This Side Up: Maximum Respect for Security ‘Measures’

It’s not his fault. But the fact is that Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) has become one of the most chronicled, most contentious Thoroughbreds of recent times. From a lawsuit over his disqualification at Churchill, to the scandal engulfing his former trainer, to his frozen Arabian treasures, to the merit (or otherwise) of his debut for a new barn, one way or another, this extraordinary creature cannot keep out of the headlines.

If feeling mischievous, indeed, one might almost say that he will not be the only polarizing incumbent facing a critical test in the first week of November. True, Maximum Security can’t strictly be described as incumbent, at least not in terms of the GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic. He sat out the race last year, and was duly confined to a divisional championship. Nonetheless he unmistakably returned from the desert in February as the horse setting standards for the next generation.

Since then, of course, he has contributed a chaos all of his own to the wider upheavals of 2020. Who would have thought not only that Maximum Security could generate still more splenetic debate than he did in the Derby, but also that a new name is yet to be engraved on the trophy, nearly 16 months after his own was effaced by that of Country House (Lookin At Lucky)?

Even the horses he runs against seem to become mere silhouettes against glare of his extrovert talent and career. Very few people, for instance, stopped to ask whether the main reason Maximum Security was pushed so hard in the GII San Diego H. might simply be that Midcourt (Midnight Lute) has now matured into an extremely potent racehorse. Instead they treated him as measuring either an incipient decline in Maximum Security, or merely the various mitigations that were certainly available to him (long layoff, tactics used by his substitute jockey, etc). Never mind that Midcourt’s brilliant performance, to some of us, was something that has been brewing for a good while and never mind the fascinating questions it raised about his own future.

At least their rematch in the GI TVG Pacific Classic at Del Mar  Saturday will permit Midcourt a second hearing. Poor old Country House, in contrast, sidled back onto the news agenda this week almost with an air of apology.

Yet while his advent at Darby Dan for 2021 received approximately one zillionth of the column inches meanwhile claimed by the horse he supplanted in the Derby, the beauty of this game is that Country House could yet have the last laugh.

Which would be no less than his connections deserve. They would hardly have chosen the uncomfortable manner in which they requited the Derby craving that unites every American horseman. Very soon afterwards, moreover, they had to relinquish any hope that Country House could restore due attention to his own merits, out on the track, instead compressing all ambition into the single, desperate prayer that he might recover from laminitis.

How gratifying, then, that he has safely secured a sequel to what was treated by many, at 65-to-1, as a pretty irritating supporting role in the Maximum Security drama. Certainly he will benefit from the best of stewardship, at his historic new home, and he has been priced as a virtual bet-to-nothing. His fee is just $7,500, and you can even get a lifetime breeding right in exchange for two foalings at a bare $5,000.

Country House is by one of the most underrated sires of his time, out of a mare whose two winners from just three other foals of racing age include one at graded stakes level. But the golden hinge of his pedigree is the Sam-Son matriarch No Class, who famously belied her name as the dam of four champions. Her celebrated daughter Classy ‘n Smart (also dam of Dance Smartly) produced Lookin At Lucky’s sire Smart Strike and her son Sky Classic is the sire of Country House’s Grade I-placed granddam.

Quite clearly, the expertise of Bill Mott had long warranted the formal gilding of a Derby success. In the event, however, he must almost feel as though the Churchill slop had smeared the protagonists with some indelible curse; Country House, never to race again and Maximum Security, as it turns out, seldom to break free of controversy.

Someday, perhaps, the Country House team will be granted a chance to purge all bitterness from this bittersweet saga. Who knows? Someday Mott could train a son of Country House to win the race–and, this time, on a straight knockout.

Even the bare form of County House’s final rehearsal, closing from off the pace for third in the GI Arkansas Derby, has acquired a persuasive luster through the subsequent endeavors of Omaha Beach (War Front) and Improbable (City Zip). That day Country House simply got the points he needed for a Derby gate. Three weeks later, he got the cavalry stampede he needed to draw out all his toughness and stamina.

Whatever the merits of the case weighed by the Churchill stewards, and by various lawyers since, Country House finished the Derby like a colt that would take a world of beating in the GI Belmont S. And who knows where his ongoing maturity–his third birthday fell four days after the Derby–might yet have taken him, in those other races by which we judge a Classic racehorse?

Taken alone, away from the feuding and the furore, his Derby performance was a coming-of-age. It was achieved by Mott sending him out there to learn on the job, with a race every month since December, taking in five different states. Country House appeared to be motoring on Nodouble gas, piped from the sire of No Class, one of the toughest and most indefatigable campaigners of the postwar era. What a cruel irony, then, that he should then have been unravelled by a luckless physical malady.

Country House will carry one of two consecutive asterisks in the Derby annals–neither, of course, suggesting the slightest deficiency or culpability. But perhaps the capricious fortunes of the Turf may yet offer both these crops some equalizing, symmetrical final drama, bringing all the opprobrium and discord to a clean, coherent finale.

An authoritative success for Maximum Security at Del Mar would set up a redemptive showdown at Keeneland with whichever sophomore finally engraves his name below that of Country House on the Classic roll of honor. Because the September Derby, as things stand, certainly has an auspiciously poised, triangular aspect: an East Coast monster at the apex, with a baseline challenge persisting from both the Midwest, through Art Collector (Bernardini), and the West, through Midcourt’s buddy Honor A.P. (Honor Code).

In view of his trainer’s genius, and that leisurely explosion in his workout last week, I certainly haven’t given up on Honor A.P. despite his recent reverse. These animals are always a work in progress. It may ultimately prove, for instance, that Midcourt will reserve his very best for a mile, but he could hardly pass up a storied Grade I in his backyard with just a handful of runners. Either way, the continued fulfilment of his potential would never have got even this far in less patient and sensitive hands.

As it happens, between Mott and the vets, much the same could be said of Country House. And if we’ll never know quite how far he might have progressed, on the track, at least his salvaged stud career might let him give us a hint.

The post This Side Up: Maximum Respect for Security ‘Measures’ appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Coronavirus Spread, Racial Justice Demonstrations: Louisville Mayor Won’t Attend Kentucky Derby

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer told the Courier-Journal on Thursday that his current plan doesn't include attending this year's Kentucky Derby, rescheduled for Sept. 5 at Churchill Downs. Fischer usually does attend the annual event.

Churchill has already announced it will close the infield and restrict the number of attendees for this year's race, down from approximately 150,000 to 23,000.

Fischer cited the rising rate of coronavirus cases in Louisville, which his chief medical officer, Dr. Sarah Moyer, has compared to a “wildfire,” as well as the racial justice demonstrations being planned for that day in Louisville by the NFAC. The demonstrations are a response to the death of Breonna Taylor, a nationally publicized case in which the Black woman was fatally shot by Louisville police.

“We do expect some people in town for that,” Fischer said. “Obviously we want to make sure we're connected to everything that's going on and planning accordingly. Like every day, that will be a busy day, just a little more so with the running of the races.”

Read more at the Courier-Journal.

The post Coronavirus Spread, Racial Justice Demonstrations: Louisville Mayor Won’t Attend Kentucky Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘It Doesn’t Matter What Year You’re In It’: Joseph Looking Forward To Ny Traffic’s Run In Kentucky Derby

Trainer Saffie Joseph, Jr. said he was looking for a little more out of Ny Traffic in his penultimate work towards the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby on September 5 at Churchill Downs, and the conditioner got just what he wanted when the four-time graded stakes placed son of Cross Traffic went a sharp five-eighths in 59.03 on Thursday morning over the Saratoga main track.

“He seems happy and that's the most important thing,” Joseph Jr. said. “I think that was our stiff work and it went as well as we could have wanted it to go. We just wanted him to come into a bit of urgency so the work will bring him forward and I think he got something out of it.”

Bred in the Empire State by Brian Culnan, Ny Traffic will arrive at the Kentucky Derby off runner-up finishes in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby on March 21 at Fair Grounds, the Grade 3 Matt Winn on May 23 at Churchill Downs and the Grade 1 Haskell Invitational on July 18 at Monmouth Park, where he came up a nose shy of victory to wire-to-wire winner Authentic.

Ny Traffic will have one more work at Saratoga before shipping to Churchill Downs either next Sunday or Monday.

“We're ahead of schedule. We planned it that way in case we have to change things because of the weather,” Joseph Jr. said. “Right now, the weather has rain on Thursday or Friday so he could work next week any day between Thursday or Saturday of next week.”

Joseph Jr. is still relishing the opportunity to compete in the historic event for the first time.

“Obviously we are in a strange year, but in 30-40 years when you look back, it doesn't matter what year you're in it,” Joseph Jr. said. “It's still the Derby. If we can win it this year, it won't mean any less. It will mean everything.”

Ny Traffic is fifth on the Kentucky Derby leaderboard with 110 points, which he garnered from his three runner-up efforts as well as a third-place finish in the Grade 1 Risen Star at Fair Grounds in February.

Joseph, Jr. said he is cautiously optimistic his colt will put in a winning performance against fellow New York-bred and likely race favorite Tiz the Law.

“We definitely feel that we're taking a horse with a chance. He's an outsider, but he has a legit chance,” Joseph, Jr. said. “Sometimes you take horses there that you know have no chance, but you still hope. But we feel that we have a horse that on his best day could upset them. Tiz the Law, he's a class above everybody. His record speaks for itself and we respect him, but we hope we can beat him.”

Also working for Joseph, Jr. on Thursday morning was Math Wizard, who provided the conditioner with his first Grade 1 victory when taking last year's Pennsylvania Derby. The son of Algorithms went a half-mile in 48.71 seconds and will most likely compete in next Saturday's Grade 2 Charles Town Classic, but is possible for the Grade 1, $500,000 Woodward on September 5 at Saratoga.

“Charles Town is in play, but the Woodward is on the backburner,” Joseph, Jr. said. “He worked well this morning and it would be his last work if he ends up going to Charles Town. We'll play it by ear and talk to the owner and see what they want to do.”

Two-time graded stakes winner Tonalist's Shape went five furlongs in 1:01.22 over the Saratoga main track and is likely for either the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks on Friday, September 4 or the Grade 2 Eight Belles at Churchill Downs on the same day.

The post ‘It Doesn’t Matter What Year You’re In It’: Joseph Looking Forward To Ny Traffic’s Run In Kentucky Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Derby Jockeys: With Several Big Names Staying Home, Kentucky Riders Get A Shot In The Big Dance

In a normal year, jockeys would be hard-pressed to miss their flights to Louisville for a chance to ride in the Kentucky Derby. Obviously, 2020 has been anything but a normal year, with the coronavirus pandemic pushing the Run for the Roses back to Sept. 5 and drawing up jockey travel restrictions all around the United States.

Last week, Churchill Downs announced that riders wanting to participate in the Derby will have to arrive in the state of Kentucky by Aug. 31, and participate in several additional coronavirus precautions.

As such, a number of prominent U.S. jockeys won't be making the trip to Kentucky. Jose and Irad Ortiz will both stay in New York, as will Joel Rosario, reports the Daily Racing Form, and last year's Derby winner Flavien Prat will stay in Southern California.

Those choices have opened the doors for Kentucky-based riders to have a chance to pick up a mount in the Derby.

Here's a look at the current 3-year-olds pointing to the Kentucky Derby, and their jockeys (plus state in which they are based), in order of points earned.

  1. Tiz the Law – Manny Franco (New York) – 372
  2. Authentic – John Velazquez (New York) – 200
  3. Art Collector – Brian Hernandez, Jr. (Kentucky) – 150
  4. Honor A. P. – Mike Smith (California) – 140
  5. Ny Traffic – TBD (last ridden by Paco Lopez) – 110
  6. King Guillermo – Samy Camacho (Florida) – 90
  7. Thousand Words – Florent Geroux (Kentucky) – 83
  8. Dr Post – TBD (last ridden by Joe Bravo) – 80
  9. Max Player – Ricardo Santana, Jr. (Kentucky) – 60
  10. Caracaro – TBD (last ridden by Javier Castellano) – 60
  11. Enforceable – Adam Beschizza (Kentucky) – 43
  12. Rushie – TBD (last ridden by Javier Castellano) – 40
  13. Major Fed – James Graham (Kentucky) – 38
  14. Storm the Court – Julien Leparoux (Kentucky) – 36
  15. Attachment Rate – Joe Talamo (Kentucky) – 35
  16. Sole Volante – Luca Panici (Florida) – 30
  17. Finnick the Fierce – TBD (last ridden by Jose Ortiz) – 25
  18. Winning Impression – Joe Rocco, Jr. (Kentucky) – 20
  19. Necker Island – Mitchell Murrill (Kentucky) – 14
  20. Shirl's Speight – Rafael Hernandez (Canada) – 0
  21. Money Moves – TBD (last ridden by Luis Saez) – 0

The post Derby Jockeys: With Several Big Names Staying Home, Kentucky Riders Get A Shot In The Big Dance appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights