‘Oath’ No Secret, But Measuring Her Talent a Pleasant Conundrum

The Week in Review by T.D. Thornton

Secret Oath (Arrogate)'s big winning move despite trip trouble in Saturday's GIII Honeybee S. at Oaklawn Park launched the 3-year-old filly to the forefront of conversation just at the precise time the sport needs a little diversion from anything having to do with lawsuits, trainer banishments, and the GI Kentucky Derby.

There is no question that the D. Wayne Lukas trainee looms large atop the leaderboard for the GI Kentucky Oaks and that her 86-year-old conditioner isn't crazy for at least considering running her against males next time out in the GI Arkansas Derby.

But if you want to drill down for a more precise prognostication as to where Secret Oath truly ranks in the always-intriguing fillies vs. colts debate and if she might be good enough to run in the Derby instead of the Oaks, you're going to have to come up with a measuring stick that doesn't appear to be available at the moment.

Comparing her 7 1/4-length Honeybee romp against the performance of males in the GII Rebel S. three hours later on the same Oaklawn card is a non-starter. The Rebel rates as the “chaos race” of the season so far among Derby preps because the 4-5 favorite was a no-show in an otherwise so-so field, and the slowly-run race was won by an improbable one-eyed gelding who paid $152.80.

Likening Secret Oath to Althea, the champion filly for Lukas four decades ago who also raced at Oaklawn (and beat the boys in the Arkansas Derby) should also be a no-go, at least for the time being. Obviously, Althea is from a much different generation. But even then, she was such an anomaly that her past-performance block reads like that of a racehorse from an entirely different planet when you consider how often Lukas raced her and how early in her career she lined up in the starting gate against males.

We'll have to let the next few weeks be the chief determinant in how Secret Oath's story arc plays out, knowing that whichever path Lukas sends her down, her next start is going to have a “circle the date” aura surrounding it.

Secret Oath entered the Honeybee with a 3-for-5 record, having won a Dec. 31 allowance race and the Jan. 29 Martha Washington S., both at Oaklawn, by a combined 15 1/2 lengths. She got pounded to 3-10 favoritism Saturday and appeared content to be last away in the Honeybee, given her natural running style as a stalker/closer.

Jockey Luis Contreras allowed the Briland Farm homebred to creep closer down the backstretch through opening quarters of :23.15 and :23.92, a brisk pace that seemed to be working to Secret Oath's off-the-pace advantage. But by the far turn, Contreras's patience contributed to his filly getting pocketed behind the two caving speedsters while an advancing rival to the outside kept the favorite locked and blocked, forcing Contreras to snatch up the reins in a ride-the-brakes type of maneuver.

Five sixteenths out, Contreras realized he had no choice but to dive inside of the tiring leaders. And when Secret Oath saw a glimmer of daylight through that narrow gap, she kicked on like a pro at the head of the lane. Never seriously threatened through the stretch, she won while kept to task but never fully extended.

Secret Oath's final time of 1:44.74 for 1 1/16 miles translated to a Beyer Speed Figure of 92, one point shy of her career-best effort. It's worth noting she carried five pounds more than the second- and third-place fillies.

Lukas indicated post-race that Secret Oath is nominated to both the Arkansas and Kentucky Derbies. The GIII Fantasy S. on the Apr. 2 Arkansas Derby undercard would be the conservative against-fillies option if he opts not to take on the boys.

Advocates for running in the Arkansas Derby will point out that Secret Oath's clocking and speed number trumped what was to follow six races later in the companion stakes for 3-year-old males. Oaklawn's third race in its quartet of Kentucky Derby points-earning preps is usually a pretty intriguing affair. But this year it might go down as the aberrational “Rebel without a cause,” which is why it's best to hold off on any claims that Secret Oath would have crushed that field had she been entered in that spot instead.

Rain had moved into Hot Springs by the time the feature race arrived, and although the track was still listed as “fast” for the Rebel, it would soon require sealing and a downgrade to “sloppy” for the final race. The un-California-like conditions would be eventually cited as a possible excuse for trainer Bob Baffert's ship-in fave Newgrange (Violence), who appeared primed to pounce after a trouble-free stalking trip but instead retreated to sixth.

The 75-1 Un Ojo (Laoban) saved ground every step of the way, rallied briefly at the quarter pole, then appeared to regress. But Un Ojo re-awakened late with an out-of-nowhere spurt of energy to snatch victory from the 15-1 Ethereal Road (Quality Road), who had been ambitiously entered by Lukas off a 19-1 maiden win in career start number four. The final time was 1:45.69, nearly a full second slower than Secret Oath's clocking; the Beyer (84) was also eight points lower.

Ethereal Road gave up serious real estate while hooked four wide on both turns, yet led from the quarter pole until 50 yards from the wire. He certainly punched his ticket to the Arkansas Derby, leaving Lukas to ponder over the next month whether he wants both his top filly and top colt aiming for the same race.

In the meantime, expect those comparisons to Althea to percolate–even if they're still off the mark.

Althea broke her maiden on June 22, 1983 at Hollywood Park. She ran second 17 days later in the GII Landaluce S., then wheeled back two weeks after that, beating the boys by 10 lengths in the GII Hollywood Juvenile Championship. When the racing switched to Del Mar, Lukas continued the pattern of aiming Althea against both fillies and colts, and she responded by winning both the GII Del Mar Debutante (by 15 lengths) and the GII Del Mar Futurity, just 10 days apart.

After a mix of firsts and seconds against fillies at Santa Anita in the fall, Althea closed out her 2-year-old season by attempting the mixed-sex Grade I double of the Hollywood Starlet (first) and Juvenile (sixth). Althea started 1984 with Santa Anita stakes victories against fillies, then shipped to Oaklawn for the Fantasy, where she finished a fast second despite encountering significant trip trouble.

Back then, the Fantasy was run the week before the Arkansas Derby. Lukas spent most of that week saying he wouldn't enter Althea against the boys. He did anyway.

Althea toyed with the Arkansas Derby field, drawing off to win by seven lengths while equaling the track record at the time. Afterward, Lukas admitted he had planned all week to run his star filly in that spot, but that he had chosen not to tell anyone until the day the race was drawn.

Thirty-eight years later, on the day after Secret Oath's win, Lukas remained uncommitted to a plan beyond saying he'd take it one race at a time.

Sunday, Lukas at first told the Oaklawn notes team that “I don't know what we're going to do,” before later adding, “Right now, she would be in the Fantasy and Ethereal Road would be in the [Arkansas] Derby.”

But you never know. The man is entitled to change his mind.

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Fantasy Winner Pauline’s Pearl Has ‘Improved Every Time,’ On To Kentucky Oaks

Pauline's Pearl continued her ascent in the 3-year-old filly division with a victory in the $600,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) Saturday at Oaklawn.

A homebred for Stonestreet Stables LLC (Barbara Banke) and Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, Pauline's Pearl earned a preliminary Beyer Speed Figure of 89, a career best, for her one-length victory over Ava's Grace to secure a spot in the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) April 30 at Churchill Downs. The Kentucky Oaks is the nation's biggest race for 3-year-old fillies.

The royally bred Pauline's Pearl, by Tapit out of Grade 1 winner Hot Dixie Chick (a half-sister to 2017 Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming), was exiting a troubled second-place finish in her stakes debut, the $300,000 Honeybee (G3) March 6 at Oaklawn. Her Beyer figures, a numerical representation of performance, have improved throughout her five-race career, rising from 61 in her debut sprinting Dec. 19 at Fair Grounds, to 70, 74, 81 in the Honeybee and now 89. The last four starts for Pauline's Pearl have come at 1 1/16 miles.

“Just a tremendous pedigree,” Asmussen said. “Her mother, we had won a Grade 1 with, the Spinaway. Grade-1 winning mare for Stonestreet and the class shows.”

Pauline's Pearl ($3.80) represented Asmussen's record 94th career Oaklawn stakes victory and record fourth in the Fantasy. She was the 4-5 favorite after going off 18-1 in the Honeybee.

Pauline's Pearl was reunited with jockey Ricardo Santana Jr. for the Fantasy. Santana had ridden Pauline's Pearl in her career debut, but was aboard stablemate Willful Woman in the Honeybee (Will's Secret was a three-quarter length winner).

“She's a nice filly,” Santana said. “We've expected a lot from her since Day 1. I rode that filly short the first time at Fair Grounds and she ran good. We always expected to run her long. The last four races she's run long, she's improved every time.”

Pauline's Pearl collected 100 Kentucky Oaks qualifying points for her Fantasy victory and ranks No. 4 on the leaderboard with 120, according to Churchill Downs. The 1 1/8-mile Kentucky Oaks is limited to 14 starters, with starting preference given to horses with the highest point totals earned in designated races like the Fantasy. Will's Secret is No. 8 with 80 points. She also won Oaklawn's $200,000 Martha Washington Stakes Jan. 30.

Last year's Fantasy winner, Swiss Skydiver, finished second in the rescheduled Kentucky Oaks (COVID-19) en route to an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly. Fantasy third Shedaresthedevil won the Kentucky Oaks for co-owner Staton Flurry of Hot Springs.

Santana, Asmussen and Stonestreet teamed to win the 2016 Fantasy with Terra Promessa, who finished 10th in the Kentucky Oaks.

Asmussen won Oaklawn's $60,000 Prima Donna Stakes for 3-year-old filly sprinters in 2010 with Hot Dixie Chick.

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‘Matured’ Sylvia Q Could Give Trainer Phil Bauer An Early Birthday Present In Oaklawn’s Fantasy

Trainer Phil Bauer has a chance for an early birthday present when he sends out two horses Saturday at Oaklawn, notably Sylvia Q in the $600,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) for 3-year-old fillies at 1 1/16 miles.

Bauer turns 36 April 14 and the Fantasy would represent his most lucrative career victory since starting his first horse in 2013.

“I wouldn't mind it,” Bauer said Thursday morning.

Sylvia Q is among seven horses entered in the Fantasy, Oaklawn's final major prep for the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) April 30 at Churchill Downs. The Fantasy will offer 170 points (100-40-20-10, respectively) toward starting eligibility for the Kentucky Oaks, the country's biggest prize for 3-year-old fillies. Swiss Skydiver, last year's Fantasy winner, finished third in the rescheduled Kentucky Oaks (COVID-19) behind Honeybee Stakes (G3) winner Shedaresthedevil en route to an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly for trainer Kenny McPeek, Bauer's former boss.

“Purse-wise and just the significance of the race moving forward, to have a shot at the Oaks or even the Black-Eyed Susan, is something we're excited about,” Bauer said.

Sylvia Q returns to stakes company after coming from just off the pace to capture an entry-level allowance race by three lengths March 11 at Oaklawn under Martin Garcia, who is named to ride Saturday. Sylvia Q was exiting the only poor performance of her five-race career, a fourth-place finish, beaten 12 ½ lengths by local division leader Will's Secret, in the $200,000 Martha Washington Stakes Jan. 30. The 1-mile race marked the stakes debut of Sylvia Q, an $80,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale graduate.

“We took a swing at the Martha Washington,” Bauer said. “Her first couple of races, looked like she was wanting to hang. I messed up and put the blinkers on her and it just kind of backfired on us. Just got a little too rank early and didn't have enough at the finish. Took those off and worked to try and get her to relax. Martin gets along with her really well and did a good job in the morning doing it, and she ran to the way she was training. Hopefully, takes another step forward here. Three-year-old filly without an (allowance other-than condition), you're kind of forced to run in stakes until sometime in May. She deserves a shot here.”

Sylvia Q, 5-1 on the morning line, is campaigned by Richard and Tammala Rigney (Rigney Racing LLC). Bauer trains privately for the Rigneys, who reside in Louisville, Ky., and named Sylvia Q, a daughter of Violence, after a “friend of the family,” the trainer said.

“They usually name their horses after people that are close to them, kids, trips they've taken and drinks, stuff like that,” Bauer said.

Overall, Sylvia Q has a 2-2-0 record and earnings of $136,524.

Bauer and Rigney Racing began building their stable by claiming Cookie for $30,000 out of an August 16, 2013, maiden victory at Ellis Park. Cookie – their first starter – became their first winner Sept. 21, 2013, at Churchill Downs.

Bauer and Rigney have since teamed to win the $300,000 Jaipur Invitational (G3) in 2015 at Belmont Park with Channel Marker and the $100,000 Hutchinson Stakes (G3) in 2018 at Gulfstream Park with Madison's Luna. Channel Marker was a $62,500 claim in 2014 at Churchill Downs.

“Very fortunate,” Bauer said.

Tactically, Sylvia Q has been a forward factor throughout her career (all five races have been routes).

“Our filly just has tremendous gate speed,” Bauer said. “She's never been sent, but she's just inherited the lead because she leaves there so well. Maybe the perfect scenario is a horse that wants to go and have a repeat of the allowance race where we just sit on the hip and cruise along that way. I guess the only worry is, is everyone going to have the same plan? But you can't take the race out of them, so I anticipate she'll break sharp and be involved early. How much early I don't know. I'll leave that up to the jock. Don't want a reverse race where she's running off early and fading late, but I think she's matured mentally and understands the process now.”

Sylvia Q and Madison's Luna, who is entered in Saturday's ninth race, an allowance sprint for older horses, are among some 10 horses Bauer has at Oaklawn. The trainer also had around 15 horses at the recently concluded Fair Grounds meeting. Bauer is wintering at Oaklawn for the first time, but before going out on his own did oversee McPeek's Oaklawn division roughly a decade ago.

“Loved my time there when I was there,” Bauer said. “Always wanted to come back, but we just were too small to split. Now this year was kind of our first time that we had enough numbers that, hey, let's give it a shot. It's worked out well.”

Bauer has compiled a 2-3-1 mark from 14 starters at the meet. His horses have collected $174,640 in purses.

Madison's Luna represented Bauer's career first Oaklawn victory, overcoming traffic trouble in a March 4 waiver-claiming sprint. The Tapit gelding returns to the allowance ranks after snapping a nine-race losing streak when running for a $40,000 claiming tag last month. Madison's Luna won his first two career starts, including the Hutchinson by five lengths.

“He's always kind of broken our hearts because we felt like he had the ability to be a top-level horse,” Bauer said. “Showed some brilliance early and then you couldn't get him back to that level. Maybe it was a confidence booster last time. A drop in class is always good. We were joking the other day that this might be his 10th last chance of protecting him. You hope the way he ran last time that maybe he's catching a groove and horses that like that track really like it. We'll give him another shot here at this level. He seems to fit. Obviously, there's a couple in there that look like they're the ones to beat, but if runs the same race back, and doesn't have to wait until the eighth pole to run, he should be a part of it.”

Madison's Luna is the 7-2 second choice in the program.

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Road To The Kentucky Oaks: Pauline’s Pearl Inherits Favorite Role In Fantasy

Maybe the first thing you notice about Pauline's Pearl, on paper, is that she's a Triple Crown nominee. In the flesh, it's her color.

A royally bred daughter of Tapit and Grade 1 winner Hot Dixie Chick, Pauline's Pearl possesses a gray coat, with reddish tint and a tiny white dot on her right hip.

“She's gorgeous,” Brooke Stillion said.

Stillion is the regular exercise rider of Pauline's Pearl, who is the 9-5 program favorite for the $600,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3) for 3-year-old fillies Saturday at Oaklawn. The 1 1/16-mile Fantasy is Oaklawn's final major prep for the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) April 30 at Churchill Downs. Probable post time for the Fantasy, the 11th of 12 races, is 5:54 p.m. (Central).

The Fantasy will offer 170 points (100-40-20-10, respectively) toward starting eligibility for the Kentucky Oaks, the country's biggest prize for 3-year-old fillies. Swiss Skydiver, last year's Fantasy winner, finished third behind Honeybee Stakes winner Shedaresthedevil in the rescheduled Kentucky Oaks (COVID-19) en route to an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly.

A homebred for Stonestreet Stables LLC (Barbara Banke) and Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, Pauline's Pearl exits a runner-up finish, beaten three-quarters of a length by Will's Secret, in the $300,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) March 6 at Oaklawn. With Will's Secret (2 for 2 in stakes races at the meeting) passing the Fantasy in favor of the $400,000 Ashland Stakes (G1) Saturday at Keeneland, the improving Pauline's Pearl is poised to become Oaklawn's new leading lady.

“I feel like she's filled out more, just in the short time she's been here,” Stillion said. “I've heard Steve say she's kind of been a late developer. She's slowly gotten better, though. Each race she comes back better and stronger. I've breezed her and love the way she trains. It's a short field and she's beaten two of the horses, already, in there. I'm hoping.”

The Fantasy will mark the fifth career start for Pauline's Pearl, who debuted sprinting Dec. 19 at Fair Grounds. She broke her maiden at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 12 at Fair Grounds and just missed at 18-1 in the Honeybee – also 1 1/16 miles – after being in traffic on the second turn. It was her stakes debut and first start outside Fair Grounds.

“Beautiful filly that seems to be going the right direction,” Asmussen said. “We're excited about running her. Quality field.”

Also returning from the Honeybee are Sun Path and Coach, third and fifth, respectively, for trainer Brad Cox. West Side Girl, Ava's Grace, Sylvia Q and Take Charge Lorin, a stablemate of Will's Secret, complete the projected seven-horse Fantasy lineup.

“If I could, I'd come tomorrow and offside Pearl because I'm really excited about her race,” Stillion said. “Tomorrow, I have to drive home for Easter, so I'm going to miss her race. I'm really, really bummed.”

The Fantasy field from the rail out: West Side Girl, Francisco Arrieta to ride, 117 pounds, 12-1 on the morning line; Ava's Grace, David Cohen, 117, 8-1; Sylvia Q, Martin Garcia, 117, 5-1; Coach, Fernando De La Cruz, 121, 5-1; Take Charge Lorin, David Cabrera, 117, 6-1; Sun Path, Joe Talamo, 117, 2-1; and Pauline's Pearl, Ricardo Santana Jr., 117, 9-5.

Stonestreet, Asmussen and Santana teamed to win the 2016 Fantasy with Terra Promessa. Asmussen won Oaklawn's $60,000 Prima Donna Stakes for 3-year-old filly sprinters in 2010 with Hot Dixie Chick.

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