Courvoisier Digs In For Jerome Victory In Stakes Debut

Hill 'n' Dale Equine Holdings and James Spry's regally-bred Courvoisier overcame a wet track to take Saturday's $150,000 Jerome for sophomores going a one-turn mile over the sloppy and sealed main track at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y.

The Jerome awarded 10-4-2-1 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the top four finishers, respectively. By Tapit and out of the 2014 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies and Eclipse Award-winner Take Charge Brandi, Courvoisier splashed over the slop and through a dense fog under Jose Ortiz to win his stakes debut for trainer Kelly Breen after breaking his maiden going nine furlongs last time out at the Big A.

Breaking from post six in the field of eight, Courvoisier found himself mid-pack a few strides from the gate before splitting horses and moving to the outside of pacesetter Hagler, who was piloted by Trevor McCarthy. Racing down the backstretch, Ortiz kept Courvoisier close to Hagler through a half-mile in a speedy 45.78 seconds.

Ortiz showed Courvoisier the crop to his right side rounding the turn, giving him the signal to make his move at Hagler as McCarthy began to give his mount a strong hand ride. Hagler battled back on the inside at the top of the lane but began to tire as Courvoisier found more and overtook the lead at the eighth pole.

Driving to the finish with two right-handed taps of the crop from Ortiz, Courvoisier widened his margins briefly at the sixteenth pole before needing to fend off one last bid from runner-up Smarten Up under Anthony Salgado in the center of the racetrack. Courvoisier had enough left in the tank to finish strongly, besting Smarten Up by 1 ¼ lengths with post-time favorite Cooke Creek checking in two lengths back in third. The final time for the mile was 1:38.86.

“He broke good but the eight-horse [Hagler] had some speed too, and it looked like he wanted it,” Ortiz said of his battle for the lead. “Crossing the chute, my horse was traveling really well and I was really happy with the position I had.

“Passing the three-eighths pole, I had to ask him a little bit but Kelly gave me the warning – he said, 'he's not going to give you anything you don't ask for, so you have to keep pedaling and he will dig in,'” Ortiz added. “And he did. He kept digging in and I'm just happy we got the win.”

Ortiz, who rode Courvoisier for the first time in the Jerome, said he was unsure of the mile distance for the chestnut colt.

“I was a little bit concerned,” Ortiz said. “Personally, I'm not a fan of stretching to a mile and an eighth and cutting back to a mile, but he's sharp. He's got tactical speed – which helps him – and I think those kinds of horses you can play around with them. He's the right kind of horse to do it and he did it successfully, so kudos to Kelly and the team.”

Salgado said Smarten Up still had something left to give in the final stages despite a poor break and being forced six-wide in the turn.

“He broke a little bit slow,” said Salgado. “It wasn't a perfect trip. He was getting dirt in the face and jumping a little bit, but in the stretch, when I asked him, he kept coming. Once we got clear, he kept going.”

Rounding out the order of finish were Unbridled Bomber, Hagler, Mr Jefferson, Ohtwoohthreefive, and Rumble Strip Ron.

The Jerome was the second career win for Courvoisier, who had won or finished on the board in each of his prior four starts. The colt put on blinkers to earn two runner-up finishes by small margins at Delaware Park before breaking through in a December 2 maiden special weight at Aqueduct by a neck.

Breen said despite the off-going on Saturday, Courvoisier has shown a fondness for the Big A.

“He does everything right,” said Breen. “He just needed to put it all together. He was being very juvenile in his first couple of races and I think this is the beginning of him moving forward.”

Breen said Courvoisier will now target a start in the Grade 3 $250,000 Withers, a nine-furlong test on February 5 at the Big A offering 10-4-2-1 Kentucky Derby qualifying points.

“In two weeks, he'll have two more workouts and we'll be right on line to run,” said Breen. “Right now, it looks like has a nice affinity for Aqueduct and in four more weeks is the Withers going two turns. We're excited for it because it's where we were pointing him. We didn't know if we were even going to run in the Jerome because we believe he is a two-turn horse.”

Bred in Kentucky by Elevage II and Hill 'n' Dale, Courvoisier earned $82,500 in victory and brought his total purse earnings to $147,450 with a record of 2-2-1 from five starts. A $2 win wager placed on Courvoisier returned $10.

Live racing at the Big A resumes Sunday with nine-race card, featuring the La Verdad for state-bred fillies and mares in Race 8. First post is 12:20 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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Pickin’ Time Wins City of Laurel Stakes At Laurel Park

Roseland Farm Stable's graded-stakes winner Pickin' Time swept to the lead on the outside around the far turn and had plenty left to turn back a bid from He'smyhoneybadger nearing the wire for a 1 ¼-length victory in Saturday's $100,000 City of Laurel at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

The 11th running of the City of Laurel for 3-year-olds was the first of three $100,000 stakes on the program, followed by the Safely Kept for 3-year-old fillies, also sprinting seven furlongs, and 1 1/8-mile Richard W. Small for 3-year-olds and up.

Ridden by Mychel Sanchez for trainer Kelly Breen, Pickin' Time ($12.80) earned his fourth career stakes win and first in open company since the 2020 Grade 3 Nashua last November at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y. Most recently, he won the Monmouth Park's New Jersey Breeders Handicap Aug. 29. The winning time was 1:23.74 over a fast main track.

Breaking outside all but one horse in the field of eight, Pickin' Time was positioned third while in the clear behind multiple stakes-placed pacesetter Awesome Gerry, who led through a quarter-mile in :23.28 pressed by 31-1 long shot Three Two Zone. Three Two Zone assumed the lead after a half in :46.60 with Pickin' Time poised to pounce.

“He gave me a pretty good feeling from the beginning. I think the team did a great job getting him ready for the race,” Sanchez said. “He was pretty easy. He broke really well. I had a good position. I didn't have to use him in the beginning, so I pretty much sav[ed ground] the whole way and when I asked him to go, he really took off.”

Pickin' Time rolled past Three Two Zone once straightened for home and powered through the stretch while He'smyhoneybadger, who beat Pickin' Time in the Oct. 23 Perryville at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., came with a belated run. It was three lengths back to Three Two Zone, who was three-quarters of a length better than Awesome Gerry in fourth.

Stakes winner Everett's Song, the 3-2 favorite, ran fifth to snap his three-race win streak. Riden With Biden, Plamen, and Depository completed the order of finish.

“I guess my horse was ready to go today,” Sanchez said. “It seems like he does better when he gets early position clear. The last couple times he was kind of in between horses [when] he broke a little poorly. I think the post position helped me today.”

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Firenze Fire to Stand Stud in Japan

Firenze Fire (Poseidon's Warrior–My Every Wish, by Langfuhr), whose many accomplishments include a win in the GI Champagne S., will be retired after his upcoming start in the GI Breeders' Cup Sprint and head to Japan, where he will stand stud at Arrow Stud.

Owner Ron Lombardi said the offer from Arrow Stud was just one of many he fielded.

“I had offers from California, Kentucky, New York, Maryland, Florida and Japan,” he said . “I would have liked to have kept him in the U.S., but the Japanese made me an offer I couldn't refuse. They really wanted him. They came to the table and are very excited to have him. He will be standing there with California Chrome and Shanghai Bobby, so they have a nice little network of horses over there.”

Trained by Jason Servis until his indictment in March 2020 and transferred to Kelly Breen after that, Firenze Fire, who is six, won the 2017 Champagne as a 2-year-old and went on to finish 11th in the 2018 GI Kentucky Derby. After the Derby, the connections focused on shorter, one-turn races and Firenze Fire went on to be one of the top sprinters in the country. Wins in the 2020 and 2021 GII True North S., the 2020 GII Vosburgh S. and the 2018 GIII Gallant Bob S. are among his nine graded stakes wins and 13 overall stakes victories. He most recently second in both the Aug, 28 GI Forego S. and Oct. 9 GII Vosburgh S., the former of which he attempted to savage winner Yaupon (Uncle Mo). Firenze Fire's record currently stands at 37-14-7-3 and earnings of $2,710,350.

“I'm going to miss him a lot,” Lombardi said. “I got the final offer, I signed it, I scanned it and started writing an email back. It took me about 45 minutes to push send. I was really thinking it over, but I am good with the decision. I think this will be good for him. I have two full-brothers to him, a 2-year-old and a weanling, and then I have a yearling half-brother by Speightstown. Hopefully, the bloodlines will continue.”

Firenze Fire will be making his fifth straight appearance in the Breeders' Cup. His best showing came when he was third in the 2020 Sprint.

“I would love to go out a winner,” Lombardi said. “I even get a kicker if that happens. Hopefully, there will be a little speed duel up front we can sit off of that and make our move. He's doing great. We're pretty excited.”

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Kentucky Derby Runner Soup And Sandwich Headlines Saturday’s Perryville Stakes At Keeneland

Live Oak Plantation's Soup and Sandwich, unraced since the $3 million Kentucky Derby (G1) Presented by Woodford Reserve in May, headlines a field of nine 3-year-olds entered Wednesday for Saturday's 13th running of the Perryville going 7 furlongs on the main track at Keeneland.

The Perryville is scheduled as the seventh race on Saturday's 10-race program with a 4:12 p.m. ET post time. First post Saturday is 1 p.m.

Trained by Mark Casse, Soup and Sandwich won his first two career starts and was second in the Florida Derby (G1) before his run in the Kentucky Derby. Tyler Gaffalione will have the mount Saturday and break from post position one.

Looming as one of the main threats to Soup and Sandwich is Roseland Farm Stable's Pickin' Time.

Trained by Kelly Breen, Pickin' Time has returned to sprinting and enters Saturday's race off a runner-up effort to Jackie's Warrior in the Gallant Bob (G2) at Parx on Sept. 25. Corey Lanerie has the mount and will exit post position five.

The field for the Perryville, with riders and weights from the inside, is:

  1. Soup and Sandwich (Gaffalione, 118 pounds)
  2. Boca Boy (Marcelino Pedroza Jr., 118)
  3. Ram (Rafael Bejarano, 118)
  4. He'smyhoneybadger (Florent Geroux, 118)
  5. Pickin' Time (Lanerie, 120)
  6. Pipeline (John Velazquez, 118)
  7. Irish Unity (Ricardo Santana Jr., 118)
  8. Cool Quest (Julien Leparoux, 118)
  9. Runway Magic (Brian Hernandez Jr., 118)

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