Moscato Scores Hard-Fought Smithwick Win

Even Saratoga Race Course bettors, usually a decisive lot, could not come to a firm commitment in Thursday’s GI A. P. Smithwick Memorial Steeplechase H. Would it be Moscato (GB) (Hernando {Fr}) or Optimus Prime (Fr) (Deportivo {GB})? They were that close. Rosbrian Farm’s highweighted Optimus Prime was the betting favorite until a few flashes before post time, when Bruton Street-US’s Moscato benefited from some late money to become the 1.70-to-1 favorite. Optimus Prime went off at 1.95-to-1. They were together through the first 1 1/2 miles of the 2 1/16-mile race on Saratoga’s inner turf course, and they provided the Smithwick’s drama through the final furlong. In deep stretch, the Smithwick came down to the two of them, with Optimus Prime beginning to tire in his first start in more than 14 months and Moscato surging to a hard-fought victory by three-quarters of a length. Possessing excellent speed for hurdlers, the duo saved their assaults for the end game as first Surprising Soul (Perfect Soul {Ire}) and then Redicean (GB) (Medicean {GB}) laid down the preliminary pace.

Ridden by Michael Mitchell, Moscato did not begin to move forward until the final run through Saratoga’s backstretch, and Darren Nagle did not flinch aboard Optimus Prime until the last fence, located at the end of the backstretch. Thomas Garner, aboard Redicean, tried a breakaway move on Saratoga’s final turn, but Optimus Prime was eating up ground with surprising ease.

“I thought we were on trouble on the turn,” said Moscato’s trainer Jack Fisher.

Mitchell was making headway with Moscato, but he was having to work for it. They weaved through tiring horses, but in midstretch they were still two lengths behind Optimus Prime, who had hit the front shortly before the furlong pole. Moscato, responding to Mitchell’s entreaties, gradually pared Optimus Prime’s advantage and took the lead inside the final 70 yards. With Optimus Prime showing some signs of fatigue, Moscato was beginning to pull away at the line.

“Coming out of the turn, he got trapped for a little bit of room, but his stamina kicked in and he really went well to the line and got his head in front at the right time,” Mitchell said.

Winner of the GIII Temple Gwathmey H. at Virginia’s Middleburg Spring Races June 13, Moscato completed the Smithwick distance in 3:47.51 on firm turf. Trained by Ricky Hendriks, Optimus Prime finished 2 1/2 lengths ahead of Riverdee Stable’s Gibralfaro (Ire) (Dalakhani {Ire}), who also is trained by Fisher. Redicean finished fourth in a field of eight.

The Smithwick completed a spring hurdle stakes sweep for Bruton Street-US and Fisher. In addition to Moscato’s two wins, Snap Decision (Hard Spun) won the Virginia Gold Cup’s David Semmes Memorial June 27 and Saratoga’s Jonathan Kiser Novice S. Wednesday. Fisher said Moscato and Snap Decision would be pointed toward Saratoga’s GI New York Turf Writers Cup H. Aug. 20.

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Favored Moscato Delivers Sweet Finish In A.P. Smithwick Memorial

Bruton Street's Moscato ran down Optimus Prime in deep stretch, overtaking him from the far outside in the final sixteenth to win Thursday's Grade 1, $100,000 A.P. Smithwick Memorial in the first graded steeplechase race of the summer meet at Saratoga Race Course.

Contested over eight hurdles, it was the final, flat portion of the race that decided the winner. Redicean, the leader at the conclusion of the jumps, was in front heading into the final turn before Optimus Prime, the winner of the 2018 Grade 1 New York Turf Writers Cup of the Spa, took the lead from the outside.

But 8-5 favorite Moscato, under rider Michael Mitchell, put in a furious finish from even further outside, finishing strong under an aggressive hand ride for a three-quarter length victory, completing the approximate 2 1/16 miles on the firm inner turf in a final time of 3:47.51.

“I had to work to keep him in position early,” Mitchell said. “The pace was good early on. I was comfortable with where we were and he jumped fantastically. He really met every fence nicely and covered the ground well. They just started to slow up coming into the turn and we had to weave through a couple of horses. Coming out of the turn, he got trapped for a little bit of room but his stamina kicked in and he really went well to the line and got his head in front at the right time.”

Moscato improved to 2-for-2 in his 9-year-old year, adding to his victory in the Grade 3 Temple Gwathmey Hurdle on June 13 at Glenwood Park at Middleburg. The English-bred son of Hernando gave trainer Jack Fisher his fourth career A.P. Smithwick triumph.

“I thought we were in serious trouble on the turn,” Fisher said. “Optimus Prime cruised up there but he hadn't run in a year and I think he might have needed the race and just ran out of gas in the last sixteenth. I think he'll be very tough next time.”

Moscato, who ended his 2019 season with a third-place finish in the prestigious Grade 1 Grand National at Fair Hill in October, improved to 12-7-3 in 33 lifetime starts. He returned $5.40 on a $2 win wager and improved his career earnings to $414,677.

“The ground suits these jumpers,” Mitchell said. “It's good a good grass cover and we had a little bit of rain last night which helps these horses. Being foreign-bred they like a bit more sponginess and cut in the ground, so it wasn't an issue being wide it was more about keeping the momentum throughout the race.”

Optimus Prime, who entered with wins in four of his previous five starts [with three graded stakes wins] dating to 2018 for trainer Richard Hendriks, finished 2 1/2 lengths in front of Gibralfaro for second.

Redicean and Chief Justice completed the order of finish. Pravalaguna, Surprising Soul and Winner Massagot were all eased. Belisarius was scratched.

The meet's other Grade 1 steeplechase, the $100,000 New York Turf Writers Cup at 2 3/8 miles, is slated for Thursday, August 20. Fisher said both Moscato and Snap Decision, who won Wednesday's Jonathan Kiser Novice at Saratoga, are likely participants.

“We'll probably run them both in the Turf Writers,” he said.

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Moscato Aims for Sweet Win in A. P. Smithwick

The spring steeplechase season was compressed by the coronavirus pandemic into 21 races at two June race meets, but it had some sweet moments.

Perhaps none was as satisfying as the GIII Temple Gwathmey Steeplechase H. victory by Bruton Street-US’s Moscato (GB) (Hernando {Fr}), named after the sweet Italian wine. Moscato will have an opportunity to make his season even sweeter in Saratoga Race Course’s GI A. P. Smithwick Memorial Steeplechase H. Thursday.

Second in the weights to Rosbrian Farm’s Optimus Prime (Fr) (Deportivo {Fr}), 9-year-old Moscato very likely will be favored in the 2 1/16-mile Smithwick off his 11-length victory in the Temple Gwathmey June 13.

The victory was everything that was expected of Moscato since his arrival in leading trainer Jack Fisher’s barn in early 2017. Bred by Kirsten Rausing and formerly trained by Oliver Sherwood, Moscato bolted through the novice division with three New York stakes victories and was American jump racing’s leading earner going into the fall season.

Fisher and the Bruton Street partners-Maryland neighbors Charles Fenwick Jr., Mike Hankin, and Charles Noell entered Moscato for the GI Grand National, but he was scratched on the eve of the Far Hills, N.J., race with an injury that kept him off the racecourse for all of 2018.

He won his comeback race, the 2019 Temple Gwathmey, but did not return to the winner’s circle until his repeat victory last month.

In between, he was unplaced only once, an eighth-place finish in Belmont Park’s GI Lonesome Glory H. behind Wendy Hendriks’ Surprising Soul (Perfect Soul {Ire}), the likely pacesetter in Thursday’s Smithwick.

Bruton Street also entered Pravalaguna (Fr) (Great Pretender {Ire}), a front-running mare formerly trained by Willie Mullins. Shipped in for last fall’s Far Hills meet, she demolished an overmatched group of fillies and mares in the Peapack S.

The 8-year-old has not started since the Peapack. Fisher also entered Riverdee Stable’s Gibralfaro (Ire) (Dalakhani {Ire}), who found a sweet spot in the International Gold Cup’s GII David L. “Zeke” Ferguson Memorial Hurdle S. last October.

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