By My Standards Earns Nose Victory Over Rushie In Oaklawn Mile

A three-time graded stakes winner last year as a 4-year-old including a victory in the Grade 2 Oaklawn Handicap, Allied Racing Stable and Spendthrift Farm's By My Standards successfully began his 5-year-old campaign with a hard-fought win in the $400,000 Oaklawn Mile, one of the co-features on Arkansas Derby day at the Hot Springs, Ark., track.

Ridden by Gabriel Saez for trainer Bret Calhoun, By My Standards – a 5-year-old by Goldencents – was up just in time to beat Rushie by a nose, covering one mile on a fast main track in 1:37.02 and paying $6.80 as the second choice in the wagering behind the runner-up, who was sent off the 9-5 favorite.

Wells Bayou finished third, followed by Gun It, and Blackberry Wine.

Pioneer Spirit, a 21-1 longshot, outran Rushie to get the early lead, going fractions of :23.21, :47.82 and 1:12.68 for the opening six furlongs.  Blackberry Wine applied pressure from the outside on the final turn, with Rushie and jockey Joel Rosario getting through on the inside on the turn for home and quickly taking command. By My Standards was travelling well on the outside and came up to challenge the leader in mid-stretch. Rushie was not finished, however, fighting back gamely under Rosario and just losing the head bob at the wire.

The win was the seventh in 15 career starts for By My Standards, who was bred in Kentucky by Don Ladd. He won the G2 Louisiana Derby at 3 and added the G2 New Orleans Classic, Oaklawn Handicap and G2 Alysheba Stakes last year at 4.

Rushie, trained in Southern California by Michael McCarthy, was also making his seasonal debut after a 3-year-old campaign that included one stakes victory in the G2 Pat Day Mile at Churchill Downs Sept. 5.

Post-race quotes:

Winning Trainer Bret Calhoun, By My Standards: “Watching it live, I thought he did (win). But when I started watching the replay, I thought he might have gotten beat on the bob. He was really ready. He really was well prepared, but I was more concerned about the short stretch mile, honestly. He's just a really good horse and he keeps overcoming. Honestly, I thought he might get shuffled back a little farther than he did. I thought Gabe (Saez) did a great job getting him in a very good position early without having to use too much horse. It kind of played out like we thought. There was quite a bit of speed in there. Some of the horses on the outside had speed and they had to make some quick decisions. Gabe just rode a great race. Fortunate enough to get him in a good spot early. It took every bit of that stretch to get there. It was a great race.”

Winning jockey Gabriel Saez, By My Standards: “I was trying to get that one position I wanted on the first turn. I got bounced around a little bit, but I relaxed and just tried to keep in that striking position. I was worried about the four (Rushie) inside of me a little bit, but when I saw him go through, I started to go after him. When we turned for home, my horse just left them and kicked in the extra gear I was expecting from him. Luckily we got there.”

Trainer Brad Cox, third with Wells Bayou: “Ran real well. Thought it was a big effort. Kind of pulled a little bit up the backside, but when he caught daylight down on the inside he was able to get a clean run in the lane and ran on. I thought it was a very good effort.”

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By My Standards Returns From Layoff In Saturday’s Oaklawn Mile

The 2021 goal for By My Standards is straightforward, trainer Bret Calhoun said Tuesday afternoon. It's a Grade 1 victory.

The first step comes in the $400,000 Oaklawn Mile for older horses Saturday at Oaklawn. A four-time Grade 2 winner and millionaire, By My Standards will be making his first start since finishing seventh in the $500,000 Clark Stakes (G1) Nov. 27 at Churchill Downs. He is the 5-2 program favorite for the Oaklawn Mile, which has drawn a field of nine.

“It's kind of a starting point,” Calhoun said. “Obviously, our main objective this year is to win a Grade 1. A lot of Grade 1s aren't until a little later in the year, so we've got to find us a roadmap, the best possible way to win a Grade 1. We just wanted to get a race under his belt, get him started and then see where our options are from there.”

A 5-year-old son of Goldencents, By My Standards won the $1 million Louisiana Derby (G2) in 2019 at Fair Grounds. Sandwiched around a victory in the $600,000 Oaklawn Handicap (G2) for older horses last May at Oaklawn were scores in the $400,000 New Orleans Classic Stakes (G2) at Fair Grounds and the $400,000 Alysheba Stakes (G2) Sept. 4 at Churchill Downs. Prior to the Clark, By My Standards ran eighth in the $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) Nov. 7 at Keeneland.

“Not really sure why he didn't perform up to our expectations the last couple of races,” Calhoun said. “The Breeders' Cup, you can kind of throw that out a little bit. The track was a little strange, extremely biased, speed-biased, so I don't know what to make of that. The last race he didn't fire, either. Honestly, he couldn't have been training better. I would have never pointed toward those spots if he wasn't just training fantastic, which he was. We were a little puzzled by it.”

Calhoun said By My Standards underwent a “complete physical” and checked out fine.

“We decided to give him a little break and that brought us to this point,” Calhoun said.

That would be a return trip to Hot Springs. Calhoun said he'd been shopping some time for a comeback spot and the Oaklawn Mile was “about the first race we could make it to.” Most of By My Standards' races have come at 1 1/16 miles or farther.

“You've got to play it week-by-week,” Calhoun said. “The weather plays a part in it. Obviously, we all got hit hard with some weather this winter and we lost a little bit here and there. But, actually, at the end of the day, everything fell into place to make this race. I know a flat mile is probably less than ideal for him, but it's actually ideal for his comeback race, I believe, so we're really looking forward to that. Flat mile, good purse and the fact that we're able to run on Lasix. We think that's important for an old horse coming off a long layoff.”

By My Standards was based this winter at Fair Grounds before joining Calhoun's Oaklawn division March 29. By My Standards had an easy half-mile breeze (:51.60) last Sunday. A winner of 6 of 14 starts and $1,829,430, By My Standards races for Allied Racing Stable LLC (Kentuckian Chester Thomas) and Spendthrift Farm, which stands Goldencents.

The projected Oaklawn Mile field from the rail out: Long Range Toddy, Jon Court to ride, 117 pounds, 20-1 on the morning line; Gun It, Ricardo Santana Jr., 117, 8-1; Wells Bayou, Florent Geroux, 124, 4-1; Rushie, Joel Rosario, 124, 3-1; Blackberry Wine, David Cabrera, 121, 5-1; By My Standards, Gabriel Saez, 124, 5-2; Pioneer Spirit, Ramon Vazquez, 124, 6-1; Home Base, Francisco Arrieta, 117, 15-1; and The Sound, Martin Garcia, 121, 12-1.

Long Range Toddy (first division of the 2019 Rebel at Oaklawn), Wells Bayou (2020 Louisiana Derby at Fair Grounds) and Rushie (2020 Pat Day Mile at Churchill Downs) are also Grade 2 winners.

Probable post time for the Oaklawn Mile, which goes as the ninth of 13 races, is 4:49 p.m. (Central). Last year's Oaklawn Mile runner-up, Improbable, went on to capture three Grade 1 events and was named the country's champion older dirt male.

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Baltas Continues Santa Ana Dominance With Going To Vegas

A change in tactics and an eye-catching turn of foot resulted in a career-best performance from the Richard Baltas-trained Going to Vegas in Saturday's Grade 3, $100,000 Santa Ana Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., as the 4-year-old daughter of Goldencents motored to an impressive 3 ¾-length win.  Ridden for the first time by Umberto Rispoli, Going to Vegas, who was claimed eight starts back for $50,000, got a mile and one quarter on turf in 2:00.80.

Second, about a half length off of heavily favored Mucho Unusual as the field made the dirt crossing shortly after its hillside turf start, Going to Vegas took the pole position about a mile from home with French-bred Neige Blanche and Mucho Unusual in close attendance to the far turn.

With a one length advantage over Neige Blanche at the quarter pole, Going to Vegas spurted clear three sixteenths of a mile out to win as much the best.

“She ran her race today,” said Baltas, who has now won the last four runnings of the Santa Ana.  “Today was the first time she showed us that kind of acceleration.  The turn of foot was impressive.”

Although she had broken her maiden and won an allowance route while on or near the lead prior to being claimed on June 12, 2020, Going to Vegas had never exhibited the kind of front-running dominance she did in the Santa Ana.

“Just working on her, getting her to relax and obviously we took the blinkers off of her (four starts back),” explained Baltas.  “With this distance, it's probably better for her to stay or even a little further.  (A) mile and three eighths, mile and a half, because she has tactical speed and she made the lead pretty easy today…I was pleasantly surprised that she had that turn of foot at the end.”

Fourth going one mile on turf in the G2 Buena Vista Stakes Feb. 20, Going to Vegas was second two starts back in the G1 American Oaks at a mile and one quarter on turf.  With the Santa Ana her second attempt at the distance, Going to Vegas was the second choice among a field of six older fillies and mares and paid $8.60, $2.80 and $2.40.

“Since last night when I watched all the races of the filly, I (thought) she probably would be the pace,” said Rispoli.  “This morning I said to myself, 'The only way to beat Mucho Unusual is to go get the lead.'  The race came the way I want, I took the lead before the first turn and from there, she just kept improving acceleration and she really gave me a serious turn of foot at the top of the stretch.”

Owned by Abbondanza Racing, LLC, Medallion Racing and MyRacehorse, Going to Vegas, who is out of the Johannesburg mare Hard to Resist, notched her first ever stakes win and improved her overall mark to 18-4-8-2.  With the winner's share of $60,000, she increased her earnings to $283,751.

Mucho Unusual, attentive to the pace while saving ground throughout, was full of run at the top of the lane but was clearly second best on the day, finishing one length in front of a late running Red Lark.

Off at 2-5 with Flavien Prat, Mucho Unusual paid $2.10 and $2.10.

Irish-bred Red Lark rallied from last under Ricky Gonzalez and paid $2.20 to show while finishing 1 ¼ lengths in front of Neige Blanche.

Fractions on the race were 24.64, 49.17, 1:14.02 and 1:38.14.

Racing resumes on Sunday with first post time for a nine-race card at 1 p.m.

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Americans In Dubai: Bigger, Badder Wildman Jack Takes On Top Dirt Sprinters

In 2020, Wildman Jack was riding high off an outstanding Dubai World Cup Carnival season, topped by a crushing of the 1200m (six-furlong) turf track record in the Group 3 Nad Al Sheba Turf Sprint.

Heading into last year's course and distance Group 1 Al Quoz Sprint as one of the main contenders, the joy ride came to an abrupt halt when the Dubai World Cup was cancelled. Fast-forward through 12 months of pandemic pandemonium and the horse is back in the UAE with a second chance at a first Dubai World Cup night impression.

This time, the Doug O'Neill trainee arrives as a newly discovered multi-surface star, having dominated a key prep for the Group 1 Dubai Golden Shaheen sponsored by Gulf News, the Grade 3 Palos Verdes at Santa Anita on the dirt.

Nine Palos Verdes winners have gone on to Dubai's top dirt sprint, including winners Big Jag and Kinsale King, runner-ups Men's Exclusive, Avanzado, Friendly Island and Euroears and third-place finisher Roy H.

“It's so nice being back,” said Leandro Mora, longtime O'Neill assistant. “I love being back here and loved spending last winter here. It's pure gold for us.

“We ran him two times on dirt back in the States and he won the last time and ran a really nice race, so that's what made the decision to run here (in the Dubai Golden Shaheen in lieu of the Al Quoz Sprint).

“When he was training on dirt here (last year), we thought he could handle it really well because his workouts were sizzling fast.”

Despite being a keen horse, full of energy, the Glenn Sorgenstein-owned son of Goldencents is reportedly quite content being back in Dubai.

“Any horse who lands on the other side of the world who eats well, sleeps well and trains happy, that means the horse likes the environment,” Mora continued. “He's a much better horse than last year when we brought him over here. He was a young horse last year and he has matured and now takes everything in stride. He's about 50kgs heavier than he was last year.”

Post positions will be drawn on Wednesday for the 1200m (six-furlong) dirt dash. A victory would give O'Neill his first Shaheen, but Leandro his second, as he was the assistant to Tim Pinfield when Big Jag won in 2000 with a spectacular performance at Nad Al Sheba. O'Neill won the 2007 Godolphin Mile with Spring At Last and has been second twice in this race, with the aforementioned Avanzado and champion American sprinter Thor's Echo.

“Big Jag was an amazing horse and I love coming here for these races,” Mora explained. “I hope Jack runs well. He's doing great and the post does not matter with him. He can be inside or outside.

“Like any Californian or American sprinter, we love to be outside, but I don't think it will be a factor for him if he's inside. I haven't checked much about the competition, really, but you have to respect the winner of the local prep (Canvassed). Any horse who has runs that fast at Meydan is going to keep on running fast. That would be the one I would worry about. Otherwise, I think we have a very good chance with Wildman Jack.”

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