Weekend Lineup Presented By The Maryland Jockey Club: Pegasus Races Anchor Gulfstream Card

The $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational and $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational are among the seven graded-stakes worth $4.725 million on a blockbuster 12-race program at Gulfstream Park on Saturday. Both Pegasus races will be part of NBC's live national telecast from 4:30 to 6 p.m.

Expanded coverage of the Pegasus World Cup will anchor TVG's weekend coverage as the network is live from Gulfstream Park with exclusive behind-the-scenes features, interviews and expert analysis. TVG's weekend broadcast will also feature opening weekend from Oaklawn Park including the $150,000 Smarty Jones Stakes on Friday which will offer points towards a berth in the Kentucky Derby.

In addition to the Pegasus World Cup coverage, NYRA-produced America's Day at the Races resumes its regular weekend schedule on Jan. 22. Presented in 2021 by America's Best Racing and Claiborne Farm, the show on FS1 and FS2 will feature racing from Aqueduct, Oaklawn Park, Fair Grounds, and Tampa Bay Downs in the coming weeks.

Saturday, Jan. 23

1:05 p.m.—$125,000 G3 Fred W. Hooper Stakes at Gulfstream Park on TVG

Graded stakes winner Performer will make his seasonal bow and first start outside of New York when he heads up the field in the one-mile Fred W. Hooper Stakes. Trained by Shug McGaughey, Performer has five wins from seven starts and has not finished worse than third in his career. The son of Speightstown most recently ran third in the G1 Cigar Mile Handicap on Dec. 5.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA4-EQB.html

2:38 p.m.—$125,000 G3 Marshua's River Stakes at Gulfstream Park on TVG

Stakes winner Vigilantes Way seeks her second win over the Gulfstream Park turf course when she headlines a field of 10 in the one-mile Marshua's River Stakes. The 4-year-old daughter of Medaglia d'Oro comes into Saturday's test off a victory in the Tropical Park Oaks at Gulfstream on Dec. 26. That outing marked the first stakes win for the Phipps Stable homebred in eight career starts.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA7-EQB.html

3:09 p.m.—$125,000 G3 La Prevoyante Stakes at Gulfstream Park on TVG

Regally-bred Always Shopping has shown an affinity for the Gulfstream Park turf in recent months and aims to keep that momentum going in the 12-furlong La Prevoyante Stakes on Saturday. Out of Stopshoppingmaria – the runner-up in the 2011 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf – Always Shopping has won two of her last three starts with both of those victories coming over the Gulfstream turf. The daughter of Awesome Again took the Monroe Stakes on Sept. 7 and enters Saturday's race off a victory in the Via Borghese Stakes on Dec. 19.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA8-EQB.html

3:40 p.m.—$200,000 G2 Inside Information Stakes at Gulfstream Park on TVG

2W Stables' Bronx Beauty, an eight-time stakes winner over her first four seasons of racing, continues the pursuit of her elusive first graded triumph in Saturday's Inside Information. Bronx Beauty owns 10 wins and $618,070 in purse earnings from 25 career starts, all for owners Richard and Marie Woll, for whom Margotta purchased the now 6-year-old mare as a yearling. Twenty-two of Bronx Beauty's starts have come in stakes, six of them graded, including a head loss to Lady's Island in the Dec. 12 G3 Sugar Swirl at Gulfstream, a race where the winner survived a jockey's objection for interference to earn her second straight win in the six-furlong sprint.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA9-EQB.html

4:13 p.m.—$150,000 G3 W. L. McKnight Stakes at Gulfstream Park on TVG

Veteran G1 winner Sadler's Joy will try and notch his first victory in more than a year when he takes on 10 challengers in the 1 ½-miles W.L. McKnight. Trained by Tom Albertrani, Sadler's Joy last visited the winner's circle in November 2019 when he took the Grade 3 Red Smith Stakes. The son of Kitten's Joy most recently finished fourth in the 2020 edition of the Red Smith Stakes and was third in the 2020 Mac Diarmida Stakes last February over the Gulfstream course.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA10-EQB.html

4:59 p.m.—$1,000,000 G1 Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational at Gulfstream Park on NBC

Robert and Lawana Low's Colonel Liam, making just his sixth career start and first in graded company, figures to garner plenty of support in the third running of the 1 3/16-mile Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational. Colonel Liam was made the narrow 7-2 program favorite over stablemate Largent (9-2) in a field of a dozen stakes winners, 10 of them graded, including G1 winners Aquaphobia, Next Shares, Say the Word and Storm the Court, the 2-year-old male champion of 2019. Colonel Liam and Largent are part of trainer Todd Pletcher's triple threat that includes Social Paranoia, also among the five horses listed at less than double-digit odds.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA11-EQB.html

5:44 p.m.—$3,000,000 G1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes at Gulfstream Park on NBC

Korea Racing Authority's Knicks Go is scheduled to seek the biggest payday of his career in Saturday's $3 million Pegasus World Cup Championship Invitational. Knicks Go will enter the fifth running of the Pegasus off three straight victories in as many starts in 2020, including a track record-breaking triumph under Joel Rosario in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile at Keeneland. Installed as the 5-2 morning-line favorite in a field of 12, Knicks Go will have to prove himself by trying to carry his abundant speed beyond 1 1/16-miles, the longest distance he has run during his 17-race career.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/GP012321USA12-EQB.html

6:57 p.m.—$200,000 G3 Palos Verdes Stakes at Santa Anita Park on TVG

Veteran gelding Captain Scotty is back to defend his title as he heads a field of eight older horses going six furlongs in Saturday's Palos Verdes Stakes. A 7-year-old son of Quality Road, Captain Scotty gives trainer Peter Miller a strong one-two punch as he'll be joined by stablemate Shashashakemeup, who comes off a big second place finish in his first start off a $50,000 claim at Churchill Downs. Jay Em Ess Stables' California-bred Take the One O One shortens up out of a close third at 29-1 in the Grade 2 San Antonio Stakes while Ax Man, idle since fourth in the Grade 2 San Diego Handicap at 1 1/16 miles July 25, looms dangerous off the bench for Bob Baffert.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/SA012321USA7-EQB.html

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‘It Makes You Appreciate What You Have’: Cancer Survivor Gonzalez Readies For First Pegasus Starter

Claudio Gonzalez has come a long way since first arriving in the United States more than 25 years ago without a job and barely able to speak the language. He has steadily climbed the ladder, beating cancer along the way, and established himself as the dominant trainer in his home base of Maryland.

Not surprisingly, the affable and easy-going 44-year-old native of Santiago, Chile is careful not to take his success – on or off the track – for granted.

“For sure, it makes you appreciate what you have,” Gonzalez said. “You're always working hard. This job is not easy, and every day is a new day. One day you might win three races, the next day you might not win any. You don't know. You have to keep working hard every day.”

Gonzalez will be chasing his biggest prize to date when he sends out Harpers First Ride for the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) Jan. 23 at Gulfstream Park. Last fall, the 5-year-old gelding provided the trainer with his third and most prestigious career graded-stakes triumph in the historic Pimlico Special (G3) at Pimlico Race Course.

GMP Stables, Arnold Bennewith and Cypress Creek Equine's Harpers First Ride was among the original dozen invitees to the 1 1/8-mile Pegasus for 4-year-olds and up, coming off a 2020 campaign in which he won seven of 11 starts, four stakes and close to $500,000 in purse earnings. The son of Grade 1 winner Paynter arrived in South Florida Jan. 11, and Gonzalez followed two days later.

“Not only for me but for any trainer, it's special. It's a big race and everybody pays attention. Maybe they can know a little bit more about Claudio Gonzalez,” Gonzalez said. “No matter what, it's good for any trainer to be here for a race like that. Everybody is watching.”

Maryland's leading trainer the past four years, Gonzalez has reached triple digits in each of the past three, even with live racing paused in the state for 2 ½ months last year amid the coronavirus pandemic. He swept all four meets in 2020, has won 11 of the last 14 dating back to Laurel's 2017 fall stand, and owns or shares 15 titles overall.

Gonzalez is also a two-time leading trainer during the Maryland State Fair meet at Timonium that typically bridges Laurel's summer and calendar year-ending fall stands but was not held in 2020 due to the pandemic.

“It is not just me. I have a good team. I have very good assistants, riders, hotwalkers, grooms, everything. We are one team and they do a great job,” Gonzalez said. “All my owners understand, if you put the horse in the right spot you have a great chance to win the race. That is the key for me. If they're in the right race, then they can win.”

Gonzalez came to the U.S. in November 1995, a teenager in search of a job, eventually landing work galloping for Juan Serey, a fellow Chilean and the leading trainer in New Jersey at the time.

“Nobody in my family had anything to do with the horses. Only my uncle, who liked to bet the horses and would take me with him,” Gonzalez said. “When I saw the horses I decided I wanted to be a jockey. I started out trying to be a jockey, but I got too big. I ate too much.

“My father [Francisco] was in New York and brought me here. I went to see Juan at that time and he gave me the chance to gallop for him,” he added. “Because Juan is from Chile, too, people told me about him and I just went to him and asked if he had a job.”

Gonzazlez stayed with Serey until 2002 and had a short stint under trainer Gary Contessa before becoming an exercise rider for trainer Ben Perkins Jr. at Monmouth Park. Among the top horses that came along during their time together were multiple graded-stakes winners Wildcat Heir and Wild Gams, Grade 3 winner Max Forever and popular local 12-time stakes-winning millionaire Joey P.

“He always galloped Joey P. When he would say, 'Joey's ready,' we knew he would win. Everybody knew and loved Joey P. around here,” Perkins said. “Looking back on it, some of the horses he got on for me he would say, 'This horse is ready today,' and he was always spot-on with his evaluation.

“Claudio's just a super, super person. He's a hard-working guy and he was an excellent rider. He always went the extra mile,” he added. “He wasn't like, 'OK, I'm done with my horses and I'm going home.' He paid attention to everything going on and we had a lot of success with Claudio. You could see then he was interested in becoming a trainer, and he put in all the work necessary to do it.”

Gonzalez was married with two young children when he was diagnosed with testicular cancer in 2008. He had surgery to remove a testicle and underwent chemotherapy, leaving him unable to work for six months.

“It was a shock when I went into the doctor and he told me it was cancer. When they say cancer, you think 'Oh no, I'm going to die,'” Gonzalez said. “Right away, I said that when I was finished with the chemo I was going to be OK. I put it in my mind. I told my kids and my wife that I was going to be OK. I didn't know if I was, but I had it in my mind I was going to be OK … and that's what happened.”

In addition to the support he received from family and friends, Gonzalez is especially grateful for the compassion shown him by Perkins, who allowed Gonzalez to focus on his treatment and convalescence.

“At the time I was sick … Ben told me, 'No matter what, we'll take care of you.' He paid me every single week when I was out. There's not too many people that would do that,” Gonzalez said. “He was there for me when I needed somebody. I owe my life, really, to Benny Perkins. If it wasn't for him, I'm not here.”

Perkins, a multiple Grade 1-winning trainer including Delaware Township and Wildcat Heir in the Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash in 2001 and 2004, respectively, said there was never a hesitation from he or his clients that they would step in to help Gonzalez.

“A lot of my owners are hands-on guys and they're around the barn. A lot of them are people that had been with us for a while,” Perkins said. “They knew what Claudio was putting into the operation and they were all willing to help out when he needed help. It was a full group thing.

“Everybody pitched in,” he added. “The guys knew him and they knew the kind of person he was. He's a good family man. He's got a great wife and kids, and everybody was glad to help.”

Gonzalez was still working for Perkins when he got his first horses, a small string he would tend to before and after his regular job. He won with his second career starter, Quiet Tiara, Nov. 14, 2012 at Laurel, earning his first stakes win the following September with Princess Perfect in Monmouth's Jersey Girl Handicap.

“At the start when I was in New Jersey, I had five horses. At 3 o'clock I would take care of my horses over there and then at 5:30 I would go to Benny and gallop eight horses for him and then I came back to take care of my horses after that,” Gonzalez said. “When I got my first win as a trainer, in the picture Benny Perkins is there. He ran in the same race and was fourth. He said, 'This is the first of many, many more.' It was a great day.”

According to Equibase statistics, Gonzalez has compiled 883 wins and $24.9 million in purse earnings from 4,191 starters through mid-January. He set career highs with 756 starters and 174 winners in 2019 and $5.2 million in purses earned in 2020

“It's a dream. You can only dream that. I never thought that I would be able to win that many races in such a short time,” Gonzalez said. “It's amazing. All the time I look and see where I was and where I am now, and I think it's like a dream,” he added. “Where I come from, it was very hard. Nobody gives you nothing. You always have to work hard and I appreciate every day I have to be able to do this. Now I can take care of my family and be happy. It's very good.”

Prior to Harpers First Ride, Gonzalez's best horse was Afleet Willy, a gelding he claimed for $25,000 Dec. 27, 2015 and turned into a multiple stakes winner of more than $555,000 in purses. Four of his five stakes wins came at Laurel Park.

Gonzalez claimed Harpers First Ride, bred in Maryland by Sagamore Farm, for $30,000 out of a Sept. 14, 2019 win at Churchill Downs. Together they have won nine of 14 starts with two seconds and a third and $549,995 in purses.

“The last year was really big for him. He ran in the Pimlico Special and he won. He won three more stakes and he looked better and better every race,” Gonzalez said. “After every race he looked better, that's why we decide to take this step. It will be the best horses in the country.”

Harpers First Ride has breezed twice since his latest win, the most recent coming Jan. 16 at Gulfstream. Gonzalez won 10 stakes in Maryland in 2020 as well as the Charles Town Oaks (G3) with Fly On Angel.

“When I came [to the U.S.] I didn't know anybody, but when they first took my picture I said, 'I know I can do it anywhere,'” he said. “I am proof that if you work hard, and if you believe it, you can make it.”

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Trainer Jose D’Angelo ‘Driving The Truck’ On The Road To Success With Jesus’ Team

Trainer Jose D'Angelo put thousands of miles on his truck last year while giving his stable star, Jesus' Team, a tour of East Coast and Midwest racetracks.

“When Jesus' Team left Florida to go to Monmouth, when he went from Monmouth to Saratoga and back to Monmouth, when he went to Pimlico and when he went to Kentucky and back to Florida, I drove him there in the truck,” said D'Angelo, recalling the extensive road trip that produced Grade 1 placings in the Preakness (G1) at Pimlico and Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) at Keeneland, as well as a lifetime of memories for a horsemen who was only in his first full year of training in the U.S. “Everywhere he went, I drove the truck.”

After hitting the road with Grupo 7C Racing Stable's reformed claimer for a full schedule of major stakes engagements last year, the 30-year-old native of Caracas, Venezuela will save a lot on gas for the 4-year-old son of Tapiture's 2021 debut start in Saturday's $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream Park. Jesus' Team will only have to make the short trip from his home at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County, to compete in the 1 1/8-mile Pegasus, which will co-headline Saturday's program with the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1).

“I'm very excited about the race. I feel blessed,” D'Angelo said. “I feel like Jesus is going to run a big race Saturday, but I'm also very nervous.”

D'Angelo may have a case of big-race jitters leading up to the Pegasus World Cup, but that doesn't mean that he lacks confidence in his horse or his ability to bring him into one of the world's richest races in peak form. He's been there, done that in Venezuela.

He grew up in a Thoroughbred racing family, the son of trainer Francisco D'Angelo, the leading trainer in Venezuela on multiple occasions, and the grandson of a prominent Thoroughbred journalist. After attending university to study business administration for two years, D'Angelo dropped out to pursue a training career with his father's blessing.

“I learned everything I know from my father. He was a great trainer in Venezuela. He won many titles in Venezuela. He is my role model, 100 percent,” he said.

D'Angelo experienced a full range of emotion at La Rinconada after saddling his first starter at the end of 2012.

“My first race I won, but he was disqualified,” D'Angelo said. “The horse's name was Dasha. It was the 23rd of December.”

Merry Christmas, indeed.

D'Angelo's spirits were quickly lifted when he saddled his first official winner with his third starter, Queen Norma, at La Rinconada.

In 2014, D'Angelo saddled Dreaming of Gold for a victory in the Clasico Simon Bolivar, becoming the youngest trainer to saddle the winner of Venezuela's most prestigious race.

“When the horse won his first race for me, I told the owners, 'We have the horse to win the Clasico Simon Bolivar.' They looked at me like I was crazy,” D'Angelo said. “Dreaming of Gold wasn't the best horse in Venezuela, but he beat the best horses. Jesus wasn't the best horse in Florida, but he beat the best in Florida and ran in the Preakness and Breeders' Cup. Both horses are very, very similar.”

D'Angelo had continued success and achieved his goal of becoming the leading trainer in Venezuela in 2018.

“It was my goal. After that, I moved to Florida,” said D'Angelo, who joined his father, who had ventured to South Florida in 2015 to resume his training career. “To come here was always my dream.”

D'Angelo, who had saddled Forze Mau for a second-place finish in the Copa Velocidad on the 2017 Clasico del Caribe undercard at Gulfstream while based in Venezuela, saddled his horse since relocating to the U.S. at Gulfstream Park June 8, 2019, when Cocktail Skirt came up a nose short of victory while finishing second in a $12,500 claiming race. He broke through with his first U.S. victory with his third overall U.S. starter, Beach Dreaming, whom he had claimed out of a $12,500 claiming race and went on to score at the same level June 27, 2019. D'Angelo didn't have to sweat out an inquiry following the 5-year-old mare's dominating 2 ¼-length victory, but she was claimed out of the race.

D'Angelo quickly established himself in South Florida while finishing the 2018 season with 15 victories from 57 starters. His early success certainly was a contributing factor to Jesus' Team being transferred to his stable last spring, a partnership that also achieved early success. The Kentucky-bred colt, who had broken his maiden in his fifth career start for a $32.000 claiming price, won at first asking by 6 ¾ lengths in a $25,000 claiming race at Gulfstream May 8.

“When he won, I thought that race was very impressive. When he came back to the barn it was like he didn't race,” D'Angelo said. “The next time he worked, the way he galloped out, he was a different horse.”

Jesus' Team made a significant jump in class next time out in a June 10 stakes-quality optional claiming allowance at Gulfstream, in which he finished second behind graded-stakes winner Sole Volante, who went on to run in the Belmont Stakes (G1) and Kentucky Derby (G1), and ahead of Florida Derby (G1) runner-up Shivaree.

“He ran green in that race, but he finished second with a big heart,” his trainer said.

D'Angelo revved up his truck, led Jesus' Team onto a van, and hit the road for an amazing adventure that included a fourth-place finish behind Authentic in the Haskell (G1) and a second-place finish in the ungraded Pegasus at Monmouth, a third-place finish in the Preakness, and a second-place finish in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile behind likely Pegasus favorite Knicks Go. Jesus' Team tuned up for the Pegasus with a victory in the Dec. 5 Claiming Crown Jewel upon his return to Gulfstream.

“I would like to be a great trainer in this amazing country and have great horses to run in the big races,” D'Angelo said. “The experience I lived last year was the best in my life, for sure.”

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Pegasus: Pairing With Harpers First Ride Is A ‘Dream Come True’ For Jockey Angel Cruz

After taking care of business at home, jockey Angel Cruz will head south to take part in the biggest race of his life.

Cruz, 25, is named on four horses when live racing returns Friday to Laurel Park – You Are Awesome in Race 3 and Seattle Ric in Race 9 for trainer Jerry Robb, Dream Happy in Race 5 for trainer Donald Barr, and Golden G in Race 8 for trainer Rodolfo Sanchez-Salomon.

Following the races, the Puerto Rico native and finalist for the 2014 Eclipse Award as champion apprentice will board a plane headed for Hallandale Beach, Fla., where he is named aboard Harpers First Ride in Saturday's $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream Park.

“I'm so happy. It's going to be my first time riding in a big race like this, like a big, known race,” Cruz said. “I've won big races, but this is going to be my biggest one. It's a $3 million race. I'm going to be riding against the top riders, and it's a dream come true.”

Cruz has ridden 5-year-old gelding Harpers First Ride in seven of his 17 lifetime starts including each of the last five, with five wins and a second. Four of the wins have come in stakes, led by the historic Pimlico Special (G3) Oct. 3 on the undercard of the 145th Preakness Stakes (G1).

Together, Cruz and Harpers First Ride have also won the Deputed Testamony, Richard W. Small and Native Dancer, the latter at the World Cup's 1 1/8-mile distance. Trained by Laurel-based Claudio Gonzalez, Harpers First Ride was bred in Maryland by Sagamore Farm.

“I love Harper. I have a lot of confidence in him, and he does in me,” Cruz said. “And Claudio, he has him ready. We're going ready to the Pegasus.”

Of his 538 career wins, three have come in graded-stakes. Besides Harpers First Ride, he won the Alcibiades (G1) with Dancing Rags and Sycamore (G3) with Renown in 2016 at Keeneland. Their respective trainers, Graham Motion and Elizabeth Voss, are both based in Maryland.

Cruz grew up in Puerto Rico with Eclipse Award-winning brothers Irad Ortiz Jr. and Jose Ortiz, coming to the U.S. at the age of 11. He won his first race on April 8, 2014 at Charles Town and also spent time riding in California and New York, where he captured Aqueduct's 2015 spring title.

Overall, Cruz ranked fifth with 64 wins at Maryland tracks in 2020. His uncle, Joel Hiraldo, and grandfather, Jose Hiraldo, were both jockeys, and his cousin, 19-year-old John Hiraldo, is currently a 10-pound apprentice at Laurel. Cruz is represented by agent Paul Plymire.

Harpers First Ride drew Post 8 in a field of 12 for the Pegasus World Cup, where he is listed at 10-1 on the morning line behind multiple Grade 1-winning favorite Knicks Go (5-2), another Maryland-bred. Harpers First Ride arrived at Gulfstream Jan. 11 and had a half-mile breeze over the main track Jan. 16. Gonzalez has been in Florida since Jan. 13.

“I think he'll love the weather. In the summer, when I first started riding him, he loved the weather,” Cruz said. “Gulfstream is a fast track. I think he's going to like it because there will be a lot of speed and it's going to play out for him, I think. Knicks Go and a couple of other horses have speed and I think Harpers is going to do really well over there. Claudio's going to have him ready. He'll be a good fit for that race.”

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