Max Player, Yaupon Already In Southern California To Prepare For Breeders’ Cup Runs

Trainer Steve Asmussen has shipped two of his Breeders' Cup contenders, Max Player and Yaupon, to Southern California to begin preparations for the World Championships at Del Mar in November, reports bloodhorse.com. Both have begun training at Santa Anita Park, and will remain there approximately a month before heading to Del Mar.

Max Player won the G1 Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont Park on Sept. 4 and is being pointed to the Breeders' Cup Classic. Yaupon won the G1 Forego Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 28 and is being pointed to the Breeders' Cup Sprint.

“Max Player is going to train straight up to the Classic,” Asmussen told bloodhorse.com. “The spacing in his races has proved extremely effective with his Suburban (G2) win and his Jockey Club Gold Cup.

“Yaupon, the same thing. Spacing in his races has been key to getting them both back running at the top of their game.”

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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Asmussen Still Smiling After Travers Day Wins With Yaupon, Jackie’s Warrior

Steve Asmussen was already back on the road scouting for new talent at the Texas yearling sales on Sunday morning, but there still were plenty of bright smiles lighting up the barn of the Hall of Fame trainer in the wake of Saturday's back-to-back wins in the $600,000 Grade 1 Forego by Yaupon and the  $500,000 Grade 1 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial by Jackie's Warrior, followed by Midnight Bourbon's runner-up finish in the $1.25 million Runhappy Grade 1 Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

“I was so proud of how our horses ran yesterday. It was a great day of racing,” said Scott Blasi, Asmussen's longtime assistant. “To win two Grade 1s in a row at Saratoga on Travers Day is a great feeling. There are certain days of the year that are incredibly competitive. There's Derby Day, Preakness Day, Belmont Day, Travers Day, Breeders' Cup. With that level of quality racing, it's the best of the best. On those kinds of days to do well, it's a special feeling.”

At this stage of the season, the two fastest sprinters, arguably, in North America, are stabled in this barn.

J. Kirk and Judy Robison's Jackie's Warrior, who won the Grade 1 Hopeful at the Spa and the Grade 1 Champagne at Belmont in 2020, notched the first top-level victory of his sophomore season by beating the highly regarded Life Is Good in the ninth race on the 13-race card. In the eighth race, William and Corrine Heiligbrodt's Yaupon beat Firenze Fire in a race filled with drama.

As the two battled in deep stretch almost stride-for-stride with Yaupon to the inside under Ricardo Santana, Jr., Firenze Fire bared his teeth, turned his head to the left, and tried to savage his rival with no fewer than seven attempts. Afterward, Asmussen said that Firenze Fire was even trying to grab Santana.

“He [Yaupon] came out of it unscathed. No marks or anything. Luckily, Ricardo was able to continue to encourage him, although he was getting pretty close to the inside rail, which I was more worried about than the horse getting bit,” said Blasi. “I think it was a really hard thing for him [Jose Ortiz, up on Firenze Fire] to correct. The thing about it is those guys are riding hard, so they were going forward and it's not like you have the bit in their mouth. They're trying to persevere, and that's a hard to thing to correct when you're in that position. I've seen pictures of horses being savaged, and I've seen horses savage, or try to bite, but I've never seen any horse do it for that long. I've never seen it go on for that long.”

Blasi said even all that commotion could not dim the brilliance of these two sprinters.

“Yaupon is a special horse. It was a great win for him,” said Blasi. “Jackie's Warrior gave another game effort. He's a special talent. The horse he beat [Life is Good] is as well. You saw how they separated themselves from the rest of the field, and that just goes to show you the class and the quality of those two horses. It was a great race. Jackie is so consistent. At one turn, he's back to doing what he wants to do.”

The Heiligbrodts' Mitole won the 2019 Forego, the Breeders' Cup Sprint, the Grade 1 Met Mile at Belmont Park, and a fourth Grade 1 on the way to championship sprinter honors that year for the barn.

Does either Yaupon or Jackie's Warrior resemble Mitole?

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“They're just really fast horses and we've had some quality sprinters like Volatile [winner of the 2020 Grade 1 Vanderbilt at Saratoga] and Mitole. I mean they were great sprinters. These horses all have the same qualities. Both of these guys, you couldn't be any better to be around and to train. Yaupon and Jackie's Warrior are professionals,” said Blasi.

Though Winchell's homebred, Grade 3 winning Midnight Bourbon, didn't give Asmussen his first Travers victory, he finished only a neck behind 2020 Juvenile champion and Grade 1 Belmont Stakes winner Essential Quality.

“It was by far the best race of his career. We were a little bit unlucky to lose but that horse [Essential Quality] is a champion. Once that horse gets by you, he's not going to let anybody pass him, and he proved that time and time again. Hats off to the winner, but our horse is definitely improving. I think with the time that they ran and how they came home in the last quarter, you have to have quality to be able to do that,” Blasi said.

The effort is particularly gratifying considering his last race in the Grade 1 Haskell at Monmouth Park in July. That day he clipped heels with Hot Rod Charlie in the stretch and fell.

“I've got to give the credit to our team here. Everybody worked so hard on that horse after coming out of the Monmouth race. The whole barn did a great job getting him to come back around,” Blasi explained. “He was able to spend time in the round pen and we let him just be a horse up here in Saratoga, which is the great thing about Saratoga. You've got the environment. It's all good.

“I'm proud of how he acted going over to the paddock. We led the pony in front of him, which I think that made a big difference,” he continued. “He was a total professional yesterday. We really are happy with how he's progressing.”

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After Eventful Forego, Lombardi Looks Toward Vosburgh Repeat For Firenze Fire

To say that the stretch run of the Grade 1 Forego was an anxious one for owner Ron Lombardi would be an understatement, but he was still proud of a valiant effort from multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire Firenze Fire, who finished second after savaging subsequent winner Yaupon in the final sixteenth of the seven-furlong event at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Trained by Kelly Breen, Firenze Fire, who finished a respective second and 11th in the last two editions of the Forego, raced in second position throughout just off the flank of Yaupon and edged his way to even terms around the turn. The pair raced nip-and-tuck in upper stretch before Firenze Fire, with Jose Ortiz up, savaged Yaupon inside the eighth pole, biting at his rival's bridle.

“He ran great. He's a warrior,” Lombardi said. “Unfortunately, that mishap cost him the race. If he stays focused, I think he wins the race. It was unfortunate but it was a race that people will be talking about for a while. Jose did a tremendous job keeping Firenze Fire in there.”

Firenze Fire was on the receiving end of a similar situation when capturing the Grade 3 Gallant Bob in September 2018 at Parx, where he fended off Whereshetoldmetogo, who tried to bite Firenze Fire in the final furlong.

“It happens so rarely and to have one horse involved in it twice – both the giving and receiving end – is really amazing,” Lombardi said with a laugh.

Lombardi, who races under the Mr. Amore Stable moniker, said Firenze Fire will target a repeat victory in the $250,000 Grade 2 Vosburgh on October 9 at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

“That was always the plan. In fact, I was thinking about skipping the Forego,” Lombardi said. “But he was doing great and it's six weeks for that. I talked to Kelly this morning; he came out of the race great like he always does. Our goal will be the Vosburgh if things fall in line.”

Not all was lost for Lombardi this weekend as New York homebred juvenile filly November Rein won her stakes debut in Friday's $200,000 Seeking the Ante on New York Showcase Day.

Lombardi said the daughter of Street Boss could target either the $250,000 Maid of the Mist on October 30 at Belmont Park, or face open company in the $400,000 Grade 1 Frizette on October 3 – a “Win And You're In” event for the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies.

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‘Nothing Left To Prove’: Champion Sprinter Whitmore Retired

Fan favorite and 2020 sprint champion Whitmore pulled up after the Grade 1 Forego and was vanned off as a precaution after jockey Joel Rosario noted that the 8-year-old gelding felt off during his gallop out. Later Saturday, trainer Ron Moquett released a statement that Whitmore had been retired from racing.

“Joel said, 'He didn't feel right pulling up, boss' after the race. He felt something different,” Moquett told the Paulick Report Sunday.

Out of an abundance of caution, Whitmore was put on the on-track equine ambulance and returned to Moquett's barn at Saratoga Race Course, where he was examined by a track veterinarian. An x-ray showed “a shadow of something in the left foreleg,” so Whitmore will be sent to Dr. Larry Bramlage at Rood and Riddle for further examination once the gelding has been cleared to ship to Kentucky. After that, he will be turned out at Rebecca Maker's farm while Moquett and co-owners Robert La Penta and Head of Plains Racing decide what's next. Whitmore's long-term prognosis is good, but Moquett believes that given his long list of accomplishments, retirement is the best route for the fan favorite.

“He's acting fine. We're just being overly cautious,” Moquett said about his star gelding. “Now is when we retire. He owes us nothing. He has nothing to prove. He's been to the mountaintop. What does he have left to do?”

Moquett's candor about Whitmore's status and his steps are indicative of the trainer's philosophy about racing in general and racing his horses specifically.

“One of the things we need to do in this sport is be transparent,” he said. “I felt I owed it to people to say this is what we're dealing with, this is what we're doing with him.”

That transparency will continue as Moquett pledges to update fans on Whitmore's next career after the announcement on Saturday.

“We're just tickled to death that we have a village. I get a lot of comments where a guy will tell me that his wife is not a racing fan, but she loves Whitmore,” the trainer reflected. “When someone respects a horse so much, that's what it's all about.”

By multiple Grade 1 winner Pleasantly Perfect, out of the Scat Daddy mare Melody's Spirit, Whitmore's resume includes three wins in the Grade 3 Count Fleet at Oaklawn Park, the Grade 1 Forego at Saratoga in 2018, and the Grade 2 Phoenix Stakes at Keeneland Race Course in 2017. In a career that has spanned 43 starts with 15 wins, what does Moquett see as the ultimate Whitmore performance?

“His win in last year's Breeders'Cup Sprint for sure,” he said. “But his last win in the Count Fleet [in 2020] tied the record as the winningest stakes horse at Oaklawn Park. That one stands out as well.”

Moquett hinted in a statement released late Saturday that Whitmore may move on to a second career, which could see him contest the Thoroughbred Makeover, depending on his medical prognosis.

 

“I hope that he teaches people that the Kentucky Derby is not the end-all, be-all, that everything he [Whitmore] accomplished came after that. Every animal is different. We focus on the individual's potential and acclimate what we do to get the most out of our horses.”

“The main thing is that Whitmore tried every time. He was as gutsy as hell.”

 

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