Life Is Good Justifies the Hype in San Felipe

Representing part of the group that campaigned 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify (Scat Daddy), and sharing a sire and some quirks with last year's Horse of the Year Authentic (Into Mischief), Life Is Good further asserted his position as the best of Bob Baffert's current crop of 3-year-olds Saturday, demolishing his competition in the GII San Felipe S. at Santa Anita. WinStar Farm and CHC Inc.'s 'TDN Rising Star' was a 9 1/2-length sprint winner on debut at Del Mar Nov. 22, and had been off since defeating stablemate Medina Spirit (Protonico) by 3/4 of a length in the Jan. 2 GIII Sham S., good for a 101 Beyer Speed Figure.

Right to the lead from the rail as expected, the overwhelming 1-2 favorite was able to get several lengths of separation down the backside as a hard-held Medina Spirit took the first turn wide, floating The Great One (Nyquist) wider. Still traveling well within himself after a :48.83 half, the bay entered the stretch some five lengths to the good, but again displayed his previously seen antics of drifting out in the stretch. He had the extra ground to give up, however, and cruised under the line a jaw-dropping eight lengths clear. Medina Spirit held second, while 'Rising Stars' Dream Shake (Twirling Candy) and Roman Centurian (Empire Maker) completed the trifecta and super, respectively.

“He's learning to settle. He's maturing and getting smarter,” said winning rider Mike Smith, who also rode Justify. “Early on, he was so used to exploding from the pole or the gate. He's learning how to run now which is the big key, and he's learning how to get into a rhythm. The rhythm is going to be a bit fast because he is that good and he has an extremely high cruising speed. We are going to have to work on some little quirks. He starts looking at things because he is out there by himself, but I can't take so much of a hold of him to give him company either, so it's a catch-22.

The Hall of Famer continued, “He's just so talented. I had a strong hold on him down to the wire, just holding onto him making sure that he stayed straight… This horse is like that Muhammad Ali song. He floats like a butterfly, and stings like a bee.”

As for Life Is Good's potential to stretch out further, Smith said, “I think he showed that he could get the distance, when a horse can get a mile and sixteenth the way he did today, it gives you every indication they could go an eighth of a mile further.”

Baffert added, “”I like the way he got away from the gate, both of my horses got away cleanly, they were in a good spot.  Down the backside that's where this horse can get a little tough and I was hoping we'd get a little 47 and change. But Mike he just sat on him, he was doing it so easily, I saw 46 and four I said, 'well, I think I could live with that. I always thought he could be a super horse, we'll find out today', but at the quarter pole I could tell he was just still cruising, just doing it easy. I just feel fortunate that I have this horse in my barn. My horse that ran second (Medina Spirit), he's a really nice horse and  I felt bad I had to run him against him, but they need these races and I didn't want to ship yet so I'm just  happy for the China Horse Club. It's nice to come out here, it feels a little festive today watching these good horses run.”

Life Is Good was made the 7-1 favorite among individual betting choices in the GI Kentucky Derby future wager pool that closed Feb. 14. As of Saturday evening he was the 4-1 public pick in the pool set to close Sunday evening. He is now tied with last Saturday's GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth S. winner Greatest Honour (Tapit) atop the GI Kentucky Derby leaderboard with 60 points.

Saturday, Santa Anita
SAN FELIPE S.-GII, $301,000, Santa Anita, 3-6, 3yo, 1 1/16m, 1:42.18, ft.
1–LIFE IS GOOD, 122, c, 3, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Beach Walk, by Distorted Humor
                2nd Dam: Bonnie Blue Flag, by Mineshaft
                3rd Dam: Tap Your Feet, by Dixieland Band
($525,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP). O-WinStar Farm LLC and CHC INC.;
B-Gary & Mary West Stables Inc. (KY); T-Bob Baffert; J-Mike E.
Smith. $180,000. Lifetime Record: 3-3-0-0, $274,200.
'TDN Rising Star'. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple Plus*. Click
for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Medina Spirit, 122, c, 3, Protonico–Mongolian Changa, by
Brilliant Speed. ($1,000 Ylg '19 OBSWIN; $35,000 2yo '20
OBSOPN). O-Zedan Racing Stables Inc; B-Gail Rice (FL); T-Bob
Baffert. $60,000.
3–Dream Shake, 120, c, 3, Twirling Candy–Even Song, by Street
Cry (Ire). ($32,000 Ylg '19 KEESEP; $75,000 2yo '20 OBSAPR).
O-Exline-Border Racing LLC, SAF Racing and Hausman,
Richard; B-Dunwoody Farm (KY); T-Peter Eurton. $36,000.
'TDN Rising Star'
Margins: 8, 2 1/4, 3 1/4. Odds: 0.50, 3.30, 8.70.
Also Ran: Roman Centurian, The Great One, None Above the Law, Govenor's Party. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

Pedigree Notes:

After being perched on various stages of the Derby trail the past few years with luminaries like champions Maximum Security (New Year's Day), Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}), and West Coast (Flatter), breeders Gary and Mary West are back this year in a big way with last month's GII San Vicente S. winner Concert Tour (Street Sense)–who they still own–and Life Is Good, both undefeated, and both 'TDN Rising Stars'.

Life Is Good also has the nation's hottest sire going for him in Into Mischief, whose 90 black-type winners and 37 graded winners include last year's Horse of the Year Authentic. The Spendthrift sire currently leads the 2021 North American rankings by earnings, black-type horses, and graded winners. Life Is Good's broodmare sire, Distorted Humor, is also one of the best in the business with 108 stakes winners out of his daughters. Five stakes winners (and 12 stakes performers) are specifically by Into Mischief out of a Distorted Humor mare, including MGISW Practical Joke.

Life Is Good's dam, Beach Walk, who sold as a $435,000 Keeneland September yearling, has a 2020 filly by Blame and was bred back to Candy Ride (Arg). Beach Walk's dam, SW & MGISP Bonnie Blue Flag (Mineshaft), sold for $1.5 million at Fasig-Tipton in 2011, but had dropped to just $15,000 at Keeneland in 2019. Bonnie Blue Flag's fourth dam, Court Circuit (Royal Vale), produced MGSWs Honorable Miss (Damascus), whose name is still honored with a graded race at Saratoga, and Bailjumper (Damascus), who still appears in pedigrees as the broodmare sire of super stallion Medaglia d'Oro.

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Dollars No Measure of Heritage–Or Potential

Life may not be especially Good, just yet–but let's hope that it's at least getting a little better, however slowly. Certainly we must trust that's true of the wider world, as science strives to stem the pandemic. For a margin of our parish going through troubles of its own, equally, no less commitment and tenacity are proving necessary to see out a long road.

Two years ago, remember, they couldn't stage the GII San Felipe S. at all after a harrowing spate of catastrophic injuries. A racetrack many of us cherish as much as any in the world has since done exemplary work in relieving what felt uncomfortably like an existential crisis. Events at Golden Gate Fields on Thursday, however, ensured that nobody in the neighborhood can be complacent.

No doubt those depressed by the outlook will meanwhile be quick to disparage the “Wild West Bonus” as just a fistful of dollars, compared to the riches tempting maturing handicap horses to a distant desert. But let's give due credit, again, to California's premier tracks for doing what they can to fight this second front against the forces of attrition.

For even if the Californian industry can overcome the zealotry of its enemies, it still faces daunting internal challenges just to maintain a viable racing population. At a time like this, then, the staging of two races dating back to Santa Anita's foundation reminds us all of what is at stake.

It goes without saying that owners of top-class Thoroughbreds can run where and when they wish. But now that Arlington Park is being touted to developers–in the view of trainer Mike Stidham, a desecration akin to selling off a National Park–we must all remember how much our sport depends on its past for its future; and our collective responsibility as the current custodians of that heritage. As such, even bystanders are absolutely entitled, however irrelevant or impertinent our opinions overall, to applaud those who understand that some things are too precious to be reduced to dollars and cents.

An extra $1 million for sweeping three historic Grade Is (Saturday's Santa Anita Handicap, the Hollywood Gold Cup, and the TVG Pacific Classic) may not measure up to fabulous prizemoney in Riyadh and Dubai. But if the westerns taught us anything, it was never to despair–however hopelessly outgunned–of such resources as we do retain. Remember Pale Rider? “There's nothing like a nice piece of hickory.”

Happily, Godolphin's U.S. racetrack division is on a sufficient roll to cover all bases with two of the most exciting 4-year-olds around. Stidham sends Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper) to his owner-breeder's homeland for the World Cup; while Maxfield takes his unbeaten record for Brendan Walsh out to the Big 'Cap.

Ironic that this race made its name with its purse, as “the Hundred-Grander.” Happily, there are people around today who recognize that its cumulative luster goes deeper than the mere glister of gold. Hats off to the Hronis brothers and trainer John Sadler, then, for adding three different horses to the roll of honor as 81st, 82nd and 83rd winners; and likewise, now, to the track managements that have shown pride and initiative in presenting the 84th as the first leg in a series that could bank you $1.87 million overall.

The San Felipe also goes right back to the track's beginnings but has arguably, in recent times, become a more likely race to showcase legitimate Grade I talent. If there's a top-class sophomore in California, chances are you will see him here, Authentic (Into Mischief) having last year maintained the modern resonance of a race won by the likes of California Chrome, Pioneerof The Nile, Medaglia d'Oro, Point Given, Fusaichi Pegasus, Sunday Silence and Affirmed-who came back the following year, of course, to win the Big 'Cap.

Life Is Good arrives in the hoofprints of Authentic, while I like the grounding Roman Centurian (Empire Maker) is getting before stretching out to the kind of test that will draw out his full potential. But it is the favorite's barnmate, Medina Spirit (Protonico), who threatens to become the story of the whole crop.

Because the premise on which we started–that we can't make every dream for a Thoroughbred determined by the amount of money involved–applies no less to the stakes than to the rewards.

Apart from anything else, Medina Spirit is reminding everyone that Bob Baffert's first three Kentucky Derby winners were respectively an $85,000 2-year-old, a $17,000 yearling, and a $20,000 RNA. In other words, the expensive horses we see in his care today need Baffert more than he needs them. That said, these days they do tend to fill out his shedrow. So the big surprise is that Medina Spirit managed to find lodgings there in the first place.

He actually changed hands for just $1,000 as a short yearling before being pinhooked by Christy Whitman at Ocala last July. Agent Gary Young had already spent $1.35 million on behalf of the same client, Amr Zedan, for a filly in the same ring the previous month and Princess Noor (Not This Time) proceeded to win a Grade I just a few weeks later. She had been bred by International Equities Holding, whose owner Oussama Aboughazale is a friend of Zedan from the holy city of Medina. Since Protonico had raced for Aboughazale, Zedan was curious about a colt who figures among just 17 named foals in his first crop; Young gave an encouraging report, and they landed him for $35,000.

So it was presumably his connections, first and foremost, that earned Medina Spirit a probation with Baffert's assistant Mike Marlow at Los Alamitos. Yet he kept holding his own against more expensive horses and the rest is, well, threatening to turn into history.

Medina Spirit is actually perfectly entitled to overcome the obscurity of his antecedents. Damsire Brilliant Speed, a son of Dynaformer who won the GI Blue Grass before ending up on turf, was unfortunate to be extinguished from memory by a lightning bolt aged just eight; while High Yield (Storm Cat) is not the only accomplished graduate of what is a good Rokeby family. As for Protonico, his second dam Wild Spirit (Chi) (Hussonet) was top-class in her homeland before being exported to win a Grade I for Bobby Frankel.

She's a graduate of Aboughazale's Haras Sumaya, a significant operation in Chile now complemented by an expanding Kentucky program. So this is hardly a case of David against Goliath. Nonetheless Medina Spirit reminds us that even the steepest odds can be overcome, with a nice enough piece of hickory. That's an important article of faith, in these embattled times: whether for our species, in general, or for the Californian branch of our community, in particular. If a $1,000 short yearling can become one of the Derby favorites, then we must surely persevere–through our belief, our enthusiasm and our actions–in ensuring that professionals and public alike, come 2121, will be looking forward to the 184th running of the Big 'Cap.

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Life Is Good Puts Perfect Record on the Line in San Felipe

Unbeaten 'TDN Rising Star' Life Is Good (Into Mischief), the 7-1 individual favorite in Pool 3 of the GI Kentucky Derby Future Wager, will look to go three-for-three in Saturday's GII San Felipe S. The 1 1/16-miles contest offers 50-20-10-5 points on the road to the Kentucky Derby.

The blowout debut winner at Del Mar Nov. 22 set an uncontested pace while making his two turn-debut in the GIII Sham S. Jan. 2, and, after very confident handling beneath Mike Smith in the stretch, held a 3/4-length advantage over stablemate Medina Spirit (Protonico). The rail-drawn, 4-5 morning-line favorite tackles an additional sixteenth of a mile in the San Felipe.

Life Is Good, owned by CHC Inc. and WinStar Farm, is on the same trajectory, to this point at least, as another Bob Baffert-trained son of Into Mischief, the brilliant Authentic, who pulled off the Sham/San Felipe double in 2020 en route to a Horse of the Year campaign, which also included wins in the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

The bargain $35,000 OBSOPN buy Medina Spirit, meanwhile, proved his effort in the Sham was certainly legit with a refuse-to-lose, front-running tally by a neck after taking heat through fast fractions in the GIII Robert B. Lewis S. Jan. 30.

“He's a good horse and I could tell that Mike was just cruising out there,” Baffert said of Life Is Good after the Sham. “It reminded me a lot of Authentic last year, when he did the same thing, and he looked like a drunk out there coming down [the stretch]. I think Mike did a great job just sort of cruising around there and it was just the kind of race we were looking for. They ran pretty fast, these are two good horses.”

'TDN Rising Star' Roman Centurian (Empire Maker) closed from last of six and made a flashy, four-wide rally on the far turn to finish a strong second in a blanket photo after bumping with a rival in the stretch in his stakes debut in the Robert B. Lewis.

“He's a very talented horse,” trainer Simon Callaghan said. “I think the San Felipe will reveal a lot, but again, Roman Centurian is a very good horse. I'm happy with him and looking forward to the race.”

Dream Shake (Twirling Candy) heads straight to the deep end for trainer Peter Eurton following an eye-catching 'TDN Rising Star' debut score at 20-1–good for a 96 Beyer Speed Figure–going 6 1/2 furlongs at Santa Anita Feb. 7. The stacked field that day included the very hyped Baffert-trained firster Bezos (Empire Maker), who never fired in seventh.

The Great One (Nyquist), second, beaten a nose as a maiden in the GII Los Alamitos Futurity Dec. 19, enters off a blowout 14-length graduation for Doug O'Neill over three rivals at Santa Anita Jan. 23.

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Promising Baffert Trainee Life Is Good Headlines San Felipe

A winner of a Grade 3 stakes on Jan. 2, Bob Baffert's lightly raced Life Is Good heads an outstanding field of seven sophomores going a mile and one sixteenth in Saturday's Grade 2, $300,000 San Felipe Stakes at Santa Anita.

A key prep for the Grade 1 Runhappy Santa Anita Derby on April 3, the San Felipe, which was won last year by Baffert's eventual Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic winner Authentic, will be contested for the 83rd time, with Baffert bidding to win it for a record eighth time on Saturday.

Owned by CHC, Inc. and WinStar Farm, Life Is Good, a Kentucky-bred colt by Into Mischief out of the Distorted Humor mare Beach Walk, was making his second start in the Sham and was off as the 1-5 favorite. Although he opened up a four length advantage at the top of the lane, he narrowly held sway by three quarters of a length over stablemate Medina Spirit, who helps provide Baffert with a solid one-two punch on Saturday.

A 9 ½ length first-out maiden winner at 1-5 going 6 ½ furlongs on Nov. 22 at Del Mar, Life Is Good, a $525,000 Keeneland September Yearling, has been no secret and will likely go favored in his third start with regular rider Mike Smith up.

Baffert is also well-armed with Medina Spirit, who comes off a gutty neck win at even money in the Grade 3 Robert B. Lewis Stakes at a mile and one sixteenth on Jan. 30. A bargain $35,000 purchase at age two, Medina Spirit set a fast pace and was extra game in victory while prevailing over both Roman Centurian and highly regarded Hot Rod Charlie on the gallop out as well. A fast finishing second, beaten three quarters of length by his stablemate Life Is Good in the Grade 3 Sham on Jan. 2, Medina Spirit has shown tremendous heart in his last two races.

Owned by Zedan Racing, Stables, Inc., Medina Spirit is a Florida-bred colt by the Giant's Causeway stallion Prontonico, out of Mongolian Changa, by Brilliant Speed. A winner of two of his three starts, Medina Spirit will be ridden for the first time by eastern-based John Velazquez.

Second, beaten a nose by Baffert's Spielberg while still a maiden in the Grade 2 Los Alamitos Futurity Dec. 19, Doug O'Neill's The Great One came back to blitz maidens by 14 lengths in a one mile maiden race here on Jan. 23. A Louisiana-bred colt by O'Neill's 2016 Florida and Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist, The Great One has the benefit of ample seasoning, as he'll be making his sixth start and be going a route of ground for the fifth consecutive time.

A $185,000 purchase at age two, The Great One, who is out of the El Corredor mare Little Ms Protocol, is owned by Colorado Avalanche defenseman Erik Johnson's ERJ Racing LLC, Train Wreck Al Racing Stables, Niall J. Brennan, Tom Fritz and William Strauss and is named for NHL hockey legend Wayne Gretzky.

A big second, beaten a neck by Medina Spirit in the Grade 3 Lewis Stakes Jan. 30, Simon Callaghan's Roman Centurian, who was an impressive maiden winner at the San Felipe distance two starts back on Jan. 3, rallied from well off the pace to come up a neck short in a three-horse Robert B. Lewis photo. Tractable early, this son of Empire Maker gives every indication he'll improve with added distance as he tries a mile and one sixteenth for the third consecutive time.

Bred in Kentucky by Don Alberto Corporation, Roman Centurian is out of the Bernardini mare Spare Change. Owned by Don Alberto and Qatar Racing Limited, he'll be making his fourth start and be handled by regular rider Juan Hernandez.

Although he's only run once, Peter Eurton's Dream Shake could not have been anymore impressive in breaking his 6 ½ furlong maiden by 4 ¾ lengths here on Feb. 7. Despite the fact he was ridden by Joel Rosario, Dream Shake, a Kentucky-bred colt by Twirling Candy, was off at a whopping 20-1, but won like an odds-on favorite.

Owned by Exline-Border Racing, LLC, SAF Racing and Richard Hausman, Dream Shake, who is out of the Street Cry mare Even Song, would appear to be taking a giant leap in his second start, but he retains the services of Rosario and therefore looms a serious threat with a 96 Beyer in-hand.

THE GRADE 2 SAN FELIPE WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 6 of 11 Approximate post time 2:30 p.m. PT

  1. Life Is Good—Mike Smith—122
  2. Dream Shake—Joel Rosario–120
  3. Medina Spirit—John Velazquez—122
  4. None Above the Law—Flavien Prat–120
  5. The Great One—Abel Cedillo—120
  6. Govenor's Party—Mario Gutierrez—120
  7. Roman Centurian—Juan Hernandez–120

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