Poetic Flare, Mother Earth Chase Classic Doubles

   Jim Bolger has some unfinished business to take care of on Sunday, having gone agonisingly close to an unprecedented English-French-Irish Guineas treble in 2007 with Finsceal Beo (Ire) (Mr. Greeley). Denied by a head by Darjina (Fr) (Zamindar) in the second leg at ParisLongchamp, the “living legend” went on to add the Irish equivalent and it is a unique Guineas treble that is on the mind of the Coolcullen maestro once again in 2021.

With an extra seven days than his brilliant filly had between the G1 2000 Guineas and the G1 Emirates Poule d'Essai des Poulains for his latest project Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}), this second part of the ambitious tilt at least seems achievable. Bolger's horses have proven time and again that they can back up quickly, so the 15-day gap that his May 1 Newmarket Classic hero has enjoyed is a relative holiday and he also has an ideal draw in four. Due to the customary eight-day period between the English and French mile monuments, the 2000 Guineas hero has not even attempted the double in recent decades but the veteran owner, breeder and trainer has spotted an opportunity to create some history.

“I'm hoping to do them all, all going well,” he said, referring to the triumvirate of European Classics which culminates at The Curragh next Saturday. “I haven't had many runners in the French Classics–Finsceal Beo was the only one, I think. He's come of Newmarket well and I've no worries about the ground.”

Irish racehorses have come even more to the fore in recent weeks under both flat and National Hunt codes and it would be no surprise if this Classic was another prestige event to be dominated by the country. Poetic Flare's sole defeat came in a soft-ground G1 Dewhurst S. won by compatriot St Mark's Basilica (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), although there were mitigating circumstances for that effort as Bolger's homebred was coming into that off a lengthy break. St Mark's Basilica now has to play catch-up with the colt he left trailing in Newmarket's juvenile showcase, but the half-brother to Magna Grecia (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) will be at home on this easy surface. “It was always the plan for him to run in the 2-year-old race on Arc day [the Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere], but he didn't and that is why he ended up going to Newmarket,” Aidan O'Brien said. “After that it was always the plan then that he would go to France for this race. I think he's a miler, but when Frankie [Dettori] rode him in the Dewhurst he said then he'd get further than the Dewhurst trip, so you'd think he might get a bit further at three.”

As far as the home team is concerned, the G3 Prix de Fontainebleau is a key course-and-distance trial and the latest edition Apr. 18 went to the imposing Policy of Truth (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) at the expense of the runaway G1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere hero Sealiway (Fr) (Galiway {GB}). The latter's trainer Frederic Rossi is convinced that Haras de la Gousserie and Guy Pariente's representative has made marked improvement from that comeback and it is hard to forget his emphatic eight-length victory on testing ground in the Lagardere. “Sealiway is getting stronger,” he said. “His last work was very satisfactory and I hope the ground will be on the soft side. I don't think that there is one particular standout horse.”

From Britain is Hambleton Racing's Mehmento (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), a member of Archie Watson's stable who comes here on the back of a second in the G3 Greenham S. at Newbury Apr. 18. Bizarrely, his early education was solely on Southwell's Fibresand with two wins there by a cumulative margin of 22 1/2 lengths Jan. 15 and Feb. 25. The syndicate's head racing manager Cosmo Charlton said, “He's in really good form and Archie is very happy with him, so fingers crossed he runs well. It was only his third start at Newbury, so hopefully there's more improvement to come. It's a big step up again. You've got the 2000 Guineas winner in there and Aidan O'Brien's Dewhurst winner, so those two are going to be hard to beat. If we can be in the mix to make the frame we'll be absolutely delighted.”

Where Finsceal Beo failed narrowly in completing the 1000 Guineas-Poule d'Essai des Pouliches double, the current Newmarket Classic title-holder Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) bids to put that right on Sunday. She is joined by the fellow Irish-trained Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}), who was just a neck behind the Ballydoyle repesentative when third in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at Keeneland in November. Miss Amulet has a big disadvantage of the widest draw in 13 and that allied with the fact that Mother Earth also has a fitness edge over her means that it would be a remarkable training feat from Ken Condon if she overcomes. “She accumulated plenty of experience as a juvenile with eight runs, she's been abroad and obviously finished her year in the Breeders' Cup so she's not lacking in that department,” he said. “She does like nice ground too and I didn't think the likelihood of nice ground in the trials in the spring was probably realistic, so we were happy to go straight there.”

Miss Amulet's stamina has to be taken on trust, but Condon is happy to find out. “You'd need to see more evidence, I suppose, before you could be categorical about the trip but to my eyes she ran on well and was strong going to the line at Keeneland,” he added. “We've had an uninterrupted prep. She's fit and looks a picture; all is well with her. She's not a flamboyant worker or anything like that, but she's done everything we've wanted. She's been on the grass with all the fillies here at The Curragh, and she won't lack for fitness anyway. She's drawn 13, which will be difficult out there but I'll speak with Ioritz Mendizabal and Michael, and we'll try to formulate a plan.”

Andre Fabre has opted to revert to a mile with Godolphin, Ecurie des Monceaux and Ecurie Skymarc Farm's unbeaten Philomene (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) following her success over 10 1/2 furlongs in the Apr. 6 G3 Prix Penelope at Saint-Cloud. As a May-foaled half-sister to Magic Wand (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}), this is a bold move but her trainer has made many leftfield decisions throughout his remarkable career with much success. “Philomene is a very straightforward filly, who has enjoyed an uninterrupted preparation,” Godolphin's Lisa-Jane Graffard commented. “Dropping her back in trip came under discussion very quickly after the Prix Penelope and Andre Fabre felt this race worked best for her timing-wise. She is a filly with a lot of class and Andre has very few worries about the trip. It's obviously unusual to drop back in distance from a [Prix de Diane] prep race to the Pouliches, but it has been done before and he felt that it was the right thing to do. This is very much a springboard for the Prix de Diane, but we are hopeful that she can run very well.”

Another potentially high-class domestically-trained filly is Gemini Stud's Sweet Lady (Fr) (Lope de Vega {Ire}), who has received the inside draw in one. Having beaten last year's G1 Prix Marcel Boussac heroine Tiger Tanaka (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}) by six lengths in the Listed Prix la Camargo at Saint-Cloud Mar. 21, she was doing her best work late when fourth to Cirona (GB) (Maxios {GB}) in a blanket finish in the course-and-distance G3 Prix de la Grotte which included the runner-up Silvestri (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) and third King's Harlequin (Ire) (Camelot {GB}).

“Sweet Lady is in great shape and the more rain there is, the happier I will be,” trainer Francis-Henri Graffard said. “She ran well in the Prix de la Grotte, which was a bit of a strange race with little pace. Christophe Soumillon looked after her that day. She has improved a lot for the run and looks in very good order to me. We are following the tried-and-tested route.”

Another proven prep is the G3 Prix Imprudence and it was Yeguada Centurion SL's Reina Madre (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) who prevailed in that seven-furlong contest over Deauville's straight track Apr. 8. As she was on that occasion, she is a live outsider again along with Amo Racing and Charles Obank's G3 Prix Miesque winner Lullaby Moon (GB) (Belardo {Ire}). The latter's trainer Ralph Beckett is wanting rain. “Lullaby Moon has worked well this spring and is ready for this task,” he said. “Every drop of rain that falls up to post time will help.” This is the swansong for Tiger Tanaka, who was sixth in the nine-furlong G3 Prix Vanteaux here Apr. 11 following her heavy defeat in the Prix la Camargo. “Tiger Tanaka is doing well–she showed us that she was in very good order during her work on Wednesday,” trainer Charley Rossi commented. “I think this will be her last race. She has had some health issues in the past and we want to do what is right by her. It is a great privilege to train such a filly. It is thanks to her that my wife, Jessica Marcialis, made racing history. Tiger Tanaka certainly has captured the imagination.”

Chapel Takes Next Step

At Naas on Sunday, 'TDN Rising Star' Contarelli Chapel (Ire) (Caravaggio) works towards Royal Ascot in the G3 Coolmore Stud EBF Fillies Sprint S. So impressive over this course and six-furlong trip Apr. 26, the half-sister to Fancy Blue (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) is taken on again by the third-placed Freedom of Speech (Ire) (Australia {GB}) who has since come back here to win May 8. “She seems in good form since winning at Naas,” trainer Aidan O'Brien said of the likely hot favourite. “She hasn't done much obviously, but we're very happy with her since. This will tell us what our next option will be, whether that's Royal Ascot or somewhere else, but we are happy with her. Having won already in Naas is obviously a positive and we were delighted with her that day.”

In the G3 Goffs Lacken S., Laws of Indices (Ire) (Power {GB}) who beat Lucky Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) in The Curragh's G2 Railway S. in July is back at that six-furlong trip following a latest fifth behind Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}) in

Leopardstown's Listed Ballylinch Stud 2000 Guineas Trial over an extra furlong Apr. 11. He takes on last year's G3 Anglesey S.  one-two A Case of You (Ire) (Hot Streak {Ire}) and Lipizzaner (Uncle Mo) and trainer Ken Condon is happy to be sending him back to what looks an ideal distance. “He's been very well since he ran in the Guineas Trial and, of course, it goes without saying the form of that is working out very well,” he said. “He has a penalty on Sunday, but he's entitled to carry that for what he did last year. It was a very nice comeback run under a penalty–I was pleased with that and I think he's come forward for it. He's a hard horse to read, to be categorical about his optimum. There were diverging opinions, but I think the owners as a collective decided after the Guineas Trial to target this race and come back in trip.”

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O’Brien, Dettori Team Up To Win 1,000 Guineas With Mother Earth

Frankie Dettori celebrated winning the 20th Classic of his career with victory on Mother Earth in the QIPCO 1,000 Guineas – then joked he has “plenty of time” to beat the legendary Lester Piggott's record of 30.

It was a fourth victory in the race for the 50 year old Italian jockey and a seventh for trainer Aidan O'Brien.

Taking the lead just inside the final quarter mile, Zoffany filly Mother Earth, a 10-1 chance, kept on finding more and at the finish had a length to spare over the staying on Saffron Beach (9-1). A futher neck back in third was 22-1 chance Fev Rover.

Speaking after the race Dettori said: “I was super excited to win that! I didn't have the pressure to ride the favorite and had a very willing partner on a filly who I knew would give me everything.

“Aidan gave me a lot of confidence this morning and said to forget about (favored) Santa Barbara and just ride my own race. He told me to get cover and I did and like I said I forgot about the favorite and just kicked at the top of the hill.

“I knew she'd stay really well and I won – it's as simple as that! It's my 20th Classic (in Britain) at 50 years old. I'm only 10 behind Lester now so I've got plenty of time!

“It's great to do it at Newmarket. I'm extremely happy and I got lucky to get that ride. Lester was 56 so I've got six years left and Kevin (Manning, 54, winner of Saturday's 2,000 Guineas with Poetic Flare) won yesterday – come on the oldies!”

Before the QIPCO 1000 Guineas, many had expected an O'Brien victory in the race to come via his 5-2 joint favorite Santa Barbara, who finished fourth under Ryan Moore.

But O'Brien said of Mother Earth: “She's a very good filly and always was. It was unfair to the favorite (Santa Barbara) to come but we had to come with the view to coming back over here for the Oaks.

“Santa Barbara is only a baby and Ryan said that he'd liked to have waited longer but he saw Frankie coming down his outside and he had to come then and she was just green in the dip, but after having one easy run it was a great run.

“Mother Earth is a very consistent filly – she had a great run in America last time out last year and that was very professional. She relaxed and quickened and did everything really well, so we're delighted. I think Mother Earth will stick to a mile and we'll step Santa Barbara up in trip – the latter was always going to go to the Oaks next time and this filly was always going to go to the Irish Guineas next. That was the plan.

“We won't go again with Santa Barbara (before the Cazoo Oaks). We felt that she would learn as much coming here as she would for three runs, but it was a risk doing it that she was going to get beaten.

“She'll be fine, she's classy and she would have learnt a lot today and she has plenty time to get over that. Ryan was very happy and he said to me that in an ideal world he didn't want to commit as early.

“But with Frankie coming he had to keep going then and she was a little bit unbalanced going into the dip, which is understandable as we've never taken her off the bridle at home. Hopefully she'll come out of it ok and it will do her good.

“I didn't ask Frankie anything afterwards – I just listened. I'm sure you could hear it all as well! It's great to have him and he's an unbelievable rider.”

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The Weekly Wrap: Pure Poetry

Master horseman Jim Bolger may have been ensconced in Ireland during this weekend's Guineas Festival, but his influence was felt far and wide across the Rowley Mile.

The fact that Bolger bred, trained and raced the 2000 Guineas winner Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire})-in addition to the small feat of breeding his sire and first two dams and training his grandsire and third dam-has been well documented in the following days. But Bolger's fingerprints were likewise on the G1 1000 Guineas the next day: he had trained the winner Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire})'s dam Many Colours (Ire) (Green Desert) for Godolphin, putting a foundation of four wins from 10 starts, including the Listed Dance Design S., on her before she was transferred to Saeed bin Suroor for a Dubai campaign. After producing two winners from her first five foals, Many Colours was sent through the ring at the 2016 Arqana December Breeding Stock Sale in foal to Night Of Thunder (Ire), where she was scooped up by the Wallace family's Grenane House Stud for €50,000. She will be worth considerably more now, with that resulting Night Of Thunder filly, Night Colours (Ire), having won the G2 Premio Dormello and the mare's next foal being Mother Earth. Many Colours has a yearling filly by Sioux Nation and a colt foal who is a full-brother to Mother Earth.

It shouldn't be overlooked either, that in addition to the dam, Bolger also trained the trainer of Mother Earth, Aidan O'Brien having spent his formative years in Bolger's employ.

Last October, when Bolger bred four 2-year-old stakes winners (including two Group 1 winners) in the space of a week, and trained and owned three of them, and three of their sires and all of their dams, it was rightly hailed as a remarkable accomplishment. It would take some deep digging into the record books to know where that feat rates in history, but for the 2000 Guineas it is a bit easier to ascertain. You have to go back to the late 1800s to find the last time an individual trained their own horse to win the 2000 Guineas, and it happened four times between 1823 and 1872. Complete records on breeders for the time are difficult to track down, but we do know that in 1844 John Barnham Day bred, trained and owned 2000 Guineas winner The Ugly Buck. We do not know whether Day bred The Ugly Buck's sire and first two dams! In any case, the owner/breeder/trainer trifecta hasn't happened in the Guineas since at least the mid 1800s. Bolger himself would have accomplished it eight years earlier with Poetic Flare's sire Dawn Approach had he not sold his colt to Godolphin late in his 2-year-old season, but that association-which also saw Dawn Approach's sire New Approach (Ire) change silks prior to winning the 2008 Derby–has been mutually beneficial. Bolger, who always seems to know exactly what he has, was surely crafting a return to the Rowley Mile in his own silks before the ink was dry on the Dawn Approach deal, with the breeding rights he had retained. Meanwhile, Bolger has continued to reap the rewards of another branch of the family: Poetic Flare's third dam Saviour (Majestic Light)-who Bolger trained for Tom Gentry before buying her privately from her breeder-is the second dam of the Bolger-bred Teofilo (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who like Dawn Approach and New Approach won the Dewhurst before going to stud at Darley.

Though he has supplied 10 European stakes winners from his first four crops of racing age, Dawn Approach, prior to Saturday, simply hadn't taken off at stud in the fashion one might have hoped for from a champion 2-year-old and Guineas winner. After covering 32 mares at Kildangan Stud in 2020-most of which were Bolger's anyway–he was deemed surplus to requirements on the Darley roster. No bother. Bolger took Dawn Approach back to his Redmondstown Stud for 2021, where he has entertained Bolger's own broodmares, and it is likely a few others will be knocking on the door. Poetic Flare aside, Dawn Approach has made a productive start to the turf season: his three runners in Britain on Saturday were all winners; 3-year-old Lunar Space (Ire) won the Listed Tetrarch S. on Monday for-you guessed it-owner/breeder/trainer Jim Bolger; and he had three other winners and four placegetters last week. Dawn Approach is the first 2000 Guineas winner to sire a winner of that Classic since 1984 victor El Gran Senor provided the 1989 winner Rodrigo De Triano, both campaigned by Robert Sangster.

Rock Solid

Poetic Flare's sire wasn't his only family member who made a statement over the weekend. We highlighted the accomplishments of Coolmore's elder statesman Rock Of Gibraltar (Ire) in this space last week on the back of his Rocky Sky (Ire) winning the Listed Salsabil S., and if this weekend's results are anything to go by it looks as if the genes of the seven-time Group 1 winner could be enjoying a renaissance. Rock Of Gibraltar was the damsire of three group winners this weekend: in addition to Poetic Flare, daughters of the son of Danehill produced the Aga Khan's Ebaiyra (Distorted Humor), who won her third group race in ParisLongchamp's G3 Prix Allez France; and Lambo (Ger) (Protectionist {Ger}), who became the first stakes winner for his sire in the G3 Bavarian Classic. The Bolger bred, owned and trained 2-year-old filly Missing Matron (Ire) (Vocalised), out of a full-sister to Poetic Flare's dam, picked up black-type on Monday when finishing third in The Curragh's Listed First Flier S. At 22, Rock Of Gibraltar is this year available for his lowest-ever fee of €5,000, but despite the dip his numbers have held steady: he sired 12 stakes winners in 2020 and his 2017 crop, his 4-year-olds of 2021, has included six stakes winners-his third-best crop yet.

Poetic Flare will be the last Bolger-bred foal out of his dam Maria Lee (Ire); Bolger sold her for €65,000 at Goffs November in 2018 to Clarecastle Stud, whose David O'Loughlin-also director of sales at Coolmore–said the Rock Of Gibraltar factor was key to the then-11-year-old mare's appeal.

“Firstly, she was a daughter of a stallion that we really rate, Rock Of Gibraltar,” he said. “With Poetic Flare winning on Saturday and Kameko taking the race last year, his daughters have now produced the winner of the 2000 Guineas two years running. She was also out of a mare by Royal Academy, a stallion I was lucky to be involved with through my work for Coolmore. Her first foal [Glamorous Approach] was a dual listed winner and had been sold for €280,000 as a breeding prospect earlier that year; we believed there may be a fair bit of upside to her.”

“The first foal [Maria Lee] produced for us was a colt by Dawn Approach, a full-brother to Poetic Flare. We sold him to Jim Bolger's granddaughter Clare Manning as a foal and he is now a 2-year-old named Frazil. We then bred her to U S Navy Flag, a champion 2-year-old like Dawn Approach. The resultant foal has developed into a lovely yearling. We look forward to offering her later on this year. We then bred her to another Group 1 winning 2-year-old in Magna Grecia. She produced a colt foal by him the other day. We are really delighted with him. We currently are discussing who to breed her back to and it's definitely not out of the question that she may return to Magna Grecia off the strength of her foal.”

Zoffany Much Missed

While Team Coolmore is surely enjoying a sense of pride concerning Rock Of Gibraltar, Zoffany's good weekend had a bittersweet tone to it, with the son of Dansili (GB)'s premature loss at just 13 in January felt more keenly than ever. In addition to Mother Earth's Classic win, the 5-year-old Zofelle (Ire), who was picked up by Stephen Hillen for 27,000gns from the Peter Magnier dispersal at Tattersalls July in 2019 and later sold privately to Scott Heider, was beaten three-quarters of a length when third in Saturday's GII Distaff Turf Mile S. on the Kentucky Derby undercard. The winner was Blowout (GB), Dansili's daughter of the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches winner Beauty Parlour (GB) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) who had cost Peter Brant €450,000 as a foal at the Wildenstein Dispersal in 2016.

Minaun (Ire), a member of Mother Earth's crop, meanwhile, marked herself as one to watch with an eye-catching local debut at Belmont Park on Friday for trainer Chad Brown. Bred by Sir Edmund Loder-whose Bellosa (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}) was one of the more impressive debutantes of the Craven meeting-Minaun was an €8,000 Goffs Sportsmans yearling who broke her maiden in the G3 Marble Hill S. last summer for Henry De Bromhead before being sold privately to American owners.

Zoffany wasn't the only son of Dansili to enjoy a productive weekend: Bated Breath (GB) bolstered his strong American record with new graded stakes winner Gift List (GB), a 23,000gns yearling initially trained by Karl Burke who won Churchill's GII Edgewood S. by 4 1/2 lengths in her second American outing. She will doubtless soon have the opportunity to join Viadera (GB) as a Grade I winner for Bated Breath. Bated Breath's Banstead Manor barnmate Kingman (GB) had a Grade I winner on the same card, with Klaravich Stables's October Book 1 find Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) sharing the spoils in the Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic with Colonel Liam (Liam's Map).

Australia (GB) was another sire to make his mark over the weekend with a group winner each in Britain, Ireland and France, all of which could make their marks in the top middle-distance races during the summer. Sir Ron Priestley (GB) got things going with a comfortable score in Saturday's G2 Jockey Club S. at Newmarket, and the 2019 G1 St Leger-placed 5-year-old looks set to continue his comeback after missing all of 2020 in the G2 Hardwicke S. at Royal Ascot. The 4-year-old Mare Australis (GB) became Australia's second Group 1 winner-joining last year's Leger scorer Galileo Chrome (Ire)-when taking ParisLongchamp's G1 Prix Ganay on Sunday, and his longterm goal is the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. Broome (Ire) has to be one of the most accomplished horses of the season thus far; he made it three stakes wins on the bounce when taking Monday's 10-furlong G2 Mooresbridge S. at The Curragh and is surely Group 1-bound sooner rather than later.

Cup Protocols Tightened

Speaking of Australia, the horse's namesake was in the headlines last week when it was announced that significant new health and safety measures would be implemented in particular for international horses looking to compete at the Melbourne Spring Carnival. Prompted by the high-profile death of Derby winner Anthony Van Dyck (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) during the running of last year's Cup, Racing Victoria commissioned a fatality report as well as a review of injuries sustained by international horses both during the Melbourne Cup and at their quarantine station, the Werribee International Horse Centre, since 2010. That is because, unfortunately, Anthony Van Dyck's breakdown was not an isolated incident. While a locally-trained runner has not died during the Cup for 42 years, the last eight years have seen six international horses break down during the Cup, and three others sustain fatal injuries at Werribee. Most of those were from European stables.

RV's review was released last week, with 41 of the 44 recommendations within set to be implemented. All Cup runners-local or international-for the first time will undergo a CT scan of their distal limbs pre-race and will be subject to an additional veterinary inspection the day before the race, but that is where the paths diverge. International horses aspiring to compete in the carnival will now be required to undergo a full-body scintigraphy and CT/MRI of their distal limbs before entering quarantine. International horses that have had a previous fracture or orthopedic surgery will be excluded from the carnival. An additional vet check by an RV-approved veterinarian will be required before the horse boards the plane, and the number of international runners at Werribee will be capped at 24; the uncapped peak was 42 in 2018. Those that do make it over will only be allowed to run once before the Cup.

The changes were met by almost universal disappointment among European trainers, who expressed understanding that something had to be done, but disappointment nonetheless at the severity of the new measures. There is fear that the difficulty and expense of running a foreign horse at the carnival may mean that even more middle distance runners and marathoners are sold abroad even earlier in their careers. There is sadness that The Race That Stops A Nation, which has become an international treasure since the pioneering Dermot Weld won it with Vintage Crop in 1993, may shrink back to a colonial event once again. The recommendations in the report are based on educated guesses, but as it usually goes with horses, no one really knows why international horses are dying at such a disproportionate rate to locals at the spring carnival. Yes, the measures seem in some cases extreme, but they might be what is needed to pull the Cup back from the public confidence crisis it is embroiled in.

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Aunt Pearl Runs Juvenile Fillies Turf Rivals Off Their Feet

Jockey Florent Geroux hustled Aunt Pearl out of the gate to secure the early lead, then cruised to an easy 2 1/2-length victory in Saturday's $1-million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at Keeneland, covering one mile on good turf in 1:35.71 and paying $7.20 as the betting favorite.

The Juvenile Fillies Turf was the fourth of five Future Stars Friday races for 2-year-olds that kicked off the two-day Breeders' Cup world championships at the Lexington, Ky., track.

Aidan O'Brien-trained Mother Earth finished second, with another European-based runner, Miss Amulet, third. She was followed by Campanelle, the Wesley Ward-trained filly who won the Group 2 Queen Mary at Ascot and Group 1 Prix Morny in Deauville.

Aunt Pearl, trained by Brad Cox, is a 2-year-old Irish-bred filly by Lope de Vega out of Matauri Pearl, by Hurricane Run. She was bred by Ecurie Des Charmes and Ballylinch Stud and races for the partnership of Michal Dubb, Madaket Stables, Peter Deutsch, Michael Kisber, The Elkstone Group and Bethlehem Stable.

Geroux, one of the best front-end jockeys in the sport, was intent on putting Aunt Pearl on the lead, and the opening quarter mile in :22.55 suggested he might be asking the filly to go too fast too early. But he managed to slow things down, getting the second quarter mile in :24.75 for a half-mile time of :47.30. The third quarter was slower still – :24.91 – for an opening six furlong time in 1:12.21.

Despite those progressively slower fractions, no one was gaining on Aunt Pearl, who cruised past the furlong pole in 1:23.84 en route to her final time of 1:35.71 Her final quarter mile was :23.50.

Aunt Pearl debuted at Churchill Downs on Sept. 1, winning a mile maiden race by five lengths, then came back five weeks later to win the G2 Jessamine Stakes at Keeneland by 2 1/2 lengths in similar front-running fashion.

The Juvenile Fillies Turf was the fourth Breeders' Cup winner for Cox, a 40-year-old native of Louisville, Ky. For Geroux, it was the sixth Breeders' Cup win for Geroux, a native of France who won the Juvenile Fillies Turf with Catch a Glimpse in 2015.

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