Patience Pays Off As Shared Sense Victorious In Oklahoma Derby

Into August, Godolphin's Racing operation and trainer Brad Cox had considered running Shared Sense in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby. When they opted out, the G3 Oklahoma Derby was chosen as the next stop for him and on Sunday, he came through for those connections at Remington Park in Oklahoma City, Okla.

Godolphin's top option for the Kentucky Derby for most of the year was a horse named Maxfield. When he left the Derby trail with an injury, Shared Sense became a possibility for the run for the roses the first Saturday of this month. He was a late bloomer, however, winning his first stakes race on July 8 when he took down the G3, $300,000 Indiana Derby at Indiana Grand. While he earned 20 points to qualify for the Kentucky Derby field, he would have had to be supplemented for $45,000 if they wanted to take on Tiz the Law and Authentic. The connections opted to keep him on a different route and that's when he came to Remington Park.

“We just didn't feel like he had the turn of foot coming out of the gate that you need to be in position to run against horses like those in the Kentucky Derby,” said Blake Cox, who represented his dad, Brad Cox, at Remington Park. “We always thought he was a nice horse, but he still needed to learn some things.”

A perfect example of Shared Sense's lack of a turn of foot came after he won the Indiana Derby and was entered back in the $200,000 Ellis Park Derby on Aug. 9. If a horse doesn't have the temerity to get position out of the gate as Cox mentioned, it can be an even tougher task to beat this class of horse from the outside 12-post position. That's what he drew for the Ellis Park Derby and he left the starting gate dead last. He was behind the field down the backstretch of that race and did close, but could do no better than fifth.

That's when Blake Cox said his father, Brad, talked to Godolphin representatives and they opted out of Kentucky for Oklahoma to give him more experience.

Brad Cox, the second-leading trainer in the country behind Remington Park leading trainer Steve Asmussen, has stable earnings of more than $11 million this year. Cox became the first trainer to win the Oklahoma Derby in back-to-back years, having also scored in the 2019 edition with Owendale.

Shared Sense, a  3-year-old Kentucky-bred colt by Street Sense out of the Bernardini mare Collective, was made the betting favorite at 9-5 odds, and pulled away deep in the stretch for a two-length victory over Mo Mosa (5-1) in second. Lightly raced Liam, making his first start against winners, and first stakes try, ran third at 26-1, another 2 1/2 lengths back.

A pair of horses with plenty of action on the tote board that didn't live up to the backing were Oklahoma-bred Rowdy Yates (5-1) in sixth and Dean Martini (4-1) in seventh. Rowdy Yates was trying to become only the third Oklahoma-bred to win this race but didn't have any rally into the stretch. Dean Martini pressed the pace into the stretch but backed up over the final furlong.

Jockey Richard Eramia took comfortable rein on Shared Sense down the backstretch of the 1 1/8-mile race on the main track, sitting fifth.

“I had a little hold on him and he was relaxed behind horses,” said Eramia. “I knew I had a lot of horse left and the best horse in the race.”

Eramia and Shared Sense put a head in front at the top of the lane before drawing off from their competition.

Shared Sense hit the finish line in 1:49.88 over the fast surface. The final time was well off the stakes and track record, set in 1998 by Classic Cat in 1:48. Shared Sense chased fractions set by Liam of :24.11 for the first quarter-mile, :48.96 for the half-mile, 1:13.75 for three-quarters of mile, and 1:38.14 for the mile.

Shared Sense earned $120,000 for the win, his fourth from 10 starts to go along with two seconds while boosting his overall bankroll to $447,745 lifetime. He was bred in Kentucky by the owner. Shared Sense was not the top money earner in this nine-horse field, going in, but he was coming out, proving he is learning his craft.

The complete order of finish in the Oklahoma Derby was Shared Sense, Mo Mosa, Liam, Avant Garde, Salow, Rowdy Yates, Dean Martini, Code Runner and Creative Plan.

Remington Park racing continues into a new month with a Thursday-Saturday schedule on Oct 1-3. The first race nightly is at 7:07pm-Central.

The post Patience Pays Off As Shared Sense Victorious In Oklahoma Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

C Z Rocket Edges Flagstaff In Santa Anita Sprint Championship

In a head and head thriller, trainer Peter Miller's C Z Rocket prevailed by a hard-fought head over John Sadler's Flagstaff in Sunday's Grade 2, $200,000 Santa Anita Sprint Championship at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., final prep to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland on Nov. 7.  Ridden for the first time by Luis Saez, C Z Rocket, who is now unbeaten in five starts with Miller since being claimed for $40,000 last April at Oaklawn Park, covered six furlongs in 1:09.14.

Breaking sharply from his number four post position in a field of five 3-year-olds and up, C Z Rocket was immediately into contention and while under restraint, sat three quarters of a length off Flagstaff as they left the half mile pole.

Turning for home, Flagstaff, with Victor Espinoza up, drifted out a bit, carrying C Z Rocket into the three path and from there, it was game on in the run to the wire, with neither horse giving an inch in great stretch duel.

“I didn't expect to be that close, but he broke so sharp and he took me there,” said the eastern-based Saez.  “I decided to let him settle and keep him happy.  When I pulled the trigger turning for home, he took off.  I love this horse, now he's ready for the real deal.”

A winner of the G2 Pat O'Brien Stakes going seven furlongs on Aug. 29 at Del Mar, C Z Rocket, a 6-year-old Florida-bred gelding by City Zip, was off as the 7-5 favorite and paid $4.80, $2.80 and $2.10.

“There were a lot of things involved in this,” said Miller, who is off to a tremendous start at Santa Anita's Autumn Meet, winning his third stakes dating back to Friday and his fourth overall, good for a tie with Bob Baffert for the lead in the trainer standings.  “We recently sold a part of him to Gary Barber and Sol Kumin and I really wanted to win for those two gentlemen.  Flavien (Prat) took off him (to ride third place finisher Collusion Illusion) and I wanted to prove that he made the wrong move.

“I just wanted to win this race … It was the owner, Tom Kagele, who picked this horse (to claim on April 30).  I wouldn't have picked him, his form was too bad to claim him, but I did like that he had run some fast races in the past … We're definitely leaning toward the Sprint, he's won the last (five) going one turn.  We're going to keep him one turn.”

With his second consecutive graded stakes win in-hand, C Z Rocket, who is out of the Successful Appeal mare Successful Sarah, is now 22-9-1-2 and with the winner's share of $120,000, he has earnings of $551,641.

Flagstaff, who ran too good to lose, was off as the third choice in the wagering and paid $3.00 and $2.10.

Ridden by Prat and off at 9-5, Collusion Illusion, who broke from the rail, couldn't go with the top two late and finished 1 ¼ lengths behind Flagstaff while paying $2.10 to show.

Fractions on the race were 22.33, 45.27 and 57.13.

The Santa Anita Sprint Championship is a Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifier, with the winner earning a fees-paid berth to the Grade I Breeders' Cup Sprint on Nov. 7 at Keeneland.

The post C Z Rocket Edges Flagstaff In Santa Anita Sprint Championship appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Lukas and Baffert: A Friendship Built on Trust and Respect  

Bob Baffert has won more Triple Crown races than any trainer in history. So when he needed someone to oversee the preparation in Kentucky of his sixth Kentucky Derby (G1) winner, Authentic, during the weeks leading up to the Oct. 3 Preakness Stakes (G1), Baffert turned to the man whose record he broke.

That's his pal, six-time Preakness winner D. Wayne Lukas, who set seemingly unattainable records that Baffert has subsequently topped.

The California-based Baffert traditionally keeps his Kentucky Derby horses in Louisville until they ship to Baltimore for the Preakness. And just because the Triple Crown's timing has been reshuffled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Baffert saw no need to change as he seeks a record-breaking eighth Preakness.

Normally, however, the Maryland-bound horses remaining at Churchill Downs after Baffert returns to California stay housed in their Derby Week barn with top assistant Jimmy Barnes. That norm was upended when Preakness contender Thousand Words flipped in the Churchill Downs paddock, sending Barnes sprawling and fracturing his wrist. Thousand Words was scratched from the Kentucky Derby and, like Authentic, is being pointed for the 1 3/16-mile Preakness.

Going into Lukas' famously pristine barn was the obvious option, where the only thing missing from the equine equivalent of a five-star hotel is the mint on the pillow. On the other hand, there is the perk of having Hall of Fame pony boy going to the track with the horses for training.

Baffert long has shipped his horses into Lukas' winter barn in Arkansas when pursuing Oaklawn Park's lucrative Derby prep schedule, including this year when Nadal came away from Lukas' hospitality sporting victories in the Rebel (G2) Stakes and Arkansas Derby (G1), and in 2015 when American Pharoah swept those races and the Triple Crown.

“Wayne and his crew have been great,” Baffert said recently. “It's a great environment for these horses. His barn is fantastic. You know Wayne — it's like the horses are staying at the Ritz-Carlton. It's fun. He's still a very sharp horseman. He lets me know how they look and how they're doing. I trust what he tells me, because he knows.”

Lukas won the 2013 Preakness with Oxbow for his 14th Triple Crown race triumph overall, breaking out of a tie with “Sunny Jim” Fitzsimmons. Baffert tied Lukas' mark five years later when Kentucky Derby hero Justify won the Preakness Stakes. He assumed the record outright when Justify gave Baffert his third Belmont Stakes and second Triple Crown sweep. Authentic's Derby padded Baffert's Triple Crown record to 16 victories.

Baffert's Preakness haul is matched only by R.W. Walden's seven victories from 1875 through 1888. His six Derby winners are tied with Ben Jones (1938-1953).

“We take the responsibility of doing a good job and taking care of them,” Lukas, aided by assistant trainer Sebastian “Bas” Nicholl, said of his horse guests. “Secondly, we just do what Bob wants done. We don't make any earth-shattering decisions. We give feedback how they're doing. He's actually calling all the shots; we just follow through and do a good job of keeping them quiet and happy. It's worked out well in the past. In fact, my strike rate with him is better than my strike rate with my own horses.

“Bob always laughs and says, 'Gee, the barn is so clean and nice. I don't know if they can handle it.' Sebastian has done a great job getting them in and out. We're just trying to do what he wants done and hopefully they run really well under our watch. It would be bad if they run bad in the Preakness and they say Lukas screwed them up.”

Authentic's only defeat in six starts came in the 1 1/8-mile Santa Anita Derby (G1). He subsequently won Monmouth Park's Haskell (G1) at 1 1/8 miles by a nose after appearing poised to draw off.

Lukas said he never questioned that Authentic could be as effective at 1 1/4 miles after watching him train at Churchill Downs before the Derby.

“His energy level, I was watching him come off the track, and his efficiency of motion,” he said. “That horse, you have to sprinkle flour to see if he's touching the ground. I mean, he just gets it over so nice. I think the Preakness is going to be right up his wheelhouse. He ran a heck of a race here. But shortening up and over that particular track, I think he's going to be awful hard to handle. And he's done terrific since the race. I'm not a big gambler, but I wouldn't bet against this horse any time now.”

Lukas, who predicted long before the Kentucky Derby that American Pharoah would be the first Triple Crown winner since 1978, likes what he's seen with the Baffert duo.

“From watching them and just being objective, they're doing terrific,” he said. “I think they've put on a little weight, which is very satisfying. Bob, I think, felt the same way. Obviously after the Derby, the winner was a little bit tucked up, which you'd expect going that far. But his energy level was unbelievable, and I think he's put on 15, 20 pounds. We're feeding them like Bob feeds them. But I think they're just in the alfalfa a little bit, and the hay, and they're just doing well.”

Lukas cheerfully promises he'll give Authentic back to Baffert,” noting of the week's scheduled equine charter from Louisville to Baltimore, “He's going to get him back Tuesday.

“Most trainers who had a Derby winner going to the Preakness would probably pitch a rollaway bed in the next stall and not even let him out of sight, let alone going back to California and saying, 'How is he doing?' ”

Lukas still holds the record for most Eclipse Award champions (24 individual horses) and Breeders' Cup victories (20). But he doesn't hesitate to call Baffert No. 1.

“There's more to this than just training that horse to run a mile in 1:32-and-change,” he said. “His horsemanship, his ability to find a good horse and buy it, his ability to keep his clientele happy — he's No. 1 simply because he covers all the bases. The only thing he doesn't do that I do is he doesn't give those corporate speeches.”

The post Lukas and Baffert: A Friendship Built on Trust and Respect   appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Big Runnuer Never Headed In Opening-Day Eddie D. Stakes At Santa Anita

Breaking sharply from the far outside in a field of seven, favored Big Runnuer made the lead and never looked back, as he took Friday's main event on opening day at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., the Grade 2, $200,000 Eddie D Stakes, winning by one length under upstart Juan Hernandez, thus providing the 28-year-old native of Veracruz, Mexico, with his first ever Santa Anita stakes win.  Trained by Victor Garcia and owned by his father “King” Juan Garcia, Big Runneur got 5 1/2 furlongs on turf in 1:01.15.

A winner of his last two races, most recently the 5 1/2-furlong Siren Lure Stakes at Santa Anita on June 21, Big Runnuer, a 5-year-old horse by Stormy Atlantic, had been ridden in his last two starts by Ruben Fuentes.

“I had never ridden him,so I asked Ruben (who is currently serving a riding suspension) what he knew about him,” said Hernandez.  “He told me he was a very nice horse with natural speed.  It looked like we had some speed inside of us, so I thought we'd stay where we were and stay comfortable.  But he broke sharp and when we cleared them and got to the rail, it was over.  I asked him to change leads and it was no problem.  He's a nice horse.”

Off at 3-2, Big Runneur, who is now four for five on the Santa Anita grass, paid $5.00, $3.20 and $2.60.

“He broke sharp (today), other times he was a jump or a jump and a half slow, but this time he broke sharp and he took the lead so easily,” said Garcia, whose father Juan was a legendary conditioner at Agua Caliente, just south of San Diego.  “I saw the first fraction at 21 (seconds) and is said, 'Well, he's not going too fast.  With the blinkers on, he is more focused on the race.”

Out of the Elusive Quality mare Elusive Luci, Big Runneur, with his first graded stakes victory in-hand, is now 7-4-1-2 overall and with the winner's share of $120,000, he has earnings of $253,660.

The second choice at 5-2, Doug O'Neill's Wildman Jack came rolling from off the pace to be second by 1 ¾ lengths over Grit and Curiosity.  With Abel Cedillo up. “Wildman” paid $3.60 and $2.80.

Ridden by Luis Saez, Grit and Curiosity was off at 7-1 and paid $3.60 to show.

Fractions on the race were 21.96, 43.98 and 55.23.

Named in honor of retired all-time great Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye, the Eddie D was run as the Morvich Stakees prior to being renamed in 2012.  Delahoussaye, America's leading rider by wins in 1978, won the 1984 Morvich aboard the Eddie Gregson-trained Tsunami Slew.

The post Big Runnuer Never Headed In Opening-Day Eddie D. Stakes At Santa Anita appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights