Colonel Liam Outclasses Rivals in Muniz Memorial

Two years ago, Bricks and Mortar (Giant's Causeway) parlayed a victory in the GI Pegasus World Cup Turf into a battling success in the GII Mervin Muniz Memorial S. and–ultimately–a Horse of the Year title. Following in those considerable hoofprints, Robert and Lawana Low's Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) validated odds-on favoritism in the event named in honor of the Fair Grounds' late, beloved racing secretary to continue on a similar trajectory, scoring by a 1 1/2-length margin that belied the ease with which it was accomplished.

Away without incident from gate three in a field scratched down to 10, including defending champion Factor This (The Factor), the $1.2-million second-priciest horse at the 2019 OBS April Sale was a touch fresh while in search of some cover early as he easily secured a ground-saving spot, but settled better turning up the backstretch as Two Emmys (English Channel) called the shots up front. Allowed to creep into closer contention as the field reached the half-mile pole, Colonel Liam traveled strongly on the turn and pushed away from the inside 2 1/2 furlongs out, looking every bit a winner. Asked for his best and shaken up passing the quarter pole, the big gray colt claimed the game pacesetter at the furlong grounds and pulled comfortably clear. Logical Myth (Data Link) rallied from the backfield to snag third money.

The 2 3/4-length winner of his turf debut at Saratoga last July 22, Colonel Liam gave the Aug. 15 $500,000 Saratoga Derby a big shake, closing off with a flourish to finish fourth, beaten 3/4 of a length behind Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and Gufo (Declaration of War), later first and third, respectively, in the GI Hollywood Derby. Freshened up thereafter, Colonel Liam proved 3 1/4 lengths too strong for his peers in the Dec. 26 Tropical Park Derby and found his best stride late in besting his stablemate Largent (Into Mischief) by a neck in the Pegasus. Like Bricks and Mortar, Colonel Liam is likely to proceed to the GI Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic on the GI Kentucky Derby undercard May 1.

Pedigree Notes:

Colonel Liam is the one of four graded winners and three Grade I winners for Liam's Map and is bred on the same cross as 'TDN Rising Star' Wicked Whisper. Colonel Liam is one of two winners from four to race for his dam, an unraced daughter of the Phillipses MGISW turf distaffer Wonder Again, whose full-brother Grass Wonder was the champion 2-year-old of his generation in Japan and later won the Takarazuka Kinen over 2200 meters (11 furlongs) and the 2500-meter (12.5-furlong) Arima Kinen on two occasions before embarking on a stud career. This is also the same female family responsible for GSW Hopeful Growth (Tapiture). Amazement is the dam of Colonel Liam's 3-year-old half-sister Lovely Dee (Shackleford), a juvenile colt by Tapiture and a yearling colt by the late Arrogate, like Liam's Map a son of Unbridled's Song. She most recently visited Copper Bullet (More Than Ready).

Saturday, Fair Grounds
MUNIZ MEMORIAL CLASSIC S.-GII, $300,000, Fair Grounds, 3-20, 4yo/up, 1 1/8mT, 1:48.33, gd.
1–COLONEL LIAM, 124, c, 4, by Liam's Map
1st Dam: Amazement, by Bernardini
2nd Dam: Wonder Again, by Silver Hawk
3rd Dam: Ameriflora, by Danzig
($50,000 Ylg '18 KEESEP; $1,200,000 2yo '19 OBSAPR). O-Lawana L & Robert E Low; B-Phillips Racing Partnership (KY); T-Todd A Pletcher; J-Irad Ortiz Jr. $180,000. Lifetime Record: 7-5-0-1, $870,965. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Two Emmys, 118, g, 5, English Channel–Miss Emmy, by Buddha. ($4,500 Ylg '17 KEESEP). O-Wolfe Racing LLC & Hugh H Robertson; B-Tottenwood Thoroughbreds Inc. (KY); T-Hugh H Robertson. $60,000.
3–Logical Myth, 122, g, 5, Data Link–Undo, by Flatter. ($37,000 Ylg '17 KEESEP). O-JPS Racing; B-Glendalough LLC (KY); T-Joe Sharp. $30,000.
Margins: 1HF, 3HF, NK. Odds: 0.70, 24.70, 10.30.
Also Ran: Pixelate, Ninety One Assault, Captivating Moon, Peace Achieved, Conviction Trade, Spooky Channel, Olympic Runner. Scratched: Cross Border, Factor This.
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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Pegasus Turf Winner Colonel Liam The Horse To Beat In Muniz Memorial

The early returns on Robert and Lawana Low's Colonel Liam were admirable enough for a young horse. A diet of steady works allowed the son of Liam's Map to post a victory via disqualification in his career debut and, while he was beaten in his second outing, there was reason to believe Todd Pletcher, his Eclipse Award-winning conditioner had plenty to work with moving forward.

In order to bring that upside to the surface, however, Pletcher needed to get the gray colt a change in surface scenery. Since switching Colonel Liam to the grass, Pletcher has indeed found himself with a new stable star on his hands, one who can further enhance his budding reputation when he starts in Saturday's $300,000 Muniz Memorial Classic Stakes (G2) against 11 rivals at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.

Contested at 1 1/8 miles over the Stall-Wilson Turf Course, the Muniz is race 12-of-14 and one of eight stakes races on Saturday's program. The headliner is the $1 million TwinSpires.com Louisiana Derby (G2)—a Championship Series event on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. The All Stakes Late Pick Five (races 10-14) and All Stakes Late Pick Four (races 11-14) are both estimated at $750,000.

The expectations Colonel Liam (post 5 as the 3-1 favorite on Mike Diliberto's morning line, with Irad Ortiz Jr. to ride) has carried since being purchased for $1.2 million at the 2019 OBS April 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale were met in his last start when he prevailed in the Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream Park on January 23. Since making his first two starts on dirt, Colonel Liam has won three of his four tries on the turf—confirming Pletcher's belief that life on the lawn would ultimately bring out the 4-year-old's best intangibles.

“We always sort of had in the back of our minds that he's got quite a bit of turf on the bottom side of his pedigree,” said Pletcher, a finalist for racing's Hall of Fame class this season. “He trained well enough on the dirt that we got him started but we also felt like maybe we weren't quite seeing the best of him. We worked him on the turf at Saratoga and that's when we saw a significant improvement. That's why we switched him to the turf, and he seems to have found a home there.”

The only blemish Colonel Liam has had on the turf came when he was bumped hard at the start of the Saratoga Derby last August en route to finishing fourth. A signal of what was to come then emerged last December when he came from off the pace to capture Gulfstream Park's Tropical Park Derby by 3 ¼ lengths.

In his first try against older horses and first venture into graded stakes company, Colonel Liam accelerated in the lane to best stablemate Largent by a neck in the Pegasus Turf while taking down a field that included grade 1 winner Next Shares and fellow Muniz entrant Pixelate.

“We felt very good coming into (the Pegasus),” Pletcher said. “He had got what we'd hoped for in the prep race and subsequently came back and trained great. We were very optimistic that he was sitting on a good race and would perform well. Aside from (the Saratoga Derby), he's been perfect on the grass and I think he's versatile enough he can handle multiple distances.”

The turf male ranks were ripe with parity last season as the top contenders took turns beating up on one another. Should Colonel Liam perform as expected in the Muniz, Pletcher would likely target the $1 million Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic (G1) at Churchill Downs on May 1 with hopes of having his charge emerge as a definitive divisional leader.

“I will say now as an older horse, he has trained more impressively on the dirt than he used to so at some point we might consider trying that again, but he's doing so well on the grass now that we felt that the Muniz was good timing wise to hopefully propel him forward to the race at Churchill on Derby Day,” Pletcher said. “Right now, the plan it to hopefully go from the Muniz to Churchill and then there is a really good schedule of some high-quality grass races all summer. Hopefully we can have a good season with him.”

Gaining Ground Racing's Factor This (post 1 at 4-1 with Shaun Bridgmohan) will try stymie Colonel Liam's progression as he takes to the course where he has earned two of his four career graded stakes victories for trainer Brad Cox. The 6-year-old son of The Factor captured last year's Muniz Memorial—part of a four-race win streak for the bay horse—but has been off the board in his last three starts, including a fifth-place run in the February 13 Fair Grounds (G3).

“(Being on the rail) going 1 1/8 miles doesn't play a big role or scare me any, being down inside,” Cox said. “I like him better in this race than in the last race, from the standpoint that it looks like we're going to have a little bit of a softer pace and not be pressed as much, and that's what he likes. There's no secret about how he likes to run and the trip he needs; he needs to be able to take a breather and hopefully he can be able to get that on Saturday.”

Though Godolphin's homebred Pixelate (post 12 at 8-1 with Luis Saez) was fifth behind Colonel Liam in the Pegasus Turf, he was beaten less than 3 lengths by the winner and has the back class of his victory in the Del Mar Derby (G2) last September for trainer Mike Stidham.

“He ran very well (in the Pegasus Turf), he only got beaten a few lengths,” said Stidham. “He's one of those horses that, every time he runs, he's going to give you a huge effort. We're taking a shot; this race did come up very tough. But I think we're live, he tries every time, and if he gets a decent trip from that outside post, I think we're in there with a decent chance.”

Lothenbach Stables' homebred Captivating Moon (post 3 at 12-1 with Marcelino Pedroza) comes into the Muniz off a victory in the February 13 Fair Grounds, the first graded win for the 6-year-old horse in 29 career starts for trainer Chris Block. He is cross-entered in the New Orleans Classic (G2).

Completing the Muniz Memorial field from the rail out: Paul Braverman and owner-trainer Tom Morley's Ninety One Assault (post 2 at 30-1 with Mitchell Murrill), a Louisiana-bred stakes winner who is 7-for-11 over the Stall-Wilson; Three Diamonds Farm's Cross Broder (post 4 at 5-1 with Jose Ortiz), third in the Pegasus Turf for trainer Mike Maker; JPS Racing's Logical Myth (post 6 at 6-1 with Adam Beschizza); a two-time stakes winner at the meet and second in the Fair Grounds for trainer Joe Sharp; Wolfe Racing and owner-trainer Hugh Robertson's Two Emmys (post 7 at 20-1 with James Graham), who won an optional-claimer here in February; Terry Hamilton's Spooky Channel (post 8 at 8-1 with Florent Geroux), who enters off a win in the January 31 John B. Connally (G3) at Sam Houston for trainer Brian Lynch; Paradise Farms Corp and David Staudacher's Conviction Trade (post 9 at 15-1 with Joel Rosario), third in the Connally for Maker; JSM Equine's Peace Achiever (post 10 at 20-1 with Declan Carroll), third in the Fair Grounds for trainer Mark Casse; and Gary Barber's Olympic Runner (post 11 at 8-1 with John Velazquez), second, beaten a neck, in the February 27 Canadian Turf (G3) at Gulfstream for Casse.

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Colonel Liam Progressing Towards March On New Orleans

Robert and Lawana Low's GI Pegasus World Cup Turf hero Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) breezed a half-mile in :48.40 for trainer Todd Pletcher at Palm Beach Downs Feb. 20 and is penciled in for his next start in the GII Muniz Memorial S. going nine furlongs over the Stall-Wilson turf course at the Fair Grounds Mar. 20, the Lowses bloodstock advisor and racing manager Jacob West said Monday.

The $50,000 Keeneland September yearling turned $1.2-million OBS April breezer got about three weeks off following his neck defeat of stablemate Largent (Into Mischief) in the Pegasus and returned to the worktab with a smooth four-furlong gallop in :48.50 Feb. 13.

“He has trained well since the Pegasus and the plan is to go to the Muniz Memorial at the Fair Grounds Mar. 20 and then kind of see where we go from there,” said West. “The [GI] Old Forester [Turf Classic at Churchill Downs May 1] was the immediate goal and Todd was wondering whether we should do something between that and the Pegasus. He bounced out of [the Pegasus] in good shape. The plan is to ship over to the Fair Grounds and it's a plan very similar to what Chad did with Bricks and Mortar (Giant's Causeway). It works out pretty good with timing and schedule like that.”

Similar to that future Horse of the Year, Colonel Liam has excelled at middle distances to this point in his career, but West is confident that the gray colt will stay further if asked to do so.

“If you go back and watch the replay of the Pegasus, he leveled out at the eighth pole and actually bumped with [stablemate] Social Paranoia (Street Boss). That kind of bumped him onto his left lead, and then once Irad [Ortiz, Jr.] got him switched back over to his right lead, he really finished with a fury and he galloped out big,” West offered. “Pedigree-wise, you wouldn't think that stretching out and going a little bit further would be that big of an issue. Physically he looks like he can get just about any distance.”

He continued, “If anyone can get a max effort out of a horse, it's Todd Pletcher, and Irad has that experience with Bricks and Mortar at the longer distances. He's a tactical rider and we have a tactical horse that seems to handle a lot of different scenarios and he always kind of shows up. I don't think distance will ever been an issue and we're hoping we have that dilemma come Breeders' Cup time on which race we should go into.”

Colonel Liam is but one of a very exciting collection of 4-year-old turf horses that includes Saratoga and GI Hollywood Derby hero Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Gufo (Declaration of War), a fast-finishing third at Del Mar; Decoraded Invader (Declaration of War); and MGSW Smooth Like Strait (Midnight Lute).

“There is plenty of depth in the division, for sure. Right now, we're at the top, but that could obviously change, so we are taking nothing for granted,” he said.

 

WATCH: Colonel Liam storms home in the Pegasus World Cup Turf

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