The Week in Review: Tapit Supplies Favors for 20th Birthday Bash

Birthdays with a zero on the end are supposed to be momentous occasions, and 20-year-old Tapit sure knows how to celebrate in style.

On Saturday, the Gainesway stallion even supplied the party favors for a double-barreled bash in his honor on the GI Kentucky Derby trail.

Exactly two decades after Tapit's Feb. 27, 2001, foaling date, two of his sons delivered sky's-the-limit performances as winning favorites in key 3-year-old prep stakes that firmly established both atop of the current crop of aspirants to wear a blanket of roses on the first Saturday in May.

The near-term debate will now center on which colt–Essential Quality or Greatest Honour–deserves kingpin billing on the sophomore totem pole.

An equally intriguing subplot involves whether either can deliver a first Derby win for the sire who has evolved into the most influential stallion of the 21st Century. Tapit has produced eight divisional champions, six Breeders' Cup winners and three GI Belmont S. victors. But siring a Derby winner has thus far eluded the now-whitened gray, just as the Derby itself did in 2004 when Tapit splashed home ninth as one of the favorites.

Undefeated 'Quality'

   Essential Quality had his 3-year-old debut delayed by two weeks because winter weather thrice forced the rescheduling of the GIII Southwest S. at Oaklawn. Yet Mother Nature still managed to intercede by imposing a sloppy (sealed) racing surface Saturday.

The undefeated juvenile champ and 'TDN Rising Star' broke fluidly and responded to a cue to rate from rider Luis Saez, settling fifth into the clubhouse turn while vacating the rail and opting for a three-wide berth (in the gooey going, every jockey in the race avoided the rail like it was strung with barbed wire).

The big matchup in the Southwest was supposed to be the tear-away speed of 6-5 second favorite Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) versus the high-cruise stalking skills of 9-to-10 choice Essential Quality, and the race unfolded as scripted in the early stages with “Jackie” leading the charge through a :23.52 opening quarter that jockey Joel Rosario then milked to a :48.11 breather of a half mile.

“EQ” took firm hold of the bit and wanted to pull, but Saez harnessed that keenness effectively and got the champ to edge forward incrementally while outside and in the clear for the backstretch run. Against the hazy blur of fog, the gray made headway at a metronomic rate of one position per furlong, attaining and releasing each target in a measured manner before focusing adeptly on the next.

EQ had given up real estate on both turns, but was full of momentum coming over the top at the quarter pole, getting second run on the caving Jackie (whose Derby stock slipped considerably after a second failed try at two turns). But Essential Quality had to brace for a fresh challenge in the form of Spielberg (Union Rags), who was unwinding from last and finishing fast after getting off to a stutter-step start.

The champ was up to the task. Essential Quality switched leads and took off when Saez asked, widening to the wire to win by 4 1/4 lengths in 1:45.48 for 1 1/16 miles, which translated to a 96 Beyer Speed Figure, an improvement of one point over his Juvenile win back in November. (The other same-distance races on the card were the GIII Razorback H., run 90 minutes earlier for older males, which clocked :01.15 faster, and an allowance-optional claimer nightcap for older males one race after the Southwest that went :0.75 slower.)

The Apr. 3 GII Toyota Blue Grass S. at Keeneland (where Essential Quality is 2-for-2) or the Apr. 10 GI Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn are reportedly under consideration as final Derby tune-ups by trainer Brad Cox.

'Greatest' Without Ease

While Essential Quality's Southwest S. win stamped him as a Derby contender who is fluidly polishing his prowess, the even-money favored win by Greatest Honour in Gulfstream's GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. (FOY) resonated more like an unleashing of brute force by a deep closer who ate a lot of kickback, totally lost his momentum on the far turn, then stormed home relentlessly despite a short-stretch configuration that does not play to off-the-tailgate tactics.

The raw power demonstrated by Greatest Honour in winning three 1 1/16 miles races this winter at Gulfstream has to be considered within the context that races at that distance at that track start very close to the first turn and end at the sixteenth pole. This often tilts the advantage to speed-centric runners, and the FOY in particular has been a house of horrors for well-backed “headline” horses. Prior to Saturday, FOY faves had lost the last four runnings and 13 of the previous 15 editions.

Jockey Jose Ortiz guided Greatest Honour to his customary spot near the back of the bunch in the FOY. Settling inside, the rugged bay wasn't crazy about being pelted with dirt, but he was hemmed in at the fence until the far turn. When Ortiz tried to edge out, Greatest Honour's back end got bumped by an outside rival, and the favorite appeared for a moment as if he was going to plummet back through the pack.

When a long-striding horse gets stopped like that, it can be difficult to get him back into rhythm. By the three-eighths pole (which is 2 1/2 furlongs from the wire on this configuration), Greatest Honour was still nine lengths adrift. He sparked back into stride when Ortiz switched him outside, but at the top of the lane, one furlong from the short-stretch finish, the colt was still five lengths off the action and under the whip.

Once in the clear on the straightaway though, Greatest Honour fully uncoiled. Granted, he ran down a tiring leader to win by 1 1/4 lengths in 1:44.02 (89 Beyer). But the visual impression he made carries more weight than any speed number. Watching him gobble up ground so voraciously led to automatic thoughts about what havoc a monster like this might be able to wreak given a longer stretch over extended distances.

Trainer Shug McGuaghey indicated the Mar. 27 GI Florida Derby was likely next. “I'm glad we don't have to run a mile and a sixteenth anymore,” he added. “When they're going farther, I think we might see a little better horse.”

Both Essential Quality (Godolphin) and Greatest Honour (Courtlandt Farms) are homebreds.

But for Courtlandt's Donald Adam, the connection to Tapit is gratifying on a different level.

“I bought the mare [Tiffany's Honour] in foal to a Tapit colt, and that colt hit the ground and was killed in a paddock accident,” Adam said post-race. “So, I bred her back to Tapit and got [Greatest Honour].”

The post The Week in Review: Tapit Supplies Favors for 20th Birthday Bash appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Gulfstream Park: $900,000 Guaranteed Rainbow 6 Jackpot On Sunday

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 will have a guaranteed pool of $900,000 when racing resumes Sunday with a 12-race program at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

First race post is 12:10 p.m.

The sequence features three turf stakes and will include the eighth race, a maiden special weight event at 1 1/16 miles on the turf for 3-year-olds with colts from the stables of Bill Mott, Shug McGaughey, Todd Pletcher, Christophe Clement, Mark Casse and Brian Lynch. In the ninth race, an optional claiming event at six furlongs, Cory Gal will seek her fourth consecutive victory. State-bred fillies go to post in the 10th race. Big Rings enters the race off a fourth-place finish in the Gasparilla at Tampa. The sequence concludes with a wide-open, $50,000 maiden claiming event for fillies at 1 1/16 mile on the turf.

The Rainbow 6 carryover jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool usually goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Pletcher Wins Four, Jose Ortiz Three On Fountain of Youth Day
Along with winning the Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) aboard Greatest Honour, jockey Jose Ortiz also won aboard Antoinette ($9.20) in the The Very One and on Attachment Rate ($15.20) in an allowance optional claimer.

Leading trainer Todd Pletcher won four races on the day. He started the day winning the second race with Nocturnal ($3.40) before Con Lima was placed first through a disqualification in the Herecomesthebride (G3). He saddled Fearless ($7.60) to victory in the WinStar Gulfstream Mile (G2 and Sayyaaf ($13.40) in an optional claimer. Pletcher's Fountain of Youth starter Prime Factor finished seventh.

Collaborate a Promising Winner
Collaborate, a 3-year-old colt owned by Three Chimneys Farm and e Five Racing Thoroughbreds, broke his maiden in his second career start, winning by 12 ½ lengths while covering a mile on the main track in 1:36.35.

Trained by Saffie Joseph Jr. and ridden by Tyler Gaffalione, is a son of Into Mischief out of the Grade 2 winning mare Quiet Temper. Collaborate sold as a yearling for $600,000.

The post Gulfstream Park: $900,000 Guaranteed Rainbow 6 Jackpot On Sunday appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Antoinette Proves Tough Cookie On Front End In The Very One

Jockey Jose Ortiz put Antoinette on the lead at the start, and the Godolphin homebred filly by Hard Spun was never headed, winning the Grade 3, $125,000 The Very One Stakes at Gulfstream Park on Saturday in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, Antoinette proved 2 1/4 lengths the best, paying $9.20 as the tepid 7-2 favorite in the field of nine fillies and mares going 1 3/16 miles on firm turf. She covered the distance in 1:53.70 after clicking off easy fractions of :23.98, :49.11, 1:13.24, and 1:36.67.

Belle Laura finished second, a neck ahead of Sister Hanan, with Tuned a head back in fourth and War Like Goddess finishing fifth.

The victory was the fourth in 11 starts for Antoinette, who hasn't raced since an eighth-place finish in the G3 Valley View Stakes at Keeneland  last Oct. 18. Prior to that she ran second to Magic Attitude in the G1 Belmont Oaks Invitational, one month after winning the Saratoga Oaks in similar wire to wire fashion.

Saturday was a big day for Sheikh Mohammed's Godolphin. In addition to Antoinette's victory, a pair of homebred runners won rich graded stakes at Oaklawn: Mystic Guide winning the G3, $600,000 Razorback Handicap and champion Essential Quality winning the G3, $750,000 Southwest Stakes in his 2021 debut.

The post Antoinette Proves Tough Cookie On Front End In The Very One appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Greatest Honour Closes With A Rush To Win Fountain Of Youth Going Away

Eight and a half lengths behind the leader with five-sixteenths of a mile to run, Courtlandt Farms' homebred Greatest Honour, closed with a rush under Jose Ortiz to win Saturday's Grade 2, $300,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth Stakes at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Trained by Shug McGaughey, the 3-year-old colt by leading sire Tapit (who also was represented on Saturday by G3 Southwest Stakes winner Essential Quality, the 2-year-old male champion of 2020) ran 1 1/16 miles in 1:44.02 on a fast track.

Pacesetter Drain the Clock  – who posted fractions of :23.66, :47.18, 1:11.51 and 1:37.45 and held a 2 1/2-length lead at the eighth pole – finished second, 1 1/2 lengths behind Greatest Honour. Papetu was another two lengths back in third, with Tarantino fourth and Jirafales fifth in the field of 10.

The Fountain of Youth, a 1 1/16-mile key prep for the $750,000 Curlin Florida Derby (G1) presented by Hill n' Dale Farm at Xalapa March 27, headlined a 14-race program with nine stakes, eight graded.

The Fountain of Youth offered 85 qualifying points to the Kentucky Derby, with the first four finishers receiving 50-20-10-5.

Updated Kentucky Derby Leaderboard

Greatest Honor lagged far back while racing in traffic early but made steady progress approaching the far turn. Drain the Clock continued to show the way under Edgard Zayas around the far turn and into the homestretch as Papetu, the early trailer, made a sweeping move around Greatest Honour to enter contention under Junior Alvarado.

The long-striding Greatest Honour was steered to the outside while building momentum on the turn into the homestretch and kicked in powerfully through the stretch to sweep past Papetu and catch Drain the Clock approaching the finish line. Greatest Honour galloped out strongly, suggesting he may get better as the distances get longer.

“He was a little farther back that I thought he would be going down the backside. A lot of dirt was hitting him. They weren't going overly fast. Going three-quarters in 1:11 and change over this track is not fast,” McGaughey said. “When Jose got him in the clear it was over.”

Ortiz, who was aboard for the considerably easier 5 ¾-length Holy Bull victory, said Greatest Honor's momentum was briefly stopped on the far turn.

“He's such a big horse with such a big stride. At the three-eighths [pole] I'm trying to get him going and I got a space on the inside but I didn't what to stop him again,” Ortiz said. “I decided to go wide and when he hit the clear, boom!”

McGaughey is hoping that Greatest Honour will follow the example of Orb, whom he saddled for victories in the 2017 Fountain of Youth, the 1 1/8-mile Florida Derby and the 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby.

“I'm glad we don't have to run a mile and a sixteenth anymore,” McGaughey said. “When they're going farther, I think we might see a little better horse.”

Fire At Will, who captured the Nov. 6 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf (G1) at Keeneland, stalked the early pace before fading to eighth.

$300,000 Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth (G2) Quotes

Trainer Shug McGaughey (Greatest Honour, 1st): “I wasn't real comfortable. I could see what was going on and I felt like if [jockey Jose Ortiz] got him in the clear then we could have a shot to make a run at him. The horse that was second [Drain the Clock], when he did break clear I said, 'Uh, oh.' But, he's a really nice horse.”

“The pace wasn't that fast today, I don't think, but he was able to overcome it. He's won twice down here now in stakes doing what he doesn't want to do, and that's a mile and a sixteenth. Like Jose said, I'm glad these mile and a sixteenth [races] are behind us. We'll be looking forward to getting him stretched out. Hopefully it's in the near future but, if not, I know what we've got. Hopefully as we keep going longer he'll keep improving. The farther the better for him.”

“He does cover a lot of ground. I don't know that he's really that quick, as much as he just covers so much ground and he can get to horses so quick. And he did today. He got to that horse pretty quick.”

“It was the kickback. Jose said he wasn't wanting to run through the dirt. He was wanting to get him to the outside and they were kind of holding him in there. Then he said they bumped over there on the turn and he kind of lost his rear end a little bit.”

Florida Derby? – “That would be my plan.”

Jockey Jose Ortiz (Greatest Honour, 1st): “He broke good, a bit slow like he always does, and I put him in the race. I tried to be as close as I could going to the backside and I got a good path behind Prime Factor. But, when we hit the turn I bumped the horse outside of me and lose my hind end a little bit and it was very hard to get him back going. He's such a big horse with such a big stride. At the three-eighths pole I'm trying to get him going and I got a space on the inside but I didn't want to have to stop him again, so I decided to go wide and when he hit the clear, boom. He was there for me. Huge run.”

“Not just this race. I won the first one [Holy Bull] and the second one, now we're going to the Florida Derby and if we could sweep the three legs that would be great momentum going into the Derby. I know there's a lot of time left and anything can happen. We just pray for the best and stay healthy. I know if the Florida Derby we're going to face tough competition, for sure.”

Owner Donald Adam, Courtlandt Farm (Greatest Honour, 1st): “It's very exciting. Being a horse that I bred and the history by which I came by him is very gratifying. I was a little concerned in this one. It looked like he wasn't in the best position, but this will be the shortest race he runs in a long time. And the longer he goes, the better he will be.”

“I bought the mare [Tiffany's Honour] in foal to a Tapit colt and that colt hit the ground and was killed in a paddock accident. So, I bred her back to Tapit and got him. I bought her at a Fasig-Tipton sale.”

Trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. (Drain the Clock, 2nd): “He ran huge. He ran like a winner. I didn't even see the winner coming. I saw Papetu coming and he ran good. Obviously, the winner is a very good horse. We can't be disappointed. It was his first time at the distance and he was beaten by a quality horse.”

Florida Derby? – “We're undecided. We'll talk it over with the owners and then we'll see what they want to do and how he comes out and go from there.”

Jockey Edgard Zayas (Drain the Clock, 2nd): “He did everything right. It's always a question if he could handle the two turns and I think he handled it pretty well. The winner has way more experience than him going two turns and for his first time going two turns, I think he ran a great race. I think he should try it again and he'll probably get better. If not, he can go back to sprinting but I think he deserves another shot.”

The post Greatest Honour Closes With A Rush To Win Fountain Of Youth Going Away appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights