Breeders’ Cup Classic Notes: Knicks Go, Essential Quality Test Del Mar Surface

Art Collector – Bruce Lunsford's Bill Mott-trained homebred 4-year-old colt Art Collector had an easy day two mornings after a Halloween half-mile work in 48 2/5 in preparation for Saturday's $6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic.

“I jogged Art Collector,” Mott said. “When we are home, we always give him a jog day after he works, but today we walked him through the paddock and jogged him again and everything went fine.”

Since joining the Mott barn over the summer, the son of 2006 Breeders' Cup Classic runner-up Bernardini and 2011 Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf fourth-place finisher Distorted Legacy is perfect from three starts, including the Alydar Stakes (Listed) at Saratoga, Charles Town Classic (G2) at its namesake course and Woodward (G1) at Belmont.

“He's just improved on his own and we haven't done anything, really, except let him lead one winning effort into another and build himself from race to race,” Mott said. “He's got three races in him now and is just doing really good. He looks stronger and has continued to develop, which is what you hope a 4-year-old is going to do. That's what you want him do and it is what it looks like he's been doing that throughout the course of the year.”

Essential Quality/Knicks Go – Trainer Brad Cox's powerhouse duo of Essential Quality and Knicks Go, both returning Breeders' Cup winners, arrived at Del Mar around 10:30 p.m. Monday from Kentucky and wasted no time getting to work Tuesday. Essential Quality, the 2020 Juvenile winner and 2-year-old champion, jogged, while Knicks Go, the 2020 Dirt Mile winner, galloped once around the track. Both were ridden by regular exercise rider Edvin Vargas.

“Essential Quality was really, really good, he looked amazing training out there,” Cox said. “He was looking around, but that was to be expected. He just jogged. Knicks Go has good energy so he'll probably do a little more. So far, so good. They all shipped in well. It was a long day yesterday, but they all look good.”

Express Train – Express Train, winner of the San Diego Handicap over the Del Mar main track this past summer, continued his preparations for a berth in the Classic Tuesday morning with a strong 1 1/2-mile gallop under regular exercise rider Amy Vasco.

Trainer John Shirreffs, who famously won the 2009 Classic renewal with Zenyatta, reported, “Right now, he's training at a level above his most recent races.  Although he's yet to win at the (Classic's 10-furlong) distance, I'm confident he can get it.”  Shirreffs added, “In the recent Pacific Classic (for which he was the post time favorite), he just didn't get his trip.”

Hot Rod Charlie – Roadrunner Racing, Bill Strauss, Boat Racing and Gainesway Stable's popular 3-year-old colt Hot Rod Charlie continued his Breeders' Cup Classic preparation when leaving Del Mar's Barn Y at 7:45 a.m. and galloping an easy circuit of the dirt track. The 2020 Breeders' Cup Juvenile runner-up and half-brother to 2019 Breeders' Cup Sprint winner Mitole drew post three of nine in the $6 million race and will be ridden by Flavien Prat, who has been aboard for five of his 11 races. Trained by Doug O'Neill, he will seek to be the conditioner's sixth World Championships winner.

“I think there's such a long run to the first turn, so any nine of the posts is probably not a big deal, but it's good that Flavien knows him so well and 'Charlie' has good gate speed,” O'Neill said. “He will try to put himself in a good position. It's nine solid horses and nine solid jockeys, so it's really all a matter of positioning and I feel good that we can find ourselves a good spot.”

O'Neill seeks his first Classic victory after five losses: Lava Man (2006), Richard's Kid (2012), Handsome Mike (2012) and Pavel (2017, 2018).

Max Player – George Hall and SportBLX Thoroughbred Corp's Max Player walked the shedrow Tuesday morning, one day after completing his final work in advance of the Classic, and assistant trainer Scott Blasi reported that the horse came out of the half-mile work well.

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, who is seeking his third Classic victory, was scheduled to arrive later Tuesday.

Medina Spirit – Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit, conditioned by four-time Classic winner Bob Baffert, was on the track this morning shortly after the renovation break for his daily gallop.  The sophomore colt is the co-third choice in the morning line for Saturday's Classic.

Stilleto Boy – Steve Moger's Stilleto Boy worked an easy 4f in 52 1/5 under jockey Kent Desormeaux over a fast track Tuesday morning at Del Mar.

Stilleto Boy galloped once around before setting about his work.

“The first time around at the seven-eighths pole he was looking at all the photographers but the second time, he was all business,” Desormeaux said. “It was either going to be 51 or 48 (seconds) and when I got to the quarter pole, I toned him down a bit. I liked what I felt this morning.”

Trainer Ed Moger Jr. was happy with the work.

“He didn't need to go quick,” Moger said of Stilleto Boy, who had worked a best-of-15 5f at Santa Anita last Wednesday before shipping to Del Mar.

Runner-up to Medina Spirit in the Awesome Again in his most recent start, Stilleto Boy is 30-1 on the morning line for the Classic and will break from post seven.

Triopoli – Pacific Classic winner Tripoli galloped Tuesday morning with assistant trainer Juan Leyva aboard. Trainer John Sadler is expected to drive down from his Santa Anita Park base Thursday.

“We know he likes this track and he likes the distance,” Leyva said. “He's settled in again here and is doing well. If the race falls apart, he could get a piece of it.”

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‘Older, Wiser And Hopefully A Little Better’: Desormeaux, Hess Back Together For Breeders’ Cup

In 1991, Robert B. Hess, Jr., won the first of back-to-back Del Mar training titles. In 1992, Hess' championship cohort was jockey Kent Desormeaux, who would score his first of back-to-back riding titles and rack up 135 wins in the two-year span.

A lot has happened in the 30 years since.

Desormeaux, 51, has notched victories in three Kentucky Derbies, three Preakness and a Belmont Stakes. He has six Breeders' Cup wins, three Eclipse Awards and has held membership in racing's Hall of Fame since 2004. With two wins Sunday at Santa Anita, Equibase statistics show him with 6,101 career victories from 32,413 mounts in a 35-year career.

Hess, 56, has gone nationwide with strings in Kentucky and Florida. But the native of Chula Vista has remained headquartered in Southern California and unabashedly citing Del Mar as holding a special place in his heart.

“Del Mar is my paradise,” Hess said Sunday. It is, after all, the place that provided him with his first winner (Palapiano, July 31, 1987), first training title in 1991 and first graded stakes winner (River Special, 1992 Del Mar Futurity).

And as they have over the years, Desormeaux and Hess are hoping to make headlines again when they team up with Cairo Memories in the Juvenile Fillies Turf and Chaos Theory in the Turf Sprint during Breeders' Cup weekend.

“I've got gray hair and he's got a couple of wrinkles, but hopefully we're older, wiser and hopefully a little better,” Hess said. “But we have the A-team back together and we're looking forward to it.”

Cairo Memories, a daughter of Cairo Prince, was pre-entered in the Juvenile Fillies and Juvenile Fillies Turf and will go in the $1 million, one mile grass event. She is 2-for-2 in a career begun at Del Mar on Sept. 5 and comes in off a win in the Surfer Girl Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 3.

“Cairo is splendid, a wonderful, gifted filly and just a pleasure to be around,” Hess said. “Unless the jock screws it up (with a wink toward Desormeaux), I think we'll get the money.”

Chaos Theory, like Cairo Memories owned by David Bernsen and partners, is a 6-year-old gelded son of Curlin. He has six wins in 18 starts with earnings of $359,454. Chaos Theory is 0-for-5 in 2021 but won both his career starts at Del Mar – the Green Flash in August and an optional claimer in November of 2020. Desormeaux was aboard for the first time in a third-place finish in the Eddie D Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 1.

Chaos Theory is one of 19 pre-entered in the $1 million, five-furlong event.

“Chaos, if he gets in, will run fantastic,” Hess said. “I've tweaked a few things, Kent knows him even better and it will be at his favorite distance on his favorite turf course.”

Desormeaux has one other Breeders' Cup mount lined up, Oviatt Class in the $2 million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile for his trainer/brother Keith.

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Hess, Desormeaux A Winning Trainer-Jockey Duo

Bob Hess Jr. and Kent Desormeaux could have been winners in another sport.

Hess had aspirations as a Major Leaguer when pitching for Stanford University in 1983-84, playing for his college team with future Major Leaguers Jack McDowell, Mike Andrete, and Ed Sprague before graduating with a degree in economics.

Louisiana native Desormeaux, 51, had visions of becoming another Pete Maravich but came up short, however not as a rider. In 1989, he won 598 races, a record that still stands.

Each went on to become established in their eventual profession, horse racing. All these years later, they remain one of racing's most successful trainer-jockey combos, having enjoyed a magical run of some 500 victories at a nearly 35 percent average.

For bettors, it's a winning formula that has evolved into Hess + Desormeaux = profit. Case in point: a classic ride by Desormeaux gave Hess another victory when Aloha Kitten purred home first by a half-length despite stumbling badly at the start in Friday's opening race at an $11.80 payoff at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif. It was the first start in more than five months for the daughter of Kitten's Joy.

The latest stakes win came with Cairo Memories in last Sunday's $200,000 Surfer Girl Stakes for two-year-old fillies at a mile on turf. Owned by long-time client Cathy Schroeder and David Bernsen, the $50,000 bargain daughter of Cairo Prince earned $120,000 and is unbeaten in two races, one more impressive than the other.

Next up, Del Mar's $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at one mile at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif., on Nov. 5.

Bob, 56, is the son of a famous trainer, and Kent, a naturally gifted Hall of Fame jockey and three-time Kentucky Derby winner, reached the apex in a racing family that includes respected multiple graded stakes-winning trainer Keith, his older brother.

Ultimately, the Bob and Kent show coalesced into one of racing's winningest jockey-trainer combos, reminiscent of yesteryear when one jockey rode exclusively for one stable.

“Other than the obvious,” Hess said, “our relationship is based on mutual trust and respect. There are plenty of top riders out here. But with Kent and I, it all starts with being honest with one another, trusting each other and respecting each other.”

It's a rock-solid foundation that more than three decades later still doesn't seem to have a pebble in its path.

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Cairo Memories Moving Forward Toward Breeders’ Cup With Surfer Girl Triumph

A close third heading into the far turn, the Bob Hess Jr. conditioned Cairo Memories set sail for home leaving the quarter pole and was never threatened through the lane en route to a 2 ¼-length score in Sunday's $200,000 Surfer Girl Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.  Ridden by Kent Desormeaux, the 2-year-old filly by Cairo Prince got one mile on turf in 1:34.27 and will now likely start in the $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf on Nov. 5 at Del Mar.

“She's been doing everything right,” said Hess.  “We were encouraged by the way she broke her maiden and she's been moving forward in her training.  Hopefully, this sets us up for the Breeders' Cup dance.”

A 4 ½-length one mile maiden turf winner in her debut Sept. 5, Cairo Memories was the second choice in a field of 11 at 4-1 and paid $10.00, $4.60 and $3.00.

“She brought some new energy from her first start,” said Desormeaux.  “I think she was excited.  I spent more time in the post parade calming her down…I worked her at Del Mar and before I ever rode her I thought she was great…I was with the owners in the paddock and that was the longest wait because I wanted to see how deep the water was, and she's shown (now) that she could really swim.”

Owned by David Bernsen, LLC and Schroeder Farms, LLC, Cairo Memories, who is out of the Indian Charlie mare Incarnate Memories, picked up $120,000 for the win, hiking her earnings to $162,000.

The 3-2 favorite with Flavien Prat, Irish-bred Helens Well rallied from next to last to finish second by a neck over Hemmerle and paid $3.00 and $2.40.

Off at 12-1 with Joe Bravo, Hemmerle was out-run late to finish third by a neck over Irish-bred Sterling Crest and paid $5.40 to show.

Fractions on the race were 22.14, 45.72, 1:10 flat and 1:22.26.

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