This Side Up: Desert Turns Up Heat On Parched Calendar

In the end, things work because they work. We try stuff, often if not always with the best intentions, and see whether it gains our trust. Lived experience, among horsemen and fans, will eventually tell us whether an experiment has failed or whether, once every generation or so, we might have struck a game-changing seam of gold. The Breeders' Cup was one such; and, who knows, maybe a similar hostility from vested interests will ultimately prove the furnace in which HISA can be forged into another.

That may seem a long way off, from both sides of the fence. But someday we'll look back and know whether or not this was a moment when enough people, recognizing the steepening gradient of viability, began to embrace the kind of duties that must accompany the privileges of a life with Thoroughbreds in 2022.

Both in terms of the cost of doing something, and the risk in doing nothing, the stakes are pretty enormous. In this era of bitter polemics, it's unsurprising that people are harnessing broader ideologies to their respective positions. As a result, however, there's a tendency to become so consumed by means that we lose sight of the ends. Things work because they work–not because they are assembled by federal factories or state artisans.

One good example is the piecemeal evolution, over the years, of the racing calendar. In my homeland of England, what has come to feel like a sacrosanct cycle actually obeys the social routine of Victorian aristocracy: Royal Ascot dovetailed with the London “season” of debutantes' balls; the imminent garden party of Goodwood is followed, just down the road, by the Cowes sailing regatta; while the Ebor and St Leger meetings at York and Doncaster were sited conveniently for grouse shoots on the northern moors. In the same way, Saratoga only became the addictive ritual it is today because the capitalist barons had found sanctuary, at an upstate spa, from the broiling city summer.

These have become cherished staging posts in our sporting year by achieving an organic connection not just with us, but also with each other. In its understated way, for instance, you could say that last weekend's GIII Ohio Derby embarked us on the second half of the sophomore campaign. Regrouping Classic protagonists like Zandon (Upstart) and latecomers like Jack Christopher (Munnings) will soon be converging along such roads as the one leading through the GII Jim Dandy and GI Travers.

 

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This schedule has matured in the habits of professionals and public alike. And I have yet to hear anything remotely coherent, among those who renewed their tiresome complaints about the Triple Crown schedule because a freak Derby winner did not risk exposure in the Preakness, about how they would avoid instead butting right into races like the GI Haskell. If you stretch out the Triple Crown, you instead create a logjam in these barely less storied races, which allow both precocious and later-developing sophomores to circle back together.

And, actually, what we see this weekend shows us what happens when you start pulling at the ball of wool. Because two of the biggest names around, both sons of Into Mischief, resume Saturday after a prolonged absence occasioned by pursuit of the winter riches nowadays available in faraway deserts.

His disappointing performance in the G1 Saudi Cup leaves Mandaloun still in the curious position of having two Grade I wins on his resumé without ever passing the post first in a Grade I race. It has also required him to take a long break before the GII Stephen Foster S., a likely stepping stone to the GI Whitney–in which race he might well encounter Life Is Good, who has similarly been stuck in the workshop since his derailment in the G1 Dubai World Cup, and now resurfaces in the GII John A. Nerud S.

Now nobody could sensibly object to the growth of international racing, a transparent boon to our sport. But the people putting up these huge prizes halfway round the world, in what always used to be a period of rest and recuperation for elite American horses, plainly have an agenda of their own. And we've seen the dismal consequences for some of those venerable spring races in California, in particular.

Everybody is perfectly within their rights to go after all that eye-watering desert bounty. But let's not lose sight of the connection between the welfare protocols at Santa Anita, which we celebrated last week, and the competence of the breed to service the program. Because we will not be meeting the standards we inherited from our predecessors, if modern champions are either campaigned like Flightline (Tapit), who is being widely credited with “greatness” after racing for an aggregate 5 minutes and 12 seconds; or disappear to the desert in the winter, then needing months to recover before tentatively contesting only a couple of races before the Breeders' Cup. (That's if they recover at all: Arrogate, for instance, plainly reached the bottom of the barrel in Dubai.)


Life Is Good | Dubai Racing Club

Arguably all those dirhams caused Life Is Good to overreach, in terms of his stamina potential, earlier than would have been the case had he stayed home for a campaign that reserved that test for the Breeders' Cup. One way or another, a single performance in Dubai has prompted a pretty abrupt relegation, by most observers, below Flightline. For now, however, I'd resist the idea that Speaker's Corner (Street Sense) will offer Life Is Good a reliable line on the relative merit of Flightline. For Speaker's Corner to be rolling up his sleeves again, just three weeks after meeting that horse in the GI Met Mile, suggests that he can't possibly have left everything out on the track that day.

Two races in three weeks! Whatever next? And both against authentic monsters, in an era where the graded stakes program has become so diluted that you really have to go looking for trouble to find it.

To all the familiar reasons for that syndrome–the foal crop, the super-trainers, the training in cotton wool–we must add the fact that many of our very best horses are taken right out of the game, for several months, by a shattering winter migration.

There's nothing inherently wrong with these desert races. On the contrary, they provide a fascinating melting pot. They're bringing together horses from radically different racing environments, arguably more successfully than the Breeders' Cup or Royal Ascot. Being wholly extraneous, however, they are unraveling a domestic calendar that had over the decades achieved a wonderful national coherence and dynamism from the accretion of local habits and loyalties.

We're seeing now, in a different context, how very hard it is to try and do something like that overnight. We can't turn back the clock on international racing, and nor should we want to–any more than we should stem the tide of progress with HISA. But we should remember that the pageant woven by so many generations past, in the domestic calendar, isn't just a cultural heritage. It is a parallel legacy to that of the breed itself, as a trusted means of testing its physical competence.

We have to retrieve that functionality: streamline racing capacity, in terms of the program; and expand equine capacity, whether as breeders or trainers or both. Otherwise the horses we send out to the desert will bring back with them a drought to wither some of the Turf's most fertile acres.

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Hot Rod Charlie Back in Action Saturday on Loaded Monmouth Card

Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow), a strong second when last seen in the G1 Dubai World Cup Mar. 26, will begin his road to the GI Breeders' Cup Classic in Saturday's GIII Salvator Mile S. on Monmouth Park's inaugural GI TVG.com Haskell S. preview day. He'll face six rivals with Hall of Famer Mike Smith booked to ride.

The half-brother to champion Mitole (Eskendereya) returns to the Jersey Shore for the first time since being disqualified from first and placed seventh for interference in a roughly run edition of last year's Haskell. He crossed the wire a nose ahead of promoted GI Kentucky Derby hero Mandaloun (Into Mischief) that day after drifting in a furlong for home and causing the ill-fated Midnight Bourbon (Tiznow) to clip heels and lose his jockey.

Hot Rod Charlie's sophomore campaign, headed by a win in the GI Pennsylvania Derby, also includes a third-place finish in the Kentucky Derby and a valiant runner-up effort in the GI Belmont S. He kicked off his 4-year-old season with a win in the G2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round 2 prior to coming up 1 3/4 lengths short of Country Grammer (Tonalist) in the $12-million centerpiece in the desert.

“I think the timing was right and he's ready to run,” trainer Doug O'Neill told TDN's Katie Petrunyak. “I like the mile distance and the fact that he's shipped into Monmouth and run well there before is beneficial as well.”

He continued, “We have the Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland circled as our ultimate goal. We will see how Saturday goes and how he comes out of it and then go from there.”

In addition to the Salvator Mile, Monmouth's 14-race card also features the GIII Eatontown S., GIII Monmouth S.; and the local Haskell prep race, the $150,000 TVG.com Pegasus S. for 3-year-olds.

Saturday's remaining graded action includes: a five-horse field headed by Juddmonte homebred and narrow GI Maker's Mark Mile S. runner-up Masen (GB) (Kingman {GB}) in Belmont's GIII Poker S.; and a sextet, including GII Santa Margarita S. upsetter Blue Stripe (Arg) (Equal Stripes {Arg}), in Santa Anita's GII Santa Maria S.

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Life Is Good, Country Grammer Thriving at WinStar

Life Is Good (Into Mischief) and Country Grammer (Tonalist), both multiple Grade I winners co-owned by WinStar Farm, are enjoying a freshening at WinStar's training and rehabilitation facility in Versailles, Ky. before they return to the racetrack for their summer campaigns. Rivals in their last start in the G1 Dubai World Cup, the duo now shares the same daily routine on the farm. After training at 6:30 every morning, they keep company together as they enjoy the grass and sunshine in side-by-side round pens.

“Life Is Good and Country Grammer arrived shortly after the Dubai World Cup,” WinStar Farm Trainer Destin Heath said. “They were able to quarantine in Louisville at a new quarantine facility, which is a change from years past.  We were able to check on them while they were there and now they've settled back into their normal routine here at WinStar. We've been letting them do their thing–keep a little bit of fitness, but be a horse. They both train early in the morning so they have ample time to go outside.”

With consecutive Grade I wins in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile and Pegasus World Cup Invitational S., 'TDN Rising Star' Life is Good was the heavy favorite in the Dubai World Cup, but Country Grammer, who was coming off a second-place finish in the G1 Saudi Cup, closed in the final furlong to get the victory.

“We all thought Life Is Good was a cinch,” Heath admitted. “I'll be honest, that was my main rooting interest. But Country Grammer coming through and winning the race was pretty special for us and the crew here at the training barn.”

Country Grammer spent a brief stint at WinStar after he was purchased as a 2-year-old by Paul Pompa in 2019 and he returned after his 3-year-old campaign that was marked by a win in the GIII Peter Pan S. After Pompa's passing in 2020, the colt sold to WinStar Farm for $110,000 at the 2021 Keeneland January Sale and was sent to Bob Baffert in California, where got his first Grade I victory last year in the Hollywood Gold Cup S.

Life is Good has also spent a good deal of time at WinStar's training center. The $525,000 Keeneland September purchase was part of WinStar's breaking program.

“Life Is Good is pretty special,” Heath said. “He was easy to break and was forward from day one. [WinStar Rehabilitation and Breaking Manager] Terry Arnold told me from day one that he was the best one of the bunch and he was spot on with that. We've always been high on him and he's never really done anything wrong. We just had to manage him to not go too fast in his early stages.”

Heath notes Life is Good's Pegasus victory as his most impressive win so far, but he first points to the talented bay's first-ever defeat last year in the GI H. Allen Jerkens Memorial S., where he ran second off a layoff after a battle with Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music), as the race he and his team are most proud of.

“He was with us for quite a bit last spring after he got injured and came off the Derby trail,” Heath said. “It was pretty special to see him run in a Grade I just 47 days after shipping out. That was a thrill even in defeat.”

While there was never a question of Life is Good's brilliance as 3-year-old, Heath said he is even more confident in the champion's ability now as an older horse.

“As a 4-year-old, he's a little bit more professional about things,” Heath explained. “He knows his job and he knows what to do. We just have to keep him in a routine to where he's happy and healthy. I think we've got him figured out now. He just likes to go out and be a racehorse.”

Country Grammer heads back to the barn after a morning in the sunshine | Katie Petrunyak

Heath said that Country Grammer is equally professional on the racetrack, but not quite as easygoing as his stablemate on the ground.

“He knows that he's all man,” Heath said. “You've got to set your scenarios up every morning with the right riders and grooms to make sure he's not going to tell them who's boss. Turned out, he's a little bit more of a ham and a little bit more animated. He plays and has a good time out there, but on the track he's the consummate professional. He never turns a hair and really enjoys his job.”

Heath, who first came to Kentucky in 2005 to work for D. Wayne Lukas and took on the role of head trainer at WinStar in 2018, is no stranger to working with top-class horses at WinStar with a long list of graduates that includes superstars Justify, Monomoy Girl, Songbird, Improbable, Midnight Bisou and Always Dreaming.

He noted that their roster this spring is particularly impressive. Along with Life Is Good and Country Grammer, two-time Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational S. winner Colonel Liam (Liam's Map), GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Champion Corniche (Quality Road), 2021 GI Woody Stephens S. winner Drain the Clock (Maclean's Music) and 2021 GI Cigar Mile H. victor Americanrevolution (Constitution) have all spent time at WinStar already this year.

“It's pretty special to have horses of that caliber,” Heath said. “The incredible horses in the barn are easy to have. They know their job and they know their routine. I just try to stay out of their way and let them do their thing. I know I never take a day for granted here and I know the crew doesn't either.”

No specific plans are set yet as to when Life Is Good and Country Grammer will ship out in the coming weeks. Country Grammer's trainer Bob Baffert is currently serving a 90-day suspension for the betamethasone positive in last year's Kentucky Derby, but Heath said the 5-year-old bay will be pointing toward Del Mar. Meanwhile Life Is Good will head to Todd Pletcher to target the Saratoga race meet.

“We're going to leave it up to the individual horse and the timeline for the year,” he explained. “We'll let them decide when they're ready to get back to the races. It's all up to the horse.”

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Champion O’Shea Bags A Memorable First

There was much cause for Irish celebration at Meydan on Saturday night when A Case Of You (Ire) (Hot Streak {Ire}) and Ronan Whelan shot to glory in the G1 Al Quoz Sprint for Ado McGuinness. But a victory that meant just as much for one Irish jockey was that of Switzerland (Speightstown) in the other major sprint on the card, the G1 Dubai Golden Shaheen, which provided Tadhg O'Shea with his first Group 1 winner at the age of 40.

O'Shea has not, however, been devoid of success throughout the last two decades. Very much the opposite in fact. Much of that time has been spent in the UAE, where he is the most successful jockey of all time and has been champion on nine occasions.

“It's my 20th season in Dubai and I'm hopefully on the cusp of sealing a tenth championship as I'm eight in front with two meetings to go,” says O'Shea.

Those meetings take place on Thursday and Friday, and however many more wins the jockey adds to his tally of 65 for the season, none will come close to his major success on Saturday for Bhupat Seemar.

He continues, “To ride a Group 1 winner on Dubai World Cup night was special. I haven't ridden a Group 1 winner on the Thoroughbreds and I turned 40 in February. I don't get too many chances in Group 1s so I was thinking maybe I'd missed the boat on that one, so it was very, very special and a huge performance by the horse on the night. He was beautifully prepared by Bhupat and the team at Zabeel Stables.”

The victory also sealed an impressive start to the training career of Seemar, who took over the licence from his uncle, Satish Seemar, at the start of the season.

“It's amazing,” says O'Shea. “Bhupat has been in Dubai for as long as I have and he's been assistant to his uncle for the last 19 years, so to be champion trainer in the first season with his name on the licence is quite something. I rode his first stakes winner on a horse called Tuz and now to ride him a Group 1 winner in his first year, it's been one of those pinch-yourself seasons.”

He adds, “I've never ridden as many winners here in a season, and for Bhupat, too, it's just been one of those years when everything clicked. We had the rub of the green throughout and the horses stayed extremely healthy and well and held their form from the drop of the flag until World Cup night. It's like a dream really and I don't want to wake up.”

The stable's good night at Meydan on Saturday also saw Summer Is Tomorrow (Summer Front) run second in the G2 UAE Derby behind Crown Pride (Jpn) (Reach The Crown {Jpn}). O'Shea had even more reason to be pleased with that good run as he was responsible for buying the colt at last year's Arqana Breeze-up Sale for £120,000.

“He ran a huge race,” says the rider. “He's won twice for us this season, including at the carnival, and now he's been second in the UAE Derby. I'll be totally honest, I didn't think he'd stay the distance. I bought him for the Burke family at Arqana, which was held at Doncaster last year because of Covid. I was more active at the sales because a lot of owners and Bhupat couldn't travel because of Covid restrictions, but it worked out well.”

He adds, “He breezed extremely well and he took to the sand over here like a duck to water. I suppose it does help a little bit, when you're looking at their action at the breeze-ups, to have ridden for a long time out here. That horse really grabbed for the ground and he had a knee action when he breezed. With all those things put together I recommended him to the Burke family and happily he has paid for himself though the season, culminating with a huge second in the UAE Derby on World Cup night.”

The stable will now be the beneficiary of a number of lots from the inaugural Goffs Dubai Breeze-up Sale, held on the Thursday evening before the World Cup.

“Goffs did a great job and it was fantastic that the Maktoum family organised to have the breeze-up sale in Dubai,” O'Shea says. “Bhupat ended up with seven horses from the sale with very good pedigrees. They are the next winners in waiting, hopefully, and it's hugely exciting for the horse population in Dubai. Most of the horses we get over here have started their careers elsewhere in Ireland, or the UK, or France, so it's nice for some of the trainers over here to start off with a blank canvas and to be able to give them time to acclimatise. I think the sale went down very well and I'm sure the results will come in the upcoming season.”

He continues, “It's a great week when everyone ships in and the sale has added an extra spice to it as there's people that you see at the sale that wouldn't have been here normally for World Cup week. There was a huge gathering and I think the timing was great.”

After racing in the UAE concludes this week, O'Shea, a native of Dromahane, Co Cork, heads to Qatar for the end of their season before making his annual summer trip home to Ireland.

“In years gone by I used to come back and try to ride in Ireland or the UK but I found it was a bit difficult,” he says frankly. “The lads who are there all year round, sometimes it's a struggle for them to get rides so I am under no illusion that I can get off a plane and be somewhere for two months and try to get rides. I concentrate on what's working and that's over here. I get home in the summer for seven or eight weeks. I used to call Dubai my second home but I spend longer here now than I do anywhere else.”

The first anniversary of the death of Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum passed last week, and O'Shea reflects on how much he owes to his support in the early days of his career.

“I was very fortunate that back in 2001 there were four of us fighting out the Irish champion apprentice title, and with about six weeks left in the season we were notified through our trainers that Sheikh Hamdan had kindly sponsored an all-expenses paid trip to Dubai for whoever was champion that year to work for four of his trainers,” he recalls. 

“Thankfully that was me, and he did the same next year and luckily I won it again. So that's how it all started. It's amazing the path you take in life but I've been coming even since and I rode a lot of winners for the late Sheikh Hamdan and his family, and have continued to do so for his wider family. It has been a hugely successful place for me and my family, and without Sheikh Hamdan's initial invitation I might never have come here.”

With Covid having forced the abandonment of the Dubai World Cup in 2020, and then led to few people being in attendance last year, O'Shea was thrilled to have been able to record his biggest winner in front of a bumper crowd.

He says, “As big and as mesmerising as Meydan is to look at it was great to see so many people back in the stands. We love the crowd and the supporters, they mean everything, and it was a little bit dreary through Covid times with no crowd. 

“Switzerland was the only UAE winner on the night so the local crowd really got behind him. They are great supporters, and they erupted when he walked back in.”

He continues, “The only low point of the night was my horse in the Godolphin Mile, Al Nefud (GB), who was a warm favourite, but he never felt right to me and I ended up pulling him up and it turns out that he fractured his pelvis. Thankfully he's comfortable and he will recover. But the rest of the horses all ran with great credit, finishing second and fourth in the Derby and then Switzerland winning, and we were so proud of Remorse running sixth in the World Cup. It was a great night.”

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