'No. Send him back here and run in the Oaklawn Stakes the same day.' ”
Instead, Cohen will be at Churchill Downs Saturday. His Kentucky Derby debut comes a little more than seven years after a severe leg injury (he was kicked by a horse in the paddock before a Feb. 1, 2014, race at Aqueduct) and the subsequent deaths of deaths of his father (cancer) and sister (head injury) threatened to derail the jockey's once-promising career.
Cohen rode his first winner in 2004 and five years later ranked sixth nationally in victories (288) and 24th in purse earnings ($7,357,326) – both career highs – competing in New York and the Mid-Atlantic. In 2012, Cohen won Saratoga's prestigious $1 million Travers Stakes (G1) for 3-year-olds aboard 33-1 long shot Golden Ticket, who dead-heated with favored Alpha.
After not riding in 2015 and 2016, Cohen returned to the saddle in late 2017 and rode 37 winners in his Oaklawn debut in 2018 to finish third in the standings. Cohen rode 75 winners the following year at Oaklawn to end Ricardo Santana Jr.'s six-year hold on the title.
In addition to Keepmeinmind (50-1 on the morning line), Cohen also is scheduled Dreamer's Disease in the $500,000 Pat Day Mile (G2) for 3-year-olds Saturday at Churchill Downs. Dreamer's Disease had several published workouts this year at Oaklawn, but didn't run at the meeting after falling behind in his training because of winter weather. He was also supposed to be riding in the Kentucky Oaks, the country's biggest race for 3-year-old fillies, for the first time aboard Ava's Grace, but the filly was scratched Wednesday morning with an injury. She had finished second in the $600,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) April 3 at Oaklawn.
“Honestly, I never felt like I wouldn't have the opportunity again,” Cohen said. “For me, it's special to get it with a team that's been so essential in my return from an injury. To have it with Robertino, not only with the Derby, but with the Pat Day Mile, for me that's definitely a special touch and the cherry on top. It means a lot. The guy's very loyal. For it to be the home team really means a lot.”
Cohen, named 2018 Comeback Jockey of the Year by JockeyTalk.360.com, a web site dedicated to promoting jockeys around the world, has 186 career victories at Oaklawn, according to Equibase. Almost two-thirds (111) have come for Diodoro.
Keepmeinmind and Dreamer's Disease, who ran sixth in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile, were all at Trophy Club Training Center in Royal (roughly 20 minutes west of Oaklawn) last spring completing the breaking process under Ike Green, who has strong ties to Diodoro. Ike Green was Diodoro's assistant at Oaklawn in 2019 and 2020 when he captured his first local training title. Green and his wife, Aidan, have run Diodoro's divisions at Saratoga and Churchill Downs in recent years. Aidan Green went out on her own last year and recorded her first career training victory and stakes victory at the 2021 Oaklawn meeting.