Racing Comes Together for Keeneland July Meet

There was a popular aphorism making its rounds through social media in the early stages of the Coronavirus pandemic.

“Check on your friends in Lexington; March Madness and Keeneland are cancelled.”

It’s true, Lexington natives experienced a shocking few days early in March when the cancellation of Keeneland’s annual Spring Meet occurred just days after the announcement that there would be no NCAA basketball tournament.

And while racing fans were certainly disappointed that there would be no tailgating on The Hill or a sunny Saturday afternoon shared between 30,000-some attendees on Blue Grass Day, of course the ones who bore the effects of the cancellation were the horsemen and owners pointing their horses towards those few prestigious weeks in April.

Kentucky-based trainer Kenny McPeek, who ranks fourth among Keeneland’s all-time leading trainers by wins, spoke of his initial impression of the an April in Lexington without a Keeneland race meet.

“I’ll admit to being very disappointed that they didn’t have the April meet,” McPeek said. “We had over 50 horses scheduled to run there. It’s unfortunate, but it was the right thing to do.”

The sudden change in the race calendar disrupted the game plan for many trainers, especially those based in Kentucky, but Keeneland’s President and CEO Bill Thomason said that the horsemen with whom he spoke remained optimistic throughout the period of uncertainty for Kentucky racing.

“What I’ve learned in this business is that the horsemen are talented, but they’re also strong and very resilient,” he said. “Whatever environment they’re given, they’re going to make do and make sacrifices.”

In an effort to distribute purse money and continue the tradition of the Spring Meet’s historic graded stakes schedule, a plan for Keeneland to return to racing has been in the works ever since they were forced to cancel in April.

“We wanted to make this happen for our horsemen,” Thomason said. “The graded stakes and the black-type races are so important. We can’t look back in the record books and see those spaces blank for a year. It was unimaginable to think that we would not be able to bring those races.”

On May 27, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission’s race dates committee approved a plan for a Keeneland Summer Meet. The five-day meet, happening Wednesday, July 8 though Sunday, July 12, will feature 10 graded stakes.

McPeek is just one of the trainers who said he was thrilled at the prospect of racing at Keeneland in July.

“I like the idea of a July meet and I’d like to see them do it every year, to be honest,” he said. “I think it could be something similar to Royal Ascot, with those five great days of racing. Whether or not they’ll contemplate this in the long run, I’m not sure, but right now I’m thrilled about it. It’s quality racing and I’m sure there will be a lot of people interested, whether you’re racing or betting those races.”

The four GI races will consist of the Maker’s Mark Mile, Central Bank Ashland, Coolmore Jenny Wiley, and the Madison. The $600,000 GII Blue Grass S. and the $400,000 Ashland will both run on July 11 with the winner of each receiving 100 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby and the Kentucky Oaks, respectively.

McPeek already has several horses slated for these major races. Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil), who currently sits atop the leaderboard of 2020 Kentucky Oaks Contenders after a third straight graded stakes win in the GII Santa Anita Oaks, will be pointed towards the GI Ashland S. along with stablemate Envoutante (Uncle Mo).

“That’s as far as I’ve thought so far,” McPeek said. “But I’m sure we are going to run a lot of horses here.”

Swiss Skydiver takes the GII Santa Anita Oaks | Benoit 

The full condition book came out on June 5, but the scheduling and logistics of this short meet was far from simple. Kentucky’s normal summer schedule includes racing at Churchill Downs, Ellis Park, and Kentucky Downs.

“Ever since we had to make the decision to cancel the April meet, we’ve been looking for a spot in the calendar,” Thomason said. “We’ve been talking to Ellis and Churchill. We want to keep people safe when they come in to Kentucky throughout our entire circuit.”

Thomason said that this coordination of tracks might not have been possible a few months ago. “When we got together earlier this year and agreed on our Lasix phase-out plan, that was kind of a moment for all of us,” he said. “We all found an opportunity to sit down and do the right thing for the industry and for horse racing in Kentucky.”

Following the approval of the Keeneland Summer Meet by the KHRC’s race dates committee, Ellis Park general manager Jeffrey Inman said in a press release, “We are all in this together, and Ellis Park is pleased to work with Keeneland on a plan that benefits our horsemen and Kentucky racing.”

Keeneland also spoke with other major tracks outside of the Commonwealth, and Thomason said the association chose not to bring back a few of the normal April graded stakes races because they did not complement the timetable of other race meets running during their traditional dates.

“We talked with NYRA and our friends at Del Mar to make sure we weren’t stepping on top of anybody around the country. None of us can afford to do that anymore. We’ve got to protect racing in our country.” Thomason said.

With the dates and races now secured, Thomason said he believes this is the time to reset and look forward. “Now we can restart. Our racing in July will build to the Kentucky Derby, which will build to our Fall Stars Weekend and our October meet, and then all of that builds to an exciting Breeders’ Cup that we’re having this fall.”

With a resounding ‘fingers crossed’ from fans hoping for a grandstand filled with people in October and November, for now, Thomason said Keeneland is focusing on how to bring racing to the fans at home in July.

“We’re brokenhearted about not being able to have fans here,” he said. “When you think of the 250,000 people who could not be at the spring meet, at first we thought the reaction might have been a little worse. But the minute we announced that we were getting ready to have a July meet, everything we heard not only from the industry, but from our community was, ‘That’s okay.’ They were just so excited that racing was back.”

The Keeneland marketing department has been working overtime in shifting from traditional media outlets to bringing racing to fans at home.

“People are already planning their parties at home,” Thomason reported. “They’re planning their picnics and their outdoor activities with family, and they’re still going to celebrate the meet. We’re going to be working with all of them to make sure that it’s special.”

Thomason said he sees this as an opportunity to tell stories and give insight from the industry to fans and newcomers who might not have those chances to learn during a normal visit to the track.

“It’s going to be different,” he said. “But out of that, it’s going to give us a chance to try some new things, and bring some new things to our fans and our horsemen. We’ll see what works and what doesn’t, and we’ll come out of this better.”

A full grandstand at Keeneland | Coady

Certainly no one is more aware of these changes than the horsemen. Strict biosecurity measures have been in place at Keeneland ever since it has re-opened for training, and the grounds are on lock down for anyone except those involved in the care and training of the horses.

But Thomason said that everyone has taken these new protocols in stride.

“Everyone is taking it seriously,” he said. “We’re under extreme protocols that will keep our horsemen and grooms safe. Everyone is just happy to be a part of it. We’re so thankful they’re here and we’re working together. It’s been a great atmosphere on the backside.”

He continued, “I’ve been heartened by all the great support that we’ve gotten from everybody in the business, because they get it. They know how serious it is. They want us to get open, and they want us to stay open.”

During the period of downtime with no horses on the backside, Keeneland was at work connecting with the Lexington community as a part of the Nourish Lexington program. Last month, they kicked off a new initiative called Nourish the Backstretch.

“We have been a part of Nourish Lexington, which helps people in our community in need and children who are normally in school and couldn’t get meals during the pandemic,” Thomason said. “But we’ve extended this program to nourish our backside. We’ve made sure our backside was taken care of during this time.”

Thomason said he believes this was a key factor as to why the community responded so well with the April meet cancellation and the spectator-less July meet.

“Keeneland is a part of this community,” he said. “The fabric of this community. The thing that Lexington and this area is known for is the breeding capital of the world. We’re proud that we’re ready to showcase that again- not only to our area, but to our state and our country. We’ve worked really hard to be a part of this community, and this is when it shows.”

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Guineas Win Is Sweet For Forgotten Mare

In bloodstock circles, plenty of air is devoted to rueing the unforgiving nature of the market, not least the tendency to toss a mare out with the bath water should she fail to sparkle with her first few foals.

When Kameko (Kitten’s Joy) won the G1 2000 Guineas on June 6, he made a fairly strong case for perseverance. His dam, the well-bred graded stakes winner Sweeter Still (Ire) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}), had been the co-second highest priced lot at Keeneland’s January Sale in 2014 at $750,000 in foal to Galileo (Ire), carrying her second foal and bought by Phyllis Wyeth to breed to her GI Belmont S. winner Union Rags. Four years later, Sweeter Still was plucked out of the ring at Keeneland November by the little-known T. Lesley Thompson for $1,500.

Bred by Annemarie O’Brien, Sweeter Still is out of the Belmez mare Beltisaal (Fr), who had herself commanded a modest price tag when bought by O’Brien’s father Joe Crowley for 8,000 Irish guineas in 2001, having a relatively light pedigree at the time. Sweeter Still was given every chance when put into training with Annemarie’s husband Aidan at Ballydoyle, but after just one start at two was sold to American interests.

Sweeter Still put together a productive campaign at three, winning a listed stake at Santa Anita at second asking and two months later adding a Grade III going a mile on the turf. She failed to shine at four and five, however, and after making one early season start at six was retired and covered by Giant’s Causeway. Though she aborted that pregnancy, Sweeter Still returned to Giant’s Causeway the following season and produced the $100,000 foal Dreaming Of Stella (Ire).

Sweeter Still made a brief return to her native land to foal Dreaming Of Stella and visit Galileo (Ire), and by the time she visited the ring at the 2014 Keeneland January Sale her pedigree had enjoyed a few significant updates. In 2012 her three-quarter-brother Kingsbarns (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) had won the G1 Racing Post Trophy, making it three pattern winners for the dam, and under the third dam Rip Van Winkle (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) had been a top-class miler in 2009. Sweeter Still shared the top of the leaderboard at Keeneland with the likes of Life Happened (Stravinsky), whose daughter Tepin would go on to win the G1 Queen Anne S., as well as the dams of GI Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Mucho Macho Man (Macho Uno) and G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches victress Flotilla (Mizzen Mast).

Returned to the ring in November of 2015 carrying her second colt by the then-unproven Union Rags, Sweeter Still was led out unsold at $325,000. By the time she reappeared at Keeneland a year later carrying Kameko, neither of her first two foals had made the races-a massive knock in the modern marketplace, and Calumet Farm was able to scoop her up for $35,000. After foaling out Kameko at Calumet a stone’s throw from the sales pavilion, Sweeter Still was covered by four-time Grade I winner Big Blue Kitten, resulting in a three-quarter-sister to Kameko who was a $5,000 Keeneland September yearling and who goes through the ring at the July 1 Arqana Breeze-Up Sale as part of the Church Farm and Horse Park Stud draft.

Sweeter Still made the short trek to Keeneland once again in November of 2018 with a covering to Calumet’s Optimizer, a son of English Channel. By that time two additional unraced produce were weighing down her record, and the former blueblood went through almost entirely unnoticed at $1,500.

To say Sweeter Still fell through the cracks would be an understatement; she positively plummeted through them. And a month later, her first foal Dreaming Of Stella would be offloaded for 2,000gns at Tattersalls December to Elwick Stud.

Kameko had been similarly overlooked when he visited the same ring for the September yearling sale two months earlier. The bay colt in the Paramount Sales consignment on day two of the sale was a brother to Nobody-quite literally: his 2-year-old brother Nobody (Union Rags) was the highest achieving of his siblings on the racetrack at the time, having been beaten a combined 50 lengths in a pair of maiden claimers at Delta Downs.

Kameko’s $90,000 pricetag paid homage to a good physical, but emphasized the coolness of the market to both his underachieving dam and to his overachieving but underappreciated sire Kitten’s Joy. Onlookers, though, should have been shaking in their boots when they saw the name on the ticket: David Redvers. Two years earlier, the advisor to Qatar Racing and Bloodstock had paid $160,000 for a colt by the same sire at the same sale, and at the time Kameko was hammered down, Roaring Lion had won the G1 Coral-Eclipse and G1 Juddmonte International and had been third in the G1 Investec Derby. Four days after Kameko was secured, Roaring Lion won the G1 Irish Champion S., and five weeks after that he clinched champion 3-year-old and Horse of the Year honours when backing up to a mile to win the GI Queen Elizabeth II S.

Meanwhile, Kameko was seeing out his 30-day quarantine at Hunter Valley Farm in Versailles, Kentucky, where Sheikh Fahad boards his Kentucky-based mares. Hunter Valley is owned by a quartet of Irishmen and managed by part-owners Adrian Regan and Fergus Galvin.

“We quarantine all the Qatar [Racing] yearlings that are bought at the sales here before they go [to Europe],” Regan said. “So we got to see Kameko for 30 days. He was a very attractive colt at the time, a very nice yearling, but I’d be lying if I said I called Tweenhills and said, “This will be your next Group 1 winner.”

 

Sweet Deal

Early last summer, as Kameko was gearing up for a racecourse debut with trainer Andrew Balding, Fergus Galvin said he received a call from Redvers.

“Sheikh Fahad and David recognized how good he was–I think it was about a month before he even ran–and asked us to look up the mare,” he recalled. “We were quite astonished to see that she had gone through the year previous for $1,500. She was a good race mare and has a good pedigree, but we all know the market is very unforgiving on those mares after four or five foals. And if they don’t produce, they really can go through for any little amount.

“So we were able to come up with a deal with the previous owner [on behalf of Qatar Bloodstock]. We got the mare, and she had had quite a late foal [a filly] by Optimizer. So she wasn’t bred last year, but we did get her covered early to Kitten’s Joy this year. So she is carrying a full-sibling to Kameko for next year.”

By the time Sweeter Still, still just 15, visited Kitten’s Joy this spring, Kameko had already seriously boosted the mare’s fortunes. A debut winner at Sandown last July 25, he was beaten a nose when second in the G3 Solario S. and a neck when runner-up in the G2 Royal Lodge S. before coming good by 3 1/4 lengths in the G1 Vertem Futurity Trophy-the same race won by Sweeter Still’s brother Kingsbarns. And as it goes, the market began to warm to the family, too: Catchingsnowflakes, the unraced Galileo filly Sweeter Still was carrying when she sold for $750,000, was bought by Mini Bloodstock for $120,000 at Keeneland November last year in foal to English Channel.

All the while, however, the Qatar Racing and Tweenhills Stud teams had been dealt a serious tragedy; a week before Kameko made his stakes debut in the Solario, Roaring Lion was euthanized in New Zealand after battling colic. He has left behind one crop of foals conceived at Tweenhills.

A week removed from Kameko’s Classic coronation, Galvin and Regan were marveling at the fact that Qatar Racing and Tweenhills had managed to twice bottle lightning with colts by the same sire and from the same sale just two years removed.

“It’s just unreal, unbelievable, for everybody at Tweenhills, Sheikh Fahad and [wife] Melissa,” Regan said. “After what happened with Roaring Lion, which was devastating, to come up with a horse like Kameko by Kitten’s Joy again; it was just very thrilling, the whole thing. We were thrilled.”

“It was a bit surreal, really, watching the Guineas,” Galvin added. “What they went through with Roaring Lion was so gutting for them all. I know it was devastating for them. And you’d think you’d have to wait a lifetime to get one similar, but two, three years later, you’re getting one by the same sire. It’s quite unbelievable, really.”

“When they bought Kameko, the whole big question about him was the mare,” Galvin added. “She’s after having ‘x’ amount of foals. She’d been to Galileo, the greatest stallion anybody has seen in our lifetimes, and you’re thinking, “God, can this mare produce?” But it just shows you…”

“You don’t give up on them,” Regan chimed in.

“You don’t give up on them,” Galvin affirmed.

 

Scat Daddy Story Starts At Hunter Valley

Hunter Valley’s association with Qatar Bloodstock and Tweenhills is a ringing endorsement for the relatively young boarding, breeding and consigning operation. Regan and Galvin-who had become friends while on the Irish National Stud breeding course together and who had moved to Kentucky around the same time-were both in managerial roles at other farms in 2004 but decided to take the leap into farm ownership with Chicago-based Irishmen Tony Hegarty and John Wade, who are in the construction business.

“John and Tony, our partners up in Chicago, have been great from the get-go,” Galvin said. “We weren’t necessarily in a position at the time to be buying a 200-acre stud farm, especially in the location we were in, being so close to Keeneland. They were a huge help to us early on. They’re great partners to have. They have a construction company up in Chicago and they come down here regularly. They just love the sport.”

It likely aided enthusiasm, too, that Hunter Valley’s first-ever yearling through the ring at Keeneland in 2005 was none other than Scat Daddy. A newborn Scat Daddy and his dam Love Style were among the first boarders at Hunter Valley, and the group was able to purchase the pair of them. Trainer Todd Pletcher bought Scat Daddy for $250,000 at Keeneland September, and two months later the farm sold Love Style carrying a full-sibling to him for $350,000 at Keeneland November.

For the Hunter Valley team, purchasing Scat Daddy and Love Style was an early gamble that paid dividends.

“For us, at the time, it was a pricey package,” Galvin said. “We had to pull in a few partners. But Scat Daddy was a lovely horse from the get-go. He got better and better as time went on. Even the February of his 2-year-old year after Todd bought him we were hearing the birds chirping down in Florida about him. And sure enough, he turned out like he did. We were always big supporters of him when he was at stud through the highs and lows. And it was just such a shame, a horse just on the crest of the wave that he died, but even though he died a number of years ago we’re still seeing his influence on the breed with his sons.”

Chief among those sons of course is No Nay Never, who was sold as a foal by-you guessed it-Hunter Valley. A member of Scat Daddy’s fourth crop, No Nay Never was conceived for $15,000 and sold for $170,000 at Keeneland November in 2011 before later being pinhooked as a yearling.

“At the time he wasn’t overly big,” Regan said. “But he was very athletic, beautifully balanced, and a very solid foal. The only thing he was lacking at the time was maybe an inch of height, but he was a beautiful foal. When he went to the sale, he was very popular. I do remember the day we were selling him. We knew we had popularity for him, but on the morning at the sale, he took off. It just seemed like the word had gone around the sale. Everybody was on him come the time we took him up to the ring.”

And Hunter Valley’s fruitful association with the sire line marches on through their involvement with Qatar Racing and partners in Vitalogy (GB), a promising 3-year-old off a victory in the GIII Palm Beach S. going 1700 metres in February. The future looks bright, then, on both sides of the Atlantic for Hunter Valley and its riches to rags to riches resident Sweeter Still, with plenty more chapters likely to be written yet in both stories.

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Kitten’s Joy’s Crossfirehurricane Takes the Gallinule

Kitten’s Joy’s reputation hardly needed any further enhancements after the weekend, but another came nonetheless at The Curragh on Friday as his son Crossfirehurricane extended his perfect run in the G3 Coolmore Ten Sovereigns Gallinule S. Held up with one behind early by a confident Shane Crosse, Scott Heider’s Feb. 28 Listed Patton S. winner was gradually unwound to reel in the G2 Beresford S. third Gold Maze (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}) with 200 yards remaining en route to a 1 1/4-length success at 7-1, with Sherpa (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) another half length behind in third.

Joseph O’Brien’s season certainly went up a notch on Friday evening and the trainer revealed that he has the G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup with its altered conditions in mind back here July 26. “He’s an improving colt. I was a little bit worried about experience and the trip coming here, but Shane gave him a lovely ride,” he said. “He had a setback after he won his maiden last year and as a result he missed most of last season. We gave him some experience on the all-weather and he won twice up there. I’d say this is going to be his trip. I’m not sure I’d be going a mile and a half with him and we’ll be looking for another race at this trip where the ground is nice and quick. The Tattersalls Gold Cup back here is an option for him and he could have another run between now and then.”

Crossfirehurricane, whose sole prior turf success had come on debut at Limerick last June before adding wins in a seven-furlong conditions event and the Listed Patton S. over a mile on Dundalk’s Polytrack in February, is a son of the stakes scorer Louvakhova (Maria’s Mon). Also the second dam of the Atlantic Beach S. scorer Jack and Noah (Fr) (Bated Breath {GB}), she is a daughter of the GIII Miesque S. winner Louvain (Ire) (Sinndar {Ire}) whose Flotilla (Fr) (Mizzen Mast) captured the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches and GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf.

The third dam Flanders (Ire) (Common Grounds {GB}) took the Listed Scarborough S. and was runner-up in the G2 King’s Stand S. before producing the G1 Haydock Sprint Cup hero G Force (Ire) (Tamayuz {GB}). She is kin to the listed winner Ascot Family (Ire) (Desert Style {Ire}), who produced the G2 Prix Robert Papin winner and G1 Prix Morny runner-up Family One (Fr) (Dubai Destination) and the dams of the G2 Rockfel S. scorer Juliet Capulet (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and the star dual group 1-winning sprinter Lethal Force (Ire) also by Dark Angel. Louvakhova’s unraced 2-year-old filly is My Generation (Speightstown), while she also has a foal full-brother to Crossfirehurricane named Gimmie Shelter.

Friday, Curragh, Ireland
COOLMORE TEN SOVEREIGNS GALLINULE S.-G3, €50,000, Curragh, 6-12, 3yo, 10fT, 2:08.41, g/f.
1–CROSSFIREHURRICANE, 131, c, 3, by Kitten’s Joy
1st Dam: Louvakhova (SW-US, $116,378), by Maria’s Mon
2nd Dam: Louvain (Ire), by Sinndar (Ire)
3rd Dam: Flanders (Ire), by Common Grounds (GB)
1ST GROUP WIN. O-Scott C Heider; B-Glen Hill Farm & Scott C Heider (KY); T-Joseph O’Brien; J-Shane Crosse. €30,000. Lifetime Record: 4-4-0-0, $103,343. Werk Nick Rating: B. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Gold Maze (GB), 131, c, 3, Golden Horn (GB)–Astonishing (Ire), by Galileo (Ire). (550,000gns Ylg ’18 TATOCT). O-The Long Wait Partnership; B-Apple Tree Stud (GB); T-Jessica Harrington. €10,000.
3–Sherpa (Ire), 131, c, 3, Zoffany (Ire)–Eirnin (Ire), by Galileo (Ire). O-Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith, Susan Magnier & Mrs A M O’Brien; B-Whisperview Trading Ltd (IRE); T-Donnacha O’Brien. €5,000.
Margins: 1 1/4, HF, 1 3/4. Odds: 7.00, 6.00, 5.50.
Also Ran: Toronto (Ire), Mythical (Fr), Choice of Mine (Aus). Scratched: Chiricahua (Ire), Dutch Admiral (Ire). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Weekend Lineup: Charles Town Classic

This weekend is part of the calm before the storm of the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve on May 4. Highlighting the relatively light lineup of graded stakes is the $1 million, Grade 2 Charles Town Classic Stakes.

Horse Racing Radio Network (HRRN) will broadcast live from Hollywood Casino at Charles Town on Saturday from 4-6pm on Sirius/XM 156 with live streaming accessible on computers, tablets and mobile devices on the HRRN website, www.horseracingradio.net.

Friday April 19

5:30 p.m.—$100,000 Grade 3 Hilliard Lyons-Baird Doubledogdare Stakes at Keeneland on TVG

St. George Stable's Jala Jala (MEX), a star at Mexico City's Hipodromo de las Americas, will shoot for her first graded stakes victory in the United States when she goes postward in the Doubledogdare going 1 1/16 miles. Named Mexico's Horse of the Year for 2017, Jala Jala dominated horses from the Caribbean by winning Caribbean Cup races at Gulfstream by nine lengths in December 2017 and by 4½ lengths last December. Trainer Ignacio Correas IV said Grade 1 winner Blue Prize (ARG) would scratch from the Doubledogdare in favor of the Grade 1 La Troienne on May 3 at Churchill Downs.

Entries: http://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KEE041919USA9-EQB.html

Saturday April 20

4:51 p.m.—$125,000 Grade 3 Whimsical Stakes at Woodbine on TVG

Shakopee Town, a homebred for Bill and Al Ulwelling, makes her Canadian debut in the Whimsical Stakes on the opening day of the 2019 Woodbine Thoroughbred meet. A four-time winner from 10 starts, Shakopee Town, trained by Kevin Attard, will be contesting her fifth race of the year, a campaign that's already yielded two wins and a second.

Entries: http://www.equibase.com/static/entry/WO042019CAN8-EQB.html

5:30 p.m.—$250,000 Grade 2 Dixiana Elkhorn Stakes at Keeneland on TVG

Michael Hui's Zulu Alpha, winner of his past two starts in graded stakes company, headlines a field of 10 going 1½ miles on the turf. The winner of the Grade 3 Sycamore Stakes here last fall when trained by John Ortiz, Zulu Alpha is now conditioned by Mike Maker and comes into Saturday's race off victories in the 1 ½-mile Grade 3 W.L. McKnight Handicap (G3) and the Grade 2 Mac Diarmida at Gulfstream Park.

Entries: http://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KEE042019USA9-EQB.html

5:37 p.m.—$1,000,000 Grade 2 Charles Town Classic Stakes at Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races on TVG

Grade 1 winner Discreet Lover is set to make his first start since finishing eighth in the Breeders' Cup Classic last November. Owned and trained by Uriah St. Lewis, Discreet Lover – a $10,000 purchase at public auction – became one of racing's great Cinderella stories when he captured the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup last September. Among those attempting to derail him Saturday will be veteran Imperative, winner of the Charles Town Classic in 2014 and 2017, and graded stakes winner War Story.

Entries: http://www.equibase.com/static/entry/CT042019USA11-EQB.html
Equibase featured race: http://www.equibase.com/free/index.cfm?SAP=TN

6:12 p.m.—$200,000 Grade 2 Kona Gold Stakes at Santa Anita Park on TVG

Dr. Dorr and Kanthaka head a field of five older sprinters in Saturday's Kona Gold Stakes going 6 ½-furlongs. Supplemented at a cost of $4,000, 6-year-old Dr. Dorr will be making his second start off of a 7 ½ month layoff while 4-year-old Kanthaka will be making his fourth graded stakes start of the current meet.

Entries: http://www.equibase.com/static/entry/SA042019USA5-EQB.html

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