Irad Ortiz Jr. Wins Fourth Consecutive Shoemaker Award For Outstanding Jockey At BC

Irad Ortiz Jr. won his fourth consecutive Bill Shoemaker Award, given to the most outstanding jockey at the Breeders' Cup World Championships at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif.

The Shoemaker Award goes to the jockey who won the most races in the 14 World Championship races this weekend with the tiebreaker being a 10-3-1 point system for second- through fourth-place finishes.

Ortiz and William Buick both won three races, but Ortiz also had a runner-up finish and three fourth-place finishes while Buick finished fifth with his only other mount.

Ortiz won the first Championship race of the weekend on Twilight Gleaming (IRE) in the Grade 2 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf and then added Saturday victories in the G1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint with Golden Pal and the G1 Big Ass Fans Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile with Life Is Good.

Buick also had one victory Friday on Modern Games (IRE) in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf and then two on Saturday with Space Blues (IRE) in the G1 FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile presented by PDJF and Yibir (GB) in the G1 Longines Turf.

Two other riders posted multiple wins: Joel Rosario and Jose Ortiz.

Rosario took the richest race of the weekend, the $6 million G1 Longines Breeders' Cup Classic with Knicks Go and Friday's G1 NetJets Juvenile Fillies with Echo Zulu.

Ortiz's victories came on Pizza Bianca in Friday's G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and Aloha West in the G1 Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint.

The Shoemaker Award is named in honor of one of the greatest jockeys in the history of Thoroughbred racing. Bill Shoemaker, who captured the Kentucky Derby four times, won 8,833 races in a career that spanned more than 40 years. In 1987, at age 56, Shoemaker won the Breeders' Cup Classic aboard Ferdinand at Hollywood Park.

Bill Shoemaker Award winners:

2003: Alex Solis

2004: John Velazquez

2005: Garrett Gomez

2006: Frankie Dettori

2007: Garrett Gomez

2008: Garrett Gomez

2009: Julien Leparoux

2010: Garrett Gomez

2011: John Velazquez

2012: Mike Smith

2013: Mike Smith

2014: John Velazquez

2015: Ryan Moore

2016: Mike Smith

2017: Javier Castellano

2018: Irad Ortiz Jr.

2019: Irad Ortiz Jr.

2020: Irad Ortiz Jr.

2021: Irad Ortiz Jr.

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Express Train Scratched from Classic, BC Friday Wrap

Express Train (Union Rags), slated to contest Saturday's GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, was scratched the morning of the race because of swelling in his hind right hock.

“He was schooling in the paddock three days ago and he got a little playful, jumping around and kicked himself,” trainer John Shirreffs said. “He'll be fine with a little more time and we plan on running him next year.”

Also withdrawn Saturday morning, Lael Stable's Arrest Me Red (Pioneerof the Nile) was forced to miss Saturday's GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.

“We had a little foot issue and changed the horse's shoes,” trainer Wesley Ward said. “It kept getting better, but we erred on the side of caution.”

“She was perfect [Saturday] morning,” he confirmed. “She jogged up perfect and is with [GII Juvenile Turf Sprint] third-place finisher Kaufymaker and fifth-place finisher and post-time favorite Averly Jane] on a plane [to Keeneland].”

L and N Racing LLC and Winchell Thoroughbreds LLC's Echo Zulu (Gun Runner), runaway winner of Friday's GI NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, will get some time off before returning for a 3-year-old campaign, according to trainer Steve Asmussen.

“She needs a bit of a break now. So that she can fill in, she needs to grow,” he said. “She's not a big filly in stature, but as a Gun Runner, he was extremely talented, but he [later] developed into the best in the world.”

Earlier this season, the TDN Rising Star won the GI Spinaway S. and GI Frizette S. prior to her latest score.

Reflecting on Friday's victory, he added, “I think it's as simple as she's faster than they are. And, I think that's what she's been all year. She continues to be just extremely satisfying. When you look at a four-race year, three Grade Is and the style in which she's done it. All of her races are fast, her numbers are good. And, against the best company, that's as good as it gets. You catch the [GI] Alcibiades winner [JuJu's Map] and the [GIII] Pocahontas winner [Hidden Connection]. They made it here. And, she was better on the day. We're very proud of that.”

According to trainer Bob Baffert, Speedway Stables' Corniche (Quality Road) is also done for the season following his win in Friday's GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile.

“He won't race again this year,” the Hall of Famer confirmed. “We don't have any specific plans for him.”

Baffert was also responsible for Juvenile contestants Pinehurst (Twirling Candy, 5th) and Barossa (Into Mischief, 9th).

“All my horses came out of the race well,” Baffert said. “I thought his [Corniche's] race was very impressive. He's a really, really fast horse and this performance shows what a brilliant horse he is.”

Bobby Flay's Pizza Bianca (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) was already heading back East following her win in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf Friday. The Flay homebred gave her trainer, Christophe Clement, his first win in a Breeders' Cup race.

“She ran very well and got a great ride,” said Clement. “She's a good filly. For me the biggest accomplishment of the whole deal–of course it's great to win the Breeders Cup–is that her owner/breeder Bobby Flay chose us with a filly that is very well bred and we were able to do this. It is very meaningful for me.”

Looking ahead, Clement added that New York's turf triple crown is a likely for next season.

“That would be the goal of the moment, but we have time to think about it,” he said.

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Breeders’ Cup Notes: Clement, Asmussen Celebrate Their BC Wins

Corniche – Speedway Stables' Corniche, whose $1.5 million sale price looks every bit the bargain following his wire-to-wire victory in the G1 TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance on Friday, came out of the race no worse for the wear.

Trainer Bob Baffert reported: “All my horses came out of the race well (including Pinehurst and Barossa). I thought his (Corniche) race was very impressive. He's a really, really fast horse and this performance shows what a brilliant horse he is.”

Baffert joked, “He was marching around the track like he was American Pharaoh.”

As for any future plans, Baffert said, “He won't race again this year. We don't have any specific plans for him.”

Corniche, when officially voted the champion 2yo, will become the conditioner's sixth Eclipse Award-winning juvenile colt.

Pappacap/Grafton Street – Juvenile runner-up Pappacap and Juvenile Turf third-place finisher Grafton Street left California for Kentucky at 1 a.m. and will be given some time off in Florida before beginning preparations for their 3-year-old campaigns.

“They both came out of their races well,” assistant trainer Allen Hardy-Zukowski said. “We were very happy with how they ran.”

Echo Zulu – It was all smiles around the Steve Asmussen barn Saturday morning as they completed preparations for today's races and basked in the victory by L and N Racing LLC and Winchell Thoroughbreds LLC's Echo Zulu in the G1 NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies. The daughter of 2017 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Gun Runner, also trained by Asmussen, went to the lead early and never looked back, drawing off to win by 5 ¼ lengths.

“I think it's as simple as she's faster than they are,” Asmussen said. “And, I think that's what she's been all year. She continues to be just extremely satisfying. When you look at a four-race year, three Grade 1s and the style in which she's done it. All of her races are fast, her numbers are good. And, against the best company, that's as good as it gets. You catch the Alcibiades winner and the Pocahontas winner. They made it here. And, she was better on the day. We're very proud of that.

“It was a very comfortable race to watch, with what's on the line and you want everything to go well. It was immediately a pretty easy race to watch. It looked like she was handling it. She was traveling well. She looked like she was getting a little separation around the three-eighths pole. And, I think that that was the separation that Gun Runner developed into, where you would see early in a race they were doing enough, but somewhere in the middle, he was doing it easier than they were and you would see the separation.

“His time, his 4-year-old year, the races that he put up, and the times that he was throwing down are going to be hard to match for anybody ever. When you have Gun Runner and everything that he did for us and how anxious we all were to get to run his babies and then for her to be what she is, it's extremely gratifying and special.”

Asmussen said that Echo Zulu has earned a vacation after completing an undefeated 2-year-old campaign.

“She needs a bit of a break now. So that she can fill in, she needs to grow. She's not a big filly in stature, but as a Gun Runner, I mean, he was extremely talented, but he developed into the best in the world.”

Juju's Map – Trainer Brad Cox, who has another busy day with the two favorites – Knicks Go and Essential Quality – in the G1 Breeders' Cup Classic and Shedaresthedevil in the G1 Distaff, reported that Juvenile Fillies runner-up Juju's Map came out of the race well.

“She's doing good,” Cox said. “She ran hard. She was just second best yesterday.”

Pizza Bianca – Bobby Flay's homebred filly Pizza Bianca headed back to the East Coast several hours after her dramatic victory in the G1 Juvenile Fillies Turf.

A spectacular ride by jockey Jose Ortiz, who replaced Joel Rosario, delivered to veteran trainer Christophe Clement his first victory in a Breeders' Cup race. Ortiz was last approaching the stretch, but managed to save ground on the inside and make his way through the field ahead.

Clement said he was very pleased with the performance, which capped a strong 2-year-old season by the only horse he currently has in training for Flay.

“She ran very well. She got a great ride,” he said. “A good filly. Three starts, two wins, and one second in a Grade 1 in Canada. For me the biggest accomplishment of the whole deal – of course, it's great to win the Breeders Cup – is that owner-breeder Bobby Flay chose us with a filly that is very well bred and we were able to do this. It is very meaningful for me.”

Though she is a Kentucky-bred based in the U.S., Pizza Bianca has a strong international grass pedigree. She is out of Flay's White Hot, a daughter of Galileo, and her sire, the Australian-bred Fastnet Rock is by Danehill. White Hot never made it to the races, but she has proven to be a valuable broodmare.

“It just shows it works.” Clement said. “I guess you just have to have an open mind because it works. He's done it.”

After Pizza Bianca finished second in the Natalma at Woodbine on Sept. 19, Clement was considering having her make her next start at Belmont Park in the Chelsey Flower. Following a work at Belmont Park in late October, Flay encouraged Clement to take her to the Breeders' Cup. If they pursued that option, it meant they would have to find a replacement for Rosario, who had ridden in her in both of her starts.

“We had the question mark with the jock, Rosario, the question mark about the ground being too firm,” Clement said. “I had no question about the filly being good enough because we knew that she was a good filly, but there was the question mark about the ground. She has been training very, very well. Great ride. It all worked it. It was wonderful.”

Pizza Bianca will return to competition in the spring, Clement said. He said New York's turf triple crown is a likely target.

“That would be the goal of the moment, but we have time to think about it,” he said.

Clement is one of the most accomplished trainers in America, and is especially tough on turf, but he was winless in 40 starts in the Breeders' Cup entering this year's event at Del Mar. He said Saturday morning that it was a satisfying win to have on his resume, but not one he had to have.

“I never woke up in the morning thinking I've got to win the Breeders' Cup to change my life. That's not the way I am,” he said. “I wake up in the morning thinking I've got to win my next race with my next runner. But I'm very happy that we've won the Breeders' Cup.”

Tiz the Bomb – Phoenix Thoroughbred's Tiz the Bomb, who rallied from 12th in a field of 13 to grab the runner-up spot behind Modern Games (IRE) in the G1 Juvenile Turf left Del Mar at 1 a.m. Saturday to return to Kentucky for trainer Kenny McPeek.

Arrest Me Red – Lael Stables' lightly raced Pioneerof the Nile colt Arrest Me Red will remain such, for now, as he was withdrawn from the G1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint on Saturday morning. Ward's other two in the race, Golden Pal and Kimari, will run.

“We had a little foot issue and changed the horse's shoes,” trainer Wesley Ward said. “It kept getting better, but we erred on the side of caution.”

Ward won his third consecutive G2 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint and fifth Breeders' Cup race with Stonestreet Farms' Twilight Gleaming (IRE) on Friday.

“She was perfect this morning,” he said. “She jogged up perfect and is with (third-place finisher Kaufymaker and fifth-place finisher and post-time favorite Averly Jane) on a plane. She should be landing soon and in her stall at Keeneland in a couple hours.”

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Echo Zulu Obliterates Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Field

When a heavy favorite enters any athletic contest, the best strategy can sometimes be to never let the underdog get into the game. Echo Zulu employed that exact game plan to perfection in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies on Friday at Del Mar, and all but guaranteed herself an Eclipse Award at the end of the year.

The 2-year-old Gun Runner filly was hustled out of the gate from the outside post by jockey Joel Rosario, who trainer Steve Asmussen named aboard Echo Zulu for the Juvenile Fillies instead of regular rider Ricardo Santana, Jr. Rosario and Echo Zulu quickly worked their way in to the rail, and snuffed out the oxygen of any rival trying to fight for the early fractions.

Echo Zulu was safely ahead of next-closest Tarabi, as she led the field into an opening quarter-mile in :23.42 seconds, while Desert Dawn and Juju's Map battled a length behind Tarabi for third position. The leader continued to maintain a one-length advantage over Tarabi across the backstretch as the half-mile point passed in :47.01 seconds.

The field bunched up behind Echo Zulu, and the duo of Tarabi and Juju's Map got to the outside hip of the leader as they approached the turn, but Echo Zulu promptly repelled the challengers, and put them several lengths behind her heading into the turn, all without Rosario's hands leaving the reins.

“She is amazing,” Rosario said. “She is fast, has so much speed and it looks like she is not going that fast. Today she liked what she was doing up there (in the front) and when I asked her, she just took off. She's just amazing.”

Rosario did little else but shake the reins aboard Echo Zulu down the Del Mar stretch, as the filly drew off to win by 5 1/4 lengths. Juju's Map carried on for second, a half-length ahead of Tarabi.

Echo Zulu completed the 1 1/16-mile race in 1:42.24 over a fast main track, paying $3.60 to win as the overwhelming favorite.

Friday's Breeders' Cup victory improved Echo Zulu's lifetime record to a perfect four-for-four and all but clinched the Eclipse Award for champion 2-year-old filly. Echo Zulu won on debut in Saratoga in July, then took the Grade 1 Spinaway Stakes at the same track. Her most recent start prior to the Breeders' Cup was a 7 1/4-length demolishing of the G1 Frizette Stakes at Belmont Park on Oct. 3.

“The level of proud is just unbelievable, with her being in the first crop of Gun Runner, what he's done for us,” Asmussen said. “A filly that came through mom and dad's program in Laredo. She's just brilliant. She's faster than they are. It's as simple as that. We're just so fortunate to be around her.”

Asmussen trains Echo Zulu for the partnership of L and N Racing and Winchell Thoroughbreds.

It was an especially satisfying victory for the Winchell operation, which also campaigned sire Gun Runner to a Breeders' Cup Classic win at Del Mar in 2017. Echo Zulu's victory also made it a virtual guarantee that Gun Runner will finish atop the freshman sire standings in 2021, having already entered the Breeders' Cup card with a healthy lead by earnings.

“It reminds me of Gun Runner,” owner Ron Winchell said. “She got out there and took command. Then took it down a notch, relaxed and got it done in the stretch. It looked a lot like (Gun Runner's) Pegasus: out, over, relax and then go.”

Bred in Kentucky by the partnership of Betz/J. Betz/Burns/CHNNHK/Magers/CoCo Equine/Ramsby, Echo Zulu was a $300,000 purchase by Winchell Thoroughbreds at the 2020 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Quotes from other connections:

Trainer Brad Cox (second with Juju's Map) – “She broke a little slow and (Florent Geroux)a put her in a good position. She raced a little wide, but she was no match for the winner. Second best today. Bottom line. No excuse.”

Trainer Cherie DeVaux (third with Tarabi) – “She ran great stretching out for the first time. The pace didn't unfold the way it looked on paper, so Javier (Castellano) went to Plan B and she ran great, so we're really happy with her performance. It's awesome to come in and have her show up off a layoff and doing something she hasn't done. Our team is great, so I'm very proud of everyone.”

Jockey Javier Castellano (third with Tarabi) – “We had a beautiful trip.  I was very happy with her race. She broke good and was right behind the winner all the way.  She was running very strong down the stretch and was fighting to be second.  It's no disrespect to run third to a champion.”

Trainer Bret Calhoun (fourth with Hidden Connection) – “I'm very disappointed. We had a little higher expectations today. She got a little unnerved in the warmup and stumbled away from there and lost a little position early. Reylu (Gutierrez) had to use her a little bit to get back into position and she didn't have the answer today.”

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