Monmouth Park Unveils Haskell Weekend Trainer Bonus

Monmouth Park will offer a weekend-long trainer bonus totaling $150,000 around the track's signature race, the GI Haskell S. Trainers will accumulate points covering races from from July 19 through 21, with $75,000 awarded to the winning trainer.

“This is a great way to expand Haskell Day into Haskell Weekend and provide our fans with an amazing racing experience for three straight days,” said Monmouth Park director of racing and racing secretary John Heims. “While Haskell Day is already circled on many conditioners' calendars, this new bonus will hopefully attract more of the nation's top Thoroughbreds to the Jersey Shore this summer.”

The $150,000 in total bonuses will be awarded as follows:  $75,000 (1st); $25,000 (2nd); $20,000 (3rd); $10,000 (4th); $7,500 (5th); and $2,500 (6th-10th).

With over $4 million in purses for the three days, the Haskell Weekend Trainer Challenge will feature eight stakes races: the July 19 Jersey Shore S.; July 20 Haskell, GII United Nations S., GIII Molly Pitcher S., GIII Monmouth Cup, GIII WinStar Matchmaker S., and Wolf Hill S.; as well as the July 21 Regret S.

Points will be awarded based on the race, led by 25 points to the winner of the Haskell, 20 to the runner-up, 15 to third-place finisher, 10 to fourth-place finisher and seven for fifth to last-place finishers.

For all other graded races, points will be awarded to first through last finishers: 18, 15, 10, 8, and 5. All other stakes will offer points of: 12, 9, 7, 5, 4.

Maiden special weights, allowances and handicaps will offer points of: 8, 6, 4, 2 and all other races will offer points of: 5, 3, 2, 1.

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Bernhards’ Long-Term Plans for Pin Oak Could be Closer Than They Realize

When Jim and Dana Bernhard purchased Pin Oak Stud last fall, the plan was always to return stallions to stand at the historic property and, while that idea may have been on the back burner before, the heat may be turned up a bit now after the couple's Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) won the GI Haskell S. Saturday at Monmouth Park.

“Jim and Dana Bernhard are on cloud nine,” Pin Oak's Clifford Barry said Monday. “I think they can't believe it. I have spoken to them multiple times and they are some kind of excited.”

While Barry would not commit to the newly minted Grade I winner standing at Pin Oak, he did admit the sophomore was an extremely attractive option to stand in Kentucky.

“He's a very, very important young horse at this point, there's no doubt about it,” Barry said. “He's a son of Candy Ride out of an Uncle Mo mare, he's such an outcross to a lot of mares here in Central Kentucky right now. Obviously, he's a horse with lots of speed, breaks his maiden going six furlongs, second in the GII San Felipe and then comes back and wins the Haskell in his fourth start in what was probably one of the strongest Haskells in several years.”

While the Bernhards, advisor Matt Weinmann and trainer Richard Mandella are still to discuss options for the colt's next race and how best to get to the GI Breeders' Cup Classic at Santa Anita in November, Barry said the current plan is to race Geaux Rocket Ride at four.

“I think the plan is to race him in his 4-year-old year, just talking to Jim and Dana this morning,” Barry said. “He's a lightly raced horse at this point and you hope he's got a really, really bright future ahead of him on the racetrack.”

As for his future beyond that, Barry said, “I think it would be premature to say he will stand at Pin Oak. I think it would be unfair on the horse to say that. But definitely Jim and Dana have had dreams of standing stallions here for sure. I think when they bought the farm, that was very much a focus on what they were thinking. Obviously, Pin Oak stood stallions–Maria's Mon, Peaks and Valleys, Sky Classic. We are very well known for standing stallions, so it won't be anything unusual to stand stallions here and it won't be unusual to take in partners at that time. We had some very loyal partners in all our stallions here.”

Barry added, “We're just excited that we even have a horse to be thinking in that way for sure. I don't think anybody was thinking to come up with a horse this quickly. Two years ago, Geaux Rocket Ride was bought as a birthday present and lo and behold, here we are after winning the Haskell. Everybody dreams those things, but you know how dreams in this game don't always turn out.”

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The Week in Review: How was this Colt 12-1 in the Haskell?

In hindsight, the victory by Geaux Rocket Ride in Saturday's GI Haskell S. was not at all difficult to predict. The real puzzler is how this top-tier Candy Ride (Arg) colt was let go at 12-1 in the betting.

A pari-mutuel post-mortem points to a “perfect storm” anchored by two factors:

The 2-for-2 'TDN Rising Star' Arabian Knight (Uncle Mo), the highly hyped sophomore from last winter, absorbed overzealous 11-10 favoritism despite not having raced in six months, with the Bob Baffert training factor (nine Haskell wins) contributing mightily to the colt's top-heavy price.

Monmouth Park's premier race also included the GI Kentucky Derby winner Mage (Good Magic). His status as a “headline horse,” though, was tempered to 4.3-1 in the betting, largely because his connections had telegraphed for weeks in advance that the Haskell would be used as a stepping stone to the Aug. 26 GI Travers S. at Saratoga.

But beyond those two favorites, it's hard to imagine why three other horses received more wagering support in the Haskell than Geaux Rocket Ride, who up until early April had been one of the West Coast's top Triple Crown threats before a fever on the morning of the GI Santa Anita Derby knocked him out of contention for the Classics.

Maybe you could figure on 'TDN Rising Star' Tapit Trice (Tapit), taking his share of the Haskell action at 4.8-1 off a third-place try in the GI Belmont S. Not so easy to fathom was the 4.9-1 support thrown to Salute the Stars (Candy Ride {Arg}) off his neck win over the track in the not-very-deep Pegasus S., or the 8-1 price on another 'TDN Rising Star,' Extra Anejo (Into Mischief), who entered the Haskell off an Ellis Park allowance romp over four foes.

Monmouth bettors must have also missed the memo on the decades-in-the-making training reputation of Hall-of-Famer Richard Mandella, who is known as a conditioner who doesn't ship horses cross-country for major races unless he believes he has an outsized chance of winning. Mandella had only started one previous colt in the Haskell, which was 23 years ago when he won the race with Dixie Union.

Jockey Mike Smith was in from Del Mar to pilot Geaux Rocket Ride for the first time, aiming for his fourth Haskell win. His last victory in that stakes was in 2020 aboard Authentic, who was 3-5 against a field of six and had secured an easy lead through tepid fractions. Home free by three lengths at the eighth pole, Authentic wilted badly in the final furlong before being reawakened by a desperate flurry of right-handed stick work from Smith to salvage a nose victory.

On Saturday, despite being aboard a 12-1 shot, Smith deftly rode Geaux Rocket Ride like the colt deserved to be odds-on. Next time out, he will be.

It's also conceivable that Geaux Rocket Ride could use the Haskell as a springboard to winning the GI Breeders' Cup Classic and being named Horse of the Year and/or champion 3-year-old colt, like Authentic did three years ago.

Geaux Rocket Ride, who started his career as a speed-centric sort but has adeptly transitioned into dangerous stalking colt, came out cleanly from the inside stall. Arabian Knight broke quicker from post eight, and it was evident right from the outset that Smith wanted no part of fighting for the lead. Arabian Knight hooked up with–and then backed off from–the 61-1 Awesome Strong (Awesome Slew), who cemented his status as a sacrificial pacemaker before the field hit the first turn.

Smith also wasn't too keen on getting bogged down on the rail. In two-turn dirt races, it's often his method of operation to try and get to the outside and establish trouble-free positioning before the field straightens away on the backstretch, even if it means giving up ground. He let Geaux Rocket Ride settle in about the four path through the turn, then was content to be parked six deep and about three lengths behind the five-wide Arabian Knight, whose jockey, John Velazquez, was also avoiding the inside fence like it was strung with barbed wire.

Arabian Knight was toying with Awesome Strong at that point, and Velazquez decided to seize the lead after an up-tempo opening quarter in :22.80 before slowing down the second and third fractions to :24.31 and :24.54.

The field started to bunch approaching the far turn, and while it's not fair to say that the triple-teaming of Awesome Strong, Salute the Stars, and the 37-1 Howgreatisnate (Speightster) were the cause of Arabian Knight's unraveling, they all contributed pesky, mid-race pace pressure at the same time Geaux Rocket Ride was winding up for a confrontation three-eighths from home.

It took Geaux Rocket Ride a full furlong to crack a stubborn Arabian Knight at the quarter pole. But by that time, the Derby winner had them both within his striking sights and was cresting toward top momentum.

Looking like the horse to beat, Mage snatched the lead off the turn, but only for a brief instant. Geaux Rocket Ride needed only one left-handed crack of the crop to re-assert his presence, and while the small-but-scrappy Mage never quit, the two months off since his third-place try in the GI Preakness S. began to show.

Ridden out while extending his margin through the stretch with every stride, the lankier Geaux Rocket Ride strode home to win by 1 3/4 lengths through a final quarter timed in :25.42 and a last eighth clocked in :12 45.

The Pin Oak Stud colorbearer's winning time of 1:49.52 for nine furlongs translated to a 100 Beyer Speed Figure.

The Haskell yielded two key takeaways for the Travers: 1) Geaux Rocket Ride won't contest it. Not a surprise considering the conditioner–another cross country trip would be “pushing” it, as per Mandella, who was non-committal about the colt's next start; 2) Mage will be a tighter fighter in a month with a very useful runner-up try under his belt and an extra furlong to work with.

Geaux Rocket Ride got a late start this season with respect to the Triple Crown trail. He debuted with a 92 Beyer in 5 3/4-length six-furlong shellacking at Santa Anita Jan. 29, then earned a 96 when second and transitioning to two turns and against winners for the first time in the Mar. 4 GII San Felipe S.

Somewhat surprisingly, he was narrowly favored at 2.7-1 in that 1 1/16-miles stakes over the more experienced winner, Practical Move (Practical Joke). Despite not winning, Geaux Rocket Ride actually uncorked the more powerful performance, forcing a legit pace and finishing with purpose in one of the more impressive prep-race defeats on the 2023 Derby trail.

That positive glow was enough to vault Geaux Rocket Ride all the way to fourth in TDN's Derby Top 12 at the time. In the Mar 14 edition of those rankings, I wrote that such a “combination of raw, front-end torque matched with still-developing staying power is an attribute you don't see often in second-time-starters.”

Because of the fever and missed start in the Santa Anita Derby, Geaux Rocket Ride didn't make start number three until the June 4 Affirmed S. at Santa Anita, which he won with a 90 Beyer after stalking three wide on both turns.

Seven weeks later, Mandella was in the Haskell winner's circle, telling FanDuel TV's Caton Bredar in his typically understated way how half a year ago, he wasn't quite sure what type of prospect he had.

“He didn't train exceptional going into his first race. He trained just good enough to give us hope. But when he left the gate the first time with his ears back and fight on his mind, you could just see [the talent] was there.”

Asked how confident he was about his 12-1 shot's chances during the running of the Haskell, Mandella put it this way:

“Everything looked great, other than I looked at [Arabian Knight] on the far turn and the rider was sitting there with a heck of a hold. And I thought, 'Oh, boy, when he turns him loose…'

“But,” Mandella said, his wry smile evident in his voice, “The Rocket turned it loose.”

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Mandella Rules Out Travers; Mulling Options with Geaux Rocket Ride

Pin Oak Stud's Geaux Rocket Ride (Candy Ride {Arg}) exited his victory in the GI TVG.com Haskell S. in good order, trainer Richard Mandella reported Sunday. The victory earned the lightly raced colt an automatic berth in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic and Mandella said he has several routes to consider to get to that Nov. 4 race at Santa Anita.

The Sept. 23 GI Pennsylvania Derby at Parx, the Sept. 2 GI Pacific Classic at Del Mar and the Sept. 30 GI Awesome Again S. at Santa Anita are all on the table. While Geaux Rocket Ride would be facing just 3-year-olds at Parx, he would face older horses in both California options.

“I'll think about all of those races and about running against older horses,” Mandella said.

Mandella has ruled out another trip east for the Aug. 26 GI Travers S. at Saratoga.

“I think it's too much to think about, taking him to Saratoga,” Mandella said. “He's young and he's not raced very much and we've pushed him along to get to this point. I don't like the idea of bringing him to Monmouth, bringing him back to California, and then coming back for the Travers. We pushed him to this point and we don't want to keep pushing. The Travers doesn't seem like the right thing to do.”

A debut winner at Santa Anita in January, Geaux Rocket Ride was second in the Mar. 4 GII San Felipe S., but was knocked off the Triple Crown trail when a fever caused him to miss the GI Santa Anita Derby. He returned with a win in the June 4 Affirmed S. and was earning his first graded score in the Haskell.

Asked if having the Breeders' Cup at his home track of Santa Anita would give Geaux Rocket Ride an advantage in November, Mandella said, “It does if you're fast enough. We think he's fast enough and so far he's passed every test. But that's another step up to get to the Classic and it's against older horses so we'll just have to wait and see if he leads us there.”

Geaux Rocket Ride and the Bob Baffert-trained Arabian Knight (Uncle Mo), the third-place Haskell finisher, were scheduled to ship back to Southern California Tuesday.

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