One Of Bloom’s ‘All-Time Favorite Horses,’ Millionaire Snapper Sinclair Readies For 2021 Debut

Millionaire Snapper Sinclair is scheduled to make his 2021 debut in Thursday's seventh race at Oaklawn, a 1-mile allowance for older horses.

Snapper Sinclair hasn't started since finishing second in the $250,000 Cigar Mile Handicap (G1) Dec. 5 at Aqueduct for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen and owner Jeff Bloom, who also campaigned champion and multiple Oaklawn stakes winner Midnight Bisou.

Snapper Sinclair has only won five times in a 29-race career, but the 6-year-old son of City Zip has bankrolled $1,438,260. The horse has several near misses on his stakes-heavy resume, including runner-up finishes in the $750,000 Tourist Mile (beaten three-quarters of a length) Sept. 7 at Kentucky Downs, the first division of the $100,000 Fifth Season Stakes (beaten a neck) last year at Oaklawn and the $350,000 Essex Handicap (beaten a head) in 2019 at Oaklawn. Snapper Sinclair also was beaten a nose in the $400,000 Risen Star Stakes (G2) for 3-year-olds in 2018 at Fair Grounds.

Snapper Sinclair recorded his biggest career victory to date in the 2019 Tourist Mile over Kentucky Downs' European-style turf course. Bloom said “a little bit of everything” has kept Snapper Sinclair in training. The flashy bay has been based at Oaklawn since mid-December.

“He's healthy, he's sound,” Bloom said. “I feel like we're just inches away from a viable stallion career. He finished second in the Grade 1 Cigar. If he wins that race, it's a game changer for him. He's just such a fun horse to have and we like to race a lot. To be able to race with a horse as honest as Snapper Sinclair, it's part of why you keep coming back for more with this kind of thing. Snapper will always be one of my all-time favorite horses. He's a barn favorite for Steve and his crew. At the end of the day, it comes down to as long as Snapper wants to continue doing what he does and he stays sound and healthy, then so be it. Let's do it.”

Snapper Sinclair was an allowance winner at the 2019 Oaklawn meeting. He has had only two starts in allowance company since the summer of 2019, the last a third-place finish in a 1-mile grass event Nov. 5 at Churchill Downs. Seven-time Oaklawn riding champion Ricardo Santana Jr. is named to ride Snapper Sinclair, the 6-5 program favorite, Thursday. The race also attracted Grade 3 winner Plainsman, the early 5-2 second choice.

“In talking to Steve about it, it's kind of like Snapper sort of deserves a spot like this to kind of kick things off,” Bloom said. “He's shown up to every tough spot out there over the course of his career … none of these races are gimmies, but it's softer competition and, hopefully, we get that win for him. He's always knocking on the door. It would be nice to get him another confidence booster, get him a win, walk him into the winner's circle and then start planning his course of action following this spot.”

Probable post time for Thursday's seventh race is 4:09 p.m. (Central).

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Oaks Winner Shedaresthedevil Back On The Work Tab At Oaklawn, Azeri Potential Target

Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresthedevil returned to the work tab Monday morning at Oaklawn, covering 3 furlongs in :36.60 in preparation for her 2021 debut, possibly the $350,000 Azeri Stakes (G2) for older fillies and mares March 13.

Shedaresthedevil, under exercise rider Fernando Espinoza, breezed on a fast track following the first break to renovate the racing surface for newly minted Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox and co-owner Staton Flurry of Hot Springs. Clockers had the 4-year-old daughter of Daredevil galloping out a half-mile in :49.80.

“Really, really good,” Cox said after watching the work. “We were just looking for like :38, and she honestly looked like she was going :38. Just well within herself. Just nice and easy. We're not going to get in a big hurry with her, just kind of pick it up a little bit each week. Couldn't have asked for a better first work back.”

Shedaresthedevil was a finalist for an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly of 2020 after winning four races, including Oaklawn's $300,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) Sept. 4 at Churchill Downs, Shedaresthedevil hasn't started since finishing third in the $400,000 Spinster Stakes (G1) Oct. 4 at Keeneland, her first start against older horses.

Following the Spinster, Shedaresthedevil received a 60-day break, Flurry said, before resuming light training in mid-December in Kentucky. She arrived at Oaklawn Jan. 9. Cox said the 1 1/16-mile Azeri, Oaklawn's final major prep for the $1 million Apple Blossom Handicap (G1) April 17, is a potential landing spot for Shedaresthedevil's 2021 debut.

“It's going to get close there,” Cox said. “We're just going to have to kind of really watch her and let her tell us if she's ready for that, but that would be the first logical target.”

Cox already has won Oaklawn's first of three Apple Blossom preps and is scheduled to have the heavy favorite in the second.

Getridofwhatailesu – in her stakes debut – was a 1 ½-length winner of the $150,000 Pippin at 1 mile Jan. 23. It marked the third victory in the last four starts for Getridofwhatailesu, who hadn't raced since winning an allowance route last March at Oaklawn. Cox said Getridofwhatailesu was subsequently diagnosed with “lameness that didn't require surgery” and sent to Custom Care Equine in South Carolina to recover.

“They did a fantastic job,” Cox said. “She came back to us and when we started breezing her she appeared to be the same horse she was last year. We had a lot of high hopes for her last year. We thought she was a graded-stakes filly. It wasn't ideal, probably, to bring her back in that stake off the layoff, but just based off the condition book, with what she's eligible for, there's not a lot of options. We were kind of forced into the race and it worked out well.”

Cox said Getridofwhatailesu is being pointed for the Azeri.

Monomoy Girl, Cox's dual Eclipse Award winner, is scheduled to make her 2021 debut in the $250,000 Bayakoa Stakes (G3) Feb. 15 at Oaklawn. Monomoy Girl has won 13 of 15 career starts, including the $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) Nov. 7 at Keeneland to conclude a perfect 2020 campaign (4 for 4) and clinch an Eclipse Award as the country's champion older dirt female. Monomoy Girl won the 2018 Kentucky Oaks en route to champion 3-year-old filly honors.

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What It Takes For A Reporter To Call Out A Cheating Trainer

We received a frustrated letter to the editor this past weekend with a familiar tune. A horse had won a graded stakes race in impressive fashion, continuing a trend of improved form that had started after the horse left the barn of one trainer for another. Why, the reader asked, did they not see coverage of the race dotted with warnings or aspersions about the trainer and his horse's meteoric rise?

It's a question we've heard before when a trainer has what a horseplayer considers an unusually high win percentage or when a horse turns in a dominant performance.

'Why are you too scared to just say the guy is cheating?' people will ask, usually with too many exclamation points. 'Why do you promote these trainers all the time?' they'll write at the end of a race preview or recap.

There are a few reasons we elected not to run that letter, and a few reasons we're not going to put out articles accusing someone of illegal activity based on suspicions or statistics.

First of all, it's important to understand there are different types of coverage on this and other publications. In our case, stories fall into the basic categories of news, features, and investigations.

If a trainer who readers are suspicious of wins a big race, we cannot pretend they didn't win it. We have to report on the results of that race. Likewise, when a trainer has a top contender for an upcoming race, we have to acknowledge that. These types of stories tend to come with quotes from owners, jockeys, and yes, trainers. Quotes may or may not ring as genuine to us or to our readers, but our job as reporters is to report those quotes and that information accurately. It is not for us to opine on them in those spaces.

Secondly, we get a lot of questions about why we don't “expose” a trainer for what a reader may believe is obvious cheating. Many readers may not realize how difficult that is to do – or how much work goes into an investigation of any kind. For us to report on an illegal drug program, we need details. What substance is being given, how it's given, to which horses, when, and where it comes from. We need proof of all those details, and we need to be able to verify that proof independently. There are relatively few people with access to those details in a barn. Probably, it comes down to the trainer, the trainer's supplier, and some number of staff.

There's a reason it took FBI wire taps to reveal the web of connections between indicted trainers Jorge Navarro and Jason Servis and their alleged doping rings – it's because they believed they were giving horses a performance advantage that would benefit their connections financially, but only if they kept their programs a secret.

One section of the government's evidence included in the March 2020 federal indictment included a mention that Servis warned Navarro via text message about the presence of a racing official in the barn area where the two trainers allegedly stored and administered performance-enhancing drugs to horses. In a call later intercepted between Navarro and co-defendant Michael Tannuzzo, Navarro said “[H]e would've caught our assess [expletive] pumping and pumping and fuming every [expletive] horse [that] runs today.”

But he didn't catch them.

Trainers who are giving horses an illegal edge know how to evade testing, and they know to avoid being caught red-handed by the racing investigators who walk the barns daily in some (but not all) states. Their careers depend on keeping that a secret. They and their suppliers have financial incentive to make sure they leave no proof – in sales records, in the feed room, or, as we saw in the indictment, in veterinary records. They have power over their staff members, who would certainly lose their jobs if they reported their bosses and who may legitimately fear they'd never find work on the backstretch again if they crossed someone powerful.

A reporter like me – with limited access to barns, no subpoena power, and no wire taps – has two choices: call and ask a trainer if they're cheating, or hope someone on the inside can help me get the proof I need. The former isn't likely to help much, since they will either truthfully tell me they're not or lie. It will put them on notice, and if they're doing something they shouldn't be, they're probably going to take that activity more underground than it already was, making it harder for me or anyone else to catch them. The latter is extremely unlikely, but my inbox is always open.

I like to think the Paulick Report has gained the reputation it has for investigative reporting because of how carefully we verify our information before it's published. When pursuing something controversial, we try to not only report the story as fairly as we can, but to verify and reverify every detail to ensure our confidence in the facts we have. Sometimes that means leaving out salacious details, and sometimes it means passing on stories altogether if we can't get the evidence we need. We approach stories this way, yes, partly because we don't want to be hit with a libel suit, but also because we believe these standards foster trust in our readers.

None of this is to say that we don't have our own opinions about what we see out there – just that we can't base a true investigative story on an opinion and a win percentage. Opinions, after all, are like … well, you know the phrase.

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Bloodlines Presented By Diamond B Farm’s Rowayton: Greatest Honour Was Built For Classic Success

After a relatively quiet year in the classics during 2020, Tapit is loaded for this year's preps to the classic races of 2021. In addition to the champion juvenile colt, Essential Quality, the multiple leading sire added a new graded stakes winner to his list of accomplishments when Greatest Honour won the Grade 3 Holy Bull Stakes at Gulfstream Park on Jan. 30.

The sire of 141 stakes winners, Tapit now has a pair of graded stakes winners among his classic prospects, along with Proxy, who was second in the G3 Lecomte Stakes at the Fair Grounds on Jan. 16. Although Tapit did not get a classic winner last year, his son Constitution did, with Tiz the Law winning the Belmont Stakes and finishing second in the Kentucky Derby to Horse of the Year Authentic (by Into Mischief), and Tapit's son Tapiture sired Jesus' Team, who ran third in the Preakness and was recently second in the Pegasus.

Now Tapit has fired up a progressive classic prospect in the tall, scopey Greatest Honour, who swept round his competition on the turn in the Holy Bull, then pulled away to win by 5 3/4 lengths in the race at a mile and a sixteenth. Trainer Shug McGaughey said, “He picked up his horses quick today. I think the farther we go, the better.”

The big bay's racing style certainly indicates he will be suited to classic distances, and the colt's pedigree backs that up in spades.

Bred in Kentucky by the Courtlandt Farm of Donna and Donald Adam, Greatest Honour is out of the Street Cry mare Tiffany's Honour. The mare didn't finish in the money in any of her three starts for owner-breeder Southern Equine, but when consigned to the 2015 Fasig-Tipton November sale in foal to Tapit, Tiffany's Honour was bought back for $2.3 million. Courtlandt Farm acquired the mare privately, and the mare's first foal was a Tapit colt who died.

The second foal out of Tiffany's Honour is the 4-year-old War Front gelding Semifinal, who brought $1.1 million at the 2018 Keeneland September yearling sale. He is unplaced from two starts and was vanned off the racetrack after the second.

Greatest Honour is the mare's third foal, and he won his maiden in his fourth start, going 8.5 furlongs on dirt at Gulfstream Park on Dec. 26. Although clearly more talented for two turns, Greatest Honour is not afflicted with a case of the slows. He was twice third in maiden specials at Saratoga and Belmont; each time, the second horse was Caddo River (Hard Spun), who won the listed Smarty Jones Stakes at Oaklawn on Jan. 22.

In his third start, going nine furlongs at Aqueduct on Nov. 8, Greatest Honour was second by a head to the Curlin colt Known Agenda, with the third horse 21 lengths farther behind. The penny had dropped, and Greatest Honour has won his next two starts.

The size, the scope, the lack of sprint speed, and yet the ability to show form late at two and improve markedly at three is the trademark of the A.P. Indy line of classic stock. And it's not coincidental that the best racehorse in the second generation of this pedigree is A.P. Indy's Belmont Stakes winner Rags to Riches, a winner in five of seven starts, four times at the Grade 1 level (Belmont, Kentucky Oaks, Santa Anita Oaks, Las Virgenes).

Rags to Riches and Belmont Stakes winner Jazil (Seeking the Gold) are elder siblings to Tiffany's Honour, who was the ninth and next-to-last foal out of their dam, the splendid racehorse and producer Better Than Honour (Deputy Minister). Winner of the G2 Demoiselle at two, Better Than Honour was second in the G1 Acorn and third in the G1 Mother Goose at three. At stud, she produced four stakes winners. In addition to her two Belmont Stakes winners, Better Than Honour is dam of Casino Drive (Mineshaft), winner of the G2 Peter Pan, and Man of Iron (Giant's Causeway), winner of the Breeders' Cup Marathon.

This family fairly reeks of stamina, but it responds well when matched with high-class speed, which is what happened with the mating of French champion and leading sire Blushing Groom (Red God) to fourth dam Best in Show. The result was Greatest Honour's third dam, G1 Kentucky Oaks winner Blush With Pride, who also won the G1 Santa Susana, was second in the G1 Spinster, and third in the G1 Mother Goose.

At stud, Blush With Pride produced three stakes winners, and this is the family of four-time G1 winner Peeping Fawn (Danehill), a granddaughter of Blush With Pride, and of G1 Hollywood Starlet winner Streaming (Smart Strike), a granddaughter of Better Than Honour.

The esteem in which breeders hold this family is evident from the sales prices of its members, and after Tiffany's Honour produced Greatest Honour, Courtlandt sent the mare to the 2018 Keeneland November sale. In foal to Medaglia d'Oro, Tiffany's Honour brought $2.2 million from Katsumi Yoshida, and the mare was exported to Japan. Tiffany's Honour foaled a filly in April 2019, was barren from a cover to Duramente for 2020, and was bred to the Deep Impact son Kizuna last year for a 2021 foal.

Greatest Honour has already provided a major update for his siblings, and the classics await. This colt is strengthening and should be a better horse in three months than he is today.

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