What’s In A Name? Rose Maddox Seeks Graded Stakes Win For Nick Alexander

You may know Rose Maddox (Grazen) the horse. A 4-year-old California-bred filly, she's won five races, including the Golden Poppy S. and the Moscow Burning S., and is 6-1 in the morning line for Tuesday's GII Great Lady M. S. at Los Alamitos. But you may not know of Rose Maddox the person.

She was an American country singer-songwriter and fiddle player who passed away in 1998. Born in Boaz, Alabama and the daughter of sharecroppers, her family sold all their possessions for $35 when she was seven and left for California to find a better life. They began their journey on foot before hopping a freight train to complete the journey.  She'd go on to have 14 hits on the Billboard country singles chart between 1959 and 1964, including several duets with Buck Owens.

She's exactly the type of person owner-breeder Nick Alexander looks to honor when he names his horses.

“I always try to find people who have succeed against long odds or persevered and she fit the bill,” Alexander said.

When it comes to naming horses, no one is more clever than Alexander. Now 80, Alexander has been a fixture at the California tracks since the late seventies. He races exclusively California-breds and many are named after people who are, to Alexander, real-life heroes who haven't gotten the recognition they deserve.

“What I do, it's an opportunity to put something out there that just isn't a combination of the dam and sire's name,” he said.  “I've always thought that was kind of a dumb idea. I'm trying to give some notoriety to people who had either been forgotten or were never very well known.”

The list is a long one.

Desmond Doss (Grazen) is among Alexander's better horses. He's a three-time stakes winner who has earned $456,911 and is named after the only conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor. Doss is best known for distinguishing himself during the Battle of Okinawa by saving an estimated 75 men. Doss refused to carry a weapon into combat because of his personal beliefs as a Seventh-day Adventist against killing, the reason why he became a combat medic. His story was the subject of the 2016 Oscar-winning film Hacksaw Ridge.

“Desmond Doss had very strong convictions about his religion,” Alexander said. “He was determined to save lives rather than take lives. I can't imagine how in the Battle of Hacksaw Ridge he did what he did in those conditions. He singlehandedly saved 75, 80 wounded marines through the night of a miserable battle against the Japanese. He survived, came home and married his high school sweetheart. You have to admire someone like that.”

Alexander's father served in the Navy during World War II, a reason why he likes to name horses after people who served with honor during the war. Alexander owns an unraced 2-year-old colt named Butch O'Hare (Grazen), who is named after another World War II hero. O'Hare Airport in Chicago is named after the Navy fighter pilot.

“He was a very atypical World War II navy fighter pilot,” Alexander said. “Most of them were tall, dark and handsome and looked like movie stars. He was short, balding and pudgy. He flew into a a squadron of Japanese bombers who were headed toward the Lexington, which at time was our only operational aircraft carrier after Pearl Harbor. He was coming back from a mission where he didn't find anything and he was flying alone. He flew right into the middle of this group and took out five or six of them to the point where they turned around and went back.”

He's also a baseball fan. Growing up in Los Angeles, he has been a Dodger fan going back to their days in Brooklyn. He liked the team because he was a big admirer of Jackie Robinson. He has yet to name a horse after Robinson but does have a Pee Wee Reese (Tribal Rule), whose wins include victories in the GII Eddie D. S. and the GIII American S. and is named after one of Robinson's teammates.

“Pee Wee Reese is one of my best horses ever,” Alexander said. “He was the captain at time Jackie came up. Pee Wee was from the South originally and some of southern players on Dodgers signed a petition saying they didn't want to play with Jackie. Pee Wee was the one that changed minds and made people realize why wouldn't you want someone as good as Jackie Robinson playing for your team, no matter what color he was?”

Sometimes, Alexander will name horses after fictional characters. That list includes Isabel Ludlow (Grazen), who will start in Tuesday's third race at Los Alamitos, a Cal-bred maiden special weight race. Isabel Ludlow is the name of a character in the movie Legends of the Fall. Alexander said it's one of his favorite movies and that he was a fan of the character played by Karina Lombard.

He says he doesn't spend a lot of time researching names or doing anything out of the ordinary.

“I'm 80 years old and I've been around a long time, so I guess I know a few things,” he said. “I'm not a serious scholar, but there are things I'm interested in like World War II.”

Facing open company in a graded stakes race after running second against state-breds in the Fran's Valentine S., Rose Maddox will be in a tough spot in the Great Lady M. Alexander is hoping for the best.

“It would be awesome to win a race like that,” Alexander said. “We've had a couple of Grade II winners from our homebreds, but it's always exciting to see another one come along who has the potential.  She started out modestly at Golden Gate but she can do just about anything. She's won short, long, on synthetic, on dirt, on turf. I don't know if she's good enough to run with those horses.  We will find out. But she's a wonderful horse to have in the barn.”

And so well-named.

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Fashionably Fast Digs In For Game Victory In Tiznow Stakes

In a race in which the emphasis was on speed, speed and more speed, Harris Farms' hard knocking Fashionably Fast proved gamest of all, as he dug deep while in between horses late to win Sunday's $100,000 Tiznow Stakes at Santa Anita by a head.  Trained by Dean Pederson and ridden by Tiago Pereira, Fashionably Fast, a 6-year-old California-bred gelding by Lucky Pulpit, got a flat mile in 1:37.14 while taking the Tiznow for the second consecutive year at the Arcadia, Calif., track.

Sponsored by the CTBA, the Tiznow is part of the Golden State Series for eligible California-bred or sired older horses.  The Tiznow is named for the California-bred two-time Breeders' Cup Classic winner from 2000 and 2001 who was trained by Jay Robbins.

Breaking from the outside in a field of five, Fashionably Fast was part of a four-horse scramble for the lead, as recent allowance winner Desmond Doss had a head advantage over Margot's Boy, with Surfing Star just a half length in front of the winner, who was hung four-wide around the clubhouse turn.

Heading to the far turn, Fashionably Fast moved into second, a half length back of Desmond Doss and these two traded punches to the sixteenth pole, where they were joined by a late running Brandothebartender. In the end, Fashionably Fast simply wouldn't be denied.

“This horse has so much heart, mucho corazon!” said Pereira, who has now ridden Fashionably Fast in 19 out of his 20 starts and in all eight of his victories.  “None of these races are easy, but he tries so hard.  Today, we were wide going into the first turn, but he's got so much speed and I didn't want to take too much hold of him.  He relaxed a little down the backside and when we were between the number one (Desmond Doss) and the number three (Brandothebartender), he gave everything.”

Third off of a 5 ½ month layoff in the six-furlong Don Valpredo Cal Cup Sprint on Jan. 16, Fashionably Fast, who registered his fifth career stakes win, was off as the 4-5 favorite and paid $3.80, $2.40 and $2.10.

“I wasn't too worried about him being wide,” said Pederson.  “He's in the clear and he was on the bridle for Tiago, which was important.  I was a little worried when he got a little keen up the backside, but you (could) tell at the three-eighth pole we had no excuse.  He doesn't make (anything) easy, he's just a very game horse.

“I almost feel more confident when he's tucked in a battle like that than when he's out there by himself.  But then at that point, you either win or you lose and you just hope for the best.  Good horses make it easy.”

Owned by Harris Farms, Per Antonsen and John Nicoletti, Fashionably Fast, who is out of the Forestry mare Fall Fashion, is now 20-8-4-3 overall.  With the winner's share of $60,000, he increased his earnings to $568,245.

For his part, Desmond Doss, a Nick Alexander homebred trained by Steve Miyadi, ran a tremendous race in defeat while pressed the entire trip.  Off at 5-2 with Abel Cedillo, he paid $3.00 and $2.10 while finishing a head in front of Brandothebartender.

Trained by Craig Dollase and ridden by Umberto Rispoli, Brandothebartender was finishing with a flourish while wide-out and ended up 12 lengths in front of Margot's Boy.  Off at 5-1, “Brando” paid $2.10 to show.

Fractions on the race were 23.07, 46.42, 1:11.49 and 1:24.29.

The post Fashionably Fast Digs In For Game Victory In Tiznow Stakes appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Fashionably Fast Bids For Repeat In Tiznow Stakes At Santa Anita

With a recent race under his belt, Harris Farms' highly accomplished homebred Fashionably Fast is back to defend his title in Sunday's $100,000 Tiznow Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.  Named for the California-bred two-time Breeders' Cup Classic winner, the Tiznow has attracted a field of five older California-bred or sired horses and will be contested at one mile on the main track.

Nick Alexander's ascendent Desmond Doss, fresh off an impressive gate to wire win versus state-bred allowance horses at one mile on Feb. 5, rates a big look, as do versatile Margot's Boy and the venerable Brandothebartender, who will be making his 41st start on Sunday.

The Tiznow is part of the lucrative Golden State Series, which is sponsored by the CTBA and is available to eligible California-bred or sired horses.

A 6-year-old gelding by Lucky Pulpit, Fashionably Fast capped a six-race winning streak in taking last year's Tiznow on March 1.  Subsequently second in the Grade 2 Triple Bend Stakes going seven furlongs June 7, Fashionably Fast threw in a clunker in the G1 Bing Crosby Stakes at Del Mar Aug. 1, running a non-threatening sixth at odds of 7-2.

Trained by Dean Pederson and owned in partnership with Per Antonsen and John Nicoletti, Fashionably Fast was then given several months off prior to resurfacing in the Don Valpredo Cal Cup Sprint on Jan. 16, a race in which he rallied to finish third, beaten 3 ¼ lengths.  Out of Harris Farms' Forestry mare Fall Fashion, Fashionably Fast appears primed for his best as he seeks his fifth stakes win with regular rider Tiago Pereira up.  With earnings of $508,245, he'll try to improve upon an overall mark of 19-7-4-3.

A runaway 4 ½-length one-mile allowance winner Feb. 5, Desmond Doss, who is trained by Steve Miyadi and is named for the legendary World War II Medal of Honor winner, will be making his third start off a four-month freshening and will likely have theft on his mind with Abel Cedillo back aboard.  A 5-year-old homebred full horse by Grazen out of Alexander's Malek mare Malley Girl, Desmond Doss has three wins from nine starts and will be seeking his first stakes win.

A 4-year-old gelding by red-hot sire Clubhouse Ride, Margot's Boy comes off a ninth place performance in the Unusual Heat Turf Classic at 1 1/8 miles on Jan. 16, but retains the services of Juan Hernandez while cutting back in distance and transitioning to the main track.  Trained by Craig Lewis and owned by his breeder Alfred Pais, Margot's Boy has two thirds from as many tries at one mile on dirt and will likely employ a stalking style.

A close second in the G2 Del Mar Derby on turf five starts back on Sept. 6, Margot's Boy is out of the English-bred mare Margot Machance and will be seeking his first stakes win in what will be his 14th start.  He comes off a big year in which he banked $186,456 from a 2020 mark of 11-3-13.

Trained by Craig Dollase, 8-year-old gelding Brandothebartender brings an overall mark of 40-6-6-14 to the Tiznow party and will be ridden for the third consecutive time by Umberto Rispoli.  Trained by Craig Dollase, this son of top sprinter Tribal Rule notched his most recent win in a 1,000 yard allowance at Los Alamitos four starts back on Dec. 19, which was his only win on dirt but it is not considered a Thoroughbred win as it was accomplished in a mixed breed race.  Third in his only one mile dirt start, “Brando,” who is owned by Flawless Racing, Brian Flanagan and Michael Jarvis, is the leading Tiznow money earner with $536,364.

$100,000 TIZNOW STAKES WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS
IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 8 of 9  Approximate post time 4 p.m. PT

  1. Desmond Doss—Abel Cedillo—120
  2. Margot's Boy—Juan Hernandez–122
  3. Brandothebartender—Umberto Rispoli—122
  4. Surfing Star—Edwin Maldonado–122
  5. Fashionably Fast—Tiago Pereira—124

First post time for a nine-race card on Sunday is at 12:30 p.m.. For additional information, please visit santaanita.com.

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