Maximum Effort

Whether you love him or have mixed feelings about him, there is one thing about Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) that is very hard to dispute: he is an outstanding racehorse.

Prohibitively favored at 40 cents on the dollar to take Saturday’s GI TVG Pacific Classic in his second start since being transferred to the barn of Bob Baffert, the bay absorbed race-long pressure but, realistically speaking, never looked like losing in securing an all-expenses-paid berth in the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic in early November. When the dust had settled, the 4-year-old had a margin of three lengths on a very game and persistent Sharp Samurai (First Samurai), while Midcourt (Midnight Lute)–who almost stole the show in the GII San Diego H. last time out-came home a well-beaten third.

“We mapped it out that he’s the quickest horse, he’s ready and now you can ride him with a lot more confidence. Once he took the lead I figured he’d be fine,” said trainer Bob Baffert, winning the marquee race of the Del Mar meet for the sixth time, equaling the record of the great Bobby Frankel. “‘Max’ was relaxing really nice. He was a totally different horse today. [Maximum Security] just does things effortlessly. He wasn’t even blowing when he came back. I’m just so happy for this horse. It’s not his fault what he went through. Today he showed that he is a great horse.”

Having won the inaugural Saudi Cup in February, Maximum Security was making his debut for Baffert in the San Diego in the aftermath of the federal indictment of trainer Jason Servis. Adding further intrigue to an already complicated situation was news that the jockey that knew Maximum Security best, Luis Saez, had contracted the coronavirus and was restricted from traveling from New York.

Enter Abel Cedillo, a rising star on the Southern California circuit, but who had never known a spotlight as white hot as the one he was about to experience. Very little went according to script in the San Diego. Clearly the one to beat, his fellow riders race-rode Maximum Security and he was unable to make the running. Under a drive for the better part of the last four furlongs, he somehow managed to peg back Midcourt on the wire to score by a nose. Connections promised a fitter racehorse this time around and he delivered–to the max.

Kicked straight into the lead from gate five by Cedillo, Maximum Security took the Pacific Classic field under the line for the first time and although the opening fraction of :23.93 was hardly demanding, it was a contested pace, as Sharp Samurai was glued to his flank, with defending champ Higher Power (Medaglia d’Oro) prominent three wide. Midcourt was restrained off the pace this time around, with longshots Mirinaque (Arg) (Hurricane Cat) and Dark Vader (Take of Ekati) the back markers.

Maximum Security galloped them along at an even tempo–the half-mile was posted in :47.98–and was asked for a bit more speed passing the four-furlong pole after six panels in a very comfortable 1:12.37. Sharp Samurai kept up the pressure around the turn and at one point perhaps looked to be traveling slightly better than the chalk, but Maximum Security turned away his very pesky foe entering the final eighth of a mile and pulled clear, covering his final quarter-mile in a solid :24.74.

“The race went pretty much how I thought,” said Cedillo. “[Trainer] Bob [Baffert] told me to keep him off the rail, because the speed was inside. If someone wanted to run up inside of us, I would have let them. He just galloped around the track. I was a little surprised that the outside horse [Sharp Samurai] was with us early and he stuck around. He ran big, but whenever he would get close, my horse would pull away on his own. He still had a little left at the end. I have to say this is probably the best horse I’ve ever ridden.”

Pedigree Notes:

Maximum Security’s dam was acquired by Gary and Mary West for $80,000 in foal to Pioneerof the Nile at Keeneland November in 2014 and was sold to Korean interests for $11,000 carrying a full-sibling to the then unraced 2-year-old Maximum Security, who would make a victorious debut in a maiden $16,000 claimer about six weeks later. Lil Indy and her weanling Korean-bred full-sister to Maximum Security were acquired and returned to the U.S. and prepared for last year’s Keeneland November sale. Lil Indy fetched $1.85 million in foal to Quality Road, while the weanling was bought back on a bid of $190,000. Lil Indy, a half-sister to MGISW Flat Out (Flatter), produced a colt by Quality Road Apr. 23 and was bred back to Curlin.

Saturday, Del Mar
TVG PACIFIC CLASSIC S.-GI, $500,500, Del Mar, 8-22, 3yo/up,
1 1/4m, 2:01.24, ft.
1–MAXIMUM SECURITY, 124, c, 4, by New Year’s Day
                1st Dam: Lil Indy, by Anasheed
                2nd Dam: Cresta Lil, by Cresta Rider
                3rd Dam: Rugosa, by Double Jay
O-Gary & Mary West, Mrs. John Magnier, Michael B. Tabor &
Derrick Smith; B-Gary & Mary West Stables Inc. (KY); T-Bob
Baffert; J-Abel Cedillo. $300,000. Lifetime Record: Ch. 3yo Colt,
12-10-1-0, $12,191,900. Werk Nick Rating: A.  
Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Sharp Samurai, 124, g, 6, First Samurai–Secret Wish, by
Street Cry (Ire). ($85,000 Ylg ’15 KEESEP). O-Red Baron’s Barn
LLC, Rancho Temescal LLC & Mark Glatt; B-Cudney Stables
(KY); T-Mark Glatt. $100,000.
3–Midcourt, 124, g, 5, Midnight Lute–Mayo On the Side, by
French Deputy. ($450,000 Ylg ’16 KEESEP). O-C R K Stable LLC;
B-Dixiana Farms LLC (KY); T-John A. Shirreffs. $60,000.
Margins: 3, 2 3/4, NO. Odds: 0.40, 10.10, 7.40.
Also Ran: Higher Power, Mirinaque (Arg), Dark Vader.
Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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‘Max’ Back On Big Stage in Pacific Classic

The last time Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) traveled 10 furlongs, he crossed the wire first before the disqualification heard around the world in the GI Kentucky Derby. A ton has happened with the colt in the year-and-change since then: an Eclipse championship, a buy-in from Coolmore, a trip across the world to win the G1 Saudi Cup, doping allegations, a barn switch. Through it all, the horse who controversy seems to follow like a shadow will return to 1 1/4 miles and Grade I company with questions to answer in Saturday’s GI TVG Pacific Classic at Del Mar.

Following his Derby demotion with a runner-up effort at 1-20 in last summer’s TVG.com Pegasus S. at Monmouth, the bay found redemption by annexing the GI TVG.com Haskell Invitational S. on the Jersey Shore. After being forced to miss several months with a minor injury, he scored victories in the GIII Bold Ruler H. and GI Cigar Mile H. to wrap up his divisional title.

Just nine days after he notched a hard-fought triumph in the inaugural Saudi Cup in his 4-year-old debut, Maximum Security’s trainer Jason Servis was indicted by federal prosecutors for alleged doping of horses including Maximum Security himself, prompting a move to the Bob Baffert barn. Making his much-anticipated return in the July 25 GII San Diego H., he ground out a nose victory at 2-5, the 10th time in 11 career races he crossed the wire first, earning a 101 Beyer, 10 points shy of his top effort.

C R K Stable’s Midcourt (Midnight Lute), who nearly dueled Maximum Security into defeat, returns to take another crack at the champion. Lightly raced at five years old, the gelding reeled off four straight victories last year culminating in a 5 3/4-length conquest of the GIII Native Diver S. at this oval in November and picked up another open-length graded tally in the GII San Pasqual S. two starts later Feb. 1 at Santa Anita. A narrow third in the GI Santa Anita H., his initial 10-furlong try, Mar. 7, he bounced back from a badly-beaten fifth in the GI Gold Cup S. June 6 in Arcadia to stretch Maximum Security all the way to the wire in the San Diego.

Hronis Racing’s Higher Power (Medaglia d’Oro), a surprise runaway winner of last year’s Pacific Classic, tries to recapture that top form. Going turf to dirt for a 5 1/2-length score in the Del Mar meet centerpiece, the bay failed to build on that run when a distant third in both the GI Awesome Again S. and GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic before finishing last as the favorite in the GI Pegasus World Cup Invitational S. Bouncing back a bit to be runner-up in the Gold Cup, he proved no match for the top pair in the San Diego, finishing 6 1/4 lengths back in third.

Sharp Samurai (First Samurai), a multiple graded stakes winner on turf, will make his first dirt start since running sixth in a Santa Anita optional claimer in March of 2017. He was last seen finishing a close runner-up in the GII Eddie Read S. on the local lawn July 26.

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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.

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TVG Pacific Classic: More On The Line For Maximum Security Than $500,000 Purse, Breeders’ Cup Berth

Maximum Security, a winner of nine of 11 starts and nearly $12-million in purses, a remarkably talented and unfortunately star-crossed colt, a runner who – despite his enviable record – is looking to reestablish himself as the big dog on the American racing scene, gets his chance to do just that at Del Mar near San Diego, Calif., on Saturday when he headlines the track's headliner on a five-stakes afternoon — the Grade 1, $500,000 TVG Pacific Classic.

The son of New Year's Day, bred by owners Gary and Mary West, who have added partners to his ownership group in the European trio of Susan Magnier, Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith, will take on five rivals in the mile and a quarter for 3-year-old and up and he'll have Abel Cedillo in the boot for the run. Cedillo rode the bay to a hard-fought nose victory in the San Diego Handicapat Del Mar on July 25 in his first start in five months and first under the care of trainer Bob Baffert. The 4-year-old carried top weight of 127 pounds that day but, under the weight-for-age conditions of the “Classic,” he – and all the other runners – will go postward with 124 pounds Saturday.

The TVG Pacific Classic offers all the monetary and prestige advantages of a $500,000 Grade 1 race, but it also provides a notable plus in that it is a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” race, meaning its winner gets a guaranteed entry into its designated race, one with all fees paid. In this case that race is the $7-million Breeders' Cup Classic, which will be run on Saturday, November 7, at Keeneland in Lexington, KY.

Here's the field for the 30th edition of the TVG Pacific Classic from the rail out with riders and morning line odds:

C R K Stable's Midcourt (Victor Espinoza, 7/2); Hronis Racing's Higher Power (Flavien Prat, 3-1); Parque Patricios Racing Stables' Mirinaque (Tiago Pereira, 10-1); Estate of Sharon Alesia and Burns Racing's Dark Vader (Umberto Rispoli, 12-1); Maximum Security (even), and Red Barons Barn and Rancho Temescal's Sharp Samurai (Juan Hernandez, 8-1).

The TVG Pacific Classic is Race 10 on Saturday's 11-race program, the premier offering of five Graded stakes on the card. It has a $300,000 winner's share.

Maximum Security finished first in the 2019 Kentucky Derby, but was disqualified and placed 17th in the world's most famous race. Then this year he again finished first, this time in the world's richest race — $20-million Saudi Cup — only to have his purse money put on hold because of issues with his previous trainer and allegations of the use of drugs on his horses. The horse surely does his share with the running; he could, however, use a bit of racing luck besides.

Higher Power won this TVG Pacific Classic last year and will be a stout threat to repeat on Saturday. The 5-year-old horse by Medaglia d'Oro shows a record of five firsts and a bankroll of more than $1.5 million to his credit.

Midcourt gave Maximum Security a ferocious tussle in the mile and one-sixteenth San Diego 'Cap last month. He's a multiple-stakes winner, including the Native Diver at Del Mar last fall.

Sharp Samurai is switching from grass to dirt to try his luck Saturday. The 6-year-old gelding by First Samurai has won eight races and more than $800,000, but only shows three dirt starts from 20 total outings.

Mirinaque is a South American by way of Argentina making his U.S. bow Saturday. He was a four-time winner in his native land, among them a pair of Group 1 races.

Dark Vader will be looking for his first stakes win in the TVG Pacific Classic. He's a 5-year-old horse by Tale of Ekatai.

First post for Saturday's big program is 2 p.m.

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