Shahryar Noses Out Efforia in Japanese Derby

Shahryar (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) denied heavy 3-5 favourite and G1 Japanese 2000 Guineas hero Efforia (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) by the narrowest of margins to take the G1 Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) at Tokyo on Sunday. It was the record-setting seventh win in that Classic for a son of Deep Impact, whose earlier successes include Deep Brillante (Jpn) (2012), Kizuna (Jpn) (2013), Makahiki (Jpn) (2016), Wagnerian (Jpn) (2018), Roger Barows (Jpn) (2019) and Triple Crown victor Contrail (Jpn) last term.

Sent off at 10-1, Shahryar was rank and tugging for more rein while in close quarters in midpack into the first turn. He was still a touch keen on the backstretch run in between horses as Bathrat Leon (Jpn) (Kizuna {Jpn}) cut out fractions of :22.80 for the quarter, :48 flat for the half mile and six furlongs in 1:12.70. Within striking distanceof  the frontrunners approach the far turn, his traffic woes continued and he was forced five deep in the hunt for racing room as the field began to fan wide at the 600-metre mark.

Still boxed in, Shahryar's momentum was halted shortly thereafter and he was steered back towards the centre of the course inside the final quarter mile. Efforia had enjoyed a ground-save trip meanwhile and cut through a gap to take control with 250 metres remaining.

The Sunday Racing colourbearer had finally found his rhythm however, and was firing on all cylinders down the lane as he switched to the favourite's left and saw daylight. The duo matched strides for the final furlong, with the bob at the line going to Shahryar by a nose. Efforia was gallant in defeat and the margin back to Stella Veloce (Jpn) (Bago {Fr}) was 1 1/4 lengths. Great Magician (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) was another nose back in fourth.

“It's so great to have won the Derby which I had made it my target with this colt ever since his debut,” said pilot Yuichi Fukunaga, who had won Japan's Blue Riband in the past with Wagnerian and Contrail. “We were keeping an eye on the race favorite but the race didn't go as smoothly as planned and we were in a tight spot so we were forced to make our charge late, but this colt really gave a terrific effort.”

A winner of a Kyoto newcomer affair last October, the dark bay ran third to Efforia in the G3 Kyodo News Hai on Valentine's Day making his 4-year-old bow. He returned with a win in Hanshin's G3 Mainichi Hai in a new race record of 1:43.90 for the 1800 metres over firm turf on Mar. 27.

Pedigree Notes
The winner, the 49th Group 1 winner for his late sire, is a full-brother to the 2017 G1 Japanese 2000 Guineas and G1 Osaka Hai victor Al Ain (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), and is one of five winners from six to race for his accomplished dam who landed the GI Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint in 2010, the same year she was named Eclipse Champion Female Sprinter Stateside. Sold for $1.1 million to Katsumi Yoshida at the 2010 Fasig-Tipton November Sale, Dubai Majesty has a 2-year-old colt by Heart's Cry (Jpn) and was covered later that year by Lord Kanaloa (Jpn), but did not produce a foal in 2020. The half-sister to MSW Majestic Dinner (Formal Dinner) was bred to Duramente (Jpn) last spring.

 

Sunday, Tokyo, Japan
TOKYO YUSHUN (JAPANESE DERBY)-G1, ¥418,840,000, Tokyo, 5-30, 3yo, c/f, 2400mT, 2:22.50, fm.
1–SHAHRYAR (JPN), 126, c, 3, Deep Impact (Jpn)
                1st Dam: Dubai Majesty (Ch. Female Sprinter-US,
                                GISW-US, $1,509,243), by Essence of Dubai
                2nd Dam: Great Majesty, by Great Above
                3rd Dam: Mistic Majesty, by His Majesty
1ST GROUP 1 WIN. O-Sunday Racing; B-Northern Farm (Jpn);
T-Hideaki Fujiwara; J-Yuichi Fukunaga. ¥227,118,000. Lifetime
Record: 4-3-0-1. *Full to Al Ain (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}),
MG1SW-Jpn, $4,749,430. Werk Nick Rating: A+++. *Triple
   Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Efforia (Jpn), 126, c, 3, Epiphaneia (Jpn)–Katies Heart (Jpn),
by Heart's Cry (Jpn). O-Carrot Farm; B-Northern Farm (Jpn);
¥87,768,000.
3–Stella Veloce (Jpn), 126, c, 3, Bago (Fr)–Oh My Baby (Jpn), by
Deep Impact (Jpn). (¥60,000,000 Wlg '18 JRHAJUL). O-Tsuyoshi
Ono; B-Northern Farm (Jpn); ¥31,776,000.
Margins: NO, 1 1/4, NO. Odds: 10.70, 0.70, 39.20.
Also Ran: Great Magician (Jpn), Satono Reinas (Jpn), Titleholder (Jpn), Yoho Lake (Jpn), Gratias (Jpn), Baji O (Jpn), Wonderful Town (Jpn), Red Genesis (Jpn), Lagom (Jpn), Time to Heaven (Jpn), Victipharus (Jpn), Bathrat Leon (Jpn), Deep Monster (Jpn), Admire Hadar (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart & video or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Hurricane’s Blast Brings Double Delight For Cooper

Anyone who either dabbles in the business with a mare or two, or operates in the higher echelons with a sizeable broodmare band, would be more than excited in the Classic countdown to have a five-length winner of a Newmarket trial who was catapulted into second favouritism for the Derby.

That was the position breeder Philippa Cooper found herself in on Guineas weekend when Mohaafeth (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) cantered all over his rivals for a cosy success in the listed Newmarket S. for William Haggas and Shadwell. And she admits it was with some shock that she experienced something close to déjà vu when another son of Frankel bred under her Normandie Stud banner won an even more prestigious trial on York's Knavesmire on Thursday to join his erstwhile paddock mate high up in the betting for Epsom's blue riband.

Hurricane Lane (Ire) is now unbeaten in three starts for Godolphin and Charlie Appleby having prevailed in a driving finish for the G2 Dante S., with former Derby favourite High Definition (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) two lengths behind him in third. 

“I was shocked, I must say,” said Cooper in the aftermath of the race. “My husband was very emotional. He watched it at home, and this foal was born when he was in intensive care in hospital and he was quite emotional watching him win like that.”

She continued, “I remember showing the photo of the foal to my daughter and she took one look and said 'you sell him over my dead body', but I am afraid we have to sell to survive.”

From a crop of six colts that year, four ended up being sold by Cooper through John Troy. Mohaafeth and Hurricane Lane went through the ring just six lots apart at Tattersalls October Book 1, the former selling for 350,000gns after the late Sheikh Hamdan had given his approval to the colt so admired by his now-trainer William Haggas. The imposing Hurricane Lane came next, and was bought for 200,000gns by Godolphin.

“One of the six had chipped a bone so he wasn't able to go to the sale,” Cooper recalled. “I had four in October Book 1 and one in October 2. Sultanina's Dubawi colt was going through first and he didn't make his reserve so I dropped the reserve for the others to make sure they all sold—I have nomination fees and boarding charges to pay. Hurricane Lane was bought on his reserve. Nobody wants these big horses but Hurricane Lane still managed to win as a 2-year-old, as big as he is.”

From the same family as Mohaafeth, the colt out of Cooper's G1 Nassau S. winner Sultanina (GB) (New Approach {GB}) came home and, now named Diavolo (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), he was set to appear in his breeder's colours at Newbury on Friday until a foot abscess delayed his debut. Cooper will, however, be represented by another member of the crop at York on Friday in the form of her homebred filly Love Is You (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), the Roger Charlton-trained daughter of Fallen For You who lines up in the Listed Oaks Farm Stables Fillies' S. off the back of a third in the G3 Nell Gwyn S. on Apr. 14.

Both Mohaafeth and Diavolo are descendants of Cooper's much-loved dual listed winner Foodbroker Fancy (Ire) (Halling). Mohaafeth's dam French Dressing (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) ran only twice but was unbeaten and won the listed Lyric Fillies' S. before retiring to stud.

Following the yearlings sales of 2019, Cooper cut her broodmare numbers significantly with a partial dispersal at the December Sale. She said, “If I'd known that I would sell all 14 mares then maybe I would have kept one or two of the yearlings back but decisions have to be made.”

Hurricane Lane's dam, the French listed winner Gale Force (GB) (Shirocco {Ger}), a half-sister to Group 1 winner Seal Of Approval (GB) (Authorized {Ire}), was among those in Normandie Stud's reduction, and she was bought by Lord and Lady Lloyd-Webber of Watership Down Stud for 300,000gns.

“I decided I was going to keep only eight mares and they were going to be from my three families—the Fallen Star (GB) family, the Dolores (GB) family and the Foodbroker Fancy—and they had to be group or listed class,” explained Cooper, who sold her Sussex-based Normandie Stud in December 2017 and now boards her mares at Coolmore and Newsells Park Stud. 

“I set down those criteria and it was very difficult but I had to make that decision in order to be able to continue. We had to be very grown up about it.”

She has, however, taken a different tack with her current crop of 2-year-olds, and one which is no doubt sensible given the current clamour for progressive middle-distance horses in training. 

She said, “I have 18 2-year-olds because I decided to keep the foals from the mares that I sold. I felt that I wasn't really getting the prices that I thought these horses were worth at the sales so I made the decision pre-pandemic to run them, and if they are good I will sell them in training.”

The group includes Hurricane Lane's half-brother by Sea The Stars (Ire), named Sweet William (Ire), who is in training with Roger Charlton.

“He's not a precocious type but he's not as big as Hurricane Lane,” said the breeder. “He's probably one of the best-looking horses I've ever bred, but then Sea The Stars is so good looking himself, I love him to bits. I don't know if lightning can strike twice—we shall see.”

French Dressing, meanwhile, has recently produced a full-brother to Mohaafeth and her 2-year-old, French Toast (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), is another with Charlton at Beckhampton.

“She's had five foals on the trot so she is having a well-earned rest,” said Cooper, a former French teacher, who added with a laugh. “Her Kingman (GB) yearling filly is named French Mistress after me.”

She continued, “Hurricane Lane will definitely stay, I wouldn't even worry about him getting the Derby trip, but I think Mohaafeth is more of a mile-and-a-quarter horse on breeding, but that doesn't mean he won't get the mile and a half, and he has the speed. I'd love Mohaafeth to win. He was the one I really wanted to keep, but there's no reason he would have done as well if I had kept him. He's with the right trainer and owner and I am blessed that they went to William and Charlie Appleby.

“Foodbroker Fancy was just the most wonderful mare. She died in terrible circumstances and she will forever be in my heart, so Mohaafeth is extra special to me. But let's hope Gale Force can go on and breed more good horses for the Lloyd-Webbers. They paid good money for her and I'd love to see her continue to do well.”

Cooper now keeps the majority of her mares in Ireland, with those set to visit British stallions based at Newsells Park Stud.

Following a period of adjustment after the sale of her own farm, at which Sultanina and fellow Group 1 winners Fallen For You (GB) and Duncan (GB) were bred, Cooper is full of praise for the help she has received from those charged with looking after her stock in some of the most famous paddocks in Ireland.

“I have to really say a big thank you to James Mockridge and the team,” she noted. “This is the first crop that was born and bred at Coolmore. It's really nothing to do with me, and I'm not saying that we were a bunch of amateurs at Normandie, but at Coolmore, it's not only the land, but their attention to detail is extraordinary. I wasn't finished when I sold the place but it was just a question of starting again and finding my feet and keeping the numbers tight.”

Cooper added, “I call myself a small breeder and people might laugh, but I am a small breeder in a sense, and it shows that it can be done. I'll just be so proud if they both make it to Epsom. If they can get there in one piece it will be the biggest thrill. The Derby is still the best race, whatever anyone says, and I'd never have imagined being in this situation.”

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High Definition Possible For Dante

G1 Cazoo Derby favourite High Definition (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) could be re-routed to next Thursday's G2 Dante S. at York after unsatisfactory blood work ruled him out of Saturday's Listed Derby Trial S. at Lingfield.

“His blood count didn't come back proper–his SAA [Serum Amyloid A] was very high and that is usually an indication of inflammation or infection somewhere, but we couldn't find either anywhere in his body,” O'Brien told Sky Sports Racing. “He scoped perfect this morning. Maybe it was just one of those things, but we'll do his bloods every day going forward and see. He's in the Dante and we'll see what happens over the next few days.”

O'Brien admitted it would be difficult to send High Definition to Epsom without a prep race.

“For us, we need to be getting out, because with the travelling you'd like a bit of time between their first and their second run,” he said. “The Dante normally is a little bit close to the Derby, but there's a little bit longer this year and that is probably what we'll look at. He'll have to improve every day and go forwards. If they [bloods] all came back normal and it had settled down then it's very possible. Realistically you couldn't go to the Derby without a run.”

O'Brien likewise confirmed that Santa Barbara (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), fourth as the favourite in last weekend's G1 1000 Guineas, is on course for the G1 Cazoo Oaks.

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Kentucky Derby Notes: ‘All The Heavy Lifting Is Done’

Galloping and jogging over a track listed as good dominated the morning activity on the day before the 147th running of the $3 million Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (G1).

BOURBONIC, DYNAMIC ONE, KNOWN AGENDA, SAINTHOOD – Trainer Todd Pletcher put the finishing touches on his Derby colts Friday morning, getting the quartet out early for final gallops prior to their Saturday date with destiny in the form of a mile and a quarter.

Three of his charges were among the first horses on the track, ambling over from Barn 42 and going through the six-furlong gap at 5:15 for mile and a quarter gallops. Known Agenda had his regular exercise rider, Hector Ramos, in the tack; Dynamic One was partnered by Carlos Perez Quevedo, and Sainthood had old buddy Amelia Green aboard.

After that trio got back home safely, the barn's final Derby contender – Bourbonic with Ramos up – set out at 5:40 for a mile and three-sixteenths spin that completed the handiwork.

“All the heavy lifting is done,” the trainer said. “They'll all walk the shed(row) tomorrow.”

Pletcher's father, Jake, was on the scene enjoying the Derby buzz. He fills out the family rooting section that also consists of the trainer's wife, Tracy, and his three college-age children, two boys (Texas A & M guys) and a daughter (Wake Forest).

Pletcher, of course, has history with the Kentucky Derby. Quite a bit, in fact.

He's started 55 horses in the race and after Saturday that record mark will rise to 59. Next on that list is his mentor, D. Wayne Lukas, with 49.

And starting four horses in America's Most Famous Race is a big deal, surely, but it's not that big a deal down at the Pletcher barn. This will be the fifth time he's started a quartet (2000, 2010, 2014 and 2018). Just for toppers, he set the race record with five runners in 2013.

The first year he entered the race was 2000 – and he entered it with a bang by running four horses. In 20 of the last 21 runnings, he's been represented by at least one horse. His only miss was in 2003, the year Funny Cide won it. Pletcher was at Churchill Downs that year, but just watched the race from the stands.

The trainer was asked what was the first Kentucky Derby he remembered.

“The first one I really recall was Affirmed (in 1978),” he said. “I'd watched a few on TV in the years before that (Bold Forbes in '76 and Foolish Pleasure in '75), but Affirmed's race got to me. I watched it in New Mexico where my Dad was running horses and I was a 9-year-old. Steve Cauthen (Affirmed's rider) was only 16. I related to that.”

When was the first Derby he saw in person?

“I was with Wayne (Lukas) from 1990 through 1995 and he ran a bunch of horses in the Derby those years (11 all told, including '95 winner Thunder Gulch), but I was working with the New York string,” he recalled. “My first in-person one was in 1999 (won by Lukas' Charismatic). I ran More Than Ready in the WHAS Stakes for 2-year-olds (he won it) earlier on the card and stuck around to watch the race. (He had More Than Ready back the following year — 2000 — in the Kentucky Derby – where he ran fourth – along with three other starters.) That was the first year I started running horses in the Derby.”

The trainer noted one asterisk on his Derby record.

“I actually wasn't here last year (when the race was shifted to the first Saturday in September),” he said. “I was in New York at Saratoga. Wayne (Lukas) was good enough to stable my horse (Money Moves) and saddle him.”

Time moves on. Pletcher's latest remarkable chapter of Derby history will go in the books Saturday.

BROOKLYN STRONG – Mark Schwartz's Remsen Stakes (G2) winner Brooklyn Strong was one of the last Kentucky Derby winners to arrive at Churchill Downs this week, coming in Tuesday morning, and he was among the last to train Friday, the final day of training before the Kentucky Derby. He jogged once around the track and then galloped slow once around.

“He's as fit as I can get him on the one week notice,” trainer Danny Velazquez said. “I'm just happy to be here. I have nothing to prove. He was a $5,000 purchase and we're in the Kentucky Derby. We made the one-percent (of the foal crop).”

ESSENTIAL QUALITY, MANDALOUN – Godolphin's Essential Quality and Juddmonte's Mandaloun had their final training session prior to Saturday's Kentucky Derby.

The Brad Cox duo galloped about 1 ½ miles at 5:15 a.m. A new member of the Cox team joined them for training this morning – Brad's youngest son Brodie.

“That'll do it,” Cox said. “Everyone's here and we're ready to go.”

HELIUM, SOUP AND SANDWICH – D J Stable's Helium and Live Oak Plantation's homebred Soup and Sandwich both galloped Friday morning for trainer Mark Casse.

HIDDEN STASH – Trainer Vicki Oliver got an early start on the morning, leaving Lexington at 3:30 to get to Churchill Downs by 5:15 to give BBN Racing's Hidden Stash a 1 ¼-mile gallop.

“He had an easy gallop this morning and I am undecided on what he will do tomorrow morning,” said Oliver, who has entrants in races one and 10 on Friday's 13-race program.

Oliver, who is saddling her first Kentucky Derby starter, will give a leg up to jockey Rafael Bejarano on Saturday afternoon. Hidden Stash will represent the 11th Derby mount for Bejarano whose best previous Derby finish was fourth on Papa Clem in 2009.

“I hope he breaks clean tomorrow and gets a good position,” Oliver said. “You have a long run to the first turn. I hope they go fast up front … I'd like to see a :46 or :47 half-mile, not a :48 like in the Blue Grass (G2).

HIGHLY MOTIVATED – Klaravich Stables' Highly Motivated galloped about 1 3/8 miles Friday morning for trainer Chad Brown.

HOT ROD CHARLIE – The Hot Rod Charlie contingent rolled out early Friday morning to catch their hero going through his final bit of track work in front of Saturday's Kentucky Derby 147.

The well-made colt had been a regular all week for the special 7:30-7:45 a.m. training session reserved for Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby runners only. But Friday he stepped onto the big Churchill Downs oval at 5:30 with regular exercise rider Jonny Garcia at the controls.

He also had his superstar stable pony – the 20-year-old Hall of Famer Lava Man – on his hip and the colt and his “Coach” (as “Lava” is known around the barn) toured the Churchill oval together, never picking up any more steam than a simple jog.

As “Charlie” returned to the six-furlong gap along the outer rail, he moved past his collection of stable admirers, including his trainer, two-time Derby winner Doug O'Neill. The colt proceeded to throw his head repeatedly and pulled hard on his reins. His message was obvious: He wanted more, quite a bit more. The “Charlie” crew all smiled and bumped fists. Their boy was locked and loaded for his historic Saturday assignment.

KEEPMEINMIND – Keepmeinmind, who has been among the first Kentucky Derby contenders on the track each morning, was joined by about a dozen other Derby contenders as he went out for his usual 1 ½-mile gallop at 5:15 a.m. A little later in the morning, trainer Robertino Diodoro, who will be saddling his first starter in the race, was all smiles as he fed the colt carrots and said everything was “great” with the horse.

Diodoro also reported that Ava's Grace, who had to be scratched from the Kentucky Oaks, only has a minor injury and is expected to resume training next week. She had been sent to Hagyard Equine Medical Institute for a full evaluation Wednesday.

KING FURY – Fern Circle Stables, Three Chimneys Farm's and Magdalena Racing's King Fury put in a 1 ½-mile gallop right after the track opened early Friday with exercise rider Danny Ramsey.

“Everyone in the barn is ready,” said trainer Kenny McPeek. The colt will start from the No. 16 post with Brian Hernandez Jr. riding.

World heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury is still expected to be part of King Fury's entourage for the walkover from the barns to the paddock Saturday. McPeek extended the offer for the boxer to attend this week, which was accepted.

LIKE THE KING – M Racing Group's Like the King jogged a mile at 7:15 with jockey Drayden Van Dyke aboard alongside a pony with Blake Heap aboard.

Heap, who is overseeing the preparation of Like the King here for Wesley Ward who has a mammoth stable housed at Keeneland, said plans for Derby morning are to be determined.

Heap put the saddle on Tea Olive to win Thursday's fourth race and give Ward his 1,998th career victory. Ward has two more runners entered today on the eve of his first Kentucky Derby starter.

However, there is Kentucky Derby experience in the Ward camp with Van Dyke signed on for his third Derby ride. Van Dyke's agent is three-time Kentucky Derby-winning rider Gary Stevens who is wearing several hats this week working for Fox Sports as well as managing some horses at Lone Star Park in Texas.

“Drayden is like family to me,” said Stevens, who has had Van Dyke's book for the past month and a half. “We talk a lot and he picks my brain and asks questions.”

Stevens rode in the Derby 22 times with his first mount coming in 1985 with Tank's Prospect for D. Wayne Lukas. That Derby marked the first time the then 22-year-old Stevens came to Churchill Downs.

MEDINA SPIRIT – Zedan Racing Stables' Medina Spirit galloped 1 ½ miles during the special 5:15 a.m. training time with exercise rider Humberto Gomez.

MIDNIGHT BOURBON, SUPER STOCK – Winchell Thoroughbreds' Midnight Bourbon and Erv Woolsey's and trainer Steve Asmussen's father Keith's Super Stock both jogged Friday morning, with trainer Steve Asmussen on the pony with Super Stock, while assistant Scott Blasi was out with Midnight Bourbon.

O BESOS – Bernard Racing, Tagg Team Racing, West Point Thoroughbreds and Terry L. Stephens' O Besos had a light gallop around 6:15 a.m. Friday.

Hands-on horseman Greg Foley was seen giving his prized Derby contender a bath following training.

“It's just what we do,” Foley said. “We love our horses and treat everyone like they're a Derby contender.”

ROCK YOUR WORLD – The tall Candy Ride colt went trackside at 6:30 Friday morning to put in his last bit of exercise en route to Saturday's 147th edition of the Run for the Roses.

Regular morning rider Javier Meza was aboard but he didn't have a lot of work to do. Trainer John Sadler had deemed Friday's activities to merely be a jog one time around the track alongside the barn's stable pony.

“He's done all his training,” the conditioner said. “He's ready. He'll walk tomorrow morning.”

Rock Your World, three for three this year (including a tally in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby) in his brief career so far, had a fine feather placed in his growing cap when it was announced that his breeding rights had been purchased by the historic Lexington farm Spendthrift, where he'll stand stud upon his retirement.

He's listed as the 5-1 second choice in tomorrow's early Derby wagering and will have the nation's second-leading rider – Joel Rosario – on board as they break from post 15 in the mile and one-quarter classic.

THE FIELD FOR THE $3 MILLION KENTUCKY DERBY PRESENTED BY WOODFORD RESERVE (GI) – Known Agenda (Irad Ortiz Jr., 6-1), Like the King (Drayden Van Dyke, 50-1), Brooklyn Strong (Umberto Rispoli, 50-1), Keepmeinmind (David Cohen, 50-1), Sainthood (Corey Lanerie, 50-1), O Besos (Marcelino Pedroza, 20-1), Mandaloun (Florent Geroux, 15-1), Medina Spirit (John Velazquez, 15-1), Hot Rod Charlie (Flavien Prat, 8-1), Midnight Bourbon (Mike Smith, 20-1), Dynamic One (Jose Ortiz, 20-1), Helium (Julien Leparoux, 50-1), Hidden Stash (Rafael Bejarano, 50-1), Essential Quality (Luis Saez, 2-1), Rock Your World (Joel Rosario, 5-1), King Fury (Brian Hernandez Jr., 20-1), Highly Motivated (Javier Castellano, 10-1), Super Stock (Ricardo Santana Jr., 30-1), Soup and Sandwich (Tyler Gaffalione, 30-1), Bourbonic (Kendrick Carmouche, 30-1). All starters will carry 126 pounds

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