Maracuja Upsets Malathaat In CCA Oaks At Saratoga

In her much-anticipated return to the races after her April 30 victory in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks, Malathaat battled Maracuja down the stretch and found herself on the losing end of a close finish for the first time in her six starts. Maracuja, who finished seventh behind Malathaat in the Oaks, came away with the upset and the first stakes victory of her career, winning the 1 1/8-mile Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks by a head at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Facing only three others, Malathaat, trained by Todd Pletcher, broke cleanly from post position one, taking a short lead over Clairiere around the first turn. John Velazquez kept the Shadwell filly on the lead throughout the race, setting early fractions of :23.38 for the first quarter and :47.13 for the half-mile. Clairiere settled in a half-length back, with Maracuja and Rockpaperscissors lingering close on the backstretch.

Around the final turn, Clairiere challenged Malathaat's lead, Irad Ortiz, Jr. keeping pressure on the Pletcher trainee. On their outside, Maracuja accelerated, Ricardo Santana, Jr. positioning his filly for their stretch run. Into the Saratoga straight, Malathaat maintained her short lead on the rail, Clairiere unable to catch her while Maracuja moved up to confront the leader. Malathaat and Maracuja dueled through the last half of the stretch, Maracuja showing a head in front as they hit the wire. Clairiere was third and Rockpaperscissors fourth. The final time for the 1 1/8 miles was 1:49.29.

Find this race's chart here.

With only four horses in the field, the G1 Coaching Club American Oaks had no show betting. Maracuja paid $31.40 and $6.00. Malathaat paid $2.10.

“She broke really sharp, which I was happy with, and she was kind of right there. They all seemed like they were coming and I thought Ricardo [Santana, Jr.] made a smart move by backing off and coming around the outside. What a race.” said trainer Rob Atras after the race. “She loves the two turns. She puts a lot into her gallops every day. The further, the better for her.”

“The trip was perfect. She broke really well today. She was running comfortably. Rob liked the filly a lot and I was happy with her. There wasn't much pressure in this race.” Jockey Ricardo Santana, Jr. said after the CCA Oaks.  “He told me, 'Just do what you have to do' and we took the victory today. I had some pressure on the side from the 4 [Clairiere] and I just let my filly take a deep breath. As soon as I took her back out, she came rolling. She ran a great race today.”

Bred in Kentucky by River Bend Farm and Austin and Janie Musselman, Maracuja is a 3-year-old daughter of Honor Code out of the Unbridled's Song mare Patti's Regal Song. She is owned by Beach Haven Thoroughbreds. Maracuja was consigned by Buck Pond Farm at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton Select Yearling Sale and was purchased by Jason Servis for $200,000. The G1 Coaching Club American Oaks is Maracuja's second victory in five starts in 2021. Her record is two wins in six lifetime starts for career earnings of $407,100.

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Champions Talk RSVP Deadline July 9

Champions Talk, a fundraiser for the NY Race Track Chaplaincy, will be held July 19 at 3p.m. at the Fasig-Tipton Pavilion in Saratoga Springs. The RSVP deadline has been extended to July 9. A limited number of seats are available for the round-table discussion featuring five champion jockeys–Chris McCarron, Jorge Velasquez, Richard Migliore, Laffite Pincay Jr. and Angel Cordero Jr. The event, which will be followed by a cocktail reception, will be moderated by Tom Durkin. Each attendee will receive a free limited edition autographed bobblehead of our honoree, Irad Ortiz Jr.

To purchase tickets, sponsor the event, or donate, click here.

 

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When An Ambulance Follows You at Work, the Job is Never Easy

The Week in Review, by T.D. Thornton

A couple of decades ago, I knew a press box wiseguy who faithfully played what he called “ambulance chaser” bets. Every time a rider got unseated in a spill, he would put two bucks to win on the next mount that jockey rode back. The wagers didn't have to involve an actual ambulance ride–he believed the very act of hitting the dirt and having to dust yourself off might give a jockey extra incentive once he or she got back in the irons. If the jockey sustained an injury that required time on the sidelines, the ambulance chaser would duly note this, putting the rider on a bet-back list to await his or her future return.

I have no idea if this wagering theory turned a profit over time–I seem to recall hearing my friend tout the veracity of his system only when those comebacking riders won. But I suspect he wasn't making ambulance-chaser bets so much for financial gain. He admired and respected jockeys for their tenacity and resilience, and viewed this small form of pari-mutuel support as a way to have a rooting interest in their well-being, perhaps hoping to send some good racetrack karma in their direction.

This gent almost certainly would have backed jockey Ricardo Santana, Jr.'s winning ride aboard 2-year-old firster Cool Papa G (Maclean's Music) in the fifth race at Churchill Downs Friday. It came one race after Santana's mount careened violently through the inner turf rail, leaving him prone on the course while the race got halted midway and declared a “no contest.”

Complaining only of post-spill soreness, Santana was medically cleared to climb back in the saddle. Not only did he win the very next race, but he later boarded a plane to New York to ride six horses on Saturday's GI Belmont S. card.

Irad Ortiz, Jr., on the other hand, would have landed on the ambulance chaser's comeback list after escaping major injury in a scary-looking spill in Thursday's fifth race at Belmont Park. His mount stumbled while switching leads in the stretch, and the thrown Ortiz was run over by a trailing horse ridden by his younger brother, Jose. After being removed from the track on a stretcher and ambulanced to a hospital, Ortiz required only stitches in his head and arm. He vowed to be back riding in two weeks.

So while Saturday's final leg of the Triple Crown turned out to be a worth-the-wait stretch battle that featured 'TDN Rising Star' Essential Quality (Tapit) out-torqueing the relentless Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow) while 11 1/4 lengths clear of everybody else, the stacked slate of graded stakes on the Belmont undercard was shaped in some ways by Santana's presence and by Ortiz's absence.

Ortiz, currently the continent's leading rider both in terms of victories and earnings, had been booked to ride all 13 races Saturday at Belmont. Horses he was scheduled to ride won the first three races on the day and five of the first seven, including three Grade I stakes (two of which ended up being pickup mounts for brother Jose).

Although Santana had the call aboard France Go de Ina (Will Take Charge), the longest shot in the Belmont S., his main reason for trekking to New York was to ride Silver State (Hard Spun), who quietly cruised into the GI Metropolitan H. after building an under-the-radar, five-race win streak for trainer Steve Asmussen and co-owners Winchell Thoroughbreds and Willis Horton Racing.

The Met Mile has historically been a productive launchpad for horses who weren't quite ready for the rigors of the Triple Crown chase at age three but are poised to peak at four after adding muscle and maturity (Vekoma, the 2020 Met Mile winner, is a prime recent example).

Silver State ($450,000 KEESEP) had dead-heated for a Churchill Downs win in his debut in September 2019 (9 3/4 lengths ahead of the third-place horse), then earned two seconds while taking the 2020 Fair Grounds prep path to an anticipated start in the GI Kentucky Derby.

But Silver State twice couldn't match strides with well-meant winners from the barn of trainer Brad Cox, and when a third in a division of the GII Risen Star S. was followed by a seventh in the GII Louisiana Derby, Asmussen withdrew his colt from Triple Crown consideration and opted to hit the “reset” button after a freshening, aiming for shorter distances. The Met Mile would be Silver State's target for 2021.

Asmussen and Santana got Silver State to New York by racking up back-to-back allowance-conditioned races at seven furlongs in Kentucky last autumn. Confidence mounting, Silver State then rolled into Oaklawn Park to win three consecutive stakes over the winter and spring, stretching out in distance from 1 to 1 1/16 and then 1 1/8 miles while stepping up in class and twice cracking triple digits in Beyer Speed Figures.

Having never faced Grade I company, Silver State was let go at 5-1 in the Met Mile betting, although his elevated mutuel was primarily the product of the zealous crush of money on the Cox-trained Knicks Go (Paynter), the prohibitive 4-5 favorite.

Silver State broke running, but with a revved-up Knicks Go intent on seizing his customary spot at the head of affairs, Santana backed off a beat and let Silver State settle into stalk mode while saving ground at the rail. At one point Silver State slid back to fourth on the backstretch as the cadence quickened (second quarter mile in :22.95, faster than the first), but Santana never panicked and always appeared to have his mount within striking distance.

Knicks Go began to wilt under duress at the top of the lane, and when he drifted out, shouldering Mischevious Alex (Into Mischief) even wider off the bend, Santana cued Silver State to barrel through that gift of a gap. With clear inside passage, Silver State asserted himself for the stretch run, swatting away a late bid from length-back runner-up By My Standards (Goldencents), with the plucky Mischevious Alex still chugging along another three-quarters of a length back in third. Knicks Go finished a drained fourth.

Saturday's Met Mile win (100 Beyer) was the third in the last four years for the training and riding tandem of Asmussen and Santana. They scored in the 2018 edition of North America's most prestigious one-mile stakes with Bee Jersey and in 2019 with Mitole (they didn't have an entry in the 2020 renewal).

Coincidentally, two races later in the Belmont S., Santana and France Go de Ina ended up pressuring Mitole's little brother, Hot Rod Charlie, in the early stages of the race. This tactic contributed to the sizzling early fractions and kept presumed pacemaker Rock Your World (Candy Ride {Arg}) from being able to clear the field from post seven–although this run-and-gun move did nothing for the chances of France Go de Ina, who got eased back to last.

Santana stuck around and rode the two late races after the feature, winning the 12th with a pickup mount. The finale didn't go off until 8:06 p.m., and the pandemic-capped crowd of 11,238 had thinned considerably by the time the starter sprung the latch for race 13.

Just as the gates opened, Kendrick Carmouche's mount reared in stall two and the two parted company, with Carmouche falling underneath his horse, his right ankle absorbing the full force of a hoof plant.

The loose horse ran riderless through the pack while Carmouche–not knowing he had two broken ankle bones–managed to make it to safety under the inner rail before the field came thundering down the turf course stretch. For the second time in three days, there was the disquieting scene of Belmont Park jockeys sprinting out to the scene of an accident to check on a fallen rider.

Sunday, supported by crutches outside the Belmont jockeys' room, Carmouche, currently North America's eleventh-leading rider in both wins and earnings, was optimistic he'd be back in about eight weeks.

“I ain't missing nothing,” Carmouche said, flashing a characteristically optimistic smile. “I'll be back, better than ever.”

Put him on your ambulance chaser list for midway through the Saratoga season.

And let's hope that list stays pretty short.

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Search Results Snares Acorn Over Fast-Closing Obligatory

Coming off her only career loss in a hard-fought race against Malathaat in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks, Klaravich Stables Inc.'s Search Results dropped back to a one-turn mile for trainer Chad Brown and responded with her first Grade 1 triumph in Saturday's Acorn Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.

The 3-year-old filly by Flatter was ridden to victory by Javier Castellano, named as a substitute for the injured Irad Ortiz Jr., who was involved in a spill on Thursday and will be out about two weeks. Search Results was the fourth winner in the first five races on the Belmont Stakes card that Ortiz had been named to ride, including Drain the Clock in the G1 Woody Stephen Stakes.

“I was at the right place at the right time,” said Castellano. “I was very fortunate to [get the mount from injured Irad Ortiz, Jr.]. I'm thankful to Chad Brown for the opportunity to ride this horse; we've had a lot of success in the past. I'm sorry for Irad Ortiz that he got hurt, but it gave me the opportunity to ride.”

Sent off the 4-5 favorite, Search Results paid $3.80 to win after running the one-mile in 1:35.50 on a track rated fast but which had taken on considerable rainfall Friday afternoon.

Juddmonte's Obligatory, coming off a last-to-first victory in the G2 Eight Belles at Churchill Downs on the same day that Search Results ran second in the Kentucky Oaks, finished a fast-closing second for trainer Brad Cox, falling a half-length short. Make Mischief, third in the Eight Belles, finished a length back in third, with Eight Belles runner-up Dayoutoftheoffice fourth – beaten a nose for third – after setting the pace. Travel Column rounded out the order of finish for the five 3-year-old fillies contesting a race first run in 1931.Miss Brazil was scratched.

Equibase chart of Acorn

This was Brown's second Acorn victory, having won the 2019 running with Guarana.

 “I'm just so proud of her to come back in five weeks after a real dog fight with Malathaat,” said Brown. “To bounce right back and lay it on the line again, this filly has so much talent and so much heart. She's a very rare kind of horse to have, and we're so lucky to have her.”

Search Results was bred in Kentucky by Machmer Hall, which consigned the filly to the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale as part of the Select Sales consignment. She was purchased  for $310,000 by Mike Ryan, agent, on behalf of Klaravich Stables owner Seth Klarman.

Dayoutoftheoffice jumped out to the early advantage in the long run down the Belmont backstretch, leading through an opening quarter mile in :23.50 and a half mile in :47.23. Make Mischief sat to her outside, with Search Results racing three wide into the far turn and just behind the top two. Obligatory, ridden by Jose Ortiz, lagged at the back of the field, never more than five lengths behind the leader.

Into the stretch, after six furlongs in 1:11.00, Search Results drew up alongside Dayoutoftheoffice, and gradually eased past that filly while Make Mischief fought to keep pace with the eventual winner. In the final sixteenth of a mile, with Search Result's victory seemingly assured, Obligatory came roaring down the outside and tried to make a race of a it, falling a half-length short at the wire.

“The pace wasn't fast but she was right there,” said Castellano. “That's the good thing about her. You can put her where you want. You can be a little closer to the pace or you can be a little bit off the pace. I don't think she's a difficult horse to manage. She's very easy and straightforward. I'm just lucky I had the opportunity to ride her.”

Obligatory's rider, Jose Ortiz, said of the filly by Curlin: “She ran huge. The pace was a lot slower today and when they started running at the three-eighths pole, they got the jump on me. It was very hard to keep her engaged with them, but she made a good run down the lane.”

The win was the fourth in five career starts for Search Results, who debuted at Gulfstream Park on Jan. 3, winning a six-furlong maiden race by four lengths. She shipped to New York to win the Busher Invitational on March 6, then won Aqueduct's G3 Gazelle by 2 3/4 lengths. She got a good trip under Irad Ortiz Jr. in the Kentucky Oaks, but came up a neck short of the Todd Pletcher-trained Curlin filly Malathaat in a battle of the unbeatens.

Search Results is by Flatter, a stakes-placed A.P. Indy stallion who stands at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., where his 2021 fee was $35,000. The Acorn winner was produced from Co Cola, a Todd Pletcher-trained stakes-place filly by Candy Ride. Search Results come from the family of Canadian champion Kimchi and G1 winner Mind Your Biscuit, now standing at stud in Japan.

 

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