Preakness Notes: Fradkins Happy To Take Detour From Commercial Market With Rombauer

At this time a year ago, Diane and John Fradkin were trying to figure out what to do with the 2-year-old homebred colt they would later name Rombauer. A couple of unexpected turns, six races and $290,500 in purse earnings later, the versatile son of Twirling Candy has brought the Santa Ana, Calif. couple to Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Md., for Saturday's 146th Preakness Stakes (G1).

Rombauer is their first starter in a Triple Crown race.

“That's exciting,” John Fradkin said. “Generally speaking, we think of ourselves as small-time, commercial breeders. We aim to sell our progeny. This is a rarity. In the past we've pretty much only raced horses that we couldn't sell. This is kind of an exception, just the way it all transpired.”

Rombauer earned a fees-paid entry into the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown by winning the Feb. 13 El Camino Real Derby, a Preakness 'Win & In' event, at Golden Gate Fields. Most recently, he finished third in the Blue Grass (G2) on April 3 at Keeneland.

Under normal circumstances, the Fradkins would not be in Baltimore to watch their colt run in the Preakness. Because 2020 was anything but normal, the Fradkins did not sell the colt from their two-mare breeding operation. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the April OBS sale of 2-year-olds was delayed a couple of months.

Since the dam, Cashmere by Cowboy Cal, typically produced precocious babies that win early in their careers, consigner Eddie Woods advised the Fradkins to sell him in a private sale after he had proven himself at the track. They sent Rombauer to their trainer, Michael McCarthy, at Santa Anita.  Rombauer promptly won his first career start at a mile on turf at Del Mar on July 25.

“He closed, he came home really well, and I honestly thought there would be some pretty big offers after that race,” Fradkin said. “But there weren't because the time was really bad and the initial Beyer number they gave him was 48. The time was 1:38 and change (1:38.30). It didn't really surprise me that there really weren't any solid offers.”

Rombauer landed in the keeper category and is writing an interesting story.

“It was sort of two lucky breaks on our part that caused us to still own the horse,” Fradkin said. “There's actually been substantial offers since that we've perhaps stupidly turned down.”

Rombauer had a troubled trip in his next start, the Del Mar Juvenile Turf Stakes on Sept. 6 and ended up sixth, but beaten only two lengths. McCarthy recommended that they try Rombauer on dirt and he ended up second, three-quarters of a length back, after a wide trip in the American Pharoah (G1) at Santa Anita. He completed his 2-year-old season with a fifth-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) at Keeneland.

In late January, Fradkin told McCarthy that he wanted to opt out of the Robert B.  Lewis (G3) and wait for the El Camino Real Derby.

“I thought it was going to be a much easier race,” Fradkin said. “We scratched out of the Robert Lewis because I thought the field was really, really tough. We had a pretty heated discussion about that. I thought that even if we ran it really well, we were likely to finish fifth because that was probably the best field ever assembled for 3-year-old colts for only $100,000. Two weeks later, we had a race up north for the same amount of purse money and I knew the field was going to be a lot easier. So that was my thinking. That continues to be my thinking, that I want to pick easier spots for the horse.”

Fradkin, who spent a handful of years as a professional horseplayer, was right: Medina Spirit, who went on to prevail in the Kentucky Derby, won the Robert Lewis. Hot Rod Charlie was third in both races.

“And I think if a horse runs his best race ever, he should be earning money,” he said. “I felt that probably would not have happened in the Robert B. Lewis and it probably wouldn't have happened in the Kentucky Derby either. We could have run our best race ever and wouldn't have made any money. So that's why we've chosen the path we've chosen.”

The road to the Preakness began in the summer of 1993 when Fradkin claimed Ruff Hombre for $25,000 at Hollywood Park. He finished last in the race and was off for two months before winning what turned out to be his career finale at Del Mar. The Fradkins invested the earnings from Ruff Hombre's win at the Keeneland September Sale in a skinny New Jersey-bred Afleet filly they named Ultrafleet. She failed to hit the board in her four starts.

“We decided to retire her and make her a broodmare,” Fradkin said. “Pretty much everybody said that was stupid, but we did it anyway and it turned out pretty well.”

Ultrafleet became the foundation mare for the Fradkins. She dropped 14 foals before her death in 2012. Among them were California Flag, who won the 2009 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1), and graded stakes winner Cambiocorsa, who is the granddam of 2018 European Horse of the Year Roaring Lion. The Fradkins retained Cashmere, Ultrafleet's next-to-last foal. Cashmere also produced Treasure Trove, who runs in the Pimlico Special (G3) on Friday.

'Fresh and Happy' Medina Spirit, Concert Tour Set for Preakness
Medina Spirit and Concert Tour, the two highest-rated colts in the morning line for Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1), each galloped 1 ¼ miles Friday morning at Pimlico Race Course under the direction of Jimmy Barnes, trainer Bob Baffert's longtime assistant.

Medina Spirit, owned by Zedan Racing Stables, is rated as the 9-5 favorite in the field of 10 after leading the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1) from start to finish. Gary and Mary West's Concert Tour is rated second at 5-2 in the morning line. In his most recent start he was third as the favorite in the Arkansas Derby (G1) on April 10.

“We had a little bit of a lighter day for them today because they have such a big day tomorrow,” Barnes said. “Both horses came off the track fresh and happy and looking awesome.”

Medina Spirit and Concert Tour are Baffert's hopes for a record-breaking eighth Preakness winner. He is a tied with Robert Wyndham Walden, who dominated the race during the final quarter of the 19th century.

Medina Spirit will break from Post No. 3 under his regular rider, Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez. Mike Smith, the 55-year-old Hall of Fame jockey, will ride Concert Tour for the first time from Post No. 10.  Velazquez will be riding in the Preakness for the 11th time. He has a record of 0-3-3. Concert Tour will be Smith's 19th starter. His two wins came with Prairie Bayou in 1993 and Triple Crown winner Justify in 2018. Smith also has finished second twice and third four times.

Asmussen 'Expecting a Very Good Run' from Midnight Bourbon
Winchell Thoroughbreds' Midnight Bourbon galloped over the Pimlico surface the day before Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1). Irad Ortiz Jr. will be aboard for the first time. The defending three-time Eclipse Award-winning jockey will seek his first Preakness victory after finishing off the board in two prior mounts.

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen again will lead the massive, good-feeling colt from the barn over to the paddock for the Preakness. When Midnight Bourbon schooled in the paddock Thursday afternoon, Asmussen was on the left side of the horse with assistant trainer Darren Fleming on the right.

One sign to expect something big from Midnight Bourbon may be that Asmussen has been using words like “giddy” and “jazzed up” for his quest to saddle a third Preakness winner with the sixth-place finisher in the Kentucky Derby (G1).

“He's a fun horse to train,” Asmussen said. “The horse is obviously very strong-minded and willful. But he's exciting to be around. He's extremely physical. He's a gorgeous horse to watch. Like I said, we're very optimistic as horsemen. The giddy part, or the humorous part, was that less than two weeks after the disappointment of the Derby, here we are crazy enough to think we can do it again.”

Asmussen said it's a positive that they haven't noticed a change in Midnight Bourbon since before the Derby.

“We're expecting a very good run from him,” he said. “I thought he was in great physical shape going into the Derby…everything was going extremely well. Missing the break did not put him in the position necessary for him to have success. From where he was, he ran reasonably well but not good enough. Here we are with a lot of horse going into the Preakness and expecting a better outcome.”

Asmussen earned his first Triple Crown victory in the 2007 Preakness with two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, who nipped Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense in a photo finish. Two years later, in her first start for majority owner Jess Jackson and Asmussen after being sold, Kentucky Oaks winner (G1) Rachel Alexandra held off Derby winner Mine That Bird to become the first filly since 1924 to capture the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. Rachel Alexandra went on to be the 2009 Horse of the Year.

“Coming back to Pimlico is extremely special,” Asmussen said. “Curlin's Preakness win here over Street Sense was as exciting as it can get for us. Being a Classic, it being Curlin, being the first time to have success on that level, you can't duplicate that again. And then to have the amazing opportunity to run Rachel Alexandra here, with the queen that she was, you can't top those memories.”

 'Reward Outweighs Risk' for Brown Trainees in Middle Jewel
Klaravich Stables' Risk Taking and Crowded Trade repeated their routine on Friday.  The Preakness runners of trainer Chad Brown took turns galloping 1 ¼ miles at Pimlico – the same thing they did on Thursday while preparing for starts in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) – and Jose Hernandez, Brown's assistant who is caring for the horses here, said they are both ready to roll.

“They are doing good, and they are training good,” Hernandez said. “We will see what happens on Saturday. Everything they have done here, they have done well.”

Crowded Trade was the first to hit the track, going out at 6 a.m. with exercise rider Kelvin Perez on board. A half hour later, Perez was on Risk Taking's back for his gallop. Brown was expected to be in town Friday afternoon.

Hernandez said he would like to see Crowded Trade, who was third in the April 3 Wood Memorial (G2) at Aqueduct, race closer to the pace. Risk Taking, he said, should be doing his best running late. He also ran in the Wood and was a disappointing seventh as the 2-1 favorite.

Both horses have trained well since the Wood and Brown was encouraged with their last works, five-furlong breezes last Sunday at Belmont Park. Working in company, both horses were timed in 1:01.76.

“A couple of their best workouts of the season,” said Brown, who won the 2017 Preakness with Cloud Computing. “This is a good opportunity to take a shot in a Classic race. Going into a race like this, you want to have a horse really thriving and doing well and I think we have two of them. The reward outweighs the risk to take a shot.”

Crowded Trade, who will be ridden by Javier Castellano, is 10-1 in the Preakness morning line. Risk Taking, who will team with jockey Jose Ortiz, is 15-1.

 Connections Hoping Keepmeinmind Will Show His Worth Saturday
Keepmeinmind marks the first Preakness appearance for both trainer Robertino Diodoro and jockey David Cohen.

Diodoro knows Keepmeinmind, a late-running seventh in the Kentucky Derby, probably will need a good setup to hit the board for the first time this year and to win for the first time since the Kentucky Jockey Club (G2) at Churchill Downs Nov. 2. But he expects Keepmeinmind is sitting on a big performance.

“What needs to happen is what it looks like is going to happen on paper,” Diodoro said. “We just need it to happen on dirt now, where we need Midnight Bourbon, we need both of [trainer Bob] Baffert's horses (to go out to the lead) to get a little pace to run out. But definitely with his running style, we need a pace to run at.”

Before Keepmeinmind ran in the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1), Ned Toffey said it was just a matter of time before the colt reaffirmed why Spendthrift Farm bought part-ownership following his victory in the Kentucky Jockey Club. Spendthrift is partners with Cypress Creek Equine and Arnold Bennewith.

Keepmeinmind heads out to the racetrack on Friday morning

“If you look at him, he doesn't look like a horse that would be a good 2-year-old and that would be it,” said Toffey, Spendthrift Farm's general manager. “We saw so much potential as a 2-year-old, he ran some nice races. He ran a very nice race at Churchill Downs and showed he could run with these horses [finishing third] in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile [G1; at Keeneland]. If you look at him, he's a big stretchy horse and really looks like he could do some more maturing. He's a long drink of water now. He's a beautiful animal, but I can see this horse the second half of the year being formidable.”

Diodoro took the blinkers off Keepmeinmind for the Derby. Toffey is among those extremely encouraged by that effort, when Keepmeinmind closed from last to come in seventh.

“I think he confirmed in the Derby that he's a horse that wants to come from well off the pace,” he said. “That was the approach Robertino wanted to take: let him come out of the gate, find his stride and make a run. He really did that well in the Derby. Of course, that's one of the problems when you're a come-from-behind horse in the Derby in a 20-horse field. You're probably going to be forced wide. Obviously, being wide didn't help his chances. It seems unlikely to think he was going to come away with a win there. But it looks like he could have been a touch in behind those first four horses, with a little luck on the turn.

“But I thought he ran a really good race,” he added. “He showed he belonged and that he can run with anybody. We're looking forward to a good race from him in the Preakness.”

With merely a length separating the Kentucky Derby's first and fourth-place finishers, Toffey said that victorious Medina Spirit, the Preakness' 9-5 morning-line favorite, “hasn't proven to be a dominant horse, but he's certainly proven to be a very consistently good horse.”

Saez Shooting for Initial Triple Crown Success in Preakness
Luis Saez, third in North America in both wins and purse earnings in 2020, has been a rising star the past couple of years. That includes earning his first Breeders' Cup victory last fall aboard champion Essential Quality in the Juvenile (G1), along with seconds in four other Cup races that weekend at Keeneland.

With Essential Quality skipping Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) after his Kentucky Derby (G1) fourth-place finish, Saez landed on Whisper Hill Farm's Unbridled Honor for trainer Todd Pletcher. Unbridled Honor comes into the 1 3/16-mile Classic off a second in the Lexington (G3) at Keeneland that followed a fourth in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2). His lone victory was a maiden race at Tampa.

While Unbridled Honor is 15-1 in the morning line, consider that Saez's only prior Preakness mount was Bravazo, who in 2018 finished second by only a half-length behind eventual Triple Crown hero Justify. Bravazo also was 15-1.

Saez is still seeking his first official Triple Crown victory. He finished first aboard Maximum Security in the 2019 Kentucky Derby, only to be disqualified for interference.

Pletcher is seeking his first Preakness victory to go with his two Kentucky Derbys and three Belmonts. The newly-elected Hall of Famer knows Unbridled Honor likely needs some help from a fast pace to effectively set up his closing kick.

“Hopefully he can get away a little better, get in a little better stalking position and then have a good pace to run at,” Pletcher said. “In the Tampa Bay Derby, he left himself way too much to do. In the Lexington, he got a good pace setup. He dropped a little bit farther back than we'd like, but he got a really clean run at it. He was kind of making a move at the same time as (victorious) King Fury, and King Fury went inside and he went outside. King Fury was able to cut the corner and save ground, but I thought it was a good effort.”

Unbridled Honor galloped Friday morning at Pimlico.

Game Time for France Go de Ina and Trainer
Before he returns home to Japan following Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) and a planned run in the June 5 Belmont Stakes (G1), trainer Hideyuki Mori wouldn't mind seeing some American baseball. He lives in the city of Osaka and is a fan of the Hanshin Tigers of Nippon Professional Baseball back home.

When asked if he wanted to see the New York Yankees or Mets when he goes to New York, he smiled. He would be happy to stay right here and watch the hometown Orioles, who are playing the Yankees this weekend at Camden Yards.

“If anyone has tickets …” he said through an interpreter.

First things first. Mori will saddle Yuji Inaida's France Go de Ina for Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1). He went through his final preparations Friday morning, walking on the track with exercise rider Masaki Takano aboard. The son of Will Take Charge then did some schooling in the starting gate, which was an important priority.

In his last start, France Go de Ina broke poorly from the gate in the March 27 UAE Derby (G2) in Dubai and finishing a non-threatening sixth. Friday, the horse stood in the gate and it was hand opened for him to walk out.

“We wanted him to get used to people standing around him.” Mori said.

Mori said he will rely on jockey Joel Rosario to make the decision on where to put France Go de Ina in the race. He said he would like to have the colt close to the pace.

“I don't want the horse to get boxed in,” Mori said. “It depends on how he breaks. If he is traveling fast, he will go, if not, he will settle and wait for his opportunity.”

Mori said that France Go de Ina will not go to the track on Saturday morning, but will have his daily hour-long walking session around the barn.

Ram Conserves Energy for Stakes Debut in Preakness
Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas sent Ram to the track for light training Friday morning at Pimlico Race Course in preparation for a start in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1), later turning his attention to interviews with television and print reporters.

Lukas, 85, is aiming for his record-tying seventh Preakness victory with Ram, a son of 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah. Ram, 30-1 in the morning line, drew the rail. Lukas made a splash in the 1980 Preakness, winning the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown with his first starter, Codex. His most recent victory was in 2013 with Oxbow.

Ram, co-owned by Christina Baker and William Mack, is trying stakes company for the first time.  He is running back in two weeks following a victory in an allowance race on the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1) program.

“We tapered off a little today. We just went a mile,” Lukas said. “Tapered off and let him get his energy. He had a lot of energy, too. He was sharp today. He's gotten better every single day on his energy level since we're been here.”

Throughout the week leading up to the race Lukas has said his colt must improve in order to have a chance to finish in the top three. Handicapping the race, Lukas said he likes the chances of Midnight Bourbon, trained by Steve Asmussen for Winchell Thoroughbreds.

“That horse, I think, is really dangerous,” Lukas said. “He looks good to me. And Concert Tour looks good to me.”

Ricardo Santana Jr. will ride Ram for the first time in the Preakness. Santana has ridden twice in the race. His best finish was a third on Tenfold in 2018.

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Preakness Notes: Winchell Hoping For Better Start From Midnight Bourbon

Ron Winchell, who campaigns Louisiana Derby (G2) runner-up Midnight Bourbon in the name of his family's Winchell Thoroughbreds, said he's trying to keep his enthusiasm in check about their chances in Saturday's 146th Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico.

“It's hard not to be overly optimistic,” Winchell, the Las Vegas entrepreneur and co-owner of Kentucky Downs as well as an internationally prominent owner and breeder, said by phone. “He's doing great. The Derby didn't seem to take a lot out of him.”

Midnight Bourbon finished a late-running sixth in the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1) after an awkward start took the strapping, nearly-black colt out of his normal up-close running style.

His connections knew the son of Tiznow was in trouble early on in the Derby. With the scratch of King Fury, the Steve Asmussen trainee went from being one of the last horses to load to one of the first, having to stand in the gate while the others were led in. When the gate's stall doors sprung open, his hind end slipped out from under him, taking Midnight Bourbon out of a preferred position up on the pace or just off the leaders. Instead, he found himself as far back as 14th and wide on both turns before rallying.

“I said it before the race, 'If he doesn't come by the first time and he's not in the first five or six spots, we're pretty much toast,'” Winchell said. “That's just how the Derby seems to be working out now.”

Winchell doesn't have to look back very far to appreciate how difficult it is to win an American Classic. He knows that no matter how fabulous your horse looks or trains that luck is involved – including the misfortunate of running into horses who are simply faster. Winchell's best finish in the Kentucky Derby was a third in 2016 by Gun Runner. He would go on to win the $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) in 2017, earning the Horse of the Year title, and the $16 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) in 2018 to cap his career before heading off to stud duties with earnings just shy of $16 million.

Gun Runner, owned by Winchell and Three Chimneys Farm, did not run in the Preakness and progressed from being a very good 3-year-old into a dominant champion at 4. Winchell is hoping Midnight Bourbon likewise will improve with age, though quicker the better, preferably Saturday.

Midnight Bourbon, winner of the Lecomte (G3) whose only finish worse than third in eight starts came in the Kentucky Derby, is the third choice in the Preakness morning line at 5-1 in a field of 10 3-year-olds. He will break from Post No. 5. With two-at-a-time loading, he'll go into the gate next to last.

“If you had said, 'Here's 10 spots. Put all the horses where you want them to be,' it would be pretty close to how it turned out. Which never seems to happen,” Winchell said.

In fact, it's making him nervous how things so far have fallen into place.

“I've got people calling me, 'I really like your horse,'” he said, adding with a laugh, “It's like, 'No. Stop it! Stop it!'”

Winchell has built upon the high-quality breeding and racing operation that his late father Verne started in the 1950s. With Ron taking over Winchell Thoroughbreds in partnership with his mother, Joan,

Upon Verne's death in 2002, the Winchell Thoroughbreds stable has campaigned Gun Runner, 2014 Kentucky Oaks (G1) and Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) heroine Untapable, 2012 Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) winner Tapizar, 2008 Louisiana Derby victor Pyro, 2005 Kentucky Oaks winner Summerly, and Cuvee, one of the top 2-year-olds of 2003, along with many other stakes winners.

The last horse Winchell purchased with his father was a silver-hued yearling bought two months before Verne's death at age 87. That colt named Tapit captured the 2004 Wood Memorial (G1) to emerge among the favorites for the Kentucky Derby. Tapit finished ninth in the Derby, but his real fame has come as a breed-shaping stallion and one of the sport's best sires of the last half-century.

“Winning the Derby has always been a focus,” Winchell said. “However, when my dad was around, we focused a little more on probably the speed element than the Derby distance. It's kind of two different horses: the ones who are going to win as 2-year-olds at Saratoga and Del Mar. That's a different set-up traditionally than the guy who is going to win the Derby.

“I've changed that focus to a certain degree in probably the last five to 10 years,” he added. “It's reflective in the amount of starts we've had in the Derby.”

Verne Winchell had four Kentucky Derby starters, the best finish being Classic Go Go's fourth in 1981. Midnight Bourbon became the eighth Derby runner for his son.

“We're getting to the Derby; we're just not performing in the Derby,” Winchell said. “However, Kentucky Oaks starters, we've started four with two winners. A little better record there. But it's one of the categories that has been very elusive for our stable, winning Classic races. Breeders' Cup races, yeah, we've won a number of those. We've brought some pretty good horses to the Derby. I think Gun Runner had a pretty good chance, but at that stage of his career, he couldn't get to the finish line first. I mean, it is what it is.”

Midnight Bourbon will be Winchell's third Preakness starter, following Tenfold's close third in the fog to eventual Triple Crown champion Justify three years ago and Pneumatic's 10th last year when the COVID-delayed race was in October. His dad finished fourth in the 1991 Preakness with Arkansas Derby (G1) winner Olympio.

Though he hasn't had as many starters as in the Derby, Winchell said the Preakness is a race he very much covets, along with its iconic Woodlawn Vase, of which the winning owner gets a replica.

“It is one of those great races you grow up hearing about,” Winchell said. “I'd love to win. I'd love to get it behind me, honestly, because we've performed well in all sorts of races. There's probably not a lot that we haven't won over the course of my involvement in racing and my dad's. These are ones that have eluded us. It's a super cool race to win. The trophy is one of the best. I've love to have a spot for it on the mantel somewhere.”

Midnight Bourbon schooled at the starting gate, followed by a routine gallop, Thursday at Pimlico. He was scheduled to school in the paddock during the races.

Asmussen is pursuing a third Preakness victory, having won his first Triple Crown race in 2007 with two-time Horse of the Year Curlin and then two years later with the filly and 2009 Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra.

“It is the Preakness and a great opportunity, being an American Classic and having a quality horse like this for Winchell Thoroughbreds,” said Asmussen. “If you've ever seen him, you realize the potential that's there.”

Asmussen's parents, Keith and Marilyn, raised and prepared all of Verne Winchell's young horses for the races at their Laredo, Texas, training facility. That decades-long association has continued into the next generation, strengthened even more by Steve Asmussen being Ron's primary trainer.

“I'm extremely proud of the Winchell and Asmussen connection,” Asmussen said. “Ron's father and my father did business and had a lot of success before they let me or Ron make any decisions. So it's extremely exciting for us.”

Barnes Pleased with Preakness Preparation of Medina Spirit, Concert Tour
Medina Spirit and Concert Tour took different paths to the Preakness Stakes (G1), but assistant trainer Jimmy Barnes is using a similar approach while preparing the Bob Baffert-trained colts for Saturday's Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown at Pimlico Race Course.

Video of Medina Spirit

 

Video Concert Tour: https://youtu.be/Fn2J7AsiuUw

After a Wednesday morning schooling session in the indoor paddock, where Baffert horses are typically saddled for the Preakness, both colts galloped 1 ½ miles Thursday morning one after the other, with Medina Spirit going first.

Since Zedan Racing Stables' Medina Spirit is coming to the Preakness from the Kentucky Derby, where he led the way from start to finish, Barnes has been on the lookout for any signs of fatigue. He has not found any.

“He had no wear and tear,” Barnes said. “He came out in excellent shape and moved right ahead, forwardly. We only walked him three days and went right back to the track and jogged. That's usually a sign, how soon we get back to the track, of how happy we are with the recovery from the race.”

Gary and Mary West's Concert Tour emerged as a top Kentucky Derby prospect with victories in the seven-furlong San Vicente (G2) on Feb. 6 and the 1 1/16-mile Rebel (G2) on March 13. After he finished third in the Arkansas Derby (G1) on April 10, Concert Tour was taken off the Derby trail. Barnes said the Street Sense colt “looked awesome on the track” Thursday and is well-prepared for the Preakness.

“We have seen what we expected to see,” Barnes said. “He was a little on the light side after the Arkansas Derby and Bob and Gary West opted to pass on the Derby and run a fresh horse in the Preakness. We've basically seen everything you'd want to see. No hiccups at all. His coat is beautiful. He's eating well. He should be ready for Saturday.”

Barnes said he is drawing a line through Concert Tour's Arkansas Derby.

“I know which direction he's heading and it's the one we want to see him in,” Barnes said. “He'll show up on Saturday.”

Baffert returned home to California from Kentucky this week and sent Barnes, a key member of his team since the late 1990s, to manage the operation at Pimlico. It's a familiar role for Barnes.

“I'm used to it. I travel all the time. I'm always on the road,” he said. “If Bob is there sometimes, that's great. If he can't make it, I just have to pick up the slack, just march on, try to do my best and try to produce a win.”

Rombauer Brings 'Wonderful Mechanics' into Saturday's Preakness
Trainer Michael McCarthy is a Triple Crown series veteran and rookie at the same time. While he gained loads of experience in the Spring Classics during his long tenure as an assistant to Hall of Famer-elect Todd Pletcher, John and Diane Fradkin's Rombauer will be his first Triple Crown starter when he goes to post Saturday in the 146th Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course.

McCarthy, 50, went out on his own in January 2014. He has had plenty of success during those seven-plus seasons, most notably City of Light's triumphs in the 2019 Pegasus World Cup (G1) at Gulfstream Park and the 2018 Breeders' Cup Mile (G1) at Churchill Downs. Versatile Rombauer has delivered him to the Triple Crown.

“Anytime you can compete in any big race it feels pretty good, but to be able to participate in something like the Triple Crown, always makes it special,” McCarthy said. “It's a wide-open race; anything can happen. These are the kind of races you want to participate in. It's pretty neat.”

Rombauer earned a fees-paid entry into the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown by winning Feb.13 El Camino Real Derby, a Preakness 'Win & In' event, at Golden Gate Fields. The son of Twirling Candy most recently finished third in the April 3 Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland.

McCarthy said Rombauer has settled in easily at Pimlico since shipping in from Santa Anita Tuesday. Rombauer galloped 1 1/8 miles Thursday morning.

“He's lightly raced this year. He travels well. He doesn't need to take his racetrack with him,” McCarthy said. “He seems to me to be doing as well as he could be. The horse is himself here and that's a good thing.”

Rombauer has won on turf and synthetic surfaces and is Grade 1-placed on dirt after finishing second in last fall's American Pharoah at Santa Anita.

“He seems to get over every surface,” McCarthy said. “It's a feather in his cap that he can adapt the way he does. He's got wonderful mechanics. He is just light on his feet, very athletic.”

Flavien Prat will ride Rombauer for the first time in the Preakness.

Cohen Makes Preakness Debut with High Hopes for Keepmeinmind
Jockey David Cohen will ride in his first Preakness Stakes (G1) Saturday at Pimlico Race Course expecting a better result fromKeepmeinmind, who closed from 19th to finish seventh in the May 1 Kentucky Derby (G1).

Video Keepmeinmind: https://youtu.be/Fn2J7AsiuUw

“We were extremely happy with his performance in the Derby,” said Cohen, who was provided his first Kentucky Derby appearance by the Robertino Diodoro-trained son of Laoban. “I think he finally got back to his 2-year-old form as far as relaxing early on and coming and finishing up with a nice, strong finish that we know he likes to do. Being such a big field, we got shuffled back a little farther than I'd have liked to have been. But at the same time, with the removal of the blinkers and getting him to relax, I was happy just for him to get back to his running style that we know he wants to run. To see him finish up was definitely encouraging.”

The 36-year-old jockey has ridden Keepmeinmind in six of seven races, only missing out on the Breeders' Cup because he was riding another horse for Diodoro.  He hasn't been just Keepmeinmind's regular jockey, he has been aboard for many of the colt's workouts.

“Some horses you fall into prior to their last start prior to getting to the Derby,” he said. “This guy, I was getting on him for his first quarter-mile at the track. I've really had a lot of foundation with him. That much was pretty special. Doing it with Robertino and my supporters made it even more special…. Just blessed that the horse made a good effort, came out of it healthy and feeling good and sound. I'm definitely looking forward to the Preakness.”

Riding in the Preakness is the latest chapter in Cohen's comeback story.

Cohen, who has ridden 1560 winners since beginning his career in 2004, was among the sport's rising stars when he was kicked by his mount in his lower right leg in the paddock at Aqueduct on Feb. 1, 2014. His badly fractured fibula and tibia required surgery involving a plate and six screws to repair.

The cancer-related death of his father, California horse owner Morry Cohen, several months after the paddock mishap had the jockey struggling to heal, not only physically but emotionally. He rode six races in late 2014 but was discovered to have a torn meniscus in his right knee. Cohen suffered another personal loss a year later with the death of his sister, Dana. He did not ride again until Nov. 30, 2017.

“Coming off an injury in 2018, I received the [JockeyTalk 360] Comeback Award,” he said. “In 2019, I had a bang-up year and won the Oaklawn Park title. To be here in 2021, I'm definitely very blessed for these opportunities.”

Keepmeinmind jogged a mile and galloped a mile Thursday at Pimlico for Saturday's Preakness Stakes. As delighted as Diodoro was with Keepmeinmind's training session Wednesday during the colt's introduction to the Pimlico surface, he was even happier with the second day at the track.

“Yesterday, he seemed happy and relaxed,” Diodoro said. “Today, he was very sharp, a lot sharper but still very happy. I think he likes the track. I'm really impressed with the surface. Even the [exercise rider] says it seems like a very kind track.”

Brown: Risk Taking Gets 'Endurance from His Dad'
During his time (2002-2007) as an assistant to the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, Chad Brown had the opportunity to work with a number of wonderful racehorses.

Tops on that list would be Medaglia d'Oro, winner of eight of 17 career starts, including the 2003 Whitney Handicap (G1) at 2002 Travers Stakes (G1), both at Saratoga.

“He is definitely one of the best horses I worked with in my time with Bobby,” Brown said, “if not the best horse.”

Brown sees a lot of Medaglia d'Oro in Seth Klarman's Klaravich Stables' Risk Taking, one of the two horses Brown will run in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course. And that makes sense since Risk Taking is a son of Medaglia d'Oro.

Video of Risk Taking: https://youtu.be/2OhmOEkKNXc

Video of Crowded Trade: https://youtu.be/Fn2J7AsiuUw

That is not meant to say that Risk Taking is the second coming of his successful sire.

“Medaglia d'Oro was quicker, faster than this horse,” Brown said. “But there are some similarities. The way he looks … you can definitely tell he is an offspring of him. He certainly looks like a son of his.”

Brown began his own training career in 2007 and will be looking for his second win in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. He got his first Preakness in 2017 when Cloud Computing ended up in the winner's circle.

Risk Taking has won two of five career starts and does his best running late. Two starts ago, he won the 1 1/8-mile Withers (G3) at Aqueduct on Feb. 6. He disappointed when he was a non-factor in the Wood Memorial (G2), finishing seventh as the 2-1 favorite.

“I think (Risk Taking) has gotten a lot of endurance from his sire,” Brown said.

Risk Taking and Crowded Trade, also owned by Klaravich Stables, went through their Preakness preparations Thursday, the second day they both went to the track. Under the supervision of Brown's assistant, Jose Hernandez, the two colts galloped about 1 ¼ miles separately.

Exercise rider Kelvin Perez rode both of the horses.

“They looked pretty good,” Hernandez said. “(Wednesday) they were a little in the bridle because they had walked two days in a row. They were more relaxed today and they galloped beautifully. They have a shot.”

Hernandez said that both horses will gallop another 1 ¼ miles Friday morning. One horse will go out at 6 a.m. and the other a half hour later.

Brown is expected to arrive at Pimlico early Friday afternoon.

France Go de Ina's Camp in Fine Spirits after Wednesday's Mishap
Things were back to normal for Yuji Inaida's France Go de Ina Thursday morning.

A day after exercise rider Masaki Takano fell off the colt after completing a four-furlong breeze in preparation for a start in Saturday's Preakness Stakes (G1), his small entourage was able to joke about what happened.

“They were all laughing immediately after,” Kate Hunter, the Preakness field representative for the Japan Racing Association, said outside the Isolation Barn. “We are laughing about it today.”

Takano, who will celebrate his 31st birthday next week, was complaining of some soreness, but that was the only issue remaining from the Wednesday fall after his foot slipped out of the left stirrup.

Hunter said she went out shopping for the rider and brought back a heating pad, Icy Hot and some Advil.

“The only casualty from the fall was a pair of Oakley sunglasses,” she said. “His pride was the only thing that was broken. When he passed the finish, (Takano) was switching his weight to do the gallop out and he lost his balance. He tried to regain it, which is why the horse looked a bit wobbly and he just fell.”

Takano was back on the job Thursday, leading France Go de Ina around the barn for an hour's worth of walking. Trainer Hideyuki Mori was there, too. The horse did not go to the track Thursday following Wednesday's workout.

Hunter said France Go de Ina will be back on track Friday, the last horse to do so, because of quarantine regulations. Training hours are from 5 to 8 a.m. because of the 11:30 a.m. first-race post time for Friday's Black-Eyed Susan (G2) card.

France Go de Ina is scheduled to do his normal walk around the track and then canter around the Pimlico oval Friday. He then will stand in the gate and get a look at where he will be saddled for the Preakness on the turf course.

“We want to let him get accustomed to having someone stand in the gate with him,” Hunter said.

Unbridled Honor Seeks First Stakes Win in Middle Jewel
Whisper Hill Farm's Unbridled Honor, second in the Lexington (G2) and fourth in the Tampa Bay Derby (G2), will be seeking his first stakes victory in the Preakness Stakes (G1) at Pimlico Race Course. Only three horses dating back to at least 1976 have earned stakes credentials in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown: Cloud Computing in 2017, Shackleford in 2011 and Gate Dancer in 1984.

The day that newly-elected Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher ran four horses in the Kentucky Derby (G1), Unbridled Honor worked in company with stablemate Promise Keeper at Churchill Downs. Pletcher takes it as a positive sign for Unbridled Honor that a week later, Promise Keeper earned his first stakes victory in the Peter Pan (G3) at Belmont Park.

“I feel like he's moving forward, but he needs to make that jump to get it done in this race,” he said. “I think he fits the profile well of a horse who has good spacing between his last prep and this. It seems like he's improving gradually. But historically, the horses coming out of the Derby are the ones you have to beat.”

Pletcher is hoping that the fact that one length separated Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit and fourth-place Essential Quality is a sign of parity.

“It appears to be kind of a wide-open group,” he said. “Until someone steps up and wins a couple of these in a row, it seems like it's the kind of year that you could see three different winners [in the Triple Crown series].”

Unbridled Honor will be ridden for the first time by Luis Saez, who was available because 2-year-old champion Essential Quality is not running back in the Preakness.

“Luis is a good positional rider, and he tends to get horses out of the gate well and he'll get good position,” Pletcher said. “This horse could benefit from that. It's a fine line between taking them out of their natural element and also getting them into a better position. Luis hopefully can effectively do that.”

Ram (in his stakes debut), Crowded Trade and the Japanese-based France Go de Ina are the other Preakness horses that have yet to win a stakes.

Unbridled Honor had a routine gallop at Pimlico Thursday morning.

Lukas: 'I've Made a Living Running Where I Don't Belong'
Preakness Stakes (G1) stalwart D. Wayne Lukas didn't quibble when Ram was rated the longest shot on the morning line at 30-1 for Saturday's Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown at Pimlico Race Course. The son of 2015 Triple Crown Champion American Pharoah has won his last two races, but he has the tough task of making his stakes debut in the Preakness.

With six wins from 44 starters, Lukas, 85, knows the Preakness well and readily admits his colt will have to improve again to be competitive in the 1 3/16-mile Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. Lukas, who once again quipped that you can't win a race unless you enter, has been known to drop a longshot winner into Triple Crown races. His last Preakness winner, Oxbow, in 2013, went off at 15-1 and paid $32.80. He won the 1999 Derby with Charismatic and he paid $64.60 after being ignored at 31-1.

Lukas said he pulled off the biggest major-race upset of his career with Commendable, who won the 2000 Belmont Stakes (G1) at 18-1. The Hall of Fame trainer said that he was surprised by Commendable's score that paid bettors $39.60

“I have also won with a few favorites,” Lukas said. “But I have been really lucky. I've made a living running where I don't belong.”

Ram had a routine gallop of 1 3/8 miles Thursday. Lukas said the colt will stand in the starting gate on Friday.

“We're done,” Lukas said. “Now we're just trying to get an energy level and keep him happy.”

Jockey Ricardo Santana Jr. has picked up the mount on Ram, who drew the rail for the Preakness.

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Neige Blanche Noses Out Rideforthecause In Santa Barbara

All in while three deep a quarter mile from home, French-bred Neige Blanche managed to nip Rideforthecause by a scant nose after a marathon mile and one half on turf in Saturday's Grade 3, $100,000 Santa Barbara Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.  Ridden by Juan Hernandez and trained by native Frenchman Leonard Powell, Neige Blanche, which translates to white snow in English, registered her first North American stakes win while stopping the clock in 2:28.01.

Starting mid-way up Santa Anita's legendary hillside turf course, heavily favored Tapwater, with Flavien Prat up, appeared to be in firm control on the lead as longshot Star of Africa tracked her in second, about one length off the lead as they crossed under the wire for the first time.

Turning up the backside, Tapwater maintained her one length edge, but Hernandez had a handful of horse, about three off the lead heading to the far turn and in a thriller, gained joint command along with Rideforthecause a sixteenth of a mile out as Tapwater faded late to run third.

“It was really close, it could probably go both ways, 50-50, inside or outside and thanks to my filly, we got it,” said Hernandez who chalked up his third win on the day and his seventh stakes win.  “It was better, because last time (a fourth place finish in the Grade III Santa Ana Stakes March 27) I think we were a little too close to the pace and today, I was a little bit more (relaxed).  Two horses in front of me and she relaxed pretty well.  Around the quarter pole, when I asked her to go, she responded really well.”

A Group 3 winner in her final French start on June 6, 2020, but winless in four stateside starts, Neige Blanche was off at 5-1 in a field of seven fillies and mares three and up and paid $13.40, $7.00 and $3.60.

“No, honestly, I thought the inside got it,” said Powell when asked if he thought he had won the tight photo finish, in which Neige Blanche was positioned outside the runner-up.  “If we were going to be in front, it was going to have to be a lucky bob and it was a lucky bob.  Today, she proved that she belongs and that she was worth the investment.  I want to thank the partners, Madaket Stables, Marsha Naify and (Laura) De Seroux for trusting us with her.”

A 4-year-old filly by Anodin out of the Muhtathir mare Bianca Neve, Neige Blanche now has four wins from 11 starts and with the winner's share of $60,000, increased her earnings to $177,112.

In a gut wrenching defeat, Rideforthecause, ridden by Mario Gutierrez, finished 1 ¾ lengths in front of Tapwater and paid $6.20 and $3.40 while off at 6-1.

Trained by Richard Mandella, Tapwater was off at even money and paid $2.40 to show.

Fractions on the race were 23.72, 48.08, 1:13.56, 1:39.27 and 2:03.80.

Racing resumes with a nine-race card on Sunday with first post time at 1 p.m.

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McCarthy ‘Couldn’t Be Happier’ With Rombauer’s Five-Furlong Breeze

John and Diane Fradkin's homebred colt Rombauer had his final timed workout in preparation for the 146th Preakness Stakes (G1) Saturday morning, covering five furlongs in :59.80 under jockey Flavien Prat at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.

Trainer Michael McCarthy said, “I couldn't be happier” with the breeze, which was the fourth-fastest of 56 recorded at the distance.

“He worked in company, settled in a length behind the other horse, passed him coming to the eighth pole and went on about his business,” McCarthy said.

Prat will ride the son of Twirling Candy for the first time in a race while making his Preakness debut. Prat entered Saturday tied with Luis Saez for third nationally in races-won at 99 and fourth in purse earnings.

Rombauer, who is scheduled to ship from California to Baltimore on Tuesday, most recently finished third in the April 3 Blue Grass Stakes (G2) at Keeneland. The Kentucky-bred colt previously captured the El Camino Real Derby, a Preakness 'Win & In' stakes at Golden Gate Fields.

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