Lightening Larry, Kathleen O. Record Gulfstream Sprint Stakes Victories

Lea Farms' Lightening Larry, second in back-to-back stakes to end his juvenile campaign, turned away previously undefeated favorite Of a Revolution at the top of the stretch and sprinted clear to a front-running  half-length triumph in the $100,000 Limehouse Saturday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

The fifth running of the six-furlong Limehouse and the seventh renewal of the $100,000 Cash Run for fillies were among five stakes for newly turned 3-year-olds worth $550,000 in purses on a New Year's Day holiday program headlined by the $150,000 Mucho Macho Man.

Lightening Larry ($8.60) broke alertly and quickly established command under regular rider Romero Maragh, going the opening quarter-mile in 21.75 seconds pressed by Concrete Glory with Of a Revolution settled in fourth on the inside. Maragh remained unmoved as Of a Revolution tipped out to launch a bid leaving the far turn.

“He was just sitting on him, so I felt pretty good turning for home because he hadn't asked him at all. When he did ask him, he responded,” winning trainer Jeff Engler said. “This horse just keeps getting better.”

Of a Revolution, a winner of both his 2-year-old starts, had the length of the stretch to get by but couldn't reel in Lightening Larry, who ran five furlongs in 56.59 before finishing up in a sharp 1:09.40 over a fast main track.

“I didn't expect to be in front, honestly. I thought [Bueno Bueno] would break on top, but we broke so sharp and he just got out there comfortable and just kicked on, which was really nice,” Engler said. “He's a super nice colt.”

Of a Revolution was a clear second, with O Captain, stakes winning filly Last Leaf, Concrete Glory and Bueno Bueno completing the order of finish.

By Uncaptured, the Sovereign Award winner as Canada's champion 2-year-old and Horse of the Year in 2012, Lightening Larry now has three wins and three seconds in seven lifetime starts. He ran second to subsequent Remington Springboard Mile winner Make It Big in the seven-furlong Juvenile Sprint Oct. 30 at Gulfstream and most recently the six-furlong Inaugural Dec. 4 at Tampa Bay Downs.

“He's a grinder. He's a blue-collar horse that just goes out there and tries his heart out every time,” Engler said. “He lays it all on the line, and when he broke sharp I knew we were in a good spot.”

Engler said he has not settled on a next start for Lightening Larry. Upcoming dirt sprints for 3-year-olds at Gulfstream include the seven-furlong Claiborne Swale (G3) Feb. 5 and six-furlong Hutcheson March 19.

“We'll just see how he comes out of it and pick something from there,” Engler said.

Kathleen O. Powers Home a Winner in $100,000 Cash Run
Winngate Stables' Kathleen O., in just her second career race, overcame a poor start to sweep past horses on the far turn and power through the stretch to a 8 ½-length victory in Saturday's $100,000 Cash Run at Gulfstream Park.

Handled by the Hall of Fame combination of jockey Javier Castellano and trainer Shug McGaughey, Kathleen O. ($6) completed about one mile in 1:35.97 over a fast main track to earn her second victory in as many tries. She raced once at 2, rallying from last for a head maiden special weight triumph in the slop Nov. 12 at Aqueduct.

“I was hoping she'd break better but she did that the first time. She didn't break that well and it takes her a few strides to get herself up underneath her,” McGaughey said. “Then when she does, [Castellano] said she was there and in a good flow. She got to horses in a hurry and finished up well, so I was very pleased with her. I think she's got a nice future in front of her.”

Breaking from Post 2 in a field of seven under Castellano, also aboard for her debut, Kathleen O. got shuffled back out of the gate and trailed the field as Mi Negrita led the group through splits of 22.74 and 44.94 seconds. Castellano began to let Kathleen O. roll in the clear three wide and she quickly began picking up horses, taking over the top spot from Mi Negrita once straightened for home.

“She has to come from behind. She showed first time in New York at Aqueduct on a sloppy track,” Castellano said. “I don't want to take that away because she doesn't want to be close to the pace. I let her do what she wants. I think Shug he did a great job with the horse. I think she's going to be a really good filly.”

Mi Negrita was a distant but determined second, followed by Fast and Flirty, Queen Camilla, Freccia d'Argento, Jumeirah and Surreal Fantasy.

“I think we've got a lot to look forward to,” McGaughey said. “I'm very pleased with the way she's come along and the way she ran today, and her maturity level. I was just saying to [my wife] Alison, think of what she's going to look like in a year from now. She's always been tall and she's still filling out.”

Kathleen O. is the first horse for Winngate's Patrick Kearney, a Chicago native who spent $275,000 for the dark bay or brown daughter of Upstart, millionaire winner of the 2015 Holy Bull (G3) at Gulfstream. Kearney also has a 3-year-old Noble Mission colt named Cloudy, who went 0-for-2 in 2021.

“They're some people I've known for a while. I play golf with him and he kind of got to asking some questions last winter. I didn't know exactly where he was coming from, but then we ended up buying two horses. One of them is on the farm now but he'll be back, and this filly,” McGaughey said. “This is their first horse, so that worked out pretty good for them.”

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Gulfstream: Of A Revolution Aims To Stay Undefeated In Limehouse

Bassett Stables' Of a Revolution, undefeated through two starts, looks to keep his perfect record intact as he steps up to stakes company for the first time in Saturday's $100,000 Limehouse at Gulfstream Park.

The fifth running of the Limehouse and Glitter Woman for fillies, both sprinting six furlongs, are among five stakes for newly turned 3-year-olds worth $550,000 in purses on a New Year's Day holiday program headlined by the $150,000 Mucho Macho Man.

Post time for the first of 11 races is noon.

Championship Meet-leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. captured the 2021 Limehouse with Drain the Clock. Drain the Clock would go on to wins in the Claiborne Farm Swale (G3), Bay Shore (G3) and Woody Stephens (G1) and run second in the Fountain of Youth (G2) and Amsterdam (G2).

Like Drain the Clock, Of a Revolution has also begun his career with two straight wins before taking on stakes competition.

“This horse, from Day 1, has always showed a lot of talent. We call him Drain the Clock Jr.,” Joseph said. “He obviously has a long way to go to reach that standard but he's a nice horse. The first time out he won. The second time out he came off a layoff and beat a quality field. I thought he did it the right way. He missed the break and was still able to overcome that. We feel like he's very talented and he goes over there with a very big chance.”

Of a Revolution, by Maclean's Music, was favored in his May 29 debut at Gulfstream in a five-furlong maiden special weight, winning by a half-length over Cajun's Magic, who would come back to capture the FTBOA Florida Sire Dr. Fager and run second in the Affirmed and In Reality divisions.

“He was actually supposed to be an early kind of 2-year-old and we were going to take him to Saratoga after he won, and he got sick,” Joseph said. “So, we kind of got backed up on him and that's why it took us longer. We got him back and then we had to just wait around for a race.”

The wait ended Nov. 13, also at Gulfstream in a six-furlong optional claiming allowance where Of a Revolution was bumped and pinched back at the start but managed to work his way to the lead after a half-mile and sprinted clear to a 2 ½-length triumph over Summery, who also returns in the Limehouse. Third-place finisher Simplification is entered in the Mucho Macho Man.

“When he broke, I thought all chance was gone and he was still able to overcome it. He made a good move and he was able to sustain the move. I think he's a quality horse,” Joseph said. “We feel like he's going to become a good sprinter. He's all speed.”

Out of the Salt Lake mare Hot Spell, Of a Revolution is a half-brother to Hopkins, who ran second by a half-length to Bob Baffert-trained stablemate Shaaz in a Dec. 26 maiden special weight at Santa Anita. Hopkins earned a Beyer Speed Figure of 104 in defeat.

“The family is getting good, it looks like,” Joseph said. “We feel that he's very talented.”

Tyler Gaffalione has the assignment on Of a Revolution from Post 3 in a field of seven.

Lea Farms' Lightening Larry will be making his seventh career start and third straight in a stakes after finishing second to Make It Big in the seven-furlong Juvenile Sprint against fellow Florida-breds Oct. 30 at Gulfstream and Cattin the six-furlong Inaugural Dec. 4 at Tampa Bay Downs.

Make It Big, Of a Revolution's Joseph-trained stablemate, improved to 3-0 with a win in the Springboard Mile Dec. 17 at Remington Park, while Cattin ran fourth in the Affirmed and third in the In Reality.

“We love him. Last time in the stake at Tampa we just caught a little bit of a bad break there where we let the horse that ended up winning the race come up in between us and we should have moved down to the rail,” trainer Jeff Engler said. “But, live and learn. [Jockey] Romero [Maragh] even said he made a little bit of a mistake there but he still dug in, and [Cattin] is a nice horse, too. We just need a good break and a good trip and I think he's going to be right there again.”

Engler said Lightening Larry, first or second five times with two wins, had an excuse in his lone poor effort when he ran ninth after chasing the pace in the seven-furlong Affirmed Aug. 28. He came back six weeks later to take an optional claiming allowance at Gulfstream over the filly Muted, who returned with an 8 ½-length score against her own kind Nov. 11.

“The one race where he didn't finish on the board honestly wasn't his fault. He had a little stall accident where he had to get some stitches in his hind quarter, so he had missed like three weeks of training,” Engler said. “We kind of ran him in there before he was really ready so that was really a trainer fault. Now that he's back in regular training and on his regular breeze schedule he's always right there. He's just very aggressive and he loves the competition.”

Maragh gets the return call from Post 5.

“He's a nice horse and he loves to train. He's just a nice colt that loves his job. He's doing great. He's on go, and we're looking for good things,” Engler said. “He's grown up a lot and he's getting bigger and taller and I think in his 3-year-old year he'll really blossom.”

Monarch Stables, Inc.'s Last Leaf will take on the boys in her seasonal debut. In her only previous try against males, the Ron Spatz trainee won the five-furlong Hollywood Beach Sept. 25 over the Gulfstream turf. That effort came on the heels of a 10 ¾-length optional claiming allowance triumph 21 days earlier on a sloppy main track.

“I loved her turf sprint. She had a good turf sprint and I think she'll love that if we can get some more opportunities to do that. And, she loved the slop, too,” Spatz said. “She's doing good. She had a good work coming up to this, so all systems go.”

Last Leaf was third, beaten a length as the favorite, in a 5 ½-furlong sprint over Gulfstream's Tapeta surface Oct. 31. She was back on grass and stretched out to a mile for her most recent start, running fifth after being fractious in the gate of the Dec. 3 Wait a While.

“I didn't think she had a big fondness for the Tapeta when she ran, and she ran good. Then it was either go to Tampa to go in a six-furlong race or try her two turns,” Spatz said. “We decided to stay here and try the two turns and it didn't work out. She's a sprinter right now, and that's what we'll do. She's coming up good for it.”

Last Leaf drew the rail under Junior Alvarado and will carry low weight of 117 pounds as the lone filly in the field.

Also entered are Carl Hess Jr.'s Concrete Glory, who had a three-race win streak snapped when eighth in the Inaugural; O Captain, a 9 ¼-length maiden special weight winner in his lone start Aug. 14 at Gulfstream for trainer Gustavo Delgado; and Calumet Farm's Bueno Bueno, a winner of two straight at Ellis Park.

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Cattin Victorious In Inaugural Stakes At Tampa Bay Downs

In today's other stakes at Tampa Bay Downs in Tampa, Fla., the 36th edition of the $100,000-guaranteed Inaugural for males, Florida-bred 2-year colt Cattin moved smartly to the lead on the turn for home under jockey Samy Camacho and continued like he'd appreciate more distance, winning by 2 ½ lengths from another Florida-bred, Lightening Larry.

Cattin's time for the six furlongs was 1:10.90. The victory lifted the spirits of Gulfstream Park-based trainer Ralph Nicks, whose father, long-time trainer Morris Nicks, died on Nov. 25 at 74 after a prolonged fight against cancer.

In the Inaugural, Camacho had close to a dream trip after breaking from the No. 4 post on Cattin, who improved to 2-for-4. “I think I got the perfect trip, because two horses (Magical Mousse, the fourth-place finisher, and Full Disclosure) were fighting on the lead and I was able to sit fourth or fifth early,” said Camacho, who also won the third race on the Florida-bred gelding Morgan Point for breeder-owner Robert C. Roffey, Jr., and trainer Chad Stewart.

“I got a chance to go inside (Lightening Larry) and when I put my horse in the clear, I thought the race was over. I feel great because Ralph Nicks gave me this great opportunity, and I want to keep it going.”

Camacho also won last year's Inaugural with Poppy's Pride. Grand Valley finished a non-threatening third.

Cattin, who is owned by Corinne Heiligbrodt, William Heiligbrodt, and Spendthrift Farm, was bred by Curtis Mikkelsen and Patricia Horth. The son of Neolithic-Adios Dawn, by Adios Charlie, fulfilled all the eligibility requirements, thus collected $80,000 from the purse.

He paid $11.40 to win.

Ralph Nicks's assistant, Sonny Righter, said hopes were high entering the Inaugural after Cattin finished a solid third in his most recent start, the mile-and-a-sixteenth Florida Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association Florida Sire In Reality Stakes on Sept. 25 at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

“I thought he would run good today,” Righter said. “I was worried he might get shuffled back early, but Samy got him back in the race pretty quick and he caught a good trip after that. He was feeling good going into the race and he ran huge.”

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Make It Big Adds To Joseph Jr.’s Four-Win Day At Gulfstream

Red Oak Stable's Make It Big overcame a slow start and traffic to capture Saturday's $60,000 Ocala Stud Juvenile Sprint, capping a four-win day for both trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. and jockey Edgard Zayas at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

In addition, Make It Big, the 4-5 favorite in the seven-furlong sprint for Florida-bred 2-year-olds, was Joseph's 12th winner from his last 21 starters, including two winners at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., and one at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky.

“Racing is a streaky game. We had a slow Saratoga. It was our first year in New York and we won two Grade 1s, two Grade 3s, and then you go through a slow Saratoga and people like to forget. It's amazing how people can throw you away so quick, and then want you when you get hot,” said Joseph, who also won Saturday's Hudson Handicap at Belmont with Ny Traffic. “You just try to stay steady and try to overcome. You're always going to hit hot spells and you're always going to hit slow spells. My job is to keep the team together, so that when we're down, we keep our heads together. It's always going to level out at the end of the year. You're never going to win a 40 or 30 percent consistently. You're always going to level out and be at 21, 22 [percent]. It's going to go through spells, and you just try and get through them.”

Prior to scoring with Make It Big, Joseph and Zayas teamed for victories with Sister Lou Ann ($4) in Race 3, Jeha ($9.80) in Race 4, and Fate of Ophelia ($17.40) in Race 7.

“Edgard rides a lot for us, and he rides a good race,” Joseph said. “He's a big part of the team.”

Make It Big, who was coming off an 8 ½-length front-running debut victory at Gulfstream three weeks ago, broke a step slowly from his rail post position before assuming a stalking position along the rail behind pacesetter Just Leo, a full brother to multiple graded-stakes winner Firenze Fire, along the backstretch and into the far turn. Just Leo, who set early fractions of :23.08 and :46.31, tired on the turn into the homestretch as Lightening Larry made a three-wide sweep to the lead entering the stretch with Make It Big still trapped behind horses.

Lightening Larry kicked in through the stretch under Romero Maragh but was unable to hold off Make It Big, who launched an outside rally after Zayas finally found running room at the top of the stretch.

“Last time, he broke on the lead, and I didn't expect him to be on the lead. Today was much different,” Joseph said. “He broke; he was behind; he had a tough trip; and he was able to overcome it. I think he's a horse that's going to progress. As the distances get longer, I think he's going to get better.”

Make It Big, a son of Neolithic, ran seven furlongs in 1:25. Lightening Larry held second, 2 ¼ lengths ahead of Clapton.

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