Baffert Doesn’t Like Inside Post, Will Scratch McKinzie From Saturday’s Bing Crosby

McKinzie will not run in this Saturday's Grade 1 Bing Crosby Stakes at Del Mar, trainer Bob Baffert told the Daily Racing Form on Wednesday. The 5-year-old son of Street Sense drew post four of ten in the six-furlong sprint contest, and Baffert doesn't believe the horse will be able to make his best effort from that spot.

“If I had an outside post, I was going to take a chance at it,” Baffert told drf.com. “But he's down in the four-hole, and this track's been playing weird. It's real loose and deep. A horse like him wouldn't have a chance.”

Instead, Baffert plans to wait for the G2 Pat O'Brien over seven furlongs on Aug. 29. Though the “Win and You're In” race offers a berth to the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile, Baffert's long-term goal for McKinzie is still the Breeders' Cup Classic over 1 1/4 miles.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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McKinzie Entered In Bing Crosby After Sharp Breeze At Del Mar

Post positions were drawn and fields were set Sunday for three stakes on an 11-race card next Saturday at Del Mar near San Diego, Calif.

The most surprising, and biggest development, was the entry of multiple graded stakes-winning McKinzie in the Grade 1, $250,000 Bing Crosby Stakes, a six-furlong main track run that often determines the top sprinter of the meeting.

Trainer Bob Baffert watched McKinzie zip through a five-furlong work in 1:00.80 Sunday morning before entering the 5-year-old son of Street Sense, a winner of seven graded stakes and more than $3.4 million, in the Crosby.

McKinzie, with graded stakes wins from 7 furlongs to 1 1/8 miles on his record, will be tasked at the shortest distance of his career. Owned by Karl Watson, Mike Pegram and Paul Weitman and named for the late racing executive Brad McKinzie, the bay horse won his racing debut at seven furlongs at Los Alamitos on October 28, 2017. He notched a Grade 1 score at the same distance in the Malibu at Santa Anita on December 26, 2018 and a Grade 2 in the seven-furlong Triple Bend there in June.

Baffert doesn't expect cutting back by an eighth of a mile would be a problem.

“He's got speed. All good horses have speed,” Baffert said. “The only good horse of mine that couldn't run short was Real Quiet.” Real Quiet overcame his “shortcomings” by winning the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and very nearly the Belmont Stakes.

The field of 10 from the rail: Lexitonian (Drayden Van Dyke); Anyportinastorm (Juan Hernandez); Desert Law (Victor Espinoza); McKinzie (Mike Smith); P R Radio Star (Mario Gutierrez); Fashionably Fast (Tiago Pereira); Law Abidin Citizen (Abel Cedillo); Wildman Jack (Umberto Rispoli); Collusion Illusion (Flavien Prat), and Heartwood (Edwin Maldonado).

Also next Saturday, the $100,000 Shared Belief Stakes, a Kentucky Derby points qualifier, has six signed up to go, featuring Santa Anita Derby winner Honor A.P.

The field from the rail: Uncle Chuck (Drayden Van Dyke); Thousand Words (Abel Cedillo); Anneau d'Or (Victor Espinoza); Kiss Today Goodbye (Umberto Rispoli); Honor A.P. (Mike Smith), and Cezanne (Flavien Prat).

On the undercard is the $100,000 CTBA Stakes for California-bred 2-year-old fillies. It attracted seven fillies that have shown promise in one or two starts.

The field from the rail: Big Andy (Flavien Prat); Governor Goteven (Tiago Pereira); Reign of Fire (Drayden Van Dyke); Righteously (Mario Gutierrez); Jasmin Chieftain (Juan Hernandez); Love Wins (Abel Cedillo), and I'm So Anna (Ricardo Gonzalez).

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Improbable Heading East For Whitney; Baffert Considers Options For McKinzie, Maximum Security

Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert will look to win the Grade 1, $750,000 Whitney for the second straight year with different horses, as two-time Grade 1-winner Improbable will ship from California for the historic race for 4-year-olds and up this Saturday, Aug. 1, at Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

Owned by WinStar Farm and China Horse Club International, Improbable captured the Grade 1 Hollywood Gold Cup at 1 1/4 miles on June 6, netting a career-best 105 Beyer Speed Figure. Baffert, who won his first career Whitney last year with McKinzie, saw Improbable work seven furlongs in 1:25.80 over Del Mar's main track on Saturday.

Baffert said Improbable was originally a possibility for the Grade 1 Pacific Classic on August 22 at Del Mar, but plans changed after Maximum Security's victory in Saturday's Grade 2 San Diego Handicap to mark his successful return from a five-month respite.

“He's coming,” Baffert said with a laugh from his California base on Sunday morning. “We were going to run him here in the Pacific Classic, but we wanted to see what Max was going to do yesterday. I think if Max laid an egg, we would have done that. But Max showed us the horse we all thought he was.”

Improbable started his career with three consecutive wins, including the Street Sense at Churchill Downs after breaking his maiden in September 2018. He capped his juvenile campaign with a five-length win in the Grade 1 Los Alamitos Cash Call Futurity in December of that year, propelling him to the Triple Crown trail in 2019 which started with back-to-back runner-ups in the Grade 2 Rebel and Grade 1 Arkansas Derby.

After being placed fourth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby and running sixth in the Grade 1 Preakness, the City Zip colt won the Shared Belief in August at Del Mar before running fourth in the Grade 1 Pennsylvania Derby in September and fifth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile in November.

After an extensive sophomore campaign, Baffert did not bring Improbable back until April, with a second in the Oaklawn Mile before a 3 1/4-length score in the Gold Cup last month. Baffert said his charge is now ready to get back on the road.

“The only problem with shipping him is that he has issues in the starting gate, for some reason,” Baffert said. “He doesn't have [those issues] in California. But he's doing really well.”

Irad Ortiz, Jr., who rode him in last year's Kentucky Derby, is expected to have the return call in the Whitney, Baffert said.

McKinzie, who defeated a seven-horse field to win last year's Whitney while earning a 111 Beyer, will not bid for a repeat. But Baffert said a return engagement at the Spa is still a possibility with the Grade 1, $500,000 Woodward for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/4 miles on September 5 an option.

Maximum Security, who last year won the Grade 1 Haskell, at Monmouth Park, the Grade 3 Bold Ruler at Belmont Park and the Grade 1 Cigar Mile at Aqueduct Racetrack en route to an Eclipse Award as champion 3-year-old, could also run in the Woodward. A son of New Year's Day, Maximum Security has nine wins in 11 career starts, including six grade or group victories.

“I might run McKinzie in the [Grade 1] Bing Crosby here going six furlongs [August 1 at Del Mar] this weekend, or the Woodward. I'm not sure yet,” Baffert said. “It's either McKinzie at the Woodward or Max at the Woodward. It depends. You never know. We're keeping all our options open. We'll nominate him [Maximum Security] everywhere.”

Baffert will be well represented at another prestigious Saratoga race, with Uncle Chuck targeting the Grade 1, $1-million Runhappy Travers on August 8. A son of Uncle Mo, the lightly raced Uncle Chuck will enter the “Mid-Summer Derby” 2-for-2 in his career, winning his debut by seven lengths on June 12 at Santa Anita before dominating a higher caliber field by four lengths in the Grade 3 Los Alamitos Derby on July 4.

Owned by Karl Watson, Michael Pegram and Paul Weitman, Uncle Chuck was a $250,000 purchase at the 2018 Keeneland Association September Sale. He will now enter his first Grade 1 appearance against a field expected to include Grade 1 Belmont Stakes-winner Tiz the Law.

“He looks good. I mean, he's training right along and maturing,” said Baffert. “We know that Tiz the Law is just a tremendous racehorse, so we're looking forward to the matchup. I just like the way he's training.”

Uncle Chuck breezed six furlongs in 1:12.20 Sunday at Del Mar.

Baffert also said Eight Rings, who won the Grade 1 American Pharoah at 1 1/16 miles in September, is likely for the Grade 1, $300,000 Allen Jerkens Memorial presented by Runhappy. The sophomore Empire Maker colt ended his 2019 running sixth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile and ended a five-month layoff by running seventh in the Bachelor on April 25 at Oaklawn.

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Baffert: McKinzie May Have Had A Good Excuse For That Met Mile Finish

If McKinzie looked to be missing a bit of closing kick in the stretch of the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap last weekend, he may be forgiven. Trainer Bob Baffert said the horse, who finished fifth as the favorite, came back to the barn missing two shoes.

McKinzie's right front and right rear shoes were missing, which left Baffert somewhat puzzled, as stepping on a front shoe with a hind foot would usually result in a loss of the front shoe alone. Jockey Mike Smith said he thought the Cinderella moment happened about 50 yards out from the gate. Baffert told the Paulick Report Tuesday the horse did not grab a quarter in the process, meaning he didn't seem to damage the flesh on the back of his front foot, but the separation of the front shoe did seem to take a small amount of hoof wall with it.

The trainer told the Albany Times-Union's Tim Wilkin that in 45 years of training horses he had never seen a horse lose a front and hind shoe together like that.

Despite running half-barefoot, McKinzie did make a closing effort in the stretch, but fell well short of front-running winner Vekoma.

Baffert told Wilkin there were no concrete plans for the horse's next start earlier this week, but he was considering the G1 Pacific Classic in late August at Del Mar. The 5-year-old won the G2 Triple Bend in June after a disappointing eleventh in the Saudi Cup.

 

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